Texas Tidbits_61404

Posted: 6/11/04

Texas Tidbits

Retiree retreat set. Retired Pastor Jess Moody will preach and Bill Pinson, executive director emeritus of the Baptist General Convention of Texas, will be the Bible study leader at the annual Retiree Ministries Retreat at Glorieta Conference Center, Sept. 13-17. The retreat is sponsored by the Baptist General Convention of Texas and Glorieta Conference Center. Special-interest seminars will be offered on healthy lifestyles, ministry opportunities, financial planning and other topics. Cost is $319.50 for a couple or $185.25 for singles. This includes four nights' lodging and buffet meals Monday dinner through Friday breakfast, as well as program expenses. A $60 conference fee will be charged for those staying in private residences. RV parking is available. For reservations, call toll-free (800) 797-4222.

BUA issues diplomas, grants degrees. Thirty-one students graduated after the spring semester at the Baptist University of the Americas in San Antonio. They included five Bible college students–two from Texas, two from Colombia and one from Brazil–who received bachelor's degrees in biblical and theological studies. Maria Hernandez Ferrier, principal adviser to the U.S. secretary of education on all matters related to limited English-proficient students, was the commencement speaker.

Committee meeting set. The Committee to Nominate Executive Board members for the Baptist General Convention of Texas will meet at 9:30 a.m., Aug. 19, in the Landes A Conference Room of the Baptist Building, 333 N. Washington in Dallas. Cassandra Northcutt, member of First Baptist Church in Longview, is chairperson of the committee.

Baylor names senior vice provost. Larry Lyon has been appointed senior vice provost at Baylor University in Waco. He will continue to serve as dean of the graduate school. Lyon is a Baylor graduate and earned his doctorate from the University of Texas. He has been on the Baylor faculty since 1975. Lyon and his wife, Carol, are members of Columbus Avenue Baptist Church in Waco.

DBU names dean. Dallas Baptist University has named Robert Brooks dean of the College of Fine Arts. Prior to his appointment at DBU, Brooks served as the church music department head at Hardin-Simmons University and associate director of educational outreach at the Juilliard School in New York City. He also served on the music ministry staffs of several Texas churches, including a nine-year tenure with Wilshire Baptist Church in Dallas. Brooks is a graduate of Baylor University and Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary.

ETBU graduates 123 students. East Texas Baptist University awarded degrees to 119 students during regularly scheduled spring commencement ceremonies and four more degrees during a special commencement three days later. A student assistant coach and three players on the ETBU Lady Tigers softball team received their degrees in a special ceremony because they were representing the school at the NCAA Division III west regional tournament in Orange, Calif., when the commencement was held. Jean Wamaitha Githinju of Nairobi, Kenya, received the President's Award.

First Shields Scholarship recipient chosen. Howard Payne University senior Joshua Myers of Austin has been selected as the first recipient of the James and Corrine Shields Scholarship, a fund established for ministry students. The scholarship was named in honor of James Shields, religion professor at Howard Payne for 19 years, and Corrine Shields, former library director at the university.

Gift to Buckner endows scholarship. Dallas philanthropist Nancy Hamon gave $1 million to Buckner Baptist Benevolences to establish a scholarship fund for children living in Buckner residential programs in the Dallas-Fort Worth area. The Hamon Compass Program will provide resources for young men and women leaving Buckner to pursue career paths through universities, colleges, vocational schools or trade schools.

HSU establishes missionary scholarship. The Charles Bryan Missionary Scholarship has been established at Hardin-Simmons University in Abilene. The scholarship, established by a gift from Bryan's estate, will benefit bilingual students preparing for missionary service. Bryan served as a missionary, area director and eventually senior vice president for overseas operations with the Southern Baptist Foreign Mission Board.

DBU wins NCCAA national title. Pitching a perfect game, sophomore Stuart Sutherland led the Dallas Baptist University Patriots to a national title in the National Christian Collegiate Athletic Association World Series in Celina, Ohio. The DBU baseball team defeated Palm Beach Atlantic 2-0 in the championship game. DBU's Mike Bard was named NCCAA coach of the year for the second year in a row, and Sutherland received the most valuable player award. Patriots making the NCCAA All-Tournament team were third baseman sophomore Cody Montgomery, junior pitcher Jeff Gilmore and sophomore pitcher Lance Broadway.

Howard Payne grants degrees to 287. Howard Payne University awarded baccalaureate degrees to 287 seniors during spring commencement ceremonies. Two seniors, John Mark Boucher and Gina Hochreiter, completed their studies with a 4.0 cumulative grade point average. James McEachern, former chairman of the board and chief executive officer of the Nashville-based Tom James Company, delivered a charge to the graduates. McEachern is a 1962 graduate of Howard Payne and serves as a university trustee.

Shoes for Orphan Souls expands. Buckner Orphan Care International has expanded its Shoes for Orphan Souls trips from three to seven countries in 2004, and the program needs volunteers–particularly in Latvia, China and Kenya. Volunteers travel with Buckner to deliver shoes and meet the children who benefit from Shoes for Orphan Souls. The Bulgaria trip, Oct. 4-16, is closed. Others trips are to China, Oct. 19-30, cost $3,500; Latvia, Nov. 4-14, $3,000; Romania, Nov. 4-14 with the Moody Broadcasting Network, $1,400 plus airfare to Budapest, Hungary; Russia, Nov. 11-21, $3,000; Guatemala, Dec. 2-11, $2,000; and Kenya, Christmas trip in conjunction with the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship, $2,900. For applications, deadlines and more information, contact Dana Jones at Buckner Orphan Care International at 1-877-7ORPHAN or email dljones@buckner.org.

