Categories
Evangelical Stuff Featured News

Russell Moore and Beth Moore Holding Panel to Discuss why Russell is Basically an Abused Wife

“An SBC that doesn’t have a place for Beth Moore doesn’t have a place for a lot of us” Russell Moore. 2019

The gruesome twosome Russell and Beth Moore (no relation, unless it’s to their father the devil) have announced that they are hosting a panel and Q &A to celebrate the relaunch of his podcast “Signposts with Russell Moore.”

The inaugural episode will feature a live conversation between the former ERLC president Russell Moore and former complementarian Beth Moore and “the two will talk about what they’ve learned in their own stories and how Christians can navigate these crazy times in the church and the world without yielding to cynicism or despair.”

Sounds scintillating.

Along with the announcement of the upcoming show, Moore released an article in Christianity Today where he discusses the Ravi Zacharias/ Lori Anne Thompson/ RZIM situation and why they couldn’t see what was in front of them. (This is ironic given that it was Christianity Today that enabled Ravi for years, and only broke the story a month after we did) Moore laments that despite being one of the most powerful and public figures in the Southern Baptist Convention, in reality, he was in an abusive environment and couldn’t see any way out, being subjected to the secret blows of his critics while telling other denominational leaders ‘I fell down the stairs” and “I walked into a door. Clumsy me.”

A spouse who is cheated on sometimes concludes that he or she wasn’t attractive enough, or is in some other way to blame for what happened. This often happens in church situations, where people sometimes find it difficult to see—sometimes until years later—that what they assumed was just “the messiness of dealing with people” turns out to have been a toxic and harmful environmentThat’s especially true when institutions—even churches—sometimes further the abuse of victims (or those who seek to help them) by gaslighting them, as though their reaction to the abuse—not the abuse itself—is the problem.

When I was in a toxic and spiritually abusive environment, I found myself coming out of years of second-guessing and finding ways to blame myself for what I was experiencing. It happened while reading a children’s book to my son. I read the final statement at the end of Mo Willems’s Goldilocks and the Three Dinosaurs: “If you find yourself in the wrong story, leave.” I put away the book and realized, “I’m in the wrong story.”

Let’s get something straight. Moore wasn’t the abusee, but the abuser. You can read more of that here and here and here and here.

Moore’s shenanigans had the effect of painting the faces of Southern Baptists black and blue with his progressive policies, all the while claiming to be the one wronged. Rather than being the victim, he was the victimizer protesting his innocence even as the skin was hanging off his knuckles and the bloodstains were freshly dripping down on the carpet.

After Moore’s ‘leaked’ bombshell letter went public, it functioned as a conveniently timed kick in the gonads of the Southern Baptist Convention President hopeful Pastor Mike Stone, accusing him of turning a blind eye to sex abuse during his time as Executive Committee chair. This was done with the goal of enabling final boss Albert Mohler to wrest the denomination away from conservatives and into his progressive possession. Yet Stone saw through this, and pointed it out with piercing clarity the problem with Moore telling the world he knew about the abuse happening, but unable to do anything about it:

Think about it for just a moment; here’s a man who’s the highest positioned ethicist in the Southern Baptist Convention – at least he was until just a few days ago. And if you take his letter at face value, then he has known about cover-up, intimidation, bullying, stonewalling, barriers, pressure, all of these sorts of things against victims of sex abuse.

He’s known about lies and backroom deals and corruption and he’s known about it not for days or weeks or months. He’s literally known about it supposedly for years while he has not breathed a word, meanwhile publishing a book called The Courage to Stan

Moore and Moore are going to get together and talk about why they both left the SBC, about how abusive, toxic, and racists it has become, oblivious to their role in its very creation and the way they molested and abused the scriptures for their own gain and the destruction and diminishing of a denomination.

Here comes the fist.

Try not to flinch.

Categories
abortion Featured News SBC

ERLC In Denial Over SBC21 Abortion Abolition Resolution- Says it’s Not ‘Key’ or ‘Priority’

In one of the most damning and revealing examples of the Ethics & Religious Liberty Committee (ERLC) operating on bad faith and showing themselves to be petty, arrogant, and out of touch with Southern Baptists, they posted a postmortem on their webpage titled Key resolutions from the 2021 SBC Annual Meeting.

