BaptistWay introduces new children’s curriculum_71105

Posted: 7/15/05

BaptistWay introduces new children's curriculum

By Meghan Merchant

Communications Intern

A new children’s curriculum from BaptistWay Press aims to teach children something pastors and Baptist General Convention of Texas leaders believe has been overlooked—Baptist beliefs.

“It seems evident that there has been a decline in teaching about distinctively Baptist beliefs,” said BGCT Executive Director Emeritus Bill Pinson, who works with the convention’s Baptist Distinctives Committee and its Baptist Heritage Center. “Many churches do little teaching in this area to anyone and less likely to children than any other age group.”

Let’s Explore Baptist Beliefs, written by Johnnie Human, is one of few teaching materials designed to fill that hole, said Diane Lane, BGCT preschool and children’s consultant.

The curriculum covers distinctive Baptist foundations such as the Lordship of Christ, the authority of the Bible, salvation by grace through faith, security of the believer, priesthood of the believer, baptism and the Lord’s Supper, church autonomy and the importance of missions and evangelism.

“This was written to encourage families and churches to educate children on why they’re Baptist,” Lane said. Children should learn what is significant about being a Baptist so they can understand their heritage and have a strong foundation when they go out into the world, she added.

Pinson views childhood as the “prime time” to teach distinctive Baptist principles, since children develop basic beliefs and attitudes that last a lifetime. And while they may not be able to “grasp the full meaning and import of these beliefs,” they are likely to associate positive feelings with the teachings, which will benefit them as they mature in their Christian beliefs, he said.

Pinson and Kevin Everett, pastor of First Baptist Church in Wellington, attributed the decline in teaching Baptist principles to a general loss of denominational commitment with the blending of evangelicalism. Since the end of Church Training, no program has taken its place in teaching Baptist beliefs, Pinson said.

Everett’s church plans to implement the new curriculum in the fall during Sunday evening classes. Adult classes at First Baptist Church completed a study on beliefs important to Baptists and Everett “looks forward to using” the children’s materials.

“The foundation ought to be built very early so it will stay” with the child forever, he said, noting what he learned as a child affected his beliefs today.

Part of the training in Baptist beliefs should come from the home, and educating parents is important for educating the child, Everett said

Let’s Explore Baptist Beliefs was created to be used in a variety of settings, including Sunday school classes, Vacation Bible School, weekend retreats, evenings classes and at home with families.

The curriculum is “very user friendly” for teachers and students, Lane said. Each lesson is color-coded and includes activities that “capture the interest of the child.”

For more information about Let’s Explore Baptist Beliefs, contact Diane Lane at (214) 828-5287. Orders may be placed through www.baptistwaypress.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.




Cyber Column by Brett Younger: Why I love butter pecan_71105

Posted: 7/15/05

Carol and Brett Younger,
August 4, 1984.

CYBER COLUMN:
Why I love butter pecan

By Brett Younger

My life would have been so much less if I had gotten in the line for chocolate. At the Welcome Students Ice Cream Social at Southern Seminary, a friend pointed out a gorgeous woman in a hideous Mexican dress: “That’s Carol Davis. She went to Seventh. Go introduce yourself.”

I nervously got in line for butter pecan—which I didn’t really care for—because that’s the flavor she was scooping. Carol and I both went to Seventh and James Baptist Church in Waco while we were students at Baylor University, but we never met because she was in the in-crowd. I desperately tried to think of a clever line and decided to go with, “The last time I had butter pecan was at Seventh and James.” When I got to the front of the line, I was so tongue-tied that nothing came out. Carol was merciful and chose not to make fun of me (a pattern we have continued to this day).

Brett Younger

On a hunch that such a compassionate woman would be there, I went to the first meeting of Seminarians United Against Hunger. Carol was there, but she was talking to a handsome seminarian whom I felt sure wasn’t there out of concern for the hungry.

A week later, God sent the break I needed. A group of us decided to go to a movie, but then participants began dropping out one by one until it was just Carol and me. (How could this not be providential?) I called and tried to sound confident: “Carol, this is Brett. … Brett Younger. … I was your best customer for butter pecan. … Yes, that’s me. We’re the only two planning to go to the movie on Monday. Are you still willing to go?” (This probably wasn’t the best way to phrase the question.)

