- Baptist General Conference
The Baptist General Conference (BGC) is a national evangelical
Baptist body with roots in Pietism in Sweden and inroads among evangelical Scandinavian-Americans, particularly persons located in the American Upper Midwest. From its small beginning among Scandinavian immigrants, the BGC has grown to a nation wide association of autonomous churches with at least 17 ethnic groups and missions in 19 nations.The "Baptist General Conference" grew out of the great revival of the 19th century, but its roots can be traced back to Swedish
Pietism . In 1852,Gustaf Palmquist emigrated fromSweden to theUnited States . Forty-seven days after his arrival, he and 3 others organized aSwedish Baptist church inRock Island, Illinois .Frederick Nilsson , who was instrumental in leading Palmquist toBaptist views, arrived in America the next year with 21 immigrants. Some of these united with the Rock Island church, while others organized a church atHouston, Minnesota . Nilsson traveled widely, founding and strengthening churches. Anders Wiberg was another pioneer among these churches from 1852 to 1855, when he returned to Sweden as a missionary.Christian experience was a major emphasis among these
Swedish Baptists , and they prospered from the awakenings in the 19th century. Immigration, aggressive evangelism and conversion through revivals brought rapid growth to the denomination.John Edgren founded "Swedish Baptist Seminary" atChicago, Illinois in 1871. In 1879, when the Swedish churches had grown to 65 in number, they formed a General Conference. The members of these churches assimilated into American society and gradually lost their separate ethnic identity. By 1940, most churches were English-speaking. In 1945, the "Swedish Baptist General Conference" dropped "Swedish" from its name and became the "Baptist General Conference of America".Swedish Baptists had maintained an alliance with the American Baptist Publication Society, American Baptist home & foreign missions, etc., and later theNorthern Baptist Convention . Some Swedish Baptists expected to merge with that body, but the groups moved toward different developments of theological emphasis. The conservativeSwedish Baptists pulled back from growing liberalism of the Northern Baptists, and in 1944 formed their own Board of Foreign Missions. This moved them toward independent existence, which they have maintained to the present.The Baptist General Conference operates the Bethel Theological Seminary and Bethel University near
St. Paul, Minnesota , and maintains offices inArlington Heights, Illinois . The official periodical is "BGC World", andHarvest Publications offers a wide range of Christian education material. The Conference labors in national and world missions, with missionaries in Central America, South America, southern Europe, former Eastern Bloc nations, Africa, the Middle East, Central Asia, the Indian subcontinent, and the Asian Pacific rim. John Piper, pastor of Bethlehem Baptist Church inMinneapolis, Minnesota , and leader of "Desiring God Ministries", is perhaps one of the most well known BGC ministers in the 21st century. Bethlehem was organized as the First Swedish Baptist Church of Minneapolis in 1871.In 2006, the BGC had 194,000 members in 950 churches in the United States. These churches are also organized into 13 district bodies - Columbia, Florida/Caribbean, Great Lakes, Heartland, Iowa, Mideast, Michigan, Minnesota, Midwest, Northern California, Northwest, Northeast, Rocky Mountain, and Southwest. The current president of the BGC is Dr. Jerry Sheveland.
There are a further 105 churches in
Canada organized into 5 district bodies. These congregations cooperate together nationally through theBaptist General Conference of Canada .The BGC cooperates with the "
National Association of Evangelicals " led by PresidentLeith Anderson (who also pastors the BGCWooddale Church ), the "Baptist Joint Committee for Religious Liberty ", and theBaptist World Alliance , and was a charter member of the "Evangelical Council for Financial Accountability ".External links
* [http://www.bgcworld.org/ Baptist General Conference] - official Web Site of the BGC
* [http://www.bethel.edu Bethel University] - official web page of Bethel University
* [http://www.seminary.bethel.edu Bethel Seminary] - official web page of Bethel Seminaryources
*"A Centenary History as Related to the Baptist General Conference", by Adolf Olson
*"Religious Congregations & Membership in the United States, 2000", Glenmary Research Center
*"The Baptist Heritage: Four Centuries of Baptist Witness", by H. Leon McBeth
*"Baptists Around the World", by Albert W. Wardin, Jr.
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