Restorative justice means more than prison ministry, victim advocates say_51704

Posted: 5/14/04

Restorative justice means more than
prison ministry, victim advocates say

By John Hall

Texas Baptist Communications

DALLAS–Restorative justice does not begin or end with prison walls but serves everyone affected by crime, a Baptist General Convention of Texas consultant told a statewide crime victims' conference.

Restoration and rehabilitation need to occur for criminals but also should be extended to everyone affected by an incident, said Tomi Lee Grover, justice system ministry consultant in the BGCT Missions Equipping Center.

Each step in the justice system brings more people who can be ministered to as a result of a crime, Grover said.

A woman prays at the BGCT-sponsored prayer breakfast during the Texas Crime Victim Clearinghouse in Dallas.Bikers Against Child Abuse escort buses to the Garden of Angels memorial to murder victims during the Texas Crime Victim Clearinghouse in Dallas.

To begin with, a criminal incident affects the victim and the offender. Their families also are influenced by the crime. Neighborhood residents may be shaken.

Emergency phone operators become involved, as well as police officers and possibly firefighters and paramedics. Later, judges, court reporters and attorneys come into the picture.

Following a conviction, wardens, correctional officers and prison administration take in an offender. After the sentence, an offender may need help establishing a productive lifestyle.

All these people can be ministered to if Christians take an appropriate approach, Grover said. Each individual has specific needs that can be met.

“There's a totality of whom we see those people to be, and that includes everyone under that umbrella–not just offenders,” she said during a seminar at the Texas Crime Victim Clearinghouse Conference.

Local police and correctional officers cannot meet all of the needs of victims and offenders without the help of the community, Grover said. They are too busy and work with too many incidents to help everyone in every way.

If Christians approach police departments looking for a way to help, they will find a way to work with officers, Grover said. That role may simply be encouragement. It may be bringing snacks or bottled water for officers.

Restorative justice ministries can begin by raising awareness of needs, Grover indicated. Church members can post fliers, encourage their pastors to speak about justice issues and pass out brochures about restorative justice. They can visit juvenile and adult prisons. Believers can hold public prayer vigils for victims.

Grover serves as a victims' assistant in Burleson. The police department trained her how to meet a victim's needs immediately after a crime without interfering with a police investigation. Her role is not to preach or evangelize, but to comfort. Sometimes her ministry is as simple as a hug.

“Love doesn't always come in words,” she said. “Doing what's right often means saying nothing.”

If Christians will try continually to meet the needs of everyone affected by crime, they will restore offenders along the lines of the biblical story of the prodigal son, Grover said. Christians also will increase safety in a community. This model of justice through ministry can happen anywhere, not only in prisons.

"They don't have to drive to a prison to be involved in restorative justice," she said.

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




Worldconnex is seeking short-term volunteers for Kenya, China schools_51704

Posted: 5/14/04

Worldconnex is seeking short-term
volunteers for Kenya, China schools

WorldconneX is seeking volunteers to serve in two cross-cultural educational institutions.

Kenya Baptist Theological College needs a registered architect who can work four to six weeks with a Kenyan architect to develop a master land-use plan for the school's 50-acre campus.

The college in Kenya also needs a librarian with at least a master's degree in library science, a computer technician and teachers of theological and biblical studies. Teaching assignments can be as short as two weeks.

Teachers need at least a master of arts or master of divinity degree.

Conversational English teachers are needed for a private school in southeast China.

Students at the school, located in the Fujian Province, are the children of Chinese governmental, military and business leaders. English-as-a second-language certification is not required.

There also is an opportunity for volunteers to help plant a church on the campus.

For more information, contact WorldconneX at (214) 421-7999 or info@worldconnex.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.




Storylist_50304

Storylist for 5/3/04 issue

GO TO SECTIONS:
Texas       • Baptists      
Faith       • Departments      • Opinion       • Bible Study      
Our Front Page Articles
Nocona teens know where to go for 'soul food'

Nearly two-thirds of wired American adults surf Net for spiritual reasons


Nocona teens know where to go for 'soul food'

Nehemiah Project Making an impact

Preparation for ministry requires church/school partnership

Texas religious leaders unite to stand against legalized video slot machines

CLC staff denied access to governor's office

Baptist University of the Americas celebrates founder's day

Relief agency seeks to improve life for Nigeria

Multicultural Retreat

Upward Homes makes dreams come true, teaches stewardship

Christian leaders should maximize abilities, pastor suggests

Annuity Board staff member joins BGCT as director of information technology office

