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Dave Roberts wrote:While CBF has experienced a somewhat turbulent year with the release of the Illumination Project Report, I can't help wondering how much CBF has benefitted from the SBC's troubles with vacancies at the highest levels of the denomination. Any thoughts?
When the Spirit of truth comes, he will guide you into all truth; for he will not speak on his own, but will speak whatever he hears, and he will declare to you the things that are to come.
Dave Roberts wrote: At the SBC, I see more long-term people still in leadership positions, though the election of this year's president may signal that the run of my generation has ended.
Dave Roberts wrote: I notice that CBF had a major institute on evangelism and SBC accepted a report of an evangelism task force, both basically acknowledging that the methods of evangelism from the past are not working as they once did. For both groups, the declining numbers of Caucasian births spell a lot of struggles for the future unless they succeed in becoming more multi ethnic.
Sandy wrote:Dave Roberts wrote: At the SBC, I see more long-term people still in leadership positions, though the election of this year's president may signal that the run of my generation has ended.
CBF inherited a lot of its DNA from the SBC when its churches either distanced themselves a bit, or left. It is going to have to decide which constituencies it can serve with a unified mission and purpose, and let the rest, particularly the older, white crowd in bigger chunks like Texas Baptists, or the floaters who have used CBF mainly as a way to keep a salary, some influence and power after getting tossed from the SBC. I think those days are over. The illimination project will separate some of the fence sitters out, and CBF can go on being what its current leadership senses that it needs to be in order to be a sustainable presence.
Dave Roberts wrote:I have always wondered where these floaters who have used CBF for a salary, influence, and power are. Of course, I was never in Texas as you were, only NC and VA. As a Virginia example, the largest staff CBF or VA has ever fielded is four people, and right now the staff is three. One of them was not even born when CBF came into being, one is in his late 30's, and only one was even active in Baptist life when CBF came into being. This must just be a Texas thing, Sandy.
William Thornton wrote:CBFers generallly detested PP already. His downfall was already factored into their decisions, no?
JE Pettibone wrote:William Thornton wrote:CBFers generallly detested PP already. His downfall was already factored into their decisions, no?
Ed: William I believe detested is much to strong to describe the feeling of most CBFers for Paige Patterson. His downfall in my opinion came as a natural consequence of his own arrogance.
Haruo wrote:Are there any CBF churches in Washington state?
Haruo wrote:Are there any CBF churches in Washington state?
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