Howard Payne students send Christmas cheer to Iraq_122004

Posted: 12/17/04

Howard Payne students
send Christmas cheer to Iraq

Howard Payne University freshman student representatives (left to right) Amanda Alvey, Ellen Belgie and Demetria Menifield participate in a student government-sponsored project to send handmade Christmas cards to military personnel stationed in Iraq. Student government is a campus organization comprised of class officers and representatives from student organizations.

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.




Latin American students serve in India_122004

Posted: 12/17/04

Juan Acuña (left), a student at Baptist University of the Americas, participates in a Christian worship service among the Banjara Gypsies of India.

Latin American students serve in India

By Ken Camp

Managing Editor

SAN ANTONIO–Two Baptist University of the Americas students–one from Mexico, the other from Nicaragua–spent the fall semester working with Banjara Gypsies in India.

Leaders of the Texas Baptist theological university hope all their students have the opportunity for a similar short-term, cross-cultural missions experience before they graduate, said Javier Elizondo, dean of academic affairs at Baptist University of the Americas.

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He worked with two former BUA students, Eddie and Macarena Aldape, and their Cooperative Baptist Fellowship colleagues in India, James and Robbi Francovich, to plan the semester-long missions immersion program.

As he learned about the Aldapes' and Francoviches' work with the Banjara Gypsy people-group in India and their desire to have students serve alongside them for a short-term internship, Elizondo grew intrigued by the possibility of placing BUA students in India for a semester.

“India, Africa and the Arab world are exactly where we'd like to place some of our students for missions service,” he said.

That's true, at least in part, because Hispanics share many physical characteristics with people in that part of the world and can blend in with the general population, he explained.

Elizondo had a clear idea of what kind of student he wanted to enlist for the pilot project in India.

“I wanted somebody who was bicultural, bilingual and self-motivated,” he said.

He also wanted somebody with roots in Latin America, who would not be so overwhelmed by Third World poverty that he would be unable to serve effectively.

The idea of placing a student from Catholic-dominated Latin America in a culture permeated by non-Christian religions also captivated Elizondo.

Allan Escobar (left) enjoys a time of fellowship, worship and Bible study with Banjara Gypsies in India.

“I wanted the students to have the challenging task of reaching a group of people who are not easy to reach,” he said.

“In Latin America, there is still a Christian influence. I wanted them to see how to evangelize in an unreached place like India and to see how much distance there is to bridge there, as opposed to bridging the distance from Catholic non-born-again to evangelical born-again.”

Elizondo enlisted Juan Acuña, a Californian born in Monterrey, Mexico, and Allan Escobar, who lived in Nicaragua until age 16, when he moved to Fort Worth.

The students served through the CBF Student.Go program.

Francovich served as field supervisor and professor-of-record for the students' fall semester, and they received credit at BUA for the work they did in India. He directed their studies as they read a book a week, and he provided mentorship for their cross-cultural learning experience.

Acuña and Escobar spent the first half of their semester in India with the Francoviches, visiting Banjara Gypsy villages, learning about the people and sharing their faith when given the opportunity.

The Texas students experienced some culture shock upon arriving in India.

Escobar acknowledged the first challenge he faced in India was to “see beyond the poverty.”

The students learned British English spoken with an Indian accent and Texas English spoken with a Spanish accent bear little resemblance to each other. Slang acceptable to one group could be offensive to a different group, they discovered.

Escobar was taken aback when he saw Indian men holding hands and embracing each other closely until he recognized it as a cultural characteristic.

Even so, Acuña insisted the greatest surprise for him was not the differences he observed but the similarities.

“Indian culture has a lot of similarities with Hispanic culture,” he noted. “Both are very family-oriented.”

During the second half of their time in India, the students worked with the Aldapes and focused primarily on youth. They visited clinics, preached in several churches and taught at a conference for youth leaders.

At one clinic, Acuña performed a sleight-of-hand illusion to capture the attention of young people who were waiting in line.

“Once I grabbed their attention, I was able to share Christ with them,” he recalled.

Acuña noted Indian young people in the cities are more westernized than their rural peers, and their curiosity about all things American provided the Texas students an open door to share their faith.

“They're interested in talking with people from the United States, and we had several opportunities to share Christ,” he said.

He recalled an encounter with two girls in a coffee shop who initially started talking with him about movies. In time, the conversation shifted to a school project one of the girls was researching about the causes of depression among young people.

Acuña explained his belief that many young people experience depression because they lack a relationship with God.

He gave one of the young women a copy of Philip Yancey's book, “Disappointment with God.”

“She wrote an e-mail to me, and she said she's reading it,” Acuña said, adding he has continued to stay in e-mail contact with several young people he met in India.

Elizondo already has made arrangements for Escobar and Acuña to share their insights with students at BUA in a variety of venues, including a chapel service and several classes. He hopes they will be “the first of many” BUA students who will have similar semester-long missions experiences.

“We are really excited about the mission of BUA to provide cross-cultural mission experiences for their students and for the great opportunity to guide students through first-hand experiences among an unreached people group in a Third World country,” Francovich wrote in an e-mail.

“Many Latin Americans have responded to the call to missions and are living in our country, and we pray that through this partnership between BUA and CBF, many more Hispanic Americans and Latin American students will be challenged to find their place of service in making disciples of all nations.”

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.




