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June 2010 Issue
A New Look at the EKG Initiative
by Kenneth S. Hemphill
 If
you have been involved at any level in the Southern Baptist Convention
over the last decade you have, no doubt, heard about EKG,
which is short for Empowering Kingdom Growth. It
is an initiative undertaken by the Southern Baptist Convention
in June of 2002 that challenged individuals and churches to look
at themselves and ask whether they had Kingdom focus. It could
be stated simply with the question "Does my heart
reflect the heart of God?"
An Historical Overview
I was the president of Southwestern Seminary when I first began
to hear about Empowering Kingdom Growth early in
2002. In truth, the idea of developing a renewed passion for the
King and His Kingdom had been percolating in the hearts of several
SBC leaders for several years. The South Carolina Convention under
the leadership of Carlisle Driggers launched an EKG
initiative in the early 90s. Its design was simple, but its impact
was profound. It challenged churches to develop a renewed focus
on the King and His mandate to reach the nations. It spawned a
renewed emphasis on evangelism and church planting. A statewide
assessment in the late 90s indicated that the emphasis had resulted
in a united focus, increased baptisms, giving, and church planting
across the state.
In 2000, Dr. Morris Chapman appointed a committee made up of
four state executives and four members of the Great Commission
Council (heads of the various SBC entities) to study how we could
improve cooperation across the entire Convention. This committee
was called the Task Force on Cooperation, and its assignment was
to explore avenues for how the churches, state conventions, and
the SBC entities could better work together for the completion
of the Great Commission. Out of those meetings the idea of a national
EKG emphasis was born.
I can still remember two of those early meetings when the idea
was still in a formative stage. As a seminary president, I was
privileged to meet with other entity heads as a member of the
Great Commission Council. Dr. Chapman began to share with us what
he sensed God was laying on the heart of the Task Force on Cooperation
to recommend to the entire Convention. Later, members of the Great
Commission Council were invited to Albuquerque to meet with all
the state convention executive directors, and several men were
invited to present papers related to the biblical emphasis on
the Kingdom of God and what it might mean if Southern Baptists
would join in a great effort to focus on taking the message of
the Kingdom across North America and to the ends of the earth.
I remember the excitement I felt as I heard about an initiative
that was founded on scriptural principles and had as its goal
the fulfillment of the Great Commission.
In a 2010 letter to Roger S. (Sing) Oldham, SBC Executive Committee
vice president for Convention Relations, Driggers reflected on
those historic days.
"As the 20th century was drawing to a close and the 21st
century was approaching, Dr. Chapman became keenly aware of the
need for Southern Baptists to project a clear, biblically based
vision for the years ahead. He spoke of that need openly as he
preached in various settings, wrote articles, and talked privately
with friends and associates.
"His concern prompted him to put in place a task force
of Southern Baptist Convention entity leaders plus state convention
executive directors to pray, study, and develop a potential vision
for Southern Baptists across the nation and around the world.
After several months of praying, reading materials of interest,
attending task force meetings at various locations across the
country, and engaging in conference calls, the time came for the
group to reach a conclusion. Should we proceed with our challenging
assignment and if so, what vision was God giving us to share with
Southern Baptists?
"I vividly recall being at one of those meetings in a
conference room at a hotel near the Atlanta airport when Morris
urged the task force to move forward with our daunting challenge.
He began to speak out of his own heart and reflection about a
potential vision for Southern Baptists that would be based squarely
on Jesus' call to His followers in Matthew 6:32-33. That call
was to 'Seek first the Kingdom of God.' In response Dr. Jerry
Rankin, president of the International Mission Board, said out
loud, "That is a vision which will never end until Jesus
comes again!" Dr. Rankin's observation seemed to bring the
matter to a close. It was a tender, spiritual experience for everyone
in the room."
In his 2002 address to the Southern Baptist Convention, Chapman
enunciated the vision and prayer of the EKG Task
Force.
"Empowering Kingdom Growth is not a program,
but a vision. We are praying for God to transform this vision
into a grassroots spiritual movement that sweeps our hearts clean
and takes a broom to the streets and gutters of the world. We
are praying for the back streets of sin to be cleansed. We are
praying for lost souls to confess their sins and let Jesus wash
them away by His shed blood.
