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Florida Baptist Convention Wins Two Top Awards At NAMB Conference

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  • Florida Baptist Convention Wins Two Top Awards At NAMB Conference

    FLORIDA BAPTIST CONVENTION WINS TWO TOP AWARDS AT NAMB CONFERENCE

    Florida Baptist Witness
    August 14, 2008
    FL

    Geoff Hammond (far right), president of the NAMB, presented NAMB's
    top church planting award to the Florida Baptist Convention for the
    planting of 140 new churches in 2007, which led the Southern Baptist
    Convention. Shown accepting the award were (L-R) Emanuel Roque,
    Rick Lawrence and Maxie Miller.

    ATLANTA, Ga. (NAMB)--The Florida Baptist Convention was recently
    honored by the North American Mission Board's church planting group
    for "being No. 1 in the commitment to expand the Kingdom of God"
    by planting 140 new churches in 2007--an achievement that led the
    Southern Baptist Convention in new church starts.

    Accepting the church planting award for the Florida convention were
    Emanuel Roque, director of the Language Church Planting Department;
    Rick Lawrence, director of the Church Planting Department; and Maxie
    Miller, director of the African American Ministries Division.

    "The Florida Baptist Convention is fortunate to have some of the
    nation's leading church planting practitioners and an executive
    director-treasurer, Dr. John Sullivan, who values church planting,"
    said Cecil Seagle, director of the Convention's Mission Division,
    which oversees the state's church planting strategy. "Recognition by
    the North American Mission Board is recognition of the outstanding
    work of Frank Moreno, Emanuel Roque, Maxie Miller, Rick Lawrence and
    their church planting teams."

    Moreno serves as director of the Convention's Language Division.

    NAMB's evangelization group also honored the Florida Baptist Convention
    for the state's increase in the actual number of baptisms in 2007
    over 2006. David Burton, director of the Evangelism Division, accepted
    that award.

    FBC photo by John Swain

    Geoff Hammond (left), NAMB president, and Ken Weathersby (right),
    NAMB's senior strategist for evangelism, presented the Florida
    Baptist Convention with an award honoring the convention for its
    increase in baptisms in 2007. Accept­ing the award is David Burton,
    state director of evangelism for the FBC.

    "We are very excited that Florida Baptists continue to be an example
    for the nation in the initiatives of soul winning and baptisms,"
    said Burton.

    "Our work in Haiti has grown over the years and continues to provide
    strong baptism numbers, which when combined with the work of our
    Florida Baptist associations gave us the highest increase of any
    other state in 2007," he explained.

    "In the midst of a national downturn in baptisms, it's refreshing and
    exciting to see many of our churches continue to be aggressive in their
    teaching and training church members to be active lifestyle witness,"
    added Burton. "I believe this is the reason many of our churches have
    high baptisms because they encourage their members to be soul winners."

    More than 500 attended the largest NAMB summer leadership meeting in
    the mission agency's history in Atlanta, July 27-31. Representing
    Southern Baptists from each state of the Union, Canada and Puerto
    Rico, attendees included specialists in evangelism, church planting,
    ministry and academics from state conventions, local associations,
    all six SBC seminaries and NAMB.

    "North America is increasingly a lost mission field," Hammond told
    the crowd packing the Airport Westin Hotel ballroom. "North America
    has always been a mission field. It was a lost mission field that
    Jesus Himself came to."

    Hammond challenged Southern Baptist leaders to pray for a spiritual
    awakening in the changing North American environment, emphasizing
    the changing population and diversity of the U.S. and Canada.

    "Among the world's industrialized countries, Canada and the
    U.S. continue to have growing populations, legally and illegally," said
    Hammond. "Canada admits into their country 250,000 legal immigrants
    each year. The U.S. population is 303 million and will be 400 million
    in the next 35 years. Over 100 million will be Hispanic."

    Illustrating the continent's exploding diversity today, Hammond said
    100,000 Ethiopians now call Atlanta home. Some 166,000 Armenians
    live in Los Angeles. In Toronto, 911 calls are handled in any of 150
    languages, according to Hammond.

    In his first address to state convention, local association and NAMB
    staff, new Southern Baptist Convention president Johnny Hunt delivered
    a wakeup call.

