“Since Wilkin has been very open about her beliefs, much of the following information was found through podcast interviews and panel discussions. As you read, ask yourself: do her views align with a biblical view of male headship, church hierarchy, and male and female roles in the church?”
(Amy Simmons – TruthScript) Recently, Southern Baptist Theological Seminary shared a photo of a book display table featuring “godly women who have served the church.” This started a contentious debate in the comments, given the SBC’s reputation for lending credibility to subversive women teachers, most notably Beth Moore. The post was later removed without explanation, which is likely what will happen to the posts of leaders like SBTS president Al Mohler decrying a sexual abuse “crisis” in the SBC and former SBC president JD Greear’s calling for a “pervasive change” in how abuse cases are handled….
This is because the two-and-a-half-year federal investigation into a so-called abuse cover-up in the country’s largest conservative denomination turned out to be a classic case of “crying wolf.” But should we fault these institutional leaders for showing concern for the victim (real or perceived)? While we can all agree that shepherds should protect the most vulnerable from false teachers and other nefarious actors, they should do so with “just weight and measures,” (Deut. 25:15) “not showing partiality” (Lev. 19:15, Js. 2:1). However, in the “Church Too” era, SBC leaders fell captive to the feminine spirit of the age. Just as the SBC leaders caved to CRT and intersectionality, they have bought into the female victim narrative. As it turns out, no one in the SBC has propagated this message more than Jen Wilkin, the most prominent woman on the aforementioned book table.
Research: Progressive (Social Justice) ‘Christianity’
CRN has compiled a list of false teachers and several other professing Christians we’ve warned you about over the years. The list also contains those we must keep an eye on plus movements, organizations and “frauds, phonies and money-grubbing religious quacks” to mark and avoid as per Romans 16:17-18 such as Jen Wilkin.