Tag: Featured

Celebrating a century of impact through the Cooperative Program

A Gift That Keeps On Giving

In 1925, Southern Baptists gathered for their annual meeting in Memphis, Tenn., and adopted a pair of foundational structures that still define the convention’s work today.  The Baptist Faith and Message laid a doctrinal foundation for the Southern Baptist Convention’s cooperating churches, while the Cooperative Program provided the unified funding method by which their work would be accomplished.

In 2025, Southern Baptists celebrated the 100th anniversary of this historic event and saw the fruit that comes from generous giving. As Southern Baptists of Texas Convention churches continued to give faithfully and sacrificially through the CP, churches were planted across the state to help push back against a growing rate of lostness. When disaster relief workers mobilized to minister to survivors of floods and fires, they did so with the help of cooperative giving. 

Simply put, the Cooperative Program’s impact has been wide-reaching and significant. 

As churches give through the Cooperative Program, 45% of undesignated receipts remain in Texas to mobilize SBTC churches and 55% is forwarded to SBC entities for national and international missions and ministry. Those gifts support international missionaries serving in some of the harshest mission fields on the planet, church planters in North America, and students attending one of the SBC’s six seminaries.

In February, the Texan featured Acts Fellowship Church in Austin, where more than three dozen people have been sent to seminary to prepare for future kingdom service—including 20 who have trained at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Fort Worth. 

“ … It’s a great way to take part in equipping the next generation of Christian leaders and to partake in the expansion of God’s kingdom,” Acts Fellowship Pastor Charles Lee said.

Caroll Marr, senior pastor of Southcliff Church in Fort Worth, said giving through the CP is personal for his congregation, which supports and sends missionaries around the globe.

“It is easy to think a larger church can make a global impact in a way a smaller church cannot,” Marr wrote in the Texan earlier this year. “Yet because of the Cooperative Program, even churches that do not feel they have a personal connection with missions or are not able to go on a mission trip are just as connected as our church.”

Throughout the year, SBTC churches were encouraged to do three things: pray for record CP giving in 2025, plan a CP Sunday to emphasize the importance of CP giving, and post testimonials to social media to spread the word about how God has used CP to bless individuals’ lives.

“The Cooperative Program is a way that we can make sure not only [our church] is being effective in reaching our neighbors and the nations right now,” said Aaron Kahler, lead pastor of Hays Hills Baptist Church in Buda, “but that we and other Southern Baptist churches will be effective 100 years from now.”

Lives are being changed as SBTC en Español continues to expand

Impact on a growing scale

SBTC En Español’s annual Florece retreat is designed to provide women with a place of pause where they can be equipped, encouraged, and renewed. 

“We prayed that Florece would not just be another event, but a true turning point in the lives of those who attended—and that is what God did,” said Arlene Sanabria, SBTC En Español women’s ministry leader. “We have received countless testimonies from women deeply impacted by the Word shared in workshops and general sessions. Many experienced inner healing and freedom from anxiety and depression, while others found comfort and had their faith renewed.”

About 900 women representing 75 churches attended the retreat, continuing a trend of growing attendance at SBTC En Español events throughout the year. The events are not just drawing large crowds, but leading to changed lives. 

At Florece, 14 women made professions of faith in Jesus Christ, while others answered a call to serve the Lord in various capacities. A similar situation happened at the Hombres de Impacto conference earlier this year, where one of the 750 men in attendance trusted Christ after being invited by a participating church.

Over the summer, Youth Week—SBTC En Español’s student camp—saw 675 campers gather to worship, connect, and hear the gospel. One of those campers was a 16-year-old girl who had been taking hormone therapy pills in an attempt to transition her body to having male characteristics. Instead, she heard the gospel, surrendered her life to Christ, and has since stopped taking the medication and started a discipleship process at her local church. She was one of about 50 campers who made a profession of faith. 

