Greenway lays out ‘big-tent’ vision for Southwestern

  |  Source: Baptist Press

Adam Greenway (Southwestern Seminary Photo)

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FORT WORTH (BP)—Evoking the imagery of big-tent revival meetings, Adam Greenway laid out his vision for the future of Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in his first chapel sermon as president.

“I believe Southwestern Seminary historically has been at its best when it’s been known as the big-tent seminary of the Southern Baptist Convention,” Greenway said in the March 21 address.

Greenway explained that just as a tent has four pegs, so Southwestern Seminary holds to four points of conviction and commitment—a high view of Scripture, the Baptist Faith and Message, the Great Commission, and cooperation.

Greenway was unanimously elected as the seminary’s ninth president during a Feb. 26-27 called trustee meeting at the Fort Worth campus.

“I think it’s important to say even in the midst of uncertain, changing, transitional times, some things ought never to change,” Greenway told the chapel audience. “I don’t come in with some radical new vision and complete discontinuity from the glorious 111-year history of the crown jewel seminary of the Southern Baptist Convention.

“If anything, I believe the Lord called me here to help reinvigorate and to retell the great legacy of our seminary for a new generation. That is my passion and my desire as a Southwesterner.”

Addressing the seminary community as well as prospective students attending several on-campus events, Greenway assured the audience that if they find themselves in alignment with four pegs—a commitment to the inerrancy and authority of Scripture; the convictions laid out in the Baptist Faith and Message; preaching, teaching, evangelism and missions; and a spirit of cooperation with one another and especially with the churches of the Southern Baptist Convention—then Southwestern is “a home for your heart. This is the seminary for you.”

“As much as it depends upon me, I want to lead in such a way here that when people come to Southwestern Seminary, even as they’re driving up James Avenue or they’re driving down Seminary Drive, the closer they get to this sacred 200 acres, they sense the power of the Spirit of God. They sense a community of people who love one another,” he said.

‘Diversity on nonessential matters’

Greenway acknowledged that the seminary family does not agree on every matter, but they agree on “the main things,” such as the inspiration of Scripture and the necessity of personal evangelism.


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Furthermore, he said, Southwesterners recognize that “there is a beautiful level of diversity on the nonessential matters that is a reflection and a reminder of what it’s going to look like one day when we stand in the very presence of God in heaven and we sing that new song together—believers from every tribe, every tongue, every nation, every language, every people group singing, ‘Worthy is the Lamb that was slain.’”

Greenway emphasized that a big-tent vision is neither new nor novel; on the contrary, he said, it is the founding vision of the seminary.

“I believe that was the heart of B.H. Carroll and L.R. Scarborough,” Greenway said in reference to the seminary’s founder and second president. “I believe it’s the heart of the New Testament.

“As much as it depends upon me, this is where we’re going to stand,” Greenway said. “And any way that our seminary can serve you, can help you, can equip you, that’s what I desire for our seminary to be….

“Our seventh president, Dr. Ken Hemphill, said that together, we can touch the world and we can impact eternity. That is my prayer. May God bless us, may God use us, may he find us faithful, and may he make us fruitful for his kingdom’s work.”


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