LifeWay’s Jimmy Draper announces retirement
By CHRIS TURNER
LifeWay Christian Resources
Published February 17, 2005
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (BP)LifeWay Christian Resources
trustees immediately will begin the search for a new president
following the Feb. 7 announcement by James T. Draper Jr. that he
plans to retire from the position effective Feb. 1, 2006.
For many years I have asked God to make clear to me when
I need to retire, Draper told the full board of trustees
during its semiannual meeting. My prayer has been that Hed
allow me the strength to finish well, serving Him until He sees
fit to bring me home. In that regard, retirement from LifeWay is
simply a transition from one ministry opportunity to another. I
believe there are exciting days ahead for both LifeWay and for me.
A presidential search committee was formed following Drapers
comments. Members are chairman Rick Evans (Ala.), vice chairman
Phil Neighbors (Calif.), secretary Ken Jones (Tenn.), Mark
Anderson (Miss.), Bill Henard (Ky.), Melvin Pugh (Pa.), Roger
Willmore (Ala.), Tom Woodson (Okla.). Ex-officio members are
Wayne Hamrick, trustee chairman; Ed Ethridge, trustee vice
chairman; and Bobby Welch, Southern Baptist Convention president.
The committee will begin accepting resumes and recommendations
immediately. The deadline for having applications to Evans is
April 15 and can be sent to his attention at Dalraida Baptist
Church, 3838 Wares Ferry Road, Montgomery, AL 36109.
Draper said an approximate timeline is for the committee to
bring a candidate to the full board at its next meeting, Sept. 12-13
in Nashville, with the intention of approving the candidate as
president-elect.
Draper said he will work side-by-side with the president-elect
until Feb. 1, 2006, when hell step down and the new
president will assume full responsibility for the position.
Draper, who will be 70 in October, told trustees his decision
to retire is borne out of his love for LifeWay and
his commitment to do what is best for the
organization and its Kingdom ministry. February 2006 will mark
his 15th year as president, and he stated it is time for new
leadership.
We are seeing a great response in our effort to connect
with younger leaders across our denomination, he said,
and we need a younger man who can lead this organization to
continue that trend. The younger leaders are ready to be Kingdom
leaders, and LifeWay should reflect a full commitment to partner
with them as they follow Gods call.
We need a younger man with great vision, one who will
not rest upon the great resources of this organization and
maintain the status quo. We need a younger man who sees future
possibilities through Gods eyes. We need a younger man who
can guide LifeWay to be a relevant resource for the church for
decades to come as the church faces tumultuous cultural times.
One thing is certain: We cannot become what we need to be by
staying the way we are.
Draper cautioned trustees to diligently seek Gods
direction in filling the position, saying that many people will
tell you they know who ought to be here and what you ought
to do. Listen graciously to them, but realize that the decision
is yours alone.
None of you should have a personal agenda, and do not
entertain the agenda of others, Draper continued.
Draper recounted how reluctant he was to leave the pastorate
when approached about taking the presidents position,
saying the greatest job in the world is being the pastor of a
local church. He offered trustees the following counsel: Find
somebody who has no ambition to be here, and when you come across
someone actively pursuing this position, run from him. Your only
purpose is to find Gods man.
Draper said he has no desire to choose his successor or to
interfere in the search process in any way. Rather, he said he
wants to be available to share his insight with the presidential
search committee when asked and pass to the next leader the
legacy that had been passed to him, beginning 114 years ago with
founder J.M. Frost.
Draper stated he has no desire to retire to a life of leisure.
Retirement from an administrative position in todays
world may sometimes be construed as a departure from labor
altogether. In no way is this my intention.
As a minister, I will never retire, Draper
concluded. I cannot retire from ordination, the call to
preach or the compulsion of the Holy Spirit to work and witness
as a Christian minister.