To everyone who appreciates and understands the
rationale for the amendments I introduced in New Orleans seeking a return to a
biennial convention schedule, thank you for your encouragement, interest,
prayers, and support.
If one meeting of the SBC every two years was
sufficient to conduct the business of the Convention in the era of the horse and
buggy, it seems a biennial meeting should be sufficient in the era of FaceBook,
Twitter, and the world wide web.
Of course, we should not embrace
biennial meetings simply because we can. We need a compelling reason to make
such a change. Currently, there are nearly 7 billion compelling reasons to
consider biennial meetings.
The Convention declared in 2010, along
with the distinguished leaders who served on the Great Commission Task Force,
that prioritizing the use of our resources for maximal effectiveness in
fulfilling the Great Commission is deeply important to us and should impact the
way we conduct the business of our Conventions and agencies.
Prioritizing
access to the gospel and funding the advance of the gospel is not merely the
stuff of convenient strategic planning, it is inherent to the gospel
itself.
The call for biennial meetings is not an esoteric call for
rethinking everything we do as Great Commission Baptists. It would actually
change very little of what we do.
It would, however, give us an
opportunity to invest millions - yes millions - more dollars in training pastors
and missionaries and reaching our neighbors and the nations.
Any proposal
that would allow us to deploy millions more in pursuing the very things we seek
to accomplish through our cooperation deserves the
consideration of our Convention.
Godly people can certainly disagree on
implementing such a change, but we should not fear or avoid a discussion of its
merits.
When the Committee on Order of Business referred my motion to
the Executive Committee, they turned the motion over to the Committee that had
already outlined its disagreement with biennial meetings following my motion requesting the study in 2010.
I attempted
to ask for a floor debate, but the question was called very quickly in a rapid
series of other motions that were, appropriately, referred to the Trustees of
the agencies in question.
For motions dealing with with the governing
documents of the Convention herself, the appropriate "Trustees" to consider the
motion are not those of the Executive Committee but the messengers of the
Convention directly.
My initial motions to amend our governing documents
were in order and, as such, the default recommendation from the Committee on
Order of Business should have been to the messengers, not the Executive
Committee. We are still Baptists, are we not?
The problem with my motions was
that they were regarded as neither wise nor or desirable by the Committee and
were subsequently referred without the clear understanding of the Convention
that a discussion could (and should) have taken place.
The Committee is
simply supposed to determine whether motions are in order. The job of the
messengers is to determine if they are wise. No where in the Constitution or Bylaws is the Executive Committee given authority to weigh these matters independently of the Convention herself.
The purview of the Executive
Committee does not include protecting us from unwise decisions regarding
amendments to our governing documents. The Constitution itself provides these
protections by requiring an affirmative vote of a supermajority of the
Convention messengers for two successive meetings in a row!
That is,
rightly, a very tall order. This is all the protection we need.
I hope,
next year, for an opportunity to have a family conversation regarding the wisdom
or lack of wisdom in moving to biennial meetings.
If we can save and
redeploy millions in the battle to reach billions without sacrificing
transparency or sound business practices, the proposal deserves serious
consideration by the people to whom God has entrusted this Convention - the
messengers themselves.
Coming up next
In my next post, I will list
and respond to the objections of the Executive Committee to biennial meetings as
given in their response to a request for a financial study of the cost of
Conventions in 2010.
The Scripture declares that we are to serve Christ in the gospel (Rom 1:9), for the gospel (Mark 8:35), and as those who must be found faithful in exercising stewardship of the mysteries of God (1 Cor 4:1-2). This blog is one believer's take on living the gospel-centered life in our time all to the glory of God. From time-to-time, assumptions, even those of well-meaning Christians, need to be taken with a grain of salt - the salt of the singular priority of Christ and His gospel.
Wednesday, June 20, 2012
What Happened to the Biennial Motion at the New Orleans SBC?
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3 comments:
Good work Daniel! I look forward to your future posts to see what their objections were. Thanks for your hard work and diligence in getting funds to the nations!
Thank you Marty! I am looking forward to engaging the objections. Most are easily overcome.
to him who hath an ear...
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