Baptist Press
 
 
WRAP-UP: SBC re-elects Luter, hears  calls for unity, revival

 
 
Posted on Jun 13, 2013 | by Michael Foust 

 
HOUSTON (BP) -- Messengers to the Southern Baptist Convention June 11-12  
re-elected Fred Luter, the body's first African American president, to 
another  one-year term and heard him deliver a rousing challenge to Southern 
Baptists to  unite and pray for revival.

The call for cooperation and revival was  delivered by other leaders, 
including Executive Committee President Frank Page,  and from members of a 
Calvinism advisory committee who spoke in the exhibit hall  the day prior to 
the 
convention. 

"Could it be," Luter asked during a  special Tuesday evening service 
focused on revival, "that the reason that lost  friend, that lost relative, 
that 
lost co-worker, that lost neighbor, that lost  classmate, have not yet turned 
from darkness to light is because they don't see  us as the body of Christ 
getting along? Friend, how is it that we say we love  God, whom we've never 
seen, yet don't speak to our brother and sister that we  see every day?"

Messengers also passed 12 resolutions that covered a  variety of issues, 
including one that expressed "our continued opposition to and  disappointment 
in" the Boy Scouts' decision to allow homosexual members. The  resolution 
affirmed the right of churches to determine their affiliation with  the 
Scouts. 

Another resolution that garnered significant attention  addressed mental 
health, calling on Southern Baptists to fight the  "stigmatization and 
prejudice" of those with mental health concerns and to "love  and minister to" 
them. It passed in light of the suicidal death of Rick Warren's  youngest son 
and the publication of a new book by Page about the suicide of his  daughter 
Melissa. 

Luter was elected unopposed, getting a standing  ovation from the 
messengers when Registration Secretary Jim Wells cast the  ceremonial ballot 
for the 
convention. 

The overwhelming majority of the  5,100 registered messengers came to a 
special revival-focused Tuesday night  service -- the annual meeting hadn't had 
night sessions the previous two years  -- where Charles Billingsley of 
Thomas Road Baptist Church (Lynchburg, Va.) led  congregational worship in 
music 
for more than 45 minutes, likely a record in  recent SBC history. Luter 
delivered his presidential sermon. 

For revival  to fall on the SBC, Luter said in his message from John 
13:34-35, Southern  Baptists must have a love for the Scripture, the Savior and 
the saints (fellow  Christians). Luter gave the most attention to the final 
point -- the need for  Southern Baptists to love one another.

The roadblock to a revival, Luter  said, may be that the lost world does 
not see Christians loving one another with  unconditional love. 

Southern Baptists "will never see revival in the  world until we first see 
revival in the church," Luter said. It must begin with  pastors and leaders, 
he added. 

"... Those saints who love contemporary  music, do you really love them? 
Those saints who love traditional music, do you  really love them? Those 
saints who love praise songs, do you really love them?  Those saints who are 
Calvinist, do you really love them? Those saints who are  not Calvinist, do you 
really love them? Those saints who love just a King James  Version of the 
Bible … do you love them? Those saints who love the Holman  Christian Standard 
Bible, do you love them? Those saints whose churches … have  Baptist in 
their name, do you love them? Those churches that don't have Baptist  in their 
name, do you love them?

"The question of the hour my brothers  and my sisters, [is] do we really 
love the saints of God," Luter said. "Do you  love the saints of God enough to 
work together to impact lostness in America?  Jesus says we should love 
each other like He loved us, and He loved us so much  that he died for us"

On Tuesday night and Wednesday afternoon -- before  the meeting was gaveled 
to a close -- Luter led messengers in saying, in unison  multiple times, 
"Lord, send a revival, and let it begin with me."

During  his report, Page mentioned one barrier to unity -- the debate over 
Calvinism --  that led him to form a 19-member advisory committee. It issued 
its report in  late May. 

"I am not naïve," Page said of the differences over Calvinism.  "I know 
there will continue to be problems and difficulties but I am convinced  that if 
we will talk to each other together we will see a unity that will allow  us 
to win more men, women, boys and girls to Christ than ever  before."

The Great Commission, and not Calvinism, should be the focus,  Page said.

The report by the Calvinism team -- not an official convention  committee 
-- urged Southern Baptists to "grant one another liberty" on the issue  and 
"stand together" for the Great Commission. 

"We affirm that, from the  very beginning of our denominational life, 
Calvinists and non-Calvinists have  cooperated together," the report said. "We 
affirm that these differences should  not threaten our eager cooperation in 
Great Commission ministries."

The  day prior to the convention, members of the committee on Calvinism 
discussed  their report during an exhibit hall panel discussion. Committee 
member Tammi  Ledbetter noted that the report's goals can be accomplished only 
if individual  Southern Baptists take the report to heart. 

"It's really up to all of  you as to what happens with this," said 
Ledbetter, a homemaker and member of  Inglewood Baptist Church in Grand 
Prairie, 
Texas. "We can talk it to death, and  I think we probably have. What matters is 
what you do with your life in the way  you relate to other people. And 
every time you have a conversation about this  document or you have a 
conversation about a fellow believer ... how you handle  yourself will make the 
whole 
difference."

Daniel Akin, president of  Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary in 
Wake Forest, N.C., and a committee  member, agreed.

"So much of this comes back to what Tammi said -- our own  personal 
attitudes and dispositions," Akin said, adding that Southern Baptists  need to 
be 
"men and women of honesty and integrity."

