Toward A Great Commission Resurgence in the Southern Baptist
Convention
Then Jesus came near and said to them, “All authority
has been given to Me in heaven and on earth. Go, therefore,
and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name
of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching
them to observe everything I have commanded you. And remember,
I am with you always, to the end of the age” (Matthew
28:18-20, HCSB).
Preamble
Southern Baptists have always been a Great
Commission people. Christ’s command to go, disciple, baptize, and teach
is woven into the very DNA of our churches. By God’s
grace, over the last thirty years, the SBC has undergone a
Conservative Resurgence that has brought substantive changes
to many of our churches and all of our Convention’s seminaries
and boards. We are thankful for the Conservative Resurgence
and believe that God has also called Southern Baptists to a
Great Commission Resurgence as the next step in the fulfillment
of our mandate in missions and evangelism which will result
in the renewal of our Convention. It is our conviction that
a Great Commission Resurgence must embrace the following ten
commitments:
I. A Commitment to Christ’s Lordship.
We call upon all Southern Baptists to submit to the absolute
Lordship of Jesus Christ in all things at the personal,
local church, and denominational levels. (Col. 1:18; 3:16-17,
23-24)
Scripture is clear that Jesus Christ is
Lord of all. Therefore, Jesus Christ must be our passion
and priority and we should aspire to both know Him and
love Him more fully. We must long to see Him have preeminence
in all things. We desire to see a Convention of Christ-centered, “Jesus-intoxicated” people
who pursue all that we do by God’s grace and for His
glory. We believe we need the ministry of the Holy Spirit to
lead us into a new and fresh intimacy and communion with the
Lord Jesus that results in greater obedience to all that He
commands. Christ’s Lordship must be first and foremost
in a Great Commission Resurgence or we will miss our most important
priority and fail in all of our other pursuits.
II. A Commitment to Gospel-Centeredness. We call upon all Southern
Baptists to make the gospel of Jesus Christ central in our
lives, our churches, and our convention ministries. (Rom. 1:16;
1 Cor. 15:1-4; 2 Cor. 5:17-21)
The gospel is the good news of all that God has done on behalf
of sinners through the perfect life, atoning death, and victorious
resurrection of Jesus. As individual Southern Baptists, we
must be gospel-centered from first to last. Gospel-centered
living will promote a grace-filled salvation from beginning
to end by putting on display the beauty of the gospel in every
aspect of our lives. It will remind us that we do not obey
in order to be accepted, but rather we obey because we are
accepted by God in Christ. Gospel-centered living will help
ensure that the bloody cross of a crucified King is the offense
to non-believers rather than our styles, traditions, legalisms,
moralisms, personal preferences, or unhelpful attitudes.
The gospel must also guide and saturate our local churches and
convention ministries. Too many of our pulpits have jettisoned
the pure proclamation of the gospel, which has resulted in
many of our people losing the full meaning and wonder of the
gospel. Too often our convention programs and agendas have
been crafted without a close tethering to the gospel. If we
assume the gospel, we will lose the gospel. If we are to experience
a Great Commission Resurgence, we must get the gospel right
and proclaim it with clarity and boldness.
III. A Commitment to the Great Commandments. We call upon all
Southern Baptists to recommit to the priority of the Great
Commandments in every aspect of our lives and every priority
we embrace as a network of local Baptist churches. (Matt. 22:37-40)
Every Christian is called first and foremost to love God and
secondly to love others. Greater love for God will always lead
to greater love for people created in His image. The Great
Commission flows from the Great Commandments.
We believe too many of us have lost some of our love for God
and others somewhere along the way. This has devastated our
witness. If we love Jesus as we should, we will love sinners
as we ought and pursue them as He did. Though we believe that
God calls believers to speak out against moral ills, this must
not be done in a way that is hateful toward unbelievers or
trades gospel priorities for political influence. We must not
condemn those who are already under the just wrath of God,
but must seek to serve them and proclaim Christ to them with
the hope that God will save them.
