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ERLC trustees hear Leatherwood’s vision for taking up ‘cause for life’

In an impassioned address to Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission trustees, ERLC President Brent Leatherwood declared, “The Gospel demands, and justice requires, we take up the cause for innocent life whenever it is imperiled.”

Drawing comparison between challenges faced in 1968 and the present, Leatherwood cited the Southern Baptist Convention’s 1968 Statement Concerning the Crisis in Our Nation, [1]

“Words will not suffice; the time has come for action,” he said, before outlining the ways that “we are not well as a society.” 

The trustees gathered Sept. 12-13 at ERLC offices in Nashville to hear from organizational leaders, elect the first Black chairperson of their board and advance strategic priorities during their biannual meeting

They also welcomed nine new board members – the largest group of new trustees in recent years. 

Kevin Smith elected

[2]

New officers were elected at the 2023 ERLC Trustees’ meeting in Nashville on Sept. 12-13. (Left to right) Kevin Smith will serve as chairperson; Amy Pettway will serve as secretary and Tony Beam will serve as vice chair. ERLC photo

Significantly, the ERLC trustees unanimously voted to elect Kevin Smith as the group’s new chairperson. Smith is the first Black chairperson in the history of the entity. 

Smith serves as pastor of Family Church Village [3] in West Palm Beach, Fla., and has been on the ERLC board since 2018. 

“Over the last two years, our entity has been blessed by the leadership of Chairwoman Lori Bova,” said ERLC President Brent Leatherwood. “She’s been a constant source of wisdom and encouragement, and we are grateful for her time as chair. Our board has now turned over the gavel to Kevin Smith, a pastor with deep ties in SBC life, who personally understands the importance of cooperation as a Baptist distinctive. I am thrilled to work with him and our new executive committee in this upcoming season.”

Gun violence ‘grieves the heart of our Lord’

Social issues such as gender confusion, sexual assault, abortion, deaths of despair, the breakdown of local communities, and racial division are all evidence that we live in “a culture that increasingly views life as diminished and disposable,” Leatherwood said.

The ERLC president then brought attention to another crisis of our time: mass shootings. 

“Gun deaths are now the leading cause of death for children under 18 in the U.S.,” Leatherwood said.

The matter of mass shootings and the work of finding solutions [4] toward their end are deeply personal to Leatherwood, whose three children were at Nashville’s Covenant School when a former student shot her way into the school, killing three students and three adults on March 27, 2023.

Leatherwood underscored his commitment to addressing the issue “because the child gunned down in Chicago grieves the heart of our Lord just as much as the child who is annihilated in the hallway of a small private Christian school in Nashville.”

“Our messengers have spoken [5] to this issue,” he said, “and I intend to begin down the path guided by their words. For they demanded leaders at the federal, state, and local level to ‘take concrete steps toward solutions’ [6] that respect our rights and ‘minimize the threat of gun violence throughout our society.’”

Strategic priorities and initiatives

Miles Mullin, ERLC vice president and chief of staff, presented the organization’s 2023-2024 strategic priorities during a plenary session, which were met with the board’s approval. They include: 

In the research and public policy committee, Hannah Daniel, ERLC policy manager, outlined priorities in the months ahead, such as:

Rachel Wiles, director of the Psalm 139 Project and deputy chief of staff, gave a report on the work of The Psalm 139 Project to the full board and described what they are learning about the varied abortion landscape in our nation.

“Pregnancy resource centers around the country are doing remarkable, life-saving work, and they are truly the heroes of the pro-life movement,” Wiles said. 

New bylaws approved

A workgroup made up of three trustees, ERLC General Counsel Palmer Williams, and an outside counsel proposed an updated version of the organization’s guiding document to the full board after a year-long review process. 

Workgroup member Scott Foshie of Illinois and Williams addressed the group to provide insight into the revision process and the nature of the more substantive changes. 

The portions of the revised bylaws focused on the relationship between the president and the board, simplifying access to financial information and clarifying what areas of decision making require full board participation. 

Trustee Jonathan Whitehead of Missouri brought to the board two proposed amendments for the bylaws to address concerns that he felt existed. After much discussion, both of Whitehead’s amendments were defeated. 

Kevin Smith, then trustee vice chair, said in conclusion, “This Commission has a very honorable track record on fiduciary issues, and a lot of it has to do with that gentleman right there,” as he gestured to Bobby Reed, the organization’s chief financial officer.

Additional decisions

The administrative and finance committee reported to the board that the ERLC is in a position of financial stability with a large amount of reserves. The full board approved an operating budget for 2023-2024 of over $3.4 million. The committee also recommended and the board approved use of a portion of reserve funds for future legal fees, strategic priorities, and investments.

In addition to the vote to elect Smith, a new executive committee was unanimously approved. The slate of officers is as follows: