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B&R WEBSITE HITS THE BIG “ONE-OH”

October 28, 2025

Baptist and Reflector

FRANKLIN — The Baptist and Reflector’s website hit a significant milestone this month.

Officially launched in October of 2015, the website — baptistandreflector.org — is celebrating 10 years of service to its readers.

“The B&R website is such an integral part of what we do,” said Chris Turner, editor of the B&R. “It allows us to provide our readers with breaking news in real time. It’s much more than just an augmentation of the print edition; it’s a valuable resource to our readers.” [Read more…]

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93-YEAR-OLD BAPTIZED IN HIXSON

October 27, 2025

Baptist and Reflector

Carson Copp was baptized with his parents, Nate and Allison, and siblings Chloe, Nick, and Harrison.

HIXSON —  Ruth Starkey stood in her grandson-in-law’s swimming pool, surrounded by family and neighbors. At 93, she was about to make a public declaration of faith.

The journey began two years ago when the Nida family from Pleasant Grove Baptist Church started building a relationship with their neighbors, the Copps, hoping to share their faith.

“A year and a half ago, the Copps’ youngest son, a fourth-grader, was the first to attend anything at the church — he came to Vacation Bible School,” pastor Brady Wood told the Baptist and Reflector. [Read more…]

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TURNING SERMONS INTO A GLOBAL MINISTRY

October 24, 2025

By Zoë Watkins
Communications specialist

Paul Leftwich reads his Bible, which he does every day. In the margins are notes he’s written over the decades he’s been in ministry. He now posts his past sermons on Facebook, reaching hundreds of people across the globe.

FRANKLIN — Paul Leftwich lay trapped under a car at 16, the bumper six inches from his neck.

Emergency responders lifted the vehicle off him before it could break his neck. Now 94, he still gets emotional recounting that day.

“I was lost and would be in hell had it not been for the grace of God and a second chance of life,” Leftwich said.

Growing up on a sharecropper’s farm in Sugar Camp Holler near Greenbrier, Tenn., during the 1930s, Leftwich ran with the “wrong crowd.” He served two years in prison for stealing railroad lanterns off boxcars on North First Street in Nashville as a teenager. “I was always a follower, not a leader,” he said. [Read more…]

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EDWINA GRIFFITH’S SUNDAY SCHOOL LEGACY: 70 YEARS OF FAITH

October 23, 2025

By Zoë Watkins
Communications specialist

At 93, Edwina Griffith has been teaching a Sunday school class for over 70 years at First Baptist Church Whitwell.

WHITWELL — Say the name Edwina Griffith around First Baptist Whitwell and chances are everyone will know exactly who she is.

At 93, Griffith still leads the Sunday school class she’s taught for 70 years. She joined the church in 1953 and hasn’t stopped teaching since.

“Being in Sunday school and teaching Sunday school is just a part of life,” Griffith said. “I mean, my Sunday’s already scheduled. I don’t have to worry about what I’m going to do on Sunday.”

Her practical, no-nonsense approach to life’s greatest difficulties — illness, death, financial hardship — counters modern anxiety culture. Her philosophy: Don’t worry and keep going.

“When it looks like everything’s out of control, God is in control,” Griffith said.

Each woman in Griffith’s Sunday school class can recite her sayings: “It is what it is” and “Your character is what you are. Your reputation is what people think you are. Keep them one and the same” — a phrase her father taught her.

From the dairy farm to DuPont

Growing up on a dairy farm in “the valley” taught her many things. As a child, she recorded how many gallons of milk the farm sold, which served as early training for her accounting career at DuPont.

The farm also taught her how to handle life’s sorrows.

“Death is painful, but it’s part of life on the farm,” she said. “You understand that early because of cattle and all the animals.”

That philosophy carried her through her husband’s illness, her sister’s death, raising her sister’s two sons, losing her own son in a car accident, and watching the world move on.

“I wait until I know what it is I need to worry about,” she said.

Through decades of history — the Great Depression, World War II, Korea, Vietnam, the rises and falls of presidencies — her Sunday school class remained constant.

“We’ve been together for so many years, we’ve shared our happiness and we’ve shared our sorrows,” Griffith said.

