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Devil in the SBC: Conservative Resurgence, abuse, and GOP power

A Devilish Blueprint Takes Shape

The Conservative Resurgence reshaped the Southern Baptist Convention and continues to shape American politics. That Conservative Resurgence campaign sold itself as a fight for biblical authority, but it also built a pipeline of power. It claimed to defend faith, but it helped harden a ruthless system. The comparison to โ€œThe Devil Wears Pradaโ€ frames a simple point: choices that feel personal often flow from elite control.

Power Brokers Seize a Denomination

Paul Pressler, a Texas judge with deep Republican ties, helped engineer the Conservative Resurgence alongside Paige Patterson. They warned that liberals were taking over the nationโ€™s largest Protestant denomination, so they rallied conservatives for a long internal battle. They captured seminaries, pulpits, and agencies, and they set loyalty tests. Many leaders later treated the movement as the SBCโ€™s saving story.

Abuse Allegations Trail the Architect

A lengthy Texas Monthly report by Robert Downen assembles a far-reaching history of alleged sexual predation by Pressler. It also details facilitation, silence, and cover-up within Presslerโ€™s circles, including figures connected to SBC leadership. Court proceedings had revealed pieces before, but the new account connects them into a single timeline. Accusations were dismissed as liberal warfare, and rumors became background noise.

Theology as a Tool for Politics

The fight focused on biblical interpretation because less literal scholarship alarmed hardliners. Pressler used that tension to rise, and opponents were branded enemies of the church. Yet the project also fused the SBC with Republican strategy. Downen argues Pressler played a crucial role in marrying white evangelicals to the GOP, and that alignment remains a central force.

The Machine Reaches Ordinary Lives

Pressler advised the Council for National Policy on voter mobilization efforts with Jerry Falwell, and those tactics spread widely. Churches far outside the SBC absorbed the same script, and members learned to fear โ€œliberalโ€ threats. A letter to George H.W. Bush reportedly promised evangelical voters access to the White House, so politics moved through religious networks. People gave money and time believing theology drove activism, but partisan goals often drove the theology.

Supporters and Detractors Clash Over Accountability

Supporters still credit the Conservative Resurgence with restoring doctrine and guarding Scriptureโ€™s authority. Detractors point to survivorsโ€™ accounts, alleged cover-ups, and the long trail of institutional self-protection. Critics also warn that the political machine persists because it still rewards quiet consent.


How the devil was disguised in the SBC and Paul Pressler’s Conservative Resurgence
Photo by Elise Coates on Unsplash

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