Baptist Bible Fellowship International
PO Box 191
Springfield, MO 65801
United States
37.2154752, -93.294718
Organized on May 24, 1950, in Fort Worth, TX, the Baptist Bible Fellowship was founded by about 100 pastors and lay people who had grown disenchanted with the policies and leadership of the World Fundamental Baptist Missionary Fellowship, an outgrowth of the Baptist Bible Union formed in Kansas City in 1923 by fundamentalist leaders from the Southern Baptist, Northern Baptist and Canadian Baptist Conventions. The BBF elected W. E. Dowell as its first president and established offices and a three-year (now four-year with a graduate school) Baptist Bible College.
The BBF statement of faith was essentially that of the Baptist Bible Union, adopted in 1923, a variation of the New Hampshire Confession of Faith. It presents an infallible Bible, belief in the substitutionary death of Christ, his physical resurrection and his premillennial return to earth. It advocates local church autonomy and strong pastoral leadership and maintains that the fundamental basis of fellowship is a missionary outreach. The BBF vigorously stresses evangelism and the international missions office reports 901 adult missionaries working on 110 fields throughout the world.
There are BBF-related churches in every state of the United States, with special strength in the upper South, the Great Lakes region, southern states west of the Mississippi, Kansas and California. There are seven related colleges and one graduate school or seminary.
A Committee of Forty-Five, elected by pastors and churches within the states, sits as a representative body, meeting in three subcommittees, each chaired by one of the principal officers-an administration committee chaired by the president, a missions committee chaired by a vice-president and an education committee chaired by a vice-president.
Membership
Full Communicants | Average Attendance | Other Members | Total Inclusive Members | Total Churches | Membership Calculation Method | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2010 | 110,000 |
110,000 |
4,000 |
|||||
2009 | 115,000 |
115,000 |
4,200 |
|||||
2003 | 1,200,000 |
1,200,000 |
4,500 |
|||||
2002 | 1,200,000 |
1,200,000 |
4,500 |
|||||
1997 | 1,200,000 |
1,200,000 |
4,500 |
|||||
1995 | 1,500,000 |
1,500,000 |
3,600 |
|||||
1994 | 1,500,000 |
1,500,000 |
3,600 |
|||||
1992 | 0 |
1,500,000 |
3,500 |
|||||
1986 | 0 |
1,405,900 |
3,449 |
|||||
1985 | 1,400,900 |
1,400,900 |
3,409 |
Clergy
Serving Churches | Retired | Other Service to the Church | Total Clergy | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2010 | 4,000 |
150 | 40 |
4,190 |
||
2009 | 4,200 |
100 | 40 |
4,340 |
||
2002 | 7,500 |
|||||
1986 | 3,400 |
4,500 |
||||
1985 | 3,400 |
4,500 |
Education
Total Schools | Staff | Pupils | Total Individuals | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2010 | 4,000 |
|||||
2009 | 4,200 |
|||||
2002 | 4,500 |
|||||
1985 | 3,400 |
750,000 |
Finance
Total Benevolences | Total Financials | Total Giving | Local Expenses | Method | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
There is no data yet |