The movie was Harold and Maude (a 19-year-old man and 80-year-old woman fall in love—what a perfect date movie!). I wasn’t used to speaking to attractive women and hoped that if I were quiet she would assume I was thoughtful. Once during the movie, I put my arm on the armrest between us.

On Tuesday, I gave Carol a dozen roses. On Saturday, we went to lunch. On Sunday evening, I went to hear Carol preach. After worship, we talked about getting married. On Monday, we named our first child—Jenna Hope. (When our son Graham was born, we reconsidered.)

Reasonable people would be embarrassed to admit they talked about marriage within a week of their first date, but on Aug. 4, Carol and I will have been married 21 years.

After more than a score of wedded bliss, I can tell you that living with a real Christian can be a real pain. Carol gives away more money than I want to give away. She makes the grudges I want to harbor seem petty. I wear an imaginary “WWCD” (What would Carol do?) bracelet everywhere I go. It’s hard to be married to someone who is kinder, smarter and more Christian than you are.

And it’s wonderful. To come from and return to a gracious marriage every day is sheer joy. I’m grateful for the love she gives her family, friends and church, and for the writing that inspires people she’ll never meet. Living with Carol makes we want to be kinder, smarter, and more Christian. On Aug. 4, I’ll have a big scoop of butter pecan and thank God.


Brett Younger is pastor of Broadway Baptist Church in Fort Worth and the author of Who Moved My Pulpit? A Hilarious Look at Ministerial Life, available from Smyth & Helwys (800) 747-3016. You can e-mail him at byounger@broadwaybc.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 for 7/11 issue_71105

Storylist for week of 7/11/05

GO TO SECTIONS:
Around Texas       • Baptists      
Faith In Action

      • Departments      • Opinion       • Bible Study      


Articles from our 7/11/05 issue:



Bombing in England will not deter Baptist World Congress

Starting over in Sri Lanka



Four Russian orphans need homes

Seminary offers light for Russia's path

On the Move

Around the State

Texas Tidbits

Previously Posted
Texas WMU seeks to mark gravesites of leaders

Super Summer impacts adult volunteers

Texas Super Summer goes to Germany

Starting over in Sri Lanka

Disaster relief ministry changes lives in Sri Lanka and Texas



Bombing in England will not deter Baptist World Congress

Cooperative Baptist Fellowship General Assembly
Fellowship affirms partner proposal, revises constitution

Families live out faith through service, research shows

Gallup says time right for leaders

Uncivil religion contrary to Christ's kingdom, Texas pastor insists

KidsHeart Africa offers care for AIDS orphans

Historian urges Baptists to reclaim rituals

CBF elects Asian woman pastor, African-American as top officers

Christians frozen by fear cannot love neighbors

Global poverty the chief moral issue today, Vestal asserts

Baptist Briefs



Recreation Ministry
Boxing ministry packs a punch in reaching young

Paris church uses golf to teach Bible lessons

Friendswood friends care for golfer's wife

Hope Camp leaders model Christian love for at-risk students

Camp workers' daily routine yields eternal results

Texas Baptist encampments: 'Look at the numbers'

The Steam rises to the occasion in evangelism

Previously Posted
Recreation leaders see sports as ministry



Court offers split decision on Ten Commandments

Supreme Court vacancy could spark ideological battle

Paul's pivotal role affirmed by controversial theologian



Biblezines package gospel in teen-friendly format

Magazine urges girls to choose virtue over vogue



Reviewed in this issue:
Glimpses of the Devil: A Psychiatrist's Personal Accounts of Possession, Exorcism and Redemption by M. Scott Peck
Whatsoever Things are Lovely by Foy Valentine
Unstoppable Women: Achieve Any Breakthrough Goal in 30 Days by Cynthia Kersey
The Shaping of Things to Come: Innovation and Mission for the 21st-Century Church by Michael Frost and Alan Hirsch
Crisis Ministry: A Handbook by Daniel Bagby
The Inner Voice of Love by Henri J. M. Nouwen




Texas Baptist Forum

Around the State

Cartoon

On the Move

Classifed Ads



EDITORIAL: Take 'ONE' step to end world hunger

DOWN HOME: Who couldn't use a car periscope?

