WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (ABP) — Conservative candidates swept all three key offices of the Baptist State Convention of North Carolina Nov. 11-12 in what was anticipated as a make-or-break election for moderate Baptists in the state.
David Horton, 43, pastor of Gate City Baptist Church in Greensboro, was elected president Nov. 11 over moderate David Hughes, 51, pastor of First Baptist Church in the host city of Winston-Salem.
Horton received 59.5 percent of the 3,840 votes cast, the largest winning margin for a non-incumbent since 1987 and the largest since 1996 for a presidential candidate facing opposition. Hughes garnered 40.5 percent, a weaker showing than either candidate anticipated.
“I was surprised, because the elections are always so close,” said Horton, whose election is the ninth in a row won by conservative presidential candidates. He succeeds conservative Jerry Pereira, 49, pastor of First Baptist Church of Swannanoa, who would have completed his second term as president but died four days before the convention, following a six-month battle with cancer. In an unusual move earlier this year, Pereira endorsed Horton and the other conservative candidates.
Phyllis Foy, a laywoman from Mooresville, was elected Nov. 12 to replace her husband, Bob Foy, as first vice president. She received 57 percent of the vote over Raymond Earp, a layman from Beaufort, who received 44 percent. Brian Davis, pastor of First Baptist Church in East Flat Rock, was elected second vice president over Ken Massey, pastor of First Baptist Church in Greensboro. The margin was 59 percent to 41 percent.
Even before the elections, there was speculation among messengers that moderate Baptists would disengage from the state convention if they lost another election, perhaps forming a new convention as has been attempted in a few other states.
After the election, Horton told reporters he hopes moderates will continue to accept the place open to them in the convention. “There has been a place at the table for moderates, and conservatives, and there will continue to be a place at the table for moderates.” He added moderates and conservatives still agree on more issues than they disagree.
Hughes, however, suggested many moderates no longer feel “a sense of place and belonging.” The sound defeat gave moderates “a clear-cut answer” for the future, he said. “While I'm disappointed with the choice that was made, I'm glad there is more clarity than there was before.”
“Today the convention spoke for the ninth year in a row. That's very definitive,” Hughes told reporters in an unusual joint press conference with Horton. “This convention is lining up squarely behind the Southern Baptist Convention, and I think that it's good to get out on the table where things stand.”
Hughes said there is “a sense of discouragement and resignation among moderates. I've been trying to get them to stay involved.” But he admitted that encouragement has been met with mixed reviews.
He predicted moderates will take some time to assess the situation, then gather to determine their course. “Not all moderates will do the same thing,” he said. “These folks are like herding cats, they are very independent thinkers. It will be well into next year before it's clear who might be doing what.”
Jim Royston, executive director-treasurer of the convention, said the staff will continue to work with all 3,803 churches in the convention, regardless of their alignment. “We work with every church, and we don't even ask that kind of question.” He credited both Horton and Hughes for “rolling up their sleeves” and working within the convention.
“I wish this was an example of shared leadership,” Royston said, a reference to the aborted proposal to alternate the presidential position between conservatives and moderates. Horton and Hughes became friends when both worked to pass the “shared leadership” plan, which was defeated by convention messengers in 1999.
“I think the convention has to decide to do shared leadership,” Horton responded. He said the plan failed “because the convention didn't want to be given parameters” for convention officers. He said the current system “is a good process.”
By most accounts, the presidential election was in part a referendum on the conservative shift in the Southern Baptist Convention, now in its third decade. Horton's support for the SBC was mentioned at least four times in the three-minute nomination speech from retired Winston-Salem pastor Mark Corts.
And while Hughes suggested in recent weeks that the North Carolina convention should consider reducing its funding of the SBC to address its own budget shortfall, Horton said after the vote, “I think my election signals strong support for continued giving to the Southern Baptist Convention.”
Horton said the SBC is “really worthy of our support” and he encouraged Baptists in the state “to do everything we can to give more to the Southern Baptist Convention” and the North Carolina convention.
During discussion of the proposed budget, messengers defeated a motion to delete $200,000 in funding for the Biblical Recorder, the convention's newspaper. “The biweekly reading of the Biblical Recorder does not bring to my heart a spirit of unity but a spirit of division,” said Cameron McGill, a pastor from Dublin. “I do not see the evangelistic purpose,” he said, adding he did “not appreciate the way I was handled” when he questioned the newspaper's editor about his concerns.
“Stop it, stop it,” countered John Butler, a pastor from Matthews, who argued against the defunding. “We are tired of the constant bickering which is destroying the unity we have left.”
Tony Cartledge, editor of the Biblical Recorder, later told Associated Baptist Press he was “most concerned” about McGill's charge he had mistreated the pastor. “I don't recall the specific correspondence, but it is not in my nature to attack people. I always try to respond as graciously as I can.”
The defunding motion, which would have deleted almost half of the convention's allocation to the Recorder, failed in a show-of-hands vote. A motion to cut a smaller amount from the newspaper failed last year. Conservatives in North Carolina support their own newspaper, the Conservative Record. Messengers later adopted the budget unchanged. The $35.18 million total is 6.3 percent below the original 2003 budget and approximately the same as reduced income expectations for 2003. The state convention recently cut $1.4 million from the 2003 budget in response to slumping contributions from churches. The cuts eliminated 24 staff positions, 15 of which were filled.
Messengers also adopted a preliminary 2005 budget of $35.68 million but that spending plan can be amended next year.
Only two resolutions were adopted — one expressing concern for North Carolinians who have lost their jobs recently and another voicing appreciation to the host city.
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