In their article, they explain that there were nine resolutions that were passed last week during the convention, of which just seven were “key” and “were related to ERLC concerns, issues, and legislative priorities.” They include:

  • Baptist Unity and Maintaining Our Public Witness 
  • On the Sufficiency of Scripture for Race and Racial Reconciliation
  • On the Equality Act 
  • On Taxpayer Complicity in Abortion and the Hyde Amendment
  • On Abuse and Pastoral Qualifications
  • On the Uyghur Genocide
  • On the Coronavirus Pandemic

Which one did they leave out?

The resolution on Abolishing Abortion. [!!! -Ed.]

According to the ERLC, the resolution to continue supporting federal defunding of earmarked funds for abortion is akey resolution that they care about and is an issue of concern for them, but the Abolition of Abortion is not, as several members of the ERLC have already spoken out against it, and consequentially they won’t even mention it on their website.

This has led the Southern Baptist for Abolishing Abortion, the coalition of pastors who introduced the resolution and brought it forward, to call out the ERLC for their obstinacy and recalcitrance.

The ERLC, which is permeated with the progressiveness and obstreperousness of Russell Moore and is funded by the SBC to the tune of $4.3 million cooperative program dollars each year, finds the aforementioned resolution so offensive and distasteful that they have gone rogue. They’ve signalled they have no intention of doing anything with it other than to publicly and privately oppose it, despite their mission and purpose to be the lobbying arm of the SBC, designed to further and represent their interests.

With the ERLC so openly and flagrantly thumbing their nose at Southern Baptists, they have provided even more fodder for their complete and immediate defunding.



Categories
Church SBC

SBC Hires Independent Firm to Investigate Russell Moore Sex Abuse Cover-up Allegations

The Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) Executive Committee has hired Guidepost Solutions to investigate claims made by outgoing Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission (ERLC) President Russell Moore that they mishandled and were involved in a cover-up of sexual abuse cases within monitoring churches.

The startling claims were leaked by the outgoing Moore in a series of two letters, one of which was sent to the current SBC President J. D. Greear where he accused the Committee of engaging in “wickedness,” while painting himself as a martyr.

Now, as I said to my trustee officers last year, through all of this I have tried to smile and pretend that everything is alright with me personally and to refrain from revealing the horrific actions you and I have experienced behind the scenes.

and that

These (Executive Committee leaders) are doctrinally orthodox and conservative leaders. They are talking about the sort of thing I am discussing here—and they don’t even know a fraction of a fraction of it.

This naturally begs the question: how is it that Moore knew all about the sex abuse cover-up, and instead of shouting it from the rooftops years ago when it happened, chose to instead, in his own words, “smile and pretend that everything is alright” and “refrain from revealing the horrific actions?”

What do you call someone like Moore, author of The Courage to Stand, who allegedly knew where all the bodies were buried, who put them there, and who threw the gun in the river, and did and said nothing about it?

If you thought to yourself, “A coward,” you’re not wrong, but also a lot kinder than us.

Guidepost is said to be a “global leader in monitoring, compliance, sensitive investigations, and risk management solutions and has deep experience providing advice and counsel to faith communities in this area.”

They were recently hired by the entity formerly known as The Ravi Zacharias International Ministry to ferret out institutional breakdown in order to determine how their pervert namesake used his ministry to fund his own private freak-a-thon for 20 years, as well as by Summit Church to determine whether or not their new hire Bryan Lorrits mishandled a sexual abuse case.

Guidepost is being hired to review the following:

These recent allegations against the SBC Executive Committee of
mishandling sexual abuse cases and mistreating sexual abuse victims; the allegations of a pattern of intimidation; and

Review and enhance training provided to SBC Executive Committee staff and its board of trustees related to these matters, as well as its communications to cooperating churches and congregants in cooperating churches.

There is no timeline for when the report will be issued, other than it will be after what will prove to be one of the most pivotal SBC conventions since its inception.

Categories
Church SBC Scandal

Breaking! Ronnie Floyd Just Called Russell Moore a Liar

(Capstone Report) HUGE: Ronnie Floyd Contradicts Russell Moore’s Slander of Mike Stone.

Russell Moore is a lifelong Democrat. Russell Moore is a liar. Of course, that’s redundant. However, it is important to highlight this as none other than Ronnnie Floyd, CEO of the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) Executive Committee, just called Russell Moore a liar.

