The Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) is once again at the center of controversy after senior leaders suggested that sexual abuse within the denomination has been overstated. The comments have sparked renewed criticism from abuse survivors and advocacy groups, who argue that meaningful reforms promised in recent years have largely failed to materialize.
Several years ago, the nation’s largest Protestant denomination publicly acknowledged serious failures in its handling of abuse allegations. Delegates approved reforms, apologized to survivors, and backed measures intended to improve accountability. However, many of those initiatives have since slowed or been abandoned, leaving survivors disappointed with the direction of the church.
Church Leadership Says Abuse Issue Has Been Politicized
Newly elected SBC President Willy Rice has argued that sexual abuse within the denomination has been used for political purposes and has rejected claims that the church experienced a widespread systemic crisis. He said churches should continue reporting criminal behavior to law enforcement, strengthen abuse prevention training, and support victims, while maintaining that the issue has been exaggerated by some critics.
Former SBC President Jack Graham also disputed the idea of a denomination-wide abuse crisis, saying past claims caused significant financial and reputational harm to the convention. Their remarks reflect a growing view among some Southern Baptist leaders that earlier investigations overstated the scope of the problem.
Survivors Say Accountability Has Fallen Short
Abuse survivors and long-time advocates strongly disagree with the leadership’s assessment. They argue that many victims still lack a reliable system to report abuse and receive justice within the denomination. Several advocates say they have stepped away from reform efforts after becoming convinced that promised changes would not be fully implemented.
One of the convention’s most significant reform proposals—a database listing church workers credibly accused of sexual abuse—was never completed after concerns about legal liability. Instead, the denomination shifted its focus toward education, prevention programs, and directing churches to existing public offender databases. Critics say these steps fall short of the comprehensive accountability measures originally promised.
Long-Running Debate Over the Scale of Abuse
Supporters of current leadership often point to statistics showing that publicly reported abuse cases represent a small fraction of the denomination’s more than 40,000 churches. However, survivor advocates argue that clergy sexual abuse is frequently underreported because victims fear retaliation or lack safe reporting channels. They also note that previous independent investigations concluded some church leaders minimized allegations and resisted reform efforts.
As debate continues, the Southern Baptist Convention remains divided between leaders who believe significant progress has been made and survivors who insist that stronger accountability measures are still urgently needed.






















































