Messengers green-light Great Commission Task Force during SBC annual meeting

Michael Foust

Michael Foust

With the goal of finding ways Southern Baptists “can work more faithfully and effectively” together in fulfilling the Great Commission, messengers to the convention’s annual meeting June 23-24 gave the green light to a task force to examine the denomination for one year and report back to the 2010 meeting in Orlando, Fla.

Julie Medlin of Hill of the Lord University Church in Columbia, S.C., prays with Kenny Winfield, a homeless man she met at Waterfront Park in Louisville, Ky., while passing out water bottles with her Crossover ’09 team June 20. The event was one of a series of evangelistic outreaches held prior to the Southern Baptist Convention annual meeting June 23-24 at the Kentucky Exposition Center.

Debate over the proposed Great Commission Task Force and an online document dubbed the “Great Commission Resurgence Declaration” had dominated pre-convention talk, with some Southern Baptist leaders backing it and others expressing concern.

In the end, the 8,700-plus messengers at the annual meeting overwhelmingly supported the task force via a motion that gave Southern Baptist Convention president Johnny Hunt authority to appoint the panel, which he did on the meeting’s final day, naming 19 members. The actual GCR document that had sparked the discussion never was proposed and did not come to a vote.

The denomination was meeting in Louisville, Ky., to help commemorate the 150th anniversary of the founding of Southern Baptist Seminary.

In other top annual meeting news, messengers:

– received an update about the GPS (God’s Plan for Sharing) evangelism initiative, which aims to see every SBC church planting other churches by 2020.

– passed a resolution that calls the election of President Obama a step toward nationwide racial reconciliation but that heavily criticizes him for some of his policies.

– passed a resolution encouraging Southern Baptist families to prayerfully consider adopting or fostering children.

– approved an Executive Committee recommendation to cease the “cooperative relationship” with Broadway Baptist Church in Fort Worth, Tex., over the issue of homosexuality.

– re-elected Johnny Hunt to a second one-year term as president.

But the Great Commission Task Force was the leading issue, not only in the minds of messengers but also for several of the meeting’s preachers. Evangelist Billy Graham, 90 years old, even sent a personal greeting to messengers (through his pastor, Spartanburg First Baptist’s Don Wilton) in which he said he had read about the “call to a Great Commission resurgence” with much interest.

The task force had the backing of Hunt, who is one of the 19 members and who named Arkansas pastor Ronnie Floyd chairman. Frank Page, pastor of Taylors First Baptist Church, was also named to the task force.

“I feel like the Southern Baptist Convention is in what we call a defining moment,” Hunt said at a press conference following his re-election. “We are defining our priorities and – we’re saying to our 43,000 churches: The Great Commission needs a resurgence. We need to fund our missionaries. We need to have more money for church planting. We need to be more intentional with the GPS.”

Hunt said he has “no desire whatsoever to touch the structure” of the convention. He also said he hopes to see – through the study and the possible implementation of a proposed report – Cooperative Program giving increase and what he called “overlap” within the denomination lessen.

“Sometimes, the overlap has proved to be very healthy,” he said. “But other times, the overlap is maybe taking some dollars [away] that could be placed somewhere else to cause us to go further in piercing the darkness with the good news.”

Al Mohler, president of Southern Baptist Seminary, made the task force motion from the floor. Page also spoke for and supported the motion.

“This is not an effort to reinvent the Southern Baptist Convention,” Mohler said, adding, “There is a generation ready and waiting to be challenged to do something great for the cause of Christ. I say we take this opportunity.”

Newly elected Southern Baptist Convention officers for 2010 (front to back): Johnny Hunt, pastor of First Baptist Church, Woodstock, Ga., president; Stephen Rummage, pastor of Bell Shoals Baptist Church, Brandon, Fla., second vice president; John Yeats, communications director of the Louisiana Baptist Convention, recording secretary; and Jim Wells, director of missions for Tri County Baptist Association in Nixa, Mo., registration secretary; (lower right box) John Mark Toby, pastor of Beacon Hill Baptist Church, Somerset, Ky., first vice president.