Latin American Baptist union elects Texas church starter as president

Texas, Mexico partnership produces base camp for ministry

Hispanic Preaching Conference

Convencion, CBF church-starting partnership ready for work

Elgin deacons learn to become servant leaders in congregation, community

ETBU grad, former basketball MVP, killed in action in Iraq

Ministry to people with disabilities needs lots of hugs, handshakes, smiles

First BGCT-endorsed Army chaplains complete officers' school with honors

Church van wrecks on mission trip

PFLAG community center named for retired Baylor prof

San Saba churches busy following up after evangelistic rally

On the Move

Around the State

Texas Tidbits

HUNGER OFFERING
Number of hungry people in world increasing by 4.5 million every year

Texas hunger offering gifts rising; $750,000 goal set for 2005


New Orleans Seminary leaves sole member vote to SBC messengers

Iorg named Golden Gate Theological Seminary president

Southern Baptist churches show membership growth, but baptisms decline

Missouri convention appeals suit dismissal

Ministry focuses on indigenous leaders among Persian-speaking people

Baptist Briefs


Growing churches have deep roots, clearly defined purpose

Christians face persecution, charges of blasphemy in Muslim Pakistan

Nations choose violence because they see God on their side


Religious supporters, opponents of abortion rights rally in Washington

Supreme Court declines appeal to military school prayer case

Oregon judge halts gay marriages, instructs state registrar to record unions for benefits

Evangelical Christians–powerful or persecuted?

Human rights group ranks U.S. third in reported executions

Interfaith coalition raises concerns about plight of 44 million uninsured Americans

Nearly two-thirds of wired American adults surf Net for spiritual reasons

Most Americans want cleaner media

Two-thirds of Americans upset about moral climate of the nation, but most younger Americans are generally satisfied

American religious activity increases, makes people happier, polls indicate

Fine arts majors more spiritual than science or business majors, UCLA survey indicates


Cartoon

Around the State

Classified Ads

Texas Baptist Forum

On the Move


EDITORIAL: So what Apathy poses incalculable danger to church

DOWN HOME: We won't forget this Mom's Day

TOGETHER: Lottery slots are a bad bet for Texas

ANOTHER VIEW: What if Baptists loved each other

Texas Baptist Forum

CYBER COLUMN by John Duncan: Simple things

Mother's Day column by Brett Younger: Mother's dance

Cybercolumn by Jeanie Miley: Trust the source


LifeWay Explore the Bible Series for May 9: Paul offers words of wisdom, encouragement

LifeWay Explore the Bible Series for May 16: Qualifications for church leaders spelled out

LifeWay Family Bible Series for May 9: Marriage should mirror the love of Christ

LifeWay Family Bible Series for May 16: Children honor parents by loving their Father


See articles from previous issue 4/19/04 here.




Mother’s Day column by Brett Younger: Mother’s dance_51704

Posted: 5/06/04

MOTHER'S DAY:
Mother's dance


By Brett Younger

My mother should be a dancer. She would, of course, roll her eyes at this idea. All of her conservative Baptist life, dancing has been as off-limits as rock and roll, playing cards and Methodists. And yet, though she will deny it until Jesus comes back—which she would want me to point out could be any minute—my mother would be a magnificent dancer.

Brett Younger

My mom has the athleticism of a ballet dancer. Her brief, but glorious, hoops career is legendary in Northeast Mississippi. Grandma wouldn’t let my mother play basketball for the purple and gold of Itawamba High School because the team’s short pants were two feet too short. On one famous night in 1948, several Lady Indians fouled out in the third quarter of a tight game with their bitter rivals—the Houston Hilltoppers—so the coach went into the stands to beg Clarice Graham to play. Mom slipped into a borrowed pair of boogie shoes and, in a dress that hit just below the ankles, scored several key baskets, dancing the Indians to a celebrated victory.

My mom has the precision of a ballroom dancer. Dancers have an extraordinary sense of where their feet, legs and arms should be at every second. Ginger couldn’t spin with Fred if he showed up even one second late. My mother has a supernatural sense of where everyone should be and has never been less than 10 minutes early to anything. If punctuality were the key to dancing, my entire family would be June Taylor Dancers.

My mom has the spirit of a jitterbugger. The best dancers are passionate. Mom has the greatest laugh. When she giggles, which she frequently does, she begins to shake, her voice goes to a pitch audible only to dogs, her face turns a beautiful shade of red and her dark blue eyes start dancing. Her rhythmic exuberance would make Martha Graham, Cyd Charisse and Paula Abdul jealous.

