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A Tennessee megachurch has baptized 93 people across four worship services in a single day, with the people professing their faith having reportedly not planned to do so in advance. First Baptist Church of Hendersonville, which has an average weekly worship attendance of around 3,600 people, baptized 93 people, the largest single-day number of baptisms the congregation has seen.

There were 12 people baptized at the church’s 8:30 a.m. service, 22 people baptized at the 9:45 a.m. service, five baptized at a 9:45 a.m. service held at a different venue on campus and 54 baptized at the 11:00 a.m. service. FBC Hendersonville Senior Associate Pastor Bruce Raley told The Christian Post that while a lot of “preparation and prayer had gone into the day,” the people who were “baptized had not come to church prepared to be baptized.”

“The 93 baptisms were spontaneous,” Raley said. “Those people did not come prepared to be baptized that day, but we were prepared for them to be baptized that day, and God just spoke, and they were obedient.” Raley also told CP that his church sees a lot of people move from other parts of the United States, with many of the newcomers having either “no faith background” or “a different faith background where baptism does not mean the same thing or it’s not emphasized.” He said, “We heard the stories of many on Sunday that this is really the first time that we have really heard about the biblical importance and the biblical meaning of baptism.”

Now that the 93 people are baptized, Raley explained that the next step will involve having them be connected to a small group Bible study to help build their religious beliefs. “Our mission statement is ‘connecting every generation to God, others, and service.’ And to connect them with others is through a group where they’re meeting with others on a weekly basis, studying the Word of God, and then engaging them in ministry,” Raley told CP.

He said, “Where they’re walking alongside other people, serving inside the church or in the community and then just pairing them up, putting them with other believers to walk as they learn the Christian disciplines.” One of the ways that the church celebrated the baptisms was to have a prominently displayed wall in which the newly baptized people sign their names to testify to what they have done.

“Baptism is a priority for us. We want to see people come to faith in Christ and then make that profession of faith public through believer’s baptism. And so, we hold baptism up,” he added.

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