On Tuesday, New Year's Day, after serving 2 years as
associate executive director of Texas Baptists Committed (TBC), I transitioned to
executive director. Our Board voted last month to name me to this post, and I want to express my appreciation to them for their
trust and affirmation. They are my partners in this work (besides being my bosses), a group of gifted and
gracious Baptist leaders, and it is my privilege to work alongside them in carrying out TBC's mission.
During the past 2 years, some of you have asked, "so if you're associate executive director,
then who's the executive director?" Good question. The short explanation is that 2 years ago,
the Board and I agreed that it was premature to name an executive director to
succeed David Currie. Now it's 2 years later, and things have changed.
Let's back up for just a moment and look at the events and decisions that have led TBC to this point.
Changes in Baptist life - and TBC - bring
reassessment
In the year or so following David Currie’s
retirement in the fall of 2009, our Board of Directors (of which I was a
member) met face-to-face almost monthly to discuss the question, where
do we go from here?
Our Baptist environment
- in Texas and elsewhere - had changed since the dramatic conflicts of past years. In the
1980s, we had witnessed the battle over the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC); followed by the 1990s tussle over the Baptist General
Convention of Texas (BGCT). But by 2010, the battleground in Texas had long since shifted from
convention gavels to church pulpits.
Change can be painful, but it can also provide an opportunity for a much-needed reassessment. Following David Currie's retirement, we on the TBC Board
began taking a hard look at changes in Texas Baptist life and seriously
discussing whether the mission of Texas Baptists Committed was still needed & relevant and, if so, how we needed to
adapt our focus to carry out that mission effectively in the years to come.
Answering our questions
After much discussion, we agreed that TBC is
needed more than ever - especially in light of reports from members of Texas Baptist churches
regarding the aggressiveness of the Southern Baptists of Texas Convention (SBTC) in spreading misinformation about the Baptist
General Convention of Texas to BGCT churches for the purpose of enticing those churches to align with the SBTC; and in maneuvering SBTC-friendly preachers into interviews with pastor search committees as well as search committees for associational directors of missions (DOMs). As with their SBC allies at the national level, the SBTC's goal is power and control, whereas the BGCT focuses on voluntary partnership and cooperation.
So our Board agreed that TBC needs to focus on the local church above all else. We still
encourage strong, effective, and diverse leadership for the Baptist General
Convention of Texas, but the center of Baptist life is the local
church. We agreed that our top priority must be to assist pastor search committees. Because TBC respects the autonomy of the local church, we never insert ourselves into local church situations, but we make our resources available upon request from church members, committees, and clergy.
We also agreed that TBC must educate members of
Texas Baptist churches on our Baptist heritage and distinctives; and reach out
to young people and show them why Baptist principles are important to the
living out of their faith.
What to do about the executive staff?
As we began to form a consensus around these
priorities in the spring and summer of 2010, we arrived at the question of
executive leadership for Texas Baptists Committed. Should we immediately initiate a search process
for an executive director to succeed David Currie? We kicked that question around the table but
ultimately decided that it just wasn't the right time to do that. As a Board,
we were in the early phases of refocusing our mission, and there was a general
consensus that we needed more time before we could clearly tell a prospective
executive director just what we expected of his/her leadership.
In the fall of 2010, the Board - led by Michael Bell as chair - asked
me to become associate executive director, effective January 2011. Our
understanding was that I would be responsible for moving TBC forward in
accordance with the focus and priorities that the Board had identified. But the
question remained of whether we would eventually initiate a search for David
Currie's successor, and I was fully in agreement that we needed to take time to assess this question.
David Currie is a preacher; I'm a layperson. But
one of the many important initiatives that David undertook in leading Texas Baptists
Committed for 20 years was to recognize the value of laypersons and involve them in Baptist
life at every level. In early 2002, David Currie recommended me for membership on the (then) 225-member BGCT Executive Board, and I took my first steps into Texas Baptist leadership. In January 2006, I was elected to the TBC Board, soon became David's editor, and was eventually asked by David & the Board to take responsibility for all of TBC's communications.
Our Baptist heritage is a key part of who I am, and I've counted it a blessing to be given the opportunity to have a part in promoting and preserving that heritage.
Two years - many steps
For 2 years, I've served as associate executive
director, and we've made progress. Last month, the Board affirmed the work
we've done together by naming me executive director.
During these 2 years, among other things, we
have:
- Produced
71 Baptist Briefs videos on Baptist history and principles
- Used in Baptist identity classes in churches
& some of our Texas Baptist universities
- Cited by the Baptist History & Heritage
Society, which has linked to them from its Web site
- Produced a weekly e-newsletter, TBC Weekly Baptist Roundup, since May 2011, which is read by over 550 people every week
- Held
a breakfast and provided a booth at the BGCT annual meetings in Amarillo
(2011) and Corpus Christi (2012)
- Formed
the TBC Advisory Network, a group of clergy and laity across Texas, to
help keep us - and each other - informed of pastorless churches needing
assistance, good pastoral candidates, and reliable information on pastoral
candidates
- Responded
to numerous requests from pastor search committees for reliable
information about pastoral candidates
- Produced
brochure, What Every Texas Baptist Church Should Know: Critical differences between the BGCT & the Southern Baptists of Texas Convention
Importance of partnership
But what is critical to understand is the
importance of partnership in this work. David Currie left us the legacy of
lay involvement, but his larger legacy is the model of partnership - that carrying out TBC's mission requires a lot of people, both laity and clergy, caring and working together. That's not just David
Currie's model. It's the Baptist model.
