🧵20% Of The Biggest Southern Baptist Churches Are Pastored By Women?
It’s no secret that the SBC has been monkeying about with its theological foundations as of late, shrugging off the oppressive mantle of complementarianism in exchange for the more lightweight and flexible windbreaker of s̷o̷f̷t̷-̷c̷o̷m̷p̷l̷e̷m̷e̷n̷t̷a̷r̷i̷a̷n̷i̷s̷m̷ egalitarianism.
To catalog the downgrade of the SBC, a couple years back, we directed ourselves to Thom Rainer’s website where he lists the SBC 500.
This is a compendium of the 500 largest Southern Baptist Churches in the United States by membership size (or in this case, 494) ranging from the 1,092 congregants at Calvary Baptist Church in Dothan, AL all the way to the 31,215 reported by Newspring Community Church in Anderson, SC.
The SBC 500 is the brainchild of Micah Fries, the former Vice President of LifeWay Research, who states, “The idea behind it is to try to identify the 500 largest Churches across the denomination, and of course, mutual learning from within that community as well as then being able to extrapolate from that some of the best practices, trends, that sort of thing, research that will then bleed across the denomination and help influence churches towards growth and reaching men and women for Christ.”
Our concern at Protestia is not the size of the church, but rather the number of churches that have women pastors on staff (hereafter known as as “impastors” there is no such thing as a woman pastor).
The practice of having women in these roles is in direct violation of the scriptures and serves as more evidence that the SBC is heading downhill at breakneck speed.
For this reason, we surveyed every single one of these 494 churches to see how many of them have impastors in their employ. The findings are pretty shocking.
Of the 494 churches listed, we could only find staff information on 446 of them. Of the 446 churches that we had data for, 47 of them listed women as “Pastors” on their staff pages as their official designation.
This means 10% of the top 500 biggest Southern Baptist Churches in the world are directly standing in defiance to the BFM and are sinfully serving in opposition to the scriptures.
When you read through our methodology below, you’ll see that this is the lowest possible percentage. In reality, it’s probably closer to 20 or 25%.
Not only do 10% of these churches have formalized impastors in leadership, but another 91 churches have women on staff with the title of either “Minister” – such as “Women’s Minister,” “Youth Minister,” “Singles Minister” – or, to a lesser extent, “Ministry Director” or “Director of Women’s Ministries.”
While some are serving in faithful, biblically appropriate roles (if with loftier-than-needed titles), many who function in their given roles are doing so with the same authority and positioning in the church as the elders and authority of a pastor, but without that specific title.
Combine the two groups and at least ONE-THIRD of the top 450 largest SBC churches in the country have women impastors or women “Ministers” employed on staff.
To hear apologists for the orthodoxy of the SBC tell it, however, there is no slide, there is no downgrade, and this is no problem. The SBC isn’t becoming more egalitarian, and you’re crazy if you think they are.
That’s the thing about these arch defenders of SBC devolution. They’ll slit the SBC’s throat and then complain about a nicked ear, while that number of impastors climbs and climbs and climbs.
Methodology:
We visited the websites of these churches, found the staff pages, and used the posted information as our basis. We did not call the churches to confirm the veracity of the information listed online, which we assume to be correct and accurate. Unfortunately, not all churches had this information publicly accessible. Of the 494 churches listed, we could only find staff information on 448 of them. For 46 of them, either there was no ministry staff page of any kind, or the staff page simply listed a biography for the senior pastor and no one else.
The lack of information was especially prevalent as we went through the final 20 largest churches. Most of these churches are multi-site and don’t list their staff, even though they have multi-million dollar staff budgets.
Newspring, for example, has over 30,000 people across 14 campuses and yet only contains brief biographies on the 14 campus pastors, even though there are likely hundreds of staff members employed there. While we would wager many women impastors or ministers are employed, we did not include them in the list of 46.
When examining the titles that are given to the staff members, we discovered no consensus on what the different roles and responsibilities should be called. As a result, their labels were quite varied (i.e. Ministry Associate, Ministry Assistant, Ministry Director, Director of the Ministry, Ministry Overseer, Women’s Minister, etc.)
This makes it challenging to differentiate between a pastor and a minister, as some churches refer to their pastors as ministers, and others do not. In some churches, the ministry directors are pastors, but not in others. This gives them the coverage and pretense to do as they please. If a church listed all the men as ministers and a few women as ministers as well, we did not include them in the list, opting for a conservative estimate, even though the terms “minister” and “pastor” are being used interchangeably.
Many churches are clearly playing games with the titles they give women, even if their role is the same as that of the men. It is not uncommon to see a staff page list fifteen different members on their church leadership page or pastoral staff page.
You’ll have “Senior Pastor,” “Executive Pastor,” “Teaching Pastor,” “Assistant Pastor,” “Spiritual Formation Pastor,” “Youth Pastor” – all men – then, as soon as a woman is listed, the terminology switches to “Children’s Minister,” “Women’s Minister,” “Youth Ministry Director” – all women, who are effectively functioning in the role of pastors but under a different name.