‘As India goes, so goes the Great Commission’_122004

Posted: 12/17/04

As many as 30 million pilgrims flooded the Hindu holy city of Ujjain to seek spiritual cleansing in the sacred Shipra River. India alone is home to 14 "super-mega" people groups with more than 10 million members each who are currently "unengaged" by a church-planting movement strategy. (Matt Jones Photo)

'As India goes, so goes the Great Commission'

By Erich Bridges

International Mission Board

MUMBAI, India (BP)–What country is home to thousands of millionaires and nine of the world's richest billionaires, makes more movies than Hollywood, boasts the world's largest democracy and is home to 24 million Christians, including 19 million evangelicals?

India.

Americans whose most vivid impressions of India come from old National Geographics and Rudyard Kipling's jungle stories might update their mental file with these facts:

bluebull Eighty percent of India's 1.07 billion people–second only to China in total population–are Hindu.

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But more than 130 million Muslims call India home, and some estimates range above 150 million. That rivals the combined population of all countries in the Arab Middle East.

bluebull The Indian middle class–those earning $2,000 to $4,000 annually–now numbers 300 million, larger than the entire U.S. population. It's expected to approach 450 million within the next five years.

bluebull Massive rural-to-urban migration likely will double the population of India's cities within two decades. That's equal to “all of Europe, all of a sudden, needing water, sanitation, drainage, power, transportation, housing,” says an Asian Development Bank official.

bluebull No fewer than 555 million Indians are under the age of 25, and Indian universities produce more than 1.5 million graduates each year.

bluebull The booming Indian economy was forecast to grow 8 percent this year as Indian industries match or surpass some of the world's top producers.

bluebull India has some 200 million English-speakers. The nation's vast collection of people groups also speaks several hundred other languages and dialects.

Pilgrims seeking spiritual cleansing in the sacred Shipra River offer fire to their gods. (Matt Jones Photo)

bluebull Three Indians made Time magazine's list of the world's 100 most powerful and influential people this year–Bollywood superstar Aishwarya Rai, former Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee and information technology mogul Azim Premji–reputedly the world's fourth-richest man.

Make no mistake: India still faces enormous problems of poverty and need. The poor in some 800,000 towns and villages still account for the great majority of the population. About 300 million people live on less than a dollar a day. As many as 3,000 Indian farmers in a single state–Andhra Pradesh–have killed themselves over the last six years because of debt and drought.

India has the world's largest number of working children–up to 115 million. Many toil in sweatshops. At least half the population cannot read.

Meanwhile, many of the graduates pouring out of the nation's universities can't find decent jobs. Despite economic growth, too many applicants are competing for too few positions. The government counts 40 million jobless workers, while the vaunted Indian info tech industry employs fewer than 1 million.

But India has made amazing progress on many fronts–economic expansion, education, technology. Its scientists, academics, computer specialists, entrepreneurs and entertainers are challenging–and often surpassing–the best other countries can offer. Expectations are soaring.

Hundreds of India's ethnic, religious and caste groups live in geographical or social isolation from each other, looking at the rest of this vast “nation of nations” with curiosity or suspicion. Many a south Indian, if set down somewhere in the north, would be as bewildered by the customs and languages as someone from the U.S. heartland parachuting into Scandinavia.

In other places, particularly the cities, different peoples and cultures mix and mingle in seemingly countless combinations. Mumbai–or Bombay, as it also is known–is India's largest city and is a world unto itself.

India boasts nearly 20 million evangelicals, such as this member of Andheri Baptist Church. Yet 80 percent of the country's 1.05 billion people are Hindu. (Matt Jones Photo)

With more than 17 million people jammed into a 180-square-mile peninsula, Mumbai is the financial capital of India, the film capital, the organized crime capital, the AIDS and prostitution capital. It is the home of India's most expensive real estate–and Asia's biggest slum. Multitudes live under plastic tarps on the streets, and others dine with old money at the exclusive stadium cricket club, where the joining fee is $30,000.

Travelers on Mumbai's sidewalks and crowded commuter trains can rub shoulders with stock traders in $1,000 suits, beggars, college students, Muslim women covered by black burqas, Punjabis, Tamils, Kashmiris, Bengalis, Assamese, Gujaratis, Keralites.

“Diversity is India,” observes a leading Christian strategist who lives there. “You can lose yourself in all the challenges and unlimited horizons for missions in this country. You could pour a thousand lifetimes into India and never exhaust it.”

India's 24-million-member Christian community is growing, but it remains a small minority of the national population of 1.07 billion.

India and its immediate South Asian neighbors have more than 200 people groups with populations exceeding 1 million. Nearly half of the world's unreached people groups live in India and the South Asian region. South Asia, which includes India, has half of the world's Last Frontier population–more than any other region.

India alone is home to 14 “super-mega” people groups with more than 10 million members each currently “unengaged” by a church-planting movement strategy. In other words, Christians are not yet focusing on any of these groups in a way that will result in growing, self-sustaining church movements. Just one of these ethnic peoples, the Rajput, totals 40 million souls.

“As India goes,” the Christian strategist said, “so goes the Great Commission.”

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.




Veteran missionary called to bring healing in Christ’s name_122004

Posted: 12/17/04

Veteran missionary called to bring healing in Christ's name

BANGALORE, India (BP)–Ask people around Bangalore, India, what a Christian looks like, and many would describe Rebekah Naylor, the Southern Baptist missionary surgeon who has labored at Bangalore Baptist Hospital the past 30 years.

Some Indians have seen Naylor–who currently is clinical assistant professor and surgeon at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas– as a cool, precise, professional medical doctor who has performed countless surgeries and other medical procedures.

She has saved lives, delivered babies and relieved suffering for thousands of people over her years in India.

