Texas religious leaders convene to consider human needs_120803

Posted: 12/05/03

Texas religious leaders convene to consider human needs

By Ken Camp

Texas Baptist Communications

DALLAS–Shared concern about human needs in Texas, particularly criminal justice and immigration issues, recently brought together leaders of the Baptist General Convention of Texas and the Texas Conference of Churches.

Severe cuts in funding for prison chaplains, together with growing anxiety about the plight of immigrants, prompted the group to explore ways they cooperatively can develop ministries and influence public policy, according to Phil Strickland, director of the Texas Baptist Christian Life Commission.

Strickland and Bishop Michael Pfeifer of San Angelo, president of the Texas Conference of Churches, convened the mid-November meeting that included BGCT Executive Director Charles Wade and other BGCT staff, as well as key ecumenical leaders.

“We went back to Matthew 25 as the basis for our concern,” Pfeifer said. “That reminds us the call to all of us as Christians, and indeed as human beings, is to reach out to strangers and aliens among us and to reach out in compassion to the prisoners.”

The group appointed two study committees, one to examine the prison chaplaincy shortage, and the other to explore immigration issues in close cooperation with the Hispanic Baptist Convention of Texas and other religious groups.

“All concerned came away with a sense that these are not just Catholic or Episcopal, Methodist or Baptist issues, but they are issues that the Christian community as a whole cares about,” said Randall Smith of Texas City, president-elect of the Texas Conference of Churches.

In the last Texas Legislature, “lawmakers slashed funding for chaplaincy programs in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, creating a critical shortage of chaplains in state correctional facilities,” Strickland said.

The national chaplaincy standard is a ratio of 500 inmates per chaplain. Even prior to the reduction in force this year, the ratio in Texas Department of Criminal Justice institutions was double that recommendation.

But since the legislature reduced the chaplaincy budget by $1.8 million, that cut the number of chaplains from 153 to 80, changing the 1,026-to-1 ratio to 1,962-to-1.

Regarding the immigration issue, Strickland pointed out that both the Hispanic Baptist Convention of Texas and the BGCT at their annual meetings passed resolutions calling for “proactive involvement of ministry activity among immigrants, documented and undocumented.”

The Hispanic Baptist Convention of Texas resolution also called on Hispanic Texas Baptists to speak “forcefully and clearly in opposition to the current immigration system that hinders the search for freedom and prosperity,” and it said the Hispanic Convention “encourages the adoption of new legislation that would unshackle the immigrant.”

More than 13 million immigrants entered the United States between 1990 and 2001, Pfeifer noted. In September, he was one of seven Catholic bishops serving along the Texas/Mexico border who called for comprehensive reform of U.S. immigration laws.

News of religion, faith, missions, Bible study and Christian ministry among Texas Baptist churches, in the BGCT, the Southern Baptist Convention ( SBC ) and around the world.




Texas Tidbits_120803

Posted: 12/05/03

Texas Tidbits

bluebull ETBU honors nine. The College of Marshall and East Texas Baptist University honored nine alumni during homecoming weekend: Madeleine Hall of Marshall received the Sallie Duncan Life Enrichment Award; Louise Bates of Mount Pleasant received the Frank Groner School Development Award; Clarence Parker of Dallas received the John Hugh Hill Scholarly Achievement Award; Rita Storie Turner of Tyler received the Wesley Smith Achievement Award; Lonnie "Bo" Pilgrim of Pittsburg received the W.T. Tardy Service Award; Rudy Robbins of Bandera received the Alumni Achievement Award; Dana Rice of Longview received the Young Alumnus Award; Bobby Spross of Orange and Frank Beeman of Crescent City, Fla., each received Unsung Hero Awards.

Joe Sharp

bluebull Sharp re-elected to lead HSU board. Joe Sharp of Granbury has been re-elected chairman of the Hardin-Simmons University board of trustees. Other trustee officers include Hilton Hemphill of Dallas, vice chairman; Inez Kelley of Houston, secretary; and Fred Aurbach of Dallas, vice chair and assistant secretary.

bluebull DBU honors Hamilton and Estes. Dallas Baptist University honored Wayne Hamilton and Weldon Estes during the Alumni Homecoming Banquet. Hamilton, currently the longest serving executive director of the Republican Party of Texas, received the 2003 DBU Distinguished Alumnus Award. Hamilton and his wife, Kara, live in Elgin and are members of Highpointe Baptist Church. Estes, who has served as a professor at Dallas Baptist University 30 years, was named the Honorary Alumnus. He and his wife, Elizabeth, are members of First Baptist Church of Dallas.

bluebull HSU seeks military alumni. Alumni of Hardin-Simmons University who are currently serving in the armed forces of the United States or who have done so in the past are invited to attend a veterans reunion at the 2004 HSU homecoming. A steering committee headed by Lt. Col. Earl Garrett, director of HSU's human resources office, is planning the reunion. Alumni who are military veterans are asked to send their mailing addresses and e-mail addresses to Garrett at egarrett@ hsutx.edu or HSU Box 16030,Hardin-Simmons University, Abilene 79698.

bluebull Weir scholarship named. The Leeman Weir Endowed Memorial Scholarship has been established at Hardin-Simmons University by Joe and Amy Weir of Colleyville. It was named in memory of Joe Weir's father, Marvin Leeman Weir, who was a farmer and rancher in Childress. Joe and Amy Weir are both 1995 graduates of HSU. Both serve on the HSU Board of Young Associates. First preference for this scholarship will be a science major who is a Childress County resident.

bluebull HBU will match church scholarships. For the first time, Houston Baptist University will match dollar for dollar, up to $1,000, any scholarship given by a Christian church in Texas to a full-time undergraduate student. The new financial aid incentive will begin in the 2004-2005 academic year.

bluebull DBU honors Stricklin. Gil Stricklin received an honorary doctor of humanities degree from Dallas Baptist University during fall convocation. Stricklin is founder and president of Marketplace Ministries. He and his wife, Ann, are members of First Baptist Church of Dallas.

bluebull Singles celebration planned. San Jacinto Baptist Association plans a Singles Celebration Dec. 31 from 8 p.m. to 1 a.m. It will be held at Northside Baptist Church in Baytown. Singles of all ages are invited for games, a talent show and food. For more information, call (281) 422-3604 or visit sjbaptist.org.

bluebull One more issue. The Baptist Standard's final issue for 2003 will be dated Dec. 22. Due to the Christmas holiday, the first issue of 2004 will be dated Jan. 12.

News of religion, faith, missions, Bible study and Christian ministry among Texas Baptist churches, in the BGCT, the Southern Baptist Convention ( SBC ) and around the world.