In addition to Hunt, Floyd and Page, the task force includes: Mohler; Jim Richards, executive director, Southern Baptists of Texas Convention; David Dockery, president, Union University; Simon Tsoi, first vice chairman, International Mission Board; Donna Gaines, Bellevue Baptist Church, Cordova, Tenn.; Al Gilbert, pastor, Calvary Baptist Church, Winston-Salem, N.C.; J.D. Greear, pastor, Summit Church, Durham, N.C.; Tom Biles, director of missions, Tampa Bay Association, Executive Committee member; Danny Akin, president, Southeastern Baptist Seminary; John Drummond, St. Andrews Baptist Church, Panama City, Fla.; Harry Lewis, North American Mission Board; Mike Orr, pastor, First Baptist Church, Chipley, Fla.; Roger Spradlin, pastor, Valley Baptist Church, Bakersfield, Calif., Executive Committee member; Robert White, executive director, Georgia Baptist Convention; Ken Whitten, pastor, Idlewild Baptist Church, Tampa, Fla.; and Ted Traylor, Olive Baptist Church, Pensacola, Fla.

 

Resolutions

The Obama resolution – which passed nearly unanimously – says messengers “share our nation’s pride in our continuing progress toward racial reconciliation signaled” by the president’s election. But the resolution says messengers “decry” Obama’s assistance to “pro-abortion” groups. It also expresses “strong opposition” to Obama declaring June as Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender Pride Month. The resolution also calls on Southern Baptists to pray for Obama – something they did immediately after its passage, with Hunt leading the prayer.

The pro-adoption resolution notes that the world has upwards of 150 million orphans, and it calls “on each Southern Baptist family to pray for guidance as to whether God is calling them to adopt or foster a child or children.” It also encourages “pastors and church leaders to preach and teach on God’s concern for orphans.”

Southern Baptists ceased their relationship with Broadway Baptist Church following a yearlong study by the Executive Committee that began with a motion from the floor at last year’s meeting. The congregation has at least two same-sex couples in the church and was embroiled in a controversy in early 2008 as to whether the couples should be pictured in a church directory. Supporters of the Executive Committee recommendation said that while the convention fully supports ministering to the homosexual community, the church by its actions was in violation of Article III of the SBC Constitution, which states that churches “which act to affirm, approve, or endorse homosexual behavior” are not in friendly cooperation. Some of the church’s openly homosexual members serve on church committees. Executive Committee members had suggested that a statement from the church condemning homosexuality would have been beneficial; the church, however, did not issue such a statement.

 

In other convention news:

– Geoff Hammond, president of the North American Mission Board, told messengers that the SBC’s associations and 42 state conventions “have signed up” for the GPS challenge and “joined hands” together with the goal of seeing every SBC church, by 2020, planting other churches.

– Thanks to a gift from the Southern Baptists of Texas Convention and an offering from the SBC Pastors’ Conference, the International Mission Board received more than $100,000 to help fill the gap from its Lottie Moon Christmas Offering shortfall. The Lottie Moon offering fell $29 million short of its goal and $9 million short of its previous year’s total.

– The Crossover evangelism outreach that precedes the annual meeting yielded more than 1,000 decisions for Christ. Approximately 3,000 volunteers from 107 churches participated.

– John Mark Toby, pastor of Beacon Hill Baptist Church in Somerset, Ky., was elected first vice president, while Stephen Rummage, pastor of Bell Shoals Baptist Church in Brandon, Fla., was elected second vice president. John Yeats, director of communications for the Louisiana Baptist Convention, was re-elected SBC recording secretary, and Jim Wells, director of missions for the Tri-County Baptist Association in Nixa, Mo., was re-elected registration secretary. Mac Brunson, pastor of First Baptist Church in Jacksonville, Fla., was elected to preach the 2010 convention sermon in Orlando, Fla.

– LifeWay Christian Resources presented the inaugural HCSB Award posthumously to Fred Winters, the pastor of First Baptist Church in Maryville, Ill., who was shot and killed while preaching. Winters’ widow, Cindy, appeared on stage and received the award. Their two daughters also were present. The award will honor individuals who have shown a high commitment to the preaching or teaching of God’s word.

– The SBC Pastors’ Conference heard from Chuck Colson, Mike Huckabee and David Platt, a 30-year-old pastor who previously was unknown to many attendees but whose passionate sermons were well-received.

Next year’s annual meeting will take place June 15-16 in Orlando, Fla. – BP