A calling she didn’t expect

Edwina Griffith sits with members of her Sunday school class, along with pastor Matthew Daniel (back row) at First Baptist Whitwell. “We’ve been together for so many years, we’ve shared our happiness and we’ve shared our sorrows,” Griffith said.

She started teaching by accident — something that happens often in her life.

“I’ve accomplished more through what people thought I could do than what I thought I could do myself,” she said.

O.R. Wagner encouraged her to teach Sunday school around 1955.

“He just was a fine Christian man and saw in me things I didn’t even know was in myself,” she said.

Griffith started teaching a co-ed young adult married class. Dean Mosier joined that class in 1965 and still attends today.

“You can go to her for anything, with confidence,” Mosier said. “She’s encouraged me through family deaths. It’s a small community and we’ve always included each other in everything. She’s our rock.”

Through hardship and loss

As a “Depression kid,” Griffith learned not to waste anything. She grew up without electricity or plumbing, with only oil lamps lighting the night.

During World War II, she listened to war news on the radio while family members served overseas, including a brother-in-law in the Battle of the Bulge. The Army drafted her husband, Phil, during the Korean War in 1953, while seven of her parents’ grandsons served in Vietnam.

She has seen it all, but fear doesn’t grip her.

“In the Bible as we study, God prepares the people for the time in which they live,” she said. “So God’s going to prepare our children and grandchildren and great-grandchildren in the years that they will live.”

When Edwina’s youngest sister died at 24 from cancer, she left behind two boys.

“She asked me to take the two boys. So my husband and I prayed about it, and I told God if he would, I would. And he did. And I did,” she said.

She raised them alongside her three biological children.

Then Phil suffered a heart attack at 40. He couldn’t work for his remaining 16 years, so Edwina became the breadwinner.

“You don’t think about when you get married that you’re going to be the one to be the provider,” she recalled. “I was the provider for the family, and I am known for the statement: It is what it is. My philosophy is life can make you better or bitter. You can’t change it. You didn’t cause it. So you deal with it.”

She worked at DuPont for 37 years, leaving early each morning for the hour commute to Chattanooga, which gave her time to make it back for her kids’ ballgames.

She brags that in all those years driving over Suck Creek Mountain, she only had two wrecks.

She also stayed “civic-minded,” joining American Business Women Association and directing the Marion County Chamber of Commerce. Additionally, she served as First Baptist’s secretary for 17 years and their church clerk for 35 years.

“Life goes on and we need to be thankful for the blessings we had for the person we were with while they were here in our memories instead of feeling so sorry for the loss we have,” she said.

Griffith is a regular reader of the Baptist and Reflector, often using the Sunday school lessons to supplement her teaching.

Still going strong

Today, she fights to stay independent. She jokes, “I can’t see, can’t hear, but got my driver’s license.”

Whitwell suits her well. With a strong church family, Griffith plans to keep teaching Sunday school as long as she can.

“I thought, well, what’s your excuse? You’ve got plenty of time to study. And God has left me with my memory so that I can remember what I studied. And so I’m teaching another year,” she said. “God will use you as long as you’re willing to, as long as you can.”

She reads her Bible every day and relies on Lifeway’s Bible study materials as well as the Baptist and Reflector’s Sunday School lessons every edition. B&R

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Filed Under: Featured, Tennessee

PASTOR APPRECIATION MONTH HAS HISTORY

October 22, 2025

By Carolyn Tomlin
Contributing writer, Baptist and Reflector

Carolyn Tomlin

According to LifewayResearch.com, 314,000 protestant churches operate across the United States (Hartford Institute for Religion Research).

Throughout American history, churches have shaped our nation’s direction, and clergy have served as vital leaders in both congregations and communities.

For generations, churches have supported their pastors and clergy, while congregations have found ways to encourage their leaders.

This tradition of honoring ordained leaders reaches back to biblical times. The apostle Paul wrote that the church elders deserve “double honor, especially preaching and teaching” (I Timothy 5:17). In I Thessalonians 5:12-13, he urged believers to “hold in the highest regard those God has chosen to work among you” and to “love them.”