DBU hosts PaceSetters camp. Dallas Baptist University will host its 9th annual PaceSetters summer camp, July 12-16. The weeklong event is geared toward students who have completed grades 9 through 12. Led by Glowing Heart, DBU's music ministry team, PaceSetters will learn servant leadership through afternoon service projects in the Dallas-Fort Worth area. Glowing Heart members will lead worship and serve as mentors of small groups to encourage students to strengthen their relationships with God. Cost is $150, which includes meals, lodging, T-shirt and camp notebook. To register, call (214) 333-5438 or (800) 460-1DBU or e-mail gloheart@dbu.edu. For more information, visit www.dbu.edu/glowingheart.

HPU concert draws 600-plus senior adults. Howard Payne University's "Singin' with the Saints" southern gospel concert drew more than 600 senior adults from 35 churches to the Brownwood campus. The concert featured the Melody Boys quartet from Little Rock, Ark., as well as two local groups–4xGrace and the Solid Rock Quartet. A similar event has been scheduled for May 19, 2005.

DBU dedicates fountain. Dallas Baptist University recently observed the 40th anniversary of the school's groundbreaking by dedicating a new fountain in front of the Mahler Student Center in honor of Wayne and Buena Stevenson. Buena Stevenson is a DBU trustee and member of the university's Women's Auxiliary Board. The Stevensons are members of First Baptist Church in Plano.

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




TOGETHER: Thank God for servants who lead_61404

Posted: 6/11/04

TOGETHER:
Thank God for servants who lead

The nation has turned its attention to life and death this past week. Americans bid farewell to Ronald Reagan. Millions of us watched the coverage of his life, politics, and service and gave thanks for him and other presidents who served this nation faithfully and well

And in the midst of this, I attended two funerals of Texas Baptist deacons who were faithful stewards of the trust God and his people placed in them.

One was Noble Hurley, well known for his involvement in the development of Dallas. He was a generous Baptist General Convention of Texas benefactor. When he died, those who knew him best thought of David's lament regarding the death of Abner, “Do you not realize that a prince and a great man has fallen in Israel this day?” (2 Samuel 3:38)

CHARLES WADE
Executive Director
BGCT Executive Board

Another great leader among us also died in the last few days. George W. Hawkes took to heart the passionate words of the prophet: “He hath showed thee, O man, what is good; and what doth the Lord require of thee, but to do justly, and love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God?” (Micah 6:8)

Many of the best deacons I have known claimed this verse as the guidestone for their lives. He believed in God, treasured and obeyed the Scripture, loved his family and set before them a true and compassionate standard of the Christian walk. He loved First Baptist Church in Arlington and believed the church could do anything God set before it. He moved to Arlington from a childhood in Flatonia, where he began his newspaper career as the 18-year-old editor of the Flatonia Argus. As editor and publisher of the Arlington Citizen-Journal through the formative years of Arlington's growth into a major city, he won more awards for journalism than any other Texan. He was always a friend to the editors of the Baptist Standard and served on the board of directors from 1967 to 1975.

But the most amazing thing about him to me as his pastor was his ability to provide effective leadership in our church without calling attention to himself or building a power base that intimidated and frustrated others. He gave moral, consistent, convictional and compassionate leadership. He was open to change as long as it rose out of biblical principles.

The young deacons in our church looked up to him. He was never jealous of his place and never failed to be where he was needed most. People grew in his presence. He cheered our younger leaders on, believing in them and making room for their contributions to the church and community.

The pastor of our church now, Dennis Wiles, told me: “George Hawkes called me about six months after I came as pastor. He said: 'Dr. Wiles, we have loved Henard East and Charles Wade. They were wonderful pastors and leaders for our church. But now you are our pastor, and we love you, and we want you to take the reins and lead our church where we need to go. I will support you in every way I can. Do you see the city library out your office window? If our church ever needs to buy that library in order for us to have room to grow, I will be at the head of the line to remove the first bricks.'” It is named the George W. Hawkes Library.

In all the years we served together, it was never about him, but always about God's kingdom work and the part FBC Arlington had in it. That is what is meant by Jesus' call to servant leadership.

Give thanks today for all the men and women who serve in your church with that kind of spirit.

We are loved.

Charles Wade is executive director of the Baptist General Convention of Texas

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.




Devotions for unemployed offered_61404

Posted: 6/11/04

Devotions for unemployed offered

MURFREESBORO, Tenn. (RNS)–When Richard Malone lost his job in 2001, he prayed to God. Not once, not twice, not only when he lost himself in despair, but every day. And he took notes.

Malone, of Murfreesboro, Tenn., spent six months mourning his old job and finding a new one. And then he published his notes.

The result is “Devotions for Job Seekers: Daily Encouragement Along the Way.”

This is Malone's second run at a prayer guide. He wrote his first one, published in 1992, before he had lived through unemployment. In this case, there's no substitute for real experience.

Losing a job, whether by layoff, firing or quitting, can transform a person's prayer life, Malone said in an interview. “It's a time that drives you to God. You question everything that you're doing. … So many things–your whole self-worth and who you are as a person–seem to be up for grabs.”

The losses keep mounting the entire time a person is without work, he said. The unemployed lose not only a paycheck but friendships, identity, purpose, direction, self-esteem–“the things at the core of your being,” he said. And the unemployed lose a place to go every day.

Malone kept a prayer journal, matching Scripture passages to his own meditations and his prayers. He shared the results with others in his church and submitted the second version of his book to three publishers. The one publisher who once had been without a job is the one who bought the book.

Malone, 55, divided 120 meditations into three stages he says he lived through in his search for his current job, overseeing the purchase of wholesale religious books and music.

The devotions move from shock over the initial impact of unemployment through a long period of waiting, when anger turns to worry and frustration, and into a time of figuring out what's been learned and what should be done differently in the next job.

