Southern Baptist Convention annual meeting in Greensboro, N.C., to focus on evangelism

Southern Baptist Convention annual meeting in Greensboro, N.C., to focus on evangelism

With the focus on evangelism and the goal of winning and baptizing 1 million people in a year, Southern Baptists will gather at the Greensboro Coliseum Complex in Greensboro, N.C., June 13–14, for their annual meeting.

It will mark the fifth meeting in North Carolina for the denomination but the first since 1916 (Asheville). Southern Baptists never have met in Greensboro.

“My quest is going to be to keep the collective head, heart and eyes of the messengers on our main business of witnessing, winning and baptizing,” Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) President and Alabama-native Bobby Welch said. “I think that’s especially critical in light of the ACP report.”

The most recent ACP, or Annual Church Profile report, showed Southern Baptists baptizing 16,000 fewer people in 2005 compared to 2004.

It will be the second consecutive year Southern Baptists have gathered under the banner of “Everyone Can” — a reference to the fact that all Christians are called to share their faith. Also, for the second straight year, baptisms will be held throughout the sessions. They will be done with approval and support of a local church, with members of each church present.

“We are not moving toward this Everyone Can effort any too soon,” said Welch, pastor of First Baptist Church, Daytona Beach, Fla.

Fittingly this year’s Scripture text is Matthew 28:19–20 — the Great Commission — and the theme is “Everyone Can … I’m It!” The “Everyone Can” challenge to win and baptize 1 million people officially began last October and ends the final week of September, which marks the end of the SBC’s church year.

Breaking with tradition, Welch will deliver his president’s address Wednesday evening, the same night the International Mission Board gives its report and presentation. (In recent years, the president’s address was scheduled during the day.)

Recording artist Casting Crowns and the “Everyone Can” People’s Mass Choir and Orchestra also will perform that night.

“Wednesday night of the convention will be like no other Wednesday night we’ve ever had,” Welch said. “It will be geared toward coming out of turn four and heading for victory lane. We want to leave that Wednesday night service excited and unified to do more than we’ve ever done before in going and giving.”

This year’s CrossOver rally, held on Saturday and Sunday, June 10–11, will set the tone for the witnessing theme.

During “CrossOver Triad” hundreds of Southern Baptists will hit the streets of Greensboro and the surrounding cities of Winston-Salem and High Point to share the gospel.

Welch has spoken in churches and rallies throughout North Carolina since early March.

“All the indicators are that momentum is really beginning to build [for CrossOver and Everyone Can],” said Welch, who added he has received many reports of churches breaking baptismal records.
Among the other highlights of the convention:

4Southern Baptists will elect a new president.

4A larger-than-life statue of a young Billy Graham will be unveiled. The 9-foot-tall statue eventually will be moved to a location near LifeWay Christian Resources.

4Fred Luter, pastor of Franklin Avenue Baptist Church, New Orleans, will preach. Franklin Avenue’s building had eight feet of water inside it during the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.

4Messengers will be asked to consider a report from the Ad Hoc Cooperative Program Committee that encourages “all Southern Baptist churches to adopt a missional mindset as they contribute at least 10 percent of their undesignated receipts through the Cooperative Program to local and global missions.”

The report also encourages “the election of officers at the state and national level whose churches give at least 10 percent of their undesignated receipts through the Cooperative Program.”

4Adrian Rogers, the longtime pastor of Bellevue Baptist Church in suburban Memphis, Tenn., who passed away last year, will be remembered during both the Pastors Conference and the annual meeting. His wife, Joyce Rogers, is scheduled to speak Monday night, June 12, during the Pastors Conference.

4Donald Wilton, pastor of First Baptist Church, Spartanburg, S.C., will deliver the convention message.

4Directors of missions and associations will be spotlighted.

But, once again, the “Everyone Can” challenge will be the focal point.

Four pastors will deliver evangelism-themed “Everyone Can” sermons: Luter; Gene Mims, pastor of Judson Baptist Church, Nashville; James I. Walker, pastor of Biltmore Baptist Church, Arden, N.C.; and David Cox, co-pastor of First, Daytona Beach, Fla. (BP)