In the early 1970s, SBC employee William Powell developed a rather simple strategy to take control of the SBC: elect the SBC president for ten consecutive years. Under the SBC bylaws, the president has sole authority to appoint the entirety of the Committee on Committees (known during most of the controversy as the Committee on Boards); the appointments do not require approval of the messengers at an annual meeting. This committee, in turn, nominates the members of the Committee on Nominations to be approved by the Messengers at the next annual meeting (i.e. one year after the president is elected and he appoints the Committee on Committees), which in turn nominates appointees for vacant positions to be approved by the messengers at the subsequent annual meeting (i.e., two years from the initial Committee on Committees appointments, and one year after the Committee on Nominations makes its recommendations). The process involves numerous overlaps: at an annual meeting the messengers approve (or reject) the nominees for positions recommended by the Committee on Nominations (the process of which started two years prior), approve nominations for the upcoming Committee on Nominations recommended by the Committee on Committees (which took place the prior year), and further elect the president, who will appoint the new Committee on Committees. Therefore, if conservatives could gain the presidency, the president would nominate conservatives to the Committee on Committees, who would in turn nominate other conservatives to the Committee on Nominations, and then in turn fill the various vacancies with conservatives. If they could gain and hold the presidency for ten years, they would accomplish the goal of having all agency heads be conservatives. produced two important developments: • The concept of
Inerrancy. Southern Baptists applied a new word, "
inerrancy", to their understanding of Scripture. Since 1650 the adjective most used by Baptists to describe their view of the Bible had been "
infallible"; however, the term "inerrancy" had been implied in the 1833 New Hampshire Baptist Confession of Faith ("truth without any mixture of error") in wording that, by this time, had already been incorporated into the 1925 and 1963 editions of the Baptist Faith and Message. The word "inerrancy" was also used by the prominent Southern Baptist scholar A. T. Robertson in the late 19th century. Some reformed theologians in Europe had utilized the term "inerrancy" in the same way that North American theologians used "infallibility." Many conservative leaders championed the word "inerrancy" in this phase of the ongoing controversy—a phase that would later become known as the "inerrancy controversy." •
Orchestration from the sky boxes. A well-organized political campaign, using precinct style politics, wrested control of the SBC. Such tactics were not unprecedented; Jimmy Allen had openly campaigned for the office just two years earlier. Pressler and Patterson were accused of directing the affairs of the 1979 meeting from sky boxes high above
The Summit where the SBC was meeting. Pressler said such accusations were false. The election on the first ballot of the more conservative Rogers began the ten-year process. Ever since that meeting, with the exception of 2004 and 2005, the conservatives of the denomination have nominated their choice for president. Each has appointed more conservative individuals, who in turn appointed others, who nominated the trustees, who elected the agency heads and institutional presidents, including those of the seminaries. Since then, every SBC resolution on the topic has been in strong opposition to reproductive rights and has expanded into similar topics such as fetal tissue experimentation, RU-486, and taxpayer funding of abortions generally and
Planned Parenthood specifically.
1981: Cecil Sherman, a leader of the moderate faction of Southern Baptists, declared in a debate with Patterson that he did not believe in an inerrant Bible but in "...a ‘dynamical’ view of the Bible's inspiration and then pointed to what he saw as contradictions in the biblical text.
1984: The SBC voted in Kansas City to adopt a strongly worded resolution against women in the pastorate. The rationale cited was that "the
New Testament emphasizes the equal dignity of men and women (Gal. 3:28)" but that "The Scriptures teach that women are not in public worship to assume a role of authority over men lest confusion reign in the local church (1 Cor. 14:33-36)".
1987: William Randall Lolley, the president of
Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary in
Wake Forest, North Carolina, resigned after the trustees voted to hire only faculty members who follow the Baptist Faith and Message
. 1990: Al Shackleford and Dan Martin of the
Baptist Press, the official news service of the SBC, were fired by the SBC's executive committee. The executive committee gave no reason for their firing; moderates claimed that they were fired for perceived bias against conservatives in their news coverage.
1990: After the SBC had elected 12 straight conservative convention presidents, who then used their position to appoint conservative educators and administrators, a group of moderates broke away in 1990 to form the
Cooperative Baptist Fellowship (CBF).
1992: Keith Parks, under pressure from conservative trustees, retired as president of the Foreign Mission Board. In his 13 years as president, missionaries entered had 40 new countries with a total of 3,918 missionaries. Shortly afterward, he joined the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship as missions director.
1991: Lloyd Elder, president of the Sunday School Board, resigned under pressure and was replaced by former SBC president
James T. Draper, a staunch conservative. A total of 159 employees retired (voluntarily or involuntarily) in November 1991.
1993: Mohler was appointed president of Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in 1993 and "hailed as a hero of SBC fundamentalism."
1994: Russell Dilday, president of Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Fort Worth, was fired abruptly. The trustees explained Dilday failed to support the resurgence at the convention and that he held liberal views of the scripture. In a March 22 statement, the faculty claimed that Dilday was an "excellent administrator" who led Southwestern in a "highly effective and successful manner" and "with a spirit of Christlikeness." Dilday, the statement said, also kept the school doctrinally sound.
2004: The Southern Baptist Convention withdrew as a member of the
Baptist World Alliance. ==Liberal and moderate reactions==