Loving God and loving others means our
churches must become more diverse. Southern Baptists were
born, in part, out of a racist context and for over a century
embraced systemic racism. For far too much of our history
we failed to love our neighbors as ourselves, and that
will forever be to our shame. By God’s
grace and the Spirit’s conviction, we publically repented
of this in 1995 on our 150th anniversary, but there is still
much work to be done. Until our churches better reflect the
diversity we look forward to in heaven, we must labor at gospel-centered
racial reconciliation.
Furthermore, loving God and loving others means each of us must
be watchful in our relationships with others in our churches
and our Convention. We must accept our constant need to humble
ourselves and repent of pride, arrogance, jealousy, hatred,
contentions, lying, selfish ambitions, laziness, complacency,
idolatries and every other sin of the flesh that leads to broken
relationships and harms our witness before the watching world.
IV. A Commitment to Biblical Inerrancy
and Sufficiency. We call
upon all Southern Baptists to unite around a firm conviction
in the full truthfulness and complete sufficiency of Christian
Scripture in all matters of faith and practice. (Matt 5:17-18;
John 10:35; 17:17; 2 Tim 3:16-17; 2 Peter 1:20-21)
Through the Conservative Resurgence Southern
Baptists reaffirmed their historic belief that the Bible
is God’s written
revelation to humanity and is “truth without any mixture
of error.” By God’s grace, what some have called
the
“Battle for the Bible” that began in the SBC 1979
has been won. However, we believe the “War for the Bible” began
in the Garden of Eden when the serpent first questioned the
truthfulness of God’s words and will continue until all
things are made new in Christ. Southern Baptists must not retreat
one inch from the non-negotiable doctrine that the Bible is
without error, lest we squander the gains of recent years.
Furthermore, we must recommit ourselves to the full sufficiency
of Scripture. It is not enough to believe that the Bible is
inerrant; we must also be willing to submit to all of its teachings,
even if that means we must relinquish our own preferences or
human traditions.
V. A Commitment to a Healthy Confessional
Center. We call upon all Southern Baptists to look to the
Baptist Faith and Message 2000 as a sufficient guide for
building a theological consensus for partnership in the
gospel, refusing to be sidetracked by theological agendas
that distract us from our Lord’s
Commission. (1 Tim. 6:3-4)
In 2000 the Southern Baptist Convention
overwhelmingly adopted a revised edition of the Baptist
Faith and Message as an instrument of doctrinal accountability
to be used by our seminaries and boards. Many state conventions
followed suit. While the BF&M
2000 is neither exhaustive nor infallible, we believe that
it is a sound confession for building theological consensus
for Great Commission cooperation. Like the best of confessions,
the BF&M 2000 speaks most clearly to those doctrines wherein
we enjoy greatest agreement and speaks more generally concerning
areas where some differing opinions exist.
The promise of the Conservative Resurgence
was that eventually we would find enough common biblical
and theological ground that we could focus on the Great
Commission. We believe the BF&M 2000 is a key tool in this endeavor because it articulates
a theological consensus that is simultaneously orthodox, evangelical,
and Baptist. As we attempt to discern the difference between
primary, secondary, and tertiary issues, we believe that by
God’s grace the BF&M 2000 will guide us in our cooperation.
This is what lies at the heart of many of our present tensions.
VI. A Commitment to Biblically Healthy
Churches. We call upon
all Southern Baptists to focus on building local churches that
are thoroughly orthodox, distinctively Baptist, and passionately
committed to the Great Commission. (Matt. 16:13-20, 18:15-20;
Acts 2:41-47; Rom. 6:3-5; 1 Cor. 5)
Baptists have always been a people committed
to building local churches that reflect as closely as possible
the faith and practice of New Testament churches. We sense
numerous threats to contemporary Baptist churches including
worldliness, laziness, faddishness, heterodoxy, arrogant
sectarianism, and naïve
ecumenism. Our churches must be committed to a biblical orthodoxy
that informs every aspect of church life. Sound doctrine must
guide every priority our churches embrace and every task they
undertake.
