Bible exhibit a labor of love for its curators_40504

Posted: 4/02/04

Bible exhibit a labor of love for its curators

By Yvonne Betowt

Religion News Service

PHOENIX, Ariz. (RNS)–As a young man in college, Joel Lampe says he “lost” the faith taught him by his father, Craig Lampe, a noted authority on old and rare Bibles.

The younger Lampe tried to find God by studying other faiths, including Judaism and Islam. He even lived in India for six months to examine Hinduism before realizing it wasn't for him.

“I could poke a thousand holes in the Resurrection, the Catholic Church, Islam and every other religious denomination,” said Joel Lampe, one of the two curators of the Dead Sea Scrolls and the Forbidden Book exhibit, a traveling exhibit that began last September in Dallas

Fragment of a Genesis scroll from the Dead Sea Scrolls and the Forbidden Book exhibit.

“I couldn't defend my faith. I had to find it.”

In 1990 Lampe went to Israel to study the Dead Sea Scrolls and visit historical biblical sites. As he saw sites he had only read about in the Bible, Lampe began the see Scripture in a different light.

He realized they were more than just words of wisdom passed down through the ages. They were words written by real people about real events.

A couple of years later, he said, he began studying the lives of William Tyndale, John Rogers, Thomas Cranmer and John Wycliffe–biblical publishing pioneers who were persecuted or killed for challenging the authority of the Roman Catholic Church.

He also said he learned from his academic study of Jesus' disciples that many of them experienced horrific deaths “and none even flinched.”

“These were 11 guys who went 11 different directions (after the Ascension) and never saw each other again. They all told the same story and refused to deny what they saw. There had to be something to what they believed,” he said.

Lampe, who lives in Phoenix, said he decided Christianity actually held the truth for him. About two years ago, he and his father's long-time friend and colleague, Lee Biondi, a noted curator of ancient manuscripts and Bibles, decided to put together a religion-related exhibit that would appeal to the masses.

It would be an exhibit allowing an up-close view of the ancient biblical artifacts and historic Bibles such as the Gutenberg Bible (1455), the English Wycliffite Bible (circa 1329-1384), the first Tyndale New Testament (1526), Luther's Reformation German Bible (1536), and the King James Bible (1611), and several others of historical significance. The exhibit also includes the Lunar Bible, a two-inch square microfilm of the Bible taken on the Apollo 14 moon mission in 1971.

Biondi began calling owners of the religious relics to ask permission to include them in his exhibit. At the same time, he made arrangements to have the Dead Sea Scrolls fragments which had been brought to Murfreesboro, Tenn., last year be part of the exhibit.

“It is a group of like-minded people who were not only willing to let us borrow their pieces, but were very eager to share the story (of the Bible),” Biondi said of those lending pieces for the exhibit.

“We wanted to tell the entire story of the Bible, from the very beginning to today. Most of the pieces are privately owned, and most of the owners are very religious but wanted to remain anonymous,” he said.

Biondi is a renowned curator of art exhibits throughout the world. He said to his knowledge this is the only exhibit featuring a complete history of the Bible. The exhibit includes several 5,000-year-old pictographic clay tablets from ancient Mesopotamia.

“It's all still amazing to me when I see people react to it,” said Biondi. “I see it fresh through the eyes of the people who see it for the first time.”

“In many exhibits of this type, only wealthy people are usually invited to view it,” Biondi said. “But we wanted to make it available to anyone who is interested in it.”

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.




Baptist Briefs_40504

Posted: 4/02/04

Baptist Briefs

Iorg nominated as Golden Gate president. Jeff Iorg, executive director-treasurer of the Northwest Baptist Convention since 1995, has been recommended as the seventh president of Golden Gate Baptist Theological Seminary. The seminary's trustees will meet April 26-27 to vote on the search committee's recommendation. Iorg was the founding pastor of Greater Gresham Baptist Church in Gresham, Ore., and has served in pastorates in Missouri and Texas. He is a graduate of Hardin-Simmons University, Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary and Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary.

Author Hefley dies. Jim Hefley, author of "The Truth in Crisis," a five-volume series that chronicled the "conservative resurgence" of the Southern Baptist Convention, died recently in Hannibal, Mo., after a long illness. He was 73. Hefley was the founder of Hannibal Books, an evangelical publishing company, and a former writer-in-residence at Hannibal-LaGrange College in Hannibal. He was pastor of churches in Louisiana, Tennessee and Missouri.

Hays nominated for SBC 2nd VP. John Hays, former president of the Ohio Baptist convention, will be nominated for Southern Baptist Convention second vice president during the June 15-16 convention in Indianapolis. Hays, pastor of the Columbus-area Jersey Baptist Church since 1981, will be nominated by Guy Morton, pastor of Lakeview Baptist Church in Vermilion, Ohio. Hays is a former trustee of the SBC International Mission Board and currently a trustee of Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary.