Malone was surprised by the comfort the Bible had to offer–psalms that helped him work through extreme emotions and stories of Old Testament heroes such as Abraham, Moses and Joseph, who waited 10, 20 or 30 years for understanding.

In the end, Malone gained a new understanding of what the Bible teaches, he said. “God is more interested in who you are than what you are doing.”

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.




Storylist for 5/31 issue_53104

Storylist for 5/31/04 issue

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

FRONT PAGE ARTICLES
Flood leaves pastor praising God for volunteers

Website becomes handiest item in toolbox as as church seeks to attract, contact visitors

Barna reports increased giving to nonprofit organizations last year

Flood leaves pastor praising God for volunteers



Website becomes handiest item in toolbox as as church seeks to attract, contact visitors

Baylor CFO announces plans to leave university, return to private business

Gay-rights rally organizer strikes plea bargain with Baylor

Baylor president keeps post; benefactor may pull out money

BGCT staffers to resign NAMB appointments

Tornado rips roof off Conroe church

Bivocational pastor enjoys coaching Hispanic pastors as BGCT consultant

Texan Engle's spin on worship That's why we're all created

ETBU choir bound for Russia

BGCT board asks Houston Baptist University to sever ties with SBTC

Southwestern uninvited to BGCT exhibit hall

Dallas-area Baptist volunteers join in Habitat for Humanity building blitz

Retired minister becomes pastor to pastors in San Angelo

Reach Millennials by helping them decode life, futurist says

Pastor sends potent picture postcards to patrons of 'adult' businesses

NAMB enters cooperative agreement with Baptist churches in Puerto Rico

Two Texas churches partner with CBF in mission to Navajos

Brazilians hear language of love from Singing Men

Terrorist attacks underscore need to evangelize, Spanish leader says

State comptroller backpedals on tax exemption decision

Texas-based missionaries offer ministry of reconciliation in Macedonia

Church collects letters to Congress opposing legal redefinition of marriage

On the Move

Around the State

Texas Tidbits


Evangelical general apparently linked to Iraqi prison abuse

Study shows North Carolina Baptists don't like the SBC but continue financial support

Competing resolutions on public education confront SBC committee

Churches finding it hard to leave the SBC–even if they do

Baptist Briefs


REBECCA ST. JAMES: Preaching purity

Pass on wisdom, values, life lessons through spiritual wills


Barna reports increased giving to nonprofit organizations last year

Covenant model offers hope for 'getting marriage right,' ethicist insists

Call for Renewal seeks to make poverty an electoral issue

Promise Keepers pledge to move from stadium rallies to the marketplace

Ratings report reveals religious radio stations on the rise

Save the Children names top 10 best, worst nations to be a mother

Teens who pray expect answers–at least some of the time, survey reveals

CHURCH & STATE
Religious freedom in Afghanistan & Iraq endangered, panel says

When it comes to religious freedom, India's future looks much brighter after election

Oklahoma Muslim student will be allowed to wear headscarves to school

Former Soviet republic named a top violator of religious freedom by panels

Church collects letters to Congress opposing legal redefinition of marriage


Cartoon

Classified Ads

Texas Baptist Forum

On the Move

Around the State


EDITORIAL University should live up to its commitment to BGCT

DOWN HOME: Countdown clock ticks louder still

TOGETHER: God offers opportunity, accountability

ANOTHER VIEW: Watch your step in political march

Texas Baptist Forum

Cybercolumn by John Duncan: Dad's old glove

Cybercolumn by Jeanie Miley: Talk, action & love


LifeWay Explore the Bible Series for June 6: Most jobs are too big for any individual person

LifeWay Family Bible Series for June 6: Baptism proclaims an encounter with Christ

LifeWay Explore the Bible Series for June 13: God continues to use people to meet needs

LifeWay Family Bible Series for June 13: Lord's Supper symbolizes God's new covenant

See articles from previous issue 5/17/04 here.




Team hopes biblical_61404

Posted: 6/11/04

CYBERCOLUMN: Loyalty

By Berry D. Simpson

It was a hard week. My 20-year companion let me down; my calculator stopped working. And I am broken-hearted.

Well, it didn’t just stop working on its own, I dropped it. But I’ve dropped it many times, including several times on caliche-covered well locations, and this is was the first time it quit.

Berry D. Simpson

It’s an HP 41CV, and I’ve been using it since 1983. It was the instrument of choice for every pre-personal computer engineer. It had expansion ports for custom memory chips containing specialized complex programs available as after-market additions. It also had an attachable magnetic card reader that preceded floppy disks (which preceded RW-CDs, which preceded USB flash-memory devices). And more, the owner’s manual stated it “overcame previous human interface limitations by adding an exciting array of alphanumeric capabilities.”

Very cool.

It was a significant hand-held computer in its time, and mine had programs for things like sucker-rod designs, downhole log calculations, fluid gradients and pump sizing—all written by my smart friends. I wasn’t very good at programming my own 41CV since not long after I got it I also got a PC in my office (we all shared the one machine) and I was captured by the wonders of Lotus 1-2-3 (which, I must say, changed my entire outlook on life, setting me free from batch-process calculations and ushering me into real-time spreadsheets … a different essay, by the way!) and macro programming.

The HP used a quirky system for entering numbers called RPN (Reverse Polish Notation, a formal logic system which allowed mathematical expressions to be specified without parenthesis, and named to honor its inventor, Jan Lukasiewicz); easy to use once you got used to it. The best part about RPN was that it kept people-who-were-not-one-of-us from borrowing our calculators because they didn’t want to risk the smug look we engineers flashed whenever they asked how to make it work.

RPN was the secret handshake for engineers.

My HP 41CV has been in the top left-hand drawer of my desk for over 20 years, and that in spite of the fact I’ve not had to share a PC with anyone since 1992. I’ve continued to pull out my HP and use it at least once a day for 20 years. It is a deep-seated part of my engineering life.