When I was home for the summer during college, I often irritated my mother by trying to get her to dance with me. On a few occasions, she humored me with a couple of steps, but she would never admit her true interest in the kicker steps I had learned from the dancing bears at Baylor. I pointed out that King David danced, the psalmists tell us to praise God with dance, and Ecclesiastes assures us that there is a time to dance, but she still wouldn’t waltz, tango or foxtrot with her son.

Angela Monet writes, “Those who danced were thought to be quite insane by those who could not hear the music.” I feel certain that though she still hasn’t admitted it, mom hears the music and knows she should be dancing.

Some can only remember the jigs their now-departed mothers danced. Some mothers are too far away to two-step with their sons. Only a fortunate few can put their arms around their mothers and dance.

On Sunday, be thankful for every playful step your mother ever took. Mother’s Day is a wonderful excuse to trip the light fantastic with our moms, even if it’s only in our imaginations.

Brett Younger is pastor of Broadway Baptist Church in Fort Worth, Texas and the author of Who Moved My Pulpit? A Hilarious Look at Ministerial Life, available from Smyth & Helwys Publishing, books@helwys.com, (800) 747-3016.

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: Trust the source_51704

Posted: 5/07/04

CYBERCOLUMN:
Trust the source

By Jeanie Miley

From the freeway to the subdivision where we were having dinner with friends couldn’t have been more than a mile. On that route, we passed five churches, all of which are “nondenominational.”

This isn’t my father’s world, I thought to myself, recalling that when I was riding my bicycle around the sidewalks of the churches he pastored. When I was a child, swinging in the backyards of the parsonages, most of which were next door to the church, somebody different was a Methodist!

Jeanie Miley

“I don’t even recognize the political party of my parents!” a friend lamented, later, as we were talking about how every single institution we have relied on is experiencing the enormous waves of change. “I’ve always been a member of their party, but I don’t seem to fit anymore!”

We who have been nurtured and grounded in the traditions of our parents are finding our traditions challenged by the voices from the culture, voices that speak in many languages and voices that come at life from varying points of view. We who are the religious establishment are hanging on for dear life, sometimes, wondering what will remain standing after the tumult of transitional times. What will be gone with the wind, and what will remain?

As I live in the meantime between times, I am brought over and over back to the Source of it all, and am reminded again and again that the institutions of my life are not God. Sometimes I wonder if in the shakeup, God is not extending an invitation to all of us to stop clinging to our idols and false gods and return to the One-Who-Makes-All-Things-New.

I’ll be honest (a novel idea for a columnist, don’t you think?). I miss the status quo. I resent having my stability, predictability and comfort disturbed. I liked it better when all of the dots connected, just as they always had, and the lines were straight, drawn from point A to point B. I miss the warm womb of the past, when I knew all of the rules and all of the players.

However, I’ve lived long enough now to know that when I get too comfortable, I tend to get complacent, and from there, it’s a quick trip to a rut and a grave.

The truth is that the God of our history is the God of our present, and, if I read the sacred texts correctly, God is alive and dynamic, vibrant and life-giving, challenging the old order and spilling and splashing new wine all over the world that he loves passionately and sacrificially.

I’m learning that I cannot trust structures that won’t flex and bend and stretch and strain to grow into the newness of life.

I’m learning that I can trust the God-of-all-of-us who crashed into history in one place, at one time, to redeem a people who had gotten stuck in the old ways.

I’m learning that I am not safe in systems that refuse to allow the fresh wind of the Spirit to blow freely through them, and that I am safe in places where I can trust people who are so sensitive to that Spirit that they know when to stand their ground and hold to what is foundational and true, and when to dance with the Creator who keeps on creating, sustaining and enlivening creation.

As for me, I’m committed to what is life-giving from my past. I’m grounded in tradition that heals and empowers.

I am, at the very same time, open to what liberates and transforms in the present.

Most of all, my trust is not in the institutions that come and go, but in the Source. My faith has found a solid resting place, and so I can, as my father counseled me, “sit steady in the boat,” even when it seems that the storms are too big and our boats too small.

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.




Upward Homes makes dreams come true, teaches stewardship_50304

Posted: 5/03/04

Upward Homes makes dreams
come true, teaches stewardship

By John Hall

Texas Baptist Communications

UNIVERSAL CITY–Kathleen Vinglas lights up at the mention of her home. It provides a quick way for her to talk about how Texas Baptists helped her.