In a statement released by Baptist Press, Dr. Floyd said Russell Moore lied in a letter to J.D. Greear. Of course, Floyd said it nicer than that—however that is what he means by saying:

“I have received a copy of the letter from former ERLC president Russell Moore to our current SBC president J.D. Greear. Some of the matters referenced occurred prior to my coming here in this role. For those matters of which I was present, I do not have the same recollection of these occurrences as stated. I do take seriously allegations in this letter which may raise concern for Southern Baptists. I have been very committed to always operate with the highest integrity and skillful hands. I am right now considering ways in which we can develop the best path forward for the sake of Southern Baptists and our God-called commitment to our unified Great Commission vision.”

As we pointed out earlier today…

To continue reading, click here.


Editor’s Note. This article was written and published at the Capstone Report

Categories
News

SBC Presidential Hopeful Destroys Russell Moore in Devastating Video

With Dr. Russell Moore’s ‘leaked’ bombshell letter being released and conveniently timed to be of a kick in the gonads of the Southern Baptist Convention President hopeful Pastor Mike Stone, accusing him of turning a blind eye to sex abuse during his time as Executive Committee chair, this scorched earth tactic has paved the way for CRT-enabling final boss Albert Mohler to wrest the denomination away from conservatives and into his progressive possession.

Stone, backed by a sea of raging supporters who are now seeing and saying out loud what we have been for nearly a decade (and getting labeled divisive over it), took to his social media to lay into the departed Russell Moore in an open rebuke of his character and intentions, declaring in a damning indictment:

The letter itself is incredible. That is, it is without credibility.

Think about it for just a moment; here’s a man who’s the highest positioned ethicist in the Southern Baptist Convention – at least he was until just a few days ago. And if you take his letter at face value, then he has known about cover-up, intimidation, bullying, stonewalling, barriers, pressure, all of these sorts of things against victims of sex abuse.

He’s known about lies and backroom deals and corruption and he’s known about it not for days or weeks or months. He’s literally known about it supposedly for years while he has not breathed a word, meanwhile republishing a book called The Courage to Stand.

Fact check: true. Stone continues:

Nobody who knows me believes that I would ever be a part of trying to cover up sexual abuse or silence its victims. That again is an outrageous lie. And again I don’t use that lightly toward anyone, but nobody who knows me would believe those accusations.

And when I talk about people who know me, let me be clear; that does not include Russ Moore. He has never, though claiming the high moral ground in this issue, he has never, not one time in a private phone call email text message visit letter, he has never not one single time contacted me privately and personally to confront me about a sin that he thought that I was committing, to caution me about an error that he thought that I was making or to warn me about a misstep that he thought I was about to lead the southern baptist convention executive committee into. No, rather he chooses these guerrilla tactics, to use some of his own terminology.

Part of the problem we have here, is we have a generation of leaders who are raised in a participation trophy era that think that if you disagree with them about anything that you’re attacking them, and that they’re enduring some kind of trauma or psychological terror.

Once again, this is not the future of the Southern Baptist Convention. And while I’m on this point, the outlandish nature of the ungodly, unbiblical nature of Russell’s slander against me on this point, is only rivaled by the outrageous nature of pastors over on SBC Twitter. Pastors who hear one side of the story and immediately call for me to be removed from any office and banned permanently from any service in the Southern Baptist Convention…

Categories
Evangelical Stuff SBC

Russell Moore and Joe Biden: Two Lifelong, Grandstanding Democrats

Joe Biden is new to the game of playing up White Nationalism as an urgent national menace. Russell Moore is an old pro.

(The New Christian Intellectual) On June 1, 2021, Joe Biden claimed that terrorism from white supremacy “is the most lethal threat to the homeland today.” In this weird rhetoric game, Russell Moore has Biden beat by several years.

Nearly two years ago, Moore published an article at the Christian Post entitled White Nationalist Terrorism and the Gospel. It was an extreme example of Moore’s asymmetry in the treatment of social ills.

Even at that time, Russell Moore may have already been making plans to exit the relatively conservative Southern Baptist Convention. Some background: Two weeks ago, Moore announced that he is departing the SBC. He will take a leadership position at the theologically liberal Christianity Today, while also accepting the title of “minister in residence” in a church that does not affirm the core Baptist doctrine of believer’s baptism.

Moore now calls Immanuel Nashville, the church of Ray Ortlund, his home. Ray Ortlund is one of the leading “nice guys” in the movement, advocating a Third Way approach to Christianity and politics—an approach that treats Democrats as brothers in the faith. As a lifelong Democrat and former Democrat campaign staffer, Russell Moore will no doubt find Ray Ortlund’s Immanuel Nashville to be an ideal base of operations from which to expand his career as a “Public Theologian” beyond the theological horizons allowed by the long-suffering Southern Baptists.

