Point-of-View
Challenge for Florida Baptists
By J. THOMAS GREEN III
President, Florida Baptist State Convention
Published January 15, 2004
The stewardship to missions giving that Southern Baptists
exhibit will determine our impact upon the world. If churches do
not believe that we can change the world from where we are, then
we will not change the world that surrounds us. The challenge for
the local church to capture a global vision is crucial for
evangelizing contemporary culture.
The foundation of the blessing and benefit of Cooperative
Program giving rests in the partnership of local churches for
world evangelization. Mission contributions through the
Cooperative Program provide resources for over 10,500
missionaries reaching out to more than 1,400 people groups around
the world. The efforts of Southern Baptist missionaries supported
through the Cooperative Program led to over 816,000 people being
baptized in 2002. I am not aware of a single local church that
yielded those exciting results independently. Yet, every Southern
Baptist church that contributed to the Cooperative Program shared
in each victory for the Lord.
Your church participates in a global vision through the
Cooperative Program. Our Southern Baptist missionaries are called
by God from our churches, trained in our seminaries, commissioned
by our mission agencies, and supported by faith through our local
churches. Southern Baptists can wholeheartedly support our
missionaries because we know that they teach what we teach,
preach what we preach, and serve with integrity and
accountability to every Southern Baptist congregation. These men,
women, and families are the heroes of our faith.
The need for sacrificial giving to the Cooperative Program in
our local churches is immense. Because we have not kept pace in
increasing the Cooperative Program giving our mission efforts
have been impacted. The Lottie Moon Christmas Offering provides
50% of the overall budget for the International Mission Board.
The Annie Armstrong Easter Offering supplies 44% of the total
budget of the North American Mission Board. Our six Southern
Baptist Seminaries do not receive a special offering beyond the
Cooperative Program.
Because the increased need was not coupled with increased
giving, we are creating an independent mindset with our mission
agencies. Individual agencies must present passionate pleas in
order to receive resources to accomplish their task. The fact
that missionaries are not being sent and work is not being
accomplished becomes the rally point for our offering emphases. I
fully support the special mission offerings of our agencies.
First Baptist Church of Brandon will give approximately $100,000
to the 2003 Lottie Moon Christmas Offering. I am not diminishing
the opportunities presented with our special offerings.
I am challenging our churches to examine the percentage or the
amount that you contribute through the Cooperative Program. The
resources to fund all of our Southern Baptist work is already
present in our churches. It is not a matter of the money but the
heart. The average percentage that our Southern Baptist churches
give to the Cooperative Program from their undesignated offerings
is 7.35% (2002 Annual Church Profile Report). This statistic
immediately reveals the opportunity to meet the overwhelming need
through increasing Cooperative Program giving in our local
churches.
My prayer is that the 2,500 plus Southern Baptist churches in
the state of Florida will rise to the occasion and set the tone
for the entire Southern Baptist Convention. Jesus taught ".
. . unto whom much is given, of him shall much be required: and
to whom men have committed much, of him they will ask the more."
(Luke 12:48). I encourage the churches of Florida to give more to
the glory of the Lord.