About
Dr. Bobby Welch
Dr.
Bobby Welch is president of the Southern Baptist Convention.
He is also the pastor of First Baptist Church in Daytona
Beach, Fla., where he will mark his 30th anniversary
in August.
Welch, 61, is a former president of
the Florida Baptist State Convention, former SBC vice
president and the co-founder of the FAITH/Sunday School
Evangelism Strategy widely used by churches across the
Southern Baptist Convention.
The Alabama native became a Christian
as a teenager, but it was in combat in Vietnam as a
reconnaissance platoon leader where his faith commitment
became resolute.
Shot at point-blank range by a Viet
Cong guerrilla, Welch was believed to be dead when he
was piled onto a military helicopter with other casualties.
He whispered a prayer of recommitment to Christ in the
days that followed as he struggled to survive.
"The longer I live, the clearer
it becomes" how much the incident 38 years ago
has influenced his call to the ministry, Welch told
the Witness.
SENSE OF URGENCY
"Ever since that day, I live in
the conscious state of knowing that I may not get home
tonight, and that drives a great sense of urgency in
me. I don't put off a lot until tomorrow. ... I am driven
with a sense of urgency to get things done. And that's
how I feel about reaching people," he said, adding,
"I'm driven with the same urgency about this convention."
In the interview with the Witness, Welch
was careful to say he will not take for granted his
election to the highest post in the nation's largest
evangelical body.
But he also made clear his goals and
convictions.
He will issue an overarching call for
Southern Baptists to reach 1 million baptisms yearly
in the United States, a goal first envisioned by Paige
Patterson, now president of Southwestern Baptist Theological
Seminary, during his SBC presidency from 1998-2000.
Toward the 1-million mark, Welch will
embark on a tour -- primarily by bus – encompassing
25 days between late August through early October to
visit every state in the nation as well as a city in
Canada to "further extend the convention"
and to hear the ideas of "grassroots" Southern
Baptists. The tour will visit visits to Alaska and Hawaii
by plane.
Welch said he hopes the cross-country
initiative will result in a coordinated effort of renewed
commitment to evangelism and plans for simultaneous
evangelistic efforts to be launched at the 2005 SBC
annual meeting in Nashville, Tenn.
1 MILLION BAPTISMS
"If you baptize a million in one
year, you would move to a level of transformation that
we would never go back again to where we used to be,"
Welch told the Witness.
With 377,357 baptisms in SBC churches
last year -- a drop of 4.44 percent from 2002, Welch
said, "We've got to get off these decimal points.
Decimal points are good for nothing but death spiritually."
Citing the baptism decline as one of
"six critical areas that we've got to break out
from," Welch said focused attention on the challenges
-- ranging from evangelism training to stewardship --
"would have the potential of creating mass and
generating spiritual synergy, and those are the sort
of things that are essential for a transformational,
forward movement -- to really go to a place we've never
been before and then we never come back to where we
used to be."
The other five areas listed by Welch
are:
-- Evangelism training. Welch said his
presidency would not be marked by advocacy of the FAITH/Sunday
School Evangelism Strategy alone. "The deal is
to do it," he said emphatically of "a thousand
ways" people can be trained to witness for their
faith.
-- Witnessing to and winning the lost.
"My belief is that you win if you witness and you
lose if you don't," Welch told the Witness. Southern
Baptists "have to get lostness, the look of lostness
of their unsaved" family members on their minds.
Rather than solely focusing on foreign missions across
the world, "We need to bring lostness closer to
home."
-- Stewardship. A consistent leader
in support of the Cooperative Program, Southern Baptists'
unified missions funding effort, First Baptist Daytona
Beach gives at least 15 percent of its undesignated
gifts to (CP) Missions. "Every budget year there
are things that we need to do more of and that we wish
we could, but we've never flinched on [CP giving] and
I don't see where we've ever suffered from it, and I
believe we're blessed because of it," Welch told
the Witness.
"I believe that there are people
out here who need to refocus on the joy, the victory
and the blessing of being in the center of God's blessing
through stewardship," he said. "And that needs
to happen at the individual level, that needs to happen
at the church level and that needs to happen at the
cooperative level."
-- Vacation Bible School. Welch said
he intends to call for all Southern Baptists -- including
adults -- to be enrolled in Vacation Bible School for
the next two years. Asserting that Southern Baptists
are "failing miserably now in a runaway way to
reach our kids for the Lord," Welch said VBS is
the "absolute best way to reinvigorate us for our
passion for reaching young people." Noting that
VBS is fueled primarily by the efforts of laypeople,
Welch added that any church, including small congregations
and those without pastors, can immediately get involved
in renewed VBS outreach.
-- Starting new units. Southern Baptists
should highlight starting new units -- Sunday School
classes and new churches -- as a vital evangelistic
strategy, Welch said. Children's Sunday School classes
are especially important, he told the Witness, because
most Christians make a profession of faith before the
age of 18.
Through the bus tour, Welch said, "I
would attempt to do an all-out effort in the first months
to encourage, urge, stir our convention with a call
to a unity of purpose for evangelism."
The tour will include a variety of congregations
reflecting the racial, ethnic, geographic and numerical
diversity of the SBC -- "a patchwork of this mosaic
of Southern Baptist Convention life," Welch said.
In addition to churches, he hopes to
meet the president, executive director, evangelism director,
Sunday School director and newspaper editor of every
state Baptist convention. He said he realizes schedules
will be difficult to coordinate and some leaders may
not be able to join in, but he hopes to meet numerous
state Southern Baptist leaders along the way and ride
with them in the bus for a period of time.
Welch settled on the bus tour as the
most effective way of meeting and hearing from grassroots
Southern Baptists, noting that "when you roll up
on a bus, they know you've been on the road. ... I think
it says to them that I'm trying to do the best I can
to extend this convention toward you, at some effort
on my part."
The bus -- which Welch was careful to note would be
the "convention bus, it's not the Bobby Welch bus"
-- will be covered with the logos of each SBC entity
and the slogan, "Do all you can with all you got
where you are -- now."
Later on, Welch told the Witness, he
would like to visit U.S. troops in Iraq and Afghanistan. |