Our New Strategist for Global
Evangelical Relations
Bobby Welch has been named to the position of Strategist for Global Evangelical
Relations with the Southern Baptist Convention's Executive Committee.
Welch is the SBC's immediate past president and former pastor of First Baptist
Church in Daytona Beach, Florida, where he served thirty-two years.
Morris H. Chapman, president of the Executive
Committee, said Welch will be "Southern
Baptists' ambassador to those leaders in other countries who are interested
in building relationships as likeminded brothers and sisters in the Lord."
Welch began his duties March 15 and will continue to live in Daytona Beach.
Chapman noted that the new position of Strategist for Global Evangelical Relations
is part of the Executive Committee's implementation of a vote by messengers
at the SBC's 2004 annual meeting in Indianapolis to withdraw from the Baptist
World Alliance and to build relationships with evangelistically oriented
Baptists and likeminded evangelicals across the globe. Funding formerly designated
for the BWA was reassigned for the new international initiative and remains
within the SBC operating budget.
The SBC initiative began with a July 2005 gathering in Warsaw, Poland, in
which a contingent of nine SBC leaders met with a dozen Baptist representatives
from Poland, Germany, Romania, Hungary, Bulgaria, and Moldova to explore
ways to partner more effectively in evangelism, church planting, and theological
education.
In June 2006, two hundred and fifty Baptists
from eleven countries attended a conference in Oradea, Romania, delving
into such themes as missions, evangelism, church planting, and preaching.
Paul Negrut, president of the Romanian Baptist Union, envisioned such
conferences being held in other locations worldwide for Bible-believing
Christians "whose hearts are knit together in compassion
for an unregenerate world."
And several Southern Baptist leaders have had an exchange of visits during
the past six months with leaders of Russian-German Baptist and Mennonite
groups in Germany interested in creating a cooperative approach to missions
and pastoral training.
Chapman said Welch will have three key emphases in his travels overseas and
across the Southern Baptist Convention:
• First, Welch will help build an overseas
network of relationships and develop partnering opportunities such as
evangelism and discipleship conferences.
• Second, in Welch's stateside speaking
engagements in churches, Baptist associations, and state conventions,
he will continue to champion the urgent need for Baptists to be active
in witnessing in their family, work and neighborhood settings. Welch
is accepting invitations to speak; for information call 386-253-5691,
ext. 101.
• Third, and importantly, Chapman noted,
will be biblical stewardship and the Cooperative Program channel of Southern
Baptist support for national and international missions and ministries.
Welch led First Baptist in Daytona Beach to be among the SBC's leading
churches in CP support during his years as pastor.
"Bobby has a passion for the lost and he combines this with a gifted
ability to connect with others across generations and cultures, both ideal
traits for reaching out to likeminded evangelicals around the world," Chapman
said.
"Importantly, he is an anointed preacher, allowing him to relate to the
lost and the saved, and Bobby has been an incredible leader in our Convention
in so many ways," Chapman added, "most recently as SBC president,
but for so many years in consistently leading his church to be strong supporters
of SBC missions through the Cooperative Program."
Messengers at the 2004 convention approved
a BWA Study Committee recommendation that the BWA funding be redirected "to
develop and execute a new and innovative strategy for continuing to build
strong relationships with conservative evangelical Christians around
the world as together we witness to the saving power of our Lord Jesus
Christ."
Withdrawal from the Baptist World Alliance
was recommended by the BWA Study Committee because, at least for the
SBC, the BWA "no longer efficiently
communicates to the unsaved a crystal clear Gospel message that our Lord
Jesus Christ is solely sufficient for salvation."
The committee had noted that the recommendation "is
not intended to cast aspersion upon the many godly and enthusiastically
evangelical Baptist fellowships that are members of the BWA. We fully
intend to continue to partner with our oldest and best friends worldwide
and to develop new and vibrant friendships and joint endeavors to reach
the world for Christ."
Welch, as SBC president, led a two-year "Everyone Can!" Kingdom
Challenge calling Southern Baptists to witness to, win, and baptize 1 million
people in a year. He traveled to forty-eight states by bus and flew to Alaska
and Hawaii to promote the evangelistic initiative. Initial results of the
effort will be evident when statistics from Southern Baptists' Annual Church
Profile are released in April.
Welch also traveled as SBC president to six
countries in four of the International Mission Board's regions in December
2005 — Central Asia, Northern Africa
and the Middle East, South Asia, and the Pacific Rim.
First Baptist Daytona Beach regularly met its goal of sending one mission
team overseas each month, said Welch, who long ago lost count of the number
of countries he has visited in various missions trips.
"I do have a burning passion for overseas work, and always have, and
so has our church," Welch said.
As First Baptist's pastor, Welch also was the co-creator of the FAITH Sunday
School-based evangelism strategy, which came into wide use in Baptist churches
across the country.
Reflecting on the threefold emphasis he will have as Southern Baptists' Strategist
for Global Evangelical Relations, Welch said:
• Overseas, he will seek "to take
large steps toward locating those persons that God has already prepared
on every continent and to relate them to each other and to the SBC for
the cause of winning lost souls in an unparalleled way."
• In the United States, he will seek "to
be another voice that continues to wave the flag of soul-winning to focus
our greatest effort on winning the lost in a way that helps likeminded
evangelicals see a greater movement of God across America."
• Concerning stewardship and the Cooperative Program, he noted, "Everybody
realizes, of course, that the Cooperative Program is the oxygen that fills
the lungs of this Convention and the blood that runs through its veins to
all missions and evangelism stations here and around the world.
"The more we go, the more we will need to give," Welch said, "and
the more we give, the more we'll be able to go.
"My emphasis is on 'more' — more
going and more giving."
In his new role, Welch added, "My desire
is, as when I was president of the SBC, to be the best friend to and
the greatest helper of the IMB, NAMB, and others who are trying to reach
people and to carry out Great Commission evangelism and discipleship.
"This is not going to be any sort of infringement on IMB or NAMB and
their responsibilities overseas or in North America," he continued. "It
will be, I am praying, a very wonderful, strong relationship."
Particularly from an overseas standpoint,
Welch said he has discussed his new role with IMB President Jerry Rankin
and other top leaders at the mission board and will be traveling to the
board's offices in Richmond, Virginia, to "meet with their leadership worldwide" before
embarking on his overseas travels.
"This is in no way any effort to be an alternative to the BWA or to start
another BWA," Welch also said. "I have no programs, supplies, products,
etc. My duty is to connect persons here and around the world to each other
in the hope that they will move forward together for the Great Commission.
My prayer, goal, and intent is for the IMB, NAMB, and the SBC to be blessed
and accelerated by such a synergy of relationships. To that end, I am to
strive to be what was termed as an 'ambassador' of goodwill and evangelism
for our great Convention."
Original article can be found here.
http://sbclife.net/articles/2007/04/sla4.asp