When Russell Moore published his 2019 article denouncing White Nationalist terrorism, he seemed to have intended to classify White Nationalist terrorism as an enormous and growing threat to peace  within both the country and the church. Moore hamfistedly (but correctly) drew his readers’ attention to the fact that God’s plan includes people of all nations. Moore then incorrectly suggested that the main reason the people of Nazareth rejected Jesus was due to this theme of inclusivity, brought into the announcement of his ministry in the passage every social justice advocate loves to misread, Luke 4.

Actually, the people of Nazareth had already taken offense before Jesus spoke of foreigners. They took offense at Jesus’ claim about his own identity. Then he further provoked their anger by comparing their lack of faith to the better faith of two foreigners. It is not possible to connect such passages with Russell Moore’s eisegetical remark that, “No doubt many accused him of ‘distracting’ them from the Word of God by talking about ‘justice’ and such things.”

Russell Moore could have claimed just as easily that Jesus’ ministry was announced by John the Baptist with the message that tax collectors should not collect any more than they were required to, and that soldiers should not extort money and not accuse people falsely, and that they should be content with their pay. These points are found a chapter earlier in the same book, but these are not themes a Democrat would be eager for people to know about.

What priorities has Russell Moore chosen? By Russell Moore’s public words these past several years, it seems he thinks little should be said about the concerning trend among SBC churches to vote for the party of abortion, theft, and anti-Christian social engineering, or consider this topic as adiaphora, a disputable matter. Little should be said about the immorality of those burning down American cities and assaulting American police officers. From such a man, you can expect only the minimum sort of response, along the lines of “we do not support that.”

What social ills does Russell Moore think would be worthy of constant national attention? White supremacy, of course. In the face of Donald Trump being nominated as the Republican presidential candidate, Moore wailed of the “darkness of pent-up nativism and bigotry all over the country.” The problem is everywhere! And the problem is white supremacy!

This week, the SBC got to read all about this lurking menace, as told by Russell Moore. Without naming particular men, Russell Moore has insinuated that several high level Southern Baptist conservatives are racial bigots, or worse.

“My family and I have faced constant threats from white nationalists and white supremacists, including within our convention,” Moore was quoted by Religion News Service. “Some of them have been involved in neo-Confederate activities for years. Some are involved with groups funded by white nationalist nativist organizations. Some have just expressed raw racist sentiment behind closed doors.”

At this time it is unclear whether Russell Moore intends to name anyone and properly support his claims.

It can hardly be doubted that someone, somewhere in the Southern Baptist Convention is a racist. But to find an open racist, or a white supremacist—or even a racially insensitive bigot—within the institutional hierarchy would be troubling. If the cause for concern were serious, it would merit personal confrontation and perhaps even public exposure—but not this manner of sly nonsense with no names named.

In case anyone has not grasped the trick used by Russell Moore and the Religion News Service (which is living up to its normal levels of journalistic integrity), the pattern is to vaguely connect some racially insensitive remarks from one SBC man to a purported pattern of hate mail from white supremacists, to white supremacy within the SBC membership, to one particular man, Mike Stone, who happens to be a conservative running for the SBC Presidency right now.

All told, Russell Moore’s sequence of claims may amount to:

“People did not like it when I said the SBC needs to apply affirmative action in selecting its president, and I have heard some racially insensitive comments, and I also get a lot of hate mail from racist strangers, and some of them are in our convention, but I will not name them, and I would like to vaguely tie all of my psychological trauma to my rival who criticized me.”

Unlike Russell Moore, faithful Christians address sin man to man. They name names. Russell Moore acted as a talebearer, repeating vague anecdotes about the sins purported to be prevalent among some undefined group of men who happened to be in a rival camp. And he did so in a way sure to cost him nothing and sure to gain him some sense of credibility and justification with his own team, to which his words were directed.

But Russell Moore does have one thing right. It is 100% valid to be concerned about the growing sense of racial animosity in the United States and in the church. Racial animosity and other tribalistic irrationalities always tend to grow in times when the nation’s leading voices find it profitable to play up stories of racial animosity as a means of gaining power. Russell Moore knows this all too well (see this and this).

