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Pastors, laymen launch Conservative Baptist Network

The following is a press release

BOSSIER CITY—A significant number of pastors and laymen, motivated by a passionate desire to keep the Southern Baptist Convention anchored to the inerrancy and sufficiency of God’s Word, have formed the Conservative Baptist Network. The Network is the product of a grassroots movement that developed organically in the hearts and minds of devoted Southern Baptists who have become concerned about the current direction and perceived future of the convention.

A significant number of Southern Baptists are concerned about the apparent emphasis on social justice, Critical Race Theory, Intersectionality, and the redefining of biblical gender roles. Many fear that these issues have received more attention than evangelism and spiritual renewal – the emphases that helped to make Southern Baptists the largest evangelical denomination in the nation.

Many messengers left the 2018 annual meeting of the Southern Baptist Convention in Dallas with deep concern that motions were made on the floor of the convention hall to prevent Vice President Mike Pence from speaking to the messengers. When all attempts to keep the Vice President from speaking failed, scores of messengers exited the convention in protest as the Vice President began his address. The insolence and disrespect demonstrated by those who walked out on the Vice President of the United States was foreign to what the Bible teaches about respecting those in authority in I Peter 2:11-17.

The 2019 Southern Baptist Convention meeting in Birmingham passed Resolution Nine to the dismay of a large number of messengers. In defending the resolution, the chairman insisted that Critical Race Theory and Intersectionality are simply analytical tools. However, they are far more than just tools; they are ideologies that have their roots in Neo-Marxist, postmodern worldviews. While the committee may have meant well in presenting the resolution, many messengers left Birmingham confused about Critical Race Theory and Intersectionality, and others left feeling that they had been misled or deceived.

There is a growing apprehension about where the Southern Baptist Convention is headed. Pastors are asking, “Is the SBC on solid theological and organizational ground? Should we continue to support the Cooperative Program? Are our values accurately represented in our institutions?” We have had one Conservative Resurgence. Is it time for a second?

Brad Jurkovich, pastor of First Baptist Church in Bossier City, La. and the spokesman for the Network, explained, “We are concerned about the current road our Southern Baptist family is traveling. It is a road that is twisting what God’s Word is saying about things like human sexuality, biblical racial reconciliation and socialistic justice.”

The Bossier City pastor also mused, “As Southern Baptists can we not love both Jesus and America? Is it no longer okay to be a pastor and a patriot?”

“There are three choices that every pastor and church have to make,” explained Jurkovich. “First, you can stay in the Southern Baptist Convention, not say anything and watch this denomination drift, drift, drift into oblivion.

“Second, you can totally leave. You can walk away, but you need to know that when you walk away you are handing billions of dollars of assets, and mission passion and evangelism strategy over to ideologies that will lead this convention into irrelevancy.

“Third, you can stay and stand and by standing make a difference. I believe that is what most Southern Baptist pastors and churches want to do, but they are not sure if they stand, who will stand with them.

“Well, I want you to know that I am willing to stand,” Jurkovich said. “And there are many others who are ready to stand with you.”

Many are embracing this third alternative, resulting in the birth of the Conservative Baptist Network. Pastors and laity from across the nation have been captivated by the fresh breath of this grassroots movement and believe Southern Baptists can work together to cultivate the momentum needed for a course correction of their beloved convention. Male and female members of the network represent varied ethnicities, generations, geographic locations, vocations and soteriological persuasions, celebrating biblical unity in Christ around the inerrant, sufficient and authoritative Word of God.

The stated purpose of the Network has been drafted and proclaims, “The Conservative Baptist Network is a partnership of Southern Baptists where all generations are encouraged, equipped, and empowered to bring positive, biblical solutions that strengthen the SBC in an effort to fulfill the Great Commission and influence culture.”

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3 Responses

    1. It finished in the 90s but was started in the 70s and first victorious in 1980. The people who first raised the alarm bells did so in the 60s. Last year raised the alarm bells and since communication is quicker than 40+ years ago, so too is organization.

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