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WRAP-UP: SBC Executive Committee takes up messenger motions

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NASHVILLE (BP) – Southern Baptist Convention Executive Committee members addressed referrals from messengers to the 2025 SBC Annual Meeting, heard reports and celebrated the highest Lifeway summer camps’ missions offering in eight years at their fall meeting, Sept. 22-23.

One messenger suggestion adopted by the EC was the formation of a task force to study resources for special needs ministry available to Southern Baptist churches. A related motion to add a Disability Sunday to the SBC calendar was formally declined the motion but with the request for the newly formed task force to consider the suggestion. See related story here [2].

At the recommendation of EC officers, members declined to file a countersuit against former SBC President Johnny Hunt. A motion to attempt to recover legal fees incurred defending a suit brought by Hunt in 2023 was referred to the EC in June. The decision was one of the few bringing discussion in Tuesday morning’s (Sept. 23) EC plenary session. See related story here [3].

Lifeway campers donated their largest missions offering since 2017 this summer. Lifeway Interim President Joe Walker presented checks totaling more than $690,000 to International Mission Board President Paul Chitwood and North American Mission Board President Kevin Ezell during the EC meeting Monday night, Sept. 22. See related story here [4].

Also during Monday evening’s session, EC members heard from EC President Jeff Iorg [5] and SBC President Clint Pressley [6]

“My dream tonight is that Southern Baptists will recommit to cooperation in all its messy splendor and focus on our overarching mission of getting the Gospel to the nations rather than being preoccupied with lesser issues,” Iorg said.

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Pressley also called for unity and cooperation in his address, calling for Southern Baptists “to actually think the best of each other.

“What a good thing when someone extends the benefit of the doubt,” he said.

Credentials Committee action

EC members approved a recommendation brought by the SBC Credentials Committee to “formally recognize the discontinued relationship” of Fountain of Praise, a congregation in Houston. The church has not reported financial participation with the SBC for at least the last 10 years and demonstrated a “lack of intent to cooperate to resolve a question of faith and practice,” the committee said.

Fountain of Praise’s website lists Mia K. Wright, wife of pastor Remus E. Wright, as a co-pastor of the church, putting the church out of alignment with Article III of the SBC Constitution, which says “the office of pastor is limited to men as qualified by Scripture.”

Conflicts of interest

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SBC Executive Committee member David Spencer signs a Conflict of Interest Disclosure Form Sept. 22 at the EC meeting in Nashville. Baptist Press photo by Brandon Porter

At the suggestion of the EC’s Convention Missions and Ministry Standing Committee, the full body declined a to amend Article VI of the SBC Constitution to disallow SBC entity employees or contract workers to serve as trustees, claiming SBC Bylaw 15. F already prohibits such conflicts of interest.

In compliance with a revised version of the SBC Business & Financial Plan passed by messengers in June, EC members each signed a conflict of interest form Sept. 22.

SBC diversity

In response to a motion requesting all SBC entities and the EC to “report on actions taken to elevate qualified biblical leaders from diverse backgrounds,” the EC listed several ways it already is active in this regard, including the work of the EC’s Office of Convention Partnerships.

“Additionally, the Executive Committee has, since 2011, reported on its efforts to increase ethnic participation and ethnic leadership in the Convention in its Annual Ministry Report,” the recommendation states.

“Finally, the Executive Committee now publishes a dashboard of reporting data in the
SBC Annual regarding ethnic participation on trustee boards, committees, and standing committees.”

Other business

In other recommendations adopted by members Sept. 23, the Executive Committee:

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