Remembering Adrian Rogers: Walking in the Footprints of a Giant of the Faith

by: Richard Land - Nov 1, 2005 - comment

I lost a dear friend on November 15, 2005. In the twinkling of an eye, Dr. Adrian Rogers slipped from this world to the glorious presence of his Savior and Lord.

Despite his more than fifty years in the pulpit, Adrian Rogers said he believed the leadership role God afforded him in bringing to fruition the Southern Baptist Convention’s doctrinal reorientation back to its conservative theological roots might be his most significant contribution to the Kingdom. From the pulpit and in his Love Worth Finding television and radio ministry, his message was consistent—God’s Word is all-sufficient. Only God Himself can take measure of the eternal victories that sprang from seeds that Dr. Rogers sowed. He was one of the giants of the faith of any era of the Christian church.

Dr. Rogers’ election as president of the Southern Baptist Convention at the Convention’s annual meeting in 1979 is viewed as the official beginning of what has been called the conservative resurgence, the movement through which the Convention’s liberal drift within its seminaries and other entities would soon be confounded with the election of theologically conservative officials and faculty. He was elected president twice more—in 1986 and 1987—in somewhat calmer conventions as the SBC’s movement back to the conservative orthodoxy of its grassroots membership marched to victory.

There is no question that his conviction that human life is precious and that each of us are made in the image of God changed the hearts and minds of tens of thousands of people. The resurgence allowed for a much clearer—and decidedly more accurate—understanding of what the Bible says on the life issue among Southern Baptists. He was a fierce defender of life and promoter of SBC resolutions that called on Southern Baptists to protect the rights of the unborn, the infirm, and the elderly. He was perhaps the first pastor of a Southern Baptist mega church to speak in support of unborn human life from the pulpit.

Adrian Rogers was perhaps the last half-century’s premier example of an expository preacher who used his gifts to magnify the Lord Jesus Christ. As pastor of Bellevue Baptist Church in suburban Memphis, Tennessee, for thirty-two years, Dr. Rogers was a faithful, eloquent, and engaging expositor of Scripture. Other than Billy Graham, he was perhaps the Southern Baptist Convention’s best known preacher.

Adrian Rogers was the chairman of the committee that proposed revisions of the 1963 Baptist Faith & Message to the SBC in 2000. Under his guidance as chairman, the committee proposed and the Convention agreed that the Baptist Faith & Message should address specifically the sanctity of human life issue. In that process, this sentence was added to “Article XV: The Christian and the Social Order” in the statement of faith: “We should speak on behalf of the unborn and contend for the sanctity of all human life from conception to natural death.”

Dr. Rogers, like most Southern Baptists, including myself, believed the Bible is the inerrant, infallible Word of God. And when you believe that, you must acknowledge its authority in all aspects of life.

Prior to the conservative resurgence in the Southern Baptist Convention, the entity that I now head was defending abortion rights. A brochure designed for distribution in Southern Baptist churches said abortion might be wrong but “sometimes it may be the lesser of two available evils.” A former president of the Christian Life Commission (now the Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission) was a strong supporter of abortion rights. He also opposed, unsuccessfully, the placement of a Sanctity of Human Life Sunday in January on the SBC’s denominational calendar in the 1980s.
Two years before the infamous Roe v. Wade decision, messengers to the Southern Baptist Convention adopted a resolution that expressed support for legalized abortion in cases of “severe fetal deformity” and where the pregnancy could damage the “emotional, mental, and physical health of the mother.” Three years later, the Convention revisited the issue and reaffirmed the 1971 pro-choice resolution.

Thanks to the sacrifice and boldness of Dr. Rogers and many others, the Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission, along with every other SBC entity and seminary, now advocates a clear pro-life ethic. As a former SBC president, Dr. Rogers was instrumental in supporting the founding in 1984 of a group called Southern Baptists for Life, an association of pioneering Southern Baptists who offered a perspective that stood in sharp juxtaposition to the views being espoused by many who were still in SBC leadership at that time.

The Southern Baptist Convention has come a long way in affirming God’s Truths in our faith and in our families. Dr. Adrian Rogers played a critical role in that monumental effort. Only in heaven will we know the full impact of Dr. Rogers’ ministry—how many physical and spiritual lives were saved because of his preaching. We are walking in the footprints of this giant of the faith.

In 1979, as president of the Southern Baptist Convention, he called Southern Baptists home to their denomination’s historic, orthodox roots; on Nov. 15, 2005, God called a faithful Adrian Rogers home. A Prince of Preachers is now in the presence of the Prince of Peace, having heard, “Well done, thy good and faithful servant.” The world—and now heaven—will never be the same for his presence.

Further Learning

Learn more about: Faith, Bible, Life, Abortion

Post a Comment




Notify me of follow-up comments?

Comments are moderated to preserve the family-oriented nature of this website and in an attempt to avoid comment spam. We welcome opposing viewpoints, and we will not turn comments away as long as your views are presented with respect to everyone.

Your comments will not appear immediately and are subject to editing or deletion. We will make every attempt to check new comments in a timely manner, though there will likely be delays on the weekends and around holidays.

Please follow the these guidelines to insure your comments will be posted:

  1. Use a real name, at least a real first name. We find folks are less-rude online when not hiding behind a screen-name.
  2. Name-calling and vulgar-language will not be tolerated. Zero-tolerance is our policy. We will not spend time editing profanity. If it contains foul language, your post will be deleted. Oh, and we decide what is and what is not vulgar.
  3. Comments must be on topic. General comments (compliments, complaints, and otherwise) are best delivered here or expressed on your own personal Web site.

Other than that, we welcome you and hope to see thoughtful discussions here at FaithandFamily.com