SBTC En Español trained more than 650 lay leaders and pastors in discipleship, leadership, technology, church planting, and evangelism through the annual Apoderados conference held in conjunction with the SBTC’s Empower Conference in February, and through Equip En Español in July. The first Hispanic Women’s Ministry Leadership Summit hosted 70 leaders representing 33 churches, and a pastor and wife retreat encouraged 30 couples to strengthen their marriages and remain steadfast in their ministries.

Additionally, more resources became accessible to Spanish-speaking churches this past year through the SBTC’s Church Health and Leadership department. Those included Chosen to Serve, a newly developed deacon ministry training, and Regenesis, a process designed to help churches experience health and renewal. 

The year also saw a new leader called to serve SBTC En Español. Luis González began working as the ministry’s full-time director in August. 

“I’m so grateful to be a part of this team. We want to mobilize our churches to make disciples and to do it with excellence,” González said earlier this year. “[When we do this], we will see more of our churches accomplish the mission of making disciples and see many people come to Christ.”

—Jayson Larson

‘I’ve learned that God is faithful’

I’ve been the pastor of Smyrna Baptist Church [in Atlanta, Texas] for more than 38 years. This is the first church, and the only church, I’ve pastored. 

I wasn’t raised in church. In fact, I can probably count on one hand how many times I was in church prior to junior high. But when I was a freshman in high school, I used to walk the streets of  Algerita, Texas [near San Saba]. I knew my parents loved me. I loved my brothers and my sister, but there was such a gnawing inside of me and I would just walk. I started running around with some kids who just loved each other, and they laughed all the time. They saw delight and joy in so many things. In order to be with them, I started going to church. And over a period of months, I gained knowledge of God’s love for me, of my problem—which was sin—and God’s solution, which was Jesus.

One Sunday morning, I was sitting by one of these young ladies and when the invitation started, I had such a pull within me that I started shuffling my feet and fidgeting. The young lady stepped out into the middle aisle to let me out and I went up and talked to Brother Powers and told him I needed to be saved. He sent me back with the deacon. He didn’t share any Scripture, but he said, “Gene, if you will ask Jesus to forgive you of your sin and take control of your life and be your Lord and Savior, He will save you just like that.” And as much as I understood, I did.

Parker is pictured with his wife, Celeta.

You know, I share with folks that when you trust Christ, it doesn’t mean everything is going to be OK. That very next year, my dad died of cancer. Our family just kind of fell apart. I lived with my older brother, I lived with my older sister, I lived with an aunt. Through all this I’d gotten out of church. I was miserable. But still, God reminded me, “You are not your own. You’ve been bought at a price.” 

My senior year, I had a family that just loved me back into the church and a pastor who started meeting with me to talk about spiritual growth, about discipleship, prayer, and studying God’s Word. And I started growing.

My second year of junior college, I felt God calling me into the ministry. I thought I would be the oldest youth minister in Texas. I’d served full-time at First Baptist Liberty City for four years when my pastor, Bruce Wells, asked me one day, “Gene, what is God saying to you? What’s God doing in your life?” I answered that I loved serving the church, but I felt like something was missing. He asked if God might be changing my calling.

I asked, “Can He do that?” And he said, “You knucklehead! You know He can.” He counseled me to pray about it. I did and God confirmed a call to the preaching ministry that summer. 

I stayed there another year and a half. When Bruce went on a visit, I went with him. When he visited someone who was lost, I was with him. He tried to teach me everything that a pastor should do, and the things a pastor should never do. I really believe that’s why I’ve been here at Smyrna [so long], because there was a foundation laid.

“God was faithful to always call to me and say, ‘Come and join me on what I’m doing and trust me even though you don’t understand what I’m doing.’ That is the one thing that really, really stands out.”

My wife, Celeta, and I have raised our family here at Smyrna. We have four children and 11 grandchildren. And for our time in Atlanta, we’ve lived in a parsonage. Currently, we are building a home of our own. 