"If we will pursue  those types of agendas in the days ahead, I believe we 
can come together for the  very purpose on which we fought the conservative 
resurgence -- that is, standing  on an inerrant Bible to get the Gospel to 
every person on the planet," Akin  added.

The Boy Scouts resolution -- overwhelmingly approved -- said the  Scouts' 
decision to allow gay-identifying youth is "viewed by many homosexual  
activists as merely the first step in a process that will fundamentally change  
the BSA," putting "the Scouts at odds with a consistent biblical worldview on  
matters of human sexuality." It further said the decision "has the 
potential to  complicate basic understandings of male friendships, needlessly 
politicize human  sexuality, and heighten sexual tensions within the Boy 
Scouts."

Churches  that choose to sever ties with the Boy Scouts should not abandon 
their ministry  to boys, the resolution stated, but should consider 
expanding their Royal  Ambassadors ministry (www.wmu.com/ra), "a distinctively 
Southern Baptist  missions organization to develop godly young men." It urged 
churches and families that remain in the Boy Scouts "to seek to impact as many 
boys as  possible with the life-changing Gospel of Jesus Christ, to work 
toward the  reversal of this new membership policy, and to advocate against any 
future  change in leadership and membership policy that normalizes sexual 
conduct  opposed to the biblical standard."

The resolution on mental health, also  overwhelmingly approved, identified 
such mental health issues as autism  disorders, intellectual disability, 
mental health conditions like schizophrenia,  clinical depression, anxiety 
disorders, bipolar disorders and diseases of the  aged including dementia and 
Alzheimer's. The resolution expressed support for  "the wise use of medical 
interventions" and supported research and treatment  "when undertaken in a 
manner consistent with a biblical worldview." 

"We  call on all Southern Baptists and our churches to look for and create  
opportunities to love and minister to, and develop methods and resources to 
care  for, those who struggle with mental health concerns and their 
families," the  resolution said.

The subject of mental health was further spotlighted  when Ronnie Floyd, 
pastor of Cross Church in Springdale, Ark., made a motion  that called on SBC 
entities to work cooperatively to create and identify  resources available 
to individuals and churches that minister to those who  suffer from mental 
health challenges. The motion was referred to the Executive  Committee and 
other entities.

Floyd cited statistics that 58 million  Americans and 450 million persons 
worldwide suffer from mental disorders and 1  million die from suicide 
annually. He said churches and communities are filled  with people who need 
Southern Baptists to minister to them and their families.  

"It's time for the SBC to be on the front lines of mental health  
challenges," he said.

During the LifeWay presentation, entity President  Thom Rainer encouraged 
messengers to read Page's new book, titled "Melissa,"  which he called "one 
of the most powerful books I've have ever read."  

Rainer noted it is unusual for him to promote a book during his  report.

"Many of us in vocational ministry want to act like our homes  have no 
problems; Frank Page takes down the façade and lets us see a real family  with 
real struggles," Rainer said.

Messengers also passed a resolution  calling on churches to protect 
children from sexual abuse and to pray for abuse  victims.

In other matters:

-- Crossover the annual evangelical  outreach held in the annual meeting's 
host city resulted in 582 reported  professions of faith in Christ. The 
outreach is held on the weekend prior to the  convention.

-- International Mission Board President Tom Elliff delivered  the entity's 
report, telling messengers they are living in a "time of the  greatest 
lostness in the history of the world."

"Are we going to back  down?" he asked.

Southern Baptists are making progress in penetrating  that lostness, but 
far more needs to be done, he said. In 2012, he said, there  were 337,385 
professions of faith in Christ and 24,073 new church plants in  other countries 
through the work of IMB missionaries. But more than half the  world has yet 
to hear the Gospel.

The world has 3,041 unengaged,  unreached people groups (UUPG), and a total 
of 1,837 SBC churches and entities  are committed to reach an UUPG through 
the Embrace initiative. In 2012 alone,  133 people groups were newly engaged 
by Southern Baptists.

The IMB could  do so much more if it had the funding, Elliff said. IMB's 
2013 budget is $323  million, but IMB received far less than that in 2012 -- 
$96 million through the  Cooperative Program and $149 million through the 
Lottie Moon offering.  

"It's time to put our money where our mouth is," Elliff said.

Via  Skype, messengers heard from an IMB worker who plants churches in 
southern Asia.  Because he serves in a closed country, his face was darkened. 
He 
said God's call  on him was clear and that he gets lonely at times, but 
"God's word actively  sustains me."

-- North American Mission Board President Kevin Ezell  delivered the 
entity's report, saying that 1,084 new churches were planted in  North America 
last year. The goal, Ezell said, is to plant churches in cities  and in areas 
where Southern Baptists have less of a presence. He cited  statistics: 
Mississippi has one SBC church for every 1,385 people, Texas has one  for every 
3,351, New Jersey one for every 78,000, and Canada one for every  115,000. 
Missiologists, he said, say one evangelical church is needed for every  1,000 
to 2,000 people. 

"We must go" to the cities, Ezell said, adding  that 80 percent of the 
population lives in and around cities. NAMB has  highlighted 32 cities it calls 
"Send Cities," Ezell said, and a NAMB missionary  -- the "Send City 
coordinator" -- resides in each one. The coordinator's job is  to recruit 
church 
planters to that city. Additionally, Ezell said, there is a  "Church Planting 
Catalyst" for every 1 million people in North America. The goal  is to plant 
four churches among each 1 million people. The biblical model, he  said, is 
churches planting churches -- "healthy, evangelistic churches."  

"We need churches that plant churches that plant churches," he  said.

-- 
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