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Georgia Baptists cut ties with church led by woman pastor Print E-mail
By Bob Allen   
Monday, November 16, 2009

DECATUR, Ga. (ABP) -- The Georgia Baptist Convention has ended its 148-year-old relationship with First Baptist Church of Decatur, Ga., over the congregation's 2007 vote to hire a woman as senior pastor.

Julie Pennington-Russell has been pastor at First Baptist Church in Decatur, Ga., since August 2007.
Pastor Julie Pennington-Russell read a letter at the end of both worship services Nov. 15 from Robert White, executive director of the 1.3 million-member state convention. It informed her that messengers to the group's recent annual meeting took action to declare them "not a cooperating church," because "a woman is serving as senior pastor."

White said funds received from First Baptist Church of Decatur during 2009 will be returned.

"Obviously the severing of relationship after so many years is unfortunate and gives the world-at-large another reason to conclude that Baptists care more about putting people out than gathering them in," Pennington-Russell said in an e-mail Nov. 16. "At the same time, I don't think this came as a surprise to many in our congregation and to be honest, having a Southern Baptist affiliation has not been especially helpful when it comes to connecting with our largely unchurched community."

Last year the Georgia Baptist Convention, one of the oldest and largest of 42 state and regional organizations affiliated with the Southern Baptist Convention, changed policies to decline funds sent by churches "not in cooperation and harmony with the approved work and purpose" of the convention. Leaders recommending the change said it came "as a result of questions raised regarding First Baptist Church of Decatur, who has a woman as senior pastor."

The Southern Baptist Convention amended the Baptist Faith & Message doctrinal statement in 2000 to declare, "While both men and women are gifted for service in the church, the office of pastor is limited to men as qualified by Scripture."

With the new action, Georgia Baptist leaders not only may refuse to accept money from First Baptist Church of Decatur, but now the church is no longer eligible to receive resources and services offered by the 3,300-church convention.

Meeting in their 188th annual session Nov. 9-10 at First Baptist Church in Woodstock, Ga., messengers to this year's Georgia Baptist Convention adopted a budget $4.1 million smaller than the previous year's spending plan. The state convention has eliminated 27 positions since January, about 13 percent of its total staff. The 2010 budget of $45.5 million is divided between the state convention's own ministries and the Southern Baptist Convention, with 41 percent of receipts forwarded to the national body.

Baptist Women in Ministry, an advocacy and support group founded in 1983, has estimated there are more than 2,000 ordained women ministering in churches with a Southern Baptist heritage. About 120 have been identified as senior pastors, mostly in churches that now identify with newer groups like the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship and Alliance of Baptists. The vast majority serve in roles other than preaching pastor, like church-staff positions, chaplains and missionaries. Thousands more minister but are not ordained.

With 2,700 members, First Baptist Church of Decatur, one of several historic congregations in what is now metropolitan Atlanta, is one of the largest and most prominent churches traditionally affiliated with the Southern Baptist Convention to be led by a woman pastor.

A search committee considered 64 candidates before unanimously recommending Pennington-Russell, who at the time had been pastor of Calvary Baptist Church in Waco, Texas, for nine years. Before that Pennington-Russell, a native of Florida and graduate of Golden Gate Baptist Theological Seminary, was pastor of Nineteenth Avenue Baptist Church in San Francisco.

Though affiliated with the Southern Baptist Convention since its founding during the Civil War era, First Baptist Church of Decatur has in recent years identified primarily with the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship, a group of former and current moderate Southern Baptists formed in 1991 that is more open to women in the pulpit.

White, executive director of the 1.3 million-member convention since 1993, said in the letter to Pennington-Russell that he "would be remiss if I did not say on behalf of the convention how grateful we have been across many years of partnership with First Baptist of Decatur for our service and ministry together."

"You and the church family are in my thoughts and prayers today as you move forward to continue your ministry in the name of the Lord," White wrote. "We recognize and appreciate the faithfulness of First Baptist Church of Decatur throughout the years."

Pennington-Russell said members of the church "wish our brothers and sisters in the Georgia Baptist Convention well, and we're moving ahead toward God's good purposes for us."

She said the church's 150th anniversary is just a little over two years away, and the congregation is strategizing about 150 ways to "communicate the love of Christ to our community and world."

-30-

Bob Allen is senior writer for Associated Baptist Press.

 

Previous stories:

Church with woman pastor expects further rebuke from Georgia Baptists (1/27)

Georgia Baptists reject church with woman pastor (11/14/08)

Opinion: Georgia Baptists isolate themselves (11/13/08)

In historic move, First Baptist Decatur calls woman as senior pastor (6/18/07)

Pennington-Russell set to make history as pastor of large Decatur church (5/29/07)

 





