Don’t ditch your denomination: Fred Luter

By Fred Luter

In September 1986, my life was changed forever when I was elected as pastor of a dying Southern Baptist Mission called Franklin Avenue Baptist Church.

I grew up in the National Baptist denomination. I was the middle of five kids raised in a home by a single mom who required everyone living in her house to attend church on Sunday mornings!

At the age of 21, I was radically saved while lying in Charity Hospital of New Orleans not knowing if I was going to live the next twenty-four hours because of a serious head wound. A deacon of the church I grew up in, put his finger inches from my face and said without apology, “Boy, obedience is better than sacrifice. If you were obedient to your mom, you would not be sacrificing your life here in this hospital!” That night I asked Jesus Christ to come into my life and woke up the next morning with a commitment to live the rest of my life as a born again Christian.

After getting out of the hospital, I started a street ministry in the neighborhood I grew up in because I wanted everyone to know about this Jesus that turned my life around! While preaching one Sunday at a National Baptist Church, someone mentioned to me that Franklin Avenue was looking for a pastor and asked if I would be interested. I said, “Franklin Avenue is a white church, blacks do not go there!” That’s when I was told about the transitioning neighborhood and how Franklin Avenue was now an African-American congregation. Well, I submitted my resume, and as the saying goes: The rest is history!

After meeting with the pulpit committee several times, I was then scheduled to teach a church-wide Sunday school and preach for the 11:00 a.m. worship service. To this day, I do not remember what my sermon was about! After the service, there was about a 90-minute Q and A time, with 35 to 40 members. Later that evening, I got a call from the pulpit committee chair to inform me that I had been elected as pastor of the Franklin Avenue Baptist Mission.

After hanging up the phone, I was both excited and scared due to the fact that I had never pastored a church before.

Upon becoming the pastor, I was committed to ask for help in all areas I thought could assist us as a church and me as a pastor. And that’s when I first was introduced to the many benefits of the Southern Baptist Convention. I met on a bi-weekly basis with leaders from our local association and then was introduced to professors, staff and facilities at the New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary. Our association trained our Sunday school teachers and ministry leaders, and our seminary provided the space we needed for outreach events.

Because of our growth, within three years, we were able to become an autonomous church. While brainstorming with our church leaders, one of our older members asked a question I did not expect. The question was: Since we are now an autonomous church, why don’t we get out of the Southern Baptist Convention? I was floored by the question and asked, “Why?” I was once again floored when I was told about the history of the Southern Baptist Convention.

I never knew that the convention I was now a part of, started as a result of slavery. After a brief history lesson and intense discussion, I made a statement that I knew came from God. I looked each of those members in their eyes and said, “All of us have a past. All of us have done something in our past that we regret. However, there is nothing we can do about our past, but we can do a whole lot about our future.”

With that said, I then stated a number of reasons why I felt it would be in our best interest to not get out of the Southern Baptist Convention:

  • The SBC allowed us to worship in the building we were in at no cost.
  • The SBC, through our local association, provided training for our ministry leaders without cost.
  • The SBC, through the New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary, allowed us to use the gym and other buildings for outreach events.
  • The SBC stands on the infallibility of the Word of God.
  • The SBC does mission, both local and foreign, better than any other group in the nation.
  • The SBC does disaster relief better than any other group in the nation.
  • The SBC believes in the importance of evangelism.
  • The SBC believes in the importance of discipleship.
  • The SBC believes in the importance of planting churches.
  • The SBC is the most racially diverse convention in the nation.

I then stated, “The SBC is not a perfect convention by any means, but I truly believe that the SBC exists to do the will of God on this earth. So let’s stay with this convention and help to carry out the Great Commission and the Great Commandment of our Lord Jesus Christ!” I then asked for a vote and the vote was unanimous to stay in the Southern Baptist Convention! Looking back on that night, it was, without a doubt, one of the best decisions we have made as a church.

In the following fruitful years, Franklin Avenue Baptist Church became one of the largest churches in our city and state. However, what none of us ever could imagine back at that business meeting, was that one day I would become President of the Southern Baptist Convention! Wow, I am so glad we did not “ditch our denomination!”


Published June 15, 2017

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Fred Luter

Fred Luter is the former president of the Southern Baptist Convention and is currently serving as the senior pastor of Franklin Avenue Baptist Church in New Orleans, Louisiana.