LifeWay adds VBS option in 2005. LifeWay Christian Resources has announced it will add a second line of Vacation Bible School resources beginning in 2005 to meet the demand of churches for wider selection in their summer evangelism and outreach ministries. LifeWay has provided churches with VBS literature for more than 80 years, including curriculum in English and Spanish for preschool, children, youth, adult and special education needs. This year's "Rickshaw Rally" curriculum theme has been widely criticized in some quarters as being racially insensitive.

Former congressman joins Union faculty. Former United States Congressman Ed Bryant has been appointed special assistant to the president and lecturer in history and political science at Union University in Jackson, Tenn., beginning with the fall 2004 term. Bryant was a Tennessee representative in the U.S. House from 1995 to 2003. Previously, he taught military and constitutional law at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, served as a U.S. district attorney and was in private legal practice.

Lutherans and Baptists partner. Lutheran Theological Southern Seminary in Columbia, S.C. will create a Baptist studies program with Baptist leaders in South Carolina, including the state's Cooperative Baptist Fellowship. Virginia Barfield, a former professor at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary, has been named director of the program, scheduled to begin this fall.

Midwestern to open undergraduate college. Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary will establish a college of ministry, Midwestern Baptist College SBC, that will award associate and bachelor's degrees. Trustees unanimously approved the proposal to establish the college and selected James Anderson as the school's first dean. The Missouri Baptist Convention has pledged $100,000 to help set up the school.

Union names Abernathy staff photographer. Union University has named Morris Abernathy staff photographer effective July 30. He replaces photojournalist Jim Veneman, who will teach photography full time and oversee visual content for the university's publications. Abernathy worked as corporate visual coordinator for LifeWay Christian Resources and as director of photography for Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary.

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.




Cartoon_40504

Posted: 4/02/04

See second cartoon here

Words you substitute for expletives after you become a Christian for two hundred, please



Universal Donor

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.




Cartoon_40504

Posted: 4/02/04

Universal Donor

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.




ANOTHER VIEW: Baptists & Pentecostals stand stronger on common ground_40504

Posted: 4/02/04

ANOTHER VIEW:
Baptists & Pentecostals stand stronger on common ground

By Roger Olsen

“Holy rollers,” “religious fanatics,” “sectarians,” “crazy Christians.”

What religious group is being described? Pentecostals? Yes; by their uninformed critics. But also Baptists–in some parts of the United States, Canada and Europe.

Baptists and Pentecostals too often ignore their common ground. Both traditions stand squarely in the center of the free-church heritage eschewing ties with the state or social support by the dominant culture. Both baptize only believers and have believers-only churches. Both have deep roots in revivalism, share a warm love for Jesus Christ, are evangelistic, believe in the authority of Scripture and sing their faith in God. Both are renewal movements within Christianity that emphasize spiritual vitality over creedal orthodoxy.

And yet, for all that, Baptists and Pentecostals look askance at each other across their shared fence.

Too often, Baptists stereotype Pentecostals as "weird," and Pentecostals disdain Baptists as "lukewarm Christians." None of this is necessary or helpful to the greater cause of the kingdom of God to which both sides are committed.

Pentecostals who defect to Baptist churches often lose friends and strain family ties. Baptists who become Pentecostals sometimes risk social standing and find themselves ostracized from their circles of friends and acquaintances. Too often, Baptists stereotype Pentecostals as “weird,” and Pentecostals disdain Baptists as “lukewarm Christians.” None of this is necessary or helpful to the greater cause of the kingdom of God to which both sides are committed.

Of course, some Pentecostals invite ridicule and suspicion from evangelicals and Baptists by engaging in extreme emotionalism or denying the Trinity. But the vast majority of Pentecostals are embarrassed by the antics of television evangelists who specialize in throwing the Holy Spirit at audiences to make them fall over and shun non-trinitarian Pentecostals from fellowship.

Pentecostals should no more be held responsible for the irresponsible acts of their own lunatic fringe than Baptists should be held responsible for the few extremists who wander around the margins of their movement spouting hatred or condemning Billy Graham for (allegedly) being “liberal.”

Researchers are increasingly examining Pentecostalism because of its explosion in developing countries. This includes mainline Protestant (generally considered liberal) social scientist-theologians such as Donald E. Miller of the University of California and Harvey Cox of Harvard University.

Cox's “Fire from Heaven: The Rise of Pentecostal Spirituality and the Reshaping of Religion in the 21st Century” attributes Pentecostalism's success to an alleged “ecstasy deficit” in mainline Christianity. His book is an excellent example of “Pentecostal chic” on the part of scholars who seem to have no particular evangelical faith of their own.

