IMB task force to assess future strategies
By Shawn Hendricks SBC International Mission Board
Rockville, Va. (BP)—Trustees of the Southern Baptist International Mission Board created a task force to examine future directions for Southern Baptists’ 163-year-old missions enterprise during their June 23-25 meeting at the International Learning Center in Rockville, Va.
The trustees also appointed 72 new missionaries and appropriated $3.2 million from reserve funds to cover expenses not met by last year’s Lottie Moon Christmas Offering.
In his report to the trustees, IMB President Jerry Rankin shared some of the challenges missionaries will face and how the IMB must be poised to respond.
“Our society is changing. Our denomination and churches are changing. The world is changing,” he said.
Rankin cited global events—natural disasters and conflicts, urbanization, Muslim extremism, diversity within the Southern Baptist Convention, declining values and growing technology—as some of the factors calling for new strategies.
“If we are to stay relevant and effective in our efforts to reach a lost world, we cannot continue the status quo, doing what we have always done,” he warned. “We’ve got to be more creative and more innovative if we’re going to fulfill the Great Commission.”
Trustees formed a task force to operate under the charge of “Renewing the Vision” to address these concerns and assess the IMB’s structure, strategies and plans for the future.
Not all changes across the world are negative, Rankin added, citing a time of “unprecedented global advance,” with 609,000 people baptized and 25,497 new churches reported overseas last year through the work of Southern Baptist missionaries and partners.
Rankin presented specifics on the task force and potential future changes in a closed session with trustees. Details will be available in the coming months.
“Challenging” times
Presiding at his first meeting as trustee chairman, Paul Chitwood, pastor of First Baptist Church of Mount Washington, said the new task force will “hit the ground running” and will meet two or three times before the next trustee meeting in September.
“I would agree that there is not a more challenging time, historically speaking, to do international mission work,” Chitwood said. “There is likewise no era that is presenting more opportunity than the one we have before us today.”
Trustees approved the appropriation of nearly $3.3 million from board reserves to fund the operating budget not met by last year’s Lottie Moon Christmas Offering, which was more than $231,000 above the previous year’s record but short of the $165 million goal.
In March, the IMB projected the final amount would top out at $156 million, IMB treasurer David Steverson noted.
“Everything was on track to meet our projection until about the 10th of April,” he reported. “It was like someone turned the spigot to the off position and the funds just sort of trickled in after that date.
Following Steverson’s report, one trustee asked about the impact of the declining value of the dollar on missionaries.
“Huge,” Steverson said, noting that the impact is felt not only on basic missionary expenses but on other overseas budget needs.
In other business, trustees:
- Appropriated more than $3 million for 124 human needs projects. A total of more than $2.3 million was released to support world hunger needs, more than $613,000 to support general relief needs and nearly $314,000 to support three ongoing 2004 tsunami projects.
- Accepted the resignation from missionary service of Rodney Hammer, former regional leader of Central and Eastern Europe. Hammer and his wife, Debbie, have served as missionaries for 18 years. Hammer stepped down from his leadership role in May after challenging policies and actions of the board of trustees with which he is in disagreement.
Western Recorder issue date: July 1, 2008
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