The work of Southern Baptist state conventions can be vital in the adoption of pro-life laws after the reversal of Roe v. Wade, the acting head of the Southern Baptist Convention’s (SBC) ethics entity said July 13 in a Baptist Press (BP) Live webcast.
The online event, hosted by BP, focused on decisions regarding abortion and religious freedom issued by the U.S. Supreme Court in its recently completed term. Much of the conversation addressed Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, a June 24 opinion that upheld a Mississippi ban on abortion after 15 weeks’ gestation. More significantly, the decision overruled the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision that legalized abortion nationwide and the 1992 Planned Parenthood v. Casey opinion that affirmed it.
The high court’s watershed judgment returned the regulation of abortion to the states, where it had rested before Roe.
“I think in this new post-Roe moment … we find ourselves in our state conventions play[ing] a pivotal role in making sure that policies to protect preborn lives are advanced,” said Brent Leatherwood, acting president of the Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission (ERLC).
“[O]ne of the best conduits for action” by Southern Baptists is through their state conventions, said Leatherwood, who encouraged communication by pastors with their Baptist state leaders.
The ERLC wants to partner with Baptist state conventions to make certain “they have the resources and the equipping that they need to be effective advocates in front of state legislators,” Leatherwood told moderator Jonathan Howe, the SBC Executive Committee’s vice president for communications.
Nearly half of the 50 states already have laws prohibiting abortion either throughout pregnancy or at some stage of pregnancy, but some state legislatures will continue to debate policies.
“[F]irst and foremost, [Southern Baptists] need to keep praying, and we need to keep being a voice for the sanctity of life in every state, because as more states take these measures and put in place policies to protect life, other states will see and feel that pressure to do the same and recognize the inherent dignity of preborn lives,” Leatherwood said.
The Dobbs decision “is actually setting right things in terms of the question of abortion,” but the ERLC is “not content with where we are,” he told viewers. “We want to continue pressing the case for life in each of the individual states, as well as at the federal level, because we do believe that there is actually an inherent right to life, and it’s contained” in the U.S. Constitution.
“We obviously celebrate this milestone, but our work is far from over,” Leatherwood said. “The Dobbs decision is essentially opening a new chapter in the pro-life movement, and we’re committed to doing that alongside our Southern Baptist churches.”
The ERLC’s pro-life work will focus increasingly on the state level, but the entity will also maintain its advocacy with the federal government in Washington, D.C., he said.
In addition to seeking pro-life protections in state laws, Southern Baptists and their churches can continue to minister to women who are abortion-minded, Leatherwood told Howe. Churches are partnering with the Psalm 139 Project, the ERLC’s ministry to place ultrasound machines in pregnancy resource centers (PRCs), and providing for the needs of pregnant women, he said. Some churches are now adopting or starting PRCs, and some small groups are basically adopting pregnant women to meet their physical, spiritual and community needs, he added.
“Our churches have already been doing a great amount of work,” Leatherwood said. “Now is the time to double down on those efforts.”
Leatherwood affirmed the role of Southern Baptist pastors in advancing pro-life ministry.
“Our pastors, honestly, have set the groundwork for this on a very foundational level by communicating the reality of the ‘imago dei’ [the biblical teaching that God has created every human being in His image],” he said. “We wouldn’t be here without our pastors proudly proclaiming that truth.”
The pro-life cause reached this moment with the overturning of Roe through a commitment to pro-life principle, persistence, patience and prayer, Leatherwood told Howe.
“We would not have gotten to this point without the prayers of thousands of pro-life Christians and pro-life activists who were committed to continually advocating for the sanctity of the unborn life for those 50 years,” he said.
Howe mentioned the nomination by President Donald J. Trump of three justices—Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett—as “a major factor” in Roe’s reversal. All three were in the 5-4 majority in the Dobbs decision.
“Absolutely. We need to acknowledge that reality,” Leatherwood said of Trump’s nominations. He also pointed to the role of Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnnell, “who had made a pointed case that these openings on the U.S. Supreme Court [represent a] once-in-a-generation opportunity to flip the court, to be a more conservative court, and those three justices played a pivotal role in the overturning of Roe.”
Howe asked Leatherwood about three decisions during the term that most religious liberty advocates considered victories:
- Kennedy v. Bremerton (Wash.) School District, a 6-3 opinion in which the high court ruled the post-game, midfield prayer of a high school football coach did not violate the First Amendment’s ban on government establishment of religion.
- Carson v. Makin, another 6-3 ruling in which the justices decided the state of Maine offended the First Amendment’s guarantee of the free exercise of religion by prohibiting faith-based schools from participation in a tuition-assistance program.
- Ramirez v. Collier, an 8-1 ruling in which the court found the state of Texas should grant a condemned inmate’s request to have his Southern Baptist pastor lay hands on and pray aloud for him when he receives a lethal injection.
Leatherwood commended each of the decisions, saying of the Kennedy opinion, “It reaffirms the fact that you can be a teacher or a student and be a Christian in the public square, and that’s a good thing. It’s a very good decision, one that I think Southern Baptists should be very happy with.”
The ERLC signed onto friend-of-the-court briefs in support of the parties that prevailed in all the church-state cases, as well as Dobbs. In the brief in the Dobbs case, the Southern Baptist entity urged the justices not only to uphold the Mississippi law but to reverse Roe.Resources for the Dobbs decision, including a prayer guide, may be accessed at erlc.com/dobbs, Leatherwood said. Information on the Supreme Court’s term is available at erlc.com/scotus.
(EDITOR’S NOTE – Tom Strode is Washington bureau chief for Baptist Press.)