Calhoun Times

‘With a full head of steam’

♦ Georgia Baptists head into evangelism conference­s on a positive note with 92% increase in baptisms since the COVID lag.

- By Roger Alford Founded in Washington, D.C., in 1822 by legendary Baptist leader Luther Rice, The Christian Index is the nation’s oldest continuous­ly published religious newspaper.

Georgia Baptists recently went into a pair of evangelism conference­s with a full head of steam, having seen a 30% increase in baptisms over the past year and a more than 92% increase since 2020.

Baptism numbers are rising as more churches submit their Annual Church Profile, a yearly census of Southern Baptist congregati­ons, and, the process, ratcheting up interest in the evangelism conference­s held in late February at First Baptist Church in Conyers, and in early March at Northside Baptist Church in Tifton.

Signs of spiritual revival have been popping up in communitie­s across Georgia with huge numbers of people making commitment­s to Christ in evangelist­ic outreaches. One of the largest instances was in October when some 1,600 people responded to the gospel during a four-day crusade in the south Georgia town of Baxley. But the Index has documented a year-long series of mass salvations, some measured in dozens, others in hundreds.

The latest count of baptisms in Georgia stands at 19,738 for 2023, an increase of more than 4,600 over the previous year.

Steve Foster, an evangelism consultant for the Georgia Baptist Mission Board, said many of the state’s churches have made evangelism a renewed priority, and they see the evangelism conference­s as the places to find workable strategies for reaching people who don’t attend church.

The conference­s, Foster said, provide healthy doses of both inspiratio­n and informatio­n to help congregati­ons reach their communitie­s.

The Mission Board has pulled together a strong lineup of preachers for the evangelism conference­s.

Keynote speakers from Georgia and beyond will be on the main platforms while a litany of others will lead smaller breakout sessions on a broad range of evangelism strategies.

“I am excited about all the speakers that we will be hearing,” Foster said in January. “These men are not only spirituall­y gifted men of

God, but they are committed to personal evangelism and sharing the gospel.”

Registrati­on for the event is now open.

At First Baptist Conyers, Robert Smith, a professor at the Beeson Divinity School at Alabama’s Samford University, will be a keynote speaker, as will Danny Forshee, lead pastor at Great Hills Baptist Church in Austin, Texas; W. Thomas Hammond Jr., executive director of the Georgia Baptist Mission Board, H.B. Charles, pastor at Shiloah Metropolit­an Baptist Church in Jacksonvil­le, Fla.; and Mark Hearn, senior pastor at First Baptist Church in Duluth.

At Northside Baptist, Hammond and Charles will be keynote speakers along with

Herb Reavis, senior pastor at North Jacksonvil­le Baptist Church in Florida and Matt Queen, evangelism professor at Southweste­rn Baptist Theologica­l Seminary.

The Mission Board is promoting this year’s evangelism conference­s as “life changing.” The theme for the conference­s is “Called to Witness.”

The annual evangelism

conference­s are among the Mission Board’s best-attended events, drawing some 1,500 people.

“Evangelism can be frustratin­g for a lot of pastors,” said Brad Marchman, also an evangelism consultant for the Mission Board. “My favorite thing the past few years has been hearing from pastors how encouraged and challenged they were by the messages and breakout sessions. They didn’t leave beat down, but feeling like there was hope for them and their church in this area.”

“are

I am excited about all the speakers that we will be hearing. These men

not only spirituall­y gifted men of God, but they are committed to personal evangelism and sharing the

gospel.”

Steve Foster, an evangelism consultant for the Georgia Baptist Mission Board

Evangelism can be frustratin­g for a

lot of pastors. My favorite thing the past few years has been hearing from pastors how encouraged and challenged they were by the messages and breakout sessions. They didn’t leave beat down, but feeling like there was hope for them and their

church in this area.”

Brad Marchman, an evangelism consultant for the Georgia Baptist Mission Board

 ?? Index/Roger Alford ?? People respond to an altar call at a Rick Gage crusade in south Georgia last fall. Some 1,600 new believers made commitment­s to Christ at the event.
Index/Roger Alford People respond to an altar call at a Rick Gage crusade in south Georgia last fall. Some 1,600 new believers made commitment­s to Christ at the event.

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