In 2019, it took several isolated incidents of hate and murder by lawless men to convince Russell Moore that White Nationalist terrorism is a growing threat to the church and to the gospel. And what of the 2014 riots in Ferguson, Missouri? Did Moore see these events as similarly troubling? What about the 2016 ambushes and murders of policemen in Dallas Texas? Were they a threat to the gospel? In Russell Moore’s world, perhaps there is little to gain from writing articles warning about the spiritual danger of excusing or praising such wicked deeds, because they did not highlight the right narrative.

When Russell Moore wrote White Nationalist Terrorism and the Gospel in 2019, he may not have known that the tactics he had been mastering would soon be used by another Democrat thought-leader.

In 2021, after a mob of lawless election protesters were inexplicably allowed to parade through the “sacred” U.S. Capitol Building, Joe Biden proclaimed that “white supremacists” are the “most lethal terrorist threat” to the United States.

One mediocre Democrat has risen to supremacy in American politics—the other in the American church. Both are competent only in the art of grandstanding and fibs. Of the two, Joe Biden seems to be the novice.

Addendum:

Let it be known that FTNCI forcefully denounces and repudiates white nationalism, white supremacy, and racism. We were saying this two years ago, and we were saying it two weeks ago. As our occasional food fights on social media demonstrate, at FTNCI, we consider it crucial to expose the errors found among the internet’s occasional clusters of backward white nationalists posing as reasonable Christians.

We are willing to pick fights with those who purport to be our allies in the culture war. Why? Because we want to actually succeed in our goal of expelling all wokesters and Democrats from the church. And because the Russell Moores of the world have often put roadblocks in our path by casting the non-woke as bigots.

If an ideological movement aims to stop Russell Moore, an obvious first step is to make sure his lies about us are actually lies. This means we are not only willing, but also eager—for reasons both moral and strategic—to loudly throw racists out of the highest windows of any movements we may join.


Editor’s Note. This article was written by Cody Libolt and originally published at The New Christian Intellectual.

Categories
Church Evangelical Stuff SBC

Russell Moore Accuses SBC Conservatives of Supporting Child Molesters, Rape, and White Supremacy

It looks like JD Hall’s prediction a couple of weeks ago that Russell Moore would throw the SBC under the bus within 90 days was about a year too late.

In a letter leaked by an Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission trustee, Russell Moore blasted conservatives within the Southern Baptist Executive Committee for their investigation into the damage the liberal ERLC has done to the SBC – specifically church giving to the Cooperative Program. Moore’s letter was written in February 2020 as pressure was mounting from Southern Baptist pews and the online discernment community to hold him accountable for the leftist positions publicly advocated for by the ERLC, including support for Critical Race Theory, liberal politicians and political causes, egalitarianism in ministry, and a lack of support for the God-given duty of churches to obediently gather for worship.

Moore – a lifelong Democrat, never-Trumper, and notorious race grifter – accuses the SBC Executive Committee of forcing him to live in “psychological terror” during his tenure as president of the ERLC. Claiming opposition to his tenure was the fault of a “tiny minority” and Executive Committee chairman Mike Stone (although Stone, who is currently in the running for SBC president, is not actually named), Moore wrote that opposition to him was not because he was anti-Trump, but because the Executive Committee was complicit in covering up sexual abuses in churches and Moore was too insistent on exposing these abuses.

Additionally, Moore claims SBC opposition to him was due to his commitment to so-called racial reconciliation and writes that “my family and I have faced constant threats from white nationalists and white supremacists, including within our convention. Some of them have been involved in neo-Confederate activities going back for years. Some are involved with groups funded by white nationalist nativist organizations. Some of them have just expressed raw racist sentiment, behind closed doors. They want to deflect the issue to arcane discussions that people do not understand, such as ‘critical race theory.'” He fails to provide any examples of who these white supremacists in the SBC are but blames those in the convention who think appointments should be based on credentials and merit for opposing his insistence in 2011 that the SBC choose a president based on skin color.

Moore’s letter is full of nameless accusations, manipulative emoting (such as a poetry recital and personal storytelling), and suspiciously has not come to light until well over a year after it was written and he has left the SBC for more liberal pastures.

The opposition to Russell Moore and the ERLC is theological in nature and has nothing to do with his stated support for sexual abuse victims. Moore has shown no ability to correctly apply the Word of God to the ethical and cultural issues of the day and instead has come down on the opposite side of faithful Christian churches, including on the issue of race. He has also done grave damage to the SBC by lying in an amicus brief to the United States Supreme Court, where he claimed that churches and state conventions were SBC entities, which would give abusive SBC organizations legal protection against disputes from autonomous churches.

