The Baptist State Convention of North Carolina is an autonomous association of Baptist churches in the state of North Carolina. It is one of the state conventions associated with the Southern Baptist Convention. Headquartered in Cary, North Carolina, the convention is made up of 77 Baptist associations and around 4,300 churches as of 2012. The convention is led by three officers, elected annually during the annual meeting of the convention. The three officers elected to serve the convention for 2019 are: President, Rev. Steve Scoggins, First Vice-President, Dr. Micheal Pardue, and Second Vice-President, Rev. Matt Ledbetter. The convention is also led by an Executive Director-Treasurer. The current EDT is Rev. Milton A. Hollifield, Jr who was elected by the convention in April 2006.
History
The Convention was founded on March 26, 1830 in Greenville. One of its thirteen founders was Thomas Meredith, who also helped to draft its constitution. In 1832, the convention established its newspaper, originally a monthly paper called the Interpreter edited by Meredith, but which in 1835 changed to a weekly paper entitled the Biblical Recorder. It was later to be merged with the Southern Watchman, to become the Recorder and Watchman. Also in 1832, the convention resolved to purchase a farm "for the establishment of a Baptist Literary Institution on the Manual Labor Principle". A committee, comprising J.G. Hall, W.R. Hinton, J. Purify, A.S. Wynn, and S. J. Jeffreys was formed to raise USD2,000 for its purchase. This institution was named Wake Forest Institute, which began operation on 1834-02-01, initially serving 25 students. In 1839, this was renamed to Wake Forest College. The Convention acquired Buies Creek Academy in 1925. It still owned it when, in 1979 it became Campbell University. In 1975, after extensive and vigorous discussion, the BSCNC adopted the following resolution, that contributed to it having more women deacons than any other state in the South, apart from Virginia, by 2005:
Today
As of 2000, there were 3,717 Southern Baptist congregations in North Carolina, with 1,512,058 adherents. Agencies included the North Carolina Baptist Foundation, which manages the funds of individuals and organizations, and the Biblical Recorder newspaper, which it purchased in 1930. , there were over 4,300 Southern Baptist congregations in North Carolina.
In 2007, the Executive Committee and Board of Directors of the Convention affirmed a proposal to create a new relationship between the Convention and the five affiliated schools. Messengers approved the proposal at the 2007 annual meeting and gave final approval in 2008, thus allowing the schools to elect all their trustees annually. Direct financial support from the Convention is being phased out incrementally over a four-year period.
Campbell University
Chowan University
Gardner-Webb University
Mars Hill College
Wingate University
The Baptist State Convention also recognizes a historical relationship with the historic educational institutions based on its founding of Wake Forest University, in 1834 and Meredith College in 1898. These institutions do not receive funding from the Convention, nor are their boards and administration members elected by the Convention. They simply acknowledge a historical relationship with their founding body, the Baptist State Convention of North Carolina.