The Baptists Shrink
by Andrew M. Manis
It’s not exactly news when the Southern
Baptist Convention (SBC) votes overwhelmingly to support evangelistic
efforts. It is news when the SBC exchanges culture-war histrionics
for a spell of self-examination.
What triggered the navel-gazing were
reports of numerical decline. Had the mighty SBC joined the withering ranks
of Mainline Protestantism? It wasn’t supposed to be that way—or thus spake
the SBC prophets of old.
Back in 1980, when the outcome of the
fundamentalist takeover was still in doubt, the Rev. Bailey Smith was able
to win the SBC presidency by promising the Pastors’ Conference not to
follow in the mainline’s footsteps. “Every denomination which has gone
liberal has gone down,” he said, “but that won’t happen to Southern Baptists
because we are people of the Book.”
Two years later, at the end of his
presidency, Smith made the argument once more, with feeling: “If Southern
Baptists ever try to escape the absolute priority of evangelism and the
authority of the infallible, inerrant word of God, we will not be able to
escape the mediocrity of the other mainline denominations.”
At the 1988 Pastors’ Conference, the
Rev. W. A. Criswell—pastor of First Baptist Church, Dallas and patron saint
of Southern Baptist conservatives—didn’t hesitate to name names: “The
mainline denominations of our nation have lost millions and millions [of
members] these last few years. The United Methodist Church has lost the
most, the United Presbyterian Church second, then follows the United Church
of Christ….It is very apparent why the decline. The curse of liberalism has
sapped the strength of their message and their witness to the Lord Jesus
Christ.”
Throughout the 12-year conflict,
Southern Baptist fundamentalists regularly hammered their opponents with a
simple challenge: “Show us one of your moderate churches that can compete
with our churches in yearly baptisms.” Unable to put up, moderates were
forced to shut up—or meekly change the subject. As in: “Oh yeah? Well, how
much money do your churches give to the Cooperative Program?”
There’s no single explanation for why
the fundamentalists won the war for the SBC, but given the importance
Southern Baptists place on annual baptisms—the symbol of tangible,
evangelistic results—the “liberal denominations” argument has to be in the
mix. As certain as the alliterated points in a Southern Baptist sermon, this
simple line of reasoning helped win 13 presidential elections in 13 years,
drove the moderates into the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship, and yielded
complete fundamentalist control of the denomination.
Fast forward to 2008 when USA Today’s
headline captured the atmosphere of that year’s convention: “Southern
Baptists Fret Over Decline as Annual Meeting Begins.” The consternation had
built up slowly, as the denomination’s numerical indices were flat for the
five years leading up to 2006 and began to turn downward in 2007. The
numbers hovered in 2008 and, much to SBC dismay, headed south again this
year.
For a denomination whose theology
demands an ever-growing emphasis on evangelism, this has been a very bad
thing. And since the 2008 convention, SBC leaders have had a flurry of
private conversations about possible solutions.
These made the news last December 22,
when Washington Post reporter David Waters, in a piece of accurate
reportage and clear-headed analysis, suggested three factors at work: First,
the product (Christian exclusivism) was less appealing. Second, the brand
(the pugnacious SBC) had become less attractive. And third, all
predominantly white denominations were in decline.
On March 17, Ed Stetzer, director of
the SBC’s research arm, LifeWay Research, hinted that he knew which way the
wind was blowing, in a chapel sermon at Southeastern Baptist Theological
Seminary in Wake Forest. “If you do not think that we needed a conservative
resurgence [i.e. the fundamentalist takeover of the SBC], you did not attend
a Southern Baptist seminary before one,” he advised the audience. Yet he
warned that the antagonistic tactics that had brought it about would “not
get us to a ‘Great Commission Resurgence.’”
Southern Baptist leaders, however, tend
to think all ills can be cured with increased doses of fervor and
evangelistic aggressiveness. So a month after Stetzer’s warning,
Southeastern president Danny Akin, in a chapel sermon of his own, outlined
twelve “Axioms of a Great Commission Resurgence” designed to be the basis
for another of Southern Baptists’ periodic evangelism initiatives.