[Read more…]

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MORRIS H. CHAPMAN, FORMER SBC PRESIDENT, DIES

October 21, 2025

By Erin Roach
Baptist Press

Morris H. Chapman during the 2010 SBC Annual Meeting in Orlando. – Photo from the Southern Baptist Historical Library and Archives

Note: Chapman will be remembered at a memorial service at 2 p.m. Oct. 24 at Triune Baptist Church, located at 8094 Horton Highway in Arrington, Tenn. The memorial service will be livestreamed at Triune Baptist Church’s Facebook page. Crawford Funeral Home is in charge of the arrangements.

NASHVILLE (BP) – Morris H. Chapman, former pastor, former Southern Baptist Convention president, former SBC Executive Committee president and champion of the Cooperative Program, died Monday, Oct. 20, at age 84.

The last SBC Conservative Resurgence president to be opposed by a moderate candidate, Chapman led the Convention to remain focused on the Great Commission as moderates broke away. Under his leadership as EC president, CP giving reached a record high that has yet to be matched.

Chapman was given the honorary title of president emeritus of the Executive Committee upon his retirement in 2010.

“Morris Chapman led with passion and integrity,” said current SBC Executive Committee President Jeff Iorg. “He was a champion for cooperation and our global mission. He was also a friend who encouraged me for many years – including after my election as president of the EC. We honor him and pray for his family in their loss.”

Born in Kosciusko, Miss., on Thanksgiving Day, 1940, Chapman professed faith in Christ at age 7 at First Baptist Church in Laurel, Miss., was called to ministry at age 12 and recognized a call to preach at age 21.

After graduating from Mississippi College, Chapman earned master of divinity and doctor of ministry degrees from Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary. He was ordained to the ministry at Bellevue Baptist Church in Memphis, Tenn., when Ramsey Pollard was pastor.

Chapman served as pastor of four churches during a span of 25 years: First Baptist Church in Rogers, Texas, from 1967-69; First Baptist Church in Woodway, Texas, from 1969-74; First Baptist Church in Albuquerque, N.M., from 1974-79; and First Baptist Church in Wichita Falls, Texas, from 1979-92.

Along the way, Chapman was active in denominational life, serving two terms as president of the Baptist Convention of New Mexico and as a member of the Executive Board of the Baptist General Convention of Texas.

In 1984, Chapman felt a growing burden for revival among Southern Baptists and led First Baptist Wichita Falls to pray by name for each of the 36,000 Southern Baptist churches as well as SBC entities. During that five-month period and beyond, the church received hundreds of responses from across the nation testifying to the impact of the effort.

During Chapman’s pastorate in Wichita Falls, First Baptist was consistently in the top 1 percent of Southern Baptist churches for giving through the Cooperative Program as well as for baptisms. Under his leadership there, CP gifts reached 16 percent of total undesignated receipts and baptisms each year averaged more than 160.

SBC presidency

Chapman, with his family, holds a press conference after being elected SBC president at the 1990 SBC Annual Meeting in New Orleans. – Photo from the Southern Baptist Historical Library and Archives

After serving as president of the SBC Pastors’ Conference in 1986 and preaching the convention sermon at the SBC Annual Meeting in 1989, Chapman’s peers looked to him as the conservative nominee for SBC president in 1990.

While Adrian Rogers in 1979 was the first in a string of conservatives elected over moderate candidates during the Conservative Resurgence, Chapman was the last. His election marked the end of moderates’ attempts to win the presidency, and the following year he ran unopposed.

Chapman appointed two task forces as president: one on spiritual awakening and the other on family ministry. He warned that the “moral fiber of our nation will soon be shredded beyond repair” if the erosion of the family was not reversed.

When moderate Southern Baptists began to explore options for redirecting their Cooperative Program gifts to bypass the SBC Executive Committee, Chapman opposed “any deviation from this proven practice of cooperation.”

In a 1990 address to the Executive Committee, Chapman said, “The two great traditions of Southern Baptists are conservative theology and cooperative methodology. We must remain true to both traditions.”

