Secretary of State describes crisis in Darfur as ‘genocide’_92004

Posted: 9/17/04

Secretary of State describes crisis in Darfur as 'genocide'

By Robert Marus

ABP Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON (ABP)–In the Bush administration's most powerful statement to date on the situation in the troubled Sudanese province of Darfur, Secretary of State Colin Powell told a Senate committee that black Africans were being subjected to “genocide” in the region–and the Arab-controlled government in Khartoum shared responsibility.

Citing a State Department report on the situation released the same day as his committee appearance, Powell told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, “genocide has been committed in Darfur and that the government of Sudan” and Arab militias in the region the government has supported “bear responsibility.” And he added, “Genocide may still be occurring.”

The crisis began in early 2003, when some black African militias in Darfur attacked Sudan's Arab-controlled government to protest long-standing inequities between black Sudanese and the Arab power structure.

A Sudanese woman sits in front of a tent at the Bredjing refugee camp in eastern Chad, the country's biggest camp sheltering more that 35,000 men, women and children. (Reuters/Luc Gnago Photo)

The government responded by arming Arab militias, collectively known by the Arabic name “Janjaweed.” The groups have, according to a variety of human-rights and governmental organizations, terrorized black Darfur residents by carrying out a systematic campaign of murder, rape, destruction of crops, and forced displacement of whole villages.

As a result, according to the U.S. Agency for International Development, nearly a million black Sudanese are at risk of death from starvation and disease due to tight quarters in refugee camps and the militias' blocking of relief shipments of food and medicine. According to various estimates, between 30,000 and 100,000 people have already died as a result of the conflict.

The United Nations reports hundreds of thousands more have been driven from their homes to other parts of Darfur and into neighboring countries. Many of those are housed in refugee camps with deplorable sanitary conditions, and hundreds daily are succumbing to hunger and disease.

“Some of (the victims alive today) have already been consigned to death in the future because of the circumstances they are living in now,” Powell told the heavily attended hearing. “They will not make it through the end of the year.”

Despite a cease-fire between the rebels and the Sudanese government negotiated last spring, the report indicates, the Janjaweed's attacks–and the government's complicity in them–have continued.

The new State Department report is based on interviews U.S. government officials conducted with 1,136 Darfuri refugees in camps in neighboring Chad. Of the respondents, 81 percent said they had witnessed destruction of their home villages by the Janjaweed, and 61 percent said they had experienced the murder of a family member.

Powell said the “genocide” term was justified because the report found a “consistent and widespread” pattern of atrocities against black villagers across Darfur at the hands of the Janjaweed and their government backers.

Powell himself also visited the region in June. In addition, several high-ranking officials–including several members of Congress and U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan–have visited Darfur and spoken with Sudanese and other local government authorities.

However, using diplomacy to bring about an end to the crisis has proven difficult. As the committee's chairman, Sen. Richard Lugar (R-Ind.) said in his opening statement, “Khartoum's status as an oil exporter, a major arms importer, and an Islamic government has diminished the appetite for decisive action (against Sudan) in some foreign capitals.”

In July, Congress passed a resolution urging administration officials to label the situation as genocide. On July 30, the U.N. Security Council passed Resolution 1556, which set a deadline by the end of August for the Sudanese government to begin bringing Janjaweed leaders to justice and to end attacks against civilians. Powell said “it appears” officials in Khartoum had failed to comply with that request.

In response, Powell said, the United States has proposed another resolution to the Security Council. It threatens sanctions against Sudan's oil industry if government officials do not work to improve conditions for black Darfuris.

The proposal will likely prove controversial on the council, which includes two members–China and Pakistan–with close ties to Sudan's oil industry. Many world leaders have criticized the aggressive U.S. approach to the situation as risky, saying it could endanger the nation's political stability and possibly cause even more hard-line officials to come into power.

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.




DBU SWAT team_92004

Posted: 9/17/04

DBU SWAT team

Dallas Baptist University incoming freshmen Amber Smith (left) and Lacey Scarborough help transfer boxes of toys to the Mission Arlington Christmas Store, where the toys will be distributed to needy area children this holiday season. More than 100 DBU students worked at Mission Arlington during SWAT (Student Welcome and Transition) Week at DBU. The orientation week for incoming freshman and transfer students included community ministry projects throughout the Dallas-Fort Worth area. Junior Karice Heath helps build storage space for materials at the East Oak Cliff Habitat for Humanity Warehouse. Heath worked as one of many returning-student team leaders modeling "servant leadership" during SWAT Week. (Kristi Brooks Photo)

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.




Same song, second verse for disaster relief volunteers in hurricane season_92004

Posted: 9/17/04

Same song, second verse for disaster
relief volunteers in hurricane season

By John Hall

Texas Baptist Communications

For Baptist disaster relief workers, the second verse is much like the first.

Once again, the volunteers were called out of Florida to avoid a large hurricane moving toward the pummeled state.

Southern Baptist workers, including teams coordinated by Texas Baptist Men, moved out of Florida Sept. 10 as Hurricane Ivan inched closer.

Disaster relief efforts following Hurricane Charley were interrupted when Hurricane Frances drenched the state. Baptists were stationed in Georgia and Alabama to wait out Frances.

Volunteers ministered for less than a week between moving into Florida after Frances and being called back out.

