Archive for the 'SBC Annual Meeting' Category

This is Our Time

SBC 2016-BlogThis is our time to come together now more than ever before, refusing to let anything separate us. In the perilous times we are facing in America, we must be found strong, faithful, and unified. Our testimony as Christ-followers in this hour needs to be that we are like Jesus Christ our Lord.

Jesus said it this way,

“May they all be one, as You, Father, are in Me and I am in You. May they also be one in Us, so the world may believe You sent Me.” John 17:21

As we are hours away from the beginning of our 2016 Southern Baptist Convention, we need to resolve now that we will stand together in love. We will stay together in love. We need to believe in one another. The need for unity in the body of Christ is more pressing now than ever before in our generation. As we meet to agree, unite, and pray, let us not forget the increasing lostness of the world around us. As this lost and needy world watches what we do and the evangelical world awaits our decisions and actions, we need to understand the stakes are high in this hour.

Communicate Hope and Love

Quite honestly, the stakes are higher than ever before. As our hearts break for the people of Orlando, we call upon each of us in our nation and beyond to rise up and pray for the families of the victims and the entire city of Orlando. Through this tragedy, we will have opportunities to communicate hope and love like never before.

In these desperate times in America, we are reminded again of our great need for Jesus Christ and for spiritual awakening in America. As we move our entire convention into a massive call to prayer on Tuesday night in St. Louis, if you live in this region or within driving range, please adjust your schedule and join us at 6:30 p.m. This is our time to remind the churches of America, the leaders in America, and the entire nation that the hope that awaits us is not in a political party or a vibrant economy, but in God for the next Great Spiritual Awakening in America.

If you have already planned to join us in St. Louis, do not miss Tuesday evening. Our National Call to Prayer for Spiritual Leadership, Revived Churches, and Nationwide & Global Awakening will be a powerful time to seek the Lord together.

Finally, please pray for me and for the delivery of my Presidential Address around 9:45 a.m. on Tuesday morning. Join us in person or via live stream at sbcannualmeeting.net.

Friends, do not miss what God is up to at the Southern Baptist Convention Annual Meeting. Go to sbcannualmeeting.net to find the full schedule, watch live online, and download the app.

These are exciting days even though we are living in perilous times.

Now is the Time to Lead and Pray,

Ronnie W. Floyd

Senior Pastor, Cross Church
President, Southern Baptist Convention

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Dr. Ronnie Floyd is currently serving as the President of the Southern Baptist Convention. The Southern Baptist Convention is America’s largest Protestant denomination with more than 15.7 million members in over 51,094 churches nationwide.

To request an interview with Dr. Ronnie Floyd
contact Gayla Oldham at (479) 751-4523 or email gaylao@crosschurch.com.

Visit our website at http://ronniefloyd.com
Follow Dr. Floyd on Twitter and Instagram @ronniefloyd

The SBC and Our Future

Future-blog

The future of Southern Baptist Convention is on my heart this week. Perhaps now, days away from the conclusion of my two-year presidency, my feelings may lean toward being a little nostalgic.

What will our future look like? If Jesus tarries His coming, how long will our convention of churches last? Only God knows the answer to these and more questions when we think about our future together.

Who Do We Want to Be in the Future?

This should be a concern for all of us, and we should never minimize this issue: Who do we want to be in the future?

I recently heard a major political leader say that during the decision-making process, he keeps in mind that “Every step is a forward-moving step.”

The same is true for the future of our Southern Baptist Convention. Every step we make needs to move us forward. Nothing moves fast in a major government or a convention of churches. Checks and balances are provided at many levels. At times these may appear to bind us, but in reality, they protect us in the long term.

I want to suggest some steps that will always keep us moving forward. Perhaps these steps could be more properly called axioms, which are principles or self-evident truths that are widely accepted among us. Who do we want to be in the future?

1. A Bible-believing Southern Baptist Convention

While this may currently be part of our identity, the reality is that the culture mocks the authority of the Bible in 2016 and beyond.

Our pastors and churches are navigating in a world unlike anything we have experienced before. Our leadership with our laypeople and one another is critical in this hour. Whatever step we take in our decision-making, we must always do so believing the Bible is infallible, trustworthy, sufficient, and inerrant, progressing toward the goal set before us.

2. A Gospel-advancing Southern Baptist Convention

In this diverse, complex season in American life and in the evangelical world, there really is only one passion that keeps us tied together: Advancing the gospel of Jesus Christ to the entire nation and world.

Our pastors, churches, and convention leaders must dig deep and find a way to experience a rebirth of sharing the gospel personally and a renewal of our priority to evangelize the towns and cities of America, and simultaneously extend the gospel globally.

We cannot retreat from this calling, but must renew our commitment to such a point that we act upon it urgently, personally, collectively, cooperatively, and aggressively.

