Tag: Featured

EMPOWER 2026: Life-changing decisions made at fourth annual Student Rally

IRVING—More than 400 students and leaders gathered at the Irving Convention Center on Feb. 22 to have a little fun, worship, and hear the gospel during the fourth annual Empower Conference Student Rally.

The rally featured Portraits Worship, comedian and illusionist Jared Hall, and Daniel Ritchie, a motivational speaker and evangelist born without arms. Grant Byrd, Southern Baptists of Texas Convention student ministry associate, also used the occasion to announce upcoming student opportunities including M3 Camp, a student mission trip to Budapest, Hungary, and a Following Your Calling workshop for students who may feel called to ministry.

Hall presented a crowd-pleasing routine heavy on audience participation. He entertained the room with card tricks, a levitating table, and the adventures of his “pet raccoon” Rocky, a stuffed animal made to appear lifelike. Hall’s final trick engaged the audience in a group calculation that ended up with a number representing the current time and date.

“This moment is happening right now,” Hall said. “My hope is that God would use you.” Before exiting the stage, Hall reminded students that time is short and the Lord has plans for all who respond to Him.

Voices raised across the auditorium as Portraits Worship led a time of praise before Ryan Fontenot of R.A.G.E. Ministries introduced Ritchie.

“We are not here by accident. Nobody in this room is here by chance. God has orchestrated this moment,” Fontenot said.

Survival and salvation

Ritchie recounted his experiences growing up in rural North Carolina, including times at school when he was bullied mercilessly.

“That was the worst time of my life,” he said, adding that by age 15, he was nearly “done with God” and ready for his own life to end.

Daniel Ritchie, a motivational speaker and evangelist born without arms, was the featured speaker at the Empower Conference Student Rally. SBTC PHOTO

One Friday, a classmate invited him to a church lock-in that evening. With few friends, Ritchie agreed to go, discovering in horror that the evening involved a dodgeball tournament in the church gym.

Miserable, he retreated to the bleachers, only to be approached by a student pastor who explained the gospel from Romans, encouraging Ritchie that Jesus had not forgotten him.

“Jesus made you to go and show the world more of Him,” the student pastor urged, telling Ritchie that his greatest problem was not his disability, but the fact he had fallen short of God’s righteousness. “You cannot do enough right things to save yourself from sin.”

After hearing the gospel, Ritchie trusted Christ as Savior. “He changed every bit about my life. He changed every bit about my eternity,” he said.

God did not, however, change his physical situation. The bullying did not suddenly end.

“What I now had was hope in the midst of my mess,” Ritchie said. “What I now had was the voice of God that was bigger and more robust than the bullies in my life. Jesus truly became everything.”

Using Philippians 1:19-27, Ritchie challenged students with three truths from the life of Paul—no stranger to adversity:

1. Jesus is our courage.

Darkness may be “choking and enveloping,” but the “great news is you don’t have to do this by yourself. … God’s got you,” Ritchie said. “I would challenge you to just trust God.”

2. Jesus is our purpose.

“Do people know that you go to church, or do people in your life know that you follow Christ? There is a difference,” Ritchie said. “Jesus doesn’t want [only] your Sunday; Jesus wants your every day.” This is the key to the abundant life, he noted.

3. Jesus is our life.

For Paul, to live is Christ and to die is gain. “The promise for us is that when this physical life ends, we step into eternity and we spend all of eternity with Jesus in heaven,” Ritchie said, asking students to consider salvation. “Some of you have kept Jesus at a distance. … Jesus knows everything about you. All you have to do is trust Him at His word.”

Later, Byrd noted those in the crowd who, upon Ritchie’s invitation, had professed faith in Christ. It was the chief purpose of the evening: to show the Savior to students who had not known Him.

For more information about SBTC Student Ministry opportunities and events, visit https://sbtexas.com/church-ministries/student/.

Empower 2026 offers exciting lineup

Ministry demands never stop. Leaders face relentless pressure from packed schedules, limited resources, and the constant need for solutions. Empower is led by experienced ministry leaders who have faced these same challenges and developed practical, effective ways to reach communities across Texas and beyond—where the need for the gospel remains as great as ever. Check out this year’s schedule and make plans to attend as we maximize our kingdom impact together. 

Sunday, Feb. 22
6:30-8:30 PM 
+ Student Rally

Join students from across the region for an unforgettable night that changes students’ lives each year. Portraits Music will lead powerful worship, Daniel Ritchie will share an encouraging message, and illusionist Jared Hall will deliver a jaw-dropping performance you won’t forget. Come to this free event ready to grow in your faith, build lasting friendships, and be inspired to live boldly for Jesus.


Monday, Feb. 23
11:00 AM-12:45 PM
+ Classics Lunch

Mark Lowry is a storyteller at heart—whether he’s singing a beloved hymn, cracking a perfectly timed joke, or delivering a message that pierces the soul.

+ Send Network SBTC Lunch
+ XPAN – Executive Pastors & Administrators Network Lunch

1:00-4:00 PM
+ Classics Session w/ Chris Osborne, Alan Arthur, Frank Harber, Greater Vision
+ Women’s Session w/ Jen Wilkin
Greater Works in Jesus’ Name
The Upper Room Legacy of John 14:12-14

1:00-2:30 | 2:45-4:15 
+ Afternoon Breakouts

4:30-6:00 PM
+ Resourcing Churches Dinner
Join us for an evening of insight and encouragement as the Church Health and Leadership team presents the wide range of resources available to strengthen and support our churches. This interactive and creative presentation will highlight practical tools designed to equip pastors and leaders for effective ministry. Don’t miss this opportunity to connect, learn, and be inspired.

