Updated 03:46 pm.EST, Mon November 23, 2009

Church|Wed, Oct. 21 2009 05:10 PM EDT

Southern Baptist Dispels Myths About Great Commission Resurgence

By Lillian Kwon|Christian Post Reporter

A Southern Baptist leader who is part of a task force that was recently set up to move the denomination toward a missional resurgence has been hard at work dispelling myths about the panel's work.

The latest rumor Dr. Daniel Akin, president of Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary, threw out was: "The Great Commission Resurgence is actually a grand Calvinist plot to infiltrate the Southern Baptist Convention and gain control or at least greater influence in the Convention."

"This may be my favorite of all the myths. The wild imaginations that have produced it are a wonder to behold," he wrote on his website.

Akin was appointed, along with 17 others, in June to form the Great Commission Task Force, which was charged with compiling a report on how Southern Baptists can work more faithfully and effectively together in serving Christ through the Great Commission.

Earlier this year, Akin had introduced a Great Commission Resurgence manifesto to help move Southern Baptists away from factionalizing and toward a missional resurgence. The manifesto reaffirms core Christian doctrines and commits to being missionaries in non-Christian cultures, among other things.

Southern Baptists should be known as Jesus people, Akin has stressed, rather than known for their traditions, legalisms, moralisms and "sourpuss attitudes." He has also emphasized that a Great Commission Resurgence is neither a moral reformation nor a revival of political activism. It is simply a call to proclaim the Gospel.

But following the creation of the GCR task force, there have been a number of "false rumors and misinterpretations" that have been attributed to the panel's work and its members, Akin lamented.

To set the record straight, the seminary president has released a series of blogs to put to rest some of the "untruths."

"There is too much mistrust that unfortunately characterizes Convention life at this time. We must be better than this. Jesus deserves better than this," he said.

Regarding the myth about Calvinists taking control of the denomination, Akin noted that the "axioms" he outlined for a Great Commission Resurgence contains "only one passing and playful reference to Calvinism." And that reference was placed there to drive the point that they do not have to agree on the specifics of Calvinism to work together in obeying the Great Commission.

The more formal 10-point GCR Declaration, meanwhile, contains no mention of Calvinism.

Akin stressed, "[T]he GCR is not about Calvinism."

Moreover, clearing up misunderstandings about task force members, Akin said he is not a classic Calvinist. Neither is SBC president Johnny Hunt or task force chairman Ronnie Floyd, he pointed out.

"[O]f all the members of the GCRTF that was appointed by Johnny Hunt, I know of only one person who is a Calvinist," he noted.

Another myth that Akin tackled was the rumor that the goal of some members of the task force to get more money to the nations is only a smoke screen to get more money to the seminaries.

"The GCR is not and has never been about getting more money to the seminaries," he stated.

"There are approximately 1.6 billion people who have no access to the gospel and 3.4 billion with limited or no access to the gospel. There are major population centers in North America, most of which are not in the South, that are bereft of strong evangelical churches and gospel witness. This is what inspired the genesis of the GCR in the first place. This is what is occupying the time and energy of the GCRTF."

During the panel's first listening session in August, Floyd told the group that their commission "is to reveal the honest and true status of this denomination," as reported by Baptist Press. The current reality is that baptisms fell for the third straight year in 2007 to the denomination's lowest level since 1987 and total membership also declined for the first time in years. Growth over the past few decades has plateaued, many have acknowledged.

The panel is expected to bring a report and any recommendations to the SBC's meeting next summer.

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  • Wed Oct 28, 2009 11:56 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    Canons of Dort tell us that the gospel, “ought to be declared and published to all nations, and to all persons promiscuously and without distinction,
    to whom God out of His good pleasure sends the gospel.”

    Pretty clear why Calvinists would be evangelistic.

    Grace and Peace,
    Jim

  • Sun Oct 25, 2009 8:46 pm Agree: 2   Disagree: 2

    As a Director of Missions in the SBC, most Southern Baptist Pastors and Directors of Missions and members who I know are 4 to 4.5 Point Calvinists in that they do not believe God has already predetermined who will go to heaven and who will go to hell. They simply don't believe God purposely created people to send to hell with no chance or hope of being saved. Although, God does indeed know who will be saved, He by no means has predetermined that.