For the engineers just a bit older than me, the instrument of choice was a slide rule. One of my favorite movie scenes is from “Apollo 13,” when a roomful of engineers whisk out their slide rules to calculate the coordinates necessary to bring the wounded spacecraft back home. It is a beautiful scene to watch them move those slides and bring those astronauts home safely to their families.

I myself used a slide rule in junior high school and senior high school, and even briefly during my first year of college. I still have it, a bamboo-wood Post Versalog 1460, with 24 scales, a silky-smooth action. It’s in my desk, but I can’t do much with it besides multiply two times three (equals six!).

In junior high, I belonged to the Slide Rule Users’ Club—a fact that was quite entertaining to my kids—where we practiced solving complex math problems and learned tricks to make us faster. For a short time, I even wore my slide rule on my belt for convenience, learning only later that a slide rule holster was not a turn-on for girls even if the holster matched my belt. Who knew? But in those days, I was more interested in physics than in girls anyway.

I’ve heard that Hewlett-Packard refuses to repair these vintage calculators (I actually heard that ten years ago!), so I don’t know what I can do about mine. I’ll try replacing the batteries if I can find any size “N.”

I’m sure there are modern calculators on the market that, given the opportunity, I would grow to love, maybe as much as I love my 41CV. I know that to be a true fact, but it’s hardly satisfying.

I could buy another HP 41CV on E-bay for about $100, but I won’t do that, either. It would be like telling a young child whose pet kitten was accidentally run over by the family car, “It’s OK; we’ll get you another one.” Another one is not the same.

Maybe it’s time for me to pull another portion of my life into the brave new world of the future. I’m never happy about going through this sort of involuntary change, but I’m usually a better man for doing it.

And it isn’t that I’m resistant to new technology. I don’t love old technology; I love things that have served me for a long time. This is about loyalty.

Just don’t ask me to multiply or divide anything for awhile.

Berry Simpson, a Sunday school teacher at First Baptist Church in Midland, is a petroleum engineer, writer, runner and member of the city council in Midland.

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: ‘Two-fer’ teaches Texans a lesson_61404

Posted: 6/11/04

DOWN HOME:
'Two-fer' teaches Texans a lesson

Sometimes, I think God must use reverse-psychology.

What other rationale could possibly explain dumping, say, the Gulf of Mexico onto North Texas in early June?

We all know folks love to complain about the weather. But a complete and utter inundation this time of year heads off gripes in two directions.

For example, some people (we'll exclude the ones whose homes and/or cars flooded, since they've got a good excuse) always gripe when the rains come. And nobody except people who lived in Washington State too long actually enjoys day upon day of clouds. So rain-gripers could be tempted to complain about receiving a boatload of rain in less than a week.

MARV KNOX
Editor

They'll gripe all right, until they look at a calendar and remember what follows June. In July and August, Texas gets drier than an hour-long tithing sermon. So, anybody with the spiritual sense of a centipede realizes complaining about rain any time, much less early summer, is foolish. And they'll repent.

On the other hand, some people (we'll exclude the dryland farmers and ranchers, since they've got a good excuse) always gripe when the rains don't come. And nobody except people who gleefully pile their tumbleweeds into Christmas trees actually enjoys relative humidity measured in the negative numbers. So, these folks will be tempted to complain in a month or so, when they've forgotten the name for white puffy things that float in the sky.

They'll gripe, too, until they remember early June. That was when their dogs started growing gills and their children sprouted webbing between their toes, when they dreamed of a horror movie called “Return of the Black Mold.” And they'll repent.

A phenomenon such as a Texas monsoon in June is known in theological circles as a “two-fer” (and, among the alliterative theologians, a “double divine deal”)–an act of God that serves multiple purposes.

Like when the air conditioning goes out at church in early August, the same day the pastor preaches on hell. All souls above the “age of accountability” receive an object lesson they'll never forget. And the little kids rejoice because the heat causes the preacher to tire quickly, letting them out of church a little early.

It also occurs when the power goes out during a business meeting debate over worship music. Fans of both organ-powered anthems and electric-guitar-driven praise choruses have to admit, at least, they're nowhere without a power source. As well as the Power Source.

And that brings us back to the weather. The Bible tells us God causes rain to fall on the just and the unjust. God also brings showers and drought upon everybody. So, we move forward, thankful for the good times and leaning on God's mercy during the bad.

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.




European Baptist leaders ‘repent’ of colonial-era sins_61404

Posted: 6/04/04

European Baptist leaders 'repent' of colonial-era sins

BERLIN, Germany (ABP)—European Baptists leaders "repented" for their century-old role in colonizing Africa, which they admit divided and exploited the continent.

The European Baptist Mission, the mission society of European Baptists, recognized the 120th anniversary of the Berlin Congo Conference of 1884, during which political leaders from 14 Western nations divvied up Africa for colonization.

The Baptist leaders adopted a statement in which they repented for the civil strife and economic injustice that resulted from Europe's colonization of Africa, according to the Baptist World Alliance.

"This division of Africa, which was planned, decreed and made possible by the Berlin Conference, resulted not only in a political splintering of Africa, but also in a destruction of natural ethnic, social and national connections, which led to tensions that continue to cause bloody conflicts," the European Baptist Mission statement said.

The European Baptist Mission, founded in 1945 by the European Baptist Federation and other Baptist groups, met in Berlin this spring to mark its own 50th anniversary. The group sends out missionaries for medical work, schools, theological education and project management to seven African and five Latin American countries.

The 1884 Berlin conference—called to resolve a dispute over control of the Congo—involved Belgium, Denmark, the German Empire, England, France, Italy, the Netherlands, the Austro-Hungarian Empire, Portugal, Russia, Sweden, Spain, the Ottoman Empire and the United States.

