Southern Baptists to gather in Kentucky
06.19.2009 1:04pm EDT
(Louisville, Ky.) Southern Baptists leaders are asking followers to put aside squabbles over political and social issues and look inward at a time when the nation’s largest Protestant denomination is hoping to stop declining membership.
Leaders hope that energizing missionary efforts can help, and plan to focus on that at the group’s annual meeting in Louisville beginning Tuesday.“We are not a political organization,” Jonathan Merritt, a Baptist pastor from Georgia and son of a former Southern Baptist Convention president, said in an e-mail message. “Too often the evangelical movement has been distracted from our primary purpose by divisive political issues.”
The convention has long made headlines for heated debates, dating back to power struggles in the 1970s and 1980s between moderates and conservatives that ended when moderates dropped out of SBC politics in the early 1990s. Over the last decade, the convention has taken positions opposing women pastors and gay rights.
“It’s not to negate that we care about those other issues,” said Daniel Akin, president of Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary in Wake Forest, N.C. “Indeed we rightly have deep convictions about abortion, a growing concern for the poor, a growing concern for healthy marriages and families. But we’re convinced the gospel of Jesus Christ is the answer to all those things.”
Convention president Johnny Hunt has said he hoped the annual meeting would steer away from national issues, like statements concerning the policies of President Obama’s administration.
Hunt told the Baptist Press in May that though Obama’s agenda gives many Christians “heartburn,” he wishes “we would spend more time focusing on our health.” Hunt declined to be interviewed for this story.
A failure to aggressively attract minorities has hurt Southern Baptist recruitment numbers, said David Key, director of Baptist studies at Emory University’s Candler School of Theology in Atlanta.
An important indicator for the health of the denomination is new baptisms, which fell in 2008 for the fourth straight year to 342,198, a 1 percent drop and the lowest level since 1987, according to Lifeway Christian Resources, the publishing arm of the Nashville-based Southern Baptist Convention. Total membership of about 16.2 million was flat over the same period, falling by 38,482, or 0.2 percent.
Key said Southern Baptists are starting to realize they’re “vulnerable and not immune from the decline (in baptisms and membership) the way they always thought they were. Like a lot of mainline Protestant denominations, all of a sudden they’re facing the same stagnation issues.”
Even with the emphasis on evangelism, the convention won’t escape politics altogether.
Already one resolution proposed by a black Texas pastor, the Rev. Dwight McKissic, is asking the denomination to acknowledge the historical importance of Obama’s electoral victory despite the convention’s opposition to his policies.
“The odds are overwhelming that there will be a resolution on President Obama,” said Akin, chairman of the committee that forwards resolutions to the floor for a vote.
But Akin said the committee, appointed by Hunt, would attempt to steer away from divisive political subjects.
Recent SBC annual meetings have embraced such topics, including a boycott of The Walt Disney Co. for offering domestic partner benefits to gay employees, a definition of gender roles that prohibit women from being pastors while calling for wives to “submit” to husbands and even disapproval of allowing members who drink to serve in leadership positions.
“I don’t think one should expect a lot of flamboyant kind of resolutions (this year) that are just kind of all over the map and addressing all sorts of issues,” Akin said.
Hunt has asked members to focus on a mission statement-style document crafted by Akin urging Baptists to put aside differences and focus on rebuilding North American and international missions. The document, “Toward A Great Commission Resurgence” has more than 3,500 signers on a Web site where it is posted.
It also has stirred up internal controversy because of a section that calls for re-examining the national convention structure, including a goal to “maximize our resources” for mission work and eliminate “overlap and duplication of ministries.”
Akin argues in the document for “more faithful stewardship of the funds” given by local churches and state conventions to the SBC’s Cooperative Program, which supports worldwide missions.
“I do think a lot of folks would like to see more of our monies that are given through the Cooperative Program making their way to the international mission fields,” he said.
But dissenters worry that a structural change could weaken the state conventions.
The document will be the “hot topic” at the two-day convention, predicts Wade Burleson, a high-profile Baptist pastor from Enid, Okla.





Ah, so being divisive hurt them, now they don’t want to be so divisive.
You reep what you sow.
isn’t the old saying something like, “if you start hating everyone but yourself, the only one left to hate is yourself?”
One of the most pathetic bunches of hypocrites in the USA!
