Ascent curators convene for shared learning, planning, and worship
← All News & resources

Ascent curators convene for shared learning, planning, and worship

Missions movement taking a more defined shape

March 28, 2025
This is some text inside of a div block.

EDITOR’S NOTE: This article was originally written by Calli Keener for The Baptist Standard and was adapted and used, with permission, for BGAV publication.

 

(ALEXANDRIA, Va.)—A “movement” focused on re-engaging North America with the gospel that has been brewing for almost a decade is beginning to take a more defined shape.

On March 18-20, 2025, Dennis Wiles, pastor of First Baptist Church in Arlington, Texas, and chair of the Ascent council, welcomed around 200 invited participants—called curators—to the second formative gathering of Ascent, hosted by First Baptist Church of Alexandria, Virginia, a BGAV-participating congregation.

When asked when the movement began, Wiles said he “would say it began when Jesus ascended into the heavens and gave the church this message and this mission.” However, the Ascent council, a group of eight at the time, first began conversations in 2016.

Dennis Wiles addresses attendees at the Ascent Curators gathering.

The initial group included Texas and Virginia Baptists, who felt like they’d lost their denominational home beyond their local and state affiliations—particularly the national and international missions agencies of their denomination.

Chris Backert, senior director of Ascent and BGAV’s associate executive director, explained when the group who envisioned Ascent began meeting to talk about a new way to cooperate for the gospel mission, they recognized the world was heading into a time of rupture.

They observed this era of upheaval was evident in social-political shifts and uneasiness. And the council began to wonder if this upheaval might be the sort of upheaval God sometimes uses to bring in a new season of revival in the church.

Starting with the gospel

Backert said they asked themselves: “What if we don’t start with the church? What if we started with the gospel?”

The early council decided to look at things from the perspective not of what does the church need, but of what does the gospel need in order to re-evangelize North America, “and we worked backwards from there.”

As they began to talk about that, “a great unity came around the idea that we really need a fresh evangelization, reengagement, awakening, whatever word you prefer. We really need a fresh outpouring of the Holy Spirit to see new generations come to faith in Christ all over North America. That’s the gospel need.”

COVID-19 slowed Ascent’s development but accelerated centrist believers’ sense of loss of ecclesial identity for the sake of the mission, Backert said. “People feel not home in their own home … and yet we feel this need, we really want to re-engage North America with the gospel.”

“I’m sure to many people Ascent feels like a seed that had been planted in the ground, and we’ve been waiting to see it emerge,” he commented. “After many years, the rainy season has come, and what was planted in the past is emerging at just the right time in the present. If this past week is a foretaste of what is to come, then our biggest hopes may indeed come true.

Backert said coming out of the season of rupture exacerbated by COVID, “we’re in a season of realignment—and you can see this playing out all over the world—and we’re in a season of ecclesial realignment.”

The gathering of individuals of diverse ecclesial backgrounds with a common gospel goal “couldn’t even have been conceived of 10 years ago,” Backert noted, but “in 2025, it makes perfect sense.”

It became clear in the years of dreaming about this new network, a sense of disenfranchisement from denomination was not limited to moderate Baptists in two states, Wiles explained.

Centrists across denominational lines were finding themselves in a similar place of loss.

Wiles said he’d been praying God would use the gathering—this new group assembled from orthodox, centrist Christians from a variety of denominational backgrounds—to discern together what God is up to in this time. As in J.R.R. Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings, “the old alliances have died.” And in this time of realignment, “it’s time for new alliances that make sense for the days ahead,” he asserted.

Backert explained Ascent is a voluntary, or “opt-in” network—“a cooperation of the willing”—but with the framework of a covenant to provide stability. The guiding covenant comes from the Capetown Commitment of the Lausanne Movement.

Based on the “connectionalism” that led to conventions, conferences, dioceses or other forms of association, Ascent aims to provide a common future for previously disparate groups—cooperating to re-evangelizeNorth America and beyond.

