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Willy Rice’s NAMB lied to the Supreme Court of the United States

(Capstone Report) And Willy Rice never said a word to refute the lie. Will he now?

Willy Rice wants to be President of the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC). If he expects Southern Baptists to entrust him with that responsibility, he should be willing to answer some questions about how the organization he oversees—the North American Mission Board of the Southern Baptist Convention—lied to the Supreme Court of the United States.

Does Willy Rice think a state convention is a Southern Baptist entity?

Does Willy Rice believe Tommy Green works for a Southern Baptist entity?

Does Willy Rice believe any state Baptist convention is an entity of the SBC?

If not, does he stand by the NAMB submission to the US Supreme Court as a NAMB trustee? Because NAMB through its attorney’s claimed just such a falsehood.

According to a NAMB filing seeking cert, the organization claimed, “Reverend McRaney attempts to avoid certiorari by emphasizing that, though he was employed by one Southern Baptist entity, he was never employed by the particular Southern Baptist entity that he sued, namely the SBC Mission Board.”

State Conventions are not SBC entities. According to the SBC website here are the entities: the SBC Executive Committee, the ERLC, Guidestone Financial Resources, the International Mission Board, Lifeway Christian Resources, The North American Mission Board, Gateway Seminary, Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary, Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary, the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, and Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary. The Women’s Missionary Union (WMU) is an auxiliary of the SBC.

Did you see a state convention in that list?

No?

Of course not. The SBC makes clear it….

To continue reading, click here


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

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SBC Prez Candidate Willy Rice Deletes Trump Article Days After Announcing Presidential Run

Southern Baptist Convention presidential candidate Willy Rice has deleted a blog article he wrote on his church website just days after announcing his presidential run, casting aspersions on Trump voters by comparing them to idolaters and Q-Anon conspiracy theorists, according to The Capstone Report, which broke the story.

The since-deleted article, which can be found here, is about events of January 6th at the Capitol building. While he explains his goal isn’t to “condemn those who may have supported or voted for President Trump,” he weighs down that toleration with a staggering amount of cautions for the Trump voter, lending the impression that he sorta does condemn it.

In essence, Rice functions in the role of the fox with its tail tied to torch, running in through a field on a mission to burn down all the strawmen. His view of the typical voter isn’t a pretty one, lamenting: “Many Christian leaders fawned over him in ways that should have made us queasy. We welcomed his support but overlooked his shortcomings. We became partisan connivers instead of biblical prophets.” Later he would describe all the ways evangelicals soiled their reputation while offering gems like:

“This current crisis of mission is the product of a toxic mix. It is a product of bad discipleship, horrific theology, and corrupted mission. It is as if Jesus did in fact bow down before Satan because he promised Him the kingdoms of the world.”

While some of the wild-eyed charismatics spoke of Trump in glowing terms and made cringey, kitschy art likening him to the Messiah, the vast majority of evangelicals did no such thing, nor were they unquestioningly blind to his many failings, despite what Rice may say.

The question emerges then- why delete this article now? Why would the church delete the article at this point in time?

It’s not because he repudiates it, is it? After all, it garnered the praise of some Top Men within the SBC.



Would it be untoward to speculate that he did so because he wants the ‘deplorable vote’ and this article getting out might throw a monkey wrench into his candidacy?

He wrote the article on January 15, 2021. He announced his bid to become SBC president on March 2, 2022. The article still existed on March 4, but sometime between the 4th and 15th, as his online history was being sifted and scrubbed of controversy and rickety skeletons, it disappeared.

I think we all know why.

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Big Eva Megachurch Pastor Slick Willy Rice Announces SBC Presidential Candidacy

Almost immediately following Ed Litton’s announcement that he would decline to serve a second year as President of the Southern Baptist Convention, Megachurch pastor Willy Rice announced his candidacy for SBC President. In his Pastor’s blog, Rice stated that the decision came “after prayer and consultation with several friends and Southern Baptist Leaders.” Amazingly, prayer and consultation for such an important decision did not take more than 24 hours, unless of course Willy Rice is the establishment candidate who was hand-chosen by the SBC elites long before Litton finalized his decision to resign.

A Slick Willy candidacy should give Southern Baptists great pause, as the pastor has a shaky track record on critical issues that the convention faces. At the 2021 convention, Rice, who claims to be a conservative, used his sermon to criticize those with doctrinal convictions about Critical Race Theory and Biblical Womanhood. In a statement that characterized egalitarians who constantly seek to subvert the scripture as Godly women who really have a heart to serve, Rice took a swipe at Pastor John Macarthur’s call for Beth Moore to “Go home”, equating Baptist Missionary Lottie Moon with wicked egalitarian motivational speaker Beth Moore:

And while we’re at it we should also remember that this convention did not build the largest missionary force in the history of Christendom by telling Lottie Moon to “go home.” Most of our sisters, our daughters and our mothers, only desire to obey the command of the risen Christ and to joyfully submit to His authority.

