American Baptist Press
   
Thursday, June 20, 2013  Organizations 
 
Medley re-elected American Baptist head
 
 
(http://www.abpnews.com/ministry/organizations/item/8611-medley-re-elected-american-baptist-head#)
 




 
This year’s biennial American Baptist gathering, June 21-23 in Overland 
Park,  Kan., takes the form of a Mission Summit, celebrating three events 
significant  in the denomination’s history.
 
By Bob Allen 
Roy Medley, American Baptist Churches USA general secretary since 2002, has 
 been elected to a two-year term as head of the 1.3-million-member body  
meeting this week in metropolitan Kansas City. He plans to retire when the 
term  ends Dec. 31, 2015. 
American Baptist News Service _reported_ 
(http://www.abc-usa.org/2013/06/19/medley-re-elected-as-general-secretary-of-abcusa/)
   Medley’s re-election 
June 19, the second day of a three-day meeting of the  ABC/USA Board of 
General Ministries. 
<FIGCAPTION>A native of Ringgold, Ga., who joined American  Baptists as an 
adult, Medley served previously as executive minister of the  American 
Baptist Churches of New Jersey, one of 34 regions within the  denomination, 
from 
1992 until 2001. 
Medley’s pastoral experience includes service as interim pastor at Christ  
Congregation, Princeton, N.J., (1977-1978) and associate pastor at First 
Baptist  Church, Trenton, N.J., (1974-1977), where he also served as a seminary 
intern  and was ordained in 1975. 
One is the 150th anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation. Southern  
Baptists split with their northern counterparts over slavery in 1845, setting  
the trajectory for both bodies for the next century and a half. 
Saturday night celebrates the 200th anniversary of the arrival of the first 
 American Baptist missionaries, Ann and Adoniram Judson, to Burma, now 
known as  Myanmar. As a result of their work, today some ethnic groups there 
are 
 predominantly Baptist. In recent years the flow of Baptists has reversed, 
with  thousands of Burmese refugees pouring into American cities to escape 
civil war,  many of them linking with American Baptist churches. 
The biennial also observes the 375th anniversary of the First Baptist 
Church  in Providence, R.I., a landmark not only for Baptists but also 
religious 
freedom  later enshrined in the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. 
“I hope that congregations will come away from this inaugural Mission 
Summit  and our Biennial with an understanding that Baptists have always been 
an  
experimental people, that we have always faced adaptive challenges with a  
willingness to try new forms of ministry, to find new forms of expression of 
our  faith and for outreach to others,” Medley said in a promotional video. 
This year’s biennial departs from the usual schedule, grouping delegates in 
 “Mission Summit Conversations” on a wide range of ministry and mission 
_topics_ 
(http://americanbaptists2013.weebly.com/mission-summit-conversations.html) . 
“I want people to come away from these conversations with a sense of  
encouragement derived from our history, but also with a sense of freedom,”  
Medley said, “a freedom to try new things” and ask new questions. 
“How do we live out the life of Christ as a people in the midst of those 
who  deal with despair, who deal with fear, who ask what future they will have 
where  the gap between rich and poor seems to grow ever wider?” he asked. “
Is there a  way for us to be a blessing to our community that we have not 
been  before?”

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