Three Texas Baptist Men units were waiting in Living Water Baptist Assembly near Covington, La. Several others were waiting in Georgia.

Most of the volunteers returned home, and fresh teams will take the units where they are needed after Ivan passes, said Leo Smith, executive director of Texas Baptist Men.

“I want to thank all of those who have been involved in personal ways in this disaster operation,” Smith said. “It is hard to gear up and then have to pull back and wait. The spirit of our volunteers has been superb. We are ready to respond again as soon as we see where Ivan will come ashore.”

The Southern Baptist Convention North American Mission Board has re-routed many of the units that were on the way to Florida, and sent others home.

Smith expressed his gratitude for continued support from Texas Baptists.

Extended disaster relief efforts such as the one taking place in Florida requires extensive monetary and prayer support, he added.

“I also want to thank our Baptist family for their prayers for our teams and the people of Florida who have had to face so much,” he said.

“Continue to pray for our disaster teams as they prepare to go back in. Your financial support would be a big help at this time.”

To support Texas Baptist Men disaster relief efforts, send checks designated “disaster relief” to Texas Baptist Men, 333 N. Washington, Dallas 75246-1798.

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: Small-car-proof what’s important_92004

Posted: 9/17/04

DOWN HOME:
Small-car-proof what's important

“Well, I could've bought you a stronger sunglasses case,” Joanna said, handing me something like a black cocoon with a zipper.

“This should be just fine,” I told her, unzipping the case and testing my sunglasses–the new sunglasses she bought me for my birthday–to see how they fit.

True confession: I have a weakness for two luxuries–shoes and glasses.

I came by the shoe deal naturally. My daddy always has appreciated beautiful shoes. I picked up the proclivity from him.

MARV KNOX
Editor

And we came by it biologically. His feet are size 13-AAA. Mine are 8 1/2-B. We're both hard to fit. Hardly anybody makes 13-AAA shoes. And very few shoemakers make 8 1/2-B's. B's usually start with size 9.

So, we've been blessed–and maybe cursed, at least when it's time to pay the bill–with hard-to-fit feet. Cobblers who bother to make sizes 13-AAA and 8 1/2-B don't mess with junk. I've always appreciated stylish shoes.

Now that I think of it, I came by this thing for glasses naturally, too.

I started wearing glasses when I was in the eighth grade. One Saturday, a girl named Cris said she liked me. The next Monday, I got my first glasses–bulky tortoise-shell headlights, just like Mr. Beall's, down at the bank. I wore them to school on Tuesday, and Cris acted funny. That night, over the phone, Cris told me she thought we should “just be friends.”

Ever since, I've tried to wear the smallest, lightest glasses I could find. And better yet, contact lenses.

When I went back to contacts–“mono” vision, one for distance and one for close-up, amazing–Joanna, who loves me with or without glasses, with or without hair, suggested I get some cool new sunglasses for my birthday.

Back home, we discovered they didn't fit in any of my other cases. The next week, Jo went by the optometrist's office to pick up a case.

“You should've seen the first one the lady brought out,” Jo told me. “It was huge. Looked sorta like an aluminum briefcase. I told her, 'That's way too big.'

“'Well, it's strong,' the lady said. 'You can drive a small car over it, and the sunglasses will be just fine.'”

Talk about overkill. Who really needs a car-proof sunglasses case?

But on the other hand, I admire those folks. They must be really proud of the sunglasses they make, if they want to go to all that trouble to protect them from small cars and, presumably, rhinoceroses and teenagers.

Makes me think about Christians. How much trouble do we go to in order to protect the good name of our Lord and Savior? Do we insulate it with holy lives, steel it with loving, moral character? Or do we scratch it and dent it with our own recklessness, sort of like a cheap pair of sunglasses we don't care about anyway?

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: ’04 decisions will impact decades_92004

Posted: 9/17/04

EDITORIAL:
'04 decisions will impact decades

2004 will get a dog-eared and tattered page in Texas Baptist history books. Generations from now, our descendants will pore over these months, evaluating their impact on all that follows.

Next week, the Baptist General Convention of Texas Executive Board will consider the most significant reorganization of the BGCT in at least five decades. The board will act on new mission, vision, values and priority statements that place the health and vitality of local churches at the center of everything the convention does. It will vote on governance proposals that drastically reduce the size of the BGCT's rambling decision-making apparatus and make the convention more accountable to the churches. And it will review strategies that will outline how the convention will serve churches to make them stronger so they can bring people to Christ and minister in Jesus' name.

If the Executive Board approves, then messengers to the BGCT annual session this fall will vote their approval or disapproval. And if the messengers ratify the changes, BGCT Executive Director Charles Wade will begin the vital task of assigning staff to new responsibilities and allocating budget dollars to make it all happen.

Some Texas Baptists may be tempted to give this process the ho-hum treatment. We've all seen organization charts come and go. We've read mission and vision statements until our eyes cross. We've seen staff reassigned. What's the big deal?

This is a huge deal, and we all should pray it becomes reality–a new reality for the BGCT.

The proposed guiding statements and governance reorganization have the potential to change the culture of the BGCT. You won't sense it in Sunday school next week or mention it in your missions committee meeting next month. You won't feel it when your finance committee reports this quarter or ponder it when a church in your association picks a pastor the first of next year. But if these changes are approved and implemented well, they will impact all those aspects of church life before too long.