Rice has a knack for criticizing those who desire to follow the scriptures, frequently accusing his ideological opponents of disrupting the unity of the church and seeking power. During a twitter rant session in January 2021, Rice got up on his high horse and made veiled swipes at those in the SBC who “use doctrine as a bully club to harass, intimidate, and shame others.” Like many Big-Eva leaders, Rice is quick to give out veiled vague criticisms with a thin veneer of Biblical imagery, while refusing to identify the target of his criticism.

Perhaps the most concerning aspect of Rice’s Theology is the weaselly way that he approaches the issue of Critical Race Theory. In a June 24, 2021 Calvary Church Podcast titled “Critical Race Theory is a Thing”, Rice begins the discussion of CRT by saying that he opposes Critical Race Theory. As the conversation progresses, Rice reveals that he doesn’t believe that Resolution 9, the SBC resolution that declared CRT as a “useful analytical tool” was necessarily a bad thing. According to Rice, bad actors in the convention are trying to use a misunderstanding of CRT to stifle discussions about race. Rice then proposes that there isn’t a single person amongst SBC leadership or prominent pastors who is a proponent of CRT:

I don’t know anyone, anyone, any single one, black, white, or anyone, behind closed doors or anywhere who is advocating Critical Race Theory.

The remainder of the podcast focuses on listening to Black Voices and learning from those who claim to have experienced racism. Rice’s viewpoint is driven by standpoint epistemology, a key tenant of Critical Race Theory. Rice genuinely believes that Black Christians have special secret knowledge about systemic injustices and racism that white Christians do not have the ability to perceive (a CRT framework described by Pastor Voddie Baucham as ethnic Gnosticism). In a nutshell, Willy Rice uses weasel words to claim that he is against CRT, even while he defends its tenants.

The standpoint epistemology of Rice was apparent in the aftermath of the death of George Floyd. As was the practice with many pastors who were beholden to CRT, Rice held a “help me understand” listen and learn panel at his church. The panel included 5 black pastors and church leaders, in addition to 2 white men who had adopted black children. The members of the panel were selected on the basis of their skin color or the skin color of their children. Rice begins by urging the congregation to refrain from casting judgements on differing opinions about race and racism, and just focus on listening and learning. The discussion that proceeded could only be described as a defense of Critical Race Theory. Panel members reflected on “white privilege” in light of the Michael Brown and Trayvon Martin “incidents”, postulating that America has been systemically racist and unjust since its inception. The Gospel was cited in passing, but all of the members of the panel push the idea that the solution to the problem is listening, learning, and having conversations, because white Christians need to know about how black Christians experience racism.

What would a winsome Willy Rice SBC presidency look like? Willy seems to emphasize unity at the expense of truth. Whether it is the issue of egalitarianism in the church or the issue of Biblical Justice, slick Willy doesn’t want to be confined to a single position on an issue, because everyone has their story and life experiences. He wants to listen and learn from those voices that feel marginalized and oppressed. Truth is defined by scripture. Justice and partiality are defined by the word of God. Man and Woman and their design are clearly defined by the word of God. Prior to the surge of standpoint epistemology into Southern Baptist Churches, the SBC was known for its reliance on scripture as inerrant and sufficient. Southern Baptists don’t need another “lean in and listen” standpoint epistemology advocating candidate, but rather a candidate who has a laser focus on the standard of scripture. In the words of past SBC President Adrian Rogers, “It is better to be divided by truth than to be united in error.”


Editor’s Notes and Reference:

This post was written by Paul Brown for Protestia.

Critical Race Theory is a Thing // Ricecast – YouTube

Minute 23-24, Minute 25, there is no one in the southern Baptist convention who is saying that we need CRT, Minute 27- COVID affected black communities worse, Minute 28, I don’t know any single one, black white, or whatever, behind closed doors who is advocating behind closed doors who is advocating for CRT, Minute 32-felt like resolution 19 shouldn’t have been brought up at all, Minute 33-we don’t want to go so far as to say that there is not such thing as systemic injustice in America, Minute 35- I can’t imagine anyone telling me they don’t want to hear about their experiences, Minute 35- we need our black brother’s and sisters opinion, Minute 40 embracing conversations, Minute 41- there are some people on the fringes who are angry and upset, Minute 45- Leaning in to hear is what we need

Help Me Understand: An Authentic Conversation on Race, Social Justice, and the Gospel – YouTube

19:37, lean in and hear this story, 26:36 Michael Brown situation cited by associate pastor, 27:07 White Privilege, 28:22 systems and structures that perpetuate, 29 Racism woven into fabric of America, 30 Structure has continued to perpetuate racism, 31:30 Systems and structures are designed, 31-Willy says that unconscious racism is real, 35:55 adopted black baby and asked people what is it like to grow up with black or brown skin, 57:14 History books are wrong and implicit bias privilege and systemic racism are real, Our nation was founded on racism and we stole labor

Willy Rice’s Sob Story: Ben Carson Sacrificed for the Sake of Unity (pulpitandpen.org)
Prominent Pastors Discuss Calvinism, Call for Unity – Lifeway ResearchPastor Willy Rice slams those who contribute to disunity in SBC | Church & Ministries News (christianpost.com)