Miller's forthcoming “Pentecostalism and Social Transformation: A Global Analysis,” co-authored with Ted Yamamori, extols the benefits of Pentecostalism for the poverty-stricken populations of developing nations. “Liberation theologians turned to the poor and the poor turned to Pentecostalism” is an increasingly popular description of the religious situation in Latin America.

Philip Jenkins argues in “The Next Christendom: The Coming Global Christianity” that Pentecostalism is about to overwhelm all the mainline and evangelical forms of Christianity in the non-Western world. Some researchers estimate as many as 50 million Christians worldwide are some kind of Pentecostals.

What is the appeal of Pentecostalism? One author called it the “vision of the disinherited.” Pentecostalism emphasizes heaven and gives people “a little bit of heaven to go there in.” This ties in with Cox's theory of religious ecstasy. Pentecostalism promises and delivers joy and peace transcending human and earthly possibilities. Especially non-Western (outside Europe and the upper half of North America) people seek a profoundly experiential religion, and a purely cerebral, liturgical or volitional (will-centered) Christianity leaves them cold.

Pentecostalism offers visible results wrought by the divine power of the Holy Spirit. The sick who cannot afford modern medicine are healed; the outcasts are given a community and place; the demon-possessed are liberated from bondage. Contrary to popular belief, most Pentecostals do not revel in speaking in tongues or ecstatic prophesying; being “slain in the Spirit” is much more common on cable television than in the average Pentecostal worship service. Nevertheless, it is true that Pentecostal services give people the freedom to rejoice and lament that North Americans often only allow themselves at sports events.

What can Baptists learn from Pentecostals and what can Pentecostals learn from Baptists?

Increasingly, developing-world Baptists are adopting Pentecostal forms of worship. The passion and uninhibited worship of the Pentecostals is characteristic of many Baptist and other evangelical churches.

Unfortunately, in the United States many Baptists and other evangelicals are going in the other direction toward more formal, liturgical worship or worship that allows no room for lay participation, spontaneity or emotion. (“Contemporary worship” is not necessarily spontaneous, Spirit-centered or uninhibited. Sometimes it can be just another kind of liturgy.)

This excludes many if not most of the ethnic groups that are finding a home in Pentecostalism. They prefer a more passionate form of worship and church life that involves intimacy, accountability and transforming experiences.

Baptists can learn from Pentecostals the freedom of worship in the Spirit; they can absorb from Pentecostalism passion manifested in tears, upraised faces and arms, joyous praise and prophetic preaching.

What can Pentecostals learn from Baptists? Baptists insist on connecting heart, head, hands and feet. Pentecostalism has tended to divorce them by reveling so much in feelings that the intellect and active service take a back seat to emotional worship. Although Pentecostals believe in the “gift of discernment” (mentioned by Paul in 1 Corinthians 12) they all too often lack the biblical scholarship and sound doctrinal teaching that is necessary to avoid religious fanaticism and heresy.

The Pentecostal challenge to Baptists is to practice wise discernment without quenching the Holy Spirit; the Baptist challenge to Pentecostals is to “go with the holy flow while still getting down to basic business.”

Baptists are good at the basic business of establishing functioning agencies and organizations and planning worship services and church meetings. Pentecostals excel at the holy flow of dynamic flexibility and praise in the midst of the mundane.

If Baptists are going to ride the revival wave of developing world, non-white, non-Western Christianity–which seems to be the future of Christianity worldwide–we need to turn sympathetic (not uncritical) eyes and ears to our Pentecostal brothers and sisters and learn from them. We do not need to adopt speaking in tongues as the essential ingredient of Spirit fullness in order to do that.

If Pentecostals are going to avoid the mistakes of church history and learn how to make the spiritual functional organizationally and intellectually, they can listen to us.

Roger Olson is professor of theology at Baylor University's George W. Truett Theological Seminary

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.




Baptist mission volunteers favor construction projects, survey says_40504

Posted: 4/02/04

Baptist mission volunteers favor
construction projects, survey says

By James Dotson

North American Mission Board

ALPHARETTA, Ga. (BP)–Most Southern Baptist volunteer missions trips involve construction, but evangelistic events, Vacation Bible Schools and backyard Bible clubs also are popular, a Southern Baptist North American Mission Board survey reveals.

The survey of 215 churches and 408 volunteers was conducted by NAMB last year based on activities during 2002.

The survey showed most projects are more than 500 miles from the sponsoring church. Churches showed a high level of interest in sponsoring more mission opportunities suitable for the entire family.

The survey focused on projects outside the local church community that were in the United States and Canada. It was commissioned to help NAMB and state conventions be more effective in facilitating and promoting volunteer missions, said Jim Burton, NAMB director of volunteer mobilization.

Previous information about numbers of volunteers has been available, but the NAMB effort provides additional data on distances traveled, projects conducted, funding and other details.

