American Baptist Press
 
 
 

Tuesday, April 1, 2014 
 
The new independent Baptist  churches
 
 


 
For many congregations, denominational identity lies in their own missions  
program.
 
By Mark Wingfield 
In the dialogue about “ex-SBC” folks that’s been transpiring on this site 
in  recent weeks, a false assumption seeps in from time to time: That all “ex
”  Southern Baptists are now affiliated with the Cooperative Baptist 
Fellowship. As  if there were only two choices available. 
Not so. Some congregations have affiliated instead with the American 
Baptist  Churches in the USA, with the Alliance of Baptists — or with no group 
at 
all.  And even among those who connect in name with a denominational body, a 
number of  larger congregations have fallen further into themselves. They 
are what we might  consider a new breed of independent Baptist churches. 
Growing up in a thoroughly Southern Baptist culture, I learned from an 
early  age that “independent” Baptists were outsiders, not to be trusted and  
uncooperative. We Southern Baptists had the “cooperative” program, after 
all,  and excelled in sharing. We worked together for the greater good. 
When the fundamentalist takeover of the Southern Baptist Convention began 
in  1979, one of the chief criticisms of the series of presidents elected at 
annual  meetings was that they did not “cooperate” enough. Often, these 
were pastors of  large churches that only marginally participated in the life 
of the  denomination. They didn’t give enough to the Cooperative Program 
unified budget,  and they didn’t support our denominational seminaries and 
institutions. Their  churches, most of the time, did their own things. They 
could 
survive just fine  independently of a denomination, thank you very much. 
Time has twisted these criticisms into an irony. The churches that once  
didn’t need the SBC now run the SBC, and many churches that once were flagship 
 churches in the SBC have become the independents. 
To illustrate, consider these comments from a friend after my previous  
ABPnews/Herald commentary on where congregations fit in the “ex-SBC” era. His  
church offers members four choices for missions giving: SBC, CBF, Texas 
Baptists  or the church’s own internal missions program. Fewer than 10 giving 
units in  this large church direct their money to the SBC. And my friend 
wants nothing to  do with the SBC as his identity either. Up to 30 giving units 
direct their  offerings to CBF, but my friend just can’t connect with CBF 
outside Texas. As a  theologically progressive, politically moderate, 
card-carrying member of the  NRA, he still finds a vast difference between a 
Texas “
moderate” Baptist and an  East Coast “moderate” Baptist. 
For now, my friend directs his missions giving toward Texas Baptists, 
joining  about 50 other giving units in his church. But that’s not fully 
satisfying to  him and still leaves him in the minority in his own church. 
That’s 
because the  “vast majority,” he said, “doesn’t know what their choices in 
denominational  labels are and doesn’t care.” The pastor, he added, “does a 
good job educating  us about our choices. They just stare blankly until he 
finishes and choose to  give to the entity that most affects them” — their 
own church’s missions  program. 
Variations on this story are repeated in Baptist churches all across the  
country. Even in my own congregation — which is as thoroughly CBF-affiliated 
as  they come — we recently had a fascinating discussion about this around 
the  tables at deacons’ meeting. Our pastor asked the deacons to discuss what 
it  means to them that our church is affiliated with the CBF and not with 
the SBC.  The most telling comment was spoken by an older man at the table 
where I sat:  “We didn’t choose Wilshire because it is a CBF church,” he said 
of himself and  his wife. “We chose it because of the kind of church it is.”
 
He paused, then added: “I suppose some part of that identity has been 
formed  by its affiliation with CBF, but we didn’t know that when we  joined.”

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to