News Articles

SBC DIGEST: Carlisle Driggers dies; Max Barnett dies


Carlisle Driggers, former SC state exec, dies at 88

By Todd Deaton/Baptist Courier

COLUMBIA, S.C. – Carlisle Driggers, 88, Hartsville native and executive director-treasurer of the South Carolina Baptist Convention from 1992 until his retirement in 2007, passed away May 18 at his residence in Georgia.

Driggers’ 16-year tenure is the second longest for an executive director in South Carolina.

Carlisle Driggers

“He (Driggers) led the convention into and through some of its most effective years of missions, education, and church revitalization,” said Tony Wolfe, current executive director-treasurer, in a statement posted on the convention’s website. “Among his many achievements were the development and implementation of his ‘Empowering Kingdom Growth’ (EKG) initiative, a surge of international missions sending, and innovative strategic gospel partnerships with Baptist groups across the state and nation.”

Wolfe described Driggers as a voice of encouragement and wisdom. “His influence among our SCBaptist people is deep and wide, having discipled, mentored, counseled, coached, and deployed many of the Baptist leaders who still serve across our state and nation today,” Wolfe added.

The goal of the “Empowering Kingdom Growth” initiative was to “enable, empower and strengthen churches in ministry,” according to an article titled “200 Years of South Carolina Baptist Leadership” archived on the convention’s website. The emphasis “encouraged each church to understand its unique contribution to the kingdom of God.”

The state convention’s EKG emphasis became the centerpiece of Driggers’ administration and gained national prominence when adopted as a strategy by the Southern Baptist Convention.

“In 2002 in St. Louis when the EKG proposal was made by the Executive Committee to the SBC, it was voted on unanimously. We knew at that point that it was going to take a while for it to really begin to take root across the SBC because it was quite a different concept,” Driggers, who chaired the SBC’s EKG task force from 2002-2005, told Baptist Press in 2010.

Previously, Southern Baptists in general had talked about the kingdom of God, but they hadn’t focused squarely on Jesus’ call to the kingdom in Matthew 6:32-33, Driggers said in the BP article.

“What began as an effort in reaching churches one by one has become a true national movement that continues to gain momentum and impact entire states,” said Morris Chapman, then president of the SBC Executive Committee. “Many Southern Baptists for the first time are learning what it is to be kingdom-minded.”

In the Nov. 7, 1991 edition of The Baptist Courier, Driggers explained, “Kingdom growth goes far beyond numbers. Kingdom growth also is measured by such indicators as spiritual enrichment through Bible study, prayer and worship, missions involvement, and stewardship development.”

Driggers served as executive assistant to South Carolina Baptist executive director-treasurer Ray Rust from 1990-1992 after returning to South Carolina from Conyers, Ga., where he had served on the staff of Northminster Baptist Church. Previously, he had worked at the former Home Mission Board (now North American Mission Board) for 13 years, first as associate director of the black church relations department from 1975-1978 and as regional coordinator for planning and budgeting for the eastern seaboard states from 1978-1988.

Driggers was a graduate of Mars Hill College (now University), Carson-Newman College (University), Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, and Pittsburgh Theological Seminary. He held honorary doctorates from North Greenville and Charleston Southern universities.

He served churches in South Carolina, Kentucky, Alabama, West Virginia and Georgia.

When asked what he hoped his legacy would be, Driggers responded, “That I helped churches to catch a kingdom perspective as they grew to the glory of God” (The Courier, Feb. 22, 2016).

“May the weight of the moment remind us all that our message is urgent, our cooperative work is critical, and our time is short,” Wolfe concluded his statement. “Much has been done by our Baptist people in the way of Great Commission advance, but much is left to do.”

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Max Barnett, longtime Baptist Okla. collegiate leader, dies at 89

By Baptist Messenger Staff

OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla. – Max Don Barnett, 89, longtime director of the Baptist Student Union/Baptist Collegiate Ministry at the University of Oklahoma (OU), died May 17.

Barnett, a native of Littlefield, Texas, helped lead a ministry at OU that celebrated its Centennial on Oct. 20, 2023. More than 500 students and BCM/BSU alumni and supporters gathered for the special 100th anniversary event.

Barnett served at OU from 1967-2004, “Where his faithful, Spirit-led leadership established a model of collegiate ministry marked by evangelistic fervor, doctrinal depth, and pastoral care for students. Max faithfully served the Lord Jesus Christ for more than 60 years in Baptist collegiate ministry, giving his life to reaching university students with the Gospel and discipling generations of young men and women for Kingdom service,” said Shane Kammerer, current OU BCM director.

In 1999, the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) President at the time appointed Barnett to serve on the Baptist Faith and Message Study Committee, a blue-ribbon committee chaired by the late Adrian Rogers, which convened to review and revise the Convention’s confessional statement for a new generation of Southern Baptists. The committee delivered its report to the Convention on June 14, 2000, resulting in the adoption of the Baptist Faith and Message 2000—a document now affirmed as a faithful summary of biblical doctrine and the confessional foundation of Southern Baptist cooperation.

Oklahoma Baptists Executive Director-Treasurer Todd Fisher said, “Max Barnett was an Oklahoma Baptists icon in Baptist Collegiate Ministry. He served at the BCM at OU for 37 years and was a member of the committee that presented the updated Baptist Faith & Message in 2000. His long, far-reaching legacy of disciple making and evangelism has a tremendous impact for the kingdom of God.”

An outpouring of support and appreciation for Barnett was seen across social media.

Chad Coleman, state director of BCM for Oklahoma Baptists, said, “I am incredibly thankful for the legacy and impact Max Barnett had on campus ministry in Oklahoma and around the U.S. Over the past year, he often took time to call, encourage me and pray for me.”

Pastor Bill Elliff said, “Max Barnett was one of the greatest men I’ve ever known. God led him to oversee the Baptist student work at the University of Oklahoma for decades, but it was merely a launching pad to change the lives of hundreds of thousands of people and ministries around the world. He arguably started more student ministries on major college universities than any man living.”

One OU alumni on the BSU staff under the leadership of Barnett said on Facebook, “At the BSU he taught me how and what ministries are all about. He’s a great leader and speaker and Christ was his life.”

Another former student said, “Under his leadership, I learned how to walk with God. I learned how to understand my faith and how to share Jesus with others.”

Kammerer added, “Max was truly a pioneer in ministry. His discipleship methods revolutionized campus ministry as we know it today. Max’s impact is still felt today at OU and other BCM’s, and he will be greatly missed. We are praying for his family.”

Read the full story here.

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