“To help us in our long-range planning, we felt like we had to have a more detailed picture of what's happening in SBC voluntarism,” he said, noting the research likely will be repeated regularly to track ongoing trends among the estimated 500,000 volunteers a year Southern Baptist churches send on mission trips.

The survey confirmed a suspicion that construction projects were a part of most mission trips to some degree, Burton said.

“We were a little surprised to find out that it was 52.7 percent,” he said, pointing out that means 200,000 volunteers a year work on building projects.

“We are piloting a strategy this summer where not only will crews build churches but they will also do evangelism in the community in support of the physical building they are constructing,” Burton said. “We realize that we have got to give more attention to growing the significance of that construction experience, because we estimate that Southern Baptist churches are saving about $35 million a year by using volunteers.”

Concerning the need for more family-oriented projects, Burton said: “We knew there was growing momentum for this, but this kind of blew us out of the water. We asked pastors and missions leaders if they would be interested in planning and promoting mission trips that are designated so entire families could participate together, and 82 percent said yes. So we are going to ramp up our strategy development in that area.”

Also encouraging, he said, was that most of the volunteer trips covered in the survey involved traveling distances of greater than 500 miles.

“There's always an assumption that people want to go out of town, but they don't want to go too far–generally about a day's drive,” he said.

“And what we found was that over half of the volunteers are traveling over 500 miles, and another fifth reported traveling between 251 and 500 miles. So distance isn't the issue that we thought it might be, and that's good news for our pioneer states.”

Among other survey findings:

28 percent reported being involved in evangelism ministries, 25.3 percent helped lead a Vacation Bible School, 15 percent led backyard Bible clubs, 8 percent conducted block parties and 32 percent listed other activities. Participants were allowed to select multiple ministry types.

bluebull Costs for the trips were shared between the individual and the church in 72 percent of the churches. The median amount of support was $143. Volunteers reported a median out-of-pocket cost of $175 for their trip.

bluebull 5,139 volunteers participated in mission projects from the responding churches, with 52 percent above age 25. Students in grades 7-12 made up 37.3 percent of the volunteers, followed by ages 18-24 at 10.7 percent.

“This was a reminder that churches need to be passionate about mobilizing their adults as well as mobilizing their students,” Burton said.

“Adults will do mission projects, and because of the skills that they bring, they have a lot to offer.”

bluebull 83 percent of volunteers reported some kind of spiritual preparation for their trip, with nearly three-fourths reporting special prayer meetings for the project. Other preparation included evangelism training (44 percent of respondents), Bible studies (40 percent) and devotional materials (38 percent).

bluebull 92 percent of volunteers said their church gave them an opportunity to share their experience with their congregation, and an overwhelming number of pastors said their enthusiasm had influenced others to become missions volunteers.

bluebull 88 percent of volunteers rated their experience as “very positive,” while another 11 percent chose “somewhat positive.” Only five respondents, or 1 percent, rated the experience as “somewhat” or “very” negative.

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 by John Duncan: The quality God blesses_40504

Posted: 4/02/04

CYBERCOLUMN:
The quality God blesses

By John Duncan

I’m sitting here under the old oak, tree asking what one trait does God always bless? As I ponder deep thoughts, the world spins out of control.

I write with the news fresh on my mind. Bush and Kerry drive toward the upcoming elections by plotting their economic strategies for American consumers. Do they know that consumers pay $1.44 for bread at Wal-Mart and $1.59 for unleaded gas? A 9-11 panel is still trying to solve the terror attacks on New York from September 2001. While they meet, an influential Shiite cleric from Iraq declares the terror attacks of Sept. 11 a “miracle from God.” He must worship the unknown God of Acts 17, because my God takes glory in abundant life, not explosive death.

John Duncan

The push for the Final Four rattles television sets across America. Who will win? Will it be Duke or the University of Connecticut or Georgia Tech or Oklahoma State?

Michael Jackson and Kobe Bryant still await trial, and the news will not let up. Speaking of court, in our small tow, the front page of the newspaper printed a story about a young lady awaiting trial for a “murder for hire” on her husband. The news causes hair to stand up on the back of my head.

A cat birthed a kitten with a genetic defect in Germany. The four-eared kitten finally found a home. Oh, the joys of a kitten finding a home where a little girl can sneak the kitten into her room at night and cuddle it and let its soft fur sleep next to her gentle face.

Drizzle drips from the sky, and rain soon comes to paint mother earth the colors of spring, which means, of course, that Daylight Savings Time comes, and we will all lose an hour of sleep. I have not found the hour of sleep that I lost last year.

The news rattles the earth, and I am thinking of that one quality God always blesses.

