onthemove_51903

Posted: 5/19/03

On the Move

Robby Buie has resigned as youth minister at Lakeway Church in The Colony.

bluebull Dave Collett to First Church in Flower Mound as youth minister.

bluebull Eddie Frazier to New Zion Church in Bonham as interim pastor.

bluebull Jamie Graybeal has resigned as preschool/children's minister at Trinity Valley Church in Carrollton.

bluebull Brian Hawkins to First Church in Bailey as pastor.

bluebull Nathan Herrington has resigned as minister of youth at Ferris Avenue Church in Waxahachie.

bluebull Don Hix to First Church in Halfway as interim pastor.

bluebull Glenn Howard to Calvary Church in Pilot Point as pastor.

bluebull Rex Jackson to Boyd Church in Bonham as music and senior adult minister.

bluebull Todd Lawrence to First Church in Kildare as pastor.

bluebull Bob Mashburn to Ferris Fellowship in Ferris as pastor.

bluebull Wesley McDonald to Memorial Church in Denton as youth minister.

bluebull Derrell Monday to First Church in Vernon as pastor from Central Church in Pampa.

bluebull Zack Pannell to First Church in Sanger as interim education/music minister.

bluebull Jonathan Patrick to First Church in Sanger as minister of youth.

bluebull Harvey Tingle to First Church in Sweetwater as pastor from Hampton Place Church in Dallas.

bluebull Randy Wilson to Grace Temple Church in Denton as minister of youth.

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.




tidbits_51903

Posted: 5/19/03

Texas Tidbits

SFA project gets grant. The Texas Baptist Missions Foundation has secured a $135,000 matching grant from the Mabee Foundation of Tulsa, Okla., to help the Stephen F. Austin University Baptist Student Ministries purchase and remodel a building. Coupled with the completion of the BSM's $1.1 million capital campaign, the campus mission will use the grant funds to double its facilities and ministry possibilities. Gifts can be marked SFA-BSM and sent to Texas Baptist Missions Foundation, 333 North Washington, Dallas 75246.

WINNERS in the statewide Bible Drill and Speakers' Tournament finals in Fort Worth are Laura Bankhead of Champion Baptist Church in Roscoe, second place in Bible Drill; Anna Summersett of First Baptist Church of Texarkana, second place Speakers' Tournament; Mandy Alling of Trinity Baptist Church in Amarillo, tied for first place in Bible Drill; Brittany May of Prestonwood Baptist Church in Plano, first place in Speakers' Tournament; and Jacob Eunice of Northside Church in Del Rio, tied for first place in Bible Drill. They will go to Atlanta to represent Texas in national competition. Not pictured are Youth Essay winners: First place, Cheri Petrusky, and second place, Rachel Tarver, both from First Baptist Church in Clyde; and third place, Zachary DeVine from First Baptist Church in Farmers Branch.

bluebull Baylor gets big gift. Baylor University will receive $19.4 million this month when the Marrs and Verna McLean Foundation Trust is dissolved. Baylor is among several Texas educational institutions to benefit from the fund, established in 1953 by the McLean family of Beaumont. Proceeds from the fund have aided key Baylor programs over the last 50 years. One-third of Baylor's gift from the fund dissolution will go to the Baylor College of Medicine in Houston.

bluebull Grover awarded. Tomi Grover, a Baptist General Convention of Texas restorative justice consultant, has received the Albert and Ethel Marsh Memorial Award from Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary. The annual award goes to the outstanding Southern Baptist doctor of education student on the basis of scholarship, experience and leadership potential as determined by the committee for advanced studies in the seminary's school of educational ministries. Grover is working on her dissertation about the effect apartment ministries have on crime rates in the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex.

bluebull DBU graduates 481. Dallas Baptist University awarded undergraduate and graduate degrees to 481 students at spring commencement May 16. Johanna Fisher, a graduating student of DBU's College of Adult Education, delivered the address for both commencement ceremonies. She is host of "The Johanna Fisher Show" on KCBI radio in Dallas. Charles Thomas Frazier Jr., head of the appellate practice group of Cowles & Thompson law firm in Dallas, received an honorary doctor of humanities. Bernie Moraga, pastor of First Spanish/Fruit Avenue Baptist Church in Albuquerque, N.M., received an honorary doctor of divinity degree.

