MacArthur blasts Beth Moore, accuses SBC of rejecting biblical authority

  |  Source: Religion News Service

John MacArthur (center) speaks at a panel discussion at the “Truth Matters” conference at Grace Community Church in Sun Valley, Calif. (Video screengrab via RNS)

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SUN VALLEY, Calif. (RNS)—Conservative Reformed pastor John MacArthur weighed in on an ongoing debate in the Southern Baptist Convention over women preachers, claiming the denomination has lost faith in the authority of the Bible.

Speaking at a celebration of his 50th year in pulpit ministry, MacArthur asserted the SBC had taken a “headlong plunge” toward allowing women preachers at its annual meeting this summer. He pointed to it as a sign the denomination no longer believed in biblical authority.

“When you literally overturn the teaching of Scripture to empower people who want power, you have given up biblical authority,” MacArthur said.

During the “Truth Matters Conference,” held Oct. 16-18 at Grace Community Church in Sun Valley, California, where he is pastor, MacArthur and other panelists were asked to react to one- or two-word phrases. Asked to respond to the phrase “Beth Moore,” a well-known Southern Baptist Bible teacher, MacArthur replied, “Go home.”

Sounds of laughter and applause could be heard in response during a recording of the session, posted online.

MacArthur—a leading proponent of Reformed theology and of complementarianism, the idea that women and men have different roles to play in the church and in society—apparently was responding to a controversy this past summer when Moore noted on Twitter that she spoke at a megachurch on a Sunday morning.

Her tweet led to accusations that Moore was undermining Southern Baptist teaching, which bars women from holding the office of pastor in churches.

MacArthur went on to criticize Paula White, a prosperity gospel preacher known as a spiritual advisor to President Trump, saying that he found these women preachers troubling because, “I think the church is caving in to women preachers.”

The pastor went on to say that the #MeToo movement was a sign the culture was taking over the church and accused feminists of wanting power rather than equality. He also seemed to compare women preachers to salespeople who hawk jewelry on TV.


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When asked if the Southern Baptists were now moving toward “soft complementarianism,” MacArthur replied, “I don’t know about terms. I just know women are not allowed to preach.”

MacArthur also criticized the Southern Baptist Convention for passing a resolution that was supportive of critical race theory and intersectionality, seeing it as a sign that “liberalism” was taking over. He also dismissed calls for more ethnic diversity on Bible translation committees.

His comments provoked a spirited response on social media.

Stephanie Tait, a Christian author and speaker, said on Twitter that she was “heartbroken, angry, and honestly just exhausted.

“I’ll keep preaching, but this still hurts,” she added.

Micah Fries, a Southern Baptist megachurch pastor in Chattanooga, Tenn., objected in his Twitter response to MacArthur’s “derisive, divisive manner” and called his comments “devastatingly dismissive of the inherent dignity, value and self-worth of women.”

J.D. Greear, president of the SBC, responded good-naturedly on Twitter, saying Moore was “welcome in our home any time,” adding a hashtag referring to the Baptist Faith & Message, a statement of SBC beliefs.

Beth Moore has not posted a comment on her Twitter feed in response. Instead, she continued tweeting her thoughts on reading through the book of Job.


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