Archives For November 30, 1999

Southern Baptist Convention

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Posted by Meredith Flynn

(New Orleans) — Dr. Richard Tribble, interim pastor of Emmanuel Southern Baptist Church in Decatur, Ill., has become a familiar sight on the convention floor in New Orleans. Tribble made four motions Tuesday morning, and spoke against the SBC’s name change recommendation in the afternoon.

Tribble’s motions asked convention messengers to:

1. Limit the use of the podium microphone during the SBC’s annual meeting, requiring those nominating persons for office to use the floor microphones.

2. Require those nominating officers to also communicate to messengers the Cooperative Program giving percentage of the nominee’s church.

3. Ask the SBC Executive Committee to prepare a manual that would set official procedure for replacing a sitting officer of the convention, even if the convention isn’t in its annual meeting session.

4. Move the SBC’s annual meeting to a date later in June that wouldn’t conflict with Father’s Day.

His frequent trips to the mic made Tribble a kind of hero to people who agree with him, and even those who might not, but still appreciate his bold voice. As we sat near the convention hall’s Starbucks, several messengers stopped by to thank him. One even made a reference to “The Trouble with Tribbles,” an old episode of “Star Trek.” Tribble laughed good-naturedly, and admitting that it is draining to advocate change from the convention floor, but it’s what he’s called to do at this convention.

“I believe the motions that I made addressed real needs we have in the convention,” Tribble said. “They weren’t frivolous, they were well thought out. They spoke to areas that need attention, and I pray that we will get attention because I made them.”

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Posted by Meredith Flynn

(New Orleans) Former Arkansas governor and U.S. presidential candidate Mike Huckabee posed for photos and shared warm words with Southern Baptists who happened upon him in the convention center’s Starbucks.

Huckabee is in town to speak at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary’s alumni luncheon today.

In this political season, he urged Southern Baptists to vote, and encouraged pastors to endorse Jesus, rather than any political candidate, from their pulpits.

“I would never encourage a pastor to endorse a candidate from the pulpit; they need to endorse Jesus from the pulpit. But they absolutely need to endorse God’s word and his principles, and make sure that people apply those principles to the candidates,” Huckabee said.

“And far more than asking Christians to gravitate to a candidate, ask the candidates to gravitate towards God’s truth. Don’t vote and support people that don’t support the sacredness of every life, and the autonomy and independence of people of faith.”

Southern Baptist Convention messengers voted by a majority of 52.48% to allow churches to use the descriptor name “Great Commission Baptists.” The convention’s approval followed heated debate on Tuesday. Check back here throughout the day for more on name change and other actions of the convention.

As the first official day of the SBC came to a close, Chris Flynn shared some of the week’s highlights so far:

Best New Orleans food experience:
Mother’s ham and roast beef po’boy

Best freebie:
Cafe Du Monde coffee and beignet mix from reception hosted by Mississippi College (my alma mater)

Favorite Pastors’ Conference speaker:
David Platt

Sermon where you took the most notes:
David Jeremiah’s Pastors’ Conference message

Friendliest new face:
TIE between Marty King (former Illinois Baptist editor) and Danny Sinquefield, pastor of Faith Baptist Church in Bartlett, Tenn.

Best celebrity sighting:
William Green, member of the Strength Team and former first round draft pick of the NFL’s Cleveland Browns

Biggest surprise of today’s business sessions:
The amount of contention over the name change recommendation

Biggest surprise the of convention as a whole:
Late nights

Word that best describes the week so far:
Busy

Most looking forward to:
Hearing more from new SBC President Fred Luter

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Waiting for the Baptist 21 luncheon for young leaders to begin Monday.

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Mingling at the reception for Illinois Baptists, family and friends.

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In the North American Mission Board’s SEND North America
city-themed exhibit.

Posted by Lisa Sergent

Holding a baby alligator at the Louisiana Baptist Convention's exhibit

You never know what you will find in the SBC Exhibit Hall. This year it was an alligator at the Louisiana Baptist Convention’s exhibit.

