| THE SOUTHERN BAPTIST CONVENTION
AN AID TO UNDERSTANDING
Rev. May 2005
CONTACT: John Revell
615-782-8611
jrevell@sbc.net
This brief paper is offered to assist those who wish to understand
the Southern Baptist Convention, its work, perspectives, and governance,
better.
BAPTISTS IN AMERICA
A recent poll found that almost one American
in five claims to be a Baptist. Baptists in America are divided
into more than fifty
bodies, but 92 percent of Baptists are found in five of those bodies—the
Southern Baptist Convention (SBC); National Baptist Convention,
USA, Inc. (NBC); National Baptist Convention of America, Inc.;
(NBCA); American Baptist Churches in the USA (ABC); and Baptist
Bible Fellowship International (BBFI).
More than half of the Baptists in the country belong to the Southern
Baptist Convention, which is the single largest non-Catholic (or
Protestant) denomination in the country.
CURRENT STATUS OF THE SOUTHERN BAPTIST CONVENTION
Since its initial organization in 1845 in Augusta, Georgia, the
Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) has grown to more than 16.2 million
members who worship in over 43,000 churches in the United States.
The Convention assigns and conducts its work
through twelve boards and agencies (referred to in SBC parlance
as “entities”),
which are supported by the churches through their financial contributions
to the Cooperative Program. They are organized for ministry, evangelism,
missionary, educational, ethical, religious liberty, and other
benevolent enterprises.
PURPOSE
Article II of the SBC constitution states that the purpose of
the Convention is to provide a general organization for Baptists
in the United States and its territories for the promotion of Christian
missions at home and abroad, and any other objects such as Christian
education, benevolent enterprises, and social services which it
may deem proper and advisable for the furtherance of the Kingdom
of God.
Working through 1,191 local associations (composed of the churches
in single- or multi-county groupings), forty-one state conventions
(composed of the churches in single-or multi-state groupings),
Southern Baptists are bound together in their cooperative endeavors
by basic biblical beliefs and a commitment to proclaim the Gospel
of Jesus Christ to the entire world.
BELIEFS
Baptists are people of deep beliefs and cherished doctrines that
can be broadly described as evangelical, or orthodox, and expressive
of historic Christianity. Throughout their history they have
been a confessional people, adopting statements of faith as a
witness to their beliefs, and are formulated with the desire
that they embody the teaching of Scripture in simple form.
The first of these statements of faith, approved by the convention
in 1925, was titled the Baptist Faith and Message (BF&M). In
1963, the BF&M was revised to address certain areas not dealt
with in the earlier version. In 1998, a revision was made which
included biblical teachings on the family. In 2000, the Convention
approved a revised BF&M which specifically addressed certain
moral and ethical issues that were not spoken to when the 1963
version was approved.
The Baptist Faith and Message is considered to be a consensus document
of things most surely believed among the preponderance of Southern
Baptists. You may print a copy of the Baptist Faith and Message
at www.sbc.net. (back to top)
PRESUPPOSITIONS BEHIND SOUTHERN BAPTIST POLITY
• The Believers’ Church
“
A local church or congregation is basically a fellowship of persons
each of whom has personal faith in Jesus Christ. Basic in Baptist
beliefs is the conviction that a person who has not trusted his
life to Jesus Christ for forgiveness and guidance is not ready
for church membership. Baptists believe that no one who does not
personally know and follow Christ can practice the bold challenges
which Jesus set forth…” (Sullivan)
• The Lordship of Christ
“
Baptists also believe that congregational decisions cannot be properly
made unless the members discussing and voting on important spiritual
matters in the church are seeking to do God’s will rather
than their own. While the church uses democratic processes, it
is, in fact, practicing theo democracy (democracy under the leadership
of God).” (Sullivan)
Individual Christians, who are seen as believer-priests, can be
expected to act in keeping with their Great High Priest.
• The Autonomy Of Churches
And General Baptist Bodies
A Baptist church is free to decide its own affairs. This freedom
is called autonomy, which means self-rule. Paul taught that each
church had a full complement of gifts for leadership and service.
The Southern Baptist Convention does not ordain ministers, assign
ministers to churches, levy contributions to denominational causes,
dictate literature and calendar, or assign persons to churches
according to place of residence. These are matters for the local
church to decide.