Rebekah Naylor, who has served at the Bangalore Baptist Hospital more than 30 years, has come to be accepted as an honorary “auntie” to hundreds and hundreds of Indian young people and children.

But others know Naylor through her soft-spoken but persistent sharing of the gospel, her training and encouragement of Indian Baptists in how to witness and plant churches. In this role, she has helped thousands of people find eternal life in Christ.

For Naylor, the missionary calling and the drive to become a physician were one calling.

“I experienced a call to missions specifically when I was 13 years old,” she said. “God spoke to me very clearly about personal involvement in foreign missions service.” That calling combined with her interest in medicine.

“My ambition in medicine was basically to use it as an avenue to share my faith in Jesus Christ,” she said, summing up a vision for her life she pursued with steadfast devotion over the following decades. Already she had plowed new ground. Few women became physicians, much less surgeons, in the 1960s.

By the time she arrived in India as a newly appointed missionary in 1974, she had managed to get through university, medical school and related training. From a comfortable home in Fort Worth, the medical and missionary newbie found herself stepping through India's poor who slept on sidewalks for want of homes.

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She arrived at Bangalore Baptist Hospital when it had been open just six months. The building sat then on a bare, 15-acre site outside the city. Although she was anxious, the Indian staff and the 12 patients welcomed the American warmly.

“The foreign doctors were supposed to know something more than others, so they came hoping that they would find excellent care. They did find excellent care, but they also found people who really cared about them,” she said.

As years passed, the city grew out to surround the hospital compound, and the hospital also grew, from 80 beds to 160. The hospital began to help educate doctors and train Indians to become X-ray and lab technicians.

Today the hospital delivers 1,500 babies a year–an average of about four babies a day. Doctors there treat more than 100,000 patients a year and impact five times that many for the gospel.

Naylor served in several key roles at the hospital, including administrator, coming to be accepted more as family than foreign staffer. She also became honorary “auntie” to hundreds and hundreds of Indian young people and children.

From its inception, the hospital maintained pastoral ministry and outreach. “Its reason to exist was to tell people about Jesus Christ,” she said.

Today, Indian Baptists point to a map of Bangalore that is dotted with Baptist churches, most the result of the hospital's outreach. When workers went to one community a couple of miles from the hospital years ago, there were no Christians and no churches. Within a year, there were 20 baptized believers. Today Trinity Baptist Church is a thriving congregation that has started 18 other churches and is working in many other communities to start more.

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.




San Antonio church provides BUA scholarships for two students from India_122004

Posted: 12/17/04

San Antonio church provides BUA
scholarships for two students from India

By Craig Bird

Special to the Baptist Standard

SAN ANTONIO–The cross-cultural mix at Baptist University of the Americas will get even richer next month when two students from India begin studies at the BGCT-affiliated school.

Woodland Baptist Church, a San Antonio congregation heavily involved with the Banjara Gypsy Partnership for more than seven years, funded full scholarships for Mary Ramabathu and Karen Solomon.

The $25,000 donation was over and above the church's budgeted financial support of both BUA and the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship.

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Latin American students serve in India

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In mid-December, the student visa was approved for Ramabathu, 35, a homeopathic medical doctor and the daughter of Narasingh Naik, director of Banjara Development Trust, a ministry of American Baptists in India.

The visa application is in the final stages for Solomon, 19, the daughter of VK Solomon, director of Gypsy Fellowship, a ministry of French Gypsy churches.

The visa applications hit several snags in recent months, which resulted in the process appearing regularly on the prayer lists of both BUA and Woodland Baptist Church.

"Both of these students will not only have a cross-cultural impact at BUA but will also return to India to ministry among their people group," said one of four CBF field personnel working with the Banjara.

"Banjaras live in 195 of India's 506 districts, and our goal is to see a Christian Banjara witness in every one of these districts so they too may bend their knee and confess with their mouth that Jesus Christ is Lord."

Ramabathu and Solomon are expected to play key roles, especially ministering to other Banjara women, he noted.

Gypsies, also called Romany, are believed to have originated in India before migrating to the Middle East, North Africa, Europe, Russia and the United States. Today, more than 20 million remain in India, known as Banjara.

"BUA is thrilled at this opportunity to help prepare the two young women for ministry and excited about what they can teach us," said Javier Elizondo, academic dean at BUA.

"As a theological university focused on missions, we actively seek to be a part of what God is doing everywhere in the world. We anticipate a long and fruitful relationship between BUA and Banjara Christians."

The impetus for the scholarships started last spring when Woodland approved a recommendation from its missions committee designating $25,000 of budget surplus for the Banjara work.

The committee had studied a list of possible projects submitted by the CBF representative that included theological education for future leaders, purchasing a van for a mobile medical clinic, offering small business loans, paying for literature translation and production, and others.

Rather than making the choice, the church voted to make the contribution with no strings attached so the Banjara team could determine the best use. They chose to put the entire amount toward scholarships.

"We had other worthy students who were not selected, but they won't be abandoned," he added. "We are searching for other funds for them to either attend BUA or schools here in India."

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_122004

Posted: 12/17/04

TEXAS BAPTIST FORUM

For whom the bell tolls

Target's decision to place "no solicitation" restrictions on the Salvation Army lacks any legal or Christian justification. If nothing else, we who have discretionary funds need gentle reminders of our affluent good fortune during this abrasive period.

That Target prohibits a modest, peaceable effort to help the needy is morally inexcusable.