3. A Leader-developing Southern Baptist Convention

In order for us to live out Ephesians 4:12, “For the training of the saints in the work of ministry to build up the body of Christ,” every member in the body of Christ must be developed to do the work of the ministry in and through the local church. Until our local churches return to our members owning the ministry and personalizing the Great Commission locally, we will not seize this opportunity before us.

While our six seminaries are developing just over 20,000 seminary students in their various locations, their robust effort must continue forward for God’s glory. This is one of our most encouraging dynamics in Baptist life. This indicates a hope that perhaps God is preparing His called servants to impact our nation and the globe in an unprecedented way.

4. A Multi-ethnic, Multi-lingual Southern Baptist Convention

Strengthening our commitment to becoming a multi-ethnic, multi-lingual denomination begins in the local churches of the Southern Baptist Convention. In other words, this is a local church issue more than a Southern Baptist Convention issue. The Southern Baptist Convention will mirror our churches.

If our churches are going to reach the towns and cities of America with the gospel, each church must become committed to reach people that comprise their community, including those of unique ethnicity and may speak a language other than English.

The North American Mission Board informed Southern Baptists that fifty-eight percent of the churches planted one year ago are non-white churches. In the past two years, with the appointments I am permitted to make as president of our convention, we are at the highest percentage of appointments of non-white Baptists in our history. Additionally, in last year’s National Call to Prayer and with this year’s National Conversation on Racial Unity in America, the Southern Baptist Convention is making great strides in this conversation and will continue to do so. But let me remind you, the key is what is happening in our churches.

5. A Local Church-centered Southern Baptist Convention

The Southern Baptist Convention is not centered on our SBC national entities, state conventions, or regional associations; we are to be centered on helping our churches. These entities, conventions, and associations exist for one purpose alone: for our churches. Their role is to assist our churches to carry out their God-assigned, God-anointed task of reaching the world for Christ. Otherwise, they have no reason to exist.

Southern Baptists are always at our best when our churches are being assisted and equipped, and our pastors are leading not just their churches, but in their beloved Southern Baptist Convention.

6. A Generously-giving Southern Baptist Convention

Southern Baptists have been able to do what we do for one reason alone: Our churches are generous in giving through the Cooperative Program and to our mission offerings. We do not need to minimize what our churches are doing already and have done together historically.

While generosity must continue to grow, money usually follows vision and the unity of our fellowship together.

7. A People-loving Southern Baptist Convention

Southern Baptists are not perfect, especially in our testimony together in fellowship, but we must not neglect our need to be a people-loving convention. Right now in these socially uncertain waters in America, we face an ongoing threat of being pulled into an ocean of skepticism, criticism, and cynicism toward not just people in America, but even more sadly, one another.

Southern Baptists should want to be known for being a people-loving convention, both within our family and outside of our family. Jesus calls us to love one another.

Who We Do Not Want to Be

Daily, we face the ongoing tension between who we want to be in the future versus who we do not want to be in the future. I have encouraged us to make great choices about who we want to be in the future.

Briefly, I want to declare who we do not want to be in the future:

  • We do not want to be a convention that questions or denies the Holy Scripture and its ongoing authority until Jesus comes again.
  • We do not want to be a convention that minimizes evangelism locally, regionally and nationally, or we will become a convention that does not advance the gospel globally. If we lose evangelism as our priority, we will soon cease to have a convention.
  • We do not want to be a convention that demeans the role of laypersons in our churches and minimizes the ministry of equipping from the local church to the convention level.
  • We do not want to be a convention comprised of only Anglo/white churches, or we will soon be dead and irrelevant to our culture.
  • We do not want to be a convention centered on ourselves, our structures, and our systems, or we will float away on the seas of selfishness.
  • We do not want to be a convention that is comprised of selfish non-giving Christians and self-serving churches or we will cease being able to finance our work together statewide, nationally, and internationally.
  • We do not want to be a convention that erodes relationships with each other and other evangelicals through constant, ongoing skepticism, un-Christian criticism, and unattractive cynicism.

I call our pastors, churches, and convention leaders to a higher life and a greater level of leadership in the times in which we live today.

In 2016, we need leaders to rise up as modern men and women of Issachar, “who understood the times and knew what Israel should do.” (1 Chronicles 12:32)

Now is the Time to Lead,

Ronnie W. Floyd

Senior Pastor, Cross Church
President, Southern Baptist Convention

*******

Dr. Ronnie Floyd is currently serving as the President of the Southern Baptist Convention. The Southern Baptist Convention is America’s largest Protestant denomination with more than 15.7 million members in over 51,094 churches nationwide.

To request an interview with Dr. Ronnie Floyd
contact Gayla Oldham at (479) 751-4523 or email gaylao@crosschurch.com.

Visit our website at http://ronniefloyd.com
Follow Dr. Floyd on Twitter and Instagram @ronniefloyd