This church has had problems like any other church. Because there’s a trust and a compassion from the congregation to the pastor and the pastor to the congregation, we’ve weathered some crazy things together. But God has always been the focus, and He has walked us right through.

I’ve learned that God is faithful, that regardless of the circumstances, regardless of whether I understood or not, God was faithful to always call to me and say, “Come and join me on what I’m doing and trust me even though you don’t understand what I’m doing.” That is the one thing that really, really stands out.

One advantage of staying in one church for a long time is you truly come to know the heart of your people, and they come to know your heart. I tell our folks all the time, “Y’all, if you’re coming because of the pastor, then you’re here for the wrong reason.” It’s never for any person except the Lord Jesus Christ. If we keep our focus on Him, then we’re going to find harmony in the church and will know the purpose for which God has called us—and that is to make Christ known.

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Events like Go Summit, Crossover brought the gospel, training to thousands

Reaching far, reaching many

Tony Mathews, senior strategist for the SBTC’s Missional Ministries department, wasn’t sure what to expect when the convention hosted the inaugural GoSummit on the campus of North Garland Baptist Fellowship in September.

He was thrilled when around 140 people representing more than 20 churches showed up to learn how to be more effective in evangelizing their friends and neighbors. 

“It just exceeded our wildest expectations,” Mathews said. “This event was multicultural and the discussions were just so rich. It was really exciting.”

The summit featured diverse speakers who worked together to break down many of the barriers that hinder personal evangelism. Session topics included how to overcome common hesitations people have when they hear the gospel, effectively reaching younger generations for Christ, and understanding the demographics and diverse cultures in your community. A women’s session encouraged attendees to point other women to Jesus by looking for ways to engage them.

The GoSummit was one of many efforts designed to equip SBTC churches with resources to advance the gospel. In 2025, leaders received training on how to conduct their own evangelism workshops, organize door-to-door evangelism, and cultivate a culture of evangelism within their churches. Multiple grants were provided to support community outreach events where the gospel was shared. Those grants enabled churches to distribute over 1,200 Bibles and 6,000 gospel tracts. 

 An increasing number of resources were also made available online to train churches and individuals. The Stand Firm online apologetics course, with more than 20 videos, equips believers to share the gospel while addressing culturally relevant issues such as human sexuality, atheism, and world religions. Evangelism Connections, a series of live virtual trainings presented by experienced evangelism leaders, served participants around the state and will continue in 2026.

SBTC churches also mobilized for the cause of evangelism in June during Crossover Dallas, the weeklong North American Mission Board evangelistic outreach held in conjunction each year with the Southern Baptist Convention Annual Meeting. About 60 churches participated, delivering the gospel to one of the largest metropolitan areas in the nation. 

Some churches did door-to-door evangelism and hosted block parties, while others used a pickleball instruction camp and a Christian comedy show as vehicles to tell others about Jesus. Crossover also included a pair of student rallies—one at Cross Church DFW and the other at First Baptist Church in Rockwall—that drew hundreds of students and led to a number of decisions for Christ.

All told, over 17,000 people heard the gospel through one-on-one and group conversations during Crossover. More than 700 made professions of faith in Christ. 

—Jayson Larson

As SBTC celebrates a big year in planting, excitement builds for what God will do next

‘It’s a special call’

Before 2025 concludes, the Southern Baptists of Texas Convention anticipates planting more churches—70—than in any other year in its history. While that’s a number worth celebrating, the need to plant churches is as urgent as ever. Jason Crandall, who earlier this year was named director of Send Network SBTC—the church planting partnership between the SBTC and the North American Mission Board—recently spoke to the Texan about what excites him about church planting, why Texas has unique needs that can be met by more churches being planted, and how churches of any size can become part of the planting movement.

As you step into this new role as director of Send Network SBTC, what are some of the things that excite you? 

Jason Crandall: I’m most excited about what we’ve already seen happen—more than 200 church plants in the last three years since the partnership began, and I’m excited about those numbers continuing to increase. We continue to see more churches getting involved in church planting and sending guys into our process to go plant churches. Our pipeline is already looking full heading into next year.

