PHOENIX — Brad Graves, pastor of First Baptist Church in Ada, Okla., will be nominated for president of the Southern Baptist Convention Pastors’ Conference, according to an announcement by Missouri pastor Malachi O’Brien.
O’Brien, SBC second vice president and pastor of prayer and church revitalization at First Baptist Church in Raytown, Mo., stated in an April 13 announcement to Baptist Press Graves “is a leader that God is using mightily.”
“Just recently, First Baptist Church of Ada experienced the presence of God in historic measure,” O’Brien said. “During the Ada Awakening, they saw 200 people come to faith in Christ and more people baptized in a few short weeks than their church had seen in the last two and a half years combined. They saw several hundred students gather to worship, and the revival has made an impact across that community.”
BP reported in March that a multi-day event in February called “Awaken Ada” yielded more than 65 baptisms. The congregation told BP today (April 17) it has recorded 103 baptisms thus far in 2017 — up from 29 during the entire preceding year, according to data from the SBC’s Annual Church Profile (ACP). The congregation’s reported average attendance of 550 in 2016 has increased to approximately 700, the church said.
A former North American Mission Board church planter in California, Graves served in 2005-06 as director of new church plants for NAMB’s Strategic Focus City initiative in Cleveland. He has pastored or served on staff at churches in Missouri, Arkansas, New Hampshire and Virginia.
Graves’ pastorate at Calvary Baptist Church in Joplin, Mo., coincided with an EF5 tornado that struck the city in 2011, killing 158 people. In response, Graves “led his church to be a major contributor to restoring his broken city,” O’Brien said.
O’Brien said Graves “is highly relatable. He is a leader. He is a rebuilder. He has the heart of a pastor. He has the heart of a church planter. He understands the needs of pastors of large and small churches, missionaries and denomination(al) employees. He has a spectrum of experience that leads him to identify with all the diversity within our denomination.”
First Baptist gave 12 percent of its undesignated receipts through the Cooperative Program in 2016, according to ACP data confirmed by the church.
Graves earned a bachelor of arts degree from Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary’s undergraduate college and is pursuing a master of divinity at Southeastern.
He and his wife Becky have four children. The death of a fifth child prompted Becky Graves to start a ministry for families who have experienced the loss of an infant or unborn child.
Graves’ nomination is the first to be announced for the SBC Pastors’ Conference. (BP)
David Roach