For decades, the BGCT has been program-driven, just like every other Baptist convention and most other denominational bureaucracies. The convention's job has been to develop programs at the Baptist Building in Dallas, promote them vigorously and pass them along to the churches. This hasn't been bad. God has blessed, and our churches and convention have prospered.

But times have changed. Just as the marketplace has been consumer-customized and businesses have become more client-oriented, the changing pace of our culture has geared churches to seek customization and specific support. Seek it because they need it. Cookie-cutter approaches don't cut it any more. And the proposed BGCT reorganization–a reorientation of the convention's function–will address those changing, changing church needs.

Within a couple of years, the reorganization will decentralize the convention. It will mean moving staff out of Dallas and closer to churches across Texas. It will mean shifting from calling the Baptist Building to get the latest upgrade of a program to working with a consultant to find the just-right options for your church. It will mean providing input from your church–ideas about what works and doesn't work and why–into a system that will take that knowledge and use it to help not only your church but other congregations. It will mean creating more flexible response systems for starting churches and doing mission work across Texas and around the world. It will mean investing in research and development to test approaches to ministry and to make the best practices available to all the churches. It will mean focusing resources on ministry to Texas' swirling demographic realities and training ministers to lead all our churches, including thousands not yet started.

It will mean all that. And more.

It hinges not only on approval, but also implementation. Pray for the Executive Board as it deliberates Sept. 28 and BGCT messengers as they meet Nov. 8-9. Pray for Charles Wade as he considers how to move reorganization to reality. And pray for all Texas Baptists as we anticipate a changing–and exciting–future.
–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.




EDITORIAL: Contest: Care for the poor_92004

Posted: 9/17/04

EDITORIAL:
Contest: Care for the poor

Like the tides, phases of the moon and the Texas Rangers' inevitable September nosedive, some events are predictable.

Take the responses that arrive every time an editorial calls on Texas Baptists to advocate government support for poor people. Say restoring funding for the Children's Health Insurance Program. Or helping the elderly and chronically ill with their prescription costs. Or maybe ensuring a basic level of education for all children, no matter where they or their parents were born.

Some responses are worse than others. Nobody these days enjoys being called a socialist. Most Christians don't appreciate their faith being called into question.

Other responses are sincere, heartfelt, genuine. And illogical. They usually go like this: “I can't believe the editor of our state Baptist paper would endorse something as absurd as wasting tax money on social-welfare programs. Don't you know what Jesus taught? It's the church's job to take care of the poor. 'Render unto Caesar the things that are Caesar's and unto God the things that are God's.' The government needs to butt out of the church's business. And it certainly doesn't need more of my tax money.”

If this were true, then churches are failing miserably. And every Christian in every church is failing, too.

But maybe I'm wrong. Let's have a contest to see if any church is meeting the challenge. To see if we can say, 'Government, take a hike; the church's got it under control.”

We're looking for a church that is doing its complete share to help provide food, clothing and shelter, medical care, educational support and emergency relief. If every church in town did its proportional share, the community wouldn't need any state or government support to meet the needs of poor children, the chronically and mentally ill, and the elderly.

Nominations should include a brief description of the church's ministries and a copy of the ministry budget, as well as information about the size of the community and the government-supported services for such people. Nominations also should include the number of other churches in the community, demonstrating that if the other churches did their share, government could get out of the business of helping poor people.

We'll also take nominations for individuals who contribute sufficiently to their churches' budgets to cover their prorated share of ministry to poor people in their town.

And if we receive bona fide winners, we'll write up their stories. We'll tell how they do it and how the rest of us can, too.

But until then, we need to demand the government adequately fund services for “the least of these” our churches are missing.
–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.




Six BGCT-related schools post increases in fall enrollment; three universities show drop_92004

Posted: 9/17/04

Six BGCT-related schools post increases in
fall enrollment; three universities show drop

By Ferrell Foster

Texas Baptist Communications

Six schools affiliated with the Baptist General Convention of Texas reported student enrollment increases this fall.

Baptist University of the Americas in San Antonio, an accredited theological university, enrolled 185 at its San Antonio campus, up from 171 a year ago. In its Baptist Bible institutes, enrollment stayed the same at 500.

Eighty-nine percent of students are in the school's bachelor's program, and 28 percent come from outside the United States.

Dallas Baptist University reports fall enrollment is up 3.9 percent, an increase of 176 students to a total of 4,714.

The record level marks the 17th consecutive year of growth at the school.

DBU has been adding buildings to accommodate its growth. The most recent addition is a three-building on-campus apartment complex that houses 250 students. A fourth building is to open in the spring.

East Texas Baptist University in Marshall enrolled 1,404 this fall, compared to 1,354 in fall 2003.

University officials attributed the growth, in part, to a new financial plan that guarantees no increase in student costs related to tuition, fees, room and board for eight semesters.

Hardin-Simmons University set a record enrollment this semester with 2,392 students, topping the all-time high of 2,374 in 1995.

It marked a 2.5 percent increase over the 2003 enrollment of 2,333.

Hardin-Simmons' Logsdon School of Theology's master of divinity program enrolled 95 students this fall, an increase of 30 students or 46.2 percent.