TOGETHER: When we work together, we please God

Texas Baptist Forum

2nd Opinion: 'Everyone' needs evidence of faith

Cybercolumn by Berry D. Simpson: Family Wedding



BaptistWay Bible Series for July 10: Rejection of Christ will bring judgment

LifeWay Family Bible Series for July 10: God's armor helps fend off the darkness

LifeWay Explore the Bible Series for July 10: Repentance is necessary to follow God

BaptistWay Bible Series for July 17: Revelation offers hope to the children of God

LifeWay Family Bible Series for July 17: Christ can enable joy even during hard times

LifeWay Explore the Bible Series for July 17: Act as God leads by caring for the oppressed


See articles from previous issue 6/27/05 here.




Explore the Bible Series for July 17: Act as God leads by caring for the oppressed_71105

Posted: 7/06/05

Explore the BIble Series for July 17

Act as God leads by caring for the oppressed

• Ezekiel 34

By Dennis Tucker

Truett Seminary, Waco

Beginning with chapter 34, the book of Ezekiel makes a radical shift from that of judgment to that of consolation and hope. Yet in some ways the opening theme of this chapter—judgment against the shepherds—appears to relate to the former emphasis on judgment. The judgment against the shepherds, however, is merely the bridge to the more promissory claims to follow in the chapter.

In the ancient world, the metaphor of shepherd was frequently applied to kings. For example, in the Sumerian King list, Etana is referred to as a shepherd, and later the better known king, Hammurabi, is dubbed a shepherd as well. There is a Babylonian proverb that reads, “a people without a king is like sheep without a shepherd.” The metaphor is well known in Israelite literature as well (Psalm 23; 1 Kings 22:17; Psalm 95).

The indictment in Ezekiel 34 is most likely against Judah’s last kings—those who ruled in the years leading up to the exile. And they are charged with failing to act as shepherd/kings.

A primary responsibility of kingship in the ancient Near East was care for the people, particularly those who were poor and oppressed. Hammurabi states one of the three reasons he set up his code was to “give justice to the oppressed.”

The primary rationale in the ancient Near East and in ancient Israel was that the king was the vice regent of God—in other words the king acted on behalf of God or the gods. In the Old Testament, there is ample evidence that God sides with the oppressed and marginalized. If an Israelite king was truly to serve as the vice regent of God, then how could he do other than care for the oppressed and down-trodden in society?

Verses 1-10 in chapter 34, however, depict a very different scene in Judah. The shepherds are taking care of themselves, they have not bound up the injured, nor have they sought out the lost sheep and returned them. As a result, the sheep “became food for all the wild animals” (v. 5). The most damning line, however, appears at the end of verse 10, “I will rescue my flock from their mouths, and it will no longer be food for them.” The kings are no longer depicted as shepherds—as vice regents of God—but as wild animals that feed in frenzied fashion upon the weak and vulnerable sheep.

As churches changed over the course of the 20th century, so too did our expectations of leadership. Often we size up our pastor or minister based on whether he or she can “manage the organization” well. If revenue is up, enrollment increases and the bottom line appears healthy, then we assume the pastor is doing things right. Unfortunately business criteria do not appear in the biblical text as a standard of leadership.

Instead, the biblical text often challenges us to see leadership in radically new ways. Ezekiel 34 returns us to a model of leadership that almost appears antiquated in modern Christianity—leadership is based on pastoral care for the least among us. If God is a God who time and time again sides with the broken, the injured and those that appear most vulnerable, should we not also expect the same from our leaders—and from each other. Modern churches have not lost some of their credibility with the larger society because they have failed to act as businesses—we have lost it because we have failed to act as God would act, demonstrating pastoral care for the least among us.

Six times in the opening verses God refers to “my flock” or “my sheep.” This prepares us for the grand announcement in verse 11 by God, “I myself will search for my sheep and look after them.” Later, in verse 16, God announces, “I will search for the lost and bring back the strays. I will bind up the injured and strengthen the weak.”

Perhaps as a church, a Sunday school class, or even as individuals, we may wonder whether we are “succeeding” in our spiritual journey. Greater yet, we may wonder, “Where is God among us?” Perhaps the perceived absence of God says more about where we are not than where God is.