A free church may freely choose to work with other free churches.
In Baptist bodies such as associations and conventions, messengers
from the churches to these general bodies meet to share counsel
and encouragement, discuss common problems, conduct business, and
pool their resources to do ministries together which no one church
could do alone. This is un-coerced cooperation.
Southern Baptists are wary of interdenominational councils. While
Southern Baptists work with other churches on matters such as abortion
and pornography, read and hear non-Southern Baptists, they do not
enter into covenants with others who may wish to speak for them.
• The Value Of Cooperation
While self-governance is an indisputable right of every Baptist
body, the necessity for, and the duty to, practice interdependence
and cooperation temper that right. Churches in the New Testament
partnered together for missions and ministry, they agreed upon
common doctrine, and they adhered to commonly acceptable practices
and policies.
It is self-evident that churches can accomplish much more by working
together in advancing the gospel than they can alone and isolated.
This kind of fruitful partnership is reflected in SBC denominational
organization. Southern Baptist churches are independent in the
area of leadership and local organization, and interdependent in
matters of missions, ministry, and common orthodoxy.
To summarize, Southern Baptists stress both local
church autonomy and the power of voluntary cooperation. They do
not want to lose
or compromise either of these important principles. Fortunately,
they need not give up either, for freedom and cooperation do not
compete. Instead, they complement each other. Southern Baptist
churches are both independent and interdependent. (back
to top)
POLITY—HOW THE CONVENTION WORKS
Southern Baptist churches meet annually in
convention. They do so by electing “messengers” who attend the Convention,
and participate in the business of the Convention. In Southern
Baptist parlance, representatives from churches are “messengers,” not “delegates.” Theoretically,
they bring no authority from the churches over the Convention,
and they take no authority from the Convention back to the churches.
From the Convention’s beginning, this relationship has been
based on trust. Usually those elected bring back to the church
a report of the meeting. In this way, all members of the church
can feel vitally involved in the work of the Convention.
During the annual convention meeting, thousands
of messengers make decisions relative to the organization’s
worldwide ministry. When those decisions are made, Convention
entities and the Executive
Committee carry out those assignments.
Southern Baptist churches provide financial support for the work
of the denomination through the Cooperative Program (See below.)
This unified funding program enables individual churches of any
size to join with others in carrying out significant national and
international projects. At the annual convention meeting, the messengers
hear reports and vote on policies and budget allocations for each
of the twelve SBC entities, or ministry agencies. (See below for
list of entities.)
Each Southern Baptist church can send as many as ten messengers
to this annual convention meeting. The cap on the number of voting
messengers is intended to ensure equality of small and large congregations
alike. Any cooperating church of any size that contributes to SBC
causes can send at least one messenger. It may send an additional
messenger for each additional 250 members or $250 in contributions,
up to a maximum of ten. When this plan of representation was first
adopted, most churches were small and had little money. Now, however,
churches are larger, and inflation has made $250 worth much less
than when this figure was set a century ago. The result is that
presently more than 70 percent of all Southern Baptist churches
could send the maximum of ten messengers to the Convention. Of
course, if they should do so, there would not be room in a convention
center for all of them.
During each Convention, messengers also elect a Convention president
to a one-year term, who is eligible to serve two consecutive terms.
The president presides over Convention business sessions, and appoints
the Committee on Committees that in turn nominates a Committee
on Nominations, made up of two representatives from each cooperating
state. When elected by the Convention, this committee then nominates
persons for election by the Convention to serve as trustees who
oversee the work of the various boards, seminaries, and other Convention
entities. Through this appointment process, the Convention president
can, in time, greatly influence the policies and directions of
the Convention and its work.
The entities of the SBC (not including WMU) are under
the direction of boards of trustees elected by the Southern Baptist
Convention.
They select the chief executive officers who oversee general operations.
These persons operate under the authority given them by the trustees
under whom they work. The trustees have no authority except that
given them by the Southern Baptist Convention appointing them.
Each year in annual session, the executive officers of the entities
subject themselves to public reporting and interrogation. If complex
questions are asked to which immediate answers cannot be supplied,
those answers are to be determined by research and dealt with by
the appropriate trustees. Subsequent full reporting is required
at the next annual meeting of the Convention. (back
to top)
THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
In order to understand contemporary Southern
Baptist Convention operations, it is important to understand
the work of the Executive
Committee. The Executive Committee is to act for the Southern Baptist
Convention ad interim, or between sessions. It reviews the work
of the Convention’s entities. This Committee itself is subject
to the review of the Convention.
