Updated 04:40 pm.EST, Sat November 21, 2009

Opinion|Fri, Sep. 21 2007 08:51 AM EDT

Interview: First Black BWA Head on Christian Unity

By Lillian Kwon|Christian Post Reporter

After two weeks of trying to adjust to his new U.S. office and the streets of Falls Church, Va., Jamaican native Neville Callam is now preparing to embark on a one month, 17-city tour across North America to introduce himself as the new head of the Baptist World Alliance.

  • Neville Callam
    The Rev. Neville Callam is the first non-white general secretary of the Baptist World Alliance.

The Rev. Callam is the first ever non-white general secretary of the 38-million-member global body. Hailing from the Global South, Callam brings a unique perspective to the position while finding himself surrounded by a very different image of Baptists in the United States. But he enters his office convinced that this is the will of God and hopeful of carrying on a new phase in the BWA.

The Christian Post had a chance to sit down with Callam at his Falls Church office on Wednesday to talk about his aspirations and the challenges that lie ahead.

CP: You just settled into your new office and position around two weeks ago. What’s the first thing on your mind that you want to start working on as general secretary?

Callam: To be honest, my effort has always been to try to learn more about the organization, to understand how it works, how it functions. And the fact of the matter is that over the first two weeks, I had the great privilege of having Denton Lotz, my predecessor, attending to initiate me into the position, explaining aspects of the new role of the Baptist World Alliance.

However, I’m going to be going on a tour of 17 cities in the U.S. and Canada, so I have been concentrating on making preparations for these visits.

CP: Is the tour for introducing yourself to Baptists?

Callam: Right, to get to know the constituency, to introduce myself to them and to have an opportunity for an exchange of ideas.

CP: You’re the first non-white BWA general secretary. You’ve already spoken of diversity and unity within the BWA. Do you feel your election marks some kind of new era for the BWA?

Callam: The way I characterize it is like this – that a new phase has begun in the life of the BWA, not a new era. The reason I say a new phase is that over the years, particularly under the leadership of Denton Lotz, there has been a definite program of internationalizing the BWA, strengthening the limbs of the BWA with the various regions of the world, giving a voice to people coming from the two-thirds world. And so, it’s natural with the growth of the Christian churches in the South and with the recognition of what we have always said – ‘the dignity of all human beings created in the image of God.’ It’s not surprising that somebody who is black – I don’t want to describe myself as non-white, I’m black (laughter), I’m of African descent – should come to the position. And I’m sure that other people from other cultures will in the future also have this opportunity since there’s a genuine relationship of family among Baptists across the world. My appointment is an expression of this reality.

CP: I actually don’t know the exact statistics of BWA membership around the world. Do you know in what part of the world the membership is most concentrated?

Callam: Well, not all the Baptists of the world are members of the Baptist World Alliance, of course. And the majority of the Baptists in the world are in fact in the United States. The present time, we enjoy a membership of some 38 million people around the world – that is members of Baptist churches. If you add to that affiliates of the Baptist churches, those who worship in Baptist churches, those who come to Sunday school but are not yet members, it would be over 100 million. Continue »

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  • Tue Sep 25, 2007 4:19 pm Agree: 9   Disagree: 0

    Congratulations Reverend Neville Callam!
    The impact of BWA and other Baptist churches around the world is an awesome testimony to the spread of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. I believe that the appointment of Reverend Callam brings a certain closure to the past practice and appearance of “racism” within the “Christian” community as a whole, especially in the South.

    God is NO respecter of persons, Acts 10:34. I believe, if the truth of His Word had been taught from the beginning of the colonization of America, then slavery and racism would have never had a foothold in our Nation. God raised His hand against racism in the Book of Numbers, when Miriam and Aaron, Moses’ sister and brother, spoke against Moses because he married a black woman, an Ethiopian woman, Numbers 12:1-15. God struck Miriam with leprosy and Aaron quickly began to beg Moses to intervene to heal her before the leprosy visited him. God looked on their racism as a sin! He still looks on racism as sin today.

    God handpicked Joshua, the son of Nun, to lead His people into the Promised Land. If you look in the Book of Numbers 13:8, you will see that Joshua is of the Tribe of Ephraim. Ephraim and Manasseh were the sons of Joseph, the eleventh son of Jacob. Joseph married an Egyptian woman named Asenath, the daughter of Poti-Pherah priest of the land of On. Joseph’s wife was black, she was not Jewish. Manasseh and Ephraim are the fathers of the two Black tribes of Israel. Yes, Joshua was a Blackman.

    Have you ever heard that Joshua was a Blackman before? Probably not, because the “Christian” church was too busy teaching that Blacks were curse by Noah. It would follow, if that were true, then slavery and bondage must have been the will of God. Noah never cursed Ham, because God had blessed Ham; but Noah did curse Canaan, Ham’s son and his grandson. Ham had many sons and only Canaan was cursed. (I explain why in “The Road to Self-Worth”)

    God is not colorblind, no, He created the races on purpose. Christianity is not about the son of Noah, but it is about the Son of God. If you are a Christian, then Jesus is the Head of your church. Yes, Jesus who was born a Jew, not black, white, yellow, brown, or red. His color is the brilliance of the “Light” of the world. The appointment of Reverend Neville Callam, as the General Secretary of the Baptist World Alliance makes His Light shine just that much brighter around the world today.

    Pastor Leo Bogee
    www.wclandtm.com

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