bluebull UMHB has record graduation. The University of Mary Hardin-Baylor reported a record number of graduating seniors for commencement May 10. The university's 147th graduating class had 321 students receiving degrees, up from 276 the previous May. John Borum of Kingwood received the President's Award, which is given to the senior exhibiting meritorious service to UMHB. Kesi Perkins of Luling received the Loyalty Cup, presented to the student who is most representative of the ideals, traditions and spirit of the university.

bluebull Truett certifies Vietnamese. Baylor University's Truett Seminary awarded the first 10 ministry certificates to Vietnamese students at a May 16 celebration ceremony. John Nguyen, pastor of Vietnamese Baptist Church in Garland, helped start the program at Truett. He praised the students and the program. It helped "stimulate and motivate" Vietnamese pastors and laymen to continue their education to improve their ministry, he said.

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.




imb_51903

Posted: 5/19/03

IMB trustees make budget cuts; Willis retiring

FRAMINGHAM, Mass.–International Mission Board trustees have restricted the number of new missionary appointments due to budget concerns.

At the May 6-8 meeting in Framingham, Mass.–at which trustees fired 13 missionaries for not affirming the 2000 Baptist Faith & Message–trustees grappled with a $10 million budget shortfall.

Despite increases in giving through the Southern Baptist Convention's Cooperative Program and the Lottie Moon Christmas Offering, contributions have not kept up with the number of new missionaries being sent out.

Trustees approved several strategies proposed by staff to cover this year's $10 million shortfall:

Two of the next three conferences for people interested in International Service Corps, Journeyman and Masters programs have been cancelled.

bluebull The number of new short-term personnel will be limited to 400 this year and 300 in 2004, and the number of new long-term personnel will be kept at 350 this year. A total of 412 were appointed last year.

bluebull Staff travel will be restricted.

bluebull Production of some materials will be delayed.

In the past two years, the IMB has drawn from reserve funds to send out more missionaries than regular budget sources could support, IMB President Jerry Rankin told trustees. Seventy percent of the IMB's budget supports missionary personnel.

Trustees also learned of the impending retirement of Avery Willis, senior vice president for overseas operations. He will step down at the end of 2003.

However, he will continue to work on special assignments.

Doug Sager of Knoxville, Tenn., was elected trustee chairman. Mike Barrett of Pleasant Garden, N.C., was elected first vice chairman, and Bill Duncan of Honolulu was elected second vice chairman. Nedra Jackson of Social Circle, Ga., was elected recording secretary.

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.




seminaries_51903

Posted: 5/19/03

Kelley proposes offering for
SBC seminaries; Criswell name possible

By Mark Wingfield

Managing Editor

A president of one of the Southern Baptist Convention's six seminaries has proposed creating an annual offering for the seminaries on the scale of the Lottie Moon Christmas Offering for international missions and the Annie Armstrong Easter Offering for North American missions.

This new offering should be named for W.A. Criswell, suggests Chuck Kelley, president of New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary.

See full text of Kelley's proposal here. (The pdf file will open with the free Adobe Acrobat Reader, available here.

Kelley proposes the idea in a white paper titled “Roots of a Dilemma: SBC Entities and the Cooperative Program.” It is published in New Orleans Seminary's online journal, “Journal for Baptist Theology and Ministry.”

The special offering is one of several possible ways to provide greater funding for the six SBC seminaries, Kelley wrote. It is the primary option he personally recommends.

The seminaries need more money, he suggests, because SBC conservatives aren't doing as good a job of funding theological education as SBC moderates did in the past.

Gifts to the SBC Cooperative Program, while increasing in total dollars, have not made gains against inflation, Kelley noted, and the recent demise of an SBC capital-needs budget has hit the seminaries hard.

The SBC's attempts to redirect more money to front-line missions through agency restructing in 1997 helped but did not solve the problem, Kelley said. From a financial perspective, these changes “to some extent offset the inroads of inflation on CP income.”

In this restructuring, the six seminaries were given an additional 1 percent of Cooperative Program income to share among themselves. This provided assistance, he said, but did not fund any new initiatives.

Even with this change, five of the six seminaries could not make their payrolls based on Cooperative Program giving alone, Kelley said.

The seminaries also took a hit two years ago when the SBC Executive Committee eliminated the capital-needs budget that traditionally had been funded by over-budget Cooperative Program gifts. Instead, any Cooperative Program overages now are distributed to all SBC entities by the regular budget formula.