Verses 23-24 speak of a new shepherd to come from the line of David. While Ezekiel may have been speaking to his immediate circumstance and possible leaders, as Christians, we understand this to be fulfilled ultimately in the Shepherd, Jesus Christ. And yet in page after page of the Gospels, we find the Shepherd mixing in circles with the poor, the victimized and the downtrodden. He is the model of leadership—he is the shepherd/king. Perhaps if we desire to hear his voice, we should find those same circles—and listen carefully. “The sheep hear his voice … and they know his voice” (John 10:3).


Discussion questions

• What models of leadership do you think are important for a minister? For a lay person? How does care for the poor and oppressed figure into your answer?

• How could your Sunday school class embody such a model of ministry?



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




BaptistWay Bible Series for July 24: Christ provides the mettle for perserverance_71105

Posted: 7/12/05

BaptistWay Bible Series for July 24

Christ provides the mettle for perserverance

• Revelation 12:1-6, 13-18; 13:1-4, 11-18

By Wayne Smith

First Baptist Church, Lamesa

Last week’s lesson covered the Second Interlude. During this pause in the narration of God’s history, mounting Roman persecution called for Christians to continue witnessing. The Roman Empire would be destroyed, although Christians would continue to suffer for some time.

Revelation 12 begins the second section of the book’s 22 chapters. In this last of three interludes, John pictures a wave of hostility directed against the church by the Romans. Emperor Nero who is portrayed as the antichrist dictates the persecution.

The conflict between Rome and the church is a picture of the conflict between Satan and God. Although the conflict with Rome will be resolved, the conflict between good and evil will continue until end times. The third interlude occurs prior to the vision of the judgment of the bowls—the final outpouring of God’s wrath upon his enemies.


The dragon and the woman (Revelation 12:1-6)

A sign appears in heaven of a pregnant woman about to give birth. An enormous red dragon stands ready to devour the child as soon as it is born. After the woman gives birth to a male child, he is taken away to heaven while the dragon pursues her.

This scene is symbolic of the beginning of the church as Jesus was born, established the church and returned to heaven. Persecution continued against the church. The woman flees into the desert where God protects her. Although the church is persecuted, God will not allow it to be destroyed.


The war in heaven (12:7-12)

The scene shifts to heaven where Michael and his angels defeat the dragon. They hurl the dragon (Satan) along with his angels to earth, where he will be allowed to practice his evil.


The dragon pursues the woman (12:13-18)

The dragon pursues the mother of the male child. This symbolic picture is one of continued Roman persecution of the church. The woman is lifted on the wings of an eagle (deliverance and protection of the church). The dragon spews out water and attempts to drown the woman, symbolic of the wave of hostility directed against the church. The earth opens and swallows the water and the woman isprotected. The dragon turns his anger against the remainder of the woman’s children, representing Nero’s anger against those who have survived his first wave of persecution against the church.


The beast from the sea (13:1-4)

As the dragon stands on the seashore, a beast with seven heads and ten crowns emerges from the sea. The seven heads and ten crowns represent seven Roman emperors who reigned and three lesser rulers who governed for a short time during the existence of the church within the Roman Empire.

The beast resembles composite animals, representative of national powers that had conquered the world. The dragon gives the beast all authority. One of the heads has a fatal wound that is healed. This head represents the power of evil to survive. Men worship the beast (emperor worship) and the dragon that gives him power. The dragon recognizes the beast as all-powerful and asks if anyone can make war against him.


The beast conquers the world (13:5-10)

The beast is given power to slander God and conquer the entire world. He is allowed to persecute the church. Christians are told to remain steadfast in their witnessing.


The coming of the antichrist (13:11-18)

Another beast comes out of the earth. He has two horns like a lamb but speaks like a dragon. This is the antichrist. He makes the entire earth worship the first beast and performs great and miraculous signs. Because of the signs, he isgiven power to act on behalf of the first beast.

He orders worship of the first beast’s image, giving power to the image of the beast to speak. He orders all who will not worship the first beast killed. He orders everyone to receive a mark on the hand or forehead. No one can buy or sell without bearing the mark. The mark is the name of the beast or the number of his name—666. More than likely, the number represents Nero as the antichrist.

This lesson presents a vision of Christ founding the church, which continues to exist after his ascension to heaven. After killing Christ, the Romans attempted to destroy the church. The emergence of Nero as the antichrist, the embodiment of evil and enemy of the church, is a symbolic narrative of historical events that occurred in the first century. Prophetic interpretation pictures events that will occur during the end times. The constant message through all interpretations of the Revelation is one of hope that enables Christians to persevere.