TOGETHER: Advent transforms darkness to light_120803

Posted: 12/05/03

TOGETHER:
Advent transforms darkness to light

While serving a Baptist church in Germany nearly 40 years ago, I learned about Advent, the season of anticipation and preparation for many Christians who celebrate at Christmas the birth of Jesus Christ. And it was a time of awakening for me.

As our family observed Advent, it made sense to me. It reminded me that darkness can be penetrated by light. The first step of Advent is to consider anew the darkness, the confusion and the hopelessness that prevailed before the coming of Jesus. There had been 400 years of prophetic silence before Jesus' birth. The Jews, God's covenant people, had suffered greatly under Greek and Roman tyranny. They awaited the Messiah. Would the promise be fulfilled?
wademug
CHARLES WADE
Executive Director
BGCT Executive Board

The angel Gabriel said to a virgin girl: “Greetings, you who are highly favored! The Lord is with you.” And it scared her. It would me too! “Don't be afraid, Mary. You have found favor with God. You will be with child and give birth to a son, and you are to give him the name Jesus. He will be great and will be called the Son of the Most High.”

Mary's astonishment can be heard in her question, “How will this be, since I am a virgin?”

The angel had the answer: “The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you … . For nothing is impossible with God.”

Mary didn't understand that any more than we do, but she said in holy faith: “I am the Lord's servant. May it be to me as you have said.” As the Spirit of God moved over chaos and brought worlds into being at the Creation, the Holy Spirit of God who created all life brought new life into being in the womb of the virgin Mary. The Word that brought light into being on that long-ago first day of creation became tiny flesh in Mary's body that he might dwell with us and become the long-awaited Light in our darkness.

Those of us who have been Christians since we were children often have little appreciation for the depth of the darkness that surrounds the hopeless, the broken and the discarded peoples of the earth. We can be so impatient with their hurts and their unbelief.

That is why Advent helps. It makes me feel and think my way back into a time I have never known much about. How empty would my life be without Jesus? How desperate would I be for light in my darkness if I had no friendship with the One who lights the way for me? Every time I have experienced fear or disappointment or shame, Jesus has been there to comfort, encourage and forgive. He has called me to make right what could be made right, and he has given me courage to move forward when I wanted to stay where I was, my shoes nailed to the floor.

“O come, O come, Emmanuel, and ransom captive Israel, That mourns in lonely exile here, until the Son of God appear.”

And Mary said to the angel, “Let it be to me according to your word.” That is what I want to say to God at Advent and all through the year: “Let it be, dear Lord, let it be!”

We are loved, indeed!

News of religion, faith, missions, Bible study and Christian ministry among Texas Baptist churches, in the BGCT, the Southern Baptist Convention ( SBC ) and around the world.




Virginia threatens Averett’s funding_120803

Posted: 12/05/03

Virginia threatens Averett's funding

By Robert Dilday

Virginia Religious Herald

RICHMOND, Va. (ABP)–As expected, Virginia Baptists have taken action that could end their 144-year-old tie to Averett University unless a conflict over homosexuality and biblical authority is resolved.

Meeting Nov. 13-14 in Richmond, Va., messengers to the Baptist General Association of Virginia annual meeting escrowed more than $350,000 they would have contributed to the Danville, Va., school next year.

But messengers enhanced their relationship with the John Leland Center for Theological Studies based in Falls Church, Va., increasing their allocation by 300 percent and moving it from a world-missions budget to the Virginia portion of the budget.

Messengers also cut by 40 percent funds to the Center for Baptist Heritage and Studies, created four years ago when the BGAV ended its ties to the University of Richmond.

The $14.3 million BGAV budget adopted for 2004 is $700,000 less than the current $15 million budget.

For the first time in more than a decade, messengers elected as president a pastor whose church contributes to national mission causes primarily through the Southern Baptist Convention. Don Davidson, pastor of Mount Hermon Baptist Church in Danville, was elected without opposition.

Since BGAV officers have been successfully nominated for many years by a network of moderate pastors, the election was widely seen as a signal that churches sympathetic to the SBC are welcome in BGAV life.

The vote to escrow Averett's allocation was recommended by the BGAV budget committee and passed decisively.

But the university attracted the ire of some Virginia Baptists in August when John Laughlin, chair of its religion department, wrote an article in a newspaper endorsing the recent action of the Episcopal Church to ordain an openly homosexual bishop and criticizing a literal method of interpreting the Bible.

Also, in September, John Shelby Spong, a controversial retired Episcopal bishop, lectured on Averett's campus, reportedly saying that the God who is revealed in a literal reading of Scripture is “immoral” and “unbelievable.”

Averett President Richard Pfau read portions of a resolution adopted Oct. 24 by the school's board of trustees, expressing regret at “any perception that Averett University has diverged from its commitment to being Virginia's flagship Christian university.”

News of religion, faith, missions, Bible study and Christian ministry among Texas Baptist churches, in the BGCT, the Southern Baptist Convention ( SBC ) and around the world.




Baptistway Bible Study for Texas for Dec. 21: The birth narrative_112403

Posted: 12/01/03

For use on Dec. 21

Luke 2:8-20

The birth narrative

By Gary Long

I got some good news the other day. It seems that the state of North Carolina (my home state, though I’ve been away since 1994) has some money for me. I bought an insurance policy in 1992 from a company that went bankrupt. However, the courts are now distributing the proceeds from the company’s sell-off. I’m apparently entitled to $58.93. Granted, it’s not a lot of money, but it is still good news.

$58.93 pales in comparison, though, to the good news I was first told as a little child back in Carolina. The good news was that in a tiny stable in Bethlehem some 2,000 years ago, God decided to reach humanity in a most unusual way. Long time Christians know this story. It’s been read to us on countless Christmas Eves. We’ve seen the living nativity. We adorned the crèche and advent wreaths in our home.

We should have tired of all this long ago. Yet somehow the power of the story never fades, and though it has almost a fairy-tale aura, we know and sense the truth it proclaims. We must tell the story again and again. We must decorate and celebrate, give gifts and feast with loved ones. We know without being told by our preacher: This is truly good news, too good not to celebrate it. I’m guessing that heaven might be like this, where we celebrate the wonder and limitlessness of God’s loving-kindness. Maybe, just maybe, our Christmas ritual is rehearsal for that ultimate advent of God.

”Good News” as used by the angel in Luke 2:10 is the same word Luke will use throughout his gospel to refer to Jesus’ coming. In a real sense that announcement from the angel to shepherds is an announcement to us as well. We stand today as amazed as the shepherds that night. Our amazement is in part due to the glorious nature of the angel of the Lord. After all, not many of us encounter angels that way, and we certainly raise a wary eyebrow at those who relate having had such a glorious encounter. But our amazement runs deeper. Our amazement is connected to the real substance of the message the angel brings. In Bethlehem, God is doing something. Jesus is born, and the angel wants us to know he is the Savior, the Messiah and Lord.