I meet with our Board, either by conference call
or face-to-face, every month. I report on our latest progress and initiatives.
We discuss, deliberate, and decide what we need to do next. Between those
meetings, I have one-on-one conversations with our Board chair and other
members.
But there are other partnerships as well. For example, we
work closely with the BGCT leadership to help Texas Baptist churches as needed. Also, during the past 2 years, we've worked to foster partnerships with other independent organizations, including:
- Associated Baptist Press
- Baptist History & Heritage Society
- Baptist Joint Committee for
Religious Liberty
- Baptist Standard
- Baptist Women in Ministry
- Center for Congregational Health
- Cooperative Baptist Fellowship
- Eula Mae and John
Baugh Center for Baptist Leadership
- Religious Herald
- T. B. Maston Foundation for Christian Ethics (which I serve as chair)
- Virginia Baptists Committed
- Word&Way
TBC has also developed partnerships with several Texas Baptist universities and seminaries, and receives donations regularly from several Texas Baptist churches. We hope that, as we continue to work to assist churches, more of them will add TBC to their budget to enable us to help others.
All of these partnerships have come about because of our common commitment to Jesus Christ and the freedom that He gives. Some of our partnerships take the form of general and mutual support, some
are more tangible, and some are still in the formative stages, but the point is that
I don't do this work alone.
Again, this is the Baptist model: cooperation and partnership, God doing His work through strategic relationships forged among His people.
TBC supporters - without you, there is no Texas
Baptists Committed
So I need the cooperation and partnership of other faithful Baptists to carry out TBC's mission. I've named a number of partners
here, starting with our TBC Board and continuing with the BGCT leadership and
others.
But I've saved our most important partner for
last - YOU. In 2012, our number of donors more than doubled over 2011, and so
did the amount of our donations. Your faithfulness in partnering with TBC
attests to the importance of the work we do. Our mission is one that is needed
in Texas Baptist life.
As executive director, I confess that it is you,
not I, who will see to it that Texas Baptists Committed fulfills the mission
that God has given us. Thank you for your support, and I ask you to continue to
partner with us in 2013. If you have information that you believe would be
useful to us, please call me at 214-986-7136 or email me at bjones@txbc.org. If your church is searching for a
pastor, and you believe we could be of help to your pastor search committee,
please call or email me. Or maybe you're like I was when I first contacted David Currie
13 years ago - frustrated and feeling alone in a church that seems to have
abandoned Baptist principles - and you simply need someone to listen to you and
maybe offer a little encouragement. I'm as close as the phone. We want to
be available to you and your church.
Finally, if you agree with me that the mission
of Texas Baptists Committed is critical to Texas Baptist life, then please give
generously this year to further this mission. Consider yourself a partner with
us in this work. That brings me to one more very important part of TBC - Jill
Faragher. You can give your donation online by going to our Web site's home page and clicking the Join/Renew/Donate link. But if you mail your donation, you'll be
mailing it to Jill.
Jill is the only other member of our staff. I'm
located in Allen, just north of Dallas, and Jill is located at South Main
Baptist Church in Houston, where she serves as finance manager, a role she also
fills for TBC. I could not do this work without Jill; she is a CPA and handles
all of our donations and other financial matters. She goes above and beyond in
making sure all financial matters are handled thoroughly and effectively, and
she is always gracious in doing so. I'm very thankful that Jill's a member of
our staff.
So what's ahead for TBC?
My title changed on January 1, but my work is a
continuation of what I've been doing for the past 2 years; it's just that
there's a little more feeling of permanence (though I still serve at the
pleasure of the Board), and I no longer have to answer the question, "so if you're the associate, then who's the
executive director?"
Initiatives begun the past 2 years will
continue. Many have found TBC Weekly Baptist
Roundup a valuable central place
to find Baptist news & opinion from a wide variety of sources. Every
conference I attend these days, people come up to me and tell me how much they
appreciate the Roundup. Our TBC Advisory Network is still in the
formative stages, but it will gain traction in the coming months and make us
even more effective in getting reliable information to pastorless churches and
helping us to connect these churches with good and trustworthy pastoral
candidates.
We are also working to strengthen our relationships
with the various affinity groups among Texas Baptists. We want to continue to find
ways to connect with young people. Finally, we are discussing ways of putting
TBC on a secure financial footing well into the future, because we believe that
its work will be needed for the foreseeable future in Texas Baptist life.
Of course, I say all of this while fully aware that
change is a constant in all life, especially among Texas Baptists. Our Board
and I are committed to staying informed and increasing our understanding of the
dynamics and challenges of Texas Baptist life, and meeting all needs that are
consistent with our mission.
It is my privilege to serve as executive
director of Texas Baptists Committed. Thank you for your faithful support of
TBC, and know that we welcome your full partnership with us in this work.