I’m also really excited about what’s happening through the Missions Mobilization group here at the SBTC. I really love the idea of M-Link [a tool that matches churches looking to serve one another] helping potential supporting churches come on board with our church plants to develop greater partnerships. A lot of times there’s a willingness of churches to help, but they don’t necessarily know what to do or who they match up with. That’s one of the things I love about M-Link, that it can match a church that can do X, Y, and Z to a church plant that needs X, Y, and Z. 

What are some of the unique needs in Texas that can be addressed through more churches being planted? 

Crandall: Texas is exploding in population. You can look anywhere in almost any of our major cities—and really, even in our non-major cities—and see they’re pushing dirt everywhere. You’re seeing subdivisions go up like crazy. Businesses are coming in. Texas is still booming. When we began talking about this Send Network SBTC partnership back in 2021, there were 29 million people in the state. Now there are almost 31 million people, and what that means is there is so much more lostness here.

The world is moving here. International populations from all over are coming to Texas, and they’re in need of international church plants that speak their language. We’ve seen a huge uptick in that in 2025. We need to make sure there are churches here that are going to bring the gospel to them.

Your church, CityView Church in Pearland, is a plant that has been part of starting 14 churches over the past 12 years. Why has that been such an integral part of your church’s ministry? 

Crandall: It kind of goes back to our founding. We’re specifically a Houston-based church, and we saw how fast Houston was growing and asked ourselves, “If we grew a megachurch in Pearland, how is that going to affect the city of Houston?” The answer we landed on was that a megachurch in Pearland does nothing, but a church that multiplies and plants churches can put churches all over that area. Those churches can embed into those local areas and become flourishing gospel congregations. CityView is a church of about 150 on a good Sunday. On Easter, we might hit 200. But the Lord has been gracious to allow us to see through those churches we’ve planted over 3,000 people worshiping on a regular basis. And some of those churches have also planted churches. By God’s grace, we’ve seen something beyond what we could ever ask, think, or imagine.

How can any church become a sending church?

Crandall: Any church can do this. One of the things I love doing in terms of mobilization is something called a Sending Lab. A Sending Lab is a one-day workshop where a church comes in and we help them figure out how to craft a sending vision. Most churches don’t realize it, but they already have 50, 60, 70% of what’s needed to plant a church.

I like to say it like this: Every church can be involved in church planting, but not every church can be involved in church planting in exactly the same way. Sometimes that means the best thing you can do is be a cooperating church where you’re giving regularly and generously through the Cooperative Program. Sometimes you can become a supporting church. A supporting church is one that’s going to come alongside a church plant and help it—whether that’s through prayer, giving, going, or in some other way. As you do that, you develop a relationship with a church planter and get to know him and then you may want to see your church get involved in a deeper way. 

I firmly believe every church needs to be involved in multiplication, and every step of the way, you’re looking for whatever that next step may be for your church.

What would you say to the pastor who thinks he may be called to plant?

Crandall: I’d say do it! I say that jokingly just because we need more. We need to plant churches everywhere for everyone. If we’re planting 160 churches a year, we might be able to keep up with the growth rate of Texas over the long haul. But for the pastor considering planting, I would say talk to another church planter. Give me a call—I’m happy to talk to you. Talk to one of our local catalysts. We want to hear from you, and we want to help you figure it out and discern that call because it’s a special call.

To connect and find out more about church planting, email jcrandall@namb.net.

Sacrificial giving has been Calvary Beaumont’s story for 125 years

A legacy of giving & watching God work

The sacrificial giving that happens at Calvary Baptist Church today has a direct link to the church’s beginning.

At the turn of the 20th century, First Baptist Church in Beaumont sponsored gospel worker Sue Cochran’s efforts to establish a Sunday school in an area known as the Cartwright Addition, growing from an oil boom.

That Sunday school, after a couple of name changes, is now Calvary Beaumont. After 125 years, the church is still going strong. 