“This was a devastating blow to the six seminaries, but a positive help for the other entities,” Kelley wrote, explaining that seminaries relied on these funds to offset capital expenses that didn't have donor appeal, like replacing sewer systems.

“The new system made it virtually impossible for the seminaries to receive ever again the money they received in the past for capital projects,” he concluded.

Meanwhile, professors' salaries at SBC seminaries are low, and costs passed on to students are getting higher.

“We are not far away from putting Southern Baptist theological education financially out of reach for many Southern Baptists,” he wrote. “Unless there are some changes, the moderate-dominated seminaries of the '70s and '80s will prove to have been far more affordable than the conservative-dominated seminaries of the 21st century.”

He outlines five options to increase funding to seminaries:

Change the Cooperative Program distribution formula.

bluebull Allow more fund-raising by the seminaries.

bluebull Allow seminaries more input into trustee selection in order to place more wealthy donors on trustee boards.

bluebull Reinstate the SBC capital-needs budget.

bluebull Create a special offering for the seminaries.

“Today it is difficult to imagine the mission boards functioning without their annual offerings,” Kelly said. “The potential for the same effect is there with an annual offering for the six seminaries. The problems are how to organize and promote it, how to pay for the cost of it and where to place it on the calendar.”

The offering, he suggested, could be named for Criswell, the legendary pastor of First Baptist Church of Dallas, who died about 18 months ago.

Ironically, First Baptist Church years ago founded a Bible college named for Criswell, first known as Criswell Institute for Biblical Studies and now as Criswell College. It is not an SBC school and, in fact, was created as an alternative to SBC schools.

Times have changed, however, and there has been a steady flow of Criswell faculty and graduates into leadership of the six SBC seminaries, particularly Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Fort Worth.

Kelley's suggestion of allowing seminary administrators more input in the selection of trustees has been proposed before but with negative repercussions.

In 1990, Russell Dilday, then president of Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Fort Worth, suggested to SBC President Jerry Vines that the seminaries were not always getting the caliber of trustees they needed.

Some of the trustees appointed to seminary boards to bring about political and theological change were not competent for the task, Dilday told Vines in a private conversation.

A member of the SBC Executive Committee overheard that conversation and raised a protest with seminary trustees, who questioned Dilday at length about what he had said.

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.




tornado_51903

Posted: 5/19/03

Tornado took deacon for a wild ride

By Lonnie Wilkey

Tennessee Baptist & Reflector

FAYETTEVILLE, Tenn. (ABP)–A historic church in southern Tennessee was leveled by a tornado May 5, but the survival of one of its deacons was hailed as “a miracle of God.”

The original sanctuary of Oak Hill Baptist Church, built in 1883, was destroyed by the tornado.

KENNETH Rozar (left) tells Charles Richards of William Carey Baptist Association about his experience during a tornado that struck the Belleville, Tenn., community May 5 and leveled Oak Hill Baptist Church.

The tornado struck the church shortly before noon, flattening the 120-year-old sanctuary. Two later additions, one on each side, were left standing but received extensive damage.

The church's parsonage also was severely damaged, forcing the pastor and his wife to seek lodging in a local hotel. The tornado caused extensive damage to 12 to 15 homes in Belleville, about 70 miles south of Nashville.

Kenneth Rozar, a deacon at Oak Hill, went to the church shortly before noon on May 5 when he learned a tornado was headed in that direction. When he arrived at the church, he heard what seemed like an explosion, he said.

The tornado picked up his truck, with him inside, and carried him over the church. He recalled seeing the pews still standing as he dove onto the floorboard of the truck. The tornado threw Rozar's truck into a telephone pole, cutting it in two. It came to rest about 150 feet from where it became airborne.

“It is an act of God he is here today,” Pastor Charles Brown said.

Rozar, who suffered a slight concussion and some broken ribs, was taken to a hospital but later released.

“I'm alive by a miracle of God,” said Rozar, who has been a member of the church since 1974.

The congregation is seeking a place to meet while deciding if rebuilding will be possible.

When church members last met the Sunday night before the storm, Rozar recalled, their lesson focused on the church being the people and not the building. “That lesson didn't mean much Sunday night, but it means a lot more now,” he said.