About two years ago, Vinglas entered a credit-repair and affordable-housing program through Upward Homes, a partner with the Baptist General Convention of Texas stewardship office that puts families in new homes.

She went through courses about how to clean up credit, eliminate debt, prepare a budget and practice biblical stewardship, including tithing.

Kathleen Vinglas poses outside her three-bedroom Universal City home, which she secured through a loan made possible by the Upward Homes program.

Personal counselors outlined specific steps to take to repair credit and coached students through the process.

Within four months, Vinglas, who was financially stable and practiced many of the principles taught in the courses prior to taking them, qualified for a home loan Upward Homes helped her obtain. In less than a year after entering the program, Vinglas was living in a new three-bedroom home in Universal City, a northeastern suburb of San Antonio.

“It made me feel great to move into a new home,” she said.

Vinglas is one of a growing number of people Upward Homes has helped in the last several years.

The nonprofit group is building 23 houses in Port Lavaca and has built 16 in San Antonio. Fourteen more Port Lavaca families are moving through the two-year program. Workshops also have been held in Dallas and Fort Worth.

Upward Homes primarily serves moderately low-income families who feel they cannot purchase a home because they cannot afford it or have credit issues, said Jeff Austin, the program's director.

This group often is overlooked because they work full-time jobs but do not make enough for homebuilders to construct homes for them, Austin said.

“They make too much to be in Habitat (for Humanity) housing and not enough for anyone to notice,” he said.

But Upward Homes staff members show them they can own a home. Banks are mandated by the government to give some loans to people who normally would not qualify.

Lenders are convinced more easily to give loans to people who show an extended commitment to moving toward financial stability and clean credit through Upward Homes classes, Austin said. Loan officers are more likely to see those loans as less risky.

In addition to paving the way for people to become homeowners, Upward Homes is laying spiritual foundations, Austin said. The classes are taught in churches and include principles of biblical stewardship. Instructors use materials from the BGCT stewardship office.

The gospel is shared with people who normally would not come to church, said Terry Austin, Jeff Austin's brother and director of the BGCT stewardship office. Some who have completed the class never heard the Christian message before.

“The beauty is it becomes an outreach opportunity for the church,” he said.

The combination of practical help with spiritual guidance strongly impacts lives, said Rodney Hill, a veteran homebuilder who works with Upward Homes. People see the church caring for them through the outreach.

“It gives them hope,” he said. “It gives them a lift.”

As with Vinglas, the homes are an easy way to share with others how Texas Baptists made a difference in a family's life, said Charlie Johnson, a former chaplain who started Upward Homes. That testimony will impact the lives of others.

“We don't sell homes,” Johnson said. “We work with people.”

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




Southern Baptist churches show membership growth, but baptisms decline_50304

Posted: 5/03/04

Southern Baptist churches show
membership growth, but baptisms decline

By Polly House

LifeWay Christian Resources

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (BP)–The Southern Baptist Convention reported a record membership of 16,315,050, up 0.41 percent over 2002, and grew to 43,024 churches, an increase of 249 new congregations, according to statistics compiled by the convention.

The statistics for 2003 were taken from data submitted by churches on the Annual Church Profile.

The SBC's LifeWay Christian Resources compiles the statistical records from reports routed through Baptist associations and state conventions.

The number of new churches represented a 0.58 percent growth. Membership figures reflected a 0.41 percent growth. These figures are down from the 2002 growth percentages of 1.04 and 1.21, respectively.

Although the SBC grew, LifeWay President Jimmy Draper said the statistics provide cause for concern.

“The incremental growth to me reflects a denomination that's lost its focus,” he said.

“The Great Commission commands us to go into all the world and make disciples. Although we've seen tremendous strides in overseas baptisms, we are not keeping up with the population growth around the world nor in America.”

While membership grew, the number of baptisms decreased for the fourth consecutive year. The 2003 total was 377,357, reflecting a 4.44 percent decrease from the 2002 totals.

This indicated a baptism ratio of 1 to 43, meaning statistically it took 43 existing church members to bring in one new member.

“There are two trends reflected in the declining baptisms,” Draper said.

“The first is a lack of urgency in our churches to baptize. I've heard from a number of people across our denomination who are saying professions of faith are good enough, and they are not teaching one of our two main ordinances of publicly identifying with Jesus through baptism. They've de-emphasized it. It is hard for someone to argue to the contrary when more than 10,000 Southern Baptist churches didn't baptize a single person last year.