“From its very beginning, Calvary has been a church that exists because of the giving of another Baptist church that had a gospel heart and a mission mindset,” said Justin Buchanan, Calvary’s lead pastor since 2023. “We are indebted to First Baptist Beaumont for the work that they did and their willingness to see the work of God happening and the gospel advancing so that the kingdom would increase here and around the world.”

About 700 people attend Calvary on Sundays. The church has two campuses and a Hispanic congregation and is among the top givers through the Cooperative Program, Southern Baptists’ funding plan for national and international missions and ministries.

“We owe our whole existence to the generosity of God’s people who were willing to give to the mission, sacrificially providing resources to start a work that has become Calvary for the last 125 years,” Buchanan said. “I think that has just always been part of the DNA of who the people are here at Calvary.”

An international ministry at Calvary is among the many ways the congregation is reaching the world for Christ.

“We owe our whole existence to the generosity of God’s people who were willing to give to the mission, sacrificially providing resources to start a work that has become Calvary for the last 125 years.”

The church has been involved in disaster relief, sending teams to Florida and Georgia during the past year to address the aftermath of hurricanes. Calvary has sent missionaries through the International Mission Board and other mission organizations and has sent some who are fully funded by the congregation.

“[We have] watched God work in the midst of our people,” Buchanan said, noting CP has enabled them to be called out to serve across the globe.

After faithfully supporting CP throughout its century-long existence, Calvary continues to find ways to keep support of the mission relevant. New member classes explain CP and what it funds. Sometimes new members are coming from an unchurched background or from a different denomination and have no concept of something as unique as the Cooperative Program, the pastor said. 

“I think they’re trying to get their heads around it and understand what it is, why it’s there, and why it’s important,” he said.

The work goes beyond sending missionaries and training pastors, Buchanan said. When he was a pastor in North Carolina, he saw CP dollars fund children’s homes, foster care, and adoption processes. Such a picture of believers’ adoption as daughters and sons into the family of God is motivation for CP giving, he said.

“In 2025, it’s as important as ever to give to the Cooperative Program because the work of Southern Baptists has not diminished and the need has not reduced,” Buchanan said. “The mission is still ever so critical and must remain central to who we are and what we do.”

Earlier this year, Southern Baptists of Texas Convention Executive Director Nathan Lorick spoke at Calvary, and “there was just a move of God among hearts as he served that morning,” particularly as he asked people to think of specific people they could ask God to save. 

The church has benefited from SBTC personnel advising them on discipleship and other ministry areas.

What began as a Sunday school in 1900 is now called Calvary Baptist Church in Beaumont, a strong congregation committed to giving through the Cooperative Program. SUBMITTED PHOTO

“We had a special needs training weekend for the community, and the SBTC staff helped us with that to know what we needed to address … to best be a church for all people and everyone made in the image of God,” Buchanan said.

Looking back, God used the Cooperative Program in various ways to shape Buchanan for ministry. He didn’t know of anyone in his family who had been a pastor, and until ninth grade he attended a small Bible church in his hometown in East Tennessee. Then his family moved to a Southern Baptist congregation.

“It was there in that Southern Baptist church that not only did God bring me to salvation, but also then called me to vocational ministry,” he said. “I went out from that church after college to attend Southeastern Seminary to be trained for this calling of God upon my life.”

Buchanan has served on staffs at Southern Baptist churches, planted a church in North Carolina, and served for a time as a professor at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary. 

“I am indebted to those who have already fought the good fight, finished the course, and kept the faith, but who in their lifetimes and their generations gave to see the work of God and the gospel message advance,” he said.

“Because of that, they have left a legacy that has impacted my life, enriched who I am, and brought me to where I am today in following God.”

Best of SBTC Resources 2025

The Southern Baptists of Texas Convention continues to provide tools and training to bring clarity, support, and momentum to every area of church life—from student ministry to evangelism to financial stewardship. Some of the resources listed here are new, while others are tried and true. Check out this list of tools designed to help your church charge into 2026 resourced and ready.

