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Covering over nine blocks of downtown, First Baptist's 15,000+ member congregation is one of the largest urban churches in the Southeast United States.
First Baptist Church Timeline 
1838 - First Baptist Church established in July 1838 as the third church in Jacksonville. 1892 - The church settled at its present location between Hogan and Church Streets in the heart of the downtown district. 1901 - Church destroyed by the Great Jacksonville Fire of 1901. 1904 - Hobson Auditorium was completed. 1976 - 3,500-seat Ruth Lindsay Auditorium opens. 1986 - Preschool Building opens. 1988 - Sunday School enrollment stands at 14,172, up from 2,385 in 1969. 1993 - 10,000-seat present day auditorium opens. 2002 - Children's Building and Welcome Center opens. 2002 - plans for a state-of-the-art Senior Adult Building announced. 
Blocks One & Two These blocks are occupied by large parking garages, known as Garages 3 & 4. The most recognizable characteristic of these garages is the light house on the corner of Union and Pearl Streets. 
Block 3 The church's 10,000 seat main auditorium consumes block 3, forming a huge wall along Union Street, opposite JTA's Rosa Parks Skyway Station. 

Block 4 This block is the home of Parking Garage Number 2 and a small pocket park on the corner of Laura and Beaver Streets. 
Block 5 This block is the home of the Children's Building and Welcome Center. This building will become the home of the First Baptist Academy's elementary school later this year.


Block 6 Bounded by Beaver, Laura, Ashley and Hogan Streets, this block contains the Ruth Lindsey Auditorium. 


Block 7 This block contains a small surface parking lot and classroom buildings centered on the NW corner of Ashley and Hogan Streets. 

Block 8 
Block 9 This block contains H.J. Klutho's 1903 Hobson Auditorium. The interior originally featured a hand painted mural on the domed ceiling, but it was removed in a 1924 renovation. The northside of this block is the home of office buildings used for the church's main offices. 




Block 10 This block is dominated by JEA's headquarters. However, the church's bookstore is located on the corner of Ashley and Laura Streets. This intersection is the half way point between Springfield and the St. Johns River. The Landing can be clearly seen from this area.