Minority enrollment is up 8 percent, and transfer enrollment is up 25.8 to 190.

The University of Mary Hardin-Baylor at Belton enrolled 2,706 students this fall, a 3 percent increase. The freshman class declined to 477 from 508, but the number of transfer students jumped to 340 from 282.

The university's freshman retention rate reached an all-time high, with 70 percent of fall 2003 freshmen still enrolled.

Wayland Baptist University's enrollment climbed to 6,272 this fall, up from last year's 6,205.

At the Plainview campus, 1,057 enrolled, compared to 1,037 in 2003.

Almost one-third of the freshman class were designated “Pioneer Scholars,” which earned them special tuition scholarships based on entrance exam scores. Twice as many freshmen this year are participating in Wayland's honors program.

Houston Baptist University's 12th day enrollment figures were not finalized, but preliminary numbers indicate 2,231 students enrolled, compared to 2,334 last fall.

New student undergraduate enrollment at Houston Baptist University remains at last year's level.

At Baylor University in Waco, overall enrollment is down 138 students to 13,799, compared to last fall's 13,937.

There are 11,580 undergraduate students, 1,297 graduate students, 424 in the law school, 391 at George W. Truett Theological Seminary, 99 at the U.S. Academy of Health Sciences in San Antonio and eight in a physical therapy doctoral program at West Point.

Baylor's freshman enrollment climbed this year by 107 students to 2,785.

The freshman class also represents a rise in average SAT scores (1190, up from 1179) and an increase in minority students (30.3 percent, up from 25.5 percent).

At Howard Payne University in Brownwood, enrollment dipped 4.8 percent, with 1,318 students this fall compared to 1,385 in 2003.

Of those students, 1,145 attend at the Brownwood campus, and 173 attend classes in El Paso, Harlingen, Corpus Christi and Weatherford. The number of new students increased to 427 from 414.

University officials attributed the decline in part to sluggish enrollment at the school's extended education .

Howard Payne graduated a near record number in the spring–260 graduates compared to the average 224.

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.




Reorganization will help BGCT meet Texas churches’ needs, leaders agree_92004

Posted: 9/17/04

Reorganization will help BGCT meet
Texas churches' needs, leaders agree

By Marv Knox

Editor

Reorganization of the Baptist General Convention of Texas is long overdue, BGCT leaders agree, but they predict the changes will enable the BGCT to improve its ability to meet the needs of Texas Baptist churches.

BGCT Executive Director Charles Wade, President Ken Hall and Chief Financial Officer David Nabors also stressed the proposed reorganization will increase accountability to the churches.

“For a long time, many Texas Baptists have felt that the Executive Board and the various boards and commissions, for all the good they have done, needed to be reorganized,” Wade explained.

Ken Hall

He cited three primary reasons: “First, the present organization is confusing and difficult to explain.

“Second, members of the Executive Board often feel they have no input into developing policies, recommendations or initiatives. All of that is done by committees or other entities.

“And third, in a time of concern that boards of directors hold executive staff accountable, it is clear the 234 Executive Board members constitute too large a body to be fully engaged in evaluating and setting direction for the executive staff.”

Hall echoed the accountability theme.

“Governance has to match the convention's goals so you can force accountability,” he said. “You have to change the governance structure.”

To illustrate, he cited “too much duplication and confusion on our boards, commissions and committees.”

“And in this era of corporate scandal and poor board oversight in the for-profit and not-for-profit worlds, we've got to strengthen accountability,” he said. “We've been fortunate in Texas, because we've had godly people leading us.”

The proposed structure would do just that, Wade added.

“There will be more accountability for decisions made and actions taken,” he predicted. “The Executive Board will be asked to decide on matters which they have had a part in researching and developing. There will be better coordination and integration of ideas and solutions to help local churches, associations and institutions.”

And that accountability has ramifications throughout the convention structure, the leaders noted.

For example, the BGCT executive director currently relates to five major governing bodies in addition to the Executive Board, and they all have fiduciary responsibilities that overlap with the Executive Board, Hall said.

Charles Wade

“The executive director now will have accountability to one group–the Executive Board, particularly through its Executive Committee,” Nabors explained.

Similarly, since the BGCT's institutions relate directly to coordinating boards and only indirectly to the Executive Board, “they never have had to be accountable to the Executive Board, even though the (BGCT) funding comes through there,” Hall noted, advocating a closer relationship between funding and accountability.

That will be accomplished through “a single line of accountability to a committee of the Executive Board,” Nabors responded.

Wade pledged the new structure will result in “a coordinated effort to assist the institutions in helping the churches be most effective in developing leaders, meeting human needs and other priorities of the convention.”

And the accountability will bounce back to the Executive Board as well, he observed.

“The Executive Board will have 90 members representing the entire state and the wonderful ethnic diversity we have in our churches,” he said. “They will be accountable for the work of the convention because they will be given the responsibility to develop the plans, policies and strategies that will affect all the work we will do together.”

Although the BGCT's institutions no longer will relate to coordinating boards, they will relate to the Executive Board's Institutional Relations Committee, Wade said.

“In fact, we hope we can better coordinate efforts and increase collaboration to encourage the institutions to help local churches be more effective,” he reported.

For example, integration of the work of institutions and commissions into the Executive Board's proposed committee structure will improve efficiency and effectiveness, he said.

