Why Past Movements Were Not Enough—and What the SBC Needs Now
In the late 20th century, the Conservative Resurgence rescued the Southern Baptist Convention from doctrinal drift. It restored biblical inerrancy in our seminaries, pulpits, and denominational institutions. This was no small feat—it preserved theological faithfulness for a new generation.
Then came the Great Commission Resurgence, calling us to a renewed focus on evangelism, church planting, and global mission. With declining baptisms and a changing culture, it reminded Southern Baptists that our doctrinal fidelity must also drive missional urgency.
But as we reflect now, we must ask: did either movement transform the soul of our churches?
We have right beliefs—and we’ve declared right priorities. But our churches remain divided, disillusioned, and in many places, declining.
Southern Baptists do not need another branding campaign or strategic slogan. We need a true resurgence—not just of ideas, but of people. A renewal that begins in the pew, not just on the platform.
Here are six essential resurgences the SBC must embrace to move faithfully into the future.
1. A Resurgence of Integrity
The Southern Baptist Convention has weathered doctrinal battles—but now faces a crisis of trust. Many Southern Baptists believe the theological convictions we fought to preserve are being undermined by institutional secrecy, platform protection, and personal ambition. The issue isn’t merely orthodoxy—it’s credibility.
Why it’s needed:
In a time when confidence in leadership is eroding, we need leaders and institutions whose lives and practices match the gospel they proclaim. If we lose integrity, we lose the ability to lead.
What it looks like:
- Financial transparency in our entities and institutions, with clear accountability to the churches that fund them.
- Building trust among messengers, not through managed narratives, but through openness, repentance when necessary, and a return to servant-hearted leadership.
- Leaders who walk humbly, avoiding personal empire-building and resisting the temptation to treat the SBC as a career ladder or political arena.
- Churches that expect godly character, not just communication skills or charisma, from their pastors and leaders.
“The integrity of the upright guides them, but the crookedness of the treacherous destroys them.” – Proverbs 11:3
2. A Resurgence of Discipleship
Southern Baptists have long measured ministry success by decisions and attendance. But far too often, we’ve made converts without making disciples. The result is spiritual immaturity in our churches and generational drift in our families.
Why it’s needed:
We cannot build gospel churches on shallow soil. And we cannot expect the next generation to walk with Christ if we do not teach them how.
What it looks like:
- Intentional, relational discipleship—not just programs, but people walking with people in the ways of Christ.
- Family discipleship, where parents—and especially fathers—are equipped to teach, model, and shepherd their children in the faith (Eph. 6:4).
- Biblical literacy, with churches prioritizing Scripture memory, meditation, and obedience—not just inspirational content.
- Training lay leaders, raising up deacons, elders, teachers, and counselors from within the congregation.
“Teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you…” – Matthew 28:20
3. A Resurgence of Unity in the Gospel
We are fragmented. Not just politically or theologically—but relationally. The SBC has become a battlefield of tribes, factions, and personalities, where brothers in Christ are treated as enemies because of differing emphases or affiliations.
Why it’s needed:
We cannot fight side by side for the lost when we’re firing shots at each other. Gospel unity is not a luxury—it’s a necessity.
What it looks like:
- Refusing tribalism—choosing fellowship with faithful brothers and sisters even when we don’t agree on every strategy or secondary issue.
- Keeping the main things central—like Christ crucified, the authority of Scripture, and the need for the nations to hear the gospel.
- Disagreeing with humility, rejecting online scorched-earth tactics, and speaking truth seasoned with grace.
“There is one body and one Spirit… one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of all.” – Ephesians 4:4–6
4. A Resurgence of Church Health
You cannot send strong missionaries from sick churches. The SBC has focused heavily on church planting and multiplication—which is essential. But far too many established churches are spiritually stagnant, unbiblically led, or dying.
Why it’s needed:
The foundation of the SBC is not its entities or its mission boards. It’s the local church. If our churches are unhealthy, our Convention has no future.
What it looks like:
- Qualified pastors and elders, who lead with courage, conviction, and compassion.
- Meaningful membership, where church rolls reflect regenerate believers in real community.
- Expository preaching and Christ-centered worship, feeding the sheep, not entertaining the goats.
- Support for revitalization, encouraging faithful pastors of smaller churches and resisting the idolatry of church size or fame.
“The church of the living God, a pillar and buttress of the truth.” – 1 Timothy 3:15
5. A Resurgence of Physical Presence in a World of Followers and Likes
We live in an age of digital disembodiment—TikToks over tables, threads over truth, clicks over community. The SBC must resist the gravitational pull of the virtual by reasserting the beauty and necessity of the local, visible, gathered church.
Why it’s needed:
Online influence has too often replaced in-person shepherding. But the body of Christ was never meant to be a brand—it is a body.
What it looks like:
- Churches that prioritize presence: gathering in person, breaking bread, laying hands, weeping and rejoicing together.
- Pastors who know their people and walk with them, not just broadcast sermons.
- Disciples who live in proximity, not merely affinity.
“And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us…” – John 1:14
“Let us not neglect to meet together…” – Hebrews 10:25
6. A Resurgence of Clarity and Conviction in a World of Ambiguity
We are living in a fog of postmodern confusion—about truth, gender, morality, and even salvation itself. Many churches are tempted to trade clarity for complexity, fearing offense more than fearing God.
Why it’s needed:
The world is not looking for another vague voice. It needs truth. Spoken with love, yes—but spoken clearly, without compromise.
What it looks like:
- Preaching with doctrinal precision, applying God’s Word boldly to cultural lies and spiritual error.
- Standing firm on God’s design for manhood and womanhood, marriage, and the sanctity of life.
- Holding fast to salvation by grace alone through faith alone, without theological drift or equivocation.
- Teaching with theological depth, equipping people to stand firm in a world that is constantly shifting.
“If the trumpet gives an uncertain sound, who shall prepare himself to the battle?” – 1 Corinthians 14:8 (KJV)
Final Word: Not a Platform but a People
The Conservative Resurgence gave us our doctrinal foundation.
The Great Commission Resurgence gave us a missional framework.
Now, we need a resurgence that gives us spiritual formation—in the pews, in our homes, and in our pulpits.
We need leaders of integrity.
We need churches that make disciples.
We need a fellowship built on the gospel.
We need pastors rooted in real communities.
We need truth spoken in love and without fear.
This next resurgence must not be top-down, but grassroots.
Not powered by politics, but prayer.
Not about reclaiming influence, but reclaiming faithfulness.
Let it begin not in a task force, but in your local church.
Let it begin with us.