The Christians will continue to be persecuted—even in the midst of the terrible events taking place. They will continue to die. The conflict between the church and Rome is symbolic of the continuing war between good and evil. Rome will be defeated, but evil will continue to exist. The final judgment and defeat of evil will occur at the end times. In the meantime, courage and persistent witness is required of Christians.


Application

We do not face the physical threats of conflict the early Christians did. We do face the threat to our Christian witness of compromise with conflicting secular practices. Compromise will not endanger our lives but it will endanger our influence.


Discussion question

• Do I constantly seek God’s direction and draw upon his strength as I face conflict in my daily Christian walk?


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.




Family Bible Series for July 24: Hold onto Christ if truth is what you seek_71105

Posted: 7/12/05

Family Bible Series for July 24

Hold onto Christ if truth is what you seek

• Colossians 2:1-23

By Mitch Randall

First Baptist Church, Bedford

It is extremely easy to fall into the trap of accepting false truth. From civil religion to oblique views of Christianity, the trap to falsehood is easily tripped by those seeking meaning and purpose in their lives. When desperate people are looking for desperate measures to cope with life’s desperate questions, people are willing to believe anything for validation, or vindication, as some of the cases may be.

In Paul’s letter to the Colossian Christians, we gain a sense of caution and sensitivity in his words. Paul’s letter, while written specifically for the Colossians, was meant to be passed from church to church. The church at Laodicea was close by, most likely established about the same time the church in Colosse was planted. Therefore, the same issues the Colossians faced likely were being debated in the Laodicean church as well.

Paul’s language gives evidence of other teachings merging with the doctrines of Christianity. We must remember the influence Hellenism (the Greek way of thought and life) played within the missionary churches. Hellenism gave credence to polytheism, which flew in the face of monotheism. For polytheists, placing faith in one God was risky business. Why pray to one God, when you could get all your bases covered by praying to them all. The premise behind this way of thinking is there is not one truth combining the universe.

Paul contradicted this by declaring Christ the one and only truth. For Paul, Christ plus nothing was the one truth on which everything hinged. Anything else, even Christ plus something, was dangerous ground. All treasures, knowledge and mysteries are centered in the person of Jesus. Practicing our faith with anything other than Christ as Lord demeans our faith to the point of destruction.

However, many in our world have added to faith in Christ. There are those who believe faith cannot be practiced properly without the gift of tongues. There are those who believe one is not a true believer if they do not prescribe to their fundamentals of faith. There are those who believe one cannot separate faith and politics, professing allegiance to political parties as proof. Just as in Paul’s day, there are those seeking addendums to faith.

In Colossians 2:8, Paul writes, “See to it that no one takes you captive through philosophy and empty deceit, according to human tradition, according to the elemental spirits of the universe, and not according to Christ.” The Greek word for “captive,” means to prey upon someone’s spirituality to lead them astray. In other words, there are people in the world looking to advance their own agendas at the expense of genuine people seeking faith in Christ. They strive to hold people captive to their belief system rather than liberating people in Christ.

The idea behind this way of persuasion drives a philosophy of empty deceit. Peeled back to its very core, this life philosophy is a hollow core of nothingness. There is nothing to build upon other than shallow thoughts created from the worldly perspectives of men. Human traditions and spirits derived from this universe lead to a false hope sold wrapped in the idea of spiritualism. Yet any time Christ is de-emphasized, there is a tendency to abandon him for the hope of something else.

Paul condemns this as heresy. Anything short of Christ Jesus is not acceptable to Paul. Jesus is the cornerstone for belief. If not, that particular wall of thought faces certain doom. Jesus is the one truth everything else is measured by. Jesus is the way, the truth and the life.


Discussion questions

• Define truth. Is there one truth within the universe?

• Why is finding truth important to our lives?

• What do we build upon the truth?



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.




Explore the BIble Series for July 24: Make no mistake, God always is faithful_71105

Posted: 7/12/05

Explore the Bible Series for July 24

Make no mistake, God always is faithful

• Ezekiel 38-39

By Dennis Tucker

Truett Seminary, Waco

Among the numerous difficult and obscure texts in the book of Ezekiel, there is little doubt chapters 38-39 are among the most difficult. Questions abound concerning the identity of Gog and the nature of the battle between Gog and Israel’s God. Other questions center on the time and circumstance of such a battle.