In 1917, the Southern Baptist Convention altered its basic structure
when it authorized the formation of the Executive Committee. Its
formation was the outgrowth of four years of efforts to bring order
to the Convention's growing agenda and complicated structure that
had developed over the years. At that time at least thirty-three
committees were appointed each year.
In his history of the Executive Committee,
Albert McClellan stated, "the
use of so many committees created problems: (1) They were in some
instances assigned complex issues without full information. (2)
They consumed too much of the Convention's time in reporting. Twenty
nine of the committees had to do their work and report to the Convention
within a six day period. (3) The committees of reference for board
reports were barriers between the persons responsible for the boards
and the Convention. (4) Too many committees were keeping the Convention
preoccupied with mechanics, when it should have been concerned
with message. (5) The four committees appointed to plan for the
1911 Convention pointed to the need for standing committees to
work between sessions. (6) There still was no general committee
to gather up the loose ends. Too much time was spent admiring the
library, and there was little time left to study the books."
The Convention elects the members of this Committee, which now
number eighty-two, who come from the forty-one state conventions.
The Executive Committee is not a board, but a committee. That is,
while it can make recommendations to or about entities or issue
reports on entities; no entity is directly accountable to it. Each
entity is directly responsible to the Convention of church messengers
in annual session. This provides a direct approach to problems.
The work of the Executive Committee is basically
fiscal and advisory. It operates in harmony with the Convention’s
desire to provide checks and balances essential to effective
democratic processes.
The Southern Baptist Convention has assigned it two different kinds
of responsibility. First, it is charged with administrative duty
for the Southern Baptist Convention when it is not in session.
Thus, the Executive Committee receives and distributes funds given
for the various missions, evangelism, educational, and ministry
enterprises for the Southern Baptist Convention, plans and manages
the annual meeting, publishes the Convention Annual, assists Convention
committees, handles legal matters, and provides staff assistance
to the elected officials of the Convention. The Committee also
handles any matters that have not been otherwise assigned specifically
to any entity arising between Convention sessions.
The Executive Committee is also assigned program
responsibilities: 1) for Cooperative Program promotion, 2) managing
the Southern
Baptist Foundation, which manages proceeds from wills, bequests
and other investments, 3) operating Baptist Press, the SBC news
service, and 4) providing a convention relations office, which
articulates Southern Baptist positions to constituents and to the
public through the media as well as producing SBC LIFE newsmagazine. (back
to top)
STRUCTURAL RELATIONSHIPS
Churches
The local churches are considered the most basic, and most authoritative,
element in Southern Baptist life. They give emphasis to the trustworthiness
of the Bible as God’s Word, the necessity of men and women
trusting Christ alone for salvation, the power of the Gospel
to change anyone who truly believes and receives it, and the
importance of missions to the entire earth. A church technically
becomes Southern Baptist by contributing to the mission causes
of the Convention.
If that contribution is made within the fiscal year (October-September)
preceding a particular annual meeting (June), the church is entitled
to send up to ten messengers to the Convention.
Requirements for a church to be affiliated as a Southern Baptist
church are straightforward and simple. Southern Baptist Convention
bylaws on membership state that in order for a church to represent
and vote at the SBC, it must “be in friendly cooperation
with the Convention and sympathetic with its purposes and work” and
be "a bona fide contributor to the Convention's work during
the fiscal year preceding" (Southern Baptist Convention 2004
Annual, p. 4). No exact amount of financial support is specified;
it simply must be a “bona fide contributor.” It further
specifies, “Among churches not in friendly cooperation with
the Convention are churches which act to affirm, approve, or endorse
homosexual behavior.”
“Friendly cooperation” can be demonstrated by various
means … the adoption of The Baptist Faith and Message, use
of Bible study materials published by the Southern Baptist Convention,
and so forth. It certainly implies that a church should give very
serious consideration to whether it understands that it is following
the Lord in aligning with the Southern Baptist Convention, and
is committed to doing so.
Ministers
Within the Southern Baptist Convention, the licensing and ordination
of ministers is a local church matter.
