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October 2009 Issue
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Cry Out
to Jesus!
From the SBC President's Address
to the Executive Committee
In his address to the SBC Executive
Committee, September 21, 2009, SBC president Johnny Hunt reminded
those in attendance of the magnitude and significance of the Great
Commission Resurgence.
As Southern Baptists undertake the massive task, they have
nothing else to do but cry out to Jesus, Hunt said, pointing to
Psalm 119:145-152.
"The psalmist prayed throughout the entire psalm, but
in these verses he took it to a new level. He concentrated on
prayer, and he cried out to God night and day," Hunt, pastor
of the Atlanta-area First Baptist Church in Woodstock, said. "From
his personal experience, he gives us some practical instructions
about successful prayer."
Hunt quoted the late expository preacher Stephen Olford, who
personally instructed him more than thirty years ago. "He
said, 'Pray when you feel like it, and when you don't feel like
it, pray until you do.'"
In the passage, Hunt noted that the psalmist displays a heart
of dedication, crying out in passion with his whole heart.
"It speaks of a great intensity from the depth of his
diaphragm. With a loud voice he cried out to God. He was eager
and desperate for God to help him," Hunt said.
"I'm so grateful for all that God has done through the
years through Southern Baptists, but I believe we're at a crossroad.
I believe we're at a place where we're in desperate need of prayer,
a desperate need of asking God to touch us again, that we may
not only go to the nations but we would be far more effective
than we've been in the last fifty years in the nation that hosts
over 43,000 of our churches and our missions."
The passion of the psalmist's prayer speaks to the emotions,
Hunt said, and the promise he included to keep God's statutes
speaks of determination.
"In one moment the psalmist desires for God to rescue
him but also to rule him," Hunt said.
The psalmist anticipated the dawning of a new day and then
meditated on God's Word in the evening. The passage, Hunt said,
challenges him to evaluate his personal life apart from his pleadings
of others from the platform at his church and as SBC president.
"How about what am I giving to missions? Do I give sacrificially?
Am I committed as a Great Commission Christian? Does my checkbook
show that? Is there anything in my budget that demands more of
the money my church pays me than the Great Commission?" Hunt
said.
"... There's a great host of us that have platforms to
speak from, but I've found that I'm no better on that platform
in all honesty before God than what I am in those early morning
hours and those evenings of reflection and meditation," he
said.
In addition to a heart of dedication and a heart of determination,
the psalmist expresses a heart for intervention. He realized his
plea was heard only on the basis of God's mercy and His intervention
would come only by grace.
"In our denomination, 'God, revive us again.' We're grateful
to God for all we're doing compared to other denominations, but
Lord, in light of what we could and I believe should be doing
as a denomination, God, revive us," Hunt said.
He noted that about three thousand volunteers participated
in Crossover, the evangelistic emphasis preceding the SBC annual
meeting, in Louisville, Kentucky, this year. And he set forth
a challenge for that number to increase to ten thousand for next
year's Crossover in Orlando, Florida.
"Remember back in the days of Las Vegas, the word so permeated
the city that Southern Baptists were coming that they began to
advertise on television we were coming. I remember knocking on
doors and they'd say, 'Who is it?' and we'd say, 'Well, we're
from a local church here and we're visiting with people in the
city.' Many of the people would respond and say, 'I wondered if
you all would come.'
"They were anticipating us coming," Hunt said. "We
told them we were coming. And we went into the city and preached
the Gospel out on the streets in Vegas."
He also said the majority of the nearly nine thousand messengers
to the Convention in Louisville were pastors, staff members, and
denominational workers. For Orlando, Hunt hopes churches will
make it a priority to urge laypeople to serve as messengers.
Hunt said in Orlando Wednesday night, the concluding night
of the annual meeting, will serve as an evangelistic evening when
people encountered during Crossover can be invited
to hear the Christian music group Casting Crowns and evangelist
Tony Nolan.
"We'll be giving a Gospel invitation, and wouldn't it
be glorious to be able to report that people were saved at a Southern
Baptist Convention?" Hunt said.
As a grandfather, Hunt hears stories about show and tell at
school.
"It's not tell and show. It's show and tell. We display
something and then we tell about it. We are great at telling,
slow at showing. God, help us to reverse it.
"What a witness it would be if we pastors, we leaders,
we denominational servants made a commitment that that would be
a priority on our schedule to be in the streets joining those
local churches to make a difference, to lead out not by the platform
which we stand behind as to what needs to happen in our denomination
but what we display in our life to our people," Hunt said.
The churches of the Southern Baptist Convention claim sixteen
million members, and Hunt said it only stands to reason that with
such an army of believers the task of seeing others come to faith
in Christ could be possible.
"I'm grateful to God for what He has done, but if I didn't
believe the best was yet to be, I would be discouraged in my heart,"
Hunt said. "But I'm encouraged and believe with all of my
heart the best is yet to be."
Adapted from a
Baptist Press article by Erin Roach.
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© 2010 Southern Baptist Convention Executive Committee
SBC Life is published by the
Executive Committee of the Southern Baptist Convention
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Nashville, Tennessee 37203
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