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.




missouri_51903

Posted: 5/19/03

New Missouri convention meets

WINDERMERE CONFERENCE CENTER, Mo.–Messengers to the Baptist General Convention of Missouri held their first annual meeting May 2-3, electing a full-time pastor, a bivocational pastor and a laywoman to leadership.

Bill Miller, elected president of the fledgling convention, is pastor of First Baptist Church of Farmington, Mo. Jimmy Albright, elected vice president, is pastor of Wyatt Baptist Church in St. Joseph, Mo., and professor of archaeology at Missouri Western State College. Sondra Allen, elected secretary, is a member of First Baptist Church of Jefferson City, Mo.

The convention was organized last spring as an alternative to the Missouri Baptist Convention after fundamentalists gained control of the existing convention's governing boards and began enacting sweeping changes.

The BGCM's first annual meeting registered 118 voting members and 105 guests, according to a report published in the Word & Way newspaper.

The convention adopted goals for budget distribution but did not set a total dollar budget goal due to the emerging nature of the organization.

Ten percent of Cooperative Program contributions sent to the BGCM will fund BGCM ministries and missions, with the remainder distributed as follows: 3 percent each to William Jewell College, Southwest Baptist University and Hannibal-LaGrange College; 8 percent to Missouri Baptist University; 5 percent each to the Missouri Baptist Foundation and Windermere Conference Center; 6 percent to Missouri Baptist Children's Home; 10 percent to The Baptist Home; and 11 percent to Word & Way.

An audit of the organization's finances for the period February through December 2002 showed total “revenue and support” of $303,594.

The convention has not released names of its supporting churches or a total number of supporting churches.

Among speakers at the annual meeting was Bob Campbell, president of the Baptist General Convention of Texas and pastor of Westbury Baptist Church in Houston.

The call to follow God is not a call to a life of leisure, Campbell asserted. “God didn't call you to live easy. He called you to serve him.”

Like the early church apostles who faced opposition, members of the new Missouri convention will not find an easy road, he predicted. “You're going to have to stand really tall. … Some of you will have to act as prophets.”

Campbell commended to the Missourians the free press enjoyed by Texas Baptists. Missouri leaders, he said, should simply tell the truth to the people.

“Tell the truth, and let the people decide,” he advised. “I believe you are a people of prayer. Leaders, tell the truth, trust the people, and God's work will get done.”

Based on reporting by Vicki Brown of Word & Way

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.




network_51903

Posted: 5/19/03

Lotz proposes Third World network

SWANWICK, ENGLAND–An international Baptist mission agency that would send and support Baptist missionaries from Third World countries has been proposed by Denton Lotz, general secretary of the Baptist World Alliance.

The agency, Lotz said, would support those who feel called by God to missionary work beyond their borders but lack the financial resources to answer the call.

Lotz made the proposal at the BWA Summit on Baptist Mission in the 21st Century, held May 5-9 at Swanwick, England. Baptist leaders from 60 countries spent a week focused on the evangelistic challenges they face as they seek to spread the gospel of Jesus Christ to all the world.

A “Call to Mission” document issued at the end of the gathering noted that “mission is from everywhere to everywhere” but such movement requires resourcing, and too often resources are held in the hands of few.

The document asks for a global as well as a local interpretation of Acts 4:32, which says that all the believers in the early church were one in heart and mind, no one claimed that any of his possessions was his own and they shared everything they had.

One of the key themes of the “Call to Mission” is that “sharing the gospel of Jesus Christ in word and deed is the task of all disciples of Christ,” and the distinction between sending and receiving countries is now outdated in light of present-day realities.

“We recognized the major challenge of a post Christian culture in large parts of Europe and North America,” the document said, “and we have also seen the spectacular growth of the church in Asia, Africa and Latin America and with it, a faith-filled missionary outreach to the ends of the earth.”

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.




iraq_missions_51903

Posted: 5/19/03

Should Christian 'soldiers' march onward in Iraq?

By Robert Marus

ABP Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON (ABP)–Now that the United States has won the physical war in Iraq, should American Christian missionaries join a spiritual one there?

Christian leaders disagree, but the question is profoundly timely–especially since some think the insertion of American Christian missionaries into the nation's volatile religious and social mix could spark a “holy war” of its own.