There is no denominational ordination service. The list of Southern
Baptist ministers is simply a compilation from the reports of the
churches. The Southern Baptist convention neither frocks nor defrocks
ministers.
Individuals
Individuals do not join the Southern Baptist Convention per se.
Rather, they become Southern Baptists by virtue of becoming a member
of a Southern Baptist church. Each church establishes its own individual
enrollment procedure, which ordinarily includes the profession
of individual faith and baptism of each candidate for church membership. (back
to top)
THE SBC AS A DENOMINATION
As has been described earlier, the SBC is an alliance of independent,
autonomous, churches working together voluntarily in friendly cooperation
under the heading "Southern Baptist." Southern Baptists
have concluded that the denomination gives churches a way to collectively
express their convictions and realize their vision. Denominations
allow churches to be a part of a larger enterprise, pooling their
resources to establish and advance Great Commission work. A denomination
can have an impact larger than the sum of the impacts of the individual
churches.
Incidentally, you may ask, “Isn't a convention a meeting
and not a denomination?” In one sense of the word, the Southern
Baptist Convention exists for only two days a year, at the annual
gathering. During the course of the rest of the year, denominational
entities carry out the instructions of the messengers to the Convention.
However, the SBC frequently identifies itself
with the term “denomination” or
one of its forms. Thus, it is correct to speak of the Southern
Baptist Convention as a denomination. (back
to top)
UNIFIED FUNDING MECHANISM -- THE COOPERATIVE PROGRAM
Cooperation helps fuel the fire of Southern Baptist mission and
ministry around the world. Following its founding in 1845, support
of Convention work depended on the societal financial principle,
i.e., support flowed to the specific enterprises of the Convention
based on the attractiveness of the enterprise and persuasive powers
of the various leaders.
In 1925, Southern Baptists instituted the Cooperative Program
through which they have since funded the advance of the gospel
locally, statewide, nationally and internationally. This unified
program for funding Convention work has made possible the more
comprehensive denominationalism contemporary Southern Baptists
have come to expect.
The Cooperative Program has been described
by some as “the
greatest voluntary funding program in the history of Christendom,” providing
support for approximately 10,500 foreign and domestic missionaries,
theological education through the six Southern Baptist seminaries,
ethical challenge and leadership through the Ethics and Religious
Liberty Commission, plus the facilitating ministries of the Executive
Committee and the GuideStone Financial Resources.
The Woman’s Missionary Union, an auxiliary
to the SBC, serves in partnership with the International Mission
Board and the North
American Mission Board in encouraging the churches to give generously
through the Cooperative Program. (back to
top)
COOPERATIVE PROGRAM SUPPORT STATISTICS
During the 2003-04 fiscal year, the Executive Committee received
and disbursed more than $189.8 million in Cooperative Program gifts
and more than $189 million in designated giving. Combined Cooperative
Program and Designated Gifts for 2003-2004 totaled more than $378.8
million for the year, which reflects an 8.5 percent increase above
2002-03.
Lottie Moon and Annie Armstrong mission offering gifts during
2003-04 totaled $176,461,279.96, which is a 16.9 percent increase
above 2002-03, for which we are extremely grateful.
Faithful Southern Baptists continue to provide
funds in record amounts in obedience to the Great Commission;
to reach the peoples
of the world with the good news that the Bible is true, God’s
care for men and women is real and strong, and eternal life in
Jesus Christ is available for all through God’s grace. (back
to top)
AGENCIES/ENTITIES OF THE SOUTHERN BAPTIST CONVENTION
The Southern Baptist Convention operates twelve agencies or entities,
as we now call them:
• World mission ministries are the International Mission Board, and
the North American Mission Board.
• Theological education ministries are Southern Seminary, Southwestern
Seminary, New Orleans Seminary, Golden Gate Seminary, Southeastern
Seminary, and Midwestern Seminary.
• Christian ethics and religious liberty ministry is assigned to
the Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission.
• Very expansive church enrichment ministry and literature publication
are assignments of LifeWay Christian Resources.
• The GuideStone Financial Resources (formerly the Annuity Board),
which manages ministerial retirement and insurance needs, and the
Executive Committee are facilitating ministries.