+ Shepherds Collective Dinner 
Come hear panelists Jason Thacker of The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary and Trevin Wax of the North American Mission Board as they explore the topic of cultural engagement—AI, deconstruction, and preaching in a rapidly changing world. Every guest will receive a complimentary book.

+ Student Ministers Network Dinner
+ Worship Leaders Network Dinner

6:00-8:30 PM
+ Evening Session

Tuesday, Feb. 24
7:30-8:45 AM
+ Advancing Mission Breakfast
+ DR Breakfast Taco Truck

8:30-11:35 AM
+ Morning Session

11:45 AM-12:50 PM
+ Cooperative Program Lunch
Join us as we celebrate the many ways God is using the Cooperative Program to fulfill the Great Commission. Our featured speaker, Jesse Payne, senior pastor of West Conroe Baptist Church, will share how the Cooperative Program has blessed his life and ministry.

1:00-2:30 | 2:45-4:15 
+ Afternoon Breakouts

4:00-5:30 PM
+ Closing Session

5:45-7:15 PM
+ Black Church Network Dinner
Get ready for an unforgettable night of family fun and inspirational praise and worship, followed by The Big Game Show—a live, fast-paced game show where attendees serve as contestants and the audience.

+ Missions Mobilization Network Dinner

After 27 years, inerrancy remains the cornerstone of the SBTC

When the Southern Baptists of Texas Convention began in 1998, it established a clear identity separate from the other convention in the state, the older and much larger Baptist General Convention of Texas. Distinctions between the two conventions in Texas developed from the Conservative Resurgence in the Southern Baptist Convention. 

To put it simply, the new convention was formed by those who favored the reform of the national denomination and were disappointed to find that this could not happen in the BGCT. The new convention has grown from 120 churches in 1998 to more than 2,800 in 2026. 

As the number of affiliated churches and the span of ministries grew, founding principles remained the same: The SBTC operates as a confessional fellowship, using the Baptist Faith and Message 2000 as the doctrinal statement each affiliated church affirms. It operates in cooperation with the Southern Baptist Convention to reach beyond even the broad reach of Texas, and it has prioritized missions and evangelism over other priorities pursued by older state conventions.   

The principles by which the BGCT has operated the past 27 years have varied as new leaders emerged. The convention now supports pro-life initiatives in Austin, for example. But some of the former principles remain influential within BGCT leadership and institutions. 

One flashpoint between the new and old conventions at the beginning was endorsement of women as pastors. While the BGCT’s leadership affirmed women as pastors, the SBTC supported the traditional teaching of Scripture, that only qualified men as called by God should be pastors. In its 2025 report, Baptist Women in Ministry claimed 43 women were senior or co-pastors in BGCT churches. The BGCT has elected three women as convention presidents—the most recent one, a children’s pastor, was elected during their 2025 annual meeting. She is the first ordained woman to have been elected BGCT president.   

The SBTC has remained in harmony with the SBC, including the allocation of 55% of undesignated receipts for national and international missions. The BGCT has had a more complex relationship with the national denomination—at one point, in 2000, mostly defunding every SBC entity that depended on Cooperative Program funds. That action was eventually reversed.

Institutions funded, though not owned or controlled, by the SBTC affirm the BF&M 2000’s doctrinal guidelines in every aspect of their ministries. At this year’s BGCT annual meeting, the decades-old controversy over teaching at Baylor University continued as some BGCT pastors urged the convention to examine the university’s response to an LGBTQ-friendly student group, as well as allegations of financial support for another LGBTQ-affirming group, Baptist Women in Ministry. The motion to investigate the convention’s flagship institution failed.

Foundational to both state conventions is their view on Scripture. Texas is a state chock-full of churches in both conventions that affirm the full inerrancy of the Bible. However, the BGCT as an organization has been unwilling to affirm inerrancy, though some likely believe it. The result of that unwillingness has been that institutions, particularly seminaries and universities, supported by the BGCT have wrestled with issues that are long settled within the SBTC and the SBC—including open theism (the belief that God does not know the future because He is still learning), LGBTQ issues, and women as pastors. 

This leads to a related distinction between the two conventions—confessionalism. The BGCT has repeatedly rejected the BF&M 2000 as the confession by which it operates, though churches within the BGCT are free to use the confession they choose. The 2000 confession specifically addresses the authority of Scripture, leadership of churches, and sexual morality in a direct way not present in older confessions. A confessional fellowship will require, as do the SBTC and SBC, that denominational leaders and programs, as well as professors teaching, will do that work within the parameters of the BF&M 2000 adopted by SBC messengers from SBC churches in 2000.

A denominational body formed around an accepted confession of faith will have far less trouble sorting out how to express their biblical convictions day to day. 

This was—and is—the unsettled difference between the two Southern Baptist state conventions in Texas.

“I’m so grateful for over 2,800 SBTC churches whose doctrinal unity fuels our mission focus,” SBTC Executive Director Nathan Lorick said. “We have always been and will always be a network of churches that stand firmly on the inerrancy of Scripture, which is the foundation for all that we do. I believe the greatest days for the SBTC are ahead.”