Not too long ago, a relative in the mountains of Spruce Pine, N.C., died. His name was Adam Duncan. He was my father’s uncle. He drove a dump truck all over the Blue Ridge Mountains, hauling dirt, quartz rock, flint, sand and asphalt. He once upon a time cultivated bees that made honey. I once saw him put on a silver suit with a mask that looked like something that a knight wore while fencing from the Middle Ages. He donned the suit and reached in the white wooden box with gloves and pulled out a honeycomb. He combed the honey and put it in a Mason jar for putting on homemade biscuits.

He took popcorn on Friday nights to my two aunts, never missed church and often led the singing. If the car broke down, he would be the one to call. If the roof leaked, he would be the one to phone. If a snow storm blew in and you needed groceries from the local store, he would risk his neck to make sure you had groceries.

He loved to sing the old trusty hymn “Trust and Obey” in the mountain church not far from his house. When he died, two senior adult men talked about Adam, describing him: “I would choose Adam Duncan as the most faithful man in church.” God blessed Adam. His most faithful task was being the first to arrive at church and the last to leave the church. Why? Adam locked and unlocked the church every Sunday, come rain or sunshine, snow or sleet, drizzle or fog.

And so here I am under the old oak tree, pondering faithfulness. The Bible says, “Moses my servant was faithful in all my house” (Numbers 12:27). Adam exhibited faithfulness. Faithfulness is taking the trash out on trash day. Faithfulness is turning your homework in on time. Faithfulness means remembering your daughter’s birthday. Faithfulness is doing the laundry before it piles too high. Faithfulness is changing the oil in the car every 3,000 miles. Faithfulness is daily Bible reading and daily prayer. Faithfulness is the consistent doing of necessary things, even when you do not feel like it. Faithfulness is trusting and obeying Jesus, even when the world spins out of control.

The old oak tree does not have a lock and key for Sunday, but churches need to be opened and unlocked. Doors need unlocked and locked on Sundays, but more than that, God needs the faithful and their faithfulness. It is the one quality God always blesses.

John Duncan is pastor of Lakeside Baptist Church in Granbury, Texas, and the writer of numerous articles in various journals and magazines


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.




DOWN HOME: Tax time reminds him of wife’s love_40504

Posted: 4/02/04

DOWN HOME:
Tax time reminds him of wife's love

Every now and then, someone says something that puts life into perspective.

This just happened to me.

Joanna looked across the room and told me: “Here. I need you to sign this.”

Jo repeats those same seven words words at exactly the same moment every year. Right before she hands me our tax statement and a ball point pen.

MARV KNOX
Editor

“Here. I need you to sign this.” They're seven of the most loving words my wife says to me all year long.

Not because they're romantic. Not because we don't have to pay taxes. Not even because she doesn't tell me she loves me every day.

But when she speaks those words and hands me that pen, she's showing me she loves me.

See, the last time I completed a tax return, it fit on a postcard, and the largest number on it had four digits. OK, maybe three.

This was long ago. Jimmy Carter lived in the White House. “Small” computers were the size of a Buick. Baptists only sang hymns in church. I had hair on the top of my head.

The year was 1979, and we were about to get married. I completed my tax return, which took all of about, oh, three minutes.

I dropped it in the mailbox at Hardin-Simmons University, where Jo and I were seniors. She still lived near the edge of a shadow cast by an authoritarian youth guru, and she announced: “Next year, you should do our taxes, because you'll be the head of our household.”

I still remember my exact response: “That's the dumbest thing I've ever heard you say.”

There I was, a religion and journalism student who didn't know anything about money, about to marry a business education major who knew all about money. I loved words; she adored numbers. Why should I ever fill out a tax return when I was about to marry a woman who could complete a dozen tax returns while I balanced my checkbook?

So, praise God from whom all blessings flow, all I've had to do every April is sign my name, wish the IRS happy returns and thank God for a numbers-savvy wife.

That's not to say we don't have a complementary marriage. I'm better at some things: I can change lightbulbs and clean the kitchen better than she can. I'm more patient with the dog and less afraid of bugs. I'm really good at polishing shoes and (when appropriately inspired) re-caulking the shower. Let's see now … I can clean out leftovers and organize the medicine cabinet.

And that's it. She's better at everything else, from giving our daughters practical advice to organizing vacations to whipping up dinner to knowing when to “chill,” as she advises me.

So, while the rest of America moans and groans as the IRS beckons, I thank God for my wife, who complements all my weaknesses. And loves me enough to do the taxes.

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.




EDITORIAL: Buckner Christ’s presence today_40504

Posted: 4/02/04

EDITORIAL:
Buckner: Christ's presence today

How can you simultaneously hug an abused preschooler in Longview, provide parenting skills to a too-young mother in Lubbock, counsel a fragile family in Laredo and teach neglected teens how to prepare for adulthood in Lufkin?

How can you place a baby with adoptive parents in Seymour and at the same time give teens in Beaumont the skills they need to stay off drugs and help inner-city children enjoy God's beautiful world in the Hill Country near Burnet?