• (NOTE) The Woman’s Missionary
Union is not owned and nor operated by the Convention, and is
the sole auxiliary of
the SBC. It cooperates very closely with the International Mission
Board and the North American Mission Board to encourage churches
to give generously through the Cooperative Program. (back
to top)
STATISTICAL SNAPSHOT
Southern Baptists believe that God is at work
in their efforts around the world. The following data illustrates
some of what the
Lord has done through Southern Baptists’ service and sacrifice.
Data below is from the last complete annual report.
Evangelism and Church Growth
•
Baptisms – 387,947 people were baptized in Southern Baptist
churches in the U.S., and 607,132 were baptized in SBC related
churches overseas. This averages about one baptism every 32 seconds.
• Southern Baptists started 1,781 new congregations in the United
States, an average of 4.9 new churches every day.
Theological Education
• The six seminaries operated by the Southern Baptist Convention
provided theological preparation for 15,931 students for ministry
at home and around the world.
• In addition, Seminary Extension provided biblical and theological
courses to 3,729 laymen and lay ministers through 450 extension
centers.
Moral Concerns
• The SBC Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission is leading Southern
Baptists to study and act upon a broad range of social and moral
issues such as alcohol abuse, gambling, racism, pornography, homosexuality,
abortion, world hunger, AIDS, homelessness, religious liberty,
religious persecution, euthanasia, and bioethical issues like human
cloning and fetal stem cell research.
Helping Ministry Families in Need
• In addition to assisting pastors in insurance and retirement needs,
GuideStone Financial Resources of the Southern Baptist Convention
(formerly the SBC Annuity Board) provided direct financial assistance
to 1,485 low-income retired ministers, and their spouses or widows
last year.
International Ministry
•
Southern Baptists supported approximately 5,300 IMB missionaries—the
most in the history of the SBC—reaching 1,194 people groups.
They reported more than 600,000 baptisms and nearly 17,000 new
churches started outside the United States.
• Southern Baptists continue to step
up in record numbers to serve in short-term volunteer projects
overseas with more than
30,000 volunteers participating last year. That compares to 12,756
volunteers in 1994 and 6,066 in 1984.
Ministry in North America
• Southern Baptists supported approximately 5,126 missionaries and
350,918 volunteers served in mission projects in the U.S., Puerto
Rico, Canada, American Samoa, and the Virgin Islands through the
North American Mission Board -- the greatest number in SBC history.
• SBC Disaster Relief
teams respond to
ice storms, tornadoes, hurricanes, flooding, and chemical spills
across the U.S. Disaster
Relief operations have included long-term rebuilding in the wake
of flooding and flood cleanup efforts.
• In 1996, Elizabeth Dole of the American Red Cross declared
that Southern Baptists fed more meals in disaster situations under
Red Cross auspices since Hurricane Hugo in 1989 than any private
or religious group in the nation – about 80 percent of the
total! (BP - 9/9/96). During the 9/11 relief efforts a Red Cross
worker in New York said, “Everywhere I turn there’s
a Southern Baptist!”
• A dramatic Disaster Relief effort was
in response to the September 11 attack. Within hours of the news,
Disaster Relief
units manned by Southern Baptist volunteers mobilized and began
providing relief for victims, family members, and the New York
City community. More than 3,800 volunteers from Southern Baptist
churches around the country partnered with the Red Cross, the Salvation
Army, and more than 200 Southern Baptist churches in the New York
City area to prepare 1,250,000 meals; clean and sanitize almost
700 apartments from debris; care for more than 850 children at
mobile child care units while their parents sought assistance from
private, governmental, and religious charities. The SBC North American
Mission Board sent some 90 chaplains from 18 states to New York
City, where they counseled with victims and their families in the
city morgue and throughout the city.