E-mail the editor at marvknox@baptiststandard.com

Since 1891, Salvation Army bell-ringers have sought funds. Standing on wet or icy pavement is no ego-inflating exercise. Rather, it is a humble reminder for us about the many unfortunates among us–our mentally and/or physically ill, addicted, veterans (one-third of our homeless are former military personnel), our inadequately educated, disabled, downsized, abandoned, our too elderly or too youthful.

Ask for whom the Salvation Army bell tolls. Given adverse circumstances, it one day may ring for you, me, our parents, our children.

The Chronicle of Philanthropy considers the Salvation Army “America's favorite and most trusted charity.” Peter Drucker states that it is “by far the most effective organization in the U.S.”

I have given this great thought: Since the Salvation Army is not sufficiently high-end for one square yard of public space outside of Target, my spendable twenties and fifties are no longer high-end enough to go inside, either. Not ever again.

Louise Shannon

Chico, Calif.

Crucified again

Are we aware of what's happening in our country this Christmas season? The Target department stores have ousted the Salvation Army from their storefronts, no Christian floats are allowed in the Denver Parade of Lights this year, and a famous department store's annual Christmas parade also will exclude them because “they're too exclusive.” They want the sales but not the substance.

But you don't have to go to Colorado or New York to view this Christmas tragedy. Just drive through the little towns of Texas and search for nativity scenes on their town squares. And it's no longer “Christmas Greetings.” It's “Seasons Greetings” and “Happy Holidays” now. And have you noticed how few Christmas cards you receive have “Merry Christmas” on them? It's hard to believe that our 80-percent-Christian country is caving in to godless secularism.

The presence of Jesus so enraged the people in his day that they crucified him. In like manner, many enraged Americans, uncomfortable by his presence, want him out. They know that as long as Christianity lives here, issues like gay marriage, abortion and Hollywood morality always will be hard to sell.

So, here we are again. Day by day, moment by moment, the standards that made us great are now being chipped away. Will America, the Lord's last bastion on earth, crucify him again?

If we do, the Lord won't die. We will.

Doug Fincher

San Augustine

Texas blessing

When we pause to count our blessings as Texas Baptists, high on the list are our hospitals, child care and educational institutions.

Many members of Baptist churches in Texas and around the nation have traveled to Marshall to the famous Wonderland of Lights. This year, the Regional Arts Council of Marshall asked the choirs and orchestra of East Texas Baptist University to co-sponsor with the council a two-hour program titled “Christmas in Marshall.”

The civic center was filled to the rafters, with church vans and tour buses from across Texas and adjoining states filling the parking lots. The ETBU choirs and orchestra presented both religious and secular selections with superb musicianship. The audience responded with numerous instances of applause and a standing ovation at the conclusion.

As Jane and I made our way out through the throng after the program, we noticed two motor coaches from a Baptist church in Wichita, Kan., loading at the front entrance. We are grateful for a wonderful musical program with the School of Fine Arts at ETBU, under the direction of Dean Thomas R. Webster.

Texas Baptists are blessed!

D.M. Edwards

Tyler

Greatest concern

I am more concerned about the breakdown of church-state separation as a danger to our nation than any other issue, including terrorism.

Our war in Iraq is caused, in great part, by the 50-year history of the Religious Right, as well as the Jewish community, in promoting the United States to establish, finance and even go to war for Israel, no matter how they treat the Palestinians. This support comes from Christians who believe it is the duty of the U.S. to do just that–establish, finance and support Israel, even if it means going to war. What a misinterpretation of the Bible; what a distortion of “love peace among men” that Jesus taught.

Even worse, these right-wing Christians have used the power of government for their religious aim. This demonstrates the corruption and abuse that comes when religion uses the state to obtain its goal. Yet Baptists, who throughout their existence have opposed using the government to accomplish religious aims, are generally supportive of this war.

Perhaps we should look again at why we are in this war. How much righteousness will we accomplish by using the political clout of the religious right to enact their version of what the Bible teaches–whether in the foreign policy of our nation or in the domestic affairs that touch our lives daily? Does political right make religious right? It never has in the past.

Sherman Hope

Brownfield

Separate solution

Mark Johnson's opening sentence about our voting for a president of the United States who we would not vote for as president of the Southern Baptist Convention (Dec. 6) brought a “Thank God” from me.

Then I amended my thoughts to, “Thank God and our founding fathers that our secular and religious leaders are not required to be of the same religion or denomination or even have the same beliefs and actions.”

The reasons Johnson listed should be proof enough to validate the need to keep our government and our religion separate from each other.

Charles McFatter

Semmes, Ala.

Shining light

Today, I mailed my subscription for two more years of the print edition of the Baptist Standard. I can't understand why some Baptists in Texas don't subscribe to the Standard. Of course, you often get criticism for being “negative.” Let's face it: The truth is often not pretty.

Forty-two years ago, I was in training to fly military helicopters. Like many of my fellow junior birdmen, I was more than a little concerned about the possibility of an engine failure at night. We had already experienced practice autorotations (simulated engine out) in the daytime with an instructor and were aware of the 2,500-feet-per-minute autorotative descent in the “Hiller Killer.” Our instructors had the answer: “When you think you are close to the ground, turn on your landing light. If you don't like what you see, turn off the light.”

A lot of our fellow Americans would rather “turn off the light” than know the truth. We are deceiving ourselves when we listen to politicians, in and out of the church, who have no regard for the truth and will do anything to further their cause.

Carl L. Hess

Ozark, Ala.