Imagine it this way. (If you’re not a college basketball fan, hang with me. Someone in your class will relate to this.) You basically have Dick Vitale (the angel) announcing the “diaper dandy” (baby Jesus) with praises for delivering the perfect “trifecta” (Savior, Messiah, Lord). Dicky V then would have wrapped up his commentary with, “Give that kid the rock (Peter, upon whom he will build the church), baby!”

study3

Maybe that’s a stretch for you. But you have to know that this angel was delivering big, big news. All of the hope of Israel as a nation was wrapped up in this one little baby who would be Messiah, Savior and Lord. The fulfillment of an entire nation’s longing was announced that night. Good news? You bet. Let’s explore just how Jesus’ birth is good news for all people, including us.

Good news would have meant “joy” for the Israelites. Although traditional messianic thought of the day anticipated a messiah who would deliver Israel politically and economically, awaiting those who heard and believed the message of Jesus was a new understanding of Messiah and Savior. Surely Jesus was a deliverer, but it certainly wasn’t what was expected. The birth of Jesus is good news that would be met with joy.

Additionally, it was good news that God was coming to Israel as promised. Latent in the story, yet prominent in the nature of God, is this: God’s promises are fulfilled. Jesus’ birth is another huge kind of proof of God’s ongoing plans to redeem and restore. Israel had been promised, “For I know the plans I have for you…plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future” (Jeremiah 29:11). Throughout her history, the petition of Israel has oft been “Deliver us!” It is good news that God has heard that cry for deliverance and answered with Jesus.

The angel’s proclamation is good news for all people in the world, not just the Israelites. For humanity it is good news that God’s grace was headed to earth. Of course, we view this story through the lenses of history. We understand the birth of Jesus as the beginning mark of God moving in a new way. We understand Jesus also through the eyes of faith and have a much clearer understanding of what “Savior,” “Messiah” and “Lord” mean because of our standing on this side of the cross.

Ultimately, the reality of who Baby Jesus was in the cradle is but a foreshadowing of the powerful Savior Jesus upon the cross, and that pales completely when held up next to the power of the resurrection of Jesus. Yet that resurrection is empty if God was not really human in Jesus. The resurrection celebration of Easter is meaningless if real flesh and real blood and real bones had not been birthed of Mary and laid in the manger.

We will do well this season to look past the giggly gurgling baby wrapped in the swaddling clothes to behold the birth itself. Birthing a baby is bloody and messy, and that applies no matter who the baby or the mother is. The full experience of humanity was God’s in Jesus’ flesh, and he emerged from Mary’s womb—just as you and I emerged from our mother’s belly.

That makes Jesus’ birth good news because in the full experience of humanity, Jesus knew human struggle, human pain, human frailty, as well as human cravings and desires, human hungers and human hurts. That makes Jesus’ sinless life and sacrificial death on the cross all the more meaningful because his life was fraught with the same temptations as us and yet he conquered sin long before he was nailed to the cross, although clearly his battle with sin culminated there.

Many commentators suggest that one piece of good news in this story is that God now identifies with humans. However, this seems to put God in a position of lacking some ability or experience to identify with humanity before Jesus was born. That interpretation suggests that God could not relate to humans before Jesus came, and that is a rather narrow and limited understanding of God’s abilities.

Rather, I would suggest the proper way for us to frame this is instead of God identifying with humans through Jesus, that humans are able to identify with God through Jesus. This subtle shift of interpretation could actually produce a keener awareness that God is not deficient in God’s ability to relate to us. Rather, we must consider that humans have the deficiency in relating to God because of sin. The good news about this birth is that Jesus’ humanity provides a portal of reconnection to the God we know innately, yet from whom we have been disconnected.

More good news is the family into which Jesus was born can be a strong reminder to us of the value of families in God’s sight. Clearly, if Joseph and Mary were a couple in our church today, there would be trouble. Hushed whispers and unkind gossip would surely abound because their situation is not socially acceptable. Joseph and Mary didn’t follow the cultural norm for a family in their day.

Although the texts never allude to this point directly, we can assume certain monikers upon the family, and although it is only conjecture, it is highly plausible that this family was stressed to the max.

That is good news to families in our churches. If God can still work through their unusual family circumstances, how much could God do through our varieties of families today? There is a place in God’s church and God’s plan for all kinds of families – blended families, single-parent families, families where grandparents raise grandkids, families with adopted children, foster families, and even highly dysfunctional families. God has a plan and use for all families, and a plan to redeem and nurture through the means of families. Surely this is good news to us!

The story has been told. By the time your class studies this text together, the celebration will almost be finished. Probably on December 26th some will be experiencing the post-Christmas “blues” that always come after a big party (and accompanied by credit card bills). Yet if we celebrate the truth of the holiday – that Jesus is God’s gift to us of a Savior who is Christ and Lord – our party will last for all eternity and our “hopes and fears of all the years” are met in Christ today. That is good news!

Questions for Discussion

bluebull What is the best news you’ve gotten this week? In what way was this a blessing of God? How does it relate to the good news of today’s lesson?

bluebull How might understanding the real “good news” of Christmas help us deal with the end of celebrating? Can God’s real presence in your life provide comfort when all the packages are opened and the family has gone back home?

bluebull How does the good news of the incarnation help you relate to God?

bluebull Understanding that God can use all kinds of families, how is your family especially equipped to share God’s good news? For example, consider: What talent(s) do we have that might be a venue to share God’s good news? What tragedy has our family endured that has equipped us to help share Gods’ love to others who hurt?

bluebull What struggle do you face today with which God’s good news can help you deal?

News of religion, faith, missions, Bible study and Christian ministry among Texas Baptist churches, in the BGCT, the Southern Baptist Convention ( SBC ) and around the world.




Texas Baptist Forum_112403

Posted: 11/24/03

TEXAS BAPTIST FORUM:
Doctrine & missions

Keith Eitel's letter, supported by Paige Patterson and sent to trustees of the International Mission Board, states that doctrinal issues, especially those involving women in places of authority over men, form the foundation for jettisoning all involvement with heretical missionary groups (Nov. 3).
postlogo
E-mail the editor at marvknox@baptiststandard.com

Women are denigrated, as usual, and missionary groups who fail to follow the leader should be dropped.

Eitel, described as “one of the cutting-edge missiologists of our day,” can be seen, perhaps, as the user-friendly spokesman for fundamentalists. The “cutting” has already been accomplished in seminaries and workplaces across the convention. Those who were uprooted and cast out with neither grace nor concern are still feeling the rough “edge” to these actions.

