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August 2010 Issue
A Legacy
of Leadership and Vision
by Staff
On October 1, 1992, the SBC Executive
Committee inaugurated a new president and chief executive officer
who would not only lead them into the next century, but would
have a profound impact upon the denominational structure and spiritual
focus of the Southern Baptist Convention. On September 30, 2010,
after eighteen years of distinguished and vital service, Morris
H. Chapman will retire from that office.
In June, 1991, Harold Bennett announced his retirement as executive
secretary-treasurer of the Executive Committee. At the time, Chapman,
pastor of Wichita Falls First Baptist Church in Texas, was completing
his first of two years as president of the Southern Baptist Convention,
during which he aggressively promoted prayer for spiritual renewal
and the need to address the fractured condition of families both
in our churches and in America. After eight months of prayer and
deliberation, the EC Presidential Search Committee nominated,
and the Executive Committee overwhelmingly approved, Chapman as
the fifth Executive Committee president and treasurer.
A native of Kosciusko, Mississippi, Chapman became a Christian
at age 7, was called to Christian vocational ministry at 12, and
was called to preach at 21. He was licensed to preach by First
Baptist Church in Borger, Texas, and was ordained to the Gospel
ministry by Bellevue Baptist Church in Memphis, Tennessee.
Prior to his tenure at the Executive
Committee, Chapman served on staff of four churches over the course
of eight years and as pastor of four churches over a span of twenty-five
years. He was pastor of First Baptist Church of Rogers, Texas,
from 1967-1969; First Baptist Church of Woodway, Texas, from 1969-1974;
First Baptist Church of Albuquerque, New Mexico, from 1974-1979;
and First Baptist Church of Wichita Falls, Texas, from 1979-1992.
Each church grew significantly under his leadership. While
in Rogers, he baptized almost 5 percent of the town's population.
At Woodway, he initiated an aggressive ministry of evangelism
and reached many families with the Gospel. In Albuquerque, he
led the church to reverse its decline. The church expanded its
ministries to the homeless, internationals, the business community,
and the University of New Mexico, growing exponentially through
evangelism and ministry.
During each of his thirteen years at Wichita Falls, the church's
baptisms and Cooperative Program gifts were both in the top one
percent in the Southern Baptist Convention.
As pastor, he participated actively in the work of the state
Baptist conventions where he served. He served as a member of
the Executive Board and was elected to two terms as president
of the Baptist Convention of New Mexico, was a trustee of Hardin-Simmons
University in Abilene, Texas, eight years, and was a member of
the Executive Board of the Baptist General Convention of Texas
five years.
While in Wichita Falls, Chapman led the church to increase
its CP giving to more than 16 percent of the church's undesignated
receipts. In addition, he came under a profound conviction that
the church should do more for the denomination than just to give
generously, as important as that was. Accordingly, he led the
church over a six-month period to pray by name for each of the
36,000 Southern Baptist churches and their pastors and for all
Southern Baptist Convention agencies. Over the course of those
six months and following, the church received hundreds of responses
from across the nation testifying to the powerful, beneficial
impact of the effort.
Before his arrival at the Executive Committee, Morris Chapman
served the Southern Baptist Convention in numerous roles, chairing
the SBC Committee on Order of Business in 1985, serving as President
of the Southern Baptist Convention Pastors' Conference in 1986,
being selected to preach the annual Convention Sermon in 1989,
being selected to preach in three annual SBC Pastors' Conferences,
celebrating its 50th anniversary celebration, and being elected
president of the Southern Baptist Convention.
As SBC President, he played a pivotal and strategic role in
the continuation of the Conservative Resurgence, an initiative
to return SBC entities to their historic and thoroughly conservative
stance regarding God's Word. Working with Home Mission Board leadership,
he instituted the annual Crossover evangelistic emphasis at each
year's SBC annual meeting, and issued a call for thousands of
volunteers to flood the nations in short-term mission projects.
He also appointed a Family Ministry Task Force designed to strengthen
families, issued a call for spiritual awakening, and challenged
Convention churches to work with the Home Mission Board to plant
one thousand new churches in the United States on Easter Sunday
1992.
In his first two years as president
and chief executive officer of the SBC Executive Committee, Chapman
recognized the need for the SBC entities to be restructured in
such a way that denominational ministries would be more efficient
and effective in the twenty-first century. Under his leadership
the Executive Committee established the Program and Structure
Study Committee (PSSC) to study the need for and viability of
such an undertaking. The PSSC presented the Covenant for
a New Century to the Southern Baptist Convention in 1995,
and it was approved overwhelmingly.
The plan called for a reduction of the number of separate entities
from nineteen to twelve. Part of that plan called for the combination
of the Home Mission Board, the Brotherhood Commission, and the
Radio and Television Commission into one new entity, the North
American Mission Board. The Executive Committee established an
Implementation Task Force (ITF) that was assigned the role of
overseeing the transition, and in 1997 the reorganization was
successfully completed.
As a result of the changes wrought by the Covenant for
a New Century, the Southern Baptist Foundation was brought
under the oversight of the SBC Executive Committee. Chapman has
been chairman of the Southern Baptist Foundation Board of Trustees
since 1997.
In 1998, Chapman led the Executive Committee to establish a
Web site for the SBC, with a vision to unite every aspect of the
denomination under one Internet umbrella. Since its beginning,
the site has become a central hub for all things related to the
Southern Baptist Convention.
In 1999, he promoted the recognition and celebration of the
Cooperative Program's seventy-fifth anniversary, assigning the
theme Partners in the Harvest to mark the momentous
occasion. The Southern Baptist Convention celebrated by embracing
aggressive goals in evangelism, volunteer ministry, and increased
giving to SBC mission causes through the Cooperative Program.