How can you pray with a widow in Austin as you help a couple in Dallas cope with the frailties of age?

And how can you duplicate these ministries all over Texas–from Amarillo to El Paso to Harlingen to Port Arthur to Rockwall and other cities and towns in-between?

Individually, of course, you can't.

But as a Texas Baptist, you have participated in all these ministries and more through the efforts of Buckner Baptist Benevolences.

For 125 years, Buckner has stood in for Texas Baptists at the point of human need. R.C. Buckner envisioned a ministry that would pour the love of Christ into the lives of broken, hurting orphans. Empowered by God's Spirit, it has multiplied many times over, to include service to abused and neglected children, at-risk teens, troubled families and aged saints.

Through it all, Texas Baptists have embraced Buckner's ministry as enthusiastically and affectionately as “Father” Buckner embraced those orphans. That's because we view the Buckner ministries as our opportunity to serve those whom Jesus called “the least of these”–the hurting, disenfranchised, powerless.

No, we can't all directly serve the children, families and elderly in Buckner's care. Logistics make that impossible. But Texas Baptists love to enable Buckner to be there. Our gifts to the Baptist General Convention of Texas' Cooperative Program budget and our direct contributions help sustain Buckner's varied ministries. Our volunteers provide people power for Buckner projects. And those folks among us who work for Buckner invest their very lives in these ministries.

As Texas Baptists, we talk about “being the presence of Christ” for people in need. Well, that's what Buckner is all about. Jesus is a loving intake worker to a family of abused children. Jesus offers a gentle hug and a shoulder to cry on for a young mother placing her baby for adoption. Jesus is a wise, experienced teacher for a troubled teenager struggling to find meaning apart from booze and drugs and sex. Jesus takes many forms, but he's present every time a Buckner staffer or volunteer dries a tear, teaches a skill or holds a gnarled, arthritic hand.

One of my favorite moments happens when I open the Baptist Standard and see a story about a Buckner need–maybe a family to adopt a Russian orphan, or volunteers to help a ministry or a call for new shoes for orphan souls. In that instant, I know the phone lines at Buckner are about to light up, because Texas Baptists love helping Buckner be the presence of Christ.

So, thank God for Buckner, which celebrates its 125th anniversary this month. The latest BGCT directory lists 35 Buckner ministries all across the state. And as you thank God for Buckner, thank God also for her seven sister organizations in Texas–Baptist Child & Family Services, South Texas Children's Home, Texas Baptist Children's Home & Family Services, Baptist Memorials Ministries, Baptist Community Services, Golden Palms Retirement & Health Center and Hendrick Retirement Living.

God has multiplied “Father” Buckner's vision, enabling Texas Baptists to bless thousands of people who desperately need to feel Christ's presence.
–Marv Knox
E-mail the editor at marvknox@baptiststandard.com

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.




Experts discuss proper role of religion in public education_40504

Posted: 4/02/04

Experts discuss proper role
of religion in public education

By Ferrell Foster

Texas Baptist Communications

DALLAS–A “strong consensus” has developed regarding the appropriate role of religion in public schools, a church-state legal expert said.

Oliver Thomas, a constitutional lawyer who helped draft the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, spoke during a recent “Finding Common Ground” meeting in Dallas sponsored in part by the Christian Life Commission of the Baptist General Convention of Texas.

“There is no such thing as a legal safe harbor,” Thomas said, referring to how legal interpretations vary and change. But in relation to religion and public education, “fortunately, we have been able to create as safe a harbor as one can conceive.”

“You are on very safe footing, not only legally but politically,” he noted, referring to very similar interpretations of current law coming from both the Bill Clinton and George W. Bush administrations.

This consensus has developed around the notion of “substantive neutrality,” Thomas said.

“We don't want government in the business of playing church,” he said. “But, on the other hand, we don't want the government in the business of, in any way, discouraging or failing to protect religion and religious liberty.

“Substantive neutrality is a way to talk about living in a society where one's religious affiliations or lack thereof do not advantage or disadvantage you in the republic.”

During a question and answer time, he noted that “teachers are understandably confused about some of these issues” because accurate information is not always getting to them.

Charles Haynes, senior scholar with the First Amendment Center in Arlington, Va., also spoke at the Dallas gathering. He said the Clinton Administration sent every public school principal in the nation information reflecting the consensus regarding religion in schools. One year later, a survey indicated that many of the principals had no knowledge of it.

A Dallas school teacher at the event said religion is kept out of schools for 12 years, then, she complained, it surfaces in commencement exercises.

Thomas responded that “no school district has no religion” in it. “Church-state separation does not mean you do not have religion in schools,” he said

Each student brings his religion to school with him, and textbooks should “take religion seriously,” he said, citing the role of religion in the civil rights movement and in the founding of the nation.