Prior to addressing the seminary
community, Akin had received the input and endorsement of current SBC
president Johnny Hunt, former president James Merritt, Southern Baptist
Theological Seminary president Al Mohler, and Thom Rainer, president of
LifeWay Christian Resources (formerly the Sunday School Board). What he had
to say to his seminarians thus amounted to an official policy address on
behalf of the denominational leadership.
Prior SBC evangelistic resurgences have
included “A Million More in ’54” and, a quarter-century later, “Bold Mission
Thrust.” It might be argued that, by diverting the denomination’s attention
away from increased missionary activity, the “Conservative Resurgence” of
the 1980s actually led to what Stetzer called “the last few years of
decline”—that had it not occurred, a Great Commission Resurgence would not
now be necessary.
Akin, however, claimed that the
Conservative Resurgence had been “absolutely essential” to the new
evangelistic push. His axioms answered the question of how the SBC “might
experience a much-needed course correction”—the very phrase leaders
of the Conservative Resurgence had often used to describe their efforts to
steer the SBC clear of liberalism and the numerical decline they associated
with it. What was needed now was, evidently, a course correction to a course
correction.
Then, at its June 23-24 annual meeting
in Louisville, the private conversations about how to buck these and other
trends became more public. News stories in the denominational press told of
trouble in the SBC’s inerrantist paradise: “Southern Baptists Consider
Restructuring amid Decline” (Augusta Chronicle, June 23), for
example, and “Southern Baptists Face Decline” (Kentucky Post, June
25).
In the place where the Southern Baptist
Theological Seminary (SBTS), a former bastion of SBC liberalism, was
celebrating its 150th anniversary, messengers (delegates)
suffered through reports of stagnation and actual loss of numbers. History
and sociology had conspired to answer the “liberal denominations” argument
in a way the moderates never could.
On June 23, Stetzer sketched out the
alarming tale to the Association of State Baptist Papers: Since 1951 the
rate of SBC membership increase had declined six percent per year, crossing
into negative territory in the last two years. “If the 50-year trend
continues, projected membership of SBC churches would be 8.7 million in
2050, down from 16.2 million last year,” he said, adding that SBC membership
could “fall from a peak of 6 percent of the American population in the late
1980s to 2 percent in 2050.”
At a meeting of the Pastors’ Conference
the day before, he had put it more bluntly: “The decline in membership and
baptisms in the SBC is not a matter of debate; it’s a matter of math.”
Specifically, in 2008 Southern Baptist membership had fallen .2 percent to
16,228,438, while baptisms dropped 1.1 percent, to 342,198. To be sure,
Stetzer concluded his remarks with the hope that “the last few years of
decline are not a trend but just a blip.”
During the official proceedings, Hunt
endorsed Akins’ call and made it a central part of his presidential address.
SBTS president Mohler moved that the Convention establish a task force to
study the problem over the next year and bring its report to the 2010
meeting in Orlando.
Had moderates continued to attend
annual meetings, one of them might have asked how it was possible for a
denomination so firmly and for so long in the hands of true believers to
shrink? The fundamentalist leadership has enjoyed unchallenged control for
18 years—or 30, if you count from 1979, when the takeover began. Prophecies
that it would make the SBC decline-proof turned out to be, at best, greatly
exaggerated.
The only dissenting voice belonged to
executive committee president Morris Chapman. As a member of the
“Conservative Resurgence” old guard, the pastor-turned-denominational
bureaucrat defended the SBC’s old-time revivalistic methodology and took
offense at Akins’ criticism of the Convention’s “bloated bureaucracy.”
On June 22, USA Today’s Cathy
Grossman tracked the potential controversy in Chapman’s uneasiness in her
blog, under the headline, “Southern Baptist Leaders Disagree: Can Retooling
Reverse Decline?” The following day, Peter Smith of the Louisville
Courier-Journal posted “Baptist Tensions Showing.”
After the criticism of SBC bureaucrats
was removed, Chapman did agree to support the task force initiative. Then,
on September 23, he announced his retirement, while allowing as how he would
lead a year-long prayer effort on the task force’s behalf. (Stay tuned for
another round of SBC in-fighting, this time over evangelistic
methodologies.)
