Alabama Baptists’ Rick Lance is among state convention executive directors appointed to a special committee to evaluate relations with the North American Mission Board (NAMB).
The action came during the Fellowship of State Executive Directors annual meeting Feb. 13–16 in Scottsdale, Ariz. State executive directors meet each year for fellowship and to discuss issues related to Baptist state convention work.
The name of the state executives’ special committee is A Study Committee on Implementation of NAMB Initiatives with State Conventions.
Emil Turner, executive director of the Arkansas Baptist State Convention and president of the fellowship for 2011–12, said the committee was established “to evaluate how state conventions and NAMB can maximize cooperation during the transition process of implementing the new NAMB initiatives.”
Announced in 2011, NAMB’s Send North America strategy focuses heavily on church planting and shifting funds to the field for church planting.
Members of the committee are Lance, executive director of the Alabama Baptist State Board of Missions; David Hankins, chairman, executive director of the Louisiana Baptist Convention; Anthony Jordan, executive director of the Baptist General Convention of Oklahoma; Cecil Seagle, executive director of the State Convention of Baptists in Indiana; Mark Edlund, executive director of the Colorado Baptist General Convention; and Bob Mills, executive director of the Kansas-Nebraska Convention of Southern Baptists.
Some state convention leaders have expressed concerns about what their relationships with NAMB will look like as historic “cooperative agreements” are replaced with new “strategic partnerships” with state conventions. The Southern Baptist entity has used cooperative agreements with states to support and define its work and to assist in the furtherance of domestic missions work.
Turner said the study committee is important to evaluating and understanding the future work of state conventions with NAMB.
“I think this study committee can help get beyond anecdotal reports about difficulties that new work conventions face and arrive at quantifiable conclusions,” Turner said.
It is the desire of the state executive directors’ group that NAMB trustees be involved in discussions as well, Turner said.
“The focus of our concern is the cooperation of NAMB and state conventions,” Turner said. “I believe this will be a good thing and expect it to proceed in a friendly and collaborative manner.” (BP)




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