Although such questions are interesting, they have led to much speculation, and in the end, result in answers that are only possibilities at best. For example, the identity of Gog has occupied an inordinate amount of attention. Some have attempted to assign his identity to a contemporary of Ezekiel such as Nebuchadnezzar, while others have thought it only a personification of evil (the Sumerian word for “darkness” is gûg).

There also are other associations with legendary figures from other cultures (the most famous is a Lydian king who ruled from 680-650 B.C. named Gyges). Others have sought to read Ezekiel 38-39 in conjunction with Revelation 20, suggesting both texts speak to the same event, and hence the same characters.

The original identity of Gog from Magog will most likely remain a mystery—and in some ways, the mysterious cloud surrounding the identity of Gog actually accentuates the power of the story. To concentrate only on the identity of Gog is to suggest in some part that the story is actually about Gog. But such is not the case. Gog is merely a character—the story is about the God of the Israelites. Whether one can identify Gog is not the question—the question is whether one knows the Yahweh God of Israel.

A second area of speculation pertaining to this text concerns the date of such a battle. Again, speculation can lead us from the primary emphasis in the text. The text was written specifically to exiles living in Babylon—those who were facing immediate crisis.

And although the text mentions phrases such as “in the days to come” (38:16), “at that time” (v. 17), and “in that day” (v. 18), we must be careful not to import our own eschatological (“end times”) beliefs into the text. All of these phrases were used by earlier prophets when speaking of the coming “Day of Yahweh”—it was a day in which Yahweh would mete out justice. These phrases would have been familiar to those who first heard Ezekiel’s words—and they would have represented a word of comfort to those in exile.

And as with the earlier prophets, Ezekiel was not concerned with a date—the Day of Yahweh was “pushed out” onto a future horizon. The question was not whether one knew the date—it was whether one knew this God who would be coming.

A persistent fear among those who experienced the exile appears to be whether God is still God—or is he some lesser deity that has fallen victim to the powers of the Babylonian gods? Ezekiel attempts to allay the fears of those who wondered about their God. He speaks of a future time when Israel has returned home, living in a city without walls, bars or gates (v. 11). Although they are a restored people, they also are a vulnerable people, unable to prevent the unwanted advances of neighboring enemies. It is at this time that God chooses to send in the army of Gog.

Had the vision of this coming battle depicted Israel as a mighty nation, prepared to repel the advances of an invading army it would have offered some assurance that Israel would be restored and able to protect itself. In this vision, however, Israel is restored, but unable to act on its own behalf—it is defenseless. Yet it is just at that moment that God announces “my wrath shall be aroused” (v. 18). God’s people can do nothing but rely on the Holy One of Israel (39:7)—to believe that the God who redeemed them once will be the same God who redeems them even now.

The final scene depicts a sacrificial (and somewhat gruesome) feast (39:17-20). The scene depicts God and his people together at the feast table—the vulnerable people alongside the capable God. It stands as a testimony of God’s power to redeem and preserve his people and to the victorious work of God on behalf of those whom he loves.

The vision of Gog from Magog and the ensuing battle actually serve as a helpful resource for theological reflection. Although the text often is folded into a discussion of the end times, such an approach may fail to appropriate the theological vigor of the text. The text suggests that in our most vulnerable moments—in moments when it appears we have no hope—we still have the Holy One of Israel.

In a pragmatic and narcissistic world, we are lead to believe we must do all things for ourselves. Ezekiel 38-39 reminds us that perhaps God is known greatest when we have shelved our pragmatic and narcissistic ways—when we are like Israel, without bars and gates, but a vulnerable people. In those moments when we discover we cannot do all things for ourselves, we will find there is One Greater.


Discussion question

• When you need to recall God’s faithfulness, what pictures spring to mind?


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.




CBF plans to start 400 Hispanic churches_71105

Posted: 7/11/05

CBF plans to start 400 Hispanic churches

By Analiz Gonzalez

Associated Baptist Press

GRAPEVINE (ABP)—Hispanics are coming to the United States in droves, and in response, the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship plans to plant Hispanic churches in droves.

The CBF’s Hispanic Initiative aims to start 400 new Hispanic congregations in the United States within eight years, in response to the nation’s fastest-growing ethnic group.