Soon after the end of major hostilities in Iraq, American Christian groups announced their desire to enter the country to spread humanitarian aid and–eventually–the gospel. Samaritan's Purse, the Christian relief and aid organization run by Franklin Graham, son of evangelist Billy Graham, announced its intention to provide relief in Iraq soon after the fall of Baghdad.

A spokesman for Samaritan's Purse refused to provide details on how many workers the organization has poised to enter Iraq or whether they already were in the country. Instead he pointed to a statement released by the organization that read, in part, “In response to requests from Christians in Iraq, with whom we've worked for many years, Samaritan's Purse plans to provide physical aid, including water, shelter and medical supplies to help as many Iraqi people as we can.”

Likewise, groups such as the Southern Baptist Convention's International Mission Board are preparing to distribute humanitarian aid in Iraq–and in some cases already are.

According to IMB spokesman Mark Kelly, the board hopes to begin distributing as many as 95,000 boxes of non-perishable food items, packed by volunteers in local churches, to Iraqis in need. An unnamed IMB worker was quoted in a May 9 press release telling IMB trustees, “The doors to Iraq are opening slowly, but they are opening.”

The aid packages are being provided to recipients “with no strings attached,” Kelly said. But the project is being advertised on the IMB's website under a headline that asks the question, “Will the unreached peoples of Iraq ever hear of God's love?”

The IMB's instructions on packing the food boxes request that no Christian literature be placed in them. But Kelly said he did not know of a way IMB officials could assure that no religious literature found its way into the kits.

After the fall of Baghdad, American journalists and foreign-policy pundits began debating whether the Bush administration would or should open Iraq to Christian groups–especially evangelical ones–eager to begin missionary work in the war-ravaged country. Journalist Max Blumenthal, in an April 15 article in the online magazine Salon, wrote, “Foreign policy experts–and even some moderate Christian groups–are already warning that efforts by the conservative Christians to capitalize on the fall of Saddam could inject a decidedly religious tone into Bush's stated plan to democratize Iraq.”

Similarly, Muslim expert Charles Kimball has said repeatedly that postwar proselytizing by American Christians in Iraq is a bad idea. “In the first place, this is an area that is living with the history of the Crusades and in the shadow of colonialism,” said Kimball a professor at Wake Forest University, as he spoke on the National Public Radio program “Fresh Air” May 5. “It's an area where people are already very suspicious … of what U.S. intentions and U.S. motives are.”

The show, produced by public-radio station WHYY in Boston and hosted by journalist Terry Gross, focused on the question of whether and how American missionaries should go into Iraq in the near term.

Kimball's position was countered on the program by Al Mohler, president of Southern Baptist Theological Seminary and a frequent media apologist for the SBC.

Ever since Islamic extremists were implicated in the Sept. 11 attacks and the U.S. commenced its “war on terrorism” in response, President Bush has insisted America is not fighting a war on Islam or Muslims but with extremists of any faith. In speeches, Bush repeatedly has called Islam a “religion of peace” and has developed ties with moderate Muslim clerics and groups in the U.S.

However, many of Bush's political and religious allies in the U.S. haven't been nearly as diplomatic in their handling of Islam. In recent months, conservative Christian activists such as Moral Majority founder Jerry Falwell and “700 Club” host Pat Robertson have issued sharp criticisms of Islam that have ignited firestorms of controversy. One comment by Falwell reportedly sparked riots between Muslims and Hindus in India that left five people dead.

Franklin Graham, an ally of the president who offered prayers at Bush's inauguration, also has inspired controversy with repeated comments that Muslims and others have found offensive. Shortly after Sept. 11, he called Islam “a very evil and wicked religion” and repeatedly criticized the faith in harsh terms.

Now, with Graham's group poised to enter Iraq, many observers are asking if that's a good idea. They particularly wonder if it's advisable in Iraq's current power vacuum. Many fear that politically active clerics among Iraq's Shiite Muslim majority could stir up the kind of revolution that in 1979 established a fundamentalist Islamic theocracy in neighboring Iran.

“To go into an area–especially to tie aid to some kind of proselytizing initiative –would be to fuel the worst sort of fears that this is a new kind of crusade, that this really is a kind of Christian imperialism,” Kimball said in his “Fresh Air” interview. “And I think that is tantamount to a lighted match in a room full of explosives.”

Mohler, on the other hand, expressed strong support for a missionary presence in Iraq.