“We’re trying to walk and work together for the sake of the Great Commission,” Backert said.

But Ascent is not going to look like what has been seen before, because it’s composed of individuals who may share a common future, but who do not share a common past, Backert said.

Wayne Faison, BGAV’s executive director, found encouragement and energy in the discussion and diversity during the gathering, which took place at the same location as BGAV’s 2024 annual meeting.

“The focus of that meeting was ‘Free Indeed,’” Faison recalled, “and we’re actually experiencing that as we are releasing Ascent to be all that God would have it to be—moving into this new season, attempting to re-evangelize North America, sowing the good news.”

“And that good news has been my experience here,” he continued, “sitting around the dinner table with faith kin, not focused on what separates us, but on how we can be a stronger, wiser family that God would have us to be.”

Jim Baucom, co-pastor of Columbia Church in Falls Church, Virginia, has been part of what is now Ascent from its beginnings. “I see Ascent as something of a snowball...there wasn’t a moment where I felt we were trying to figure out what we were doing.” He added, “It still excites me to see new people in the room... and to see them get really energized and excited... to find people who feel equally passionate about serving Christ in this way.”

Leadership connections among faith kin

Several ministry leaders from diverse backgrounds participated in or moderated several panel discussions and led breakout sessions. Those sessions were treated as “task force” opportunities both to discuss how curators’ ministries currently meet needs in the subject area under discussion and to envision how Ascent can continue developing and/or supporting ministries.

Chris Backert (left) facilitates a group panel discussion during the gathering.

Wissam al-Saliby, president of Baptist WorldAlliance-connected 21Wilberforce, spoke about the organization’s work to advocate for religious freedom during a panel about “sowing the gospel in the face of opposition.”

Al-Saliby noted sowing the gospel brings persecution. The good news is “churches are present, active, and engaging allover the world,” he said, but with that comes challenges of persecution, as well as lower-level forms of discrimination and opposition. He urged Ascent curators to be sure to factor in the mission work being done locally to fightfor religious freedom, as the movement continues to take shape.

Todd Still, dean of Baylor University’s Truett Theological Seminary, moderated a panel discussion on sowing the gospel through preaching and developing preachers of the gospel.

Kevin Nderitu, executive pastor of District Church in Washington, D.C.; former Texan Mark Goodman, lead pastor of Rabbit Creek Church in Anchorage, Alaska, a congregation recently removed from the Southern Baptist Convention; and Ashley Berryhill, director of Global Engagement at First Baptist Church in Arlington, participated in a panel discussion on “sowing the gospel through the local congregation.”

Cindy Wiles, of First Baptist Church in Arlington, director of the Restore Hope mission organization; Jim Ramsay of TMS Global; and Jennifer Lau of Canadian Baptist Ministries participated in a panel on “sowing the global gospel … beyond the local congregation.”

John Upton, BGAV’s retired executive director, facilitated a discussion on how to do global missions responsibly—out of love, with humility and with a “round table” approach, based in mutuality that breaks down barriers between local and global missions.

Carey Sims of Cliff Temple Baptist Church in Dallas will be project lead for the Junia Network, a yearlong Ascent cohort initiative offering a place for women in ministry to share, learn, and resource one another. The initiative is named after Junia, whom Paul affirms along with her husband in Romans 16:7 as being“in Christ” before he was and outstanding among all apostles.

The gathering also included a celebration service recognizing curators who had been ordained or licensed by their churches during the past year and anointing ministers who had assumed new ministry roles.

Attendees share a sacred and powerful moment during the Ascent dedication and prayer service at Old Town Community Church in Alexandria, VA, on March 18, 2025. Surrounded by Ascent peers, those celebrating new achievements and direction in ministry were commissioned through heartfelt prayer, the laying on of hands, and words of blessing. The service of celebration and dedication was held during the Ascent Curators and Creators gathering March 18-20.

Last Updated:    
March 28, 2025