Costly cure

I have a question regarding Wilber Newton, Kevin Lyles and their families concerning their attempt to find a cure for Lou Gehrig's disease (Nov. 1): If the body parts used in their treatment were from Jewish children who were murdered by the Nazis, would that be OK? Would God give that OK?

After all, those children would have been killed anyway, regardless of the beliefs of those seeking treatment, same as the aborted children in China. Might as well not waste the body parts.

There is, however, a small complication. If people pay a high price for use of those body parts, there will inevitably be more abortions and more killing of innocent, helpless children.

How can it be that Southern Baptists are involved in this great hypocrisy? Abortion is the greatest moral issue of our age. Someday, abortion will be universally considered a moral abomination, just as the Holocaust is today. God will see to that.

Then what will we tell our grandchildren when they ask, “Grandpa, what did you do in the struggle to eliminate abortion in the bad old days?” Will we only be able to say, “I found a good use for the carcasses of aborted children so that they would not be wasted”?

Otis F. Graf Jr.

Houston

Worthy recipients

There are about 10,095 old retired ministers who are struggling to survive, and about 3,400 are believed to be living in poverty.

Back in the 1920s and '30s, there was not any retirement put back for them. They were struggling to get by and are still struggling today. If it had not been for these old ministers, you and I might not have heard about Jesus.

I am sure God wants you and me to help these old ministers and their wives. Would you share what you have with those who have less? May our Lord touch your heart.

The Southern Baptist Annuity Board has a helpful program called Adopt an Annuitant, where people can help retired ministers. Those who desire to help can contact: Annuity Board, P.O. Box 2190, Dallas 75221-2190; phone (800) 262-0511.

One hundred percent of a gift to an adopted annuitant is used for that purpose.

John Hatfield

Wylie

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.




Suit asserts Lottery Commission, attorney general broke state laws_122004

Posted: 12/17/04

Suit asserts Lottery Commission,
attorney general broke state laws

By Ferrell Foster

Texas Baptist Communications

AUSTIN–A Texas taxpayer doesn't want state government to pay a bill to a Las Vegas lawfirm, and he's filed suit to stop it.

Russell Verney says the state has no business paying for expenses incurred through an allegedly illegal contract and verbal agreements that followed.

The suit affirms what the Baptist General Convention of Texas' Christian Life Commission staff discovered earlier this year. The contract was part of a concerted effort by the gambling industry and its political supporters to bring video slot machines to Texas, CLC staff said.

Russell Verney

Verney asserts the state agreed to pay $100,000 to Lionel, Sawyer and Collins to–among other things–write legislation legalizing video gambling in Texas. Later, it was amended orally to more than $360,000, according to a summary of actions prepared by the CLC.

Lionel, Sawyer and Collins already has been paid $176,000, according to published reports.

Verney, director of the southwestern regional headquarters of Judicial Watch, filed suit Dec. 14 to stop further payment. The lawsuit is against Texas Lottery Commission Executive Director Reagan Greer, Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott and Comptroller Carole Keeton Strayhorn.

Strayhorn, however, twice voiced support for Verney's position during a Dec. 15 press conference, saying, “I do not want to pay that bill.”

She was named in the suit because her office is the one that pays the state's bills. The State Lottery Commission and the attorney general's office are the ones actually involved in the questioned contract.

Verney alleges the two state offices used a “convoluted two-stage contract” to do something Texas law prohibits a state agency from doing–“expending any money on lobbying.”

Also, he said, the Lottery Commission is prohibited by law from operating video gambling. By hiring the lawfirm to help bring video gambling to Texas, the commission was doing something state law prohibits it from doing, Verney said.

Verney brought the suit as a “resident taxpayer” of the state, but in his role at Judicial Watch he “oversees the monitoring of state governments for the appearance of corruption or abuse of power,” according to his biographical information.

Suzii Paynter, director of public policy for the Texas Baptist CLC, said the suit “puts the legislature and the executive branch on notice that the separation of powers is still important in this state and that checks and balances are still important.”

“This contract was an attempt to create a private piggy bank for a state agency and to pass slot machine legislation with the leadership of the governor and the administration,” she said. “There were so many special and unusual privileges that were going to be awarded to the Lottery Commission.”

The legislature rejected the proposal during the fourth special session in May despite strong backing from Gov. Rick Perry and other state leaders. If approved, the legislation would have granted the Lottery Commission exemption from state bidding and procurement procedures, created a slush fund for unlimited administrative travel, and provided exemptions from judicial oversight and an annual audit, Paynter said.

When legislators voted on the proposal, they did not know it had been written by a Las Vegas lawfirm with ties to slot machine companies and gambling interests, she said.

The Christian Life Commission staff brought the issue to the surface.

“Last spring during the special session, we were aware the governor had completely reversed his position against gambling,” Paynter said.

New gambling data surfaced during the session. “It was clear this was not information used in the past,” Paynter said. “That took us into exploring where all this new information was coming from.”

What they initially found was an eight-page report on “eight-liner” gambling machines that had been paid for by Lionel, Sawyer and Collins. The report got the CLC's attention because it quoted only four sources, one being the Baptist Standard, news journal of the Baptist General Convention of Texas. The Standard article quoted some Department of Public Safety figures.

The firm had paid $23,000 for the report, which was supposed to be confidential, Paynter said.

“We then began to collect information and began to ask for open records,” she said.

The CLC staff eventually learned of the contract between the lawfirm and the state, and they reported it to the House of Representatives Licensure and Administrative Procedures Committee, which oversees regulation of the Lottery Commission. A hearing was held June 1.

