Ralph D. West, Houston pastor, cuts ties to Southern Baptists over critical race theory rejection

West, founder of the Church Without Walls, is just the latest to criticize six seminary presidents who said critical race theory was incompatible with their faith.

The Rev. Ralph D. West, founder and senior pastor of The Church Without Walls, in Houston. Courtesy photo

(RNS) — A pastor pursuing a doctorate at Southwestern Theological Baptist Seminary in Fort Worth, Texas, announced in an editorial Wednesday (Dec. 16) that he was withdrawing from his degree program and severing his megachurch’s affiliation with the Southern Baptist Convention over a recent statement by its seminary presidents on critical race theory.

The move by the Rev. Ralph D. West, founder and pastor of Church Without Walls in Houston, is the latest backlash from the Nov. 30 statement by six Southern Baptist seminary presidents denouncing critical race theory and intersectionality.


READ: Southern Baptist seminary presidents nix critical race theory



The presidents, all six of them white men, issued the statement saying the race theory is “incompatible,” with the denomination’s central affirmation, the Baptist Faith & Message. West, a Black pastor, is just the latest to criticize the statement from leaders of the nation’s largest Protestant body with 14.5 million members.

In his commentary in the Texas publication The Baptist Standard, West writes: “In this time, these men chose to castigate a framework that points out a truth that cannot be denied. American history has been tainted with racism. America codified it. And more, our public and private institutions propagated it.”

Last week, the National African American Fellowship of the Southern Baptist Convention asked for a meeting with the seminary presidents saying their statement was insensitive to Blacks.


READ: Black Southern Baptists weigh in on critical race theory critique by officials


Others have also criticized the statement, pointing out the Southern Baptist Convention, founded in 1845 by Christians who believed that missionaries could own slaves, still cannot shake off its troubling racist past. (In 1995, the denomination formally apologized for slavery, saying, “we genuinely repent of racism of which we have been guilty.” )

Critical race theory has come under fire in conservative and right-wing circles that reject the idea of systemic racism and find fault with the Black Lives Matter movement. In September, President Trump issued an executive order banning critical race theory from government-sponsored race and sex-based training.

In their statement, the seminary presidents did not explain how critical race theory clashes with the core beliefs of Southern Baptists.

The theory is used in many academic circles to explain how racial inequality cannot be understood apart from social, economic and legal systems that benefit white interests.


West said that while he is keeping his affiliation with Baylor University, which is not affiliated with the SBC, he was withdrawing from Southwestern Seminary and severing any relationship between his church and the denomination.

The pastor could not be reached for comment on Wednesday.

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