Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

What’s in a name?

Southern Baptists reconsider moniker

- SARAH PULLIAM BAILEY

Leaders in the Southern Baptist Convention are increasing­ly dropping the “Southern” part of their Baptist name, calling it a potentiall­y painful reminder of the convention’s historic role in support of slavery.

The 50,000 Baptist churches in the convention are autonomous and can still choose to refer to themselves as “Southern Baptist” or “SBC.” But in a recent interview on the topic, convention president J.D. Greear says momentum has been building to adopt the name “Great Commission Baptists” — because of the racial reckoning under way in the United States and because many have long seen the “Southern Baptist” name as too regional for a global group of believers.

“Our Lord Jesus was not a White Southerner but a brown-skinned Middle Eastern refugee,” says Greear, who this summer used the phrase “Black lives matter” in a presidenti­al address and announced that he would retire a historic gavel named for an enslaver. “Every week, we gather to worship a savior who died for the whole world, not one part of it. What we call ourselves should make that clear.”

The shift takes place at the end of a summer of racial unrest when Confederat­e monuments have been removed, schools have been renamed, and Washington, D.C., has decided to change the name of its football team. For Southern Baptists, the change also reflects a long-standing desire to remove confusion when the convention launches churches in the Northern United States and overseas.

The convention formed in 1845, splitting from Northern Baptists over Southern support for missionari­es who owned enslaved people, and is considered the largest Protestant denominati­on in the United States, with 14.5 million members. It will continue to legally operate as the SBC, officials says, citing the hefty cost and complexity of a legal name change. But since August, the denominati­on’s website has declared “We Are Great Commission Baptists,” an alternate moniker that refers to the verses in the New Testament when Jesus commands his disciples to baptize believers in all nations.

Ronnie Floyd, who heads the convention’s executive committee and was on President Donald Trump’s evangelica­l advisory council during the 2016 campaign, addressed fellow Baptists in a recent letter as “Great Commission Baptists.” And Greear says hundreds of church leaders in several Southern states have emailed him in recent weeks to say they plan to adopt the alternate name.

Danny Akin, president of Southeaste­rn Baptist Theologica­l Seminary in North Carolina, and Al Mohler, president of Louisville’s Southern Baptist Theologica­l Seminary, says they both support using “Great Commission Baptists” to describe the denominati­on, though they won’t legally change the names of their schools.

About 80% of churches in the convention are in Southern states, according to the 2019 SBC Annual Church Profile. But Greear says that moving forward, Baptists’ shared evangelist­ic mission — not Southern culture — should help shape their identity. He says 20% of churches in the convention are led by pastors of color, and 63% of churches that were “planted,” or started, last year were led by people of color.

While theology hasn’t changed, he says, what does need to change is the culture of the convention: “We as Baptists want to be defined by 2025, not by 1845.”

Marshall Blalock, the white pastor of South Carolina’s First Baptist Charleston, which is believed to be one of the earliest Baptist churches in the South, says he decided to adopt the name “Great Commission Baptist” after he met with Black pastors in Mobile, Ala., in July in an effort to build bridges.

Blalock and others are wary of being perceived as part of a broader politicall­y liberal movement or taking actions that could be seen as aligned with the Black Lives Matter movement or the Democratic Party. Still, Blalock says, he thinks using a different name is the best way for the convention to move forward from its past.

“Anybody who knows why we’re trying to do this knows we’re not trying to be woke, and we’re not trying to cover up the past,” Blalock says. “We need to remove barriers.”

At its inaugural meeting in Augusta, Ga., in 1845, the convention considered naming itself the “Southern and South Western Baptist Convention,” according to Nathan Finn, a Southern Baptist historian who is provost of North Greenville University in South Carolina. Southern Baptists disagreed with Northern believers over several issues, but the final straw was whether missionari­es could be enslavers.

The Northern Baptists, now formally called the American Baptist Churches USA, started calling themselves the “American Baptist Convention” in 1950, which caused resentment and provoked competitio­n among Southern Baptists, Finn says. That denominati­on is now viewed as more liberal in its theology and culture.

Finn says he was ambivalent about using a different name for years until this summer when he jumped on board. “I’m not embarrasse­d to be a Southerner,” he says. “It’s about what that word conjures up for people, especially people of color. They’re saying: ‘That name is a hang-up. When my people hear that name, they think slavery.’ God forbid

 ?? (Houston Chronicle via AP/Jon Shapley) ?? J.D. Greear (from left), president of the Southern Baptist Convention; Ronnie Floyd, president and CEO of the convention’s executive committee; and Mike Stone, chairman of the executive committee, pray during the executive committee plenary meeting at the Southern Baptist Convention in 2019, in Birmingham, Ala. Greear and Floyd are among those in the growing movement to adopt the name “Great Commission Baptists” in place of “Southern Baptist” because of racial unrest and the regional limits of its current name.
(Houston Chronicle via AP/Jon Shapley) J.D. Greear (from left), president of the Southern Baptist Convention; Ronnie Floyd, president and CEO of the convention’s executive committee; and Mike Stone, chairman of the executive committee, pray during the executive committee plenary meeting at the Southern Baptist Convention in 2019, in Birmingham, Ala. Greear and Floyd are among those in the growing movement to adopt the name “Great Commission Baptists” in place of “Southern Baptist” because of racial unrest and the regional limits of its current name.

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