State Sen. Jane Nelson, vice chairperson of the Sunset Review Committee, called for an audit of the contract by the state auditor's office.

Comptroller Strayhorn, in a July 2 letter to the attorney general's office, questioned the “allowability and legality of using lottery account money for payment of the LSC contract,” according to the summary of actions released by Paynter.

“Many unanswered questions remain about the nature of the contract,” the summary says. The state auditor's report was “inconclusive on central questions of jurisdiction and payment and the appropriate and legal status of the Lottery to fund the contract. … The injunction filed by Judicial Watch continues the investigation of this matter.”

Paynter expects the video lottery issue to return in the upcoming session of the legislature, which begins Jan. 11. “I expect them to try to apply the money to property tax relief,” with some going to school finance, she said.

“There are more than 400 lobbyists paid to promote gambling expansion full time,” Paynter said. “We can't defeat this issue with money. We have to defeat this issue with people and the voice of constituents. A public interest lawsuit like this is another voice of the people.”

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.




Accrediting agency places Louisiana College on one-year probation for violating standards_122004

Posted: 12/17/04

Accrediting agency places Louisiana College
on one-year probation for violating standards

By Robert Marus

Associated Baptist Press

PINEVILLE, La. (ABP)–The South's major accrediting agency for schools has placed a Louisiana Baptist college on probation for a year for violating the agency's standards.

Louisiana College officials announced the Pineville, La., school was placed on probation by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools.

Members of the association's commission on colleges voted to make the change at their regularly scheduled December meeting in Atlanta.

Probation from the accrediting agency is a more serious sanction than a warning or “notation” on the school's record, but less severe than the full removal of accreditation.

The school will have 12 months to prove it is in compliance with the agency's standards.

Louisiana College has been roiled by controversy for several years, with much of it coming to a head in the past two years as a group of fundamentalists gained a majority on the institution's board of directors.

All board members are appointed by the Louisiana Baptist Convention.

In the past few months, the college's president, chief academic administrator and board chairman have resigned.

Last month–only a week after being introduced to the Louisiana Baptist Convention–the college's newly called president unexpectedly withdrew his application for the job, citing “governance issues.”

Earlier this year, a special committee from the accrediting agency visited the college's campus on a fact-finding mission. Committee members determined Louisiana College was not in compliance with several of the association's standards regarding academic freedom and proper board governance.

“The committee concluded, based upon extensive interviews with members of the board of trustees, senior staff and faculty, that a significant portion of the board of trustees of Louisiana College are influenced if not controlled by the agenda of the Louisiana Inerrancy Fellowship and the Louisiana Baptist Convention,” the SACS report read.

The study team said an agenda from the inerrancy group–established as a political movement within the Louisiana Baptist Convention–had unduly influenced the board's work.

Among the controversies on campus were two trustee-initiated policies many professors said violated academic freedom–a 2003 move to require prior approval of class texts and materials by administrators and more recent actions that made the board more closely involved in faculty hiring and that required new faculty hires to be in agreement with the Southern Baptist Convention's 2000 Baptist Faith & Message statement.

According to a statement released by Louisiana College, Interim President John Traylor said the school will meet that goal.

“It is my opinion that SACS is calling on the institution to recognize the seriousness of the accrediting standards. Trustees, administration and faculty must take the steps necessary to move the college into full compliance, lest we lose membership in SACS,” the statement read.

“The entire college community–trustees, administration, faculty–have committed themselves to the actions necessary to bring Louisiana College into compliance with the standards of accreditation.”

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.




On the Move_122004

Posted: 12/17/04

On the Move

B.B. Alvarez to Fairview Church in Grand Prairie as interim minister of music.

bluebull Luke Austin to Zephyr Church in Zephyr as minister of music.

bluebull Jeff Bankhead to Central Church in Italy as pastor.

bluebull Billy Barden to Berry Lane Church in Abilene as pastor.

bluebull Jason Bollinger has resigned as minister to students at First Church in Wimberley to start a new church in the San Marcos area.

bluebull Jack Bourland has resigned as pastor of First Church in Holiday Beach.

bluebull Linda Bradley to First Church in Rockport as interim minister of education.

bluebull Gene Cannon has resigned as pastor of Belvue Church in Kermit.

bluebull Kyle Carlson has resigned as minister of music at Midtown Church in Brownwood.

bluebull Bob Day to Miller Grove First Church in Emory as pastor from Calvary Church in Sulphur Springs.

bluebull Charles Dixon to First Church in Lancaster as senior pastor from Calvary Church in Harlingen.

bluebull Michael Eaton to Holiday Hills Church in Abilene as pastor.

bluebull Blake Edwards to First Church in Wimberley as interim student pastor.

bluebull Matt Ellis to Rocky Point Church in Stephenville as music minister.

bluebull Jimmy Flynn to First Church in Washburn as pastor, where he had been interim.

bluebull Gary Fore to First Church in Wimberley as pastor of outreach.

bluebull Jim Fox has resigned as pastor of Hillcrest Church in Amarillo.

bluebull Clark Frailey has resigned as pastor of First Church in Cresson.

bluebull Bob Gardner to First Church in Wimberley as pastor of adult education and singles.

bluebull Steve Griffin to Midway Church in Springtown as minister of worship and discipleship from Eureka Church in Weatherford, where he was pastor.

bluebull Wayne Griffin to Second Church in Amarillo as pastor.

bluebull Tim Gruver to Heights Church in Liberty as pastor.

bluebull Daniel Hancock to First Church in Grandview as minister of students from First Church in Sunnyvale.

