Are Southern Baptists Being Targeted by Open-Border Libs In Sketchy Lifeway Study?

Earlier this week, Lifeway Research, in a study sponsored by World Relief, purported to show “Pastors support legal immigration, split on deportation levels,” according to an article in the SBC’s Baptist Press.

In a thread on X, attorney and author Jon Whitehead breaks down what’s really happening.


Our old friends at the Evangelical Immigration Table are still trying to buy the SBC’s voice.

EIT-member World Relief just hired Lifeway to conduct a biased survey for SBC consumption, claiming “Protestant pastors” overwhelmingly support open immigration policies.

Let’s look under the hood.

Start with who paid for it. World Relief — a member of the Evangelical Immigration Table, which has spent years lobbying evangelical institutions toward open-borders immigration policy — sponsored this survey and hired Lifeway to conduct it.

Lifeway’s sampling is credible, I guess, but that doesn’t make the sponsor’s methodology neutral! It’s incredibly biased toward WR’s priors. 

Start with the sample. Lifeway surveyed 667 “American Protestant pastors.”

The crosstabs — buried after the headlines — reveal that roughly 36% of the weighted sample is mainline pastors. United Methodists. Presbyterians (USA). ELCA Lutherans.

Mainline pastors support increasing legal immigration at 2x the rate of evangelical pastors. 3x as likely to call refugees a top-three global priority. 5x as likely to oppose foreign assistance cuts.

So Baptist Press is covering a survey that has very little to do with SBC or “evangelical” opinion. 

Here’s what the survey claims, versus what SBC pastors likely believe.

“36% of pastors want the American Church on the forefront of refugee response.”
→ For SBC pastors: approximately 25%.

“A majority of pastors say we should increase legal immigration.”
→ For SBC pastors: a minority.

“51% oppose PEPFAR cuts.”
→ For SBC pastors: They actually support the cuts, 48% to 41%.

Some of the headlines are opposite was SBC pastors would say. 

How do we know how SBC pastors would likely respond? Mostly arithmetic.

Lifeway published the evangelical vs. mainline breakdown for each question. I asked Claude to use those splits, reverse-engineer the sample composition, and reweight toward SBC pastoral demographics.

The raw data is in the survey World Relief paid for. They just didn’t want to show the lower evangelical support in the headlines. 

What do SBC pastors actually care about?

The survey suggests “immigration” is a top three issue for pastors. But that’s because mainline pastors, at 41%, dragged that number up.

Only 16% of evangelicals chose immigration as a top-three global concern, taking it well out of the top 3. Definitely not top three for SBC pastors.

We can correct the samples.

We can’t correct for the biased questions, which are engineered to produce agreeable-sounding headlines, even when asked to immigration hardliners. 

Technique one: motherhood statements.

“Legislation should respect the God-given dignity of every person.”

98% agree! Because no pastor is going to tell a pollster he opposes human dignity. What he thinks about deportation enforcement, asylum restrictions, or employer sanctions is never asked precisely.

World Relief gets to say “98% of pastors support our principles.” 

Technique two: advocacy language baked into the question stem.

Q20, on PEPFAR: “…the program known as PEPFAR…which is credited with having saved 25 million lives, primarily in Africa.”

Q19, on Afghan deportations: “…including some Afghans who had converted to Christianity or who supported the US military…”

Q13, on global displacement: “…the number of people forced to flee their homes has nearly doubled, from 60 million to more than 120 million…”

These are written to produce a specific, compassionate responses; they’re biased, leading questions. 

Technique three: never rank the real tradeoffs.

The survey never asks whether asylum eligibility should be restricted, whether employers should face penalties for hiring illegal workers, or whether sanctuary policies should be prohibited.

The one question that touched on immigration levels framed the choice as “helpful vs. harmful” before asking about quantity — priming agreement before the tradeoff arrived. None of the questions require a pastor to choose between compassion and real cost.

It’s designed to let pastors to give compassionate-sounding answers, without understanding their policy tradeoffs. 

The Evangelical Immigration Table has been trying to move SBC immigration policy for fifteen years. We’ve seen this strategy before! Claim a consensus exists, manufacture the data to support it, then use it to pressure the SBC resolutions committee.

Would it surprise you to hear these numbers were released during a meeting of the ERLC’s new “Immigration Task Force?”

EIT/WR is still hoping “Lifeway” statistics will be accepted at face value, and be used as the basis for an “SBC consensus” in June.

But it’s still the same far-left groups trying to buy the SBC’s voice.


As author and cultural commentator Megan Basham points out in response to Whitehead:

If you value journalism from an unapologetically Christian worldview, show your support by becoming a Protestia INSIDER today.
Become a patron at Patreon!

TOP STORIES

A note on comments/discussion: We do not censor/delete comments unless they contain profanity/obscenity/blasphemy. We do our best to review spam filters for non-spam comments, but we will inevitably miss some. Hyperlinks in comments generally result in deletion. If your comment isn’t immediately visible, it may be awaiting moderation – please don’t post it again. Comments close two weeks after an article/post is published.

One response to “Are Southern Baptists Being Targeted by Open-Border Libs In Sketchy Lifeway Study?”

  1. tekton

    The Real Person!

    Author tekton acts as a real person and verified as not a bot.
    Passed all tests against spam bots. Anti-Spam by CleanTalk.

    The Real Person!

    Author tekton acts as a real person and verified as not a bot.
    Passed all tests against spam bots. Anti-Spam by CleanTalk.
    says:

    As far as i’m concerned, 100% support fraud, theft, swindling, coercion, and other severe violations and deprivations of rights that have been imposed on my mother and myself, because 0% have spoken up or done anything about it.

    When what they say is not the same as what they do, what in the sam hill good is a poll?

    100% will stand at the pulpit and preach that fraud is wrong. Yet 0% will practice what they preach, because they are lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of God, having a form of godliness but denying the power thereof. It’s uncomfortable. And they are faithless cowards. They are exactly as the fallen away church is described in scripture – 2 Tim. 3:1-5, Rev. 21:8, and every other applicable passage. They are every bit as bad as the mainline denominations flying the flag of sin.

    A slight swing at halfway, from small minority to small majority, in some cases just 3% difference, of those who say they give a hoot about what’s right and wrong, is not exactly anything to be proud of. The SBC is circling the drain just like all the others. It’s just a matter of time.

    Megan is correct that there is deceit. But there’s another level of deceit in the reaction, which is the implication that there is a major significant difference between the SBC and those mainline denominations, when the truth is that there is not.

    Christians should not give a hoot about consensus and commandments of men in the first place. Which is another level of deception, and destructive diversion of attention. We don’t evaluate what’s right and wrong based on consensus and commandments of men. We obey what almighty God says is right and wrong. He overrules every consensus of mankind. Any who are swayed by such polls are not truly born again Christians in the first place. Including some who might’ve been speaking from the pulpit for decades.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Ads Blocker Image Powered by Code Help Pro

Ad Blocker Detected

We have detected that you are using extensions to block ads. Please support us by disabling your ad blocker, or subscribe on Patreon to read ad-free!