Religious views aside, First Baptist Church should be embraced as a main generator of traffic in the downtown area and a focal point of any marketing plan geared toward attracting more business activity and vibrancy on the Northbank. Article written by Ennis Davis |
May 2, 2008, 9:19 am
Re: First Baptist: Jacksonville's Urban Church
On a sad note, Dr. Lindsay Jr's wife, Shirley Lindsay died last night unexpectedly after a fall. I found out about 10 pm
May 2, 2008, 10:03 am
Re: First Baptist: Jacksonville's Urban Church
That is sad. My prayers go out to their family.
The chuch really suprised me the first time I saw it from the inside. The building's exterior is very bland and "dead", however, the interiors of the main auditorium are fantastic. I really would like to see the campus start to better embrace the street. They could also use some more interesting architecture to let passers-by know that its a church.
May 2, 2008, 3:17 pm
Re: First Baptist: Jacksonville's Urban Church
Mother Lindsay's death is very sad indeed. She was devastated by the death of her husband and son in the freakish timing of their deaths.
The Lindsay family was very dear, and Homers Sr. and Jr. were an example of Baptist rectitude and kindliness at its best.
She is in a much happier place now.
May 2, 2008, 3:43 pm
Re: First Baptist: Jacksonville's Urban Church
Nice photo tour of FBC. I do love my chruch.
It is very sad to hear of Mrs Lindsey's death. We all know she is now in heaven celebrating with Homer. She wil be dearly missed,
May 2, 2008, 8:18 pm
Re: First Baptist: Jacksonville's Urban Church
wow this what is this building...?
what if....ahh what am i saying? it would be destroyed by now if it was built.
May 2, 2008, 8:20 pm
Re: First Baptist: Jacksonville's Urban Church
That was a new mixed-use church facility First Baptist proposed around 1929. Needless to say, the Great Depression most likely killed it.
May 2, 2008, 8:48 pm
Re: First Baptist: Jacksonville's Urban Church
The Depression did kill it.
Plus the church went through a period of restructuring after the death of the then pastor and the complete changeover in politics. Baptists were still a small minority back then as most of the city was Episcopal.
May 3, 2008, 2:03 pm
Re: First Baptist: Jacksonville's Urban Church
My prayers go out to the Lindsey family also.
May 3, 2008, 3:08 pm
Re: First Baptist: Jacksonville's Urban Church
The Lindsey family was very dear, and Homers Sr. and Jr. were an example of Baptist rectitude and kindliness at its best.
Are you serious? The guy who said environmentalism was a waste of time because "God was coming back any day now, so who cares how we trash the earth?" is an example of kindliness at its best? Well, maybe Baptist kindliness at its best, but not the kindliness I like out of people. Homer G. Lindsey was a homophobe, a bigot, and a teacher of religious intolerance, just like Vines and the fat mustachioed donkey who is now there. These are people who still adamantly flying their "W04" stickers while they watch their country economy, and lives go down the crapper; who oppose abortion, but don't care about the death penalty or war; and who do jackshit for outreach to the homeless literally surrounding them-- treating their church like a fortress, with heavy and unnecessary security at all times, lest a scary poor black person come near them.
May 3, 2008, 3:22 pm
Re: First Baptist: Jacksonville's Urban Church
I don't recall Dr. Lindsay saying that about trashing the earth easy.
Dr. Vines was a huge step down on the evolutionary ladder from dr. Lindsay and Brunson is lower down a few rungs still. Vines and Brunson are both terrible homophobes, bigots, and preachers of intolerance. But Dr. Lindsay was a very sweet man.
May 3, 2008, 3:59 pm
Re: First Baptist: Jacksonville's Urban Church
Dr. Vines was a huge step down on the evolutionary ladder from dr. Lindsey and Brunson is lower down a few rungs still. Vines and Brunson are both terrible homophobes, bigots, and preachers of intolerance. But Dr. Lindsey was a very sweet man.
yikes! that was judgmental. (and open-minded)
May 3, 2008, 4:01 pm
Re: First Baptist: Jacksonville's Urban Church
As a Member of the Church, Driven. I feel I am entitled to the opinion.
Especially after years of tithing and a huge family that has attended the church since the 50s.
Besides, words have meanings you know. You just have bother with learning them and stay committed to being fair. A Judgement is different from being judgemental.
Dr. Vines was so noted for his intolerance that he drove hundreds of pastors away from the Southern Baptist Convention and caused an outright split with Texas Baptists, who felt he was being to rigid and intolerant. When Texas thinks your ass is intolerant, Driven, thats a judgement that you can take to the bank.
May 3, 2008, 7:01 pm
Re: First Baptist: Jacksonville's Urban Church
I'm in Texas and I'm a Baptists does that make me a Texas Baptist? I know Free Will Baptist but not Texas Baptist. What is that?
May 4, 2008, 12:13 pm
Re: First Baptist: Jacksonville's Urban Church
I believe there was section of the Southern Baptists from Texas that broke off and started their own convention.
In my personal opinion from growing up in Sothern Baptist and Independent Baptist Churches is that as a whole the Southern Baptist were drifting to the liberal side of the spectrum. I think Dr. Vines is a great man, I was sad to see him leave FBC.
May 4, 2008, 12:36 pm
Re: First Baptist: Jacksonville's Urban Church
everyone has their own speed, Stephenc. I just miss Dr. Lindsay.
http://www.jacksonville.com/tu-online/stories/061302/met_9655580.html
Muslims, however, also said they were encouraged by people of other faiths who have rallied behind them.
"I have been getting calls all morning from ministers and other people of conscience saying how sorry they are that someone in their community made these irresponsible remarks," said Ash Shaikh, who serves on the board of the Islamic Center of Northeast Florida.
