McRaney v. The North American Mission Board of the Southern Baptist Convention
A fellowship of churches rooted in faith for 180 years
Founded in 1845, the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) is the largest Protestant denomination in the United States. It includes nearly 47,000 independent churches, with nearly 13 million members, who voluntarily cooperate to share the Christian faith, provide advanced Christian training at Baptist seminaries, and demonstrate the love of Christ through ministries to the most vulnerable. One of its key ministries is the North American Mission Board, which helps churches plant new congregations, supports evangelism, provides chaplaincy ministry, and serves communities by caring for refugees, providing disaster relief, and fighting human trafficking.
The Mission Board pursues these ministry priorities through partnerships with 42 different state or regional conventions of Baptist churches. One of these is the Baptist Convention of Maryland/Delaware (“Baptist Convention”), an organization of more than 500 Baptist churches in Maryland and Delaware. In 2012, the Mission Board and the Baptist Convention entered into a strategic partnership to coordinate ministry efforts. That same year, the Baptist Convention hired Will McRaney as its executive director to lead its role in the partnership.
Private disagreements and a public lawsuit
As the partnership progressed, the Mission Board and McRaney developed serious disagreements about how to carry out the ministry work—including missionary selection and funding, charitable giving, and requirements for how missionaries carried out their religious work. The Mission Board concluded that McRaney had shown “serious and persistent disregard” for the religious principles of the partnership and the Baptist Convention’s board ultimately voted unanimously to remove McRaney from his leadership role.
In 2017, McRaney filed a lawsuit claiming that the Mission Board had defamed him and interfered with his employment. His allegations, however, were rooted in the same internal religious disagreements that had led to the end of the partnership. Becket filed a friend-of-the-court brief in support of the Mission Board, explaining that forcing courts to referee such disputes would entangle judges in questions of religious leadership and mission—something the First Amendment squarely forbids.
The court steps in to protect the freedom of the faithful
After eight years in court, the Fifth Circuit ruled in September 2025 that civil courts may not meddle in disputes over internal religious leadership and ministry decisions. Judge Andrew Oldham, writing for the majority, made clear that the law shields churches and ministries from being pulled into court over spiritual disagreements: “the church autonomy doctrine prohibits any court from adjudicating McRaney’s claims.”
The court emphasized that claims like defamation can’t be used to force religious groups to defend their internal decision-making in court. In making that point, the court cited Becket’s brief twice, noting that these protections apply broadly across different faith traditions and governance structures, including the non-hierarchal fellowships and associations like Baptists.
Importance to Religious Liberty:
- Religious Communities: Churches and religious organizations have a right to live, teach, and govern in accordance with the tenets of their faith. When the government unjustly interferes in internal church affairs, the relationship between church and state is threatened. The First Amendment ensures a church’s right to self-definition and free association.