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Southern Baptists Called to Look at Reality

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INDIANAPOLIS – Going into their annual meeting with a smaller membership count and declining baptisms, Southern Baptists were called to take an honest look at reality.

  • Frank Page, outgoing president of the Southern Baptist Convention, speaks during the 16-million member denomination's annual gathering in Indianapolis on Tuesday, June 10, 2008.
    (Photo: The Christian Post)
    Frank Page, outgoing president of the Southern Baptist Convention, speaks during the 16-million member denomination's annual gathering in Indianapolis on Tuesday, June 10, 2008.

On the surface level, members of the Southern Baptist Convention – the largest Protestant denomination in the country – may pat each other on the back for all the good works they’re doing, but outgoing SBC president Frank Page urged them to see themselves as they really are, even though it may hurt.

“I wonder … will we as Southern Baptists recognize the signs of what is happening among us?” Page told thousands of attendants Tuesday.

The 16 million-member denomination went into their 2008 meeting after the April release of LifeWay Christian Resources' Annual Church Profile, which revealed that baptisms fell for the third straight year in 2007 to SBC’s lowest level since 1987. Total membership also dropped by 0.24 percent to 16,266,920.

Page, who ends his second annual term as SBC president this week, has predicted that the number of Southern Baptist churches will fall by half by 2030 unless the denomination makes major changes. Amid the falling numbers, Page cautioned Southern Baptists against pointing fingers.

While many are quick to blame the infighting among various groups within the denomination or a failure of the conservative resurgence, Page let the responsibility fall on each person.

“The truth is individuals and churches are the ones who are in decline. And we must deal with reality,” Page said at the annual meeting. “We have compared ourselves to the wrong standards, ignoring God’s call for repentance and we have been failing to be relevant to a culture that sees us as representatives of death, not as representatives of light.

“I believe God is calling us to see that the problem lies with me,” he added. “Yes, there are problems amongst us. I have deep concern about the absolute disintegration of many of our churches … But let’s take an honest look at reality. Blame the denomination if you wish, but the problem is ‘me.’ ‘I haven’t been winning people to Christ as much as I [ought to].’”

The thousands of attendants applauded in concordance with Page’s poignant address.

Robert Thomas, senior pastor of Franklin Baptist Church in Salisbury, N.C., said he’s more concerned as a Christian than a Southern Baptist. He believes Page’s message to “get busy and do what we should be doing” should be directed to Christians overall and not just Southern Baptists.

This year, SBC messengers – representatives of local SBC churches – will consider a 10-year evangelism initiative to mobilize churches to reach the nation for Christ. While introducing the flexible, multifaceted strategy, Page expressed hopes that this week’s meeting will be the beginning of “the greatest time of evangelism in the history of the Southern Baptist Convention,” according to a column posted on the North American Mission Board (NAMB) Web site. NAMB is the domestic missions agency of the Southern Baptist Convention.

“Wouldn't it be wonderful to see every Southern Baptist church involved in intentional evangelism, soul-winning and yes, baptizing record numbers of persons?” Page posed.

As many Southern Baptists have encouraged in recent years, Page called the denomination to a “Great Commission Resurgence.” And that will only occur when Southern Baptists “fall in love” with Jesus, who spoke the Great Commission – to spread his teachings to all the nations of the world.

“I believe then baptisms will begin to increase,” Page assured.

Most recent comments
  • Fri May 01, 2009 2:56 pm : 0 : 0 Flag

    "Born and raised" Southern Baptist, I've attended churches throughout our country. Moving with my job, my family "plugged in" where God planted us.
    I have become troubled over the past years as evangelical has grown into meaning republican. In most cases Southern Baptists are true to the scriptures, yet there is a group that believes that any statement by a neo-conservative makes is the new gospel. Think about this, the "conservative" party had been in power until recently, how many abortion laws did they pass? How many marriage, sacred institution (between a man and a woman) bills did they force through congress?
    The answer to both of these is none. Quit listening to Rush, Boortz, Hannity, and Coulter. Dig into the scripture, Jesus was a liberal. He helped the poor.
    Patriotism is another issue that conservatives push on society, love of country is not a bad thing, but my King did not die wrapped in an American Flag, nor did he pledge allegiance to the American Flag, nor did he kill doctors because they disagreed with him, nor did he turn his back on the poor. Try to get a group of Southern Baptists together to do mission work in their community, shoot they would rather throw money at a missionary over seas, and if they do get involved on a personal level, they go out-of-town.
    I've seen men walk out of a service because they did not venerate the flag, some "believers" have misplaced their loyalty. Mine is to Jesus, the Christ; how about you?
    The last time a political party forced patriotism down the public's collective throat, their leader had a "little zizzy" mustache and spoke of the thousand year Reich.
    Our allegiance is to the Holy One, not to any man.

  • Wed Feb 25, 2009 8:32 pm : 0 : 0 Flag

    Paul says there is only one baptism so the SB are going against scripture. The only true church is the invisible body of Christ which Christ it the head, not Peter or anyone else. Jesus never had the majority. Most of the people that were there wanted a free meal. If they would worry more about the people they do have and make sure they are truly saved, then what else matters. Is it money they are worrying about?

  • Wed Feb 25, 2009 8:26 pm : 1 : 0 Flag

    Jesus didn't give authority to anyone for His church. He is the head of the body. And Paul was the one He gave the message to that we gentiles we going to be saved apart from Israel. There is only one baptism in the age of grace and not the ones that the SB are doing. Paul tells us there is only one baptism. They are going against scripture. Who cares about numbers. Teach the ones you have. Jesus never had the majority. Most of the ones that followed Him around only wanted a free meal. It hasn't changed one bit.

  • Tue Nov 11, 2008 11:07 pm : 0 : 1 Flag

    In decline? Not a surprise. This isin't the church nor the church leaders that Jesus gave authority to. This isin't the Church that Jesus said He would pray for. All man made institutions eventually fold, so with the Southern Baptist church.
    In Christ....

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