We must be especially mindful to resist
contemporary threats to our historic, biblical Baptist
identity. Our churches must remain committed to the Baptist
distinctives of a regenerate church membership, believer’s
baptism by immersion, the priesthood of all believers,
congregational church polity, local church autonomy, and
liberty of conscience for all people. Each of these distinctives
must be embraced under the Lordship of Christ as revealed
in Christian Scripture and interpreted by gospel-centered
congregations. We must be willing to alter our practices
to better accord with a robust Baptist identity, including
in many churches a more responsible baptismal policy, the
recovery of a redemptive church discipline, a healthier
relationship between pastors and their people, and a commitment
to an every-member ministry.
Mission is not a ministry of the church,
it is at the heart of the church’s identity and essence.
We must encourage our churches to see themselves as the
missionary bodies that they are. Pastors and other leaders
must be willing to teach and model for their people how
to be missionaries in their community, regardless of their
vocation or location. Churches must have a global perspective
and recognize those members who are called to serve overseas
long-term and engage in short-term global missions. Churches
must labor to both plant new churches in unevangelized
areas of North America, especially the great urban centers,
and revitalize existing congregations. We long to see a
Convention where every church is a church planting church
in its unique Jerusalem, its Judea and Samaria, and the
uttermost parts of the earth.
VII. A Commitment to Sound Biblical Preaching. We call upon
all Southern Baptists to affirm and expect a pastoral ministry
that is characterized by faithful biblical preaching that teaches
both the content of the Scriptures and the theology embedded
in the Scriptures. (2 Tim. 4:1-5)
Biblical preaching is central to building
healthy churches that pursue healthy agendas within the
context of a healthy Convention. We need a new battalion
of well trained pastors who preach the whole Bible with
clarity and conviction. Authentic preaching must develop
systematically the Bible’s theological content.
It should understand both the Old Testament and New Testament
to be Christian Scripture that together communicates one grand
narrative about the world’s creation, fall, redemption,
and restoration, with the person and work of Jesus Christ as
the climax of the Bible’s storyline.
We also believe that genuine preaching is more than mere Bible
teaching, no matter how orthodox and articulate. Healthy preaching
should apply biblical truths in a way that makes unchanging
truths relevant to contemporary believers. It must also be
gospel preaching that pleads with men to be reconciled with
God and expects the living and powerful Word of God to produce
results and usher in conversions. It must be preaching that
convicts sinners, encourages saints, changes lives, and glorifies
God.
VIII. A Commitment to a Methodological
Diversity that is Biblically Informed. We call upon all Southern Baptists to consider themselves
and their churches to be missionaries in non-Christian cultures,
each of which requires unique strategies and emphases if the
gospel is to penetrate and saturate every community in North
America. (Phil. 2:1-5; 4:2-9)
There are essential and non-negotiable components of biblical
ministry like proclamation, evangelism, service to others,
prayer, and corporate worship. At the same time, we are convinced
there is no specific style or method ordained by our God through
which we must engage in these biblical ministries. In the past,
Southern Baptists were characterized by a remarkable uniformity
in both style and substance, but those days have long passed.
Though we must remain united in substance, we must embrace
a healthy, biblically informed diversity in our methodology
if we are to effectively evangelize North America.
Different contexts demand diverse strategies
and methods. We must think like missionaries and ask, “What is the best
way to reach the people I live amongst with the gospel?” Various
ethnic believers and social/cultural tribes will worship the
same God, adore the same Jesus, believe the same Bible, and
preach the same gospel. However, they may meet in different
kinds of structures, wear different kinds of clothes, sing
different kinds of songs, and engage in different kinds of
ministries. We must treat the United States missiologically
and do so with the same seriousness that our international
missionaries treat their foreign people groups. As long as
our varied methods communicate gospel truth, with theological
integrity, unto God’s glory, we should not allow our
different approaches to divide us.
IX. A Commitment to a More Effective
Convention Structure. We
call upon all Southern Baptists, through our valued partnerships
of SBC agencies, state conventions/institutions, and Baptist
associations to evaluate our Convention structures and priorities
so that we can maximize our energy and resources for the health
of our local churches and the fulfillment of the Great Commission.
