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Racism, Patriarchy, and the Southern Baptist Convention

Racism, Patriarchy, and the Southern Baptist Convention

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In this episode of The Justice Briefing, Dr. Jemar Tisby breaks down the Southern Baptist Convention's recent vote to amend its constitution—by a 77 percent margin—banning women from preaching to assembled congregations.

Dr. Tisby draws on his own history with the SBC to offer an insider's analysis of what the Truth and Unity Amendment actually says, why Al Mohler pushed for it, and what the election of new SBC president Willy Rice signals about the denomination's continued rightward turn.

But Dr. Tisby goes deeper than the headlines.

Tracing the SBC's origins back to 1844 and the case of James Reeve—an enslaver whose deliberate nomination as a missionary candidate was the spark that led to the denomination's founding—Dr. Tisby makes the case that the SBC's patriarchy and its racism are not two separate problems that happen to coexist.

They share a common theological architecture: the divine sanctioning of hierarchy, the use of Scripture to compel submission, and the punishment of those who resist.

From the household codes that justified chattel slavery to the amendment that just passed, the logic is the same, and understanding that connection, Dr. Tisby argues, is essential to understanding what faithful resistance must look like today.

In This Episode...
  • The Truth and Unity Amendment, what it says, and why Al Mohler pushed for it even though the restriction on women pastors was already denominational policy
  • The case of James Reeve—the 1844 missionary nomination that was a deliberate pro-slavery provocation and led directly to the founding of the SBC
  • How the biblical defense of racial hierarchy and the biblical defense of gender hierarchy draw from the same New Testament household codes
  • The “purity of white womanhood” trope—how white women were simultaneously subordinated to white men and weaponized against Black people
  • Saddleback Church, Beth Moore, and the enforcement mechanisms the SBC already had in place before this amendment
  • The parallel between the SBC’s centralizing of authority and unitary executive theory in the Trump administration
  • The election of Willie Rice as SBC president and what it signals about the denomination’s further rightward turn
  • Why you cannot address patriarchy in the SBC without also addressing its racism and why the denomination is case in point


I believe women are called and qualified to preach and pastor. And I name the links between racism and patriarchy. If that’s the kind of insight you value, become a paid subscriber. JemarTisby.Substack.com

Host a screening of Jesus Was a Migrant: jesuswasamigrant.com

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