California Baptists cut staff, citing decline in Cooperative Program Giving

Overall giving to the SBC’s national funding program is down about 2%.

The Southern Baptist Convention annual meeting at the Indiana Convention Center in Indianapolis, June 11, 2024. (RNS Photo/AJ Mast)

(RNS) — The California Southern Baptist Convention, one of 41 regional groups that make up the Southern Baptist Convention, announced this week that it had cut six staff jobs, citing an ongoing decline in giving.

Donations to the state’s Cooperative Program, which funds national, international and state-specific ministries, fell short by $170,000 in the current fiscal year. That 7% shortfall is part of an ongoing decline in giving, according to Baptist Press, an official SBC publication.

State Baptist officials have drawn on reserves to cover shortfalls over the past three years. The staff cuts, including four layoffs and two voluntary retirements, mean the state convention will not need to draw on reserves — as long as giving does not decline.


“The stewardship that God has given me as the Executive Director in assuring we continue to have a healthy and sustainable future is a heavy burden,” Pete Ramirez, the state convention’s executive director said, according to Baptist Press.

Giving overall to the SBC’s Cooperative Program is down just under 2% in the current fiscal year. The SBC’s annual budget called for $148 million in donations to be given to national and international causes, but actual giving to date is $145.4 million, according to a recent report posted by the SBC’s Executive Committee.

The SBC’s Cooperative Program, which turns 100 years old in 2025, is one of the nation’s most successful religious charitable programs, having raised more than $20 billion since its inception. Those funds pay for overseas missions, new church starts, seminary education, disaster relief and other programs.

But giving to the program has declined in recent decades. Southern Baptist churches give less than 5% of their income to the Cooperative Program, down from 10% in the 1980s. And less than 60% of SBC churches give to the program, down from three-quarters in the early 2000s.



The denomination has also lost more than 3 million members since 2006 and has faced a sexual abuse crisis and debates over the role of women in church leadership. The denomination’s Executive Committee also spent several years dealing with leadership turmoil before electing a new permanent leader this spring.

In 2023, the SBC expelled Saddleback Church in Southern California, one of its largest congregations, after that church ordained several women as pastors. At the time, Saddleback was giving $100,000 annually to the Cooperative Program. It’s unclear whether Saddleback remains a member of the California Baptist Convention, or if that congregation still gives to the convention. In either case, the shortfalls in California predate Saddleback’s removal from the SBC.


It’s also unclear if other states are also experiencing Cooperative Program shortfalls. Most of those conventions will hold their annual meetings in the fall. A 2023 report from Baptist Press found that Colorado, Minnesota-Wisconsin and New Mexico conventions also reduced their giving to the program.

The recent Executive Committee report showed that giving remained down in Colorado. However, Mike Proud, that state’s executive director, said that is not the case.

“CP giving is actually up in Colorado there may be some delays related to getting that money to the EC,” he told RNS in an email. “But our giving through June of 2024 is actually up by 2% over last year.”



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