Will we ever realize this movement to control, condemn and castigate those who refuse to kneel in homage to selected doctrine and political mandate is designed to ferret out the Christians who believe in grace without politics, service without bias and commitment without contempt?

It is clear that doctrine divides us. If what has happened to educational scholars over the last 20 years of fundamental control is an example of current leadership, then it was then, is now and will continue to be a deplorable doctrine.

Eitel's paper concludes with this statement of appeal to the IMB: “Recruit administrators committed to theological renewal of the board.” This, as always, demonstrates that this is politics. When did the board accommodate unto itself a theology?

Edward Clark

Danville, Ky.

Trap of polytheism

Malcolm Yarnell of Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary warns against the heresy of modalism (Nov. 10). The Trinity is not just God putting on three different faces or modes.

But Yarnell also needed to warn Christians that the doctrine of the Trinity does not present a “social group” of three Gods. Such a social trinity would deny the indisputable witness of both Old and New Testaments that God is one.

Yarnell's insistence that adding the one word, “triune,” to the 2000 Baptist Faith & Message guards against the heresy of modalism deserves a lot more explanation than his article presented. The early church councils carefully crafted the doctrine of the Trinity in order to preserve biblical monotheism and establish the full divinity of the Christ and the Holy Spirit.

Avoiding modalism by insisting on a social trinity of three distinct divinities falls into the deadly trap of polytheism, or three gods.

Baptists' statements on the Trinity did not contribute to nor create modalists for over two centuries. Judge for yourself. Yarnell seems more intent on defending the 2000 BF&M than he is in defending the doctrine of the Trinity.

Cyrus B. Fletcher

Baytown

Church & state

Former Alabama Justice Roy Moore and his Religious Right comrades would like America to become a Christian theocracy. Church and state would be one and the same; the effect of such a union would be political corruption big-time. Non-Christians and unbelievers would be treated like second-class citizens.

A theocracy established in Jesus' name would displease Christ. Jesus rejected the temptation to rule a political kingdom. The last would be first in his kingdom. He mingled with sinners, talked to prostitutes, touched lepers.

Never-failing love dominated everything Jesus did. He did not coerce anyone to follow him.

Separation of church and state has worked very well in our country for over 200 years and must be maintained. Were Roy Moore's actions done in love, or were they done to promote a self-serving political agenda?

Paul L. Whiteley Sr.

Louisville, Ky.

Being 'Baptist'

Regarding the editorial on being “Baptist” (Nov. 10), we Baptists need to review occasionally what we profess to believe and check ourselves to see that we not only “talk the talk” but also “walk the walk.”

We sometimes get wrapped up in organization and procedure and forget what the Bible says about our basic tenets.

God has blessed us for many years because we have adhered to our strong beliefs.

Let us not stray.

James E. Biles

Lufkin

Doctrine upheld

I sadly disagree with Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary President Paige Patterson regarding his criticism of the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship.

I have been a pastor in Dallas since 1977 and am a 1980 graduate of Southwestern Seminary. I have had three children born at Baylor University Medical Center, and I am a member of the Dallas Baptist Association's committee on committees.

But the Lord has led me to attend CBF annual meetings for 11 years.

I always have been welcome to express a mission agenda at CBF meetings. I have experienced genuine and Spirit-led movements of Jesus.

I have never heard or felt any attempt on CBF's part to entice Southern Baptist Convention churches. Nor have I seen any hint of acceptability of homosexual practice.

But I have seen CBF strongly uphold the doctrine of the priesthood of all believers, authority of local churches and equality of male, female and the poor and the rich.

“CBF is a Jesus people,” said Daniel Vestal, the CBF's national coordinator, said at 2003 general assembly. This clearly refutes Patterson's statement that CBF denies the exclusivity of Christ for salvation.

Yoo J. Yoon

Dallas

Lift up Jesus

Malcolm Yarnell's speech to a seminary audience, praising the 2000 Baptist Faith & Message for adding “triune God,” is like bragging about a Band-Aid on a scratch of a severed arm.

A letter from seminary professor Keith Eitel accused the International Mission Board of pervasive theological error and needing to synchronize with the theological convictions of the Southern Baptist Convention. It seems the IMB errs by placing women as strategy coordinators.

Being under fire before, IMB President Jerry Rankin said he saved the IMB by asking missionaries to sign the 2000 BF&M. Accountability to the SBC was the reason Rankin gave for firing missionaries.

Causing women strategy coordinators to be fired will be another notch on the gun that terminates workers for the Lord.

The question should not be: Do we save the IMB or missionaries, but how far do we remove troublemakers?

The SBC should stop downgrading women, sticking its nose into the autonomy of the church and individual priesthood, and maintain its priority to reach a lost world. Not by arguing the Bible, but by lifting up Jesus.

If leaders won't do that, God help Baptists to get some who will.

Rex Ray

Bonham

What do you think? Submit letters for Texas Baptist Forum via e-mail to marvknox@baptiststandard.com or regular mail at Box 660267, Dallas 75266-0267. Letters must be no longer than 250 words. They may be edited to accommodate space.

News of religion, faith, missions, Bible study and Christian ministry among Texas Baptist churches, in the BGCT, the Southern Baptist Convention ( SBC ) and around the world.




GIVE A GOAT: Alternative Christmas gifts_112403

Posted: 11/24/03

GIVE A GOAT:
Alternative Christmas gifts

By Mark Wingfield

Managing Editor

A number of Christian ministries have borrowed a page out of the Neiman-Marcus Christmas Catalog.

Like the upscale Texas retail chain, these ministries use the seasonal catalogs to offer unique gift ideas, ranging from the simple to the extraordinary.

But unlike the purveyor of gifts such as the luxury ice fishing house and custom-made mermaid outfit, these ministries provide alternative Christmas gift options that benefit third parties.

As an extension of their year-round efforts to fund ministries to the world's neediest people, organizations such as World Vision, Samaritan's Purse and even Texas-based Buckner Baptist Benevolences publish Christmas catalogs. The idea is to shop for something to help a person in need and then send a gift card to a friend or loved one announcing that this item has been donated in their name.

$50: Provide medicine for an orphanage for one month.
Buckner Baptist Benevolences

See a catalogue of more gift ideas here.
View with the free Adobe Acrobat Reader, available here.

A pioneer in this field is Heifer International, a non-profit organization based in Little Rock, Ark., that works to end world hunger by providing livestock and small animals to farmers and impoverished families.

The Heifer Christmas catalog features a barnyard variety of gift ideas, ranging from a flock of chicks or ducks for $20 to a sheep or goat for $120, a llama for $150 or a heifer for $500. The extravagant giver may choose The Ark for $5,000, which will provide a veritable Noah's Ark of animal sets.

