ABP News
 
 
 
 
 
Suzii Paynter elected to lead  CBF
 
 

Feb 22, 2013






 
The Cooperative Baptist Fellowship  unanimously elected pastor’s wife and 
Baptist General Convention of Texas  official Suzii Paynter as the group’s 
next top administrator Feb.  21.
 
By Bob Allen 
Lay denominational worker Suzii Paynter of  Austin, Texas, was elected Feb. 
21 as the third executive coordinator of the  Cooperative Baptist 
Fellowship. 
The CBF Coordinating Council unanimously  elected Paynter, whose nomination 
was announced Jan. 17 after a year-long  search, during the opening session 
of a two-day meeting at First Baptist Church  in Decatur, Ga. 
She currently works as director of both  the Texas Baptist Christian Life 
Commission and Advocacy Care Center of the  Baptist General Convention of 
Texas. She succeeds Daniel Vestal, who retired  last year as head of the 
1,800-church Fellowship organized in 1991. 
A pastor’s wife, Paynter has long been  active in CBF life as a layperson, 
beginning as a member of the first CBF  Coordinating Council and planner of 
the group’s first General  Assembly. 
“I love the Fellowship,” Paynter said  moments after the vote. “If there 
is any group that has taught me not the words  of the Scripture but the 
spirit of it -- the experience of Christ’s  encouragement, the experience of 
Christ’s love, something in fellowship that  means kindness and deep sympathy 
-- 
if there is any group that has given that to  me in my own life, it has 
been the Christians and the leaders and the churches  of this very Fellowship.” 
CBF moderator Keith Herron, pastor of  Holmeswood Baptist Church in Kansas 
City, Mo., said the historic vote helps  bring closure to several years of “
some sense of transition” for the Fellowship,  which has undergone 
downsizings due to budget shortfalls, a two-year task-force  study calling for 
a 
massive reorganization and changes in several top-level  leaders including the 
CEO. 
George Mason, pastor of Wilshire Baptist  Church in Dallas and chair of the 
10-member executive coordinator search  committee that met for the first 
time in January 2012, said the group talked to  171 pastors and listened to 
focus groups in a process that had the effect of  making committee members “
more and more excited about who we are as  CBF.” 
“In all that process, it came to be clear  that if the 2012 Task Force 
recommendations were to be implemented, that we  needed a certain kind of 
person 
with a certain set of gifts, who really was  experienced, someone we could 
trust, someone who would inspire us and someone  who would give us 
confidence that the things that this community wanted to be in  the future 
would be 
ensured,” Mason said. “That led us to Suzii  Paynter.” 
Reflecting on her own experience as “some  random Baptist laywoman” who 
was named to the interim steering committee of what  would become CBF, Paynter 
said she was “touched and moved” by early leadership  of Cecil Sherman, 
the Fellowship’s founding coordinator who retired in 1996 and  died in 2010, 
and befriended by Vestal, also a key figure in forming CBF who led  the 
organization 15 years before retiring in June 2012. 
Embarking on a process of replacing the  current Coordinating Council with 
a leaner and more focused governing council,  and two new leadership bodies 
tasked with global missions and church resources,  Paynter anticipates 
engaging new leadership who are now in a similar place to  where she started 
out 
22 years ago. 
“My dream for CBF is for us to become the  most vital and vibrant religious 
community in the United States and to reach our  arms around the world,” 
she said. “I think we have a voice that we can be proud  of, a voice that 
reflects the heart of our churches and exemplifies the best  that we want to 
give.” 
A mother of two and married to the pastor  of First Baptist Church in 
Austin, Texas, where she is a frequent Bible teacher  and deacon, Paynter is a 
native of San Antonio who grew up attending the city’s  Trinity Baptist 
Church. 
She is a graduate of Baylor University  with a master’s degree from Stephen 
F. Austin University and an honorary  doctorate from Dallas Baptist 
University. She worked as a literacy professional,  professor and consultant 
before 
going to work for Texas Baptists in  2001. 
The first woman to serve as director of  the Baptist General Convention of 
Texas Christian Life Commission, Paynter now  joins a small group of women 
leading national religious bodies in the United  States and in Baptist 
leadership around the world. 
She begins work March 1 at the CBF  Resource Center in Atlanta, but as 
Herron noted, she has already been busy “for  weeks and months” meeting with 
various groups in anticipation of her  election

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