•
Since mid-August, in the wake of hurricanes Charley, Frances, Ivan,
and Jeanne, more than 7,000 Southern Baptist Disaster Relief volunteers
have helped prepare nearly 2 million meals and completed more than
5,600 cleanup and recovery projects, according to the Southern
Baptist Convention’s North American Mission Board. (BP 10/1/04)
• Southern Baptist volunteers in disaster
relief responses typically prepare most of the meals distributed
by the American
Red Cross. Southern Baptists are the third-largest disaster relief
agency in the country with more than 28,000 trained volunteers
on call for local, state, and national emergencies. (BP 9/20/04)
World Hunger Relief
• In 2004, Southern Baptists contributed $7,574,160 to the Southern
Baptist World Hunger Fund and relief funds, none of which was used
for administration. Last year in the U.S. alone, there were more
than 31,000 professions of faith stemming from hunger and relief
efforts. These funds provided over 3.9 million meals in Canada,
the U.S., and its territories. In addition, Southern Baptists provided
food and poverty relief assistance through 293 projects in 52 countries
overseas. (back to top)
SBC COMPARISON WITH MAINLINE DENOMINATIONS
SBC and Mainline Denomination Membership Trends
1961-1998
(Source: Adherents.com)
• Methodists: 1961 –11,709,629; 1998 – 8,500,000.
Decrease about 27%
• Episcopal: 1961 – 3,500,000; 1998 – 2,500,000.
Decrease about 28%
• Presbyterian Church USA: 1965 – 4,000,000; 1999 – 2,600,000.
Decrease about 36%
• Christian Church (Disciples of Christ): 1961 – 1,800,000;
1998 – 879,000. Decrease about 52%
• The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America formed in 1987
as a result of the merging of the Lutheran Church of America, the
American Lutheran Church, and the Association of Evangelical Lutherans.
In 1987 they reported membership of 5,290,000 – in 1998 they
reported 5,185,055 (in 2002 they report 5,125,919).
• American Baptist Churches in the USA
reported 1,500,000 in 1960 and 1,503,267 in 1998 (the Baptist
World Alliance Website
reported 1,455,855 in 2000)
• Southern Baptist Convention: 1961 – 9,978,000;
1998 – 15,851,356.
Increase about 59% (back to top)
CONCLUSION:
The polity of the Southern Baptist Convention is practically unique
in the world of religious denominations. Though unusual, it has
been remarkably effective in facilitating the cooperative work
of the more than 43,000 Southern Baptist churches together through
the Convention. (back to top)
SOURCES AND CITATIONS:
James L. Sullivan, How Southern Baptists Work Together, Baptist
Heritage, pamphlet series, (1979).
Bill Merrell, Article, “A Sad Story Of Seven Sisters”,
SBC Life, May 1996. (back to top)
MISCELLANEOUS INFORMATION ON THE SBC
THE CONVENTION. The Southern Baptist Convention is both an annual
national meeting and a voluntary association of 43,000 affiliated
churches having 16.3 million members (2004 figures) representing
all 50 states.
As an annual meeting, the gathering in Nashville, June 21-22,
2005, was the 148th in the Convention's 160-year history -- the
SBC formed in Augusta, Ga., during 1845. As a denomination, the
SBC is the largest evangelical body in America.
The annual meeting is held in a different region of the country
each June to allow the Convention to conduct its business. Typically,
between 10,000 to 15,000 Southern Baptists and guests attend the
annual meeting. The actual number of registered messengers in modern
times has ranged from 8,871 when the Convention met in Portland,
Ore., in 1973 -- its first time in the Northwest -- to a record
of 45,519 in Dallas in 1985.
Future host cities for the annual meetings include Greensboro,
N.C. in 2006 and San Antonio, Texas in 2007. Recommendations for
future sites are presented and voted on at the annual meeting.
SBC TERMINOLOGY. Southern Baptists, because of their historic
belief in the free religious choice of each person and in the autonomy
of the local church, use terms and approaches which may differ
from those used by other denominations.
Here are some examples:
1. The exact and proper name of the denomination is the Southern
Baptist Convention. When referring to the national body, it is
never the Southern Baptist Church or The Baptist Church. When referring
to a local congregation it is proper to use the (name) Baptist
church.
2. Churches cooperate with, or are affiliated with, the Southern
Baptist Convention. These churches have not delegated authority
to messengers they elected to attend the SBC -- for this reason
messengers are not referred to as delegates. A church's messengers
may vote for a particular Convention policy, but the church is
not bound to observe it.
NOTE: A messenger is a member of a missionary Baptist church that
is in friendly cooperation with the Convention, sympathetic with
its purposes and work, and, been a bona fide contributor to the
Convention’s work during the fiscal year preceding. A messenger
must be a member of the church that appoints him or her.
Cooperating churches are entitled to one additional messenger
for each $250 contributed to the work of the Convention or each
250 members. Each church is limited to 10 messengers.