Moderates officially formed the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship while Chapman was SBC president in 1991, but he kept Southern Baptists focused on the mission. It was at that year’s meeting in Atlanta that Chapman pushed for extending Southern Baptist outreach in the host city for the annual meeting each year. It became a week-long effort and was renamed “Crossover” at Chapman’s suggestion.

During an address titled “It’s Time to Move” at the 1992 SBC Annual Meeting, Chapman said, “In moving to the high ground we move beyond moral infidelity, beyond the merely political, beyond doctrinal ambiguity, beyond division within our ranks, all for the sake of the One who called us unto Himself and set us to His work.”

Executive Committee leadership

The “innovative way” Chapman worked as a strategist during his Convention presidency led the SBC Executive Committee presidential search committee to choose him in 1992.

“We were brought to a firm confidence in him as a man of great strength, who as a Christian statesman has demonstrated God-given skills in the initiation and cultivation of enterprising and unifying approaches to Great Commission advance,” the committee said.

Chapman’s vision, diplomacy, commitment to evangelism and world missions as well as his stalwart support of the Cooperative Program were among the traits they heralded.

With Chapman as its champion, the Cooperative Program, Southern Baptists’ funding system for national and international missions and ministries, regained the strength needed to push into a new century.

CP allocation budget receipts distributed to Convention entities grew by 44 percent during Chapman’s 18 years as EC president. Receipts exceeded the annual CP allocation budget 15 years in a row from 1994 through 2008, falling off slightly during a global economic crisis.

Total giving through CP to state Baptist conventions reached a record high of $548,205,099 in 2007-08. Even without an adjustment for inflation, that is 23 percent higher than the most recent year.

In his role at the Executive Committee, Chapman led the implementation of the Conservative Resurgence vision, preaching throughout the Convention and emphasizing the full authority, inerrancy and infallibility of the Bible.

To prepare Southern Baptists for the 21st century, Chapman initiated a study committee that led to the Covenant for a New Century in 1995, a plan that streamlined Convention entities for improved effectiveness.

As EC president, Chapman in 2002 launched Empowering Kingdom Growth, a call for Southern Baptists to seek first the Kingdom of God and see the Great Commission fulfilled, and in 2007 he introduced Global Evangelical Relations to strengthen relationships with likeminded groups worldwide.

Throughout his ministry, Chapman preached in more than 40 countries and represented Southern Baptists in Oval Office meetings. He published four books on biblical doctrine and pastoral practice.

Julian Motley, who was chairman of the EC presidential search committee at the time Chapman was elected, said at Chapman’s retirement dinner in 2010, “Any attempt to characterize his leadership must take into account his passion to reach people for Christ.”

During one of his final preaching engagements, Chapman reflected on the start of his ministry.

“I told God early on, ‘I cannot preach.’ I remember a few others telling Him that,” Chapman said at a Southwestern Seminary chapel service in 2022. “Do you know what God did? He said, ‘Well, son, we’ll just look at that.’ He said, ‘I think I will call you to preach.’ I said, ‘Oh, no! I can’t stand up in front of all those people and say anything!’ He said, ‘You will.’”

Chapman added that he was an example of “how God can take the common and do with it the uncommon.”

In an interview with Baptist Press upon his arrival at the Executive Committee, Chapman said he made a decision during his first pastorate in Rogers, Texas, that guided the rest of his life.

He resolved “to never to run ahead of God, to make every effort not to take things into my own hands with regard to my fields of ministry. I would try to be faithful to Him on a daily basis and let Him provide for the future,” he told BP.

“God knows my heart, that I’ve decided to do nothing more and nothing less than His perfect will. I have a strong conviction God has a perfect will for His children, that He will honor and bless us as we seek to be obedient.”

Chapman is survived by his wife Jodi, his son and daughter-in-law Chris and Renee Chapman, his daughter and son-in-law Stephanie and Scott Evans, eight grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.

“The best of life is to know wherever you are, whether the world knows your name or not, whether the Convention knows your name or not, whether only your family knows your name and loves you, that God has you exactly where He wants you,” Chapman said at his retirement.

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GREENEVILLE PASTOR RETIRES AFTER NEARLY 55 YEARS IN MINISTRY

October 20, 2025

Baptist and Reflector

Pastor James Kendrick Pierce III at Towering Oaks Baptist Church. 