While only 10 percent of Africa's land was in European hands in 1876, 90 percent was controlled by those 14 colonial powers by 1902, the statement noted.

The European Baptists said the world's industrial powers—particularly the World Trade Organization and the International Monetary Fund—continue "to treat African nations as cheap suppliers of raw materials, and have often used unfair trade and customs agreements to gain access to their markets, while closing themselves off for those exports."

"As European Christians who follow the example of Jesus Christ, we must confess that we have profited from the inequality of nations and markets," the EBM said. "We must confess that we are a part of a system that has for too long accepted these past and present injustices without resistance, and that has pocketed these profits for itself and its own prosperity without a guilty conscience."

The Baptists leaders asked African Christians for forgiveness for "allowing the spirit of colonialism to make a mockery of the spirit of Christ." They vowed to work for justice and called for a "New Berlin Conference" to right the wrongs of the 1884 meeting.

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




Cybercolumn by Jeanie Miley: Talk, action and love_61404

Posted: 6/04/04

CYBERCOLUMN:
Talk, action & love

By Jeanie Miley

For most of my life, I’ve been seduced into thinking that critical people are also critical thinkers.

Now, I know that critical people are … well, they are critical, and just because they have a wide audience or a big vocabulary doesn’t mean they are necessarily smarter than anyone else!

I’ve been (mis)led into believing that people who are really adept at articulating the problem really are concerned about the problem. I’ve (mis)thought that those who rant and rave about what has gone wrong in the world are the ones who care most about the world. And I have allowed myself to be manipulated and sometimes bullied by folks who made me think that I just couldn’t possibly understand the grave and dire outcomes that were just around the corner.

Jeanie Miley

Hopefully, I’m catching on to something that could, in some important and powerful ways, change my life for the better! I’m waking up to the wonderful reality that anyone can state and re-state the problem, each time getting louder and more dramatic. I’m learning, as well, that zeal comes from the will to control and dominate, but true passion comes from the heart and that the difference in the two is profound.

People who really care about something don’t stand around making pronouncements about the problem but are in the middle of things, often quietly going about doing good. People who care about solutions don’t have time to listen to the rants about how bad things are, and they are often oblivious to the obstacles that others love to announce, analyze and bemoan.

People who care don’t repeat the same dire warnings over and over, but are effectively involved in finding solutions, seeking resolutions and making a difference in the small and large details of everyday life. Critics and complainers, whiners and belly-achers sit around and vent about the smoke in their eyes; problem-solvers figure out what to do about the fire that is causing the smoke!

People who care don’t get bogged down in negativism and criticism. They don’t have time for mumbling and murmuring, complaining and censuring, and they aren’t interested in rumors and gossip. Instead, they get up in the morning and show up for their assignment, making the world a better place, where they are, with whatever they have.

I think a lot about the fact that God so loved the world that he set about enacting a plan that was all about healing, transforming, liberating and empowering those whom he loved. I think about how different things would have been if God just sat on some judge’s bench, somewhere in the heavenlies, booming out his criticisms and complaints.

I think a lot about the ways in which God extends love and care to us, even while we are oblivious to those ways or even running away from that love. I stand amazed before the fact that it is love that changes us, and not criticism and condemnation.

I think a lot, as well, about how I shut down and clam up when all I hear is how bad things are or how wrong I am, and I wonder if other people are like me. I’ve never, ever gotten “better” under constant carping, but I have been healed and transformed by love.

I know for sure that stating and re-stating a problem does not solve the problem and, in fact, seems to perpetuate and enlarge the problem.

Talk is cheap.

Action is hard.

Love is costly.

I suppose that is why there is so much talk.

Jeanie Miley is an author and columnist and a retreat and workshop leader. She is married to Martus Miley, pastor of River Oaks Baptist Church in Houston, and they have three adult daughters. Got feedback? Write her at Writer2530@aol.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.




Two Texas churches partner with CBF in mission to Navabps_53104

Posted: 5/28/04

Volunteers talk with children during a mission trip to the Navajo reservation.

Two Texas churches partner
with CBF in mission to Navajos

By Craig Bird

Cooperative Baptist Fellowship

GALLUP, N.M.–A people at the crossroads just got another traveling companion.

The Cooperative Baptist Fellowship recently signed a four-way partnership covenant with Calvary Love Ministries of Gallup, N.M., and two Texas Baptist churches that “calls us into the heart of Christian ministry among the Navajo,” said Tom Ogburn, the Fellowship's associate coordinator for volunteer and partnership missions.

“We (Navajos) are at a spiritual crossroads,” Calvary director Andrew Begaye said.

“We have to answer the question, 'What is Native American Christianity?' And we have to answer it soon. For too long and … too often, our people are told that if you become a believer in Jesus, you have to become like the white man.

“Somehow, despite that, God's mercy has taken place, and faith has taken deep root into many hearts and minds. But young people are asking: 'What is truth, and what is religion?'”

Begaye, an Athapascan Navajo, spent 20 years evangelizing his people as a missionary with the Southern Baptist Home Mission Board.

Amanda Ellis of University Baptist Church in Houston enjoys working on a Vacation Bible School project with with a young Navajo girl. (Photos by Linda Lapointe)

In 1997, Begaye formed Calvary Love Ministries, which helps start four or five Navajo churches a year. Begaye describes the organization as “an interdependent and cooperative fellowship of churches” working with Native American, Hispanic, Asian and Anglo churches from five major denominations, three para-church organizations and seven independent ministries–plus CBF.

The organizational shift didn't disrupt relationships University Baptist Church of Houston and Broadway Baptist Church of Fort Worth had with Begaye. They had been bringing groups to the Navajo reservation–which is roughly the size of West Virginia–for years, and they kept right on.