For the listed price, Heifer will purchase and transport animals to those who need a sustainable source of nutrition and income. They, in turn, are asked to share the gift with someone else.

For example, a family that receives a heifer obtains a source of protein to nourish children and adults alike. A good dairy cow, Heifer reports, can produce four gallons of milk a day–enough to feed the family and have some additional to sell. Further, a healthy cow may bear a calf once a year, furthering the supply of nourishment for a community.

A family that receives a heifer is asked to donate to another family in need the first female calf born to their cow.

Heifer International works in Latin America, the Caribbean, Africa, Central and Eastern Europe, Asia and the South Pacific.

This year's Heifer International catalog features a plethora of celebrity endorsements, from Walter Cronkite to Jimmy Carter to author Barbara Kingsolver.

World Vision, an international Christian humanitarian relief organization based in Federal Way, Wash., offers a similar catalog, but one that stretches beyond animals.

Through World Vision, donors may give Christmas gifts of water wells in Haiti ($10,000), wheelchairs for disabled children ($250), education for an orphan child for one year ($150) or immunizations for a child in a developing country ($25).

This is the eighth year for World Vision's Christmas catalog. Last year, the catalog raised $5.8 million from more than 30,000 donors.

“The gift catalog vividly communicates the needs of our global neighbors and explains the help that caring individuals like you can provide,” explains a promotional piece. “It's a great educational tool for families that also helps instill compassion in children.”

The gift catalog originally was developed as a way to help World Vision's existing donors, explained spokeswoman Karen Kartes. However, it quickly became a way to introduce new donors to the world's needs, she added.

About 70 percent of those who give gifts through the catalog are women, Kartes said, and many of those women are mothers of young children. Giving alternative gifts from a ministry catalog provides children a personal illustration of the greater meaning of Christmas, she said.

Officials at Heifer International agreed, noting in a news release: “While kids might have difficulty understanding what it means to write a check to charity, they can easily grasp the power of giving an animal … to poor families in 48 countries around the world.”

Samaritan's Purse, the international relief ministry headed by Franklin Graham, is best known for its Operation Christmas Child drive of shoebox gifts. However, the North Carolina-based ministry also offers a Christmas gift catalog. Available gifts include wheelchairs for disabled people who cannot afford them ($75), Bibles in a variety of languages ($10), training for international evangelists ($25) and airfare to transport sick children to the United States for specialized care ($2,000).

One of the newest organizations to offer a Christmas catalog is Buckner Baptist Benevolences, a ministry affiliated with the Baptist General Convention of Texas.

For the second year, Buckner has produced a catalog featuring gift opportunities for its retirement services, international orphan care work and statewide ministries of child and family services.

Featured items include supplemental medications for senior adults who cannot afford all their medicine ($15), large-print Bible study materials for senior adults ($20), winter coats for orphans ($30), medicine for an orphanage for one month ($50), diapers and formula for an infant in foster care ($30) and counseling for a child who has experienced personal trauma ($200).

“We've realized the attitudes of many of our donors are changing. Many people want to see a tangible use of their contributions, and the gift catalog approach is a practical way for us to show them how their money is used,” explained Scott Collins, vice president for communications.

“This is only our second year, so our constituents are just getting used to the idea,” he added. “But because most consumers use catalogs, this is an easy transition. The gift catalog approach also translates easily to the Internet because people today are so accustomed to shopping online. Ultimately, we believe that holds the most potential for non-profit organizations.”

In addition to the specific gifts available in Christmas catalogs, all Texas Baptist ministry organizations–including child-care agencies, family ministries, schools and hospitals–rely heavily on year-end donations. These agencies often will provide acknowledgement cards to those in whose name gifts have been made.

Where to find Christmas gift catalogs

Buckner Baptist Benevolences

www.buckner.org

World Vision

www.worldvision.org

Heifer International

www.heifer.org

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News of religion, faith, missions, Bible study and Christian ministry among Texas Baptist churches, in the BGCT, the Southern Baptist Convention ( SBC ) and around the world.




Cybercolumn: Preparing for Christmas by Brett Younger_112403

Posted 11/25/03

CYBERCOLUMN:
Preparing for Christmas

By Brett Younger

Those of us who don’t count shopping days until Christmas are counting the days until we have to start counting shopping days until Christmas. We need to stop and ask, “What do we really want for Christmas?”
Brett Younger

In addition to a pint of Ben and Jerry’s Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough ice cream, Cotton Bowl tickets and an IOU for a copy of “Who Moved My Pulpit: A Brief Amusing Guide to Almost Everything Ministerial” by Brett Younger (available in March, Smyth & Helwys Publishing) we are all waiting for a moment when we feel the Spirit of Christmas. Some of the busyness of the holidays comes from our attempts to create a lump in the throat.

Such moments are fabulously unpredictable. Sometimes flickering candles and “Ave Maria” leave us yawning. At other times Alvin and the Chipmunks singing “Deck the Halls” bring tears to our eyes. The randomness of moments of Advent grace does not mean we cannot be more open to those possibilities. What activities make the experience of the Christmas Spirit more likely? What is less likely to lead to Christmas joy?

More Likely
Less Likely
• Watching a child tell the Christmas story with porcelain figures of Mary and Joseph • Watching a child tell the Christmas story with “The Lord of the Rings” action figures
• Singing “O Little Town of Bethlehem” with a choir • Singing “Jingle Bells” with the barking dogs
• Taking a walk and looking at the stars • Walking in the mall parking lot looking for your car
• Reading a note on a Christmas card from a dear friend • Reading an e-mail Christmas card from your bank
• Watching Capra’s “It’s a Wonderful Life” • Watching “National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation”
• Taping a story book for your grandchildren • Buying your grandchildren an X-Box
• Listening to Rutter’s “Angels’ Carol” • Listening to Puff Daddy’s Christmas album
• Spending your time on a gift that costs no money • Spending lots of money on a gift because you don’t want to feel embarrassed
• Eating freshly baked cookies with children • Eating cookies Mrs. Fields baked by yourself
• Giving clothes to someone who needs them • Giving handkerchiefs to someone who has handkerchiefs
• Eating a meal with three people you love • Attending a big party with people you don’t know
• Spending Christmas Eve at your church • Spending Christmas Eve at Toys-R-Us
• Wishing for a more loving Christmas • Wishing for a more organized Christmas


Even if we pay more attention to music, friends, and silence there’s still no guarantee we’ll see angels and stars. It’s helpful to remember that nobody at the first Christmas was prepared. Christmas happened for them because they were there. We would do well to stop trying to make something out of the ordinary happen and notice what’s always happening, stop trying to create a love that isn’t there and recognize the love that is there, and stop watching for something we’ve never seen and see the joy we usually miss.

