You may recall me noting that last week, I attended the annual meeting of the Southern Baptist Convention in Indianapolis. This week, The Weekly Standard, has an important piece about us. Entitled, “The Dwindling Baptists? Not Really,” the piece starts this way:
ARE SOUTHERN BAPTISTS “dwindling”? Recent headlines about the annual meeting of the 16.27 million member Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) refer to its ostensible struggles with membership decline. Having lost 40,000 members last year, America’s second biggest religious body was described as “dwindling” by a Washington Post headline, which other media echoed.
In contrast to Mainline Protestant denominations like Episcopalians and Presbyterians, the SBC is overwhelmingly conservative. During the 1980s, conservative Baptists, derided as “fundamentalists” by critics, were alarmed by liberal inroads and solidified their governance of church agencies and seminaries. Southern Baptist and other evangelical churches have enjoyed almost unfettered growth in recent decades, while the once dominant Mainline denominations are now in their fifth decade of decline.
Read the rest here.
[hat tip: JR]