• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
Christian News Now

Christian News Now

News for the Thinking Christian

  • Home
  • U.S.
  • World
  • Church
  • Faith
  • Tech & Science
  • Family
  • Entertainment
  • Sports

Southern Baptist Pastor, Former Abuser Resigns After Church Ousted From Denomination

March 16, 2021 by Staff

by Adelle M. Banks

(RNS) A Tennessee pastor who confessed two decades ago to statutory rape has resigned after his church was recently removed from the Southern Baptist Convention for hiring him.

Pastor Randy Leming Jr., who served at Antioch Baptist Church in Sevierville, announced his resignation on Feb. 28, the Baptist and Reflector reported on Thursday (March 11).

The Baptist and Reflector, a publication of the Tennessee Baptist Convention, said Leming had been with the church since 2014.

The Southern Baptist Convention Executive Committee, meeting in February, determined that the church was no longer “in friendly cooperation” with the denomination because “the church knowingly employs as pastor a man convicted of statutory rape.”

The SBC voted in 2019 to amend its constitution to make sexual abuse one of the stated grounds for disfellowshipping a church. 

Leming declined to provide a statement to the Baptist and Reflector. Religion News Service could not immediately reach the church for comment.

According to a 1998 decision in a Tennessee appeals court, Leming was 31 and a pastor at Shiloh Baptist Church in Sevier County in 1994 when he performed oral sex on a 16-year-old victim on two occasions. Shiloh Baptist is within six miles of the Antioch church.

Leming appealed the two concurrent sentences of 18 months in prison he received, claiming the sentences were excessive. The judge in the case upheld the lower court decision, calling the committed offenses “especially shocking and reprehensible.”

The Tennessee Baptist Mission Board was not informed of the disfellowshipping of Antioch until after the Executive Committee decision had been reported in a state newspaper, the Baptist news journal said.

“Now that this has been brought to our attention, we will begin the process to better understand the circumstances surrounding Antioch Baptist Church’s situation,” said Randy C. Davis, president of the mission board. “The SBC Executive Committee had a full year to work through its process and to better understand the situation. It is important that Tennessee Baptists also understand the complexities.”

Filed Under: Church

Primary Sidebar

Trending News

Former Youth Pastor’s Child Sex Abuse Case Delayed Amid New Victim Allegations

Cities Church Pastor Releases Statement Following St. Paul’s Decision Not To Charge Anti-ICE Protesters

Jackie Hill Perry Responds to Pride Month ‘Discourse’ About Her Story

Biola Announces Acquisition of Phoenix Seminary, Expanding Talbot School of Theology

RSS ChurchLeaders

  • Famous Pastors in America: Who They Are and Why They Matter
  • 3 Ways To Make Life Easier for Your VBS Volunteers

RSS Faithit

  • Parents, It’s Your #1 Job to Get in Your Kids’ Way at All Times. Kids Do Not Deserve Privacy.
  • 5 Ways You Are Ruining Your Child’s Life Without Even Realizing It

RSS ForEveryMom

  • Woman Gives Birth to Twins Conceived Three Weeks Apart
  • 12 Heartwarming Mother-Daughter Movies Perfect for Your Next Movie Night

Footer

About Us
Privacy Statement
Terms and Conditions
Cookie Settings
Contact Us
Newsletter

Images used on christiannewsnow.com are licensed from stock photography providers including Shutterstock, Getty Images, iStock, Unsplash, and other licensed contributors, or are used with permission. Individual image credits are available upon request.

Search

Copyright © 2026 · Christian News Now