David Nabors

“The Executive Board will be involved in the evaluation of the work of the institutions and the missions, education and public policy matters,” he explained. “So, the board will be able to make better decisions about allocating resources through the budget and personnel assignments.”

And the new structure will not erode the strength of the Christian Life Commission, which has “spoken to and not for” Texas Baptists on moral concerns for more than five decades, Wade added. “We will not lose the prophetic voice on ethical and moral issues which the CLC provides. We will improve our ability to educate our churches and people regarding biblical ethics.”

Advisory groups will strengthen the impact of ministries previously represented by coordinating boards and commissions, he noted, stating these groups will “serve as resources and advocates for our missions and ministry efforts.”

Although each of the BGCT's 113 affiliated district associations no longer will be represented on the Executive Board, representation will be fair and equitable, Nabors and Wade promised.

“Resident membership of our churches is a better representative baseline measure of Texas Baptists,” Nabors said.

“There will be three Executive Board members for every 50,000 resident members of our Baptist churches across Texas, This is the fairest way to represent our people and our churches,” Wade added. “Although every association will not always have at least one Executive Board member, we will be working so hard to relate to the churches and associations across Texas that they are going to feel better represented and better served than ever before.”

Moreover, the new Executive Board's membership “will be a more accurate representation of our true makeup” than the current board's roster, Nabors added.

“We will implement overlays of ethnic, gender, clergy, laity and other appropriate measures to be sure we have a fair representation of our churches' membership. These measures will be updated periodically to assure consistency in that representation.”

That diversity will be evident in about a year, when the first roster of Executive Board members is presented to the convention at the time of the final constitutional vote, which would make the reorganization official, Wade said.

“Everyone will be able to see before the final vote that we have achieved a broad-based representation of all our Baptist people,” he said.

The reorganization is vital for the BGCT's future, the convention leaders stressed.

“These changes will make our convention more accountable to the churches,” Wade noted. “The changes will make the convention staff more helpful to our churches, associations and institutions, and more focused on encouraging, facilitating and connecting our churches in their work to fulfill God's mission of reconciling the world to himself.”

“We are not the convention we were 50 years or 20 years ago,” Nabors said. “In order to be viable and helpful to our churches, we must change to reflect who we are today and who we need to be tomorrow.”

“The challenge we face in the BGCT is not from those who oppose us,” Wade said. “Our challenge is to be useful and enthusiastic partners with the Holy Spirit and the churches so that people everywhere will get a chance to know how much God loves them.

“We must focus on what God has called us to do if we hope to engage and energize young Baptists across this state in doing the work God has given us all to do.”

The proposed changes will create a strong Executive Board that can guide a strong state convention, Hall added.

“There should be one group of people who looks at the whole picture of what Texas Baptists want to do and holds agencies and leadership accountable,” he said.

Hall praised the proposals for enabling the BGCT to meet the needs of the times.

“In this day, organizational governance must be lean and adaptable to the ever-changing nature of the world,” he explained. “This streamlined governance model enables Texas Baptists to be more flexible and have less denominational bureaucracy, and therefore we are able to respond to needs and opportunities more quickly.”

The reorganization is not simply change for the sake of change, Wade added.

“It grows out of our desire to be more accountable to the churches for the decisions and proposals that will arise in the future,” he said. “We believe it will be more effective and will generate more appreciation and confidence among our Baptist people as we move forward.

“Equally important to me are the proposed mission, vision, values and priority statements,” which also were proposed by the convention's strategic planning committee.

“These will shape our core strategies and then the operational decisions that will put our staff in the most strategic places with the most strategic assignments to help us encourage, facilitate and connect the churches in their work.”

That's a new vision, “a refocusing on the needs of the churches,” Nabors said.

And fulfillment of the new vision is up to Texas Baptists, Hall added: “The outcome is dependent upon our faithfulness and stewardship of ministry. I'm committed personally to do everything I can to make it happen.”

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.




Executive Board will consider streamlining BGCT governance_92004

Posted: 9/17/04

Executive Board will consider streamlining BGCT governance

By Marv Knox

Editor

A streamlined Baptist General Convention of Texas decision-making structure and an emphasis on accountability are the key ingredients in a historic proposal to reorganize the convention.

The proposal–to be implemented through an amended BGCT constitution–would eliminate five major BGCT governance groups and bring their responsibilities under authority of the convention's Executive Board.

It also would trim the Executive Board from 234 members to less than 100, while mandating the board reflect the BGCT's geographical, racial and ethnic, gender, age and ecclesiastical diversity.

A special strategic planning committee, named by BGCT Executive Director Charles Wade, developed the recommendations. The reorganization would mark the convention's first major structural change in five decades.

The Executive Board will consider reorganization at its fall meeting Sept. 28. The recommendations are part of a package of proposals that include new mission, vision, values and priority statements, as well as core strategies for directing the convention's work.

If the board approves the proposals, they will be presented to messengers who attend the BGCT annual session in San Antonio Nov. 8-9.

And if messengers approve the constitutional changes at annual sessions in 2004 and 2005, the BGCT governance structure will shrink and accountability will focus on the Executive Board.

According to the governance proposal, the BGCT would eliminate the Christian Education Coordinating Board, which acts as a liaison to the universities and academy affiliated with the convention. The Human Welfare Coordinating Board, which relates to the convention's child care, aging care and health care institutions, also would be eliminated.