Brett Younger is pastor of Broadway Baptist Church in Fort Worth




storylist_111703

Posted 11/14/03

Article List for 11/17/03 issue


GO TO SECTIONS:
Texas       • Baptists      
Religion      • Departments      • Opinion      • Bible Study     

OUR FRONT PAGE ARTICLES
Be an army of one in ministry, McBride urges

Ken Hall BGCT is a 'work in progress'

Woodlawn youth go to school on BGCT annual session



African American Fellowship hears plea for ebony and ivory in harmony

Baylor & Standard honor four with ministry awards

Messengers wouldn't bite on challenge to Baylor nominee

BGCT session gives survey of black Baptist history

Baptist University of Americas named

PRESIDENT'S ADDRESS: Bragging rights

BGCT child-care agencies describe state's needs

CLC speaker Take faith to school

Crossover Lubbock warms hearts on High Plains

Demographic data called aid to church growth and ministry

Davis: Open a new window to evangelize

Churches advised to make proper preparation for financial security

New workshop format draws crowds at BGCT

Ken Hall BGCT is a 'work in progress'

Historians brush up on Texas Baptist Men

Be an army of one in ministry, McBride urges

BGCT program signs, seals and delivers missions emphasis

Motions call for study of HBU's ties and funds for restorative justice

Lubbock woman challenges MSC volunteers to dream

Messengers dialogue face-to-face with BGCT officers in breakout

BGCT session: Parenting Education Bootcamp

Pinson: How to make a Baptist

Assembly of God puppetmaker lends a hand at Baptist convention

Reyes looks to the future for TBC breakfast

Hunt still on for Texas Baptist Men executive director

Woodlawn youth go to school on BGCT annual session

Wade pledges openness to change, calls Texans to cooperate

Texas WMU executive board reports affirm core values

WMU Tell the generations

WorldconneX introduces itself; Parks also named

Worship should unite, professor says



Iraqis gratefully receive food boxes sent by Baptists in Texas & beyond

Buckner urgently needs help to process shoes

On the Move

Around the State

Texas Tidbits




Court ruling favors case of Missouri Baptist University

Moderates ponder future in North Carolina after ninth loss

Illinois rejects 2000 BF&M as sole faith statement

Baptist Briefs




Veggies uprooted to a new garden



OUT OF ORDER Ten Commandments judge ousted

Prisoners' religious freedom challenged




Cartoon

Classified Ads

Texas Baptist Forum

On the Move

Around the State




EDITORIAL: BGCT's 2004 challenge: Align budget with priorities

Down Home: Affirming words bless the family

ANOTHER VIEW: Proposed amendment would 'trump' federal courts

TOGETHER: Three great things about BGCT '03

Texas Baptist Forum

He Said/ She Said: Front Seat

Cybercolumn for 11/17: Gentle breath of thewounded healer by John Duncan



LifeWay Explore the Bible Series for Nov. 23: God's peace can rule, judge and regulate life

LifeWay Family Bible Series for Nov. 23: Paul shines the light of truth into the darkness


See articles from previous issue 11/10/03 here.




Mark Wingfield to join Wilshire Baptist Church staff_112403

Posted: 11/20/03

Mark Wingfield to join staff of
Wilshire Baptist Church in Dallas

By Ken Camp

Texas Baptist Communications

DALLAS–Baptist Standard Managing Editor Mark Wingfield is leaving denominational journalism after 21 years to join the staff of Wilshire Baptist Church in Dallas.

At a called church conference Nov. 19, the North Dallas congregation overwhelmingly voted to call Wingfield as associate pastor with specific responsibilities in communications, outreach and stewardship education. He will assume the post on Jan. 1.

His hiring is part of a transition plan as Senior Associate Pastor Preston Bright moves toward retirement in two years.

Mark Wingfield

Wingfield has been a member of Wilshire Baptist Church for five years, when he came to the Baptist Standard.

"I am passionate about our church and its vision, mission and ministry," he said. "To be able to invest my full attention on advancing the work of the church is invigorating and challenging."

Rather than retreating from action, Wingfield said he sees the move to a church staff as putting him at the heart of Baptist life.

"The reality is that the local church is the center of action for Baptist ministry. And I know of no other church that presents a better place to serve than Wilshire," he said.

"I some ways, I feel I am becoming part of a national trend that I have written about. More churches are calling out staff leadership from among their members. The proposal put together by our pastor and personnel committee is visionary, and I'm thrilled to be part of Wilshire's long tradition of stepping out on faith to fulfill the church's mission in creative ways."

Wingfield is vice chairman of deacons, an adult Sunday School teacher and a member of the strategic planning council at Wilshire, a congregation affiliated with the Baptist General Convention of Texas and the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship.

"The opportunity to call Mark to our church staff gives us someone of immense competence and confidence. His admirable courage in speaking for and to Baptists in the wider church assures us of his clarity of vision and conviction," said Pastor George Mason.

"His commitment to Wilshire's mission has been evident in everything he has done. I can't wait to see what God will do among us with the addition of Mark to our team."

Wingfield has been recognized by his peers as one of the top investigative, enterprising reporters in denominational journalism. Over the past two decades, he has reported on tumultuous changes at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary and Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, conflict at Baylor University, and the often-divergent paths taken by the BGCT and the Southern Baptist Convention.

As managing editor of the Baptist Standard, Wingfield made the paper "sparkle," according to Editor Marv Knox.

"Mark is one of the most insightful, thorough, fair and committed journalists Baptists ever produced. His insatiable curiosity, tenacity for truth and passion for people have shaped his remarkable ministry for more than two decades. Plus, his impeccable eye for design and ear for the ever-changing conversation of faith have made the Standard fun to read" he said.

Even so, to those who know him best, Wingfield's decision to join the Wilshire Baptist Church staff seemed a logical step, Knox observed.

"He has always been one of the finest, hardest-working church members anywhere. His training in ministry, experience in Baptist life and investment in the ministry of the church have shaped him for this new opportunity at Wilshire. While his departure saddens all of us who work with him, we're also excited for Mark and for his wonderful church," Knox said.

Before coming to the Baptist Standard, Wingfield was editor of the Kentucky Baptist Western Recorder, where he earlier served as news director.

Previously, he worked as associate director of news and information for the Southern Baptist Convention Home Mission Board and as director of news and information with Southwestern Seminary.

Wingfield has been a prolific contributor to the Associated Baptist Press independent news service, which recently made him the inaugural recipient of its Writer's Award.

"We knew the first award had to go to Mark," said ABP editor Greg Warner. "He has epitomized quality, truthful Baptist journalism for so long, and ABP and its readers were most often the beneficiaries of his talent."