GREENEVILLE, Tenn. — Pastor James Kendrick Pierce III is retiring after nearly 55 years of ministry, including 35 years leading Towering Oaks Baptist Church.

Pierce, who goes by Tommy, preached his first sermon at age 16 and accepted his first ministry position at Zion Baptist Church in Louisiana two weeks after graduating from Denham Springs High School at age 17.

“I went to church for nine months before I was born,” Pierce said, referring to his upbringing as the son of minister James Pierce.

Pierce led several churches before arriving at Towering Oaks in April 1990. He earned a Bachelor of General Studies in Communications from the University of Kentucky, a Master of Divinity from New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary, and a Doctor of Ministry degree in 1988.

Under his leadership, Towering Oaks grew from one worship service to two before constructing a new worship center that opened Dec. 1, 2002. The church adopted the motto “To Know Him and Make Him Known.”

Pierce became known for preaching without shoes after a 2003 sermon about Moses and holy ground. “What constitutes holy ground?” he asked. “Holy ground is anywhere you meet with God. This is my prayer. That every time I stand behind this desk, we meet with God.” He removed his shoes during that sermon and preached in socks from that day forward.

Since 2020, Pierce has hosted weekday morning devotions at 7:15 a.m., concluding with “Honor God with your thoughts, the places you go, things you do and the words you say.”

Pierce plans to continue leading trips to the Holy Land — his 25th tour is scheduled for February — and will serve as pastor emeritus. He also intends to supply preach, mentor pastors and spend time with his nine grandchildren.

Pierce and his wife, Shelley, have four children: James, Hannah, John and Abigail.

A reception in Pierce’s honor was held Oct. 19 at the church’s Family Life Center. B&R

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SOUTHEASTERN SEMINARY PRESIDENT DANNY AKIN TO RETIRE AFTER 22 YEARS OF LEADERSHIP

October 20, 2025

SEBTS staff

Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary President Danny Akin (Baptist Press File Photo)

WAKE FOREST, N.C. – Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary President Daniel L. Akin announced on Oct. 14 that he will retire from the role at the end of the 2025-2026 school year. His official retirement date is July 31, 2026.

Akin, Southeastern’s longest serving president, made the announcement in a chapel service during the SEBTS Board of Trustees annual fall visit. Reflecting on more than 21 years as president, Akin acknowledged his gratitude to the Lord and to the Southeastern family while also expressing confidence in the direction and leadership of the Southern Baptist Convention’s East Coast seminary. [Read more…]

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QUARTER OF AMERICANS VIEW BIBLE AS ‘JUST ANOTHER BOOK,’ SURVEY FINDS

October 16, 2025

By Diana Chandler
Baptist Press

PHILADELPHIA, Pa. (BP) — Nearly a quarter of U.S. adults think the Bible is “just another book of teachings written by people,” the American Bible Society (ABS) said in its latest release from the 2025 State of the Bible.

More people are skeptical of the Bible’s teachings than those who think the Bible is “totally accurate in all the principles it presents,” ABS said Oct. 14 in releasing the study’s seventh chapter focused on trust.

“A half-century ago, Americans generally trusted the Bible. Attitudes are more complex these days,” John Plake, ABS chief innovation officer and State of the Bible editor-in-chief, said of the findings. “Our latest survey finds a mixture of belief and questioning in the American public.” [Read more…]

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TBDR AIDS RECOVERY EFFORTS FOLLOWING EXPLOSION

October 12, 2025

By David Dawson
Managing editor, Baptist and Reflector

Glynn Jones, chaplain for the DR team from Englewood Baptist Church, passes out food to first responders on Sunday.

BUCKSNORT — With warm words, warm smiles and warm food, Tennessee Baptist Disaster Relief volunteers are aiding the recovery efforts in Hickman County in the aftermath of Friday’s deadly explosion at the Accurate Energetic Systems plant.

Volunteers from Englewood Baptist Church, Jackson, are operating a DR mass feeding trailer on the AES campus, providing meals for first responders and investigators. 

The explosion resulted in at least 16 deaths, according to multiple news outlets, and left behind only remnants of the plant. [Read more…]

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