bluebull Bob Hobbins to Memorial Church in El Campo as pastor from First Church in Three Rivers.

bluebull Stephen Holcomb to First Church in Richardson as interim minister of music.

bluebull Richard Jackson has completed an interim pastorate at First Church in Sulphur Springs.

bluebull Scott Johnson to Tyland Church in Tyler as pastor from Joy Church in Gladewater.

bluebull Tamara Kimmell to First Church in Godley as children's director.

bluebull Jeff Kluttz to First Church in Needville as pastor from First Church in Rosenberg, where he was minister of students.

bluebull Dick Mahler to Belmore Church in San Angelo as associate pastor.

bluebull Jon McWhorter to Mustang Church in Pilot Point as pastor, where he had been interim.

bluebull Chris Melton to First Church in Rockport as interim youth minister.

bluebull Scott Mills to First Church in Little Elm as church administrator.

bluebull Mike Minton has completed an interim pastorate at Walnut Street Church in Nocona.

bluebull Beverly Patman to First Church in Rio Vista as minister of youth.

bluebull Reed Redus to First Church in Amarillo as interim associate minister to students.

bluebull Tim Reed to First Church in Bloomburg as pastor from First Church in Redwater.

bluebull Josh Rombs to First United Methodist Church in Beeville as music director from First Church in Woodsboro.

bluebull Bob Schmeltekopf has completed an interim pastorate at Central Church in Italy.

bluebull Deena Schulze has resigned as children's pastor at First Church in Wimberley.

bluebull Teresa Seymour to First Church in Little Elm as preschool minister.

bluebull Glenn Shock to Valley Grove Church in Stephenville as pastor from First Church in Seymour.

bluebull David Tankersley to Harmony Church in Eastland as pastor.

bluebull James Teel to Oplin Church in Clyde as pastor.

bluebull Shari Walker has resigned as minister of children at Crestmont Church in Burleson.

bluebull Henry Walton to Elmwood Church in Abilene as music director.

bluebull Alan Wilson to First Church in White Deer as pastor from Temple Church in Amarillo, where he was minister of music and 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.




Brother’s unselfishness provides gift of life, inspires sister_122004

Posted: 12/17/04

Brother's unselfishness provides gift of life, inspires sister

By George Henson

Staff Writer

DALLAS–A boy's desire to give of himself has meant new life for seven other people and led to eternal life for his sister.

Brooke Webster, a Dallas Baptist University junior and Miss Dallas County 2005, fervently promotes organ donation, but she wasn't always such a believer.

A little more than six years ago, she was a 14-year-old without a care in the world enjoying an October night out with friends at a haunted house.

Brooke Webster, a Dallas Baptist University junior and Miss Dallas County, came to faith in Christ and gained a passion for promoting organ donation after her brother's death.

Her brother, 11-year-old Ryan, had elected to spend the evening at the roller skating rink.

“After awhile, he told his friends he was tired and for them to come and get him when the races started. He walked over and sat at one of the tables and put his head down. When they came to get him, he didn't move. He was unconscious,” she recalled.

She came home that night to a dark house, finding a tearful phone voicemail message from her mother to come to the hospital. A congenital aneurysm in Ryan's brain had burst.

Shortly after his sister arrived at the hospital, doctors said Ryan had died.

They asked if the family wanted to donate his organs.

His mother immediately said “yes,” but his sister wasn't as certain.

“I didn't really understand it. I thought that if they did that, I wouldn't get to see him,” she recalled.

Her mother explained, however, that Ryan had seen an “Oprah” episode two weeks before about how a 19-year-old man's organs had benefited others, and he had told his mother he wanted to do the same thing.

“Now Ryan is living on in seven other people who received his organs,” she said.

Ryan also had been involved in the youth program at Columbus Avenue Baptist Church in Waco, and his mother and sister felt in his death a prompting to begin attending church as well.

“In December 1998, I became a Christian, largely as a result of my brother's witness,” Webster said.

She remains a member of the Waco church but attends First Baptist Church in Irving while at school.

She said her position as Miss Dallas County gives her a platform to educate others about organ donation and share her Christian witness at the same time.

The education program she developed, “For the Love of Ryan,” is aimed at children in sixth grade up through adults. Its focus is the importance of donating organs, along with separating facts from myths about the process.

“It's something I'm very passionate about,” she said.

She is the state director of Students for Organ Donation, a national organization. A chapter is beginning at DBU, making it the third in the state, along with Rice University and Southern Methodist University.

While the story of Ryan's death is closely related to her passion about organ donation, it also is the beginning point of her faith walk, so it also gives her an opportunity to share her Christian testimony, she said.

“It's what I'm passionate about, and it's a way to glorify God.”

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.




Abilene church helps members match skills, interests to missions needs_122004

Posted: 12/17/04

Abilene church helps members match
skills, interests to missions needs

By John Hall

Texas Baptist Communications

ABILENE–At Pioneer Drive Baptist Church, any member who can sweep a floor has a skill that can be used to honor Christ. Church leaders emphasize Christians should live “missionally”–using their talents and abilities to glorify God and share Christ.

This means each person, whether a banker, construction worker, writer or businessperson, answers the same calling of expanding God's kingdom, said Randy Perkins, minister of missions and outreach.

Christians are called to examine the community and meet needs, Perkins said. Each person has a skill set that can help people. They must engage and intentionally serve Christ through it.

Pioneer Drive Baptist Church members get to know a young girl during a recent mission trip to New York City. The trip is part of the congregation's effort to live “missionally.”

