Home Christian News SBC’s IMB Mandates COVID-19 Vaccinations for All Missionaries

SBC’s IMB Mandates COVID-19 Vaccinations for All Missionaries

missionary vaccine policies
FILE - In this Sunday, March 22, 2020 file photo, Missionaries visiting the Philippines return to the U.S. at Salt Lake International Airport. Faith groups are taking various approaches to COVID-19 vaccines for missionaries. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints gives unvaccinated missionaries assignments in their home countries. The Southern Baptist Convention’s International Mission Board requires the COVID-19 vaccine. (Rick Egan/The Salt Lake Tribune via AP, File)

COVID-19 vaccine refusal rates may be high among white evangelical Christians, but the International Mission Board — which deploys thousands of missionaries — is not hesitant about the shot.

The global agency of the Southern Baptist Convention, the largest evangelical Protestant denomination in the U.S., announced this month it is requiring vaccinations for missionaries they’re sending into the field amid the pandemic.

The IMB may be the first U.S. missionary agency known to have such a mandate, according to leaders in the field, as other faith groups approach the issue in a variety of ways including limiting where people can serve and making considerations for uneven global access to the vaccines.

“This is a very common-sense decision,” said Ed Stetzer, a Southern Baptist who is dean of Mission, Ministry and Leadership at Wheaton College. “Mission-sending agencies from the United States have the real opportunity to be vaccinated, and they’re going to places around the world that don’t.”

The IMB policy applies to both current and future missionaries as well as some staff members. Among the reasons it cited for the measure are health concerns and the fact that increasing numbers of countries are implementing their own vaccine requirements — some field personnel have reported needing to show proof to board airplanes and subways or enter restaurants and malls.

In a statement announcing the policy, IMB leaders acknowledged that it could be a deal-breaker for some people considering missionary work or currently serving with the organization.

The Rev. Allen Nelson IV, a pastor who leads a Southern Baptist congregation in Arkansas, said he is not against vaccines but is completely opposed to mandates for missionaries.

“This is something that must be left up to a person’s own conscience, research and discussions with a doctor, as well as their particular ministry context,” Nelson told The Associated Press.