• Important insights from First Baptist Dallas Pastor Dr. Robert Jeffress on the Southern Baptist Convention, politics and preaching from an interview with Todd Starnes.

  • ‘I don’t know anybody under the age of 70 who cares about what is happening in the denomination.’

  • Are we in a post-denominational age where only the local matters?

Dr. Robert Jeffress blasted the President of the Southern Baptist Convention, J.D. Greear, and other critics who seek to isolate preaching from moral and political issues. He pointed out spiritual convictions must be preached and must guide how Christians vote during an interview with Todd Starnes on Starnes’ Fox Radio Show Thursday. His comments on what people think of the Southern Baptist Convention are important for judging if the Southern Baptist Convention can be rescued from its leftward drift.

Politics and the Pulpit

Jeffress told Starnes that a Christian should let his faith shape his politics.

“I think the sin is not having your Christian faith impact how you vote,” Jeffress told Starnes.

Jeffress said he would agree with Greear that the pulpit shouldn’t be partisan. However, he strongly endorsed preaching and Christian involvement with moral issues like abortion. He pointed to past examples of Christian morality transforming society for the better.

Jeffress told Starnes,

“JD and others are talking about keeping politics out of the pulpit, so that we don’t limit the reach of the Gospel message—well, I’m all for keeping politics out of the pulpit if you correctly define what you mean by politics. Is talking about abortion, the murder of the unborn, is that political or is that spiritual and moral? I think that it is all three. I think it is ludicrous to say that our moral and spiritual convictions should somehow be isolated and separated from how we vote.

“Thank God the leaders of the American Revolution didn’t buy into that. The Black Robed Regiment, pastors, led the way in the American Revolution. I’m glad Martin Luther King, Jr. didn’t keep politics out of the pulpit. He allowed his Christian faith to lead him and be an advocate for Civil Rights. Or, look at those who abolished slavery. It was Christians who allowed their spiritual convictions to shape their politics that removed slavery from our country.”

Can the Southern Baptist Convention be saved from progressives?

For those who want to save the Southern Baptist Convention from its leftward, progressive drift, there were troubling words from Dr. Jeffress.

Starnes asked what the people of First Baptist Church Dallas think about the issues in the Southern Baptist Convention. Jeffress said people don’t care.

Jeffress told Starnes,

“They don’t pay any attention to it. I think we are living in a post-denominational age, and I think whether it is Southern Baptist or any other mainline denominations, I don’t think people relate any more to large masses of ecclesiastical bureaucracies. I think it is kind of like Tip O’Neil said one time, ‘All politics are local,’ and I think that is true about the church as well. I know our members are concerned about First Baptist Church Dallas and what we are doing to change the world for the better by introducing people to faith in Christ and I don’t know anybody under the age of 70 who cares about what is happening in the denomination.”

For those who want to stop the leftward drift of the Southern Baptist Convention, we must recognize some powerful obstacles that Jeffress identified. Namely, the intensely local focus of today’s church members.

Can conservatives overcome the myopic view of the Church? Is Jeffress right that we are in a truly post-denominational age? What does that mean?

It raises a couple of interesting questions that I’d love to hear Dr. Jeffress on: Would First Baptist Dallas consider leaving the Southern Baptist Convention if it continues this leftward slide? Does he see any benefits in staying within the Southern Baptist Convention today? And do the people of First Baptist Dallas see any benefits from being SBC?

I’ve spoken with several small church pastors about what happened in Birmingham, and while it will be covered in a longer report, the leftward drift like the resolution approving the use of Critical Race Theory and Intersectionality could suppress their turnout at future conventions. More than one asked for a copy of the resolution so they could present it to their church with recommendations for decreased SBC involvement.

As we’ve reported before, liberal politics kills churches.

Stooges for the Republican Party and President Trump?

Jeffress rejected the idea that any of Trump’s evangelical advisers were ‘stooges’ for the president.

Jeffress told Starnes, “I agree 100% that no pastor should be a stooge for a political party or for government leader. I agree 100% with that, but I don’t know anyone on the current team that is. If he is insinuating and I think he is that those of us evangelical leaders who support Trump are somehow being coopted by him that is absolutely not the case at all.”

Jeffress said conservative evangelicals use access to President Donald Trump to encourage the president and advocate for Christian-influenced policies.

Jeffress told Starnes, “Every evangelical leader I know who has a relationship with President Trump uses that proximity to encourage President Trump and the tremendous Christian policies he has implement regarding abortion, religious liberty and move of our embassy in Israel to Jerusalem. I don’t know anyone that has been a stooge for the Republican Party or President Trump. “

Check out the entire interview. It was important and offers something Southern Baptists leaders must ponder. Also, check out the Todd Starnes Radio Show website and ToddStarnes.com for more conservative news.

9 thoughts on “Can the Southern Baptist Convention be saved from its leftward drift?”

  1. Calvinists in the SBC are about to split over the social justice issues. The resolutions committee radically changed the resolution on critical race theory and intersectionality which was approved. Watch this story in the coming weeks.

  2. I’m 38. I left the SBC and am now churchless, although I’m looking for an independent Baptist church. I will never again be a member of a denomination because of crap like what’s going on with the SBC.

  3. It needs no saving if “left drift” is toward the Cross!
    Right evangelical drift has already become a synonym for siding with
    the power structure away from the Cross (listen to Jefress, Graham,
    Falwell and you will realize all is not well). “Right drift” has lost the
    church credibility. Those in the 20 to 30 age range are leaving the church
    “in droves” (according to Pew). SBC is about to explode with issues of
    racism, gender, sexual exploitation.
    The answer is in fasting and praying, not in prevaricating, name-calling,
    or hiring PR agency.

  4. It appears, to me, to be too late for the SBC. The fact that J.D. Greear is the president is almost a death knell to the SBC. He would not be president if the SB churches had not been priming their church members, for a long time now, with heresy. Look at the comments here! The blind leading the blind. It has been painful to see America come crashing down but it is excruciating to see the American church go apostate.
    All of those people are ‘loving’ each other and the lost right to hell. Ouch. Everytime I think of it this verse pops into my head: “Jesus wept”. I weep with Him.

    2 Timothy 4
    1I solemnly charge you in the presence of God and of Christ Jesus, who is to judge the living and the dead, and by His appearing and His kingdom: 2preach the word; be ready in season and out of season; reprove, rebuke, exhort, with great patience and instruction. 3For the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine; but wanting to have their ears tickled, they will accumulate for themselves teachers in accordance to their own desires, 4and will turn away their ears from the truth and will turn aside to myths. 5But you, be sober in all things, endure hardship, do the work of an evangelist, fulfill your ministry.

  5. Just what is going on with the SBC? Our church did not send a messenger, so no information was passed on.

  6. It is impossible to behave differently from your true beliefs. As you truly believe so will you act. Your actions speak louder than words. Dr Jeffress is correct. The SBC is paving the road to hell with (perhaps) good intentions?

  7. All white skin worshiping pagans masquerading as Christians. Most white Americans were never true Christians.

Comments are closed.