Duties currently assigned to the coordinating boards would be delegated to a new Institutional Relations Committee of the Executive Board.

The proposal also recommends disbanding the State Missions Commission, which supervises work of the Executive Board's missions and ministries staff. Supervision of these tasks would be assigned to the Executive Board's new Church Ministries Committee.

The proposal suggests renaming the Christian Life Commission the Christian Life Group, which will continue to address public policy and ethical issues.

According to the proposal, “advisory groups throughout the state” could be formed to “provide input, feedback and ministry involvement” for areas of work previously administered by commissions and committees.

In addition, the governance proposal would do away with the free-standing BGCT Administrative Committee, which serves as the convention's personnel and budget committee. A new Administrative Committee of the Executive Board would take up those duties.

A new Executive Committee would “plan, coordinate and monitor the general progress” of the Executive Board. The committee would be comprised of the chairperson and vice chairperson of the Executive Board, the president and two vice presidents of the BGCT and the chairperson of each Executive Board committee.

The Executive Board would respond to its new duties by expanding its operational framework. Instead of meeting three times a year for a half day each, the board would conduct three two-day meetings. The new oversight committees would meet one day, and the full Executive Board would convene the next day.

The new structure is designed to increase accountability to the convention by centralizing authority–which previously had been dispersed–in the Executive Board.

The reorganized Executive Board would be comprised of 90 members–three each from 30 geographic/population sectors across the state. Each sector would be comprised of about 50,000 resident members of BGCT-affiliated churches.

The Executive Board also would include the BGCT's president and two vice presidents. Presidents of Woman's Missionary Union of Texas, Texas Baptist Men, Baptist Student Ministries and Hispanic Baptist Convention–all of which have been members of the Executive Board–will be ex-officio members of the new board, as will presidents of “any other convention-recognized fellowships” and the convention recording secretary.

The membership structure would depart from the current guidelines, which provide for at least one member from each of the 113 district associations affiliated with the convention.

But the new structure still would ensure representation from all across the state. With the sectors allocated according to resident church membership, representation would somewhat resemble legislative districts. High-population counties would include more than one sector, while low-population counties would be grouped geographically to create a sector.

The smaller Executive Board–with its committees that would oversee specific convention operations–responds to a frustration expressed by many current and former board members: The sheer size of the current board and the limited scope of members' participation in the governance process has translated into limited accountability for the board.

Executive Board membership would be reserved for “members of churches that are supportive of the Baptist General Convention of Texas,” the proposal notes.

When the Executive Board is fully functioning, members will be divided into three groups, with each member serving a three-year term but one-third of the members' terms expiring annually. Members would be eligible to serve a second three-year term, but they would be ineligible to serve for more than six years consecutively.

Unlike the current Executive Board policy, the convention would pay travel expenses for board members to attend meetings.

Still, the new arrangement is expected to save money, since the convention would not be paying travel and other expenses for meetings of the eliminated coordinating boards, commissions and committees.

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.




Group accuses two churches of endorsing Democratic candidates_92004

Posted: 9/10/04

Group accuses two churches
of endorsing Democratic candidates

By Robert Marus

ABP Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON (ABP)—A religious-liberty group often accused of attacking conservative churches for political activity has criticized two progressive Baptist congregations for Democratic advocacy.

Americans United for Separation of Church and State asked the Internal Revenue Service to investigate New Birth Baptist Church in Miami for hosting what the group called a “Democratic rally” during an Aug. 29 worship service.

At the service, which featured Democratic National Committee chairman Terry McAuliffe and Democratic political activist Al Sharpton, speakers urged the congregation to defeat President Bush in his bid for re-election.

“Bush has misled us for four years and will not mislead us the next four years. Get out and vote, and we'll send Bush back to Texas,” McAulliffe said, according to Americans United.

Churches and other non-profit groups organized under Section 501(c)(3) of the federal tax codes are not allowed to endorse political parties or candidates without risking loss of their tax-exempt status. However, churches may host voter registration drives and educational activities as long as they are done in a non-partisan fashion.

In his complaint to the IRS, Americans United Executive Director Barry Lynn said New Birth's actions went beyond that.

“This event seems to have gone beyond legitimate voter education about issues,” he wrote. “Rather, the event was partisan in its approach and included only Democrats. It promoted Democratic candidates while disparaging Republicans. … I urge you to take appropriate action to correct this abuse of the law.”

Americans United also criticized—although it stopped short of asking for officials to investigate—an Aug. 29 speech by former President Bill Clinton at the famously liberal Riverside Church in New York City. Clinton's speech, which was timed for the beginning of the Republican National Convention in New York, was highly critical of Bush's policies. However, Clinton did not directly endorse Bush’s Democratic challenger, Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry.

Riverside Church is dually affiliated with the American Baptist Churches and the United Church of Christ.

“The difference between the Florida and the Riverside cases is that you in Florida, you had the chairman of the Democratic National Committee basically telling people how to vote—not just criticizing the shortcomings of a candidate,” Lynn said. “Bill Clinton's speech … came right to the edge of the cliff, but stopped short of a direct candidate endorsement.”