Churches not in cooperation with the Convention include those
that act to affirm, approve, or endorse homosexual behavior.
Attendance is not limited to messengers, but only messengers can
vote on business presented to the Convention. Messengers usually
comprise about two-thirds of the attendance.
3. More than 40 state Baptist conventions or general associations
and state fellowships provide, facilitate or otherwise support
ministries in all 50 states. Each state organization is independent
of, but cooperates in, the ministries of the Southern Baptist Convention.
State organizations have entities of their own and many operate
colleges, hospitals and children's homes.
NOTE: The Southern Baptist Convention has no jurisdiction over
entities and policies of a state convention. Likewise, the SBC
has no jurisdiction over district-level associations of Baptist
churches. Finally, the SBC has no jurisdiction over local churches
-- each congregation is an autonomous body that hires its pastor
and other staff and owns its facilities.
4. Each of the SBC entities and auxiliary identifies its chief
executive officer as president and its trustee head as chairman.
NOTE (corporations related to the Southern Baptist Convention):
General Boards: The International Mission Board of the Southern Baptist Convention,
Richmond, Virginia; The North American Mission Board of the Southern Baptist
Convention, Inc., Alpharetta, Georgia; LifeWay Christian Resources of the
Southern Baptist Convention, Nashville, Tennessee; Annuity Board of the Southern
Baptist Convention, Dallas, Texas.
Institutions: The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, Louisville,
Kentucky; The Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, Fort Worth,
Texas; New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary, New Orleans, Louisiana;
Golden Gate Baptist Theological Seminary, Mill Valley, California;
The Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary, Inc., Wake Forest,
North Carolina; Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, Inc.,
Kansas City, Missouri.
Commission: The Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission of the
Southern Baptist Convention, Nashville, Tennessee.
Auxiliary: Woman’s Missionary Union,
Auxiliary to the Southern Baptist Convention, Birmingham, Alabama.
Other: The Executive Committee of the Southern Baptist Convention,
Nashville, Tennessee.
5. Motions adopted at the annual meeting are binding upon the
national entities to which the motion refers. Resolutions, on the
other hand, are non-binding. Neither motions nor resolutions are
binding on state conventions, district-level associations or local
churches.
6. Although a number of SBC leaders are influential, no one is
authorized to speak for the Southern Baptist Convention beyond
what the Convention itself has indicated by pronouncement or other
action.
7. The Cooperative Program is the conduit through which Southern
Baptists empower their mission efforts. Also referred to as CP
Missions, The Cooperative Program supports state convention and
SBC missions and ministries throughout the United States, North
America and internationally. Currently, more than 5,000 missionaries
serve across North America and another 5,000 serve in 153 countries
touching more than 1100 people groups. The Cooperative Program
enables Southern Baptist congregations to partner together through
a multitude of ministries including: educating future pastors,
missionaries and ministry leaders; sending and supporting missionaries;
providing relief for retired ministers and widows; helping members
apply Christian principles to moral and social problems.
WORKING TOOLS OF MESSENGERS. Messengers to the Southern Baptist
Convention find a number of items of printed materials useful.
The Book of Reports contains the annual reports of the committees
and entities of the Convention and includes any recommendation
that requires a vote. Another working tool is the Convention Bulletin;
a newspaper published daily during the convention, which contains
announcements of business, times and places of special meetings
and other times of vital interest. Following the annual session,
the contents of the Book of Reports and the proceedings of the
convention are compiled into the Southern Baptist Convention Annual.
It also contains a directory of pastors and denominational workers
by states.
BASIC BELIEFS. Southern Baptists do not have a creed, but have
adopted various statements of faith -- accepting Scripture as the
source of doctrine. These statements of faith are neither binding
on members nor intended to hamper freedom of thought or the investigation
of the truth. Instead, these serve as statements of doctrinal consensus
among Southern Baptists and as an expression of our beliefs to
the world.
Additional reference pieces available through the Southern Baptist
Convention Executive Committee:
We Thought You'd Like to Know -- provides position statements
on many key issues facing Southern Baptists.
Meet Southern Baptists -- describes the generally held convictions
of Southern Baptists and gives general information about Southern
Baptist entities and related organizations.
Baptist Faith & Message 2000 -- details
the doctrina
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