This commitment recognizes the great strength of our partnership,
which has been enabled by the Cooperative Program and enhanced
by a belief that we can do more together than we can separately.
At the midpoint of the 20th century the Southern Baptist Convention
was a convention characterized by impressive institutions,
innovative programs, and strong loyalty from the churches.
But the convention has too often failed to adapt its structure
and programs to the changing culture. We are frequently aiming
at a culture that went out of existence years ago, failing
to understand how mid-20th century methods and strategies are
not working in the 21st century.
Some of our convention structures at all
levels need to be streamlined for more faithful stewardship
of the funds entrusted to them. We must address with courage
and action where there is overlap and duplication of ministries,
and where poor stewardship is present. We are grateful
for God’s gift of Cooperative
Program dollars to both state and national entities. Both state
and national entities must be wise stewards of these funds,
and closely examine whether the allocation of Cooperative Program
dollars genuinely contributes to Kingdom work or simply maintains
the status quo. We are grateful for those churches and state
conventions that are seeking to move more Cooperative Program
dollars beyond their respective selves, and encourage this
movement to continue and increase in the days ahead.
We must take steps toward simplifying our
convention structures in an effort to streamline our structure,
clarify our institutional identity, and maximize our resources
for Great Commission priorities. We should ask hard questions
about every aspect of our Convention structure and priorities
and pray for God’s wisdom and
blessing as we pursue wise answers to those questions. We must
be willing to make needed changes for the good of our churches
and the spread of the gospel. We believe that North American
church planting, pioneer missions around the globe, and theological
education are three priorities around which Southern Baptists
will unite. Our Convention must be examined at every level
to facilitate a more effective pursuit of these priorities.
The Great Commission, missions and theological education is
the responsibility of the local church. As a convention of
churches, we cooperate together to support theological education
so that we can continually train competent shepherds who will
lead churches through teaching, love and example, and who will
see to it that the churches they lead are Great Commission
churches that are promoting missions and advancing theological
education. We are blessed as Southern Baptists to have such
an avenue to serve the local church. Furthermore, we are grateful
for the impact of the Conservative Resurgence that has given
us seminaries committed to the inerrancy, infallibility, and
the sufficiency of the Bible.
We believe the local church must be “ground zero” in
a Great Commission Resurgence, and that our associations, state
conventions and national agencies exist to serve and assist
the churches in their divine assignment. We are convinced that
as our people see our entities in this light, they will respond
in even greater support of the Cooperative Program.
X. A Commitment to Distinctively Christian
Families. We call
upon all Southern Baptists to build gospel-saturated homes
that see children as a gift from God and as our first and primary
mission field. (Deut. 6:1-9; Psalm 127, 128; Eph. 6:4)
The family is the first institution ordained
by God and the foundational institution in all human cultures.
Unfortunately, in our own time we see the family attacked
on a number of fronts. Too many Southern Baptists have
embraced unbiblical notions about marriage and family.
Too often we believe that children are a burden rather
than a blessing and smaller families are more “responsible”
than large families. Too many believe that motherhood is not
valuable as a woman’s unique and primary calling and
is not as “fulfilling” as other occupations. Too
many believe that husbands and fathers are not uniquely called
and gifted for leadership in the home and that biblical gender
roles destroy authentic equality.
We believe that distinctively Christian
families are characterized by a deep love of Jesus Christ
above all things and a desire to honor God as a family.
We believe that Biblical truth is loved, taught, and lived
out in healthy Christian homes. We believe that godly families
cast a vision for spiritual greatness and equip every member,
including children, to live for God’s
glory and pursue great things for His name’s sake. We
believe that strong Christian families are characterized by
an atmosphere of love, fun, service, humor, faith, and fellowship.
Southern Baptists must continue to reject the cultural status
quo and seek to be a counter-culture for the common good when
it comes to building God-centered, gospel-driven, Great Commission-loving
homes.
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