In the Southern Baptist Convention’s 2021 Book of Reports, Moore brags that the ERLC defended religious freedom during the COVID-19 pandemic:

The ERLC has consistently and repeatedly advocated that the state treat churches the same as similar activities, businesses, and spaces consistent with First Amendment protections, while recognizing that God has given the state the authority to manage activities, businesses, and spaces during a national health crisis.

2021 Southern Baptist Book of Reports, page 191

You read that right. Moore bragged in the report about letting churches be treated like businesses, and about his recognition that businesses can be “managed” by the government. So much for supporting religious liberty.

Now in addition to his appointment as a “public theologian” at Christianity Today, Moore has been welcomed with open arms to Ray Ortlund’s church Immanuel Nashville as a so-called “minister in residence,” a church that practices the very un-Baptist tradition of sprinkling babies:

So much for being a “faithful son of the Southern Baptist Convention.”

Russell Moore was and is an enemy of the visible church and particularly confessional Baptists. He is a career faith-grifter and the SBC Executive Committee was right to pressure him to the point where he took his wolfish unfaithfulness elsewhere.

Categories
Breaking Featured SBC

Breaking: Russell Moore Leaves the SBC, Becomes ‘Minister in Residence’ at Non-SBC Church

Former ERLC President Russell Moore has joined Pastors Ray Ortlund and Barnabas Piper at the non-denominational Immanuel Church in Nashville, TN, joining their leadership team with the idea that the church will act as a staging ground for his new public theology project at Christianity Today.

With this move, he has effectively signaled that he has left the Southern Baptist Convention not only professionally, but personally as well. Though he still has a few more weeks left in his tenure at the ERLC, with a few more commitments to close out, he is making a beeline for the denominational door. Regardless of whether a formal statement is immediately forthcoming, for all intents and purposes, the man is gone.

https://twitter.com/rayortlund/status/1399874586167156736

Calling him a man of “tremendous integrity” and a “man of the bible” who “knows how to preach the gospel in the public square better than almost anyone today,” Immanuel Pastor TJ Tims shared that Moore’s “heart resonates deeply” with the ministry at Immanuel Nashville, and as a result, they have found a place for him as “Minister in Residence.”

https://twitter.com/rayortlund/status/841267529184100352

Moore will occasionally preach and teach at the church that is closely associated with The Gospel Coalition, but their primary goal is to serve as a “home base” for his new progressive and spiritually garish endeavors.

In the post With Russell Moore Gone, I Weep in Joy, published a mere two weeks ago, one of JD Hall’s predictions was that:

“Within 90 days (or so) you will see or read Moore in a podcast or article (my guess would be CT or RNS) explain that he left the SBC because they grew too narrow for his view of wide-tent Christianity (of course, the opposite is true). He will point to Beth Moore as one of his reasons for leaving, holding true to his word that “a denomination that doesn’t have room for Beth Moore doesn’t have room for a lot of us.”

Looks like this treacherous man is right on schedule.

Categories
Featured

We’re Throwing a ‘Kill the Fatted Calf’ BBQ to Celebrate Russell Moore Leaving the ERLC, and We Want YOU There

And bring hither the fatted calf, and kill it; and let us eat, and be merry. Luke 15:23

Here at Protestia/ Pulpit & Pen, we’ve been working for more than a decade to get Russell Moore to leave the Southern Baptist Convention. Now that this day is upon us, we are going to celebrate and commemorate Moore’s departure from the SBC this coming Tuesday, May 25, 2021 with our Kill the Fatted Calf celebration, and we’re inviting all Patrons to attend.

All patrons may join the event, at any donation level. The event will include a teaching on the imprecatory Psalms, and we will invoke them against the Social Justice leaders and pray together that God shut their mouths.

Every attendee will be entered for door prizes that include:

* A Bible commentary
* “Fault Lines” by Voddie Baucham
* A Heritage .22 Rough Rider revolver

JD will be broadcasting from his kitchen or patio (weather permitting) at 06:30 PM Mountain Time (US and Canada) and we want everyone to FEAST.
Buy yourself some beef, some venison, or even some poultry, and grill it up in honor of this glorious day.

A new BBQ Grill will be given away to the person with the most impressive piece of grilled animal flesh. The winner will be decided by a vote of attendees.

We’ll be joined by our fellow discernment bloggers who helped make Moore’s departure a reality. Let’s celebrate together! 