M-Link 

Identifying missions partners can be tricky. Pastors and missions leaders know opportunities abound, but locating those partners can be difficult. 

That’s why SBTC leaders developed M-Link.

M-Link connects “going” churches looking for partners to serve with “hosting” churches looking to receive mission teams. Going and hosting churches each fill out an online form, providing information such as abilities, needs, group size, and budget, and M-Link assesses the data to provide the best matches for each one. Those opportunities could be in Texas or in areas where the SBTC has developed partnerships through initiatives such as Reach Nevada, Reach Puerto Rico, and Reach Europe. 

“I’m excited about this because it helps churches participate in the Great Commission in a way that uniquely assesses who they are and it’s based on their capacities and abilities as opposed to a one-size-fits-all missiology,” SBTC Missions Mobilization Associate Colin Rayburn said.

Chosen to Serve 

Being a deacon is more than a title. It’s a calling to serve with humility, wisdom, and dedication. Chosen to Serve is a dynamic training meant to equip deacons with the biblical foundation, practical skills, and spiritual insight needed to serve effectively. 

The curriculum is designed for those who are new to the role or for those seeking to deepen the effectiveness of their service. Chosen to Serve will soon be available through the SBTC Resource Webstore, and churches can also request on-site training. 

“Healthy churches are served by healthy deacons,” said Jeff Lynn, the SBTC’s Church Health and Leadership senior strategist who wrote the curriculum. “Having served as a pastor for 25 years, I deeply value the difference it makes when men truly understand their role. I believe the principles in this training will not only encourage deacons but also empower pastors to serve more effectively.”

ReZoom 

This weekly online gathering is meant to provide student ministers from all over the state with a little bit of everything. It’s intentionally held on Thursday mornings, giving participants who have midweek meetings a place to talk about what worked the night before, what didn’t, and everything in between. Even for those who don’t have a Wednesday night gathering, ReZoom provides opportunities for student ministers to network and support one another through the sharing of ideas, prayer, and more. 

“Student ministers and leaders are just giving, giving, giving all the time,” SBTC Student Associate Grant Byrd said. “Sometimes they just want someone to listen to them, but sometimes they don’t want to talk at all—they just want to listen. We absolutely welcome that. I believe that as long as you’re willing to laugh at yourself and you’re willing to learn, you’re gonna love it.”

Online Disaster Relief Training 

Americans woke up July 4 ready to celebrate Independence Day. Residents of Central Texas woke up that same day to what turned out to be one of the worst natural disasters in Texas history when flooding across the Hill Country and in the surrounding areas claimed the lives of at least 135 people.

SBTC Disaster Relief volunteers began mobilizing almost immediately. Around the same time, a significant spike in users was recorded on the SBTC DR online training site. The online modules include an introductory course that’s required for new volunteers and those seeking to renew their credentials, as well as specific training in areas such as Cleanup & Recovery and Feeding.

“Our ministry seeks to meet real needs and share the hope of Jesus Christ with those impacted by disasters,” SBTC DR Director Scottie Stice said. “These training modules will give you an orientation into disaster relief ministry and help users learn to safely work in disasters such as floods, fires, and tornadoes.”

Barriers & Bridges

Texas is one of the most ethnically diverse states in the U.S. That makes it one of the most religiously diverse places in the world, as well. In some cases, a Christian’s attempt to evangelize those around them requires them to have a basic understanding of what someone else believes. 

Barriers & Bridges, a North American Mission Board resource available on the SBTC website, aims to educate Christians about the beliefs and practices of those who call North America home. The resource provides information on a range of belief systems ranging from Sikhism to Roman Catholicism to Wicca, as well as recommendations for how to strategically engage such groups. Each section of the guide includes a list of barriers to the gospel for each group, as well as ways to build bridges for them to have true faith in Jesus Christ.