In his address at the 2000 Southern Baptist Convention in Orlando,
Florida, Chapman challenged Southern Baptists to a passionate
commitment to pray for revival. After the Convention, he initiated
a Web site dedicated to facilitating his challenge to prayer,
offering the opportunity for visitors to submit prayer requests
and to commit to a specific, consistent time of prayer. This site
continues to be the most frequently accessed site in the SBC.net
family of pages.
In 2000, he also challenged the Southern Baptist Convention
to embrace a united commitment to family renewal and spiritual
health, noting the rapid and alarming decline in the state of
America's families. As a result, the Executive Committee recommended,
and the Southern Baptist Convention approved, the establishment
of the Council on Family Life, which launched a multi-faceted
strategy to call families back to God's design for healthy and
wholesome families.
Working with state convention, Executive Committee, and SBC
entity leaders, Chapman led the Executive Committee and the Southern
Baptist Convention to overwhelmingly adopt and embrace a new vision
for the SBC. At the 2002 Convention in St. Louis, he introduced
Empowering Kingdom Growth (EKG), a call for Southern
Baptist churches and members to unreservedly and wholeheartedly
pursue the Kingdom of God above all else. Heralding Matthew 6:33,
he indicated that his hope was that the vision would filter down
and take root in individual hearts, then "bubble up"
to sweep across the Southern Baptist Convention, the nation, and
the world. At the time, he observed that of all his efforts and
emphases at the SBC Executive Committee, "Nothing in ten
years is more significant than EKG because it puts the
focus where it needs to be."
In 2002, Chapman led the Executive Committee to implement legal
recognition and designation of the Southern Baptist Convention
as the "sole member" in each SBC entity's corporate
documents, effectively preventing the potential for any SBC entity
to declare its independence from the messengers of the Southern
Baptist Convention.
In 2003, the Executive Committee initiated the Funding Study
Committee, which sought to address concerns over the percentages
of SBC Cooperative Program receipts distributed to the entities
of the Southern Baptist Convention. Relatedly, he worked extensively
with the Cooperative Program Ad Hoc Committee, initiated by several
state convention executive directors, in 2005.
In 2007, following the SBC decision to end its funding of the
Baptist World Alliance, he initiated the Global Evangelical
Relations (GER) effort, demonstrating the SBC's ongoing
priority and commitment to maintain strong fraternal relationships
with like-minded Christian groups around the world.
From the earliest days of Chapman's ministry, he has been motivated
by compassion for those who do not know the Lord. At Southwestern
Seminary, he received the Stella P. Ross Award in evangelism.
In his professional labors and personal evangelistic service,
he has traveled and spoken extensively in forty-two nations. He
has participated in international evangelistic ministries in six
nations on four continents, baptizing thousands of new Christians
in the Indian Ocean in Mombassa and the Han River in Korea. In
addition, he has preached widely in revivals, conventions, and
conferences in the United States.
Chapman has taken seriously his ministry to pastors and others
in local church ministry, having written or compiled four books:
Faith: Taking God at His Word (1992), The Wedding Collection
(1991), Jesus: Author and Finisher (1987), and Youth
Affirm: The Doctrine of Christ (1985).
Chapman graduated from Mississippi College in Clinton, Mississippi,
and received master of divinity and doctor of ministry degrees
from Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Fort Worth,
Texas. He has been awarded honorary doctorates from Southwest
Baptist University in Bolivar, Missouri; Mississippi College in
Clinton, Mississippi; and Grand Canyon University in Phoenix,
Arizona.
Chapman has received numerous honors recognizing his contributions,
including being awarded the M. E. Dodd Award for Distinguished
Service to His Denomination, by Union University, in Jackson,
Tennessee (2006); being named the 2003 Distinguished Alumnus of
Southwestern Seminary; receiving the Good Shepherd Emblem from
the Association of Baptists for Scouting for his commitment to
spiritual, physical, mental, and moral development of Baptist
youth (2001); and being awarded the George Washington Medal of
Honor by the Freedoms Foundation for his sermon entitled, "Hear
This Word, America" in 1980.
Chapman has been a respected civic leader in each community
he has served. While in Rogers, he led a series of one-day "religious
retreats" at nearby Fort Hood, where he received "Soldier
of God" Citations from both the 1st and the 2nd Armored Divisions.
At Woodway, he served as the on-call chaplain for Holiday Inn,
Waco, and was on the local Honor America Day committee. In that
capacity, he was selected to represent the city at a Washington
D.C. rally.
During his ministry in Albuquerque, Chapman served as the chaplain
for the University of New Mexico Lobos basketball team, was invited
to participate in numerous Governor's prayer breakfasts, worked
with the city government to resolve the "panhandler's problem"
by developing a vibrant inner-city ministry, and was a frequent
speaker on moral issues before the city administration and at
civic clubs.
Early in his ministry in Wichita Falls, he was thrust into
visible leadership as his church responded in the wake of killer
tornadoes that tore through the city. In Tennessee, he has served
in many advisory roles, including service as a member of the Advisory
Board of Directors for Regions Bank since 1993, and has been an
advisory member or a trustee with several Christian colleges,
including Union University in Jackson.
He is married to the former Jodi Francis, a registered nurse,
of Memphis, Tennessee. Jodi has also distinguished herself as
a recognized leader, serving as a trustee of the Baptist Sunday
School Board, an officer for the Ministers' Wives Conference,
and a member of the strategic SBC Peace Committee. The Chapmans
have two married children, Christopher Morris and Stephanie Suzanne,
and eight grandchildren.
Copyright
© 2012 Southern Baptist Convention Executive Committee
SBC Life is published by the
Executive Committee of the Southern Baptist Convention
901 Commerce Street,
Nashville, Tennessee 37203
Tel. 615.244.2355
Email us: sbclife@sbc.net
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