If you are not a Patron yet, now is a great time to join. Sign up HERE, and support our ministry and the work the Lord is doing.

See you all there!


Editor’s Note. To stave off any anticipated criticism, there is a way to reconcile Proverbs 11:10, Revelation 18, Proverbs 24:17, Exodus 15, etc.

For this reason, we rejoice!

Categories
Evangelical Stuff Featured Op-Ed

Op-Ed: With Russell Moore Gone, I Weep in Joy (Must Read)

I weep in joy.

For ten years – day in and day out – I have chronicled one particular plague upon my (now previous) denomination who was an essential force driving evangelicalism left. It has been an unwavering exercise in stubbornness to do whatever possible to rid the Christian church of one cancerous sore. His name is Russell Moore.

Since 2011, we have published a total of 597 articles about Russell Moore’s hard-left progressivism, his undermining of Southern Baptist faith, his attack on Christians, his support of the religious liberty of Muslims but not believers, and his role as one who “sneaks into the church privily, to spy out its liberty and take it captive.”

These articles represent thousands of hours, years of toil, and constant attention to his public words. No one in mainstream Christian media – especially and including the Baptist Press – could be bothered to report the truth on this influential figure.

You must understand that when we set about to expose this man and his strategies, we were excommunicated by larger evangelicalism. We were blacklisted and boycotted and banned and blockaded. Back in circa 2011 to 2016, conservatives and Calvinists heralded him as a *conservative* leader. He had them fooled.

We chronicled his support for animal rights. We chronicled his support for illegal immigration. We chronicled his communitarianism and socialist beliefs. We exposed his former career as a Democrat staffer. We exposed his *stated* desire for his wife to “be more like Hillary Clinton.” We exposed his partnership with George Soros. We chronicled his rejection of Christian liberty. We chronicled his support for the LGBTQ movement. We chronicled his sojourn into Social Religion and Social Justice every single day, 365 days a year, for a decade.

People did not believe us, until they did. That started in about 2016. Since then, the tide turned. Public pressure mounted. Hundreds, if not thousands, of churches have left the SBC or stopped paying their salaries due to our coverage (praise God). Our chronicles were the ammunition used for tens of thousands of salvos launched against him by men both small and great.

When we began, conservative blogger, Frank Turk, told me that reporting negatively about him would “ruin me” because – and I quote – “he is solid.” We stuck to our guns and continued to report the truth.

James White said on the Dividing Line in *about* 2015, “I don’t know who this Russell Moore guy is, and I don’t care. Pulpit & Pen seems obsessed with him for some reason.” He seems to have figured out who he is now (this is an understatement) and might *slightly* better understand why we were obsessed with him at the time. It seems that our obsession spread to him as well, eventually.

It was not easy being told we were wrong so frequently, so fervently, and by so many of our friends who refused to look at the evidence presented. I carry scars of which you don’t know.

Today, Moore announced his resignation for a more lucrative (higher paying) gig at a “Big Eva” (Big Evangelicalism) parachurch ministry as a professional celebrity (he refers to this as being a “public theologian”).

I had already predicted that this would occur and that Russell Moore would use the SBC as merely a means to promote himself, and he would wind up **after enough pressure mounted** in greener pastures that were procured by the influence 4 million dollars a year of Cooperative Program money could afford him – with each penny designed to magnify his personal agenda of self-promotion.

I won’t post a picture all “Kyle J Howard” style, but I and my discernment buddies have a shed a tear of happiness tonight. It is what we have worked for, for so very long. It has been a long, hostile, and dangerous journey. But it now seems that the denomination with a hard liberal trajectory has now been able to quarantine the plague to a left-of-center organization, Christianity Today (or, as we call it, “Christianity Astray” or “Critical Theory Today).

This publication, as we have also covered, published an article from a lesbian claiming that worship was “like masturbation, only done to God.” They endorsed the impeachment of President Trump. They daily platform every form and kind of rank heretic under the sun. And most importantly, Christianity Today makes absolutely zero pretenses that they are conservative, but boldly and emphatically clarify daily that they are on the far-left side of the theological spectrum. This is where Moore belongs, along with his new (and old) colleague, Ed Stetzer, who we also proudly ran out of Lifeway Christian Resources (a denominational entity) with applying polemical pressure.

This is a win for the church. “Marking and avoiding” is part of the Christian’s job. We can’t remove someone from the world, but we can occasionally remove them from the church, so as to mitigate the damage they do by misleading people under false pretenses.