Now they will serve as ministry models for other Fellowship churches that want to be involved, Ogburn said. They will focus on leadership training, church construction and holistic ministry endeavors, including home renovations and community empowerment activities.

Claudine Marion, Broadway Baptist's staff liaison with Calvary Loves Ministries, described Begaye as “a rare human being … committed to the idea that Navajo culture can be incorporated into Christian faith. And other Navajos have great respect for him because of that.”

Broadway tries to take people from other churches each year, hoping they will begin annual trips by their congregations.

University Baptist Church, which has built one Navajo church building a year for the past 15 years, also involves other churches from as far away as Kansas and Colorado–including nonBaptists–in its trips.

A Navajo woman studies a Bible written in her native language.

“Our intent is to make it possible for the Navajo Christians to sustain the work,” said Wally Long, a University Baptist Church member who heads up its projects.

“Navajos can share the gospel with other Navajos much better than we can.”

Marion added: “We go to work with them, not for them, to encourage their community church outreach.”

The formal agreement pledges the Fellowship to contribute $4,000 in 2003-04, $3,500 in 2004-05 and $3,000 in 2005-06 to the Calvary Love Ministries operating budget.

The two Texas churches will provide annual contributions of $4,000 to the ministry's operating budget, in addition to continuing volunteer participation. University Baptist Church has additional responsibility in church construction.

Potential projects include construction of a discipleship and leadership training center on 100 acres outside of Gallup.

The plan calls for using volunteer labor and about $50,000 in materials to build the center while recruiting volunteers for long-term commitments.

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.




Baylor president keeps post; benefactor may pull out money_53104

Posted: 5/28/04

Baylor president keeps post; benefactor may pull out money

By Ken Camp

Managing Editor

WACO–Embattled Baylor University President Robert Sloan came within one vote of losing his job at the school's May 14 board of regents meeting.

And the board's failure to change leadership at Baylor could cost the university millions of dollars from a major benefactor in Houston.

Robert Sloan

A motion to ask for Sloan's resignation failed by an 18-17 secret ballot, and regents elected Will Davis, an Austin attorney who is considered a supporter of the beleaguered president, as chairman by the same margin.

The Waco Tribune Herald initially reported the action, which was confirmed to the Baptist Standard by a source close to the vote. Balloting occurred in a closed session, and regents were instructed not to discuss the matter with media.

Last September, when five regents announced their plans to fire Sloan, the board instead voted 31-4 to affirm his leadership as the university's president.

Baylor University spokesman Larry Brumley said he did not expect an immediate public response from Sloan regarding any vote the regents took.

Several regents leaving their six-hour meeting on the university's Waco campus refused to comment, referring all inquiries to outgoing board Chairman Drayton McLane of Temple.

McLane, owner of the Houston Astros, was eligible for re-election as chair. In a news conference at the close of the regents' meeting, McLane declined to say even if he had been nominated, since the vote took place in executive session.

McLane said the board will devote its June meeting to discussing the Baylor 2012 plan. The long-range vision includes an extensive campus building program, but it has incurred extensive debt for the 14,000-student school, the world's largest Baptist university.

Regents may need to extend the long-range plan beyond 2012 because of current economic conditions, he acknowledged.

He also announced the regents approved a $341 million budget for 2004-2005, a 9 percent increase over the current budget.

McLane's successor as chairman of the regents is a partner in the law firm of Heath, Davis and McCalla.

Davis is considered a strong Sloan supporter, as is at least one of the three regents elected at the meeting.

Buddy Jones, owner of a public affairs firm in Austin and a public supporter of Sloan's presidency, was elected to serve on the board, effective June 1, along with John Minton, an attorney from Tyler, and Albert Black, president and CEO of On-Target Supplies and Logistics of Dallas.

They replace three regents rotating off the board, characterized by informed observers as previously supportive of Sloan's leadership, but only mildly so: Dale Jones of Dallas, Neal Jones of Falls Church, Va., and Ted Snider of Little Rock, Ark.

“Baylor has been led into a crisis mode–a very serious crisis,” philanthropist John Baugh told the Baptist Standard.

Baugh, founder of the Houston-based SYSCO Corporation, addressed the regents, warning he would ask for loans to be repaid and financial gifts he has made to the university to be returned if the board allows Baylor to continue in its current direction.

“Baylor University's plight can be likened unto a ship–its rudder torn from the stern by tornadic winds created by the flailing actions of those who seemingly seek to gain unilateral and absolute control over the university,” he told the board, speaking from a prepared text.

Baugh urged the regents to take action immediately to rescue the university from “the paralyzing quagmire in which it currently is ensnared.”

He announced plans to establish a new nonprofit entity, the Partnership for Christian (Baptist) Education, to promote higher educational institutions committed to the ideals of the Baptist General Convention of Texas.

Baugh told the board he anticipated the new entity would receive funding equal to or greater than the total given by his family to Baylor.

The Baugh family contributed the $5 million lead gift toward the construction of facilities for Baylor's Truett Theological Seminary–one of more than a dozen programs and projects they have gifted at Baylor, ranging from capital improvements to scholarships and study-abroad programs.

Baylor's Hankamer School of Business named its Center for Private Enterprise and Entrepreneurship in Baugh's honor.

When asked how much he and his family had given the university, Baugh replied he hadn't added it up.

But some sources close to Baylor conservatively estimated his gifts at more than $15 million, plus $3 million in outstanding loans.

“Should the regents–either by specific decision or by default–allow the university's course to continue to be altered, we shall request the several million dollars currently on loan to Baylor by the (Baugh) Foundation be paid without delay,” he said.

“Additionally, the further request will be made that Baylor return promptly the aggregate amount of contributions that Mrs. Baugh and I have made to the university in order that the proceeds may be immediately redistributed to the Baptist General Convention of Texas.”