One of the best things about the SBC Annual Meeting is the Exhibit Hall. You never know what you will see. One year, a seminary graduate who had become an animal trainer was there with a lemur and a vulture.  Another year, messengers got to take turns riding a Segway around the North American Mission Board’s exhibit.

NAMB exhibit

The 2012 NAMB exhibit features Send North America.

This year has not disappointed. From the Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission’s exhibit where children can make balloon animals and have their caricatures drawn, to LifeWay’s test of strength challenge, to the International Mission Board’s interactive exhibit that gives messengers the opportunity to hammer a nail into a large, wooden cross as an expression of their commitment to the Great Commission.

Cross at the IMB's interactive exhibit

A young woman hammers a nail into a cross at the International Mission Board’s interactive tent inside the SBC Exhibit Hall. The exhibit prompt reads, “I place this nail in the cross as a commitment to take the Gospel to the ends of the earth.”

Disaster Relief has large tractor-trailers, a Ford F550 Western Hauler truck, sample mud-out and other equipment, a shower/laundry unit and more. WMU is there with World Crafts on display and for sale. FAITH Riders have a Harley on display and Mid-Continent College as a great classic car.

Disaster Relief Tractor-Trailer

One of the North American Mission Board’s Disaster Relief Tractor-Trailers on display in the SBC Exhibit Hall in New Orleans. Southern Baptists have the nation’s third largest disaster relief response organization behind only the American Red Cross and Salvation Army.

Mid-Continent College's classic car

The exhibit hall also houses an entire LifeWay Christian Bookstore. You can find anything they sell in their regular book store and probably more. With a quick glance around the convention center’s corridors, it is easy to see messengers carry LifeWay bags full of their newly found treasures.

LifeWay Christian Bookstore

Messengers shop at the LifeWay Christian Bookstore in the SBC Exhibit Hall.

But the most unusual display this year was hosted by the Louisiana Baptist Convention.  Convention-goers had the opportunity to hold a live, baby alligator and have their picture taken with it.  Never one to shy away from a challenge, I stepped up, held the alligator and smiled at the camera.  His mouth was bound shut, so there was no worry of being bitten. I also noted the alligator’s skin was surprisingly soft.

I texted the photo to my husband and parents who couldn’t believe I held and petted a “gator.” My mother immediately started calling me “Gator Girl.” Thanks mom.

So now I’m thinking, what could we do at the IBSA Annual Meeting in November? The Illinois state bird is a red Cardinal (what do Cubs fan think of that?), the state animal is white-tailed deer (I’m sure hunters could help us with that), our state amphibian is the Eastern Tiger Salamander (I don’t want to hold a salamander), and, finally the state fish, a blue gill (do we want to pose with a dead fish?).

And don’t forget, our state reptile is the painted turtle and our state insect is the monarch butterfly.

Being the Land of Lincoln, maybe we should have a large cut out of President Lincoln. Do you think the Presidential Museum would lend us his wax figure? If they agree, maybe they could include Mrs. Lincoln and the children, too.

Think about it. What should we have in the IBSA Annual Meeting Exhibit Hall this year? Just don’t call me Gator Girl.

I’m glad you’re gonna be the president of this place, dude.

— LifeWay CEO Thom Rainer to First Vice President Fred Luter on the platform of the SBC meeting in New Orleans.

On the platform: Dude

(New Orleans) — Here in New Orleans we’re seeing lots of coverage as a native son is set to become the first African American president of the SBC. Many are reporting on the race angle, but a columnist for the local paper, Jarvis DeBerry of the Times Picayune, says that’s not all that’s new about the ‘new face’ of the SBC.

Here’s an excerpt from today’s coverage:

Most of the coverage about Luter’s new position will focus on his race. That’s as it should be. It’s not insignificant that a black man will be leading a majority-white denomination. And not just any majority-white denomination, but one that was formed in defense of slavery.

