Welch: SBC will baptize a million in a year
Posted: 6/15/06
Welch: SBC will baptize a million in a year
By Steve DeVane
Biblical Recorder
GREENSBORO, N.C.—Outgoing Southern Baptist Convention President Bobby Welch guaranteed Southern Baptists will meet his goal of baptizing a million people in a year. He just didn’t say what year.
In his final address to the SBC annual meeting as president, Welch said some people have claimed he called the convention to try to do the impossible.
“We will baptize a million in a year,” he said. “I don’t know if it’ll be this year.”
The goal might be reached this year if Southern Baptists get to work in the last three and a half months of the SBC’s fiscal year, he asserted.
The SBC annual meeting focused on the theme of “Everyone can — I’m it.”
Welch, using the story of Jesus feeding 5,000 as recorded in John’s Gospel, said God is calling for more from Southern Baptists.
Welch talked of how Jesus was eying the crowd looking for people who might be saved.
“We must rediscover our confidence in the power of God’s gospel,” he said.
Christians shouldn’t have to invite their friends to a meeting or get them to read a book if they believe in the power of the gospel to radically change lives, Welch said.
“You can win them on the spot,” he said.
Welch said he had asked missionaries what the hardest part of their jobs are, expecting to hear about the distance from home or separation from families. Instead, the missionaries talk about the pain of having so little resources that they have to keep saying no to reaching people who are ready to say yes to the gospel.
“Ladies and gentlemen, I’m telling you today, that ought not be true,” Welch said.
Two things are critical for Southern Baptists—their theology of evangelism and how they apply it, Welch asserted.
“We have to do more going and giving,” he said.
Welch said Southern Baptists get the “best bounce for their buck” through the Cooperative Program. Through the unified giving plan, Baptists are working 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days a year, he said.
Referencing recent talk of whether churches should give at least 10 percent to CP, Welch asked Southern Baptists to instead focus on what they agreed about in the program.
“All have agreed we should do more and we should do more and we can do more and we will do more,” he said.
When Jesus fed the multitude, all God needed was a lad, Welch noted.
“I wonder where all the men were?” he said. “There were 5,000 of them hanging around there.”
Maybe all the men were trying to figure out how to get to the leadership table—or perhaps were trying to figure out how to keep others from the table, he suggested.
If Southern Baptists would spend less time blogging on websites, maybe they’d spend more time witnessing, Welch said. He quickly added that if anyone was happy that he’d criticized bloggers, they should think about how much time they spend with their cell phone in their ear.
Welch mentioned a sermon he gave at last year’s SBC meeting in which he used a dead frog as an illustration. Welch said the frog was run over by a car because it wasn’t in deep water where he was supposed to be.
Just after mentioning the sermon, Welch turned around and was handed a live frog. He pointed out how the frog’s long legs allowed him to jump far.
Welch then pointed out the difference between one frog’s croak and the croaking of a multitude of frogs.
“This convention needs to come together on the main thing,” he said.
News of religion, faith, missions, Bible study and Christian ministry among Texas Baptist churches, in the BGCT, the Southern Baptist Convention ( SBC ) and around the world.