At commencement exercises, Thomas said, it is OK for a student speaker to refer to God, but it is not appropriate to ask other students to participate in a religious expression such as prayer.

Haynes described the importance of public schools being “laboratories for democracy and freedom.” The “civic mission” of schools in turning out good citizens needs to be renewed.

“There are more than 16 words in the First Amendment” to the U.S. Constitution, Haynes said, referring to the religious freedom portions.

While religious freedom and the liberty of conscious it implies are critical, all five freedoms ­ religion, speech, press, assembly and petition ­ are all “deeply important.” Those freedoms have been used over and over to call Americans to “live up to the founding principles.”

Other sponsors of the Finding Common Ground event were the American Jewish Committee, the Esther A. and Joseph Klingenstein Fund and the Jack Lowe Foundation Fund.

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.




LifeWay Explore the Bible Series for April 11: Worship is proper response to resurrection_40504

Posted: 4/02/04

LifeWay Explore the Bible Series for April 11

Worship is proper response to resurrection

Matthew 28

By David Morgan

Trinity Baptist Church, Harker Heights

On the first day of each week, Christians across the world gather to worship. On the first day of the week following Jesus' crucifixion, as the day dawned, Mary Magdalene and another Mary returned to his tomb to grieve (Matthew 27:61). Mark and Luke tell us they planned to anoint Jesus' body with ointment and spices (Mark 16:1; Luke 24:1). What they sought was closure. What they experienced was commencement.

Believe the truth (28:1-6)

Matthew wrote the only Gospel to record that an earthquake accompanied the resurrection. The earthquake occurred just prior to or as the women arrived. An angel descended with it and rolled away the stone. He then sat down on it to signify completion or triumph. The earthquake demonstrated that God was working in ways beyond human possibility.

The earthquake and the appearance of the angel shocked the guards, paralyzing them with fear. The angel assured the women they had nothing to fear, that Jesus was no longer dead but alive. He invited them to look into the tomb and see that Jesus was gone. He also reminded them Jesus had predicted his resurrection (Matthew 16:21; 17:23; 26:32).

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Angels appear at the beginning and end of Matthew's Gospel to explain events. An angel announced to Joseph that God was miraculously working in Jesus' birth. Here the angel announced that God had miraculously raised to life this same Jesus.

Share the good news (28:7-10)

The messenger further instructed the women to tell the disciples Jesus had risen and he would meet them in Galilee. The words, “is going ahead of you,” are used in Scripture for a shepherd leading his flocks (Mark 10:32; John 10:4).

Two sets of emotions–fear and joy–stirred within the women. As they left quickly to carry the angel's message to the apostles, Jesus appeared and surprised them. Matthew's use of the name Jesus reminded his readers the Jesus whom the women had known in the flesh was now their risen Lord.

The women fell before him, grabbed his feet and worshipped. This was a normal way to show subjection to a king. Their clutching his feet shows this was not a vision. Matthew wanted to stress that Jesus was alive.

Jesus encouraged them to not be afraid and repeated the angel's command to tell the disciples that Jesus would meet them in Galilee. He used the more intimate term “brothers” to refer to the disciples.

The women responded to seeing the risen Jesus by worshipping him. They also shared their experiences with the disciples. Encountering the resurrected Christ inspires one to both worship and witness.

Beware erroneous conclusions (28:11-15)

The sentries Pilate assigned to guard the tomb hurried to the city to tell their story, as did the women. The guards carefully related to the chief priests what had happened. The chief priests conferred with the elders. They determined the best response was to bribe the soldiers to lie–say the disciples came and stole the body while the guards were sleeping. The Jewish authorities promised to protect the soldiers should Pilate hear of their story. Many Jews believed the soldiers' story. The lie persisted among Jewish circles even as Matthew wrote his Gospel.

Worship the Lord (28:16-17)

The 11 remaining disciples heard the women's report and journeyed to the mountain in Galilee that Jesus had specified. We cannot identify the mountain, but Matthew's emphasis on mountains draws a parallel between Jesus and Moses.

Mountains played significant roles in both of their lives. Moses, the old law-giver, received his call and received God's law on Mount Sinai. Just prior to his death, God summoned him to Mount Pisgah, where he viewed God's promised land and then died. Jesus, the new law-giver, instructed his disciples on this mountain in Galilee and on the one where he delivered the Sermon on the Mount.

The other Gospels report that Jesus appeared to the disciples while they were in Jerusalem. Matthew focused on the meeting in Galilee because Jesus wanted to emphasize that the good news about him was to be shared with all people and not just Jews in Jerusalem. Galilee had a large Gentile population.

When the disciples saw the risen Christ, they fell on their faces. Their first reaction was worship, but Matthew candidly related some doubted. Thomas appears not to have been the only skeptic.

Seeing is not always believing. The women saw and believed, but the soldiers did not. Some disciples believed immediately, but others hesitated.