But Luter as the new face of the Baptists is important for another reason. He seems to never stop smiling. If you’ve sat through as many Baptist services as I have, you might judge that a miracle. Baptists, especially Baptist pastors, have a reputation for being sour, disapproving, finger-wagging killjoys.

That’s not Fred Luter. “I love to laugh,” he said Friday morning. “I love to have a good time.”

That comes through in his sermons. It comes through in his conversation. The gospel is good news. Luter acts like it.

“If anybody has joy, if anybody has peace and happiness, it should be us,” he said. Still, the perception persists that “Baptists don’t have any fun, that we don’t laugh. We don’t have any joy. I would love to change that perception.”

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Posted by Eric Reed

Fred Luter stands on the edge of history. Today he is expected to be elected the first African American president of the Southern Baptist Convention.

The New Orleans pastor wowed the crowd at the Pastors’ Conference last night with a sermon that was at once fiery, commanding, and joyful. Several times, after a series of rhetorical shouts, Luter flashed a winsome smile. Calling out a string of America’s sins – including abortion, racism, homosexual lifestyle, crime and drugs – Luter concluded there might be many things he’s ashamed of, given the current state of the nation, but “I am not ashamed of the Gospel!”

Excited by his subject, he jumped up and down in place, then turned to the head of the Pastors’ Conference and asked, “Can I do that here?” And he jumped some more to the cheers of a warm and approving audience.

No one besides Luter has been nominated for president so far. Messengers will vote later this afternoon.

Observers inside and outside the convention are wondering what the long-term impact of Luter’s election would mean for the historically white denomination. While the convention has made great strides in ethnic church planting, and now has about 20 percent non-white membership, the question arises how Luter can turn his election from a public statement into lasting change.

Bruce Nolan, writing in the New Orleans Times Picayune, framed the issue this way:

“’With Fred’s election the Southern Baptist Convention is going to affirm that change has to come,’ said the Rev. David Crosby, of First Baptist Church of New Orleans, who will nominate Luter on Tuesday.

Others cautioned that the election does not by itself signal wholesale change.

In the Southern Baptist world, the president’s influence lies in the power to nominate like-minded people to seminaries and agency boards. Presidents typically serve two one-year terms, so it takes several in succession to change the course of Baptist life.

‘Luter could be the first of a series of presidents moving the denomination toward a more racially and ethnically sensitive position,’ said Bill Leonard, a former Southern Baptist who is now chair of Baptist studies at Wake Forest University Divinity School.

‘But if it stops with him and it turns out he is the only one, it will be a moot point.'”

To read Nolan’s full article, go to http://www.nola.com/religion/index.ssf/2012/06/the_rev_luter_is_unoppose.html.

Illinois Baptists brought their friends and families to a reception following the Monday evening session of the SBC Pastors’ Conference. Conversation flowed along with the coffee. Check out these photos, and look for more in the July 2 Illinois Baptist.

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David Platt

David Platt, author of “Radical,” speaks passionately during the SBC Pastors’ Conference.

Alabama pastor David Platt delivered a blistering message this afternoon at the SBC Pastors’ Conference, touching on two hot-button issues emerging at this year’s convention: the debate over Reformed theology in the SBC, and true salvation and the “sinner’s prayer.”

Platt urged pastors toward a unified view of the “mystery” of salvation focused on true repentance.

“Who among us has a market on the mind of God? Who among the finite, flawed men in this room is able to fully comprehend the majesty of God and man’s salvation? Let us behold the mystery of biblical conversion. Let us not attempt to explain it away, and let us certainly not try to debate it away and in the process divide ourselves as the body of Christ.

Let us humbly discuss the things we do not know, things that have been pondered by Bible-believing Christians for centuries, and let us boldly declare truth that we do know, truth that has been boldly proclaimed by Bible-believing Christians for centuries.

We all in this room, all of us, we know and we agree, everyone who repents and believes in the Lord Jesus will be saved.”