A study showing how one of America's leading Protestant denominations
has been shaped by the philosophical and political presuppositions
of its secular environment.
"Farnsley offers us an engaging analysis of how the SBC moved dramatically
to the right in the 1980s. By exploring the interplay of authority
and power, he reveals how Fundamentalists subverted the Convention
and institutionalized their control of it. Farnsley's general approach
could be applied to other contemporary religious denominations and
private-sector institutions."—John F. Wilson, Princeton University
Unlike other recent studies of the Southern Baptists, Southern
Baptist Politics was written after the culmination of the "Baptist
battles" of the 1980s, when Fundamentalists had effectively taken
control of the denomination. It also considers the SBC not simply
as a denomination but as an organization with characteristics similar
to other voluntary associations in American society—an approach
that promises to be useful for the study of other religious groups
in America. Arthur Farnsley concludes that the SBC, as an American
denomination, had within itself the seeds of pragmatism and individualism
that characterize most American voluntary organizations.
Of primary interest to Farnsley are the crucial issues of authority
and power. Taking his cue from Paul Harrison's classic study, Authority
and Power in the Free Church Tradition, Farnsley considers how
authority has traditionally been exercised within the SBC, and how
Fundamentalists maneuvered within this existing authority structure
to seize power. According to Farnsley, disgruntled Fundamentalists
soon discovered that they could exploit the democratic elements
within the SBC polity to their advantage. So successful were they
in their efforts that by 1990 all significant leadership positions
within the denomination were filled by Fundamentalists, thus enabling
them to take, and hold, institutional power.
The lessons of Southern Baptist Politics extend beyond this
one denomination. By using the Southern Baptists as a case study,
Farnsley asks what the SBC controversy can tell us about religious
organizations in America, about dealing with cultural pluralism,
and about institutional means for creating change. |