"Empowering Kingdom Growth is an appeal
for spiritual renewal in individuals and churches. The acronym
for Empowering Kingdom Growth is EKG!
A medical EKG measures the health of the human heart.
God wants healthy Christians to worship and serve Him in a healthy
church. We believe God is calling us to make an appointment with
the doctor for a spiritual check-up. Will you take your soul and
your church to see the Great Physician? Will you ask God to heal
you if there is dullness of hearing and dimness of sight?"
The recommendation of the committee was unanimously approved
by the Southern Baptist Convention that year. The Task Force on
Cooperation now began to function as the EKG Task
Force. I am always amazed at how God orchestrates events, and
we often can't see His hand at work until we are able to look
back over history. In 2000, God had already begun to move my heart
to deepen my own prayer life. I began to write The Prayer of
Jesus which was published by Broadman and Holman in 2001.
While writing this book, I was challenged to consider what it
meant to pray, "Your Kingdom come."
In studying the entire context of the Lord's Prayer, I was
confronted anew by a verse which had been my life verse since
I was a freshman in college: But seek first the kingdom of
God and His righteousness, and all these things will be provided
for you (Matthew 6:33). I began to rigorously examine my own
life to seek if I was seeking with "highest priority"
the Kingdom of God. This caused me to look at my own ministry
and ask if my gifts and strengths were being used for the greatest
Kingdom impact. Little did I know that this self-examination would
lead me to leave Southwestern Seminary and move to Nashville to
become the national strategist for Empowering Kingdom Growth
in July of 2003.
Developing a National Strategy
From the very beginning, Dr. Chapman and the EKG
steering committee encouraged me to develop a national strategy
that would assist churches to develop Kingdom focus and a clear
Kingdom strategy. They insisted that it should not be a program
or slogan but a passionate focus on Scripture that led to a transformed
heart, creating a passion for God's Kingdom.
This desire resonated with what God had already been doing
in my own life. I am convinced that nothing changes anyone's
heart and mind but the Word of God applied by the Spirit of God.
For that reason I began to read and re-read the Bible focusing
on the concept of God's Kingdom. From my study, the book EKG:
The Heartbeat of God was written and published by Broadman
and Holman. It focused on the theme of the King and His Kingdom
as it ran throughout the Scripture. Three threads repeated themselves
God desires a people who will embody His name, embrace
His mission, and obey His Word. His plan is to work through these
people to reclaim the earth for its rightful King. This "Great
Commission Kingdom" theme runs throughout the pages of Scripture.
In order to make these biblical truths available to the man and
woman in the pew a forty-day study was developed.
The design and desire of this first forty-day study was to
transform the heart. It is my conviction that no significant change
can occur in the life of the individual or the church until the
heart is first transformed. Yet, we have had other studies that
resulted in heart transformation but the impact was often short-lived
both in the life of the individual and in the church. That led
to the development of Eternal Impact: The Passion of Kingdom
Centered Communities. This book focuses on the book of Acts
and several of Paul's letters to the early churches and challenges
us to ask about God's design for His church. This study's design
is to impact how we think about church. Often our thinking is
self-centered, assuming that the church is designed to meet my
needs and make me comfortable until Jesus returns. Yet the Bible
makes it clear that the church is designed and empowered to reflect
God's fullness to a lost and dying world. Once again the task
force determined that study guides needed to be made available
for local church study.
Two other tools have been developed to provide the "resources
for Kingdom advance." The first was Making Change: A Transformational
Guide to Christian Money Management. This book was given high
priority because a task force made up of state executives was
looking to see how we could give greater visibility to the Cooperative
Program as the tool by which we could provide the resources to
complete the Great Commission. This book was the first of its
kind to include principles of Christian money management, stewardship,
and an explanation of how the Cooperative Program works. Pastors
would often complain that their people no longer understood or
appreciated the Cooperative Program. Once again a forty-day study
tool was made available, and this time a youth study guide was
created based on the conviction that we must teach our young people
biblical principles of money management before they left for college.
A fourth tool has now been made available entitled You Are
Gifted: Your Spiritual Gifts and the Kingdom of God. This
thirteen-week study is designed to mobilize laity for ministry
to the King by discovering, developing, and deploying their gifts
through the church to advance the Kingdom. Twenty percent of the
average congregation does 85 percent of the ministry. We will
never be effective in Kingdom advance until we radically change
these percentages that demonstrate the lack of understanding of
our role in the advance of the Kingdom of God.