“I would certainly like to see evangelical Christians go into Iraq and every other nation, in the name of Christ, and with the most sensitive presentation of Christian truth, along with a very urgent need and desire to meet the most basic human needs of the people in that area,” he said. “I fully expect there will be evangelical missionaries from many other nations of the world (in Iraq), so that it will not be an American effort but a Christian effort.”

Christians ministering in Iraq and elsewhere should make it clear they do not represent the American government, Mohler added. “We're there in the name of Christ. Christianity is trans-ethnic, trans-political, trans-national, and that is essential to the Christian gospel.”

IMB spokesman Kelly reflected Mohler's view. “If there are problems with American relief efforts in Iraq, it will have at least as much to do with the fact that the group is Americans and not just American Christians,” Kelly said. Noting that in the Muslim world the perception that all Americans are Christians is widespread, he added, “It would not be a problem that only evangelical groups would have.”

Southern Baptist missionaries, many of whom have worked in Islamic countries for decades, are well-versed in local history and culture and therefore sensitive to the delicacies of such work, Kelly said.

“When they select projects … one of the things they look at is whether that community would be open to receiving assistance,” he explained. “If they find any evidence that Southern Baptist relief would not be welcomed, they would go somewhere else where it would be wanted. Nobody has any desire to see the lives of people in Iraq made more difficult, or to see a delicate situation inflamed by these kinds of sensitivities.”

Kelly also noted that, when possible, Southern Baptist workers in the region would work with other evangelical Christian groups in the region, including Arab Christian groups and indigenous Iraqi churches.

Working with Iraqi Christians would be a good move, agreed Bill O'Brien, a former Southern Baptist missions leader and founder of the Global Center at Samford University in Birmingham, Ala. American missionaries could help avoid the appearance of being leaders of a new imperialist crusade by working under the authority of indigenous Christian groups, he suggested.

“The first thing a person or a group would really have to be willing to (do is) establish credibility and earn the right to be heard,” O'Brien said. “And the best way I can think of to do that would be to go into partnership or under the auspices of existing churches in Iraq.”

According to the U.S. State Department, an estimated 750,000 of Iraq's 23 million people are Christians. O'Brien noted that Iraq is home to Christian worshipping communities that are nearly as old as the faith itself.

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.




letters_51903

Posted: 5/19/03

TEXAS BAPTIST FORUM:
Focus on family issues

I am writing in response to Ben Macklin's letter (May 12) expressing concerns about non-Southern Baptists preaching at the Pastors' Conference, June 15-16 in Phoenix.

He states, “Our Cooperative Program dollars given to the SBC should not fund a single non-Baptist. Period!” He has nothing to worry about. The Pastors' Confe

E-mail the editor at marvknox@baptiststandard.com

rence is funded solely through the offerings collected at the conference, product sales of recorded sermons, and the hosting church, in this case, First Baptist in Dallas.

I encourage Texas Baptists to attend. This year's conference will focus on family issues, particularly ministering to ministers' families.

My pastor, Mac Brunson, is serving as president of the Pastors' Conference. He has a compassionate heart for hurting families and a passion to see our families become the place where missions and ministry take root and then flourish.

Free counseling sessions will even be available to individuals or families who wish to speak with a Christian counselor. This service is being donated by counselors from First Baptist in Dallas, Hope for the Heart Ministries and Focus on the Family.

The outstanding speakers will address this critical issue, and the vast majority of them are Southern Baptists. And we are working and praying that the music will honor the Lord Jesus Christ and minister to the hearts of our brothers and sisters in Christ with a sense of refreshing and renewal.

Keith Ferguson

Dallas

Consciences not for sale

I am somewhat befuddled by the recent refusal of the North American Mission Board to ratify the cooperative agreement with the Baptist General Convention of Texas (May 12).

The BGCT Executive Board went to extraordinary lengths to accommodate the desire by NAMB to include a requirement that jointly funded missionaries “conform” to the 2000 Baptist Faith & Message. Many of us felt we were bending over backward to make the agreement acceptable. All we wanted was a brief disclaimer that clarified the fact the BGCT does not endorse the 2000 BF&M. Now NAMB is jeopardizing the work by claiming we have come to an impasse.

NAMB seems determined to separate themselves even further from cooperative work with the BGCT, no matter how much we try to accommodate their concerns.

