Beth Moore parts ways with Southern Baptist Convention

Beth Moore (Photo: Facebook/Beth Moore)

Beth Moore, one of today's most popular female Christian writers and speakers, has announced she is leaving the Southern Baptist denomination. 

The Living Proof evangelist and New York Times bestselling author confirmed that she is leaving the denomination after three decades, but is still a Baptist by faith. 

Moore told the Religion News Service that she and her husband are now attending a different church that is "gospel-driven".

Explaining her decision, she alluded to aspects of the Southern Baptist heritage without going into specifics. 

"I love so many Southern Baptist people, so many Southern Baptist churches, but I don't identify with some of the things in our heritage that haven't remained in the past," she said. 

"At the end of the day, there comes a time when you have to say, this is not who I am." 

Coinciding with her decision, she recently ended her partnership with Lifeway Christian Resources, the publishing and distribution division of the Southern Baptist Convention. 

Although Lifeway will continue to sell her books, it will no longer publish them or administer her live events, RNS said. 

Moore has been outspoken in the past when she has disagreed with the Southern Baptist Convention, notably on race and the role of women in church. 

In recent years, she was a vocal critic of Donald Trump, recently warning that Trumpism was "seductive and dangerous". 

News
Churches urged to be ready amid reports of growing Bible curiosity among young adults
Churches urged to be ready amid reports of growing Bible curiosity among young adults

A sharp rise in Bible sales and reports of growing spiritual curiosity among young adults in the UK has prompted calls for church leaders to be ready to respond. 

Memorial art for Holocaust heroine unveiled
Memorial art for Holocaust heroine unveiled

Haining said she'd be "back by lunch", in fact she was on her way to Auschwitz.

The Christian Churches and the Nazis
The Christian Churches and the Nazis

Why were so many German Christians supportive of the Nazis in their rise to power and why were so few involved in active opposition once the realities of the Third Reich became apparent? 

The problem with Labour’s Islamophobia definition
The problem with Labour’s Islamophobia definition

Whether it's called Islamophobia or "anti-Muslim hostility", the threat is the same.