Ultimately, Russell Moore resigned *not* for greener pastures, but because he had to. He is the weakest link of the chain of Albert Mohler’s persona. Everyone knows he was Mohler’s main man, who has thus far not criticized Moore for a single thing he has ever said and done. Mohler, who desires to cinch up his total control of the denomination in a few weeks at the annual convention, could not have Russell Moore hanging like an albatross across his neck. He has been sufficiently marked.

Moore resigned for the same reason Moore asked Karen Swallow Prior to resign from the ERLC. We have sufficiently marked him as aberrant and sufficiently proved our case. While Mohler and Moore are in ideological lockstep, just as were Moore and Pryor, Moore is a liability to Mohler, and so Moore had to go.

That said, I have some further predictions. Discernment is not infallible, but it is more accurate than charismatic prophecy *every time*.

Here are my predictions:

1. Within 90 days (or so) you will see or read Moore in a podcast or article (my guess would be CT or RNS) explain that he left the SBC because they grew too narrow for his view of wide-tent Christianity (of course, the opposite is true). He will point to Beth Moore as one of his reasons for leaving, holding true to his word that “a denomination that doesn’t have room for Beth Moore doesn’t have room for a lot of us.”

2. Within 90 days (or so), you will see or read Moore make some significant hard-left turns in his ideology. He will more boldly come out in support for the Democrat Party, his version of being “pro-life” (socialism), and his denial of essential Christian doctrines.

3. Within 90 days (or so), you will see Russell Moore throw the SBC (an organization that he only used as a piggy bank) under the bus. He will accuse it of unrepentant systemic racism, misogyny, and bigotry and portend that he took the moral high road by separating from it.

Meanwhile, this is a lesson. Slaying dragons is hard work. In the end, God does the heavy lifting.

I was largely alone in those early days (2011-2016). Utterly…completely…alone in my criticism of Moore. I lost friends, and to some extent, family, over it. I lost business. I lost – for a time – my reputation, which became mud in that niche audience. Countless blogs have been written *against me* for speaking what now, has proven to be the truth.

“Let God judge betwixt us” has been my answer, and time has pronounced the verdict.

However, beginning in about 2014 – and heavily in 2016- others picked up the fight. Praise God for the Wrecking Ball method of guerilla journalism, out-writing and out-fighting the opposition. Praise God for:

Reformation Charlotte
Capstone Report
Rod Martin (and company)*
Sovereign Nations
The Social Justice Contras
The Evangelical Dark Web
Janet Mefferd

Ultimately even Founders’ Ministries – by far the *slowest* organization to speak an ill word of the man – got on board by eventually understanding the clear and present danger he presents to the Body of Christ. It is always better late than never.

Additionally, many thanks to Dustin Germain and all the volunteers and co-laborers at P&P who have spent YEARS toiling alongside us to chronicle his departures from orthodoxy, to report the truth, and to expect the Lord’s will to be done. Thank you to our team of a dozen-plus people who have put in the hours to do God’s work of truth-telling. Thank you to the 3k warriors in our Pulpit Bunker, our steady financial patrons, many thousands in our listening audience, and millions who have read our articles.

The publishing organizations and parachurch ministries all fought the good fight against him. It was a group effort and although they began the fight slightly after we began it, it would not have been done without them. Moore has been purged from the Body of Christ like a fowl bowel movement, and God’s people should rejoice.

Moore’s allies will consider it a victory for him. He showed himself the door (shame on the SBC), rather than having him thrust out of it. And, he got a better gig for more money. But the rest of us realize that it’s a stinging rebuke to Albert Mohler, who has until this very day insisted “there is no liberal drift in the SBC.”

Hogwash. Consider Moore’s head on a platter, or handed over to the devil, whichever you prefer.

Is this post ‘spiking the football’? Maybe. But you can write, “I told you so” on my tombstone.

SDG.

Pastor and Publisher JD Hall


* Martin and I have had no direct interaction (the only exception to the groups listed above), but he largely tarries with a group with whom I’ve sparred many times known as the “traditionalists.” I’m pleased to announce that the traditionalists and I have largely become personally reconciled after bickering for a number of years over Calvinism and have learned to be amicable. While they’re still wrong on the issue about which we had animosity, I feel that both our sides saw that bigger enemies besides one another are on the horizon. The work of Martin and the Conservative Baptist Network in helping Moore pack his bags cannot be over-stated.