ANAHEIM, Calif. — Southern Baptists approved a series of sexual abuse reforms Tuesday, including a way to track accused ministers, and elected a new president in one of the denomination’s most consequential annual meetings in decades.

On the first official day of the Southern Baptist Convention’s annual meeting this week, voting delegates, known as messengers, picked Texas pastor Bart Barber to lead the SBC and voted for reforms to prevent sexual abuse within the church. 

Sexual abuse will be one of the most significant issues facing the nation’s largest Protestant denomination at its two-day annual meeting.

Guidepost Solutions, a third-party firm, investigated the history of SBC leaders’ mishandling abuse reports and recommendations for reform, and presented its findings in a shocking report released in late May. 

Messengers voted in favor of two main abuse reform recommendations Tuesday: a new abuse reform implementation task force, and a “ministry check” database that keeps track of ministers credibly accused of sexual abuse. 

The competitive presidential election, seen as a bellwether for larger political divisions in the SBC, came to a narrow runoff Tuesday evening following the vote on abuse reforms. Barber defeated Florida pastor Tom Ascol, receiving 60.87% of the vote.

“We need a man who can lead us through the battleground of our disagreements to the common ground of our cooperation,” Matt Henslee, a Southern Baptist pastor from Texas, said of Barber in a nomination speech. 

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The series of abuse reform recommendations, while significant for the SBC, are the “bare minimum,” said Bruce Frank, chair of the SBC sexual abuse task force.