CBF participants got a taste of this growing diversity in Baptist life during their annual general assembly in Grapevine. Albert Reyes, president of the Baptist General Convention of Texas, preached the opening-night sermon. He noted the mission fields—Hispanic and otherwise—have come to Texas, where Anglos are no longer in the majority.

Preaching from Matthew 22:34-40 on Christians’ responsibility to love God and neighbor, Reyes noted how the concept of “neighbor” has changed since Jesus’ time and culture.

“The definition of ‘neighbor’ has changed thanks to CNN—you now know everyone’s business,” Reyes said. “The whole world is our neighbor. We are in a global village.”

But one doesn’t have to watch CNN to find neighbors from different cultures, Reyes added.

“I sometimes wonder if I might be at a world missions conference when I go to the mall and see people dressed up in costumes from all around the world,” he said. “The nations of the world have come to us. The peoples of the world have streamed to us. We now live in one of the greatest mission fields in the history of the world.”

CBF’s plan is to partner with Texas Baptist Hispanic church leaders who will mentor non-Hispanic Baptists nationwide who are interested in starting Spanish-speaking congregations. The plan also involves training Hispanic leaders interested in ministering to their own people.

The San Antonio-based Baptist University of the Americas, where Reyes serves as president, will work with the Hispanic Baptist Convention of Texas and CBF to spearhead the initiative.

The school has over 20 extensions throughout the United States that offer Hispanics the opportunity to get ministry leadership training and the chance to earn a high-school-equivalency degree. Those who attend the extension centers can go on to plant a church or further their education at a higher institution.

Luis Sara, who attended the CBF General Assembly, went to Baptist University of the Americas, obtained his GED and bachelor’s degree, and is now working on obtaining a master’s degree at another Texas Baptist school, Hardin-Simmons University.

Sara went on to become active in a Hispanic mission that grew from 12 members to about 65 since he joined.

Bernie Morega, a CBF volunteer and Hispanic mission pastor, said the future is bright for Hispanic Baptists. Last year, less than 25 people attended the CBF Hispanic Network during the general assembly. This year 126 were present.

“In the next five or 10 years, they are not going to look at you as whether or not you are Latino,” he told the gathering. Morega added he has been drawn to CBF from its earliest days because he feels the group doesn’t view him as a “Latino”—merely a ministry category—but rather, sees him as fully a Baptist partner in ministry.

With the help of CBF, Hispanics will have more opportunities to lead churches—both predominantly Latino ones and Anglo or mixed congregations, he said.

“I believe CBF will open the doors for us,” Morega said. “I hope that I will see (these changes) in my lifetime.”

Reaching that point, Reyes said, will require both Latinos and others who have been steeped in their own culture to learn new ones.

“I think if we’re to love the world next door, we have to become social anthropologists. We have to become cultural anthropologists.We have to learn other cultures,” he said. “You can’t get accurate cultural knowledge apart from friendship—and those two things produce wisdom.”


With additional reporting by Robert Marus of Associated Baptist Press




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.




Lotz urges church to return to faith of ‘pre-Christendom’_71105

Posted: 7/11/05

Lotz urges church to return
to faith of 'pre-Christendom'

By Tony Cartledge

North Carolina Biblical Recorder

GRAPEVINE (ABP)—Participants in the Baptist World Alliance “belong together because we belong to Christ,” Denton Lotz told more than 500 supporters at a dinner in Grapevine celebrating the global Baptist group’s 100th anniversary.

The dinner preceded the annual general assembly of the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship. CBF was accepted as an official BWA member body in 2004, a factor that contributed to the Southern Baptist Convention’s decision to withdraw from BWA. Since then, state conventions in Texas and Virginia have applied for full BWA membership.

Contributions from CBF, the Baptist General Convention of Texas, the Baptist General Association of Virginia, and other supporters have “more than made up” for the loss of funds from the SBC, once BWA’s largest contributor, Lotz said.

Taking a cue from Philippians 4:8, Lotz said he wanted to focus on positive things, citing Baptist success stories from Nigeria, Cuba, Bulgaria, Turkey, Russia, Burma, and China—places where Baptist work is growing despite difficulties and sometimes persecution.