Those gifts would be redirected to Christian institutions of higher learning in Texas that reflect the principles held by Baylor at the time the donations originally were given, he explained.

Baugh told the board he intended to use “all other means possible to ensure that Baylor remain deeply rooted to its long-established moorings … religiously in keeping with a Baptist perspective, academically in keeping with a sound perspective fully involving the faculty of the university, and fiscally in keeping with available resources.”

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.




Reach Millennials by helping them decode life, futurist says_53104

Posted: 5/28/04

Reach Millennials by helping
them decode life, futurist says

By Marv Knox

Editor

HOUSTON–Churches can reach Millennials–the conservative generation of Americans born since 1982–by helping them “figure out the code” to life's profound questions, futurist Neil Howe advised.

Howe is a demographer, economist, historian and author of several books on U.S. generations, including “Millennials Rising: The Next American Generation.”

“We are constantly trying to predict what the next generation is going to be like,” he noted during a daylong lecture at Houston Baptist University, conceding, “Extrapolation–predicting that the rising generation will be like the current generation only moreso–always proves to be wildly inaccurate.”

Neil Howe

For example, historians guessed the Baby Boomers, born between 1943 and 1960, would be more conformist than their parents, the Silent Generation, he said. But Boomers proved to be the opposite, questioning virtually all authority.

Based on how the Boomers lived, Generation X, born between 1961 and 1981, was expected to be even more passionate and ideological than their parents. “But they proved the present is not an extension of the past,” Howe observed.

Now that Millennials are coming of age, they are turning out to be quite different than anticipated, he said.

Extrapolating from Generation X, experts expected Millennials to be “more culturally cynical, collectively pessimistic about the future and prone to risk-taking activities like sex, drugs and crime,” he reported. “But once again, truth conflicts straight-line extrapolation.”

Howe cited an array of developments that document the Millennials' conservative generational turn.

In the past decade, teen violent crime has declined by 65 percent, “the greatest reduction in history … down beyond imagining,” he said.

Sexual activity by high school students has dropped 20 percent in 10 years, and the rates of teen pregnancy, abortion and births have declined 30 percent to 40 percent.

Teens also are less likely to be loner “free agents,” he said. High schoolers involved in community service climbed from 27 percent in 1984 to 83 percent in 1999-2000.

Fifty-six percent of Millennials say they find explicit sexual activity and nudity offensive, a trend Howe called “the new modesty.”

Millennials also are the most ethnically diverse U.S. generation, he said. Non-Anglos account for 37.6 percent of Millennials, compared to 32.8 percent of Gen X and 24.2 percent of Boomers.

Geographical or regional factors could impact how quickly people see these trends, he said, explaining, “If any group is behind the trends, it is rural kids.”

The shifts that shape each generation should not be surprising, since the parenting generation responds to the weaknesses or challenges they experienced, Howe reported.

“It's not that one generation rebels. The previous generation raises kids to complement themselves, not to be like themselves,” he explained. “New generations always are the answers to the problems of the older generation.”

For example, late Boomers and early Gen Xers, who grew up with the insecurity of divorce and parents who put careers ahead of kids, naturally compensate by lavishing attention and security on their Millennial children.

So, early Millennials grew up riding in minivans, the quintessential family cars, with bumper stickers touting, “Baby on Board,” he said. In their era, the markets flooded with books calling for raising children better and movies casting them in a positive light.

“It's been a good thing to be seen as a kid,” he said. “The '90s was the first decade when per capita spending on kids grew faster than any other generation.”

Responding to all the forces upon them, Millennials have developed seven generational characteristics, Howe described. Millennials are:

bluebull Special.

Millennials value stability over rapid change, he said. More of them want to have children than their counterparts in previous generations.

They also expect society to be better when they take over, with significant numbers saying they intend to make improvements in technology, ecology, foreign relationships, government, arts and culture, and religion.

bluebull Sheltered.

Noting that steps to care for children–such as child protection policies–have been in place all their lives, Howe said, “Millennials see protection as a sign that older people care about them and want to protect them to go out and do great things.”

While 58 percent of their parents acknowledge they're sometimes overprotective, 90 percent of Millennials agree on parental rules that are “strict and fair.”

In 2002, 56 percent of high school students said they prefer to attend a college that is nearby, compared to 41 percent who said they want to go far away.

bluebull Confident.

Among Millennials, 90 percent said they are happy, and 82 percent predicted they will be better off than their parents, he reported.

Not coincidentally, the suicide rate has declined for Millennials.

bluebull Team-oriented.

Sixty-four percent of Millennials agreed they will be seen as the “us generation,” Howe said, pointing out their emphasis shifted from the Boomers' “I” to “we.” Also, 50 percent of Millennials said they trust institutions, compared to just 26 percent of adults.

School innovations that “harness peer pressure”–such as uniforms and student juries that levy penalties for misbehavior–have been well-received by Millennials, he said.

Millennials also are quick to point a finger at indulgent individualism, he noted. Students in kindergarten through grade 12 said the primary causes of social problems are selfishness, failure to respond to authority, wrongdoing by politicians, and lack of parental discipline and leadership.

bluebull Conventional.

Millennials typically expect higher standards of themselves and others than do adults, Howe said.

Also, ninety-four percent of children age 9 to 17 told researchers they trust their parents, and 82 percent of teens said they have “no problems” with any family member–the highest percentage since World War II, he said. Sixty-seven percent said they would raise their own children the way they have been raised.

The “Harry Potter” book series is popular with Millennials because it emphasizes values they share–friendship, structure and the need to band together, he observed.

bluebull Pressured.

Despite all the attempts to protect them, Millennials feel pressure more intensely than did their predecessors, Howe noted.