Warner went on to say that Wingfield's move from denominational journalism to a church staff position "testifies to why Christian journalists do what we do–because we believe in God's people as firmly as we believe in God's truth."

Wingfield is a past president of the Baptist Communicators Association and has been a frequent winner in its Wilmer C. Fields Awards Competition, including the organization's top writing honor, the Frank Burkhalter Award. He also received a Katy Award from the Dallas Press Club.

Wingfield earned an undergraduate degree in journalism from the University of New Mexico and attended Southwestern Seminary. He and his wife, Alison, have 11-year-old twin sons, Luke and Garrett.

Concerning the Baptist Standard's future, Knox noted, "Since this move so obviously clarifies God's will for Mark Wingfield and Wilshire Baptist Church, I'm confident it's also God's will for the Standard. We will seek his successor and maintain the paper's commitment to inform, inspire, equip and empower Texas Baptists to follow Jesus Christ and expand God's kingdom."

News of religion, faith, missions, Bible study and Christian ministry among Texas Baptist churches, in the BGCT, the Southern Baptist Convention ( SBC ) and around the world.




Around the State_112403

Posted: 11/24/03

Around the State

Appointments

Eleven missionaries with Texas ties have been appointed by the North American Mission Board:

bluebull Joe Buck, who considers San Antonio his hometown, was appointed as a two-year resort missionary in Jackson Hole, Wy. He previously was a counselor for Laity Lodge in Leakey.

bluebull James and Claire Collins serve in Reno, Nev., where he is a church starter. He is a Howard Payne University graduate, and she is a University of Texas graduate. They previously served four years as missionaries in Mexico with the International Mission Board. They have three children, James, Marissa and Eleanor.

bluebull Kristi Dodd was appointed as a two-year multihousing church-starting missionary in Odessa. She works with Mission Odessa, a ministry of First Church there that includes apartment ministry, jail ministry and other outreach efforts.

bluebull John and Angela Herrington serve in Omaha, Neb., where he is a church starter. A Texas native, he previously was pastor of Lakepointe Community Church in Conroe and was pastor of a Nebraska church for 13 years. She also is a Texas native and a graduate of Baylor University. She was an instructor at Montgomery County Community College in Conroe, a lecturer at the University of Nebraska and a public school teacher in Arlington. They have four children, Heath, Emily, Seth and Megan.

bluebull Michelle Kendrick is a two-year missionary at the Baptist Center in Houston.

bluebull Heather Jo McIver is a two-year collegiate evangelism missionary in Syracuse, N.Y. She grew up in Spring and is a graduate of Dallas Baptist University.

bluebull Dominic Menard, a Texas native, is the collegiate evangelism missionary in Carbondale, Ill. He previously was a youth minister in Baytown.

bluebull Jamie Morgan works in collegiate and resort ministry in Ocean City, Md. A two-year missionary, she considers Glenn Heights her hometown. She previously was a youth intern at Southwest Church in DeSoto. She also has served as a student missionary in Keller, Australia and Malaysia.

bluebull Derek Yan, who considers Grand Prairie his hometown, is associate pastor of Solid Rock Fellowship, a new church in Edmonds, Wash. He previously was a pastoral intern at Rosen Heights Church in Fort Worth.

Anniversaries

bluebull Stephen Bailiff, fifth as youth minister at First Church in Navasota.

bluebull Robert Sea, 10th as pastor of Chinese Church in Lubbock, Nov. 1.

bluebull Domingo Chapa, fifth as pastor of Getsemani Church in Tahoka, Nov. 6.

bluebull S.W. Keeton, 10th as pastor of MacKenzie Terrace Church in Lubbock, Nov. 28.

Death

bluebull Joseph Underwood, 86, Oct. 15, in Richmond, Va. Born in Rising Star, he began preaching at age 15 and was ordained as a minister at 18. He began his vocational ministry at a local country church while a student at Baylor University. He and his wife, Mary Lea, were appointed as missionaries to Brazil in 1943 by the Foreign Mission Board. He resigned his appointment in 1953 to become the pastor of a New Mexico church and later worked in the offices of the state convention there. After six years, he moved to Richmond, Va., to serve as a consultant in evangelism and church development with the the mission board for more than 20 years. He retired in 1981. He is survived by his wife; sons, Wyatt, William and Charles; daughter, Judy Webb; brother, W.R.; sister, Elizabeth McAnelly; and seven grandchildren.

Ordained

bluebull Donald Sheffield to the ministry at Friendship Church in Doddridge.

bluebull Uli Baumert, Mike Causey and Steven Graf as deacons at Windsor Park Church in DeSoto.

bluebull Curtis Guidry and Terry McDaniel as deacons at Memorial Church in Baytown.

News of religion, faith, missions, Bible study and Christian ministry among Texas Baptist churches, in the BGCT, the Southern Baptist Convention ( SBC ) and around the world.




BaptistWay Bible Study for Texas for Dec. 7: Jesus the only fix for broken lives_112403

Posted: 11/24/03

Dec. 7

1 John 1:1-2:2

Jesus the only fix for broken lives

By Gary Long

Consider for a moment your favorite restaurants. No matter the cuisine, what do they have in common that makes them your favorite? The common thread between my favorite restaurants is more than the taste of the food and quality of the service–it is the experience I have there.

The word is “organoleptic.” It means that something is known and understood through multiple senses. To experience a favorite restaurant fully is to savor the food, to smell the varieties coming from the kitchen, to take in sights that stimulate the eyes, to hear the music in the background or the voice of a close friend, and to feel the textures of a nice napkin or a sturdy coffee cup.

Such was the experience of the Johannine community as they sought to describe their experience of Jesus. For the first time in history, God became touchable and seeable, as well as hearable. No longer was God narrowly accessible only through the temple and high priests. Now God was something to experience personally!

Linked closely to the gospel of John, the community from which 1 John emerged certainly would have in their corporate memory, “The Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us” (John 1:14). The reality of God becoming human was something the writer of 1 John could hardly express, much less contain. It was more powerful than human comprehension could take in. Like trying to describe our favorite restaurant, they could only use words of sensory experience because God had become “really real.”

Emphasizing this reality was meant to serve a dual purpose: (1) Harkening the advent of God moving in a new way and (2) restraining the heresy that Jesus was not really human or was somehow “less” than human.

Advent of Jesus signals a new way

These two purposes offer up an applicable message for us too. Clearly, the epistle is seeking to build unity among believers around the truth of Jesus' identity as God incarnate. Moreover, not only do verses 1-4 provide boundaries for the makeup of Christian community (that is to say, Christians have the distinct belief that Jesus is God in the flesh), but the passage also informs our development as Christians.

