The Cooperative Program
The Cooperative Program is Southern Baptists’ unified plan of giving through which cooperating Southern Baptist churches give a percentage of their undesignated receipts in support of their respective state convention and the Southern Baptist Convention missions and ministries.
NAMB uses Cooperative Program gifts in a multitude of ways:
- Evangelism resources and events
- Support missionaries and their ministries
- Endorse and train chaplains
- Sustain ministry centers
- Meet administrative and operational needs
These funds are used all year long and allocated to where the needs are the greatest.
How does the Cooperative Program Work?
It begins with you!
You give yourself first to God (II Cor. 8:5). Next, out of gratitude and obedience to God for what He has done for you, you commit to give back to Him, through your church, a portion of what He provides. This is commonly called a tithe and represents ten percent of your income (Lev. 27:30, Mal. 3:10).
Your Church decides the next step. Your church prayerfully decides how much of its undesignated gifts will be committed to reaching people in your state and around the world through the Cooperative Program. This amount is then forwarded to your state or regional Baptist convention.
Messengers at the State Convention Annual Meetings from your church and other churches across the state/region decide what percentage of Cooperative Program gifts contributed by local congregations stay in your state to support local missions and ministries. The percentage to be forwarded to the SBC Executive Committee for North American and international missions and other SBC entity ministries is also determined at this time.
Messengers at the Southern Baptist Convention Annual Meeting from across the country decide how the gifts received from the states will be distributed among SBC entities. These gifts are used by SBC entities to send and support missionaries, train pastors and other ministry leaders; provide relief for retired ministers and widows; and address social, moral and ethical concerns relating to our faith and families.
The bottom line – people around the world hear the gospel and receive Christ!
Why Southern Baptists Embrace the Cooperative Program
- It presents a unified and comprehensive budget, throwing a funding blanket over statewide, national and international missions and ministries.
- It provides a long‐term sustainability for our entities. When a church makes their missions giving as a percentage of their church budgets, it provides consistency and stability.
- It adheres to our long-term Baptist principle that “we can do more together than alone.”
- The Cooperative Program mitigates competition between entities, thereby allowing a balanced Acts 1:8 Strategy.
- It levels the playing field and makes a place at the table for small and ethnic churches. Every church can stand hand in hand, shoulder to shoulder, on level ground, as partners in the gospel (large churches, small churches, new churches, growing churches, graying churches, and ethnic churches).
How Does a Church Give to the Cooperative Program?
A church contacts its state convention office for information on how to give. The state can send forms and envelopes to the church for mailing gifts. Some state conventions also offer online giving after an online account is created.
How Can a Church Find Its State Convention Office?
All state and regional conventions are listed on the SBC directory page.
Are Promotional Resources Available?
To help promote the offering in your church, you can find multiple resources on the SBC website.
The History of the Cooperative Program
Since its inception in 1845, the SBC has always had one mission —the Great Commission (Matt. 28:19-20). To fulfill its assigned part of this divine mandate, each SBC entity made special offering appeals to the churches. This method was referred to as the “societal” approach to missions and resulted in severe financial deficits, competition among entities, overlapping pledge campaigns, and frequent emergency appeals which greatly hampered the expanding ministry opportunities God was giving Southern Baptist. Some entities took out loans to cover operating costs until pledges or special offerings were received.
In 1919, the leaders of the SBC proposed the 75 Million Campaign, a five‐year pledge campaign that, for the first time, included everything – the missions and ministries of all the state conventions as well as that of the Southern Baptist Convention. Though falling short of its goals, a God‐given partnership of missions support was conceived – The Cooperative Program. Since its launch in 1925, the effectiveness of the Cooperative Program has been dependent upon individuals, churches, state conventions, and SBC entities cooperating, working toward a common goal of sharing the gospel with every person on the planet.