In terms of our methodology, we erred on the side of conservatism. If they listed a woman as “Youth Minister” on the pastoral staff page, we did not categorize her as a pastor as part of the 46.
Here are a few examples of what is meant by :
Similarly, these women, called ministers, were not included as pastors in our list, which only included those whose churches specifically use the title of “Pastor” to define them.
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Trump's spiritual advisor Paula White praising deranged Moonies cult leader is so dangerous. Here is why 🧵
During a recent Universal Peace Federation’s Peace Summit, White, who was attending, repeatedly praised ‘Mother Moon,’ otherwise known as Dr. Hak Ja Han Moon, the widow of the Rev. Dr. Sun Myung Moon, co-founder of the Universal Peace Federation and the World Unification Church. Ie, Moonies.
Mother Moon is a billionaire and regarded by many as the “Messiah” and the “True Parent to all mankind,” whose goal is to unite all faiths in world peace and harmony. She and her husband founded the Moonies cult and the summit is a means to spread further the moonies’ message of anti-biblical, Christ-hating syncretic ecumenism.
Worship artist / Singer-Songwriter Topping Gospel Music Charts Is Actually a Muslim?
Musical artist Nouri is a Kurdish singer and songwriter that was born and raised in a Syrian refugee camp. Remaining there until she was three, her family was ultimately given refugee status in New Zealand, where she grew up.
She later moved to L.A., where she lived out the back of her car, before finally hitting it big in the music industry with her 2018 debut album 'Where Do We Go from Here,' which hit #1 on several charts and gained international attention.
Building on her successes, after sharing multiple covers of worship songs on her TikTok account, she recently released the original worship song 'Change In Your Name' this past summer- a slow, soaring gospel ballad that placed #10 on iTunes Gospel Charts and reached #4 on Billboard's Top Gospel Songs. Receiving millions of streams, it now sits at 15th place half a year later.
She explained to Headliner Hub:
"I was talking to God one night and I was praying, and this song – I swear – it just comes out of nowhere. It was: you give me purpose. That's how it started. After two hours, the song was kind of written. I wanted to write a worship song, and I would say God helped me write that song, because I was really looking for an answer."
After doing this for over two decades, listening to literally 10,000 sermons, this is one of the craziest thing I've ever heard.
Broken into 4 parts, a United Methodist impastor offers a *DEFENSE* of Jezebel and Asherah worship in ways that blow my mind ⬇️⬇️⬇️🧵
A must watch!
In a recent sermon, wearing her Spirit of Jezebel shirt, Rev. Debra McKnight claims that the "Jezebel Spirit" is basically any woman who is "competent, attractive, and smart," just like Jezebel herself and Kamala Harris.
McKnight reveals that when she was getting married, she looked for a "biblical model of marriage" to highlight and represent her at her wedding and settled in on Jezebel and Ahab calling them "true partners." She ultimately decided to forgo her choice, however, as then she'd have to spend half the wedding explaining her affection and affinity for those two.
She admits that Jezebel made a mistake when she urged Ahab to kill the man for the vineyard, but argues that Jezebel didn't do anything David didn't do, and yet he was called a man after God's heart, while she was unfairly labeled 'the worst.'
Lecrae, who previously revealed he stopped going to church because it was too 'triggering', and that now 'church' for him is going to an album launch party or hanging out with a bunch of friends on a tour bus, answers the question 'can you love God and not go to church.' It's not good.
It amazes me to see these Intellectual Calvinists point to some debate Michael Brown did with James White a decade ago as justification for commending him as someone we should listen to and view as a faithful bible teacher, and not the squirrely scoundrel that he is.
No one is saying you can't be friends with him. That's a misnomer and a strawman. What we are saying is you don't have to promote the guy. And yet, apparently, all you have to do is note you have "deep theological disagreements" with him as a disclaimer and he gets a pass
Brown makes it a habit of promoting, praising and endorsing heretics and hucksters routinely; the most egregious of charismatic ne’er do wells and other bizzaro charlatans who repeatedly teach gross theological error and are unable to properly handle the scriptures. Full Stop.
Here's a thought. Based on the information GCC elders had at the time, there was sufficient reason to believe D was repentant and the home was safe. E disagreed, and justifiable church discipline ensued, on account of not submitting to their collective spirit-led wisdom.
Suppose later D emerged as a child predator who fooled everyone and necessitated a separation/ divorce, does that mean that GCC is guilty in light of their initial assessment, based on the information they had at the time? There's a case to be made that they're not.
Reasonable people can disagree and come to different conclusions. As far as why there's been no response, one view could be that GCC sees the discipline of a member as a private church issue. And although JR made it public, there's no step in Matthew 18 that says after