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Comments (14)Add Comment
...
written by Slick, November 16, 2009
"...having a Southern Baptist affiliation has not been especially helpful when it comes to connecting with our largely unchurched community." A telling statement. It is a shame that the fundamentalist takeover has allowed the SBC Pharisees to dictate their law across the convention to the detriment of the Kingdom of God. Is it any wonder that so many SBC churches have dropped the word Baptist (or never adopted it) from their church’s name.
...
written by LKSeat, November 16, 2009
The Georgia Baptist Convention needed Pastor Julie and the FBC, Decatur, more than they needed the GBC.
Festering Grudge
written by mcskinny, November 17, 2009
THe FBC Decatur called (the article says hired. I thought Baptist churches called pastors?) Pastor Julie Pennington-Russel approximately 2 1/2 years ago. It took the festering sore that long to come to this action? Hummm, interesting thoughts come to mind, like someone didn't think God would allow the church to continue this long???
Leave the GBC
written by Slick, November 17, 2009
Maybe more churches ought to disfellowship with the GBC. I can tell you that the GBC does little to nothing for our church in GA.
B-o-o-o H-o-o-o-o-o!!!
written by Gene, November 17, 2009
Wow--a church which has been a leader in giving to the GBSC and Cooperative Program in years past. A church which probably had more HMB Staff members in it during the 70's than any other church in Atlanta. A church which started multitudes of missions all around the growing suburbs. A church which has pioneered ministry to the aged and students at Agnes Scott / Emory / etc. so that real Christianity might reach out to future world leaders.


They kicked out my ordaining church because they (Oh My God) called a woman as Senior Minister!!! They sure were evil and needed to be ousted for all the past deeds and current.

Thanks for the break!!!

God's blessing on Decatur FBC--may you always be so evil!!!

Gene Scarborough
Ordained by FBC Decatur 1970--and still proud of it
Outsider Looking In
written by jandbg, November 18, 2009
I speak on my own, not as a representative of any group.

I occasionally attend the Smokerise Baptist Church in Stone Mountain. In fact, I teach SS there once a month but our roots and most of our time are spent in another denomination that has ordained women since 1865. The test of time and the test of fruit have long ago proven the value of good women in the clerical ranks. ( You will be known by your fruit...)

William Booth, co-founder of The Salvation Army once said: "Some of my best men are women." Linguistic chauvinism aside, he got it right. His wife, Catherine, was an amazing woman who gave steady leadership council and regularly (and effectively) preached to huge crowds when women were't allowed to do so by virtually any other denomination. She set the pattern for many thousands, if not millions, of women who have and still do claim ordination rights and responsibilities around the world. I hesitate to think of the losses to the Kingdom had she and her successors been muzzled. Both Booth's were way ahead of their time. For the record, she was the other co-founder.

I applaud this local church for their courage and insight and believe God will work wondrously as long as she and the others she leads are faithful to Christ.

He's still no respecter of persons, right?

Thanks for letting an outsider speak.

Jack Getz
Tucker
another example
written by Dr. J, November 18, 2009
Conventions are the New Testament equivalent of old wineskins- not very useful and will break when filled with new wine.
...
written by UNC, November 19, 2009
The fact that it is 2009 and we are even discussing this issue demonstrates how incredibly out of touch SBC has become. I can only hope that they continue on this path to complete irrelevancy.
...
written by jbird, November 23, 2009
GBC action--very sad and very silly!
pastor
written by Bobby McCord, November 25, 2009
The fact is that a church who no longer submits to the authority of scripture is longer a Bible believing church. That church can do whatever it wants to but it should no longer enjoy the fellowship of a Bible believing association or convention. Its not a matter of opinion, style, tradition, or prejudice. Its a matter of the authority of God's Word in the church. You love the parts about grace but hate the parts about obedience. You love the parts about being called but hate the parts about qualifications. You love the parts about liberty but hate the parts about obedience. James said that kind of faith is not a saving faith! I am tired of Liberal churches who fail to submit to the authority of God's word boast about how much they give to the cooperative program as if that allows them to disregard God's Word or recuses them from criticism or even opposition from those of us who believe God's Word to be true. All I can do is believe God's Word to be true and do my best live according to what it says out of gratitude for the grace God has shown me through the sacrifice of His Son, Jesus.
pastor
written by Bobby McCord, November 25, 2009
My email is This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it . Please contact me.
...
written by revmatt, December 03, 2009
I've been a Baptist minister for more than 12 years, licensed in a so-called mega-church, educated at a Baptist seminary, and have filled many a pulpit when asked to stand in. But, I must admit that I am happily divorced from conservative and moderate Baptists when I read of things like this. I live minutes from Pennington-Russel's church in the heart of Atlanta/ Decatur. I can honestly say that most of us in this community think Baptists are incredibly backward, isolated, and absolutely irrelevant to our daily lives. If Baptists can't consider women equal, what can they possibly have to say that isn't ignorant and hateful? Punishing a church for allowing its pastor to preach without a penis thwarts any credibility Baptists might have with thinking individuals. And when you have no credibility, people won't be listening to you and your "good news."
compromise
written by Bobby McCord, December 03, 2009
I won't compromise God's word to please you or the culture. If the church is not relevant it is because most look and act and Talk like world including so called or should I say Self called ministers like yourself. Compromising may draw a big crowd but so does the circus, and you talk like a clown.
ps
written by Bobby McCord, December 03, 2009
P.S.
If anything destroys the credibility of a minister, it is divorce. You are unqualified to speak on the qualifications of a pastor.

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