But the DON’T follow the gospel of Jesus Christ. They follow Paul’s and John’s INTERPRETATION (with their added crap) of the gospel. And to add fuel to the fire, very few have ever read what Jesus is quoted to have said and taken the time to compare it to the twisted words of Paul and John. And this is what comes from most pulpits – the pastors or priests interpretation of what Jesus is claimed to have said.
What a bunch of absolute bullshit! As the saying goes, Jesus must be spinning in his grave.
Southern Baptist are the Ku Klux Klan by another name and they can kiss my fucking ass!
I wonder why they have declining membership. Maybe it’s because they hate all of the people they might try to proselytize to?
They are just ignorant bigots.
I grew up Southern Baptist. I can tell you, by experience….JUST ANOTHER HATE GROUP!!!! Let them keeptalking. It only helps our cause.
Religion is the poison of mankind..and the killer of the human spirit!
#
Disgusted American Said:
“Religion is the poison of mankind..and the killer of the human spirit!”
No. Bigotry and hatred are the poison of mankind, and sadly you are demonstrating precisely these things with your comments. I am not defending these hatemongers, but your words make you no different to them.
Religion is not the enemy. Bigotry is. Religion is just one of the many tools used by bigots to justify their hatred, but it is used by just as many people, including some on here, to condemn it. Attack the bigots certainly, but don’t tar all religions and religious people with the same brush. Some of them are our allies.
@Isaac – You are wrong; the comments posted by Disgusted American are aimed at an institution not at people and are nowhere near close to the idiology shoved down our throats by the religious right. They are merely observations of the organization itself. He is not proclaiming violence or bigotry unlike the MAJORITY of religions do towards us. So to state his/her words make him/her no different is completely uncalled for.
@Michael W – yes, it is always easy to defend bigotry you agree with, isn’t it? Sorry, but to say religion is the poison of mankind is absolute nonsense. The majority of religious people I know are good, kind people who do not discriminate against me or anyone else because of sexuality. A few personally believe that I am committing a sin by being gay, but believe, as the Bible professes, that it is God’s place to judge, not theirs. The rest, the majority, simply believe that there is nothing wrong with being gay.
Religion can become a poison in the hands of a bigot, but in itself it is not a danger, and to make a judgemental comment like he did demonstrates the same intolerance I have seen from homophobes. Just because it’s not directed your way it doesn’t make it any less insidious.
If you believe in the god created by man in the image of man (with ALL religions do) then you can fall back on this creation to justify just about anything you want to say and believe. And you can classify anything you want as a sin just by interpreting “scripture” so this the justification is there. I refuse to accept any of the bovine fecal matter. Religion and bigoty are the same only one is covered by the cloak of the other.
Most, if not all, “religious” people have never studied the bible. They accept whatever is heard from the pulpit because it is “inspired” by their mythical god. And if they do read they don’t question out of the fear that has been pounded into their mind since childhood.
Oh yes, there most certainly is a Source of All, but not that thing that religious organizations bow and scrap to.
Rapture? I think Rupture would be a more appropriate word.
Christ said “Judge not lest ye be judged.” So keep your bloody opinion of my life to yourself. Do NOT judge or comment on my life. Concentrate on your own. And don’t stick your bible in my face or I might be tempted to grab it out of your hand and stuff it up you ass.
Religion is ideed the opiote of the people.
The Southern Baptist Convention is losing members because of its long history of closing its doors to people. Today they have closed their doors to LGBT people and same-sex couples trying to build a strong committed and faithful marriage, but historically, they have also closed doors to African Americans as well as other Christians who hold liberal and progressive views. Now, even as President Obama reaches out to them (neglecting many commitments he has made to social progressives), they continue to attack and condemn him.
Their abuse of scripture to hurt others or to defend bigotry is divisive and alienates people they should be welcoming. The declining membership of the Southern Baptist Convention only shows they are reaping what they have sowed— anger, division and alienation.
If the decline is greater than can be attributed to deaths of older members, the only explanation is that people are leaving. If people are leaving, then there’s a problem in their teachings, and simply deciding to teach them more loudly, to more people, isn’t going to help. They may have huge outreach festivals and find a way to record huge “altar calls” but if existing members have been leaving for causes that don’ t get fixed, new members will end up doing the same.