Americans United has regularly criticized—and sometimes reported—conservative churches and ministries for appearing to endorse Republican candidates. In recent months, the group has asked IRS officials to investigate Virginia Baptist pastor and television preacher Jerry Falwell as well as Arkansas Baptist pastor Ronnie Floyd for endorsing Bush. It also criticized an Aug. 24 chapel speech that Falwell gave at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Fort Worth where he said, “The press is here today, expecting me to get into politics, which I’m not going to do, except to tell you to vote for the Bush of your choice.”

“I'm appalled by both of them,” Lynn said of Falwell and Clinton's respective speeches. “I think that it's deplorable when political leaders or religious leaders—a Jerry Falwell or a Bill Clinton—kind of skirt the law and turn a religious institution almost into a political entity.”

Several conservative groups have pushed in the last two years to pass legislation, sponsored by Rep. Walter Jones (R-N.C.) that would end the ban on politicking by churches and other houses of worship. Americans United and other church-state separationist groups have strongly opposed the bill.

Bill Murray, a Virginia-based conservative religious activist whose biggest claim to fame is being the born-again son of the late atheist Madalyn Murray O'Hair, is one of Americans United’s fiercest critics. He backs the Jones bill, and recently started a satirical organization to "rat out liberal churches" for political involvement. He said that Lynn, through Americans United , “does nothing but attack conservatives in order to help liberals get into political office.”

Murray also accused Lynn of reporting the Miami church only to avoid criticism that the group only attacked conservative churches.

“This is just grandstanding to pretend that he is being non-partisan,” he said, noting the conservative Catholic League reported the political activity at New Birth Baptist a day before Americans United did. “As of two weeks ago, (Americans United) had only reported two liberal churches” to the IRS, he said.

Americans United spokesman Joe Conn said his group hadn’t waited on the Catholic League to report the Miami church to the IRS, but simply took longer to investigate the situation carefully before deciding to report New Birth for violations of the law.

Conn also called Murray's accusations of partisanship on Americans United’s part unjustified.

“Our first interest in this was (church endorsements of Democratic presidential candidate) Jesse Jackson back in ’88, so it’s hardly a partisan effort on our part,” he said.

According to a document the group provided, of the 52 churches Americans United has reported to the IRS since 1992 for inappropriate political activity, 31 were accused of activity in support of conservative candidates, while 21 were accused of activity in support of liberal candidates.

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.




‘Uncle Charlie’ leading Ugandan orphans to Christ_92004

Posted: 9/10/04

'Uncle Charlie' leading Ugandan orphans to Christ

By Leann Callaway

Special to the Baptist Standard

Five years ago, musician Charlie Bancroft picked up a nickname while on a mission trip to Uganda, and it’s stuck with him.

Now, children everywhere call him “Uncle Charlie.”

“They have a custom in Uganda to call all adults uncles and aunties,” he explained. “That name stuck with me, and now that's what kids all over the world call me.”

Bancroft has continued ministering in Uganda to children by leading worship at a camp for more than 1,000 orphans.

Charlie Bancroft

“Through the years, I have developed a strong bond with the kids in Uganda, and to me, there's nothing better than ministering to orphan children and watching them grow in their faith and develop into responsible leaders.”

Wherever Bancroft leads worship, he says his goal is to lead children to the heart of Jesus.

“I want them to see Jesus in me, on and off the stage, and to love the Jesus that I love,” he said. “Our goal should be to lead our audience to the heart of Jesus. That doesn't mean we can’t have fun. Believe me, we have tons of fun; that’s where kids are at. But a quality of a good worship leader is to take the children’s energy and channel it towards focusing on Jesus.”

At age 16, Bancroft made a profession of faith in Jesus Christ while attending an outdoor crusade in Lawton, Okla. At age 19, he dedicated his life to full-time ministry and began serving as a Baptist youth minister.

He was involved in youth ministry 21 years, serving in Baptist churches across Oklahoma and Texas, including Central Baptist and West Side Baptist churches in Wichita Falls. In addition, he established “Off Campus” evangelistic rallies in southern Oklahoma and founded Young Men of Integrity, a ministry for teenage boys.

In 1997, Bancroft created Upward Bound Ministries, which evolved into a full-time children’s music ministry.

Last year, he led worship at 70 children’s conferences and rallies. During the summer, he often leads worship at Mount Lebanon Baptist Encampment’s preteen camp. Bancroft recently moved to Tampa, Fla., where he attends Idlewild Baptist Church, but most of his events still are in Texas Baptist churches.

“To me, the ultimate experience is when children give their lives to the Lord,” he said. “That's what it is all about. Whether through camp, rallies or conferences, the whole point of what we do is to point kids to Jesus and have fun while doing it. I jokingly say it took 21 years of youth ministry to prepare me for children's ministry.”

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.




Floaters puzzled but happy with free water ministry on Guadalupe River_92004

Posted: 9/10/04

'Tubers' puzzled but happy with
free water ministry on Guadalupe River

By Craig Bird

Special to the Baptist Standard

CANYON LAKE—Every summer, the Guadalupe River becomes an international waterway. Mike Bates thinks that makes it a prime location to tell folks about a God who loves the whole world.

Bates, who leads First Baptist Church of Canyon Lake’s ministry to the “tubers” who flock to the small Comal County town to float the Texas Hill Country stream, admits he wasn’t looking for a multinational experience when he suggested the unusual evangelism effort. He just wanted to offer free bottled water and soft drinks as an expression of God’s love to hot and thirsty tubers. But he assumed most would speak in a Texas drawl.