1Cross Evangelism App

A couple of years ago, a Korean student attending Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary wanted to share the gospel with a Spanish-speaking Mexican man. Knowing the challenges presented by the language barrier between them, the student pulled out his phone and opened the SBTC’s 1Cross app—a tool churches and individuals can use to share the gospel in nearly 70 languages. After hearing the gospel in his native language, the Mexican man gave his life to Christ and was connected to a church in Fort Worth.

Twelve years after its launch, 1Cross continues to be used by thousands of people around the world to engage in cross-cultural evangelism. The app has nearly 24,000 downloads, and 800 videos have been downloaded for use this year alone. In addition to video and audio gospel presentations, the app also provides links to other evangelism resources including trainings to evangelize Buddhists, Hindus, Muslims, and Mormons.

Online Tax Seminars 

Most people aren’t itching to talk about unrelated business taxable income. They don’t envision stimulating conversations about seeking formal recognition of exempt status or accountable expense reimbursement plans. 

But churches don’t have a choice. Each year, church staff—and often volunteers—carry the burden of stewarding God’s resources well while facing complicated questions. For many, it can feel overwhelming.

Each January, the SBTC hosts a series of Online Tax Seminars to resource churches with the training they need to navigate the often cumbersome and confusing world of tax and finance. The seminars are led by professionals with decades of experience and offered at no cost to participants. 

“In the changing world of administration, staying up to speed is important,” SBTC Chief Financial Officer Joe Davis said. “These tax seminars bring churches up-to-date information as well as instruction on more traditional issues.”

Five minutes with Michael Cooper

Lead pastor of Mabank’s Grace Community Church since 2013, Michael Cooper trusted Christ at age 17 and was called to the ministry at 18. Following college, he earned a doctorate from Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary and in addition to pastoring, serves as an adjunct college and seminary professor and lecturer. He is active in the Southern Baptists of Texas Convention, this year serving on the credentials committee. Cooper has authored numerous articles and the book Cruciform Identity: Union with Christ and Christian Formation. Cooper and his wife, Kailie, are the proud parents of two little girls, Sophia Grace and Lydia Joy. He is passionate about the history of preaching, severe storm spotting, music, and the Dallas Cowboys.

What have you been celebrating at the church lately?

We’ve been in a state of transition. We moved into our new worship space in 2023. While we’ve had some ups and downs, God has been faithful to provide an abundance of grace. There is a renewed focus on discipleship. 

What are some ways the church is ministering to the Mabank community?

We are prioritizing outreach in various ways. In the spring we had 30 members go knocking on doors. We have a presence in the community. Recently, we had specific conferences dedicated to reaching students, women, and men. 

What is one thing you are praying will happen over the next year at Grace?

A renewed focus on missions. This past summer, a group from the church went on a domestic mission trip to North Carolina. This was a first for our church. I pray that this will continue. 

What’s one thing you have learned to this point of your life and ministry you know you will never forget?

How difficult it is to maintain healthy boundaries in life and ministry. I have to own my “stuff.” Be quick to repent, forgive, and love. 

How can other SBTC churches be praying for you and your ministry?

Continued faithfulness to keep plodding well. My revised dissertation, based on the theology of preaching of 17th century pastor Benjamin Keach, is being published by Wipf and Stock in 2026. I am beginning the slow work of revision. Pray for sustained personal growth and intimacy with Christ.

Executive board affirms commitment to mobilize SBTC churches to reach Europe with the gospel

LUBBOCK—The Southern Baptists of Texas Convention has taken steps to deepen its commitment to reversing the growing trend of lostness in Europe.

During its Oct. 29 meeting, the SBTC Executive Board approved a $556,000 grant to strengthen its ministry partnership with the International Mission Board. The grant will be used over the next three years to support IMB’s “Everyone Equipped” initiative in Europe.

The scope of the initiative would provide IMB personnel in Europe with coaching, mentoring, and accountability training in an estimated 20 cluster groups from 102 regions. Additionally, it would provide Great Commission training for local believers and funding for a one-time affinity-wide gathering for all IMB field leadership.