As the annual meeting ground to an end,
a noontime panel discussion focused on the waning interest among young
ministers in becoming involved in SBC activities, including the annual
meeting. The fact that the event took place at Sojourn Community Church (as
opposed to a church with name “Baptist” in it) symbolized the lack of
interest in denominational ideology among the rising generation of
ministers. They share the conservative theology, but are turned off by
meetings with a reputation for internal battles that waste time and alienate
the public they’re trying to reach.
On the whole, however, this year’s
installment went easy on Southern Baptists’ well-known habit for public
controversy. Some debated the merits of Calvinist theology, which is
embraced by an estimated 30 percent of Southern Baptist pastors.
Another small-scale row focused on
Baptist involvements with the Acts 29 church planting network, founded by a
California minister known for Theology on Tap (discussing religion over a
beer) and other evangelistic methodologies deemed unacceptable by most
Southern Baptists. The messengers also approved a resolution that criticized
President Obama’s position on abortion even as it congratulated him on his
historical election.
But after their season of
self-examination (and at times self-flagellation), the messengers voted
almost unanimously to appoint the Great Commission Resurgence Task Force. It
comprises 23 prominent leaders, including Akins, Mohler, and Hunt, and
updates the Southern Baptist public via its web site,
www.pray4gcr.com. As of this writing,
5,653 prayer partners had signed up for duty.
Still, the SBC’s
traditional solution of renewed evangelistic commitment may present a major
problem, especially if coupled with its traditional insistence upon biblical
inerrancy. In his chapel address in March, Akins told his audience: “If you
deny the Bible, just go ahead and join another denomination. You’re not
welcome in the Southern Baptist Convention. Go join other denominations that
are plunging headlong into oblivion and insignificance.” This is hardly a
posture calculated to attract religious seekers.
Even if Southern Baptists were to
devote their new evangelistic effort to attracting new members from other
conservative denominations, a strategy such as this may be doomed to
failure. Various religious surveys suggest that to tie evangelism to persons
who will accept biblical inerrancy is to concentrate efforts on a small and
diminishing pool of potential members.
The 2008 American Religious
Identification Survey (ARIS) found that less than 30 percent of Americans
identify themselves as evangelical or born-again (excluding those Catholics
who self-identify that way). For its part, the Pew Forum’s 2008 U.S.
Religious Landscape Survey put evangelicals at 26.3 percent of the
population. Either way, more than two-thirds of Americans are unlikely to
accept Southern Baptists’ understanding of the Bible.
The Landscape Survey’s questions on
belief make this sufficiently clear. Only 27 percent of the national total
said they believed that “there is only ONE true way to interpret the
teachings of my religion.” Only 24 percent of Americans believe their
religion is the “one true faith leading to eternal life.” And only 33
percent believed that “the scriptures are the Word of God, literally true,
word for word.”
It could be argued, of course, that the
whole enterprise of SBC evangelism is to transform new recruits into
inerrantists. How successful have they been at that in the past?
The vast majority of converts to SBC
churches are Bible-believing cultural conservatives when they arrive.
According to a 1993 study by the SBC’s North American Mission Board, only 1
out of 9 described themselves as ever having been “unchurched.”
In other words, SBC conversions have
generally tapped into people who already have one foot in the tent. Secular
folks and moderate-to-liberal believers who don’t already share their
assumptions have been a much, much harder sell.
But the more significant problem for
the SBC is the rapidly rising number of Americans who, though conservative,
identify themselves as “Just Christian” or “non-denominational Christian”
and show little interest in the finer points of theology or in the kind of
church that emphasizes doctrinal divisions or even denominational identity.
Indeed, according to the 2008 ARIS, the non-denominationals are the only
segment of the American religious community that has experienced significant
growth over the past two decades.
Southern Baptists believe that right
theology trumps sociology. The fundamentalist takeover of the 1980s was
predicated on a bet that inerrancy would be a prophylactic against numerical
decline. The current Resurgence, for all its reliance on new energy and new
evangelistic methodologies, is predicated on the same bet.
Most religious seekers in America are
not only disinclined toward inerrancy, but also inclined toward
nondenominational, non-controversial, and non-ideological versions of
Christian faith. This suggests that after the Great Commission Resurgence is
over, a shrinking SBC will have to mount another evangelistic effort, and
another, and another. |