Rick Warren, the retired pastor of Saddleback Church in Lake Forest, California, failed Tuesday to convince the Southern Baptist Convention to restore his church to its fold after his 2021 decision to ordain three women to the pastoral ministry. In a vote taken in New Orleans Tuesday, the approximately 12,000 messengers, as delegates to the convention are called, decided by a 9-1 margin to finalize the expulsion of one of the country’s largest Baptist congregations. The results were announced Wednesday.
Even more lopsided was the vote to formally expel Fern Creek Baptist Church, which Linda Barnes Popham has pastored for 33 years.
Even more lopsided was the vote to formally expel Fern Creek Baptist Church in Louisville, Kentucky, which Linda Barnes Popham has pastored for 33 years.
It’s significant that a woman was pastoring a Southern Baptist church for that long in Louisville — literally, the backyard of Al Mohler, the president of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary and an activist against women’s ordination — and the church was only formally expelled this week. Warren’s recent about-face in favor of ordaining women pastors seemed to have finally brought her to the Southern Baptists’ attention.
Her church, along with Warren’s, was targeted for disfellowshipping by the SBC Executive Committee, and she, like Warren, made an unsuccessful appeal to the convention to remain in fellowship with her congregation. In other words, it was only because a Southern Baptist man spoke up on behalf of women pastors that we finally heard the voice of a Southern Baptist woman who has already spent more than three decades serving as a pastor.
“I PUBLICLY APOLOGIZE to every good women in my life, church, and ministry that I failed to speak up for in my years of ignorance,” Warren wrote on Twitter Saturday. He said knowing he’d held back women “breaks my heart now, and I am truly repentant and sorry for my sin…. Christian women, will you please forgive me?”
While I am grateful for Warren’s pivot on women’s ordination, including his bold apology as he admitted his complicity in the subjugation of women, I can’t help but recall sociologist Allan Johnson’s description of patriarchy as “male dominated, male identified, and male centered.” In male-dominated spaces such as the Southern Baptist Convention, even conversations that are about women often are driven by men and center men.
Warren is obviously more famous than Popham. His book “The Purpose Driven Life” has been translated into 137 languages and sold more than 50 million copies, according to his publisher Simon & Schuster. In 2009, in a move that upset liberals and also upset conservative evangelicals, Warren delivered the invocation at President Barack Obama’s inauguration. Even so, it is striking how much more attention Warren has gotten than Popham.
In male-dominated spaces such as the Southern Baptist Convention, even conversations that are about women often are driven by men and center men.
In asking that the convention reconsider the expulsion of its church, Warren was effectively representing Saddleback’s women pastors, whereas Popham spoke for herself. “We’re not here to seek to convince any of you to allow your church to have women pastors,” she told the SBC messengers. “But we should still be able to partner together.”
The overwhelming majority of those in attendance rejected both appeals, but while Popham’s three-minute address won her 806 votes of support, Warren’s appeal won 1212.
Which means a man advocating for female pastors received more support than a woman pastor advocating for herself.
“The issue of a woman serving in the pastorate is an issue of fundamental biblical authority that does violate both the doctrine and the order of the Southern Baptist Convention,” Mohler told the convention Tuesday.
My biggest regret in 53 years of ministry is that I didn’t do my own personal exegesis sooner on the 4 passages used to restrict women. Shame on me.
— Rick Warren (@RickWarren) June 10, 2023
I wasted those 4 yrs of Greek in college & seminary. When I finally did my proper “due diligence”, laying aside 50 years of… pic.twitter.com/yz3HjNUFw6
Don’t dismiss this rejection of women in leadership as just a Southern Baptist problem. Even if it were, that would be no small thing. With a membership of around 13 million people, the Southern Baptist is the largest Protestant denomination in North America. But it would be naïve to believe that the hardening of Southern Baptist attitudes toward women’s leadership will stay confined to the Southern Baptist world. It’s already trickled outward.
Retired Baptist Pastor John Piper, who co-authored the influential book “Recovering Biblical Manhood and Womanhood” and launched the even more influential website Desiring God (for which Al Mohler writes guest posts), argues that women should not hold positions of “personal and directive” authority over men: neither in the church nor in the workforce. Not only should women not be pastors, according to this worldview, but they also should not have male secretaries, command men in military combat or even serve as police officers.
The collateral effects of such a large denomination telling its members that women shouldn’t hold positions of leadership are hard to quantify, but such a position does not benefit this country’s women and girls. Imagine, for example Southern Baptist men making personnel decisions based on Piper’s thoughts about women.









