Great Commission Ministry in Every Calling: Southeastern Hosts Annual SBC Women’s Breakfast
Mary Asta Mountain | June 11, 2025
On Wednesday, June 11, women attending the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) in Dallas gathered for a time of fellowship and encouragement at Southeastern Seminary’s annual Women’s Breakfast.
Geared towards women in all seasons of life, ministry, and leadership, the breakfast featured a conversation between Drs. Kelly King and Rebekah Naylor, as they reflected on Naylor’s years of ministry and what it means to follow Christ faithfully wherever he calls.
King teaches at Southeastern Seminary as assistant professor of Christian ministry while also serving as the women’s minister at Quail Spring’s Baptist Church in Oklahoma. Naylor serves at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary as distinguished professor of missions and as the missionary-in-residence. In addition to her teaching career, Naylor also spent 50 years serving with the International Mission Board (IMB).
Over the course of breakfast, the women in attendance listened as King and Naylor conversed about Naylor’s experience working as a medical professional and missionary overseas.
“We can cross every geographic barrier, every cultural barrier, every economic barrier,” Naylor said, speaking to the value of medical professionals serving on the mission field. “Everybody gets sick. And the best part: within minutes, we get to a spiritual conversation. And there’s really no other profession that can do it with all people, across all those barriers, and get to that spiritual conversation.”
We can cross every geographic barrier, every cultural barrier, every economic barrier. Everybody gets sick. And the best part: within minutes, we get to a spiritual conversation.
As they spoke, Naylor and King discussed God’s faithfulness to bring them to a saving faith in Christ; they explored what it looked like for Naylor to share that faith with those she ministered to on the field.
“In the clinic, there were often opportunities to share my faith story,” Naylor said. “My own story of believing in Jesus, mainly to say to them, ‘When you’re in trouble, what’s your go to? Well, you know, [for] me, it’s that my best friend is Jesus, and I tell them how that works for me. And that would maybe open the door for gospel witness.”
Naylor also played a pivotal role in establishing a nursing school that provides professional and medical training for, especially, young women from a poor economic background.
For some of the students, who feel called to serve Christ through their ministry, the medical training is also paired with training for missions, wherever God calls them.
Naylor explained to the women listening that “12% of your missionaries serving around the world are healthcare trained, and healthcare missions today with the IMB is very much important — supported — it is a commitment.”
King and Naylor also discussed ways that believers can be praying for the persecuted Church in India.
“We need to pray for strength and for boldness,” Naylor expressed, “for all of those who are there. There is great response to the gospel in India today — more than I ever thought I would see.”
Attendees left the event encouraged and emboldened by the stories shared and by the testimony of God’s faithfulness in Naylor’s life and the work of IMB missionaries. Naylor’s story and advice equipped them to better serve the medical professionals in their churches as well as those returning from the field or interested in pursuing missions.
“We wanted the women at the SBC to be better equipped to serve the church and fulfill the Great Commission wherever God has placed them,” said Candi Powers, event emcee and women’s life coordinator at Southeastern. She encouraged the women in attendance to check out the Southeastern booth and learn more about how theological education, at all levels, can equip them for the work that God calls them to.
To learn more about Southeastern’s heart for the Great Commission and for equipping women for that great work, visit sebts.edu/women-around-southeastern.