I am willing to continue working with NAMB to help us have a mutually beneficial cooperative agreement. This should be a simple thing to do.

But we will not be coerced to sell our consciences. Nor will we allow ourselves to be forced to bow down to a man-made “instrument of doctrinal accountability” for the sake of a few dollars from Atlanta.

Wesley Shotwell

Azle

Defense of Calvinism

A recent letter referred to the SBC as a “16-million-member juggernaut” which grew to such proportions during “the low-water mark of Baptist Calvinism” (May 5). It claimed this is evidence the 20th century was “quality time” for the SBC.

The writer failed to note that of the SBC's 16 million members, less than half will be in church on any given Sunday morning. Cut that number by two-thirds, and we get the Sunday night and Wednesday night attendance. Many SBC churches have scores on the roll and only a handful in the pew.

Though lots have “prayed the prayer” and “walked the aisle” and been told they are Christians, for the majority, old things have not really passed away, and, as a result, all things have not become new. Sadly, the most prominent category of Southern Baptists may be the “non-resident” or “non-active” variety. This is what 20th century Baptist Arminianism and pragmatism produced.

The writer admitted, as many will not, “the earliest Southern Baptists were strong Calvinists.” The average SBC church has strayed from the biblical gospel of sovereign grace, the gospel our early SBC leaders preached, and has made salvation the result of human decision rather than divine power.

God bless those who are calling us back to our original doctrinal moorings.

Michael Williams

La Marque

'Other' gospel

When does “the commitment to reporting the news that impacts Baptists and the kingdom of God” (May 5), cease to be an objective coverage of news? The bold placement of “Deep-fried gospel” on page 1, followed by extensive coverage and production information comes across not only as free advertising but, in addition, endorsement.

Such phrases in the article as “telling the gospel in a fresh way” and “the scandalous nature of the gospel in a new way” bring to mind the Apostle Paul's words of warning to the Galatians: “But even if we or an angel from heaven should preach a gospel other than the one we preached to you, let him be eternally condemned” (Galatians 1:8).

Aubrey Richardson

Blum

Best-kept secret

Texas Baptists' best-kept secret is the youth Bible drill and speakers' tournament.

Dedicated young people from all over the state recently competed in the finals for this year's tournament in Fort Worth.

Church leaders, write the Baptist General Convention of Texas now to get information on next year's tournament. This year, we had our first round, the local church tournament, on Sunday morning. Outside of being put to shame by two speakers who, in four to six minutes, did a better job than I did behind the pulpit, I was pleased.

Our little rural church has sent finalists to Fort Worth for the past three years, and I am truly grateful for the dedicated workers that prepare our young people for the tournament.

At the least, it will be a shot in the arm to your Discipleship Training program. It also sows permanent seeds of God's word in their lives. The whole church is blessed.

I would like to thank Texas Baptist universities, who award scholarships to the speakers' tournament finalists, and a special thanks to Sweetwater Baptist Association for supporting this event annually.

Spread the word. This is one of the best things going on among Texas Baptists, and everyone needs to know about it!

Bruce Parsons

Roscoe

Removing evil

“Religious leaders and churchgoers singing from different book on war” (April 28) espouses the theory that Protestant leaders should be concerned that their members are significantly to the right of themselves on the question of war with Iraq. I find this thesis troubling.

We who supported President Bush and the U.S.-led invasion are not warmongers. Neither are we mindless automatons waiting for religious leaders to tell us what to believe. We read the same Bible and pray to the same God as they do, and God speaks to us too. We love and respect our pastors but do not look upon them as prophets.

George W. Bush, a godly man, is a strong leader who feels a responsibility for making the world a safer place by eliminating the regime of the most evil man to lead a country since Hitler.

We now have seen the rape rooms, mass graves of people who were executed and other atrocities committed by Saddam Hussein. He destroyed hundreds of villages and gassed his own people, including children. Surely the world is safer without him in power.

It was fitting that this article appeared in the same issue as a piece on Dietrich Bonhoeffer, who, finding Christian solutions had seemed to become meaningless in such utter evil, chose other ways to express his faith in a time of terrorism and crisis. Who knows how different the world might have been if strong world leaders before World War II had followed the example of Bonhoeffer?

Jean Vaughn

Deer Park

What do you think? Submit letters to marvknox@baptiststandard.com or Box 660267, Dallas 75266-0267.

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.