“The second trend I see is that we as a denomination have lost a sense of urgency in reaching people for Christ. You can't baptize those who have not been led to the Lord.

“We face some tremendous challenges from an increasingly secularized society, and we've got to lead people to a saving faith in Christ if we are going to have a positive influence in our culture.”

Other statistics reported are:

Additions by means other than baptisms totaled 422,350, down 2.24 percent.

bluebull The number of mission congregations declined from 5,439 to 5,114, a 5.98 percent decrease.

bluebull Primary worship attendance in SBC churches was 5,873,880, a growth of 0.58 percent.

bluebull Overall giving grew by about 5 percent. Total tithes, offerings and special gifts totaled $9,105,505,497, up 4.88 percent. This figure included $7,170,236,005 in undesignated receipts.

When all other sources of income were added in, the total receipts reported by churches were $9,648,530,640, up by 1.98 percent.

bluebull Music ministry enrollment/participation grew by 2.63 percent, with a total of 1,701,848.

bluebull Sunday school enrollment grew by 0.24 percent, with a total of 8,193,886.

bluebull Discipleship training enrollment was 2,001,560, a decrease of 4.72 percent.

bluebull Missions participation also showed a decrease: Woman's Missionary Union enrollment fell by 11.52 percent to 852,205; men/boys missions education enrollment fell by 3.91 percent to 418,606.

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.




PFLAG community center named for retired Baylor prof_50304

Posted: 5/03/04

PFLAG community center named for retired Baylor prof

WACO–Parents, Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays recently opened a community center in Waco named for a retired Baylor University religion professor and his wife who have a homosexual son.

The center is named for Eddie Dwyer, 92, who taught in the Baylor religion department 37 years–including six as interim department head–and his wife, Velma, who was a credit manager in the university's financial aid office 31 years.

Paul Dwyer, a Baylor alumnus who has worked the last 30 years as a specialist in the Congressional Research Service in Washington, D.C., told his parents 13 years ago he was gay.

After his son's disclosure, the father began extensive research about scientific findings and psychological studies, as well as theological and philosophical writings, on homosexuality.

He concluded homosexuality an innate condition in some people, not a choice.

In researching the Bible, Dwyer decided the scriptural references to homosexuality as an “abomination” were cultural prejudices rather than unchanging principles.

For example, he saw the sin of Sodom and Gomorrah not as consensual homosexual relations, but rather the inhospitable nature of people who abused aliens among them by placing them in sexually subservient positions.

In a paper on the Bible and homosexuality Dwyer wrote 10 years ago, he said: “A spirit of living by faith and a motive of love are primary concerns of Christians, rather than living by a system of legalistic rules.

“In light of Paul's view of God as revealed through Christ and his major emphasis on God's plan for universal redemption, I am convinced God does not judge a person on the ground of his or her inborn nature. God measures an individual by the kind of person he or she is and by the quality of the life that person lives.”

The naming of the Eddie and Velma Dwyer Community Center came not long after an openly gay student at Truett Seminary lost his scholarship and the student newspaper was censured by the administration for an editorial supporting the legalization of same-sex unions. The Dwyers maintained the timing was coincidental.

“This is not retaliation against Baylor. I set out my views long before this cropped up in the Baylor administration,” Eddie Dwyer said.

Baylor Spokesman Larry Brumley said the university had no response on the issue. “It's not a university matter,” he said. “It's a personal matter.”

Terri Jo Ryan of the Waco Tribune-Herald contributed to this report.

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.




Nocona teens know where to go for ‘soul food’_50304

Posted: 5/03/04

Nocona teens know where to go for 'soul food'

By Jo Gray

Special to the Baptist Standard

NOCONA–On any given Tuesday, about one-third of the students at Nocona High School can be found at church–eating lunch.

Nobody at First Baptist Church of Nocona recalls exactly when the congregation launched its free lunch program to attract high school students.

But until she stepped aside earlier this year, Cathy Lilley was part of it for as long as anyone could remember–17 years.

Students from Nocona High School fill their plates at a weekly lunch provided at no cost to the teenagers by seven churches in the community.

“It started through summer activities geared at acquainting young people with church,” Lilley said.

Those first lunches were held in the basement of First Baptist, with members of Bethel Baptist Church providing food every-other-Tuesday, timed to coincide with the local high school's lunch period.

Soon, it became obvious students could just as easily assemble at Bethel Baptist, so the schedule was fixed for alternating Tuesdays.

“Back then, we averaged 15 kids,” Lilley recalled. “The attendance began to increase. As more students participated, it became apparent it was almost cost-prohibitive. We invited other churches to help out.”

Now, seven Nocona churches participate in the program during the school year–First Baptist, Church of Christ, Bethel Baptist, First Assembly of God, Central Christian, First United Methodist and the local Catholic church. The last three churches alternate when a fifth Tuesday occurs during the month.

Students gather at First Baptist on the first Tuesday of each month, Bethel Baptist the second Tuesday, and so on. Many of them drive their own vehicles. For those who don't, a church van or bus provides free transportation.

Of a total enrollment of approximately 250 students in the local high school, an average of 70-90 attend the lunches on a regular basis. As many as 120 have attended.

“Attendance sort of drops off this time of year with all the end-of-school activities,” Lilley said.

While students may come for the free food, they also receive “food for the soul” through brief devotionals.

“We don't want there to be any barriers, any expectations on their part,” said Dave Woodbury, youth pastor at First Baptist.

“Our ministry is to share the love of Christ. This is the perfect opportunity to do that. We can show them how much God loves them … how much we love them by providing a free meal and a short devotional.”

Woodbury said he tries to teach the young people they are the true ministers when they are among their peers. Many of them have invited friends to take part in the meal program.

One senior said his cousin invited him. He could not recall ever being in church before and was “hanging around on the street messed up on alcohol and drugs.” He credits the free lunch program with changing his life.

“God moved in my life and lifted me up,” he said. “I learned I didn't have to do it by myself. Now, I have new friends to help me out.”

Another said she felt an atmosphere of love when she attended the lunches.

“We know we are welcomed here,” she said. “We are not judged. You can come feeling really down, but when you leave, you will always feel better.”

Several factors make this program successful year after year, organizers said. The menu includes foods the teenagers like, such as tacos, burgers and fries.

And while they may receive a message, they are never “preached at.”

So why do some of the students attend the lunches but still don't attend church?

One student described it as peer pressure: “They can come here to get the word of God, without the fear of being seen going into a worship service.”

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.




Ministry to people with disabilities needs lots of hugs, handshakes, smiles_50304

Posted: 5/03/04

Ministry to people with disabilities
needs lots of hugs, handshakes, smiles

By John Hall

Texas Baptist Communications

Starting a ministry to special-needs individuals is as simple as a smile, handshake or hug, say Texas Baptists who lead such efforts in their churches.

Welcoming special-needs people into a congregation is the key to ministering to them, said Michelle Guppy, a leader in the special-needs ministry of Graceview Baptist Church in Tomball.

Often, the family of a disabled child feels awkward in church settings because they fear their child is bothering the rest of the congregation, Guppy said. They notice church members acting uncomfortably around their child. Sensing this, many such families choose not to attend church.

When church members greet the child and touch his hand during conversation, it goes a long way to overcoming the discomfort, Guppy said.

“As a parent, all they want is to feel welcome,” said Guppy, mother to a 10-year-old autistic boy. “We're not going to church to be healed, but to be welcomed. We want to go somewhere our children will be welcomed, and someone will tell them about Jesus.”

Many special-needs families know each other, Guppy said. When a church welcomes one of the children, word quickly spreads to other families that the congregation wants to minister to the special-needs population. Nearly one in five Americans is disabled in some manner, according to the 2000 United States census.

“If you welcome them, they will come,” she said. “They're out there.”

Graceview went beyond welcoming special-needs individuals. The congregation went and found them.

The church advertised a weekly four-hour time where volunteers would care for the child while the parents could relax.

Denise Briley, director of the church's special-needs ministry, followed the special education school bus to each home in the community.

In Bible studies, Dale Sage, founder of the special friends ministry at First Baptist Church in Longview, tries to recruit public school teachers to be leaders. They have received state training in handling special-needs individuals. But she also trains volunteers with a passion for helping disabled people.

Training helps people be more sensitive to the needs of the disabled, Sage said. Workers begin to understand what methods work best with each person. Training also helps provide a safe environment.

At First Baptist Church in Longview, all special-needs individuals 10 to 75 years old are in one group to begin Sunday school. They sing songs and do hands-on activities such as crafts and plays.

Then the group divides into smaller classes. Sage tries to put the special friends into classes of people who are the same age and learning ability.

Those who are able to sit through the worship service do, Sage said. The group tends to sit together with the teachers, who can help when needed.

Sage admits it is difficult to know how much of the classes and service each person comprehends, but she said class members need to know God loves them. Church members can serve as practical examples of how God loves them.

“We feel strongly that it is not teaching them the Bible story or a memory verse that is important,” she said. “We believe it is most important to teach them God loves them.”

The ministry blesses the family, Guppy and Sage agreed. It allows families who have not attended church to enter a fellowship. Worship becomes a family event.

“It brought the joy back,” Guppy said. “We've been blessed with faith through our journey.”

The work also blesses the church and the volunteer workers, Sage and Guppy added. The church is carrying out the Great Commission by reaching what has been a neglected group. Workers see the happiness in the eyes of the people they minister to daily.

Sage routinely attends her students' events at school and arranges camps and rallies for them. She takes them to the Baptist General Convention of Texas Special Friends Retreat yearly.

“It gets to the point you don't even see their handicaps,” Sage said. “They're just Jane and Bob and Sue.”

Graceview Baptist Church is holding a conference about special-needs ministry Sept. 24-25. For more information, visit www.thejoyministry.org.

The Baptist General Convention of Texas Special Friends Retreat is scheduled Oct. 1-2 at Mount Lebanon Baptist Encampment. For more information, contact Diane Lane at (800) 355-5285.

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.




Convencion, CBF church-starting partnership ready for work_50304

Posted: 5/03/04

Eddie Aldape, one of the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship's Global Missions field personnel, speaks to a class at the Baptist University of the Americas in San Antonio. BUA is training ministers to serve in the new churches being started as a part of the CBF partnership with the Hispanic Baptist Convention of Texas.

Convencion, CBF church-starting
partnership ready for work

By Craig Bird

Cooperative Baptist Fellowship

Less than a year after shaking hands and agreeing to work together, the Hispanic Baptist Convencion of Texas and the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship are rolling up their sleeves toward jointly starting at least 400 Hispanic churches throughout the United States by 2010.

The agreement, including a goal of baptizing 10,000 Hispanic Christians, was formalized in June 2003. The first new congregations are expected to form this summer. Already 25 Hispanic churches and another 75 Anglo churches have committed to the project.

“My dream is that 100 or 150 or 200 of our churches will catch this vision,” said Alcides Guajardo, president of the Hispanic convention.

“It is thrilling for Anglo churches across the United States, realizing they may not have the human resources or cultural understanding it takes to plant churches among the Spanish-speaking people around them, to ask us to help. Already, especially in urban areas, Hispanic churches have a heart–and experience–to start new churches in their own areas, even though many of them are small numerically.”

That inherent desire to help birth new congregations could be the key to reaching and surpassing the goals, Guajardo believes.

“We have 1,300 churches in the Convencion, so to expect 400 of them–30 percent–to each start another church might be unrealistic,” he said.

“But another of my dreams is that after a year or year-and-a-half, the new church will be ready to organize and the Convencion partner church can then link up with another Anglo congregation and plant a new church with it and then a third and maybe a fourth. That can happen.”

Bill Bruster, the Fellowship's networking coordinator, concurs. “This is one of the most exciting partnerships CBF has entered into,” he said. “We look forward to a long and fruitful relationship with the Convencion.”

That relationship is being nurtured in workshops and seminars, in addition to being promoted individually by Convencion and Fellowship leaders.

The Baptist General Convention of Texas Church Multiplication Center led a breakout session on the partnership at the Hispanic Evangelism Conference in Houston in January. Later this spring, it will host another information/training workshop for Dallas-Fort Worth-area Hispanic churches interested in being partner churches. Then in June, workshops on the partnership will be offered at both the CBF General Assembly in Birmingham, Ala., and at the annual session of the Hispanic Baptist Convencion of Texas meeting on South Padre Island.

Realizing that new churches need trained leaders, Convencion and Fellowship leaders have pledged to work together to help establish compañerismos–regional fellowships–throughout the nation to train, equip and encourage church leaders.

A key provider of trained leadership is expected to be the Baptist University of the Americas, which partners with the Fellowship on a variety of projects. In the past five years, on-campus enrollment at the San Antonio-based institution has soared from 43 to 206, while students enrolled at BUA's off-campus Baptist Bible Institutes jumped from 175 to 521.

But Guajardo notes: “There is no way BUA and all the other Texas Baptist universities combined can produce enough trained leadership to take care of the needs of Hispanic churches in Texas, Mexico, Latin America and South America and the partnership, too.

“Just like in biblical times, the key will be to find people in the community where the new churches are located that God has inspired to serve as leaders and then help train them,” Guajardo explained. “When local leaders are discovered, inspired and trained to do the work, people will respond to them as well as–and often far better–than imported leaders.”

Opportunities for local training also will be advanced by the compañerismos. These regional fellowships, in turn, could link with BUA's expanding off-campus program. In addition to numerous centers scattered throughout Texas and Mexico, BUA operates Baptist Bible Institutes in Alabama and South Carolina. Discussions are under way to expand the centers to California, Kentucky, North Carolina and Georgia.

“This partnership, coupled with BUA's role in providing theological education nationwide, is a step in the right direction for the near future for the next generation of Baptists in America,” BUA President Albert Reyes said.

“Hispanics are already the second-largest ethnic group in the United States and growing rapidly. There will be a major Hispanic presence in our country, no matter what we do. The question is: Do we want a Hispanic population that knows and loves Jesus or not?”

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.




Number of hungry people in world increasing by 4.5 million every year_50304

Posted: 5/03/04

The number of poor and hungry people around the world continues to grow at an alarming rate, according to Bread for the World's annual report.

Number of hungry people in world
increasing by 4.5 million every year

By Ken Camp

Managing Editor

The number of hungry people in the United States and the developing world is greater now than it was when international leaders set hunger-cutting goals in the mid-1990s, said a recently released report by a faith-based anti-hunger organization.

At the World Food Summit in 1996, global leaders agreed to cut hunger in half by 2015–reducing the number of hungry people in developing countries from 800 million to 400 million.

But in its 14th annual report on world hunger, Bread for the World noted there are 842 million hungry people worldwide now, and the number is rising by 4.5 million a year.

The report attributed the hunger growth in part to a slowing world economy, wars and natural disasters.

Pledges by United States government leaders to cut the number of Americans living in hunger–from 30.4 million to 15.2 million by 2010–also are lagging behind, the report noted.

Currently, about 35 million Americans either don't know where their next meal is coming from, or they have to cut back on what they eat because they don't have enough money for groceries, the report said.

Food insecurity and hunger in the United States have increased three years in a row. Since 1999, the number of children living in homes at risk of hunger has increased by 1 million.

“There is no reason–save politics–that 842 million men, women and children are hungry,” said David Beckmann, president of the Bread for the World Institute, a nonprofit anti-hunger education and research organization.

“Even in a time of economic difficulty and conflict, the world–and certainly the United States–could still be making progress against hunger. What's mainly missing is a stronger commitment.”

Ironically, the report noted a poll indicating 94 percent of American voters said it was important to them to pay for domestic anti-hunger programs, and 64 percent said the United States has a moral obligation to lead in fighting hunger worldwide.

“The most direct way for the United States to help reduce world hunger is to improve and expand development assistance–the kind of assistance that helps poor countries cope with AIDS or helps subsistence farmers raise their productivity,” Beckmann said.

Domestically, the U.S. government can fight hunger best by improving and expanding its federal nutrition programs, the report asserted.

“To end hunger, the United States must make it possible for everyone to receive a livable income. That requires better education and job opportunities, assistance that helps low-wage workers support their families, and a social safety net for people who cannot work, such as the disabled or elderly,” the report said.

Bread for the World disputed the assertion that faith-based organizations and other charities can end hunger without federal programs.

“Food banks and church pantries cannot provide enough food to the people who come to them and do not reach many of the people who need help, especially in sparsely populated rural areas,” the report said.

Private donations to soup kitchens, food banks and similar programs total $2 billion to $4 billion annually, compared to $44 billion spent each year on federal programs that still are not meeting the needs of all Americans.

“Clearly, if the United States is to meet its goal of cutting hunger in half by 2010, our nutrition programs must be retooled and reformed to not only modernize and strengthen the current initiatives, but also to extend their reach to those people falling through the cracks,” Beckmann said.

The report called on citizens to “demand change” from elected leaders concerning policies that affect the poor.

“Instead of debating more tax cuts for the wealthy, U.S. leaders should be working to improve and expand development assistance to poor countries and federal assistance for hungry people in the United States,” the report said.

Baptist World Aid, the humanitarian relief arm of the Baptist World Alliance, was one of the sponsors of the Bread for the World report, along with Church World Service, the Mennonite Central Committee and other faith-based relief agencies. The International Fund for Agricultural Development provided major funding for the study.

For the full report, visit www.bread.org.

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