  • Sun Oct 25, 2009 9:03 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 2

    Yes, the Calvinists are coming... I mean they are already here. The thought that Calvinism negates evangelism is a false statement. Because God has saved us, and because He has called and chosen us to be the tools to bring the elect in, we must go forth and preach the Gospel without compromise. It is because of our election and our belief in the sovereignty of God that we evangelize.

  • Sat Oct 24, 2009 9:22 pm Agree: 2   Disagree: 0

    If God has determined who will be and will not be saved, then why bother with evangelism? Each human's destiniy is a stacked deck, we are nothing but pawns, and God is a wicked sadist. I would rather go to hell than worship a thing like that.
    Funtunately we have a God who has clearly told us that our predestination is based on His forknowledge. His purposes are always fulfilled without ever Him ever forcing Himself on a single human will. Jesus used the language of choice and personal responsibility, was joking? Was he only jesting when he used words like "whosoever will"? I don't think so. There is no problem with God being Soverign and granting to man, a free will, it is the only thing that make sense, and the only thing logical thing that accounts for what it, that is reality.
    Southern Baptist should be conserned about Presbytarin infiltration. Calvanism has killed that denomination, and it will do the same to ours if we let our guard down. I have seen Calvinists win more Chirtians over to Calvanism than I have ever seen them win the Lost to Christ.

  • Sat Oct 24, 2009 7:52 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    Knight,

    Unfortunately, hypers may not accurately represent reformed theology but they do represent it quite boisterously. There are those on the other end of the spectrum who do not accurately represent the Arminian theology either but they are quite boisterous and public as well.

    This is what happens when we take very complicated and nuanced doctrinal issues and documents and make them into 10 words instead of teaching the whole thing.

    In today's "debates", Calvin wouldn't be calvinist enough and Jacobus wouldn't be enough of a free-willer.

    Grace and Peace,
    Jim

  • Fri Oct 23, 2009 3:39 pm Agree: 1   Disagree: 0

    Calvinism is not at odds with Gospel proclimation... Quite the opposite. Since we do not know who the elect are we are to preach faith and repentance to all people. We know that no one can respond favorably to the gospel apart from the working of the Spirit.

    I'll say it one more time, Reformed Theology (Calvinism) is NOT at odds with the Great Commission. It is a misrepresentation of historic Calvinism to suggest otherwise.

    By the way, Hyper Calvinists do not represent historic Calvinism.

  • Thu Oct 22, 2009 1:14 pm Agree: 2   Disagree: 5

    I consider myself to be a Calvinist, but I follow the teachings of the Bible alone.

  • Thu Oct 22, 2009 12:50 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 1

    Although I am not a Calvinist, those who profess to follow the teachings of Calvin would be hard pressed to ignore this piece of history:

    Canons of Dort:
    tell us that the gospel “ought to be declared and published to all nations, and to all persons promiscuously and without distinction, to whom God out of His good pleasure sends the gospel.”

    Hyper - Hyper - Calvinists may disagree (and the numbers are small as far as anyone can count) but those who hold to the theological tradition of the Reformed faith must accept this I think.

    Grace and Peace,

    Jim

  • Thu Oct 22, 2009 12:35 pm Agree: 1   Disagree: 3

    "And that reference was placed there to drive the point that they do not have to agree on the specifics of Calvinism to work together in obeying the Great Commission."

    This is an example of how spiritually illiterate people are becoming these days. Calvinists believe in the Great Commission, because even though God predestined salvation that does not take away our obligation to share the gospel with EVERYONE (because we don't know who has been chosen).

  • Wed Oct 21, 2009 6:43 pm Agree: 10   Disagree: 2

    The Calvinists are coming, the Calvinists are coming. It must be a long time since anyone worried about a Calvinist conspiracy.

    "Southern Baptists should be known as Jesus people, Akin has stressed, rather than known for their traditions, legalisms, moralisms and a "sourpuss attitudes."

    Gosh, if I made that kind of statement, I would be accused of being vindictive toward SBs.

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