An unprecedented number–84 percent–intend to attend college, he said. The same percentage see security as “very important” in their lives.

As markers of how driven they are, two-thirds of Millennials don't get enough sleep, and 88 percent reported they have specific five-year goals.

bluebull Achieving.

“It's cool to be smart,” Howe said of the young generation. Early Millennials posted the highest SAT college-entrance scores since 1974, and Millennials have chalked up increasingly high scores on standardized tests, particularly for math and science.

Perhaps their desire is linked to their view of the future, he said, noting 75 percent of college students expect increased terror threats. But 93 percent said they believe science and technology will play an important role in responding to those threats.

Churches can use this information about Millennials to create models for ministry that are effective at reaching them with the gospel, Howe noted in an interview.

The first step is understanding that, like everything else about them, Millennials see faith and religion differently than their parents do, he said.

All their lives, Boomers have keyed on religious insight, on “focusing on the heart … changing you from the inside out,” he asserted.

“Millennials are much more interested in figuring out the code: What makes sense? How do religions work?” he explained. “Millennials are incredibly system-minded.”

They also want to know the “how” and “what” of religion.

“If you're going to worship God, what do you do? Do you do some things every week? Practically speaking, what does that mean for changing your relationship to your parents, to society?” he said.

“Millennials also have a real interest in using the church as a focus of community involvement. They place a large focus on community service. But they also use the church as an extension of their social life–sort of a group.”

With Millennials' emphasis on behavior and rules, the Christian faith can become an attractive foundation for their lives, Howe said.

“I've heard teens talk about churches being an answer to the relativism of the postmodern time,” he said. “This allows the church to create anchors of trust and faith to build a basis for acting in this world.

“This is a generation that wants to do things–to plan, act, build communities. So, it helps to have certain cornerstones.”

For example, ministry to Millennials needs to be “straightforward about doctrine,” he explained.

“Millennials are not as indirect as Boomers often are in getting at what religion means. Boomers often get off on what the experience is like, what it feels like. They get fixated on attitude.

“The Millennial doesn't care about attitude. The Millennial cares about what I have to do; what behaviors are required. So, be direct. Tell Millennials what is required. Explain what it means. Then move on, telling them how they can be effective in this world.

“Millennials want to know how to build a better community, organize, socialize and have fun.”

And even how Millennials have fun is significant for churches that try to minister to them, he observed, describing a new trend–congregations renting skating rinks, movie theaters or laser tag facilities. “Obviously, it's fun. But it's also in tune with the whole Millennial approach to protection.”

Millennials also appreciate planning, he said.

“Millennials, much more than Boomers, want to plan their lives over time. What does that mean with regard to marriage, careers and education? I'm not sure how a church would do this, but in ways that are fun and interesting, it can help them focus on how to build a life that is significant.”

And with Millennials, significance matters.

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.




Terrorist attacks underscore need to evangelize, Spanish leader says_53104

Posted: 5/28/04

Terrorist attacks underscore
need to evangelize, Spanish leader says

By John Hall

Texas Baptist Communications

Evangelical Christians in Spain are feeling an increased urgency for evangelism in the aftermath of terror attacks that killed almost 200 people March 11, said Manuel Sarrias, general secretary of the Union Evangelica Bautista Española.

Spanish Baptists–still recovering after four explosions rocked three commuter trains in Madrid–are seeking to end terrorism, Sarrias said.

Ignorance, poverty and injustice lead people to hate established authority and push them to resort to violence, he said. Evangelicals are working to alter lives before they turn to terrorism.

“The church has to have a principal role in changing the lives of people,” he said through a translator. “The message is for everyone.”

The atmosphere in Spain is similar to the United States post-Sept. 11, 2001, Sarrias said. Some do not feel safe. Awareness of uncertainty has increased.

Spaniards are looking to religion for answers.

“People in general realize no one is in charge of their own lives,” said Sarrias, who also serves as the vice president of the evangelical representative body to the government.

This is a prime opportunity for Spanish evangelicals to convert a nominally Roman Catholic nation, he said.

But Spanish Baptists must seize the opportunity, he emphasized.

The attacks have “really encouraged us as evangelicals to double our efforts,” Sarrias said. “Spain is a mission field. Secularism is rampant.”

Spanish Baptists are facing a new world on several fronts, he added.

A nation that has long had friendly relationships with Muslims now sees increasing skepticism toward them.

Though Sarrias sees fundamentalist Islam as the major threat to the Western world, Spanish Baptists are encouraging people to stop associating terrorism with all Muslims.

The Baptists are against terrorism, but love people, he stressed.

“As evangelicals in Spain we're trying to help people understand the difference between fighting terrorism and xenophobia,” he said.

“We're really trying to make it work. It's a very difficult subject, he acknowledged.”

Spain also is facing a new political reality.

Shortly after the attacks, the nation elected Rodriguez Zapatero as their new prime minister, he explained.

Sarrias said he is hopeful the new leader will create a more equitable environment for evangelicals.

Traditionally, Spain's government has favored the Catholic church with financial subsidies and tax-exemptions denied to evangelical congregations.

In this new environment, Sarrias urges Texas Baptists to continue their efforts in Spain through the relationship facilitated by the Baptist General Convention of Texas Partnerships Resource Center.

He specifically would like to see more evangelism teams come to the nation.

Music and choral groups also are effective means of reaching Spaniards, he said.

Many people have responded positively to testimonies following concerts, he added.

Sarrias encouraged Texas Baptists to pray for Spanish Baptists in this new world.

“The Baptists of Spain really appreciate the close ties they've had with the Baptist General Convention of Texas,” he said.

For more information about mission trips to Spain, contact the BGCT Texas Partnership Resource Center at (214) 828-5182 or texas_partnerships@bgct.org.

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.