Worshipping the living Christ is the proper response to Christ's resurrection. We should not become bogged down in details and proofs. Our response to the resurrected Christ should be the same as the women and disciples–worship.

Questions for discussion

bluebull What makes you believe that Jesus has been resurrected?

bluebull Is worship a priority in your life?

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.




LifeWay Explore the Bible Series for April 18: Paul gives Timothy his final marching orders_40504

Posted: 4/02/04

LifeWay Explore the Bible Series for April 18

Paul gives Timothy his final marching orders

2 Timothy 1

By David Morgan

Trinity Baptist Church, Harker Heights

A more somber tone looms over the Apostle Paul in 2 Timothy than in 1 Timothy. Second Timothy has the feel of his last will and testament. He was writing from a severe imprisonment (2 Timothy 1:8; 2:9) which he believed would end in his execution (2 Timothy 4:6). He considered this letter to be his final opportunity to instruct and encourage his young protégé.

We sense his deep love and concern for the young man who would continue Paul's heritage in the ministry. He reminded Timothy to be steadfast in the faith. He urged Timothy to resist the false teachings that still plagued the Ephesian church.

Remember our joint heritage (1:3-5)

Paul opened his final letter to Timothy the same way he began many of his letters–with a word of thanksgiving. He consistently thanked God for Timothy in his prayers. He could remain involved in Timothy's life by interceding for him even though prison bars and oceans separated them.

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The apostle affirmed he had served God with a clear conscience. He was not excusing his persecution of Christians. Instead, he was asserting that he was serving God to the best of his knowledge prior to his encountering Jesus on the road to Damascus. His conversion transformed this mistaken understanding. Paul felt he was serving the same God as his Jewish forefathers. His being a Christian was the continuation of what God had started with the chosen people of the Old Testament.

A deeply personal reflection interrupted Paul's prayer. He ached to see Timothy again. He remembered the sadness when they parted but longed for the joy a reunion would bring.

Timothy's genuine faith, as well as that of his mother and grandmother, spawned Paul's gratitude. Apparently Timothy grew up in a home strongly committed to God.

We should never underestimate the influence of a Christian home. We should gratefully remember the blessings and relationships God bestows on us.

Use your gift (1:6-7)

Because of Timothy's genuine faith and his timid nature, Paul reminded him to stir up the gift that resided in him. God's gift certainly surpassed Timothy's natural abilities. God used others through the laying on of hands to bestow the gift to Timothy. That others had recognized God's work in Timothy stimulated the young man to action. God's gift provided Timothy what he needed to accomplish the work to which God had called him and Paul had commissioned him. God could overcome Timothy's timidity with power, love and discipline. God provided the young pastor with strength and love for those he served. All Christians need to use self-control or discipline to accomplish their God-given work.

Demonstrate courage (1:8-12)

Paul urged Timothy not to keel over under opposition and falter in the faith. He challenged his colleague to share with (“join”) Paul in his trials and suffering. God would empower Timothy to remain strong as God had bolstered Paul. Paul considered himself to be a prisoner of Christ and not of Caesar. He also encouraged Timothy to remember Jesus' faithfulness before Pilate as a motive to be courageous. To follow Christ is to carry one's cross of suffering and shame.

God called the pair to salvation and to service. They had received their salvation through God's choice and God's grace and through no effort of their own. God's purpose to redeem humanity extended back into eternity, but God's intent had been made visible through Christ becoming human. Christ's work rendered death powerless and displayed for all to see the life and immortality possible through the gospel (“the good news of Christ's revelation of God”). The apostle asserted that God commissioned him to proclaim the gospel boldly and publicly and then instruct others in Christian living.

Paul accepted his suffering because he was convinced God would never let him down nor desert him. He refused to lose confidence in the gospel. Paul entrusted his proclamation of the gospel to God and knew that God would preserve the message until the day of judgment. As Paul had overcome difficulties, so too should Timothy.

Remain steadfast in your faith (1:13-14)

Paul had drawn a blueprint for Timothy's teaching. He knew that circumstances would force Timothy to expand the message as necessary. Paul reminded Timothy of the Holy Spirit as his strength to guard the gospel. Protecting the truth of the gospel was essential in a setting filled with false teachers.

Paul again cited his own life as an example of guarding the faith. Some of Paul's earlier allies in the faith had rejected and abandoned him. In contrast to those who had deserted him, Onesiphorus (“bearer of profit”) stood by him in the imprisonment. He had ministered to Paul and was not deterred by Paul's imprisonment, signified by “my chains.” He diligently searched for Paul in Rome until he found him. He was eager to associate with Paul in his suffering and ministry. Paul prayed for God to bestow mercy on him because of this ministry.

Questions for discussion

bluebull Who will carry on your spiritual legacy?

bluebull Who has been your mentor?

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.