The Rev. Jerry Vines, senior pastor of First Baptist Church, caused a national outcry with a speech he made Monday night at a Southern Baptist pastors' conference in St. Louis. Baptist leaders at the conference said they supported Vines' statements, as did many who gathered at First Baptist for a service last night.
Vines criticized Islam as inferior to Christianity, founded by a man possessed by demons who married a 9-year-old girl.
Muhammad had numerous wives, although the number is in dispute. Scholars say one of them was about 9 when they married.
Vines' speech was rebuked by national organizations, including the Anti-Defamation League and the Council on American-Islamic Relations.
"Hate speech has become a predictable event at Southern Baptist conventions," said Robert Parham, executive director of the Baptist Center for Ethics in Nashville, Tenn.
Susan Tucker Johnson, communications director at First Baptist, said Vines and other church leaders would have no comment.
This is the latest flareup for the Southern Baptist Convention. At its 2000 convention in Orlando, the denomination of 15.8 million members drew national headlines by adopting a new faith statement opposing abortion, homosexuality, pornography and banning women from serving as pastors.
Former President Jimmy Carter -- who was perhaps America's most famous Southern Baptist -- severed his ties.
http://www.sbtexas.com/default.asp?action=article&aid=2962&issue=6/21/2006
For example, in 1992 contention at the Foreign Mission Board spilled over into convention business. The outcome was different in 2006 when a motion to investigate alleged trustee improprieties at the International Mission Board was referred—to the satisfaction of messengers, the motion maker and the Committee on Order of Business.
While several hundred messengers to the 1992 Indy meeting walked out in protest of FMB President Keith Parks’ disparaging characterization of conservative leadership, a similarly sized crowd of 11,639 messengers at Greensboro welcomed strides toward peace among disagreeing members.
Welch, who presided over business, provided opportunities for messengers to vent disagreement with a few of his rulings, while early on sounding a call for civility after someone in the arena stands shouted tauntingly toward former SBC president and retired Florida pastor Jerry Vines.
May 4, 2008, 1:12 pm
Re: First Baptist: Jacksonville's Urban Church
www.multisoap.wordpress.com
May 4, 2008, 3:06 pm
Re: First Baptist: Jacksonville's Urban Church
The Lindsey family was very dear, and Homers Sr. and Jr. were an example of Baptist rectitude and kindliness at its best.
Are you serious? The guy who said environmentalism was a waste of time because "God was coming back any day now, so who cares how we trash the earth?" is an example of kindliness at its best? Well, maybe Baptist kindliness at its best, but not the kindliness I like out of people. Homer G. Lindsey was a homophobe, a bigot, and a teacher of religious intolerance, just like Vines and the fat mustachioed donkey who is now there. These are people who still adamantly flying their "W04" stickers while they watch their country economy, and lives go down the crapper; who oppose abortion, but don't care about the death penalty or war; and who do jackshit for outreach to the homeless literally surrounding them-- treating their church like a fortress, with heavy and unnecessary security at all times, lest a scary poor black person come near them.
Those are some strong words man. I used to notice all the security when I used to hang downtown. It didn't seem like an inviting place. I always felts like FBC should give up/sale some of the parking lots they owned to the city, and allow those locations to be be redeveloped. They have a Skyway Station right next to the church, yet the members drive right to the church and JTA conveniently shuts the system down on Sundays. I have always heard the rumor that part of Downtown's boringness has a lot to do with FBC and all the property they own. Don't they have enough of downtown??
May 7, 2008, 12:40 am
Re: First Baptist: Jacksonville's Urban Church
F.B.C. is nothing more than a cult.
It is filled with the doomed.
And even before we heard all the frightening stories of blood-drinking, child sex rituals, animal husbandry and every other vulgar thing about that vile place, we knew the truth about those freaks.
Jacksonville will never escape their curse.
May 7, 2008, 8:27 am
Re: First Baptist: Jacksonville's Urban Church
Thank you for your candid opinion JaxHater. Just be careful... we're looking for a lost soul to to sacrifice.
May 7, 2008, 8:35 am
Re: First Baptist: Jacksonville's Urban Church
Haha. good one Jason.
May 7, 2008, 9:40 am
Re: First Baptist: Jacksonville's Urban Church
haxhater...with a soul??? now that's funny.
May 7, 2008, 11:12 am
Re: First Baptist: Jacksonville's Urban Church
It is filled with the doomed.
And even before we heard all the frightening stories of blood-drinking, child sex rituals, animal husbandry and every other vulgar thing about that vile place, we knew the truth about those freaks.
Jacksonville will never escape their curse.
Do you have any sort of proof of this (particularly the blood-drinking, child sex retuals or the animal husbandry)?
May 7, 2008, 1:45 pm
Re: First Baptist: Jacksonville's Urban Church
Exactly the reason for us to look for it.
May 7, 2008, 10:10 pm
Re: First Baptist: Jacksonville's Urban Church
Jason: wouldn't you rather be w/your son on that RC competition then bothering w/JaxHater?
May 8, 2008, 8:38 am
Re: First Baptist: Jacksonville's Urban Church
Good point! RC Blimps can be outfitted with tracking equipment to further our mission.
May 8, 2008, 1:10 pm
Re: First Baptist: Jacksonville's Urban Church
we can add nets that drop too
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