June 26, 2008
Full
Gospel Baptists mark rapid growth
By Greg
Garrison
© 2008
Religion News Service
BIRMINGHAM,
Ala. — The Full Gospel Baptist Church Fellowship International marked nearly 15
years of rapid growth on Tuesday (June 24) by consecrating nine new bishops and
celebrating its blend of black Baptist and Pentecostal theology.
"They have called us
`Bapticostals,'" said Bishop Andy Lewter of Amityville, N.Y., the keynote
preacher for the consecration service that drew more than 1,000 people.
"Those who joked and pointed fingers 15 years ago, they ain't laughing no
more."
The Full Gospel Baptist
Fellowship has been growing fast since its founding in New Orleans in 1994 by
Presiding Bishop Paul S. Morton Sr., who relocated to Atlanta after Hurricane
Katrina in 2005.
"It was founded to
bridge the gap between the Baptists and Pentecostals," said Doris Stokes,
a member of Morton's church, Changing a Generation Full Gospel Baptist Church
in Decatur, Ga.
Morton's wife, Debra, was
recently named senior pastor of his former pulpit at St. Stephen's Full Gospel
Church in New Orleans.
Although some churches have
left traditional Baptist denominations to join the movement, newly consecrated
Alabama Bishop Freddrick Andre Hardy said it's not a rivalry.
"We're trying to let
them know we're not in competition," Hardy said. "We're all God's
children. One should be free to experience all of God. We don't say the
traditional Baptist church is less saved than we are. We believe there is more
to experience."
That would include speaking
in tongues, which is usually discouraged in Baptist churches but embraced in
Pentecostalism as a sign of the Holy Spirit.
Beyond theology, the Full
Gospel Baptist Fellowship emphasizes evangelistic outreach and numerous social
ministry programs.
"Our assignment is to
change a generation," Hardy said. "We're going to reach out in our
communities and show the love of Christ."