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Baptist General Convention of Texas Information

The Baptist General Convention of Texas is the oldest surviving Baptist convention in the state of Texas. The churches cooperating with the Baptist General Convention of Texas (BGCT) partner nationally and internationally with both the Southern Baptist Convention and the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship, among others, for missions. In 2009, the BGCT began to also go by the name Texas Baptists to better communicate who they are.

Contents

Background

There were Baptists among the first Anglo-American settlers of Texas, but under Spain (and later Mexico), non-Catholic religious worship was prohibited. The first Baptist sermon preached in Texas was preached by Joseph Bays of Missouri as early as 1820. The first Sunday School in Texas was organized by a Baptist, Thomas J. Pilgrim, at San Felipe de Austin in 1829. Mexican authorities forced the Sunday School to disband and hindered the attempts of the earliest Baptist preachers.

The first Baptist church in Texas was organized in Illinois by Elder Daniel Parker. Parker visited Texas in 1832, and concluded that the Mexican laws clearly prohibited organizing a church in Texas. He also decided the immigration of an organized church into the state would not violate the colonization laws. To this end, he and several others constituted a church in Illinois, then traveled to Texas by wagon train, arriving in Austin Colony January 20, 1834. Parker held a strict predestinarian theology, as well as his controversial Two-Seed theology. Like those travellers, the church was named Pilgrim. This church, and those churches of like faith that followed, remained aloof from the majority of Baptists in Texas. Pilgrim church is the oldest Baptist church in Texas, and survives today as a Primitive Baptist church.

The first missionary Baptist church in Texas was organized at Washington-on-the-Brazos by Z. N. Morrell in 1837. The following year, Isaac Reed and R. G. Green formed the Union Baptist Church, about 5 miles north of Nacogdoches, Texas. This church, now known as the Old North Church, is the oldest surviving missionary Baptist church in Texas, and cooperates with the Baptist General Convention of Texas. After Texans achieved independence from Mexico, Baptists began to flourish in Texas. Many churches were formed in the days of the Republic of Texas. With the multiplication of churches came also the organization of associations. The first association was the Union Baptist Association, organized in 1840.

Unification

As the local associations increased, missionary Baptists became interested in cooperation together on the broader state level. In 1848 representatives from four associations met at Anderson, Texas, and started the Baptist State Convention of Texas. In 1853, the Baptist General Association of Texas was organized at Larissa in Cherokee County in east Texas. Other bodies were formed to serve their regions (and often due to dissatisfaction with the other bodies), such as the East Texas Baptist Convention (org. 1877 at Overton) and the North Texas Baptist Missionary Convention (org. 1879 at Allen). B. H. Carroll, pastor of First Baptist in Waco, was instrumental in getting the General Association, during its 1883 meeting, to propose that five conventions in Texas consider the expediency of uniting as one body. The North Texas Convention dissolved, and recommended its churches affiliate with the Baptist State Convention. The East Texas Convention also joined the state convention. In 1886, the Baptist General Association of Texas and the Baptist State Convention of Texas ratified the terms of merger and consolidated into one body called The Baptist General Convention of Texas. In addition to Carroll, other leaders in the merger included S. A. Hayden, J. B. Cranfill, J. B. Link, J. M. Carroll, R. T. Hanks, and G. W. Smith.

Divisions

The harmony of unification in the 19th century gave way to three major divisions in the 20th century—the S. A. Hayden controversy and the formation of the Baptist Missionary Association of Texas in 1900, the fundamentalist/modernist controversy and the formation of the Premillennial Missionary Baptist Fellowship by J. Frank Norris in 1933, and the conservative/moderate controversy and the formation of the Southern Baptists of Texas Convention in 1998. The body has nevertheless maintained a steady progress throughout the 20th century.

Beliefs

Baptist General Convention of Texas beliefs include Bible inspiration, the priesthood of the believer, the sanctity of life, the virgin birth of Christ, salvation through the death of Jesus Christ, and that Christ is the head of the church. The Convention accepts the 1963 Baptist Faith and Message as its statement of faith. The Convention specifically does not accept the 2000 Baptist Faith and Message.

Current status

The convention's offices are located in Dallas, Texas, though convention staff are located across the state. The Executive Director of the BGCT is David Hardage. According to its mission statement, the Baptist General Convention of Texas "encourages, facilitates and connects churches in their work to fulfill God’s mission of reconciling the world to Himself," and is active in evangelistic, educational, and benevolent endeavors toward achieving this goal. About 80 local Texas Baptist associations and 5,700 local churches cooperate with the Baptist General Convention. In October 2007, the Convention elected its first woman president, Joy Fenner of Garland, Texas.

Universities affiliated with the Baptist General Convention of Texas

Baptist University of the Américas

Baylor University

Dallas Baptist University

East Texas Baptist University

Hardin-Simmons University

Houston Baptist University

Howard Payne University

University of Mary Hardin Baylor

Wayland Baptist University

References

External links

Southern Baptist State Conventions
Baptist denominations in the United States
Alliance of Baptists · American Baptist Association · American Baptist Churches USA · Association of Reformed Baptist Churches of America · Baptist Bible Fellowship International · Baptist General Association of Virginia · Baptist General Conference · Baptist General Convention of Texas · Baptist Missionary Association of America · Black Primitive Baptists · Central Baptist Association · Christian Baptist Church of God · Church of Christ, Instrumental · Conservative Baptist Association of America · Conservative Baptist Association of the Southeast · Continental Baptist Churches · Cooperative Baptist Fellowship · District of Columbia Baptist Convention · Evangelical Free Baptist Church · Free Will Baptist Church · Full Gospel Baptist Church Fellowship · Fundamental Baptist Fellowship Association · Fundamental Baptist Fellowship International · General Association of Baptists · General Association of General Baptists · General Six-Principle Baptists · Independent Baptist · Independent Baptist Fellowship International · Independent Baptist Fellowship of North America · Institutional Missionary Baptist Conference of America · Liberty Baptist Fellowship · Missionary Baptists · National Association of Free Will Baptists · National Baptist Convention of America, Inc. · National Baptist Convention, USA, Inc. · National Baptist Evangelical Life and Soul Saving Assembly of the U.S.A. · National Missionary Baptist Convention of America · National Primitive Baptist Convention of the U.S.A. · New England Evangelical Baptist Fellowship · Northern Baptist Convention · Old Regular Baptists · Old Time Missionary Baptist · Original Free Will Baptist Convention · Pentecostal Free Will Baptist Church · Primitive Baptists · Primitive Baptist Conference of New Brunswick, Maine and Nova Scotia · Primitive Baptist Universalist · Progressive National Baptist Convention · Reformed Baptists · Separate Baptists · Separate Baptists in Christ · Seventh Day Baptists · Silver Bluff Baptist Church · Southern Baptist Convention · Southwide Baptist Fellowship · Sovereign Grace Baptists · Spring Creek Church · Triennial Convention · Two-Seed-in-the-Spirit Predestinarian Baptists · Union Baptists · United American Free Will Baptist Church · United American Free Will Baptist Conference · Wisconsin Fellowship of Baptist Churches · World Baptist Fellowship
All baptist denominations

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