“This will not be just a series of trainings, but the development of a culture of coaching, mentoring, and accountability for our workers and local partners,” according to information provided from IMB to the Executive Board. “We trust that as we focus on the Word in the power of the Spirit, the Lord of the harvest will answer our prayers for multitudes of maturing disciples, leaders, churches, and missionaries across Europe.”

In 2023, the SBTC launched a new mission focus—to mobilize churches to multiply disciple-making movements in Texas and around the world. Part of that strategy includes its ministry partnership with the IMB called Reach Europe. In May 2025, 33 pastors and association leaders traveled on a vision tour of Europe to identify opportunities for SBTC churches to mobilize alongside local churches on what IMB considers the most lost continent on the planet.

SBTC churches are already being mobilized through Reach Europe. This past August, members from more than 20 churches traveled to Prague to minister to and encourage approximately 200 missionary children. Additionally, more than a handful of SBTC churches have already stated their intention to travel to Europe in the near future to work with local churches to strengthen them and widen their gospel reach.

Additional Reach Europe vision tours are planned for 2026.

New board officers selected

Wes Hinote, senior pastor of Old River Baptist Church in Winfree, was chosen to serve as board chairman at the Oct. 29 meeting. He replaces Steven Gaither, who is stepping down from the position after announcing he has accepted the call to serve as the new executive director of Highland Lakes Camp and Conference Center.

James Jordan, executive pastor at First Baptist Church Forney, was selected to serve as the board’s vice chairman, filling the role left vacant by Hinote. Averri LeMalle, senior pastor of The Church at Jersey Village, was elected secretary.

Latest Richards endowment recipients announced

Board members learned the latest recipients have been selected for the Jim and June Richards Endowment for Kingdom Advance.

The endowment’s purpose is to support individuals or organizations which promote kingdom causes through religious ministry consistent with the doctrinal statements of the Southern Baptists of Texas Convention. It was established by the Southern Baptists of Texas Foundation in 2021.

Richards, the convention’s founding executive director from 1998 through 2021, said he and his wife made the decisions for this year’s recipients after much prayer and consideration. Those recipients are:

  • The National Hispanic Baptist Network, led by former and longtime SBTC staff member Bruno Molina. Richards said he was excited when Molina accepted the role as the NHBN’s executive director, adding, “He is in a strategic position to influence millions for the cause of Christ.”
  • The La Chapelle Church Planting Network, a movement that has started numerous churches in Montreal, Canada—one of the largest unreached places in North America. “June and I have a special place in our hearts for Montreal,” Richards explained, noting that David Pothier, pastor of La Chapelle Church, has labored to bring the gospel to that area “with integrity and sacrifice.”
  • The June Richards Scholarship Endowment at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, which will be disbursed to support other women to faithfully fulfill the roles to which God has called them as Mrs. Richards has done in her own life. “June—my wife and ministry partner for 52 years—is a Proverbs 31 woman,” Richards said. “She served with me when I was a pastor, church planter, director of missions, and at the SBTC. Her prayers have impacted untold numbers of lives.”

Richards now serves as executive director emeritus. The SBTC grew from 120 churches to more than 2,600 churches during his tenure. Prior to coming to Texas, he pastored for 21 years in Louisiana and then served as an associational executive director in Northwest Arkansas.

Executive Committee expresses support for Credentials Committee’s work

Following the meeting, the SBTC Executive Committee released the following statement:

“We had an amazing annual meeting at Southcrest Baptist Church followed by a great Executive Board meeting as we celebrated what we are seeing God do through our network of churches, including our growing partnership with the IMB in Europe and the many ways our churches are advancing the mission in Texas and beyond. We also wish to express our appreciation in support of the Credentials Committee’s work in faithfully applying our governing documents and look forward to the results of our constitution and bylaws review committee that will begin work in November.”