    "If this denomination doesn't get desperate for God's Son and a
    movement of the Holy Ghost of God in our denomination again, we're
    in trouble," Hunt said. "The great evangelist Vance Havner said,
    'the great tragedy of our day is that the situation is desperate but
    the saints are not.'

    Attendance at the recent convention in Indianapolis dropped 20
    percent. You can't do that very often and not be in serious trouble."

    Hunt, senior pastor of First Baptist Church, Woodstock, Ga., said
    Baptists have to go back 50 years to find baptism numbers as low
    in North America. Hunt said evangelism is what Southern Baptists
    do as a result of what they've learned--to be obedient to the Great
    Commission. "But revival comes when God touches. We need God to revive
    us personally, as churches and as a denomination, and give us passion
    for lost people. You let God come down and touch our hearts and we'll
    share. God's going to have to wake us up, shake us and show us where
    we are."

    To meet the challenges of spreading the Gospel throughout North
    America, NAMB's senior strategists, under the leadership of Hammond,
    homed in on the mission agency's new National Evangelism Initiative
    (NEI), recently introduced at the SBC's annual convention in
    Indianapolis.

    "Not often do we have the opportunity to come together at an historical
    point with a rallying call to Southern Baptists like the NEI," Hammond
    said. "We didn't come up with NEI in a vacuum. About 96 partners from
    state con­ventions, associations and NAMB developed the strategy
    after many hours of meetings and travel. After your input here,
    it will go national," he told the audience.

    With a time-horizon of 12 years, NEI will be launched in early
    2009. Its theme will be "God's Plan for Sharing" (GPS) with the goal
    of every believer sharing and every person in North America hearing
    by 2020. The four primary focus points of the initiative are praying,
    engaging, sowing and harvesting.

    "The process of implementation lies in the hands of many of you in
    this room," Hammond said. The church is the way Jesus has chosen to
    win the world. Our headquarters is the local church. Jesus died for
    the church."

    Calling associations the "front lines," Hammond said association
    offices have most of the contacts with SBC churches. He reminded
    the Baptist leaders that in an effort to achieve more focus and
    emphasis on associations, NAMB has appointed David Meacham--a former
    associational missionary and state executive--to the newly created
    post of NAMB senior strategist for associations.

    "Is NEI going to be a challenge? Absolutely. Is it anything less
    than what God expects of us? No." Hammond told the audience that
    they would not recog­nize the Southern Baptist Convention in 2020
    "if God helps us reach these goals."

    In addition to the objectives set for the NEI, Hammond stated
    additional goals in the areas of church starting and missionary
    sending.

    Hammond stated he wants each of the 48,000 SBC churches in North
    America engaged in starting new churches to reach all people groups by
    2020. In addition, he hopes to see every Southern Baptist crossing
    cultural and spiritual barriers to serve in some sort of short-
    or long-term mission endeavor by 2020.

    During the four-day conference, NAMB also presented annual awards for
    outstanding achievements in evangelism and church planting to state
    conventions and individuals.

    Steve Fowler, state director of missions for the Montana Southern
    Baptist Convention in Billings, Mont., was presented the "Dennis
    Hampton Rural Church Planting Award," while Stanley K. Smith, state
    director of missions for the Baptist Convention of Pennsylvania-South
    Jersey, was given NAMB's "People's Choice Award" for "excellence in
    mentoring and coaching peers across North America in church planting."

    The Wyoming Southern Baptist Convention was recognized for its 200
    percent increase in the number of churches planted in 2007 over 2006.

    In addition to Florida, NAMB's evangelization group recognized three
    other state conventions for their increase in the actual number of
    baptisms between 2006 and 2007. These included the Georgia Baptist
    Convention, the Baptist General Convention of Texas and the Tennessee
    Baptist Convention.

    Four other state conventions were honored for "expanding the
    kingdom of God by the increase in percentage of baptisms between
    2006 and 2007." These were the Illinois Baptist State Association,
    Minnesota-Wisconsin Baptist Convention, Southern Baptist Conservatives
    of Virginia, and the Convention of Southern Baptists of Puerto Rico.

    --Boundary_(ID_hXk7BzJpOnxx1QMxm+UrRQ)--
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