“Who would have thought we’d get to talk with people from Ireland and Mexico or from Germany, Switzerland or England?” he asked. “We had one man who only spoke French, so I don’t know if he ever understood what we were saying—and a man from Japan kept trying to pay us for the drinks, over and over.”

Tommy Lawson, Becky Roosa and Mike Bates of First Baptist Church in Canyon Lake distribute water to thirsty 'tubers" as they prepare to float down the Guadalupe River.

One reply was clearly understood—nothing is really free, and there is a catch buried somewhere in those ice chests among the plastic bottles and pop-top cans.

“The first time they come by, they look to see if there is a donation can somewhere and keep asking: ‘Is it really free? What’s the catch?” Bates admitted. Obviously, the large hand-lettered signs proclaiming “free sodas” and “free water,” or even the First Baptist team members’ assurances weren’t convincing enough.

But the card the tubers were offered along with the drink convinced most of them.

“Yes … it really is free!” the purple-and-white business-card-sized handout declares. “We hope this small gift brings some light into your day. It’s a simple way of saying that God loves you—no strings attached. Let us know if we can be of more assistance.”

The reverse side has a schedule of services at FBC Canyon Lake along with a map, address and phone number.

Bates isn’t aware of anyone who has visited or called the church, but he is encouraged that so many people tucked the cards into waterproof pouches, along with their driver’s licenses and other important documents.

“This is about getting them to realize there is a God who cares about them even when they are floating down a small river in an out-of-the-way rural Texas town,” he explained. “We’re not here to be intrusive or get in their way. But if they want to talk, we are available.”

Though the First Baptist church building is less than a mile from the popular launch point of Horseshoe Bend, Pastor Gordon Hightower pointed out the church never before had found a consistent means of sharing the gospel with tourists.

But Bates paid attention when Hightower taught a class on “How to Become a Contagious Christian” that included books on friendship evangelism. The church embraced his idea. Four other church members joined him for distribution duty while others provided cases of water and soft drinks and cash contributions.

The project launch was delayed for a month when unusually heavy spring rains kept the release rate from Canyon Lake Dam so high that the currents were unsafe. But by July 4 weekend, the flow was cut back, and the weather was hot and clear.

“The river was bumper-to-bumper with people all weekend,” Bates said. “There were times you couldn’t see the water because all the inner tubes were touching.”

The effort may be nonintrusive and casual, but that doesn’t mean it isn’t strategic, he noted.

“The local economy is pretty much driven by the floaters,” Bates pointed out. “We didn’t want to upset the companies who make their living catering to them, so we don’t go into the camp grounds. I checked with the sheriff’s office to be sure we were all legal—then we picked our spot. I feel like God made this path just so we could be here and do this.”

The location is about two-thirds into a mile-long hike—uphill—tubers must make to take another trip around the bend.

“It takes about an hour to float from the bridge where they get into the water until the bridge where most of them get out,” Bates said. “Then they not only have to climb uphill, but they are carrying those heavy inner tubes that—because they are black—absorb lots of heat. Some of them make that loop four or five times in a day. By the time they get to our little shady spot on the trial, some of them look like they are coming out of the desert.”

The team even helped one 15-year-old girl who was on the verge of heatstroke along with scores of lesser emergencies. Sometimes they helped smaller children carry the tubes the rest of the way to the river and, “there was one couple who had spent their last $6 on food but hadn’t had enough money to get anything to drink, so we got to meet that need,” Bates said.

Team member Tommy Lawson is a veteran at one-on-one Christian witnessing and relishes the opportunity to talk about his faith when the opportunity arises.

“I enjoy meeting people, and I’m not embarrassed to stand out here with this sign and share these drinks,” he said.

Becky Roosa, who distributed cards while Lawson and Bates passed out drinks, is confident the effort “plants seeds” for other Christian witnesses to water and later reap. Team members also benefit, she says.

“This sharpens our ministry and witness skills so we can better share our faith in all types of situations,” she explained. “I am on my way to southern Spain as a missionary, and while I know I won’t be able to do this exact type of thing there, this experience will help me in what I can do.”

Bates, who hopes to expand the project to multiple sites along the river next summer, set three ministry goals before they started: Show God’s love to the people he brings to the river. Get First Baptist Church members who never had been active in planned evangelism involved. And provide a model for other churches.

The first goal obviously has been met.

“I’ve been told that our little river is the seventh most popular vacation spot in the country,” he said. “We had an estimated crowd of between 5,000 and 10,000 each day of the July 4 weekend.”

The second goal is under way. In addition to the core team of five, “people at church are interested and involved in praying for us and supporting us—and that’s where the new teams will come from next summer.”

The third goal was a bit of a stretch, Bates thought, but he felt led to include it.

Then the very first day a youth group from a church in Corpus Christi was tubing the river, met the First Baptist Canyon Lake team and peppered them with questions about what they were doing and why.

“They left here all excited saying: ‘We can do this on the beach at Padre Island. We’re going to do this on the beach at Padre Island,’” he said with a broad smile.

And First Baptist Canyon Lake will do it again next summer on the Guadalupe River.

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.