It's like this: If we believe we should attempt to live like God, and Jesus was fully God, then we are to live in the light of Jesus' ways. It's really rather simple. If we want to live like God, we should live like Jesus lived. God's advent in the person of Jesus signaled the beginning of a new time and a new way of being the people of God, both for the Johannine community and for us. The difficulty arises in discerning how we ought to live like Jesus in our culture because certainly the ways of living in the dominant culture of American society run counter to many of the distinctly Christian ways of living.

study3

If we seek to live in accord with Jesus' way of being light in the world, we ought to consider some things. For example, as 1 John says later, Christians are to be known by their love. Further, nearly all Christians I've met agree our love is to be patterned after Jesus' kind of loving. Yet I would submit that most of us have a poorly formed understanding of Jesus' kind of love.

We freely interchange several concepts in our use of the word “love.” I love pizza, and I love the Tar Heels, but that certainly is not the same as “I love my son, Caleb.” What's more, as Philip Kenneson suggests in his book on the fruit of the spirit titled “Life on the Vine,” we dole out and receive love as if it is a marketplace exchange. We assign values to everything in our culture, including other people, and in so doing we “love” others only to the extent that they offer us something in return.

Henlee Barnette once spoke, “Love pursues the good of 'the other.'” For us to live in the light of Jesus as fully God means we must relearn some basic teachings of Christianity, and one of those ideals is to love as Jesus loves. Instead of ending our commitments to one another in marriages, friendships or church memberships because we no longer perceive that we are getting something from the exchange (that is to say, we no longer “feel loved”), we must willingly confess we have decided to stop willing what is best for “the other” and admit we have ceased to love.

Restraining heresy

The occasion for this epistle includes the need to combat heresy. The church was struggling to understand who Jesus was in his nature as God. Was Jesus mostly human with some God-like qualities? Was Jesus fully God and not really human, only appearing phantom-like as a human? What John most wants to say in this chapter is that somehow, beyond our comprehension, Jesus was at once both “one with man, and (in some sense) one with God.”

If you can get a Christian to be honest, she will confess to struggling with this very issue. There is no way to begin to describe the perfect blending of God and humanity that we see exhibited in Jesus, yet we try. And it is important to clarify what we believe about Jesus, for I am convinced that how we answer the question of who Jesus is determines the foundation of our faith as Christians.

When Jesus asked his disciples who they thought he was, they proclaimed him the Messiah. He ordered them to keep his identity a secret at that time. However, when we arrive at the time of 1 John, it is clear it is a matter for proclamation and an issue of doctrinal debate. The conclusion one reached determined whether “fellowship” (1:3, 6, & 7) could be forged. This is because the writer viewed the individual's assent to Jesus as fully God and fully human as a sign of “fellowship” with the Father through Jesus, as well as a criteria for fellowship in the church.

Ultimately, orthodox Christianity came to confess Jesus as the messiah, the Christ. 1 John ascribes this title indirectly with the phrase “word of life” (v. 1), echoing the high Christology of the prologue to the Gospel of John (1:1-15) and making clear that Jesus as Christ was from the beginning with God and intimately related to God. Jesus existed from limitless eternity and has entered into the plane of history to dwell among us. Indeed, as the deep meaning of the haunting hymn “O Come, O Come Immanuel” proclaims: God is with us.

The “message” 1 John wants us to receive deserves special note, that “God is light and in him there is no darkness at all” (v. 5). This message serves not only as an introductory appetizer to the rest of the epistle, it also serves as the wellspring from which our Christian ethic might emerge. Take note of the use of “light” and the interconnectedness between walking in light and experiencing righteousness. God is light, we are children of the light and we should therefore walk in the light.

The Johannine community would probably have heard this message and recalled their Jewish ancestors' experiences with God as fire. In Exodus 3, Moses experiences God as fire. On the exodus from Egypt, the Israelites are guided by God's presence as a column of fire. God's presence in the tabernacle is signaled by fire. Simeon hails the birth of Jesus as “light for revelation” (Luke 2:32), John the Baptist applies the light metaphor to Jesus (John 3:19-21), and Jesus himself claims, “I am the light of the world” (John 8:12).

Walking in this “light” is a demanding thing, as already highlighted in the challenge to consider our understanding of “love” toward one another. But walking in the light also produces righteousness in us. This is not a “works-righteousness” but rather it is the effect of walking with Jesus. We strive to be more like Jesus, and in so doing recognize our sinfulness. We confess our sinfulness, and “he who is faithful will forgive us our sins” (v. 9). The point is clear: We need forgiveness. Being in the light of Jesus helps us recognize that truth, and then the abundance of grace is given us when we seek restoration.

Unlike the majority of Paul's work, which is centered on freedom from sin as freedom from the law, the debate concerning sin that 1 John addresses wasn't really about whether certain things were sinful or not. It was really about whether or not sin mattered or even existed. 1 John would have us believe sin does exist and does matter in this world. The Gnostics of that day argued sin didn't matter because the moral world of the flesh didn't matter. Sin was inconsequential.

This is not too different from our context today in which there is a deep and wide hunger for things spiritual, but not so much concern over whether the human condition must be remedied. Self-help books fly off the shelves, but few of the approaches to self help deal with the fallen nature of humans, and if they do deal with the “brokenness” of individuals, the methods of self help are supposed to be “fueled from within” by a person's own strength.

1 John would have none of this. 1 John informs us clearly that the problem is sin and no internal mechanism will fix us. Only the “atoning sacrifice” (2:2) of Jesus the Christ can redeem us and enable us to walk in the light.

Gary Long is pastor of Willow Meadows Baptist Church in Houston

Questions for discussion

bluebull Living in light of Jesus' way will call each of us ultimately to question our actions and attitudes. Would you evaluate your actions and attitudes as “other-directed” or “self-directed?” Somewhere in between?

bluebull Why do you think it was important to the writer of 1 John that there be unity around the nature of Jesus' divinity? What possible conflicts could arise when a church does not agree on who Jesus is?

bluebull How might our Christmas shopping and gift giving be changed by seeking to live in the light of Jesus' ways?

bluebull Consider the fruit of the spirit: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control (Galatians 5:22). To what degree do you bear each of these fruits toward others? How might evidence of these fruits in the life of the believer illustrate how we do or do not live in accordance with Jesus' ways?

bluebull Identify several movies or books that have as a baseline assumption that humans are intrinsically fallen or that humans are intrinsically good. For example, compare “Natural Born Killers” with “The Matrix,” or compare “The Lord of the Flies” with “Robinson Crusoe.”

News of religion, faith, missions, Bible study and Christian ministry among Texas Baptist churches, in the BGCT, the Southern Baptist Convention ( SBC ) and around the world.