North Carolina pastor Ronnie Parrott is calling Southern Baptists to join him in praying and fasting for the next seven days as discussions continue among the officers and staff of the Southern Baptist Convention Executive Committee, the Sexual Abuse Task Force appointed by SBC President Ed Litton and Guidepost Solutions, the third-party firm the task force has selected to investigate the SBC EC’s handling of sex abuse claims.
“I believe God is working to expose the darkest areas in our convention,” Parrott, pastor of Christ Community Church in Huntersville, North Carolina, told Baptist Press. “Our enemy thrives in darkness around issues like race issues and sexual abuse. I believe prayer and fasting is the way to move towards unity and effective execution of our mission. There are many opinions, but only what God says matters. We must bring these issues before the Lord.”
Parrott has created a Google form allowing people to sign up to participate in the weeklong movement.
On Sept. 21, the SBC Executive Committee approved a motion to allocate up to $1.6 million in Cooperative Program money for Guidepost to conduct its investigation, which spans from Jan. 1, 2000, to June 14, 2021.
The motion set a deadline of Sept. 28 for the EC, the task force and Guidepost to “flesh out” the waiving of attorney-client privilege.
Expectations and standards
Parrott coauthored a motion with Tennessee pastor Grant Gaines that was adopted by messengers to the 2021 SBC Annual Meeting, asking the SBC president to name a task force to commission a firm for a third-party investigation. The task force is to “ensure that the third-party review includes an investigation into any allegations of abuse, mishandling of abuse, mistreatment of victims, a pattern of intimidation of victims or advocates, and resistance to sexual abuse reform initiatives.”
The motion also said, “We further move that the task force agree to the accepted best-standards and practices as recommended by the commissioned third-party, including but not limited to the Executive Committee staff and members waiving attorney client privilege in order to ensure full access to information and accuracy in the review.”
The task force was given the date of 30 days prior to the 2022 SBC Annual Meeting to make public a written report.
Parrott told BP that messengers have “spoken clearly that they expect full cooperation.”
“In the SBC, it’s vital that we remember that the local church is the headquarters of the Southern Baptist Convention,” Parrott said. “In June, the Southern Baptist Convention overwhelmingly adopted a motion directing the Executive Committee to fully cooperate with an independent third-party investigation into its handling of sexual abuse over the past 20 years.”
In the Google form, referring to the waiving of attorney-client privilege, Parrott said, “It is our desire to see the Executive Committee follow the will of the messengers for the sake of transparency and credibility.”
Prayer and fasting
“We are praying that there would be a waiving of attorney-client privilege within the scope of this investigation,” he said, “That the task force, Guidepost and the Executive Committee officers would come to a unifying agreement on accepting the motion in full so that the truth can be found without further hindrance.”
Parrott is calling participants to commit to prayer and fasting between “sundown on Wednesday, September 22nd to lunch on Wednesday, September 29th.”
He lists three specific issues of concern.
- Pray for the meetings between the Sexual Abuse Task Force and the Executive Committee Officers.
- Pray for full adoption of the motion presented by the messengers at the 2021 SBC in Nashville.
- Pray for unity around the gospel and the Great Commission to prevail through this whole process.
Reported by Baptist Press, news service of the Southern Baptist convention.
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