Anecdotal Stories
From the very beginning, stories from participating churches
gave us great encouragement that the EKG process
was producing the results for which we had been praying. Sam Gore,
pastor of Macedonia Baptist Church, led his small rural church
through EKG. It changed the entire focus of the
church. A new 12,000 square foot family life center was constructed
and the youth group grew to twenty-eight in number. What startled
everyone was the impact on giving. The church quadrupled its CP
giving, tripled its associational giving, and experienced record-breaking
giving to the church budget. This prompted Sam to invite me to
the association to present the process to all the local churches.
The associational model continues to be the most effective model.
Matt Sams began his ministry at FBC Fort Stockton, Texas, by
studying EKG with the deacons. From the study a
deacon family ministry plan began and the budget was increased
by 20 percent and seven new ministries.
Ed Emmerling, a pastor in Flint, Michigan, led his church through
the EKG study and then followed it up with Eternal
Impact. Families are being changed and the mission passion
of the church has been transformed. People are giving sacrificially
for world missions and feeling a call to fulltime missions. As
the church has focused on the Kingdom instead of itself, God has
sent more people to the church than they would have ever experienced
if they had focused on growing their own church.
Rob Sumrall of Franklin Crossroads Baptist Church in Cecilia,
Kentucky, began the Making Change study during January
2009. They experienced several snowy Sundays and still had their
largest Sunday School attendance ever. The church had just passed
the most aggressive budget increase in their history just before
the economy crashed. In spite of some pressure from a few members,
they decided they would not cut back on the budget or their CP
giving. They surpassed their budget goal that year and the trend
continues. This church was among the first to begin the You
Are Gifted study early this year.
In spite of the growing number of positive testimonies, we
wanted substantial evidence that the process was making a difference.
One can amass anecdotal stories based on nearly any study or process
that is used by a church. Can we actually substantiate the growth
claims with hard data?
The Louisiana Story
When David Hankins went to serve as executive-director of the
Louisiana Convention, he took the EKG process with
him. In 2006, Louisiana launched their EKG initiative
with sixty-five pilot churches. Now in its fourth year, 249 churches
have completed at least one phase of the EKG-LA
initiative.
Recently, the Louisiana Baptist Convention researched the 2006-2009
trends associated with EKG churches and compared
those with those churches that have not-yet engaged in EKG.
They found several relevant and significant statistics that demonstrate
the value of the EKG process.
EKG
churches tend to baptize twice as many as not-yet EKG
churches.
Giving
through the local church tends to average 13 percent higher for
EKG churches.
In 2009,
EKG churches gave on average 41 percent more to
the Lottie Moon Christmas Offering than the same churches
did in 2006. In comparison, not-yet EKG churches
increased giving by 12 percent.
In 2009,
EKG churches gave an average of 33.45 percent more
to the World Hunger Offering than they did during 2006.
During the same period the not-yet EKG churches
increased by 15.25 percent. These increases in giving in all categories
were deemed to be especially significant in the light of recent
economic conditions.
The task force members were greatly encouraged to see statistical
evidence that the process works and God uses His Word to transform
the hearts and minds of His people.
The Future of EKG
As I reflect over these few short years of the EKG
emphasis and how God has used it, I can only be encouraged that
the Southern Baptist Convention made a bold and visionary decision
when it decided to challenge people and churches to focus on God's
Kingdom. With our renewed emphasis on the Great Commission through
the work of the Great Commission Task Force, it appears to me
that we have a bright missional future. I believe that the EKG
process and its accompanying material provides the biblical tools
for helping churches to renew their passion for the Great Commission
and their vision for expanding the Kingdom to the ends of the
earth. If our statistical evidence from the Louisiana Convention
holds true in other states, associations, and churches, we can
anticipate a flood of resources for Great Commission advance.
What else would we expect? You do remember the promise of the
King: But seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness,
and all these things will be provided for you (Matthew 6:33).
Kenneth S. Hemphill is a member of First
Baptist Church in Hendersonville, North Carolina, and is the SBC
national EKG strategist.
For useful resources and more information
about Empowering Kingdom Growth go to EmpoweringKingdomGrowth.net.
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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