Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Rev. Jerry Young, pastor of New Hope Baptist Church in Jackson, Mississippi, gives his farewell address as outgoing president of the National Baptist Convention, USA, which is the nation's largest ...
NBCUSA President Rev. Jerry Young, a Mississippi pastor, preaching at a March 2020 event featuring President Joe Biden. Young, who has led the nation's largest Black Baptist denomination for 10 ...
Connecticut pastor Rev. Boise Kimber, president-elect of the National Baptist Convention, USA, and Mississippi pastor Rev. Jerry Young, outgoing president of the Nashville-based denomination ...
From 2015 to 2016, President Jerry Young collaborated with the Southern Baptist Convention on racial reconciliation. [ 31 ] [ 32 ] Meeting with President Ronnie Floyd of the SBC, 10 pastors from each convention were assembled to discuss race relations; in 2016, Young revealed several difficulties surrounding racial reconciliation to The New ...
The church celebrated its 170th anniversary on March 4, 2016, with an event where the guest speaker was Reverend Dr. Jerry Young, President of the National Baptist Convention, USA, Inc. [2] Reverend Richard Sneethen. The church membership in 2016 was about 1,500, with about 750-900 attending services weekly.
National Baptist Convention, USA, Inc. Baptist: 1880 President Dr. Jerry Young Montgomery, Alabama, United States United States 7,500,000 [25] The second largest Baptist denomination in the world. It is considered a black church with its membership being largely African American. Nigerian Baptist Convention: Baptist: 1915
Rev. Jerry Young, pastor of New Hope Baptist Church in Jackson, Mississippi, gives his farewell address as outgoing president of the National Baptist Convention, USA, which is the nation's largest ...
Raised Southern Baptist, but left the Convention due to disagreement with its conservative positions. [4] Working with Jimmy Carter to conduct "Celebration of a New Baptist Covenant" meeting of over 30 liberal Baptist denominations and organizations in the US and Canada, which was held in Atlanta, January 30—February 1, 2008. [5] [6]