“If you see a need, let's meet that need,” Perkins said. “And while we're meeting that need, let's share Christ.”

Members have started ministries that match their skills and gifts, from roof repairs and church building ministries to volunteering in a crisis pregnancy center or a service that provides showers to the homeless. The congregation also has started two churches.

Perkins is quick to note these are not programs of the church in the traditional sense but congregationwide efforts to “empty” itself into neighborhoods.

Members use their skills and passions to serve where they want, rather than functioning through artificially designated areas of ministry.

“Meet people where they are,” he encourages Christians. “Get involved in life. Get involved in reality.”

A prime example of ministry growing out of missional living is House of Faith, a Pioneer Drive-sponsored work to poor children, Perkins said.

It began with a group of people seeing the need for ministry along streets they traveled regularly.

They began going up and down streets, inviting youth to events such as Bible clubs.

At first, parents were reluctant to let them in their yards. Now they welcome church members into their homes.

Denise Davidson, who leads this effort, said volunteers have ministered to about 300 children in three years and have seen 50 children make faith professions through weekly Bible clubs. A grandmother and mother also made the same declaration.

The clubs and volunteers provide some consistency for the children, many of whom come from unstable backgrounds, Davidson said. Workers show the children love and give them a place they feel they belong.

Davidson now is trying to replicate the ministry in several different points in Abilene. House of Faith is active in several West Texas cities.

“I love it when you start the club and you see kids walking down the street,” she said. “They come up and give you a big hug.”

This model of missions with people investing their lives in other people follows Jesus' example of meeting needs, Perkins noted.

Pioneer Drive staff encourage members to stop in their daily work to act as Christ did. "When you put yourself out there, the Lord will use you."

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.




Christmas Bible School teaches true meaning of the season_122004

Posted: 12/17/04

Children listen intently to lessons during a one-day Christmas Bible School at Faith Baptist Church in Princeton.

Christmas Bible School teaches
true meaning of the season

By George Henson

Staff Writer

PRINCETON–No star above a stable guided them, but the story of the Christ-child still drew people to worship as a North Texas church reminded area families about the true meaning of Christmas.

Each year since 1998, Faith Baptist Church in Princeton has held Christmas Bible School. It began when some members of the church decided to set aside one Saturday in early December to celebrate and teach children about Christ. This year, the event fell on Dec. 4, with 69 children and 39 volunteers attending.

Beginning at 9 a.m. and ending at 2 p.m., Christmas Bible School has many elements of Vacation Bible School, a mainstay of summer children's ministries in Baptist churches. Like VBS, children at Christmas Bible School are divided into age-graded classrooms and led by volunteers in Bible study, crafts, music and recreation.

Teenagers help teach children a craft activity during a one-day Christmas Bible School at Faith Baptist Church in Princeton.

The last couple of years, the children's choir has performed its Christmas musical during the assembly time, Pastor Stan Fike said.

Everything, whether the games or the Bible story, is meant to illuminate the true meaning of Christmas, he explained.

Over the years, Faith has chosen a variety of memorable methods to teach the Christmas story. One year, a family set up a pen full of sheep and dressed as shepherds to tell the children about the night the angels shared the message of Jesus' birth.

This year, for recreation, they opted to use Collin Baptist Association's new ministry trailer. The trailer includes a bounce house, a cotton candy machine and other equipment to entertain and excite the children during their recreation and snack time.

While individual activities have changed to keep things fresh for children who return year after year, the day always concludes with a special birthday party for Jesus. The party includes the children singing “Happy Birthday” to Jesus before enjoying cupcakes and games. The party reminds the children that behind the fun and games, Jesus is the focus of the day–and Christmas.

Three children made professions of faith in Jesus Christ through this year's event, and about 30 of the children who participated don't usually attend church at Faith Baptist, Fike said.

While everything is planned to share God's love with children, it also is an effective outreach to parents as well, he added.

“We have many unchurched families who take advantage of the opportunity for free babysitting while they go Christmas shopping,” he said. “We don't mind that at all, because it gives us the opportunity to tell their children about the true meaning of Christmas–the birth of our Savior and Lord, Jesus Christ.”

And it doesn't stop with the children, Fike added.

“We have a couple of families whose first contact with our church came through Christmas Bible School,” he said. “The children had such a good time, they made their parents bring them to church the following Sunday, and they've been here ever since. I got to baptize three children and their mother and father as a result of the gospel being shared through Christmas Bible School.”

This year yielded similar results, with three families without a church home visiting the day after their children attended Christmas Bible School, he said.

Other churches are beginning to contact Faith Baptist Church after sharing their curriculum, all of which is designed by members.

The amount of preparation and time spent by volunteers is not lost on Fike.

“It's amazing to me how many of our members, youth and adults, will take a Saturday out of this busy holiday season to serve the Lord by ministering to children,” he said.

Many members who cannot participate on Saturday help by baking cupcakes, donating craft supplies and praying for the children and their families, he said.

“It ends up being a fantastic blessing for everyone involved, whether it's the kids and their families or our teachers and helpers,” Fike asserted.

“Not only has Christmas Bible School been a great opportunity for us as a church to reach the community with Christ's love, but it has been a special time to honor the real reason behind the holidays, the birth of Jesus Christ.”

For more information on Christmas Bible School, contact Faith Baptist Church at (972) 736-3733 or faithbaptistprinceton@juno.com.

Jennifer Fike, a junior at Hardin-Simmons University in Abilene, contributed to this article.

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.