Leaders of the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship (CBF) may add a preamble to the organization’s constitution, restoring explicit references to Jesus Christ and the Great Commission deleted in July.
The proposed preamble, approved by the CBF Coordinating Council’s legal committee and advisory council, was presented to the full council at its Oct. 13–14 meeting in Atlanta.
Leaders hope the move will quiet critics both within the Fellowship and beyond who complained when references to Jesus were deleted from the earlier document.
The recommended preamble states: “As a fellowship of Baptist Christians and churches, we celebrate our faith in the One Triune God. We gladly declare our allegiance to Jesus Christ as Lord and to His gospel as we seek to be the continuing presence of Christ in this world.
“Our passion is to obey the Great Commandment (Matt. 22:34–40) and the Great Commission (Matt. 28:19–20) of our Lord in the power of the Holy Spirit, and to uphold Baptist principles of faith and practice as we partner with one another and other Christians.”
At its June 30–July 1 general assembly in Grapevine, Texas, the Fellowship voted to approve revisions to its governing documents but not before several participants objected that the revised constitution and bylaws omitted explicit references to Jesus and His Great Commission — the command to share the gospel and make disciples.
The approved constitution says the Fellowship’s purpose is “to serve Christians and churches as they discover and fulfill their God-given mission. The Fellowship shall fulfill its purpose in keeping with its commitments to the historic Baptist principles of soul freedom, Bible freedom, church freedom, and religious freedom; to biblically based global missions; to a resource model for serving churches; to justice and reconciliation; to lifelong learning and ministry; to trustworthiness; and to effectiveness.”
Previously the purpose statement mentioned bringing together Baptists and calling out God’s gifts in individuals “in order that the Gospel of Jesus Christ will be spread throughout the world in glad obedience to the Great Commission.”
The general assembly defeated two motions to send the purpose statement back to the Coordinating Council so members could consider restoring references to Christ and the Great Commission after CBF leaders insisted those commitments were implied.
Almost immediately after the vote, some Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) leaders criticized the action.
They pointed out many moderate Baptists previously had critiqued the SBC for removing a reference in the 2000 Baptist Faith and Message to Jesus Christ as the criterion for biblical interpretation. They also cited it as evidence of alleged liberalism and lack of commitment to evangelism within the CBF.
The SBC’s constitution does not mention Jesus either. (ABP)
CBF leaders address ‘Jesus’ in constitution
Related Posts

High court blocks NY coronavirus limits on houses of worship
November 30, 2020
As coronavirus cases surge again nationwide the Supreme Court late Wednesday barred New York from enforcing certain limits on attendance

FIRST-PERSON: After the election
November 6, 2020
EDITOR’S NOTE: J.D. Greear is pastor of The Summit Church in the Raleigh-Durham, N.C., area and president of the Southern

Fla. ministry called No. 1 ‘hate group’ in state
August 28, 2019
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — A well-respected Florida ministry is suing after finding its name on a CNN map of “all

ETS meeting includes 190 Baptist presenters
December 12, 2018
DENVER — Some 190 of 750 presentations at the Evangelical Theological Society’s (ETS) annual meeting were offered by scholars with
Share with others: