Church van wrecks on mission trip_50304

Posted: 5/03/04

Church van wrecks on mission trip

ENID, Okla.–Three men from Highland Terrace Baptist Church in Greenville escaped serious injury when the van they were riding in flipped four times during a traffic accident April 26.

While only the three men were in the church's van at the time of the accident, about 20 members of the congregation made the trip to assist First Indian Baptist Church in Enid, Okla.

The adult team worked to repair the church's roof, paint and other renovation tasks during the day, while Pastor Riley Hamilton preached revival services Sunday evening through Wednesday.

Clyde Dennis was driving the church van when an Enid woman ran a red light and struck the vehicle causing it to overturn. He was treated for neck and back injuries as well as a cut on the head before being released from an area hospital.

Passengers Harold Thompson and Harold Morris were treated at the scene for bumps, bruises and cuts.

All three men were able to return to work the following day.

Damage to the church's 2002 Chevrolet Express van was estimated at $20,000.

A second church van was driven to Oklahoma the day following the accident to help transport the team back to Greenville.

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




ANOTHER VIEW: What if Baptists loved each other_50304

Posted: 5/03/04

ANOTHER VIEW:
What if Baptists loved each other?

By Jim Furgerson

Recently I visited another state. The state Baptist paper was lying on the coffee table in the home where I stayed. I could not miss the lead story. A graph plotted the baptisms reported by Baptist churches in that state for the last 20 years. My heart hurt as I examined the numbers. The baptisms plateau, and then the graph starts a gradual decline to a 20-year low in 2003. Why?

Jim Furgerson

The Baptists in this state have experienced a theological division that has caused several of their institutions to leave the state convention. These actions have led to several lawsuits, Baptists suing Baptists. Many Baptists have taken great pride in the fundamental stance the state convention has taken. At the same time, many have felt disenfranchised and thrown away.

I wonder what could happen in Texas if we were known as Baptists –people who love each other?
–Jim Furgerson

In the course of my visit, I found pastors and lay people hurting for fellowship and afraid to express their convictions because they may not be among friends.

What has happened?

This is one of our old-line states with a rich tradition of Baptists cooperating to accomplish what many thought was impossible. Baptists in this state have built outstanding institutions. They have corporately touched their state and the world for Christ.

It was hard to believe what I heard Baptist people saying about fellow Baptists. What has happened to the love and trust that allowed them to cooperate together? Trust and love are gone, and there are two distinct factions. Two groups that call themselves Baptists, and they are fighting–not loving one another.

Jesus told his disciples: “A new command I give you: Love one another. As I have loved you, so you must love one another” (John 13:34).

This is not a suggestion; it is a command. We are commanded to love like Jesus loved. To me, that implies that even though we have differences, we continue to love each other. Not just love each other, but love each other as Jesus loved us. Jesus loved us with such fervor that while we were sinners (in every way totally repugnant to him), he loved us enough to die for us.

I wonder what could happen if Baptists loved each other as Jesus loved us?

What would happen if we earnestly sought to find where we could agree and amplified those points of agreement? Overlook all the warts and simply love each other. I mean really love each other and seek the best for those in our sphere of influence.

I think Jesus may have answered that question in the next verse: “By this all men will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another” (John 13:35).

I wonder what could happen in Texas if we were known as Baptists–people who love each other? Texas Baptists–people who not only love each other but also love all people, regardless of their color or stripe. People who, cooperating together, join God in what he is doing, simply loving people into the kingdom.

Could it be that the walk of the leadership in the state I was visiting is so offensive that the lost can't hear the message of Jesus and his love? Oh, that Texas Baptists would be known as people of the Bible who live what it teaches and walk together in Jesus' love.

Jim Furgerson is a regional associate for the Baptist General Convention of Texas and former executive director of Texas Baptist Men

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.




Supreme Court declines appeal to military school prayer case_50304

Posted: 5/03/04

Supreme Court declines appeal to military school prayer case

By Robert Marus

ABP Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON (ABP)–The Supreme Court has declined to hear a challenge to a lower court's ruling that outlawed mealtime prayers at a state-run military college.

The justices turned aside the appeal from Virginia officials April 26. Last year, a three-judge panel of the Richmond-based 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled against the Virginia Military Institute's tradition of suppertime invocations, which was reinstated in 1995 after having been discontinued for a few years.

At that time, the majority judges said the unique nature of the military school–which emphasizes “obedience and conformity”–made its situation different than those in other federal cases dealing with prayers at state-supported institutions of higher learning.

Although the Supreme Court has long outlawed government-sponsored prayers at public elementary and secondary school functions, the 6th and 7th U.S. Circuit Courts of Appeals said in separate 1997 rulings that colleges and universities were different.

In those decisions, the appeals courts said state universities could offer “non-denominational” commencement prayers.

Although the justices normally decline cases with no comment, Justice Antonin Scalia released a dissenting opinion blasting the court's majority for their decision. Among the reasons he cited was the alleged conflict on the issue among circuit courts.

“The weighty questions raised by petitioners … deserve this court's attention, particularly since the decisions of two other circuits are in apparent contradiction,” Scalia wrote.

Chief Justice William Rehnquist joined Scalia in his dissent.

The three justices generally considered the court's most liberal–John Paul Stevens, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen Breyer–issued an even rarer retort to Scalia's dissent, arguing that the court should decline to hear the case mainly on jurisdictional and procedural grounds. However, in their opinion–penned by Stevens–they also touched on constitutional reasons for denying the appeal.

Stevens noted the 4th Circuit majority acknowledged “in theory” the principle propounded by the 6th and 7th Circuits–that institutions of higher education are different environments than elementary and secondary schools, where students are older and thus less likely to feel coerced into activities led by their educators.

Therefore, prayers at some school-related events may not violate the Constitution.

But, Stevens said, the lower court nevertheless found that argument “unhelpful in this case because of the features of VMI that distinguish it from more traditional institutions of higher education.” Stevens said those distinguishing features include VMI's “emphasis on submission and conformity.”

However, Scalia said that reason for the distinction was, “to put it mildly, a frail one.”

He went on to say that, in comparing mealtime prayers at state military colleges to commencement prayers at other state universities, “it might be said that the former is more, rather than less, likely to be constitutional, since group prayer before military mess is more traditional than group prayer at ordinary state colleges.”

The case arose when two VMI cadets–Neil Mellen and Paul Knick–sued the school's then-superintendent, Josiah Bunting, over the practice. Cadets marched into the mess hall at mealtime, and a student chaplain said a prayer before the cadets ate.

According to the school, the prayers were “non-denominational” and mentioned God but not Jesus or any other deity. Students did not have to recite or listen to the prayers, but were required to maintain respectfully “at rest” during the invocation.

Lawyers for the American Civil Liberties Union represented Mellen and Knick. The cadets have since graduated and Bunting has since retired.

The head of a Washington-based Baptist religious-liberty group hailed the court's decision as an affirmation of proper church-state relations.

Brent Walker, executive director of the Baptist Joint Committee on Public Affairs, noted that the 4th Circuit is “the most conservative appeals court in the land” but that the panel of judges “understood that coerced prayer violates the principles of religious liberty.

“People of faith understand that coerced prayer is an oxymoron and that for prayer to be prayer, it must be completely voluntary,” Walker 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.




downhome_50304

Posted: 5/03/04

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

Sometimes, timing can be a real bummer.

Like Mother's Day this year. It's next Sunday, a couple of days after the spring semester ends at Hardin-Simmons University, where our oldest daughter, Lindsay, is wrapping up her sophomore year.

“That's terrific!” you might say. “School's getting out just in time for Lindsay to move home for the summer! Joanna should be thrilled! What a great Mother's Day present!”

You would be wrong, even if you used up a lifetime's supply of exclamation points.

Lindsay's not returning home this summer. She's staying in Abilene. She'll have a full-time job and live in an apartment. Just like a grown-up. We're loading her old bed, desk and dresser and hauling them out there next Saturday.

The day before Mother's Day.

To be fair, I can't really gripe. After my sophomore year at Hardin-Simmons, I got an internship at Texas Baptist Children's Home, and I never really lived at home with Mother and Daddy again.

MARV KNOX
Editor

And maybe that's the problem. I see what's ahead: Full-time jobs in other cities. Apartments and then houses. Different schedules; different lives. Our first “baby” never will call our home her home again.

Oh, this is why we shed all those tears in the first place, back when she went off to college.

Lately, images of young Lindsay have played in my mind like a splendid video of her life.

I remember her asleep in Jo's arms the evening after she was born. I see her taking her first steps.

I recall one evening when she was about 4. Jo was gone to church, and Lindsay and Molly were upstairs playing. I took the trash out to the street, but the girls realized I wasn't in the house before I got back. I'll never forget how they felt as they hugged my knees, crying, and how badly I felt for scaring them.

And there is 5-year-old Lindsay, sitting in a Mrs. Winner's restaurant on a Saturday morning, eating a cinnamon roll during a “date” with her daddy, before we went to the park

A moment ago, she was sitting in the backseat of our car as we drove her to the first day of first grade. Next, she was a ninth grader, performing with the Farmerettes drill team at halftime of her first football game.

OK, I know what's happening. One of the great parts of parenthood is being needed. Now that Lindsay stands stronger and stronger on her own, I wrap the memories of simpler, needier times around me like an old quilt.

One of the hardest parts of parenthood is turning loose. Trusting into God's hands this child who's been God's all along and realizing I'm not her fix-it Daddy anymore.

But one of the best parts of parenthood also is turning loose. Trusting into God's hands this young Christian woman, strong and independent. Just as we prayed she would be.

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




EDITORIAL: So what Apathy poses incalculable danger to church_50304

Posted: 5/03/04

EDITORIAL:
So what? Apathy poses incalculable danger to church

“Those commercials drive me crazy,” my wife, Joanna, said the other night. I looked up in time to catch another frenzied attempt to convince us to annihilate the hordes of termites chomping away inside the walls of our home.

If you don't know what I'm talking about, count yourself blessed. Anti-termite commercials swarm through TV cables this time of year. They're almost as annoying and obnoxious as termites themselves.

But when I see those ads–particularly the one where the woman hoes a weed by her foundation and the whole wall falls in–I'm reminded of a pernicious pest chomping away inside the souls and psyches of Christians, particularly Baptists.

Apathy.

That's right, little ol' innocuous apathy. Most folks don't care where it ranks on the scale of sin. Few Bible scholars give it a thought. Just to check, I scoured the indexes of at least a dozen volumes of theology. Not a word about apathy.

Of all the sins, apathy must be among Satan's favorites. It's the gateway to so many others.

Compared to big-time sins like greed, lust and vengeance, apathy doesn't add up to much. Kind of like comparing termites to fire, tornadoes and floods. But just as untended termites can destroy a house from the inside out, apathy can cause Christians to crumble.

“Who cares?” the apathetic soul asks. Well, God does. And, ironically, so does Satan.

On the positive side, our lives matter to God, who stamped us with the divine image. God cares about the intricate details of our lives–who we are and what we become, our relationships, our joys and sorrows, our plans and aspirations. So, if all this is important to God, who oversees the universe, the stuff of our lives ought to matter to us.

Conversely, Satan cares as well. Not for the same reasons God cares. To the contrary, the Evil One seeks whom he may destroy and devour. Of all the sins, apathy must be among his favorites. It's the gateway to so many others. Think about the people you know who have succumbed to sin. Most of the time, the descent started when they ceased to care–about God, about the feelings of family and friends, about their own self-respect. Apathy opened them up to a panorama of problems.

“OK. So what?” you ask. Be careful. You're on the verge of you-know-what.

Apathy matters because it poses an incalculable danger to the church, Baptists included. Especially Baptists.

You see, apathy often runs on the twin rails of anger and disappointment. And Baptists have been living right in the middle of those tracks.

Anger has been an ongoing part of Southern and Texas Baptist life for almost exactly 25 years. We won't rehash the battles here. But if you've paid attention at all, you know the struggle for the soul of the national and state conventions has been bruising and severe. Friends, families and churches have been divided. And just when you thought it might be over, another aspect of the dispute rose to the surface, revisiting old pain and creating new anger.

Consequently, for years now, Baptists have been disappointed. We're disappointed with the outcome of our disagreements. If you live in Texas, you're likely to be disappointed because either (a) one side won control of the Southern Baptist Convention or (b) the other side maintained control of the Baptist General Convention of Texas.

Many of those same Baptists are disappointed in themselves for feeling trapped in the disagreement for so long. Quite a few Baptists are disappointed in all the other Baptists for not behaving up to their standards.

And even if you never got embroiled in that cycle of anger and disappointment, you may well have encountered its corollary in your own congregation. Take worship, for example. Very likely, more churches have fought over the style of music to be used in worship than have embraced the “Baptist battles.” The pain is personal and real.

Apathy follows anger and disappointment for the same reason scar tissue forms in an untreated wound. Soul and body both seek relief. Scar tissue numbs nerves, blocking pain signals. Apathy numbs spiritual and emotional sensitivity, also blocking pain signals.

Many Baptists have dressed apathy in one of two disguises. Sweet denial pretends nothing is wrong. But just as denial in a family only provides time for dysfunction to fester, Baptist denial leads away from healing and wholeness. Blissful ignorance pretends all that is not acknowledged does not exist. But just as ignorance leads to failure in the classroom, Baptist ignorance leads to sadness, not bliss.

A significant number of Baptists downplay the danger of apathy by denigrating other values. “Why should I care about the convention anymore? It's irrelevant; this is a post-denominational age,” they explain. “I don't worry about worship music anymore. Corporate worship is overrated. I can worship with CDs at home,” they insist. Because they deny disappointment and avoid anger, they imagine they're the loving, caring ones–the mature ones who have “grown past” the causes of their apathy. And parts of their hearts have died.

Elie Wiesel, the Holocaust survivor and Nobel Peace Prize winner, exposes the fallacy of such thinking. He uses a synonym for “apathy” but addresses its danger: “The opposite of love is not hate; it's indifference. … The opposite of faith is not heresy; it's indifference. And the opposite of life is not death; it's indifference.”

The option is not continued anger and disappointment. A loving God does not wish that for God's children. But apathy is not the answer.

We do not need to revisit Baptist battles or church fights. We do need, however, to protect, preserve and perpetuate truth and beauty.

If your heart has grown apathetic, nurture it back to life. Renew your relationship with Christ through prayer and Bible study. And renew your passion through relationships and activity. Life is both too short and too long to stay mired in conflict and animosity that wilts your soul. Ask God to help you find like-minded believers and learn to care again.

–Marv Knox
E-mail the editor at marvknox@baptiststandard.com

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




Elgin deacons learn to become servant leaders in congregation, community_50304

Posted: 5/03/04

Elgin deacons learn to become
servant leaders in congregation, community

By John Hall

Texas Baptist Communications

ELGIN–Church finances, leaky roofs and plumbing problems easily can dominate discussions in deacons meetings.

But at First Baptist Church of Elgin, deacons are setting aside that “business” to focus on serving the congregation and the community.

Following a recent study of deaconship with resources from the Baptist General Convention of Texas minister/church relations office, the deacons are emphasizing service throughout their ministry, according to Odus Crumley, deacon chairman.

During monthly meetings, leaders spend more time talking about their passions and ministry opportunities than administering church activities, Crumley said. As deacons discuss recent ministry ideas, others help formulate ideas of getting the work started.

Gerald Aalbers, pastor of the church, said the deacons are “looking to stand in the gaps” where service is needed. The deacons are searching for community and individual needs they can meet.

“We recognize all deacons are servants, but not all servants are the same,” Crumley said.

Enabling servant leadership is one of the 11 characteristics for a healthy church adopted by the Baptist General Convention of Texas.

From these meeting conversations, the deacons have started a monthly luncheon that serves about 60 people. During the meal, participants minister to others in various ways, including making gift bags for shut-ins.

Deacons started a prayer breakfast for men and boys in the community. Each Sunday, the church also prays for deployed soldiers with connections to the congregation. The men deliver bags of gifts and church information to each visitor.

They also began distributing food to about 70 families a month. The men have become passionate about serving the poor or temporarily jobless through the ministry, according to Aalbers. He sees men loading and unloading bags of food each week.

“We shine where we can shine,” Crumley said. “We do the work where it needs to be done.”

These ministries strengthen the church's presence in Elgin, Crumley said. People recognize the congregation is trying to improve lives and see it as a place of hope.

“We would hope that it would enable us to share Christ and let people know we care,” Crumley said.

Expanding and strengthening the kingdom of Christ through witnessing and service is a deacon's calling, Crumley said.

“Being a deacon means saying you're going to be a servant–to follow the Christian lifestyle in our church home and workplace,” Crumley said

For more information about the BGCT's resource for encouraging servant deacons, call (888) 446-1453.

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.




ETBU grad, former basketball MVP, killed in action in Iraq_50304

Posted: 5/03/04

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

MARSHALL–A former East Texas Baptist University basketball star is among more than 700 American military personnel who have been killed in action in Iraq.

Capt. Arthur Felder of Lewisville, Ark., was one of four soldiers killed April 24 in Taji, Iraq, when mortar rounds hit their camp. He was assigned to the Army National Guard's 39th Support Battalion, 39th Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division from Hazen, Ark.

Felder, 36, graduated from ETBU in 1989.

He played on the ETBU Tigers basketball team from 1985 to 1988 and was named Most Valuable Player during his senior season. Felder ranks 5th on the ETBU all-time rebounds list with a career total of 706.

Jim Webb, former basketball coach and now professor of kinesiology at ETBU, told the Marshall News Messenger: “Arthur knew what work it took to be successful and was willing to put forward that effort. His mother had taught him to work and respect education, and they valued it.”

Felder was “one of those youngsters that was smart, dependable and everybody that knew him loved him,” Webb said.

Felder was employed at Step One of Little Rock, Ark., a court-appointed alternative school for juveniles.

He was a member of St. Luke Baptist Church in Little Rock, where he served as youth director.

Felder is survived by his mother, Cheryl Stuart of Lewisville, Ark., and son, Jaelun, 8, and a daughter, Amari, 4.

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.




Human rights group ranks U.S. third in reported executions_50304

Posted: 5/03/04

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

WASHINGTON (ABP)–The United States ranks third, behind only China and Iran, in reported executions, said a new report by a human-rights group that opposes the death penalty.

Amnesty International's annual report on the death penalty, noted four countries accounted for 84 percent of the 1,146 government-reported executions worldwide in 2003–the United States (65), China (726), Iran (108) and Vietnam (64).

The report cautioned that the actual execution figures for China, Iran and Vietnam –known human-rights abusers–were likely higher due to unreported executions.

The report also noted that the U.S. and China were the only nations in 2003 known to have executed prisoners who committed the crimes of which they were convicted while they were juveniles.

According to Amnesty International, 77 nations had abolished the death penalty altogether by the end of 2003, and 40 more had abolished it in practice. The total of 117 countries not practicing capital punishment was five more than in 2002.

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




LifeWay Explore the Bible Series for May 9: Paul offers words of wisdom, encouragement_50304

Posted: 5/03/04

LifeWay Explore the Bible Series for May 9

Paul offers words of wisdom, encouragement

2 Timothy 4

By David Morgan

Trinity Baptist Church, Harker Heights

Living in God's presence (4:1-5)

Imagine you have a few days to live. You have one final opportunity to write to a friend. What do you say? How do you say it?

Paul found himself in precisely that situation. Facing imminent execution, he penned his final instructions and reflections to Timothy. He urged his young partner to remain faithful to the gospel and the task to which God had called him. Because Timothy faced strong opposition from false teachers who littered the church's landscape, Paul used his response to his impending death to encourage Timothy's continued faithfulness. Paul offered these words with utmost seriousness and somberness.

God's servants shoulder an awesome responsibility. Paul offered his words with the realization that Christ determines his servants' destinies. While Paul would face an earthly judge who could order his execution, he claimed he served a living Christ who would ultimately judge both living and dead. Christ's appearance would finalize his kingly reign. Paul appealed to his young friend with the assurance of God's ultimate triumph.

study3

Paul summed up Timothy's task by charging him to “preach the word,” which Paul elsewhere defined as, “Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners” (1 Timothy 1:15). Any occasion is appropriate for heralding the gospel. We should proclaim it even when we do not feel like it. We should preach it when we face opposition.

Preaching includes correction, rebuke and encouragement. Preaching turns those who have wandered off back to God's way. It rebukes (a stronger term than “corrects”) those for whom gentle persuasion was inadequate. It inspires those who struggle to remain faithful. Preaching speaks specifically to each person's situation. Care and consideration for one's feelings and for true doctrine should characterize Timothy's exhortations.

Paul anticipated a time when Christians would reject the gospel's truth and pursue teachings that teased and gratified their desires. These Christians would search for teachers who would scratch their itching ears. Tragically, Paul indicated they would find many teachers who would accept this unhealthy role.

Timothy needed to remain faithful to combat false teaching. Careful observation of these teachings would reveal whether they were true or false. He had to keep up his guard to protect the church from the encroachment of such teachers. Paul summed up Timothy's work in these situations–endure hardship, preach the gospel and fulfill all the tasks to which he had been called by God.

Looking to the future (4:6-8)

Knowing his time left on earth was short, I imagine Paul paused, smiled and thanked God once again for Timothy's friendship and faithfulness. He closed his eyes and reflected upon the future of the work he had started as he passed the torch to the next generation.

He shared his testimony as a final encouragement for Timothy. Paul recognized his life had not been wasted even as he wasted away in prison. He pictured his impending death as a final offering to God. His life was almost, but not quite, over. The Romans considered Paul their prisoner. He considered himself God's prisoner and rejoiced he could offer himself freely to God. Paul had wrestled forces aligned against Christ. He had finished the course of many years. I envision Paul's life as a marathon–bursts of speed, fatigue and struggle, and a dogged determination to finish. Through it all, Paul remained faithful to Christ and his gospel.

Paul professed no regrets. All that awaited Paul in this world was execution. What awaited him in the eternal world was the crown of righteousness. The garland, given to winners of athletic events, suggests both victory and immortality. The Lord, the “righteous Judge,” would crown his faithful servant Paul with eternal life. Paul then remembered and included all those others who had longed for Christ's appearing and who would join him triumphantly at the finish line.

Trusting in God (4:16-18)

As this letter and his life drew to a close, hear Paul again singing praises in prison (Acts 16:25). He sang alone because colleagues had deserted him. He prayed God might forgive them. (Could Paul have been remembering Stephen's death?) Although so-called friends might forsake him, God remained faithful to strengthen him. Because God strengthened him, Paul continued to proclaim the gospel. Based on past testimonies before the authorities, I suspect Paul's defense included telling the story of his conversion.

God had delivered Paul from “the lion's mouth.” He was convinced God “would rescue him from every attack.” Paul's assurance that God would bring him “safely to heaven” suggests God would enable him to remain faithful to the gospel through this final stage of his life. Quite fittingly and in true Pauline character and fashion, he praised God's faithfulness, “to him be glory for ever and ever. Amen.”

Question for discussion

bluebull What wisdom has God provided for you to share?

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




LifeWay Explore the Bible Series for May 16: Qualifications for church leaders spelled out_50304

Posted: 5/03/04

LifeWay Explore the Bible Series for May 16

Qualifications for church leaders spelled out

Titus 1

By David Morgan

Trinity Baptist Church, Harker Heights

Every church needs good leaders to accomplish God's purpose for it. Every church has a specific task. God calls people in each church to satisfy its unique leadership needs. Our previous studies in 1 and 2 Timothy have shown us through the Apostle Paul's instructions to Timothy how we can become worthy servants. Paul's directives to Titus will further guide us to become effective church leaders.

What makes a good leader? (1:5-9)

Paul had left his associate Titus on Crete to finish the work they had started. Although Acts does not mention that Paul ever visited Crete, many scholars believe Paul visited there after he had been released from his Roman imprisonment (Acts 28:30-31). He later was arrested again (2 Timothy 4).

Paul left the island with the work unfinished. Christians on Crete needed further instruction on how to live as a community of faith and resist false teachers. One specific task that awaited Titus was to designate leaders (“elders” and “overseers”) for the churches.

The list of qualifications for these elders parallels Paul's list in 1 Timothy 3. The traits focus on the areas of marriage and family, character and demeanor, and commitment to the integrity of the gospel.

study3

For an elder to live a model life, he needed to be “the husband of but one wife” (literally, “a one-woman man”). Christians continue to debate how to interpret this phrase. Options include necessarily married, not remarried after divorce and married to only one woman at a time.

Paul declared the children of elders should believe and conduct themselves properly. Families may not reach this ideal where all their children are believers, but church leaders with committed families provide excellent models for others in the church. At any rate, children of elders should refrain from blatantly immoral living.

God has entrusted overseers to be stewards of God's word. A steward, usually a slave, managed another's estate and was accountable to the owner. God's stewards are accountable to the Lord as they guide people in God's truth. Thus, it is necessary that they live blameless lives. Blameless living entails resisting arrogance (“not overbearing”), withstanding impulsive anger (“not quick-tempered”), refraining from drunkenness (“not given to much wine”), refusing to attack opponents (“not violent”) and keeping from using their position for undue financial gain (“not pursuing dishonest gain”).

Paul contrasted the negative behaviors with traits that promote faithful service. Church leaders who exhibit goodness, discipline, and righteous and holy living protect themselves and the church from ungrounded accusations. They express these qualities through loving and devoted service to other believers.

Overseers need to be firmly grounded in the truth of the gospel. They have a two-fold task: To encourage faithful believers in the truth and to resist those who contradict their teachings. Specific content of this truth may be found in Titus 2:11-15.

Why are good leaders needed? (1:10-12)

Churches need quality leaders to withstand the inevitable appearance of false teachers. False teachers refuse to acknowledge those in the church with legitimate authority. They speak fluently and eloquently but have no Christian substance in their words. Paul called them deceivers and mere talkers. Jews of that day used the word “talkers” to refer to heathen worshippers. The false teachers he targeted appear to have been legalists who insisted people had to obey the Jewish law to be Christian. These legalists required circumcision and adherence to other Jewish rituals for salvation.

Paul commanded that overseers muzzle the many false teachers because of the damage inflicted on the church. The teachings were exceedingly dangerous. The “households” they were ruining could mean either house churches meeting in their homes or whole families. The desire for dishonest gain motivated these teachers. Paul cited a Cretan proverb to drive home his point concerning the depravity of these false teachers.

What about poor leaders? (1:13-16)

Paul expected Titus to take appropriate action. Titus needed to sharply rebuke false teachers. The purpose of the rebuke was redemptive, not punitive. If the false teachers accepted sound teaching, their faith might become healthy. One step to restoring their spiritual health was to reject the Jewish myths of which they were so fond. “Myths” appear to be some sort of spiritual speculation based on the Old Testament. The second aspect of the false teaching was the requirement that Christians obey Jewish legalistic requirements. The term “truth” suggests false teachers were rejecting the most basic teachings of the Christian faith.

The character and conduct of the false teachers revealed their true nature. Purity comes not from adhering to external rites such as special diets and rituals but to an internal transformation. An impure character defiles even those actions that appear to be righteous.

I've been told actions speak louder than words. Such was quite true for the false teachers. They claimed to know God, but their behavior indicated otherwise. Paul described their deeds as an abomination against God (“detestable”), disobedient and “unfit for doing anything good.”

Question for discussion

bluebull What do you think is the most important quality in a leader?

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




LifeWay Family Bible Series for May 9: Marriage should mirror the love of Christ_50304

Posted: 5/03/04

LifeWay Family Bible Series for May 9

Marriage should mirror the love of Christ

1 Corinthians 7:1-9; Ephesians 5:18-33

By Rodney McGlothlin

First Baptist Church, College Station

A cartoon a number of years ago pictured the Apostle Paul walking under a banner that said, “Paul … Welcome to Corinth!” The men of the church were in the foreground ready to greet him. In the distance was a group of women waving signs that read, “Paul is unfair to women!” and “Paul is a chauvinist!” Paul was walking toward the women saying, “I see you got my letter!”

I have done hundreds of weddings, and all of them included some readings from Paul, especially 1 Corinthians 13 or Ephesians 5. I have yet to have a couple read that portion of Scripture contained in this week's lesson that says, “If they cannot control themselves, they should marry, for it is better to marry than to burn with passion” (1 Corinthians 7:9). Brides and grooms generally search for nobler scriptural support in their decision to marry. There are better passages with which to gladden the hearts of their parents on that blessed day.

What is the biblical ideal for husbands and wives? This week's text shines a light on what God envisioned for a Christian marriage. 1 Corinthians 7:1-9 and Ephesians 5:18-33 (I have added verses 18-21 to the text printed in the Family Bible Study quarterlies) express Paul's theology of the home.

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The home is to be a place where responsibilities are shared. In 1 Corinthians 7, Paul set the context for this discussion in terms of “marital duties.”

The church must speak up today for a biblical theology of sex. We dare not leave this aspect of education to the school alone, much less to the opportunistic lowbrow humor of prime time sitcoms. Why did God create us as sexual beings? What is his purpose in giving us the gift of sex? The biblical answer includes procreation, communication (intimacy) and pleasure. When Paul speaks of mutual duty in marriage, we must not limit this to the act of sex alone. We must include the responsibilities for children, communication and joy within the home.

The home is a place where submission is volunteered. I do not think you can interpret Ephesians 5:22 apart from the context that includes verses 18-21. Most translations have included an imperative in verse 22. “Wives, submit to your husbands.” There is no verb stated in verse 22. It is implied from verse 21. In verse 21, it is not an imperative verb. It is a participle. The imperative is found in verse 18. It says, “Be filled with the Spirit.” That is the command. What follows is a series of participles; “speaking to one another,” “singing and making music in your hearts,” “always giving thanks to God” and “submitting to one another out of reverence for Christ.”

Verses 22-33 flesh out how this mutual submission would work in various relationships. It is an encyclopedia of how Spirit-filled people live in relationship with each other. Can you think of a better place than the home to learn how to live together?

The submission required in this text is mutual, voluntary and beneficial to all involved. No one in the Christian life is given dictatorial status over others. Lordship is a crown that never sits easily on a human head.

Jesus said: “You are not to be like that (Gentiles who Lord it over others). Instead, the greatest among you should be like the youngest, and the one who rules like the one who serves” (Luke 22:26). The Christian ethic is not to work your way to the top of the authority chart. It is to work your way to the bottom.

If it was good enough for Jesus, it is not too much to ask the same of husbands and wives. This submission flows voluntarily out of a Spirit-filled life in the same way that speaking, singing and thanksgiving flow from a life controlled by the Spirit. Verses 22-33 indicate wonderful benefits to all involved.

The home is a place where Christ is revealed. It is to our shame that we have argued over Paul's meaning of the word “submit” while neglecting the example of submission clearly given. Christ is our example.

Everything we do is “as to the Lord.” What does this mean? Our homes should be places where Christ is revealed through our relationships. Husband, if someone should ask you, “How much does Christ love the church?” you should be able to say, “Come with me to my home, and see how I love my wife and serve her, and you will see how Christ loves the church.” Wife, if someone should ask you, “How much does the church love Christ?” you should be able to say, “Come with me to my home and see the way I love and honor my husband and you will see the way the church is in love with Jesus.”

May our homes become places that reveal the true character of what it means to be a fully devoted follower of Jesus Christ.

Questions for discussion

bluebull What do you believe to be the most important component in growing a healthy, joyful marriage?

bluebull Why is submission such an explosive topic for some people? How would you explain the meaning of this word in Ephesians 5:22?

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LifeWay Family Bible Series for May 16: Children honor parents by loving their Father_50304

Posted: 5/03/04

LifeWay Family Bible Series for May 16

Children honor parents by loving their Father

Ephesians 6:1-4; 1 Timothy 5:1-8

By Rodney McGlothlin

First Baptist Church, College Station

Have you ever heard the voice of God?

My sons have. There is a great man of God in the church I served in Stillwater, Okla. He has a deep voice, knows and employs the King James English, and always is the narrator in the Christmas and Easter musicals.

When he would speak in church, my boys would often comment, “I like it when God talks in church.” He sounded like God to them. We often sat with him and his wife at Oklahoma State baseball games. “God” talked baseball with my boys. No wonder they love baseball to this day.

What does God sound like to you? I am sure the first time I heard God's voice, he sounded a lot like my mother and father. From them, I began to learn that I lived in an environment where trust was possible.

When it comes to life lessons that inspire trust or faith, I am certain the ultimate teacher is God himself. When he began to tug at my heart, trusting him was as natural as trusting my own parents.

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This is why the words of this week's lesson are so important: "Children, obey your parents in the Lord, for this is right. 'Honor your father and mother'–which is the first commandment with a promise–'that it may go well with you and that you may enjoy long life on the earth'" (Ephesians 6:1-3).

Why should children honor their parents? It is certainly not because they are always honorable. This text should never be employed to convince anyone to tolerate abuse. Remember, Paul began this section of Scripture back in Ephesians 5 with the command to not be drunk with wine, but to be filled with the Spirit. The parents in question are assumed to be Spirit-filled, God-loving, Christ-following disciples. Such parents should be honored.

We should honor our parents because God uses families to accomplish his purposes. He chose Abraham's family so that through them he could bless all the families of the earth. He promised them a land.

Paul quoted Deuteronomy 5:16 as the “commandment with a promise.” The promise was not just long life. It included the words, “that it may go well with you in the land the Lord your God is giving you.” God wanted them to remain in the land a long time to serve him.

New Testament families passed along their faith at home as well. Paul commented to Timothy on his family-based faith heritage with these words: “I have been reminded of your sincere faith, which first lived in your grandmother Lois and in your mother Eunice and, I am persuaded, now lives in you also” (2 Timothy 1:5). We think of the home as being where character is formed. It is more importantly the place where faith is born.

How do we honor Spirit-filled parents? We love their Lord. I cannot think of anything I would rather my children do than to serve the Lord Jesus with their whole lives. I know it is what my parents want most for me. I have a brother who also is a pastor. I think our parents believe their raising of two sons was an act of service to God. They should be honored by their boys for pointing us to Jesus.

How do we honor Spirit-filled parents? We remember their labor of love. How can any of us repay parents for all they have done for us? I am sure they appreciated all the plaster hand castings and macaroni-covered cigar boxes we made for them during Vacation Bible School. I think they just need to know we remember their labor of love and we thank God for them. Godly parents are the heroes most needed in today's world. That is the kind of parents I had, and it is the kind of parent I want to be.

How do we honor Spirit-filled parents? We meet their needs as they met ours. My parents came running to us in the night when we had a need. They were there for us. They also took us with them when they went running to their parents in their time of need. I expect to do some running of my own when the time comes. It will not be a chore. It will be family. It will be how we honor those who gave us life and faith. What a gift!

Questions for discussion

bluebull How do you honor your father and mother? How would you like your children to honor you?

bluebull What are you doing in your home to ensure that your faith is being passed along to your children?

bluebull What example do your children see in the way that you honor your parents?

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.