The problem with Baptists in North America and Europe is that “we think we’re living in Christendom, but we’re not,” Lotz said. Christendom tends to be too cozy with the government, too intellectual and out of touch with genuine expressions of faith, he said. Pentacostalism is the fastest-growing form of Christianity in the world, he said, largely because it is more open to New Testament expressions of faith.

“We need to go back to pre-Christendom,” Lotz said, to follow the lead of the earliest Christians, before the church institutionalized religion.

North American and European Baptists sometimes act as if they are ashamed to be Baptist, Lotz said, while Third World Baptists are proud to be distinctively Baptist.

“The future of Baptists is to discover our roots and who we are,” Lotz said.

Lotz was introduced by CBF Coordinator Daniel Vestal, who said, “We want to be good members” of BWA.

Baptist World Aid director Paul Montacute talked about disaster-relief efforts coordinated by the BWA humanitarian arm in the wake of last December’s Indian Ocean tsunamis. BWA partners raised more than $20 million for the effort, he said, noting that years of continuing recovery work are needed in the area. Montacute also spoke of “silent tsunamis” of death from HIV/AIDS and from famine in sub-Saharan Africa, and of deadly persecution of Christians in places like Sudan, Uganda and the Congo.

Baptists must help, not only with funds, “but by taking political action,” he 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.




Commentary by Brett Younger: Encountering Evil_71105

Posted: 7/11/05

COMMENTARY:
Encountering Evil

By Brett Younger

On Thursday morning, July 7, my family boarded the Eurostar, the train that goes under the English Channel, in Paris. Onboard, we planned our last day in England—the underground to the hotel, Madame Tussaud’s, and The Lion King. An hour before we were to arrive, cell phones started ringing. People all over the train were whispering anxiously—in French. My wife, Carol, asked the woman across from her to explain, but all we could understand was “le bomb.”

"I still feel overwhelmed with sadness at what happened in London, but I am partially grateful that I was there."

When we got to London, the scene was surreal. Police went through our train looking for a passenger who had made a suspicious phone call. Before they let us leave, they explained that several bombs had gone off in the subways. Sirens were blaring. Ambulances were tearing past. One rumor was that 200 people were already dead. In the chaos and confusion, emergency officials had no advice as to where we should go or what we should do. The underground and buses were shut down.

We walked to a hotel, where we were told that the nearest vacancies were 30 miles away. We joined a bizarre exodus of tens of thousands of frightened refugees walking out of the city. After wandering for awhile, we were lucky to get to share a taxi to the airport with a Nigerian financier who kept saying, “This is a very bad day.” The cab driver insisted: “It had to happen. We knew it was coming.”

We listened in silence to the horrible news on the radio. Traffic wasn’t moving, so we had a long time to hear the stories and imagine the horror. People were calling in to tell of wounded victims staggering out of the darkness of the tube stations gasping for breath. People were screaming: “We are dying in here! Help us!”

When his subway station was closed, one man chose to take the No. 30 bus and then was injured in the explosion that sheared off the top half of the bus. Shards of glass and metal splattered across the road. People dripped with blood. Doctors rushed from victim to victim. Wives cried for their missing husbands. Strangers hugged.

That night on the news and the next morning in the papers there were, of course, politicians trying to make themselves look good—“We will not be intimidated!”—but reactions also included eloquent words of sorrow, compassion and courage.

Ken Livingstone, mayor of London, spoke movingly of the tragedy: “This was not a terrorist attack against the mighty or the powerful. It is not aimed at presidents or prime ministers. It was aimed at ordinary working-class Londoners.”

The archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, was concerned about violence against Muslims: “I have spent this morning with Muslim friends, and we’re all as one in our condemnation of this evil and in our shared sense of care and compassion of those affected in whatever way.”

Robert Fisk, a columnist for The Independent, was one of many who courageously questioned how to respond to hate: “It is easy for Tony Blair to call yesterday’s bombings ‘barbaric’—of course, they were—but what were the civilian deaths of the invasion of Iraq in 2003 and the children torn apart by cluster bombs? When they die, it is ‘collateral damage’ when ‘we’ die, it is ‘barbaric terrorism.’”

Sorrow, compassion and courage are the responses to which God calls us when we encounter unthinkable evil. I still feel overwhelmed with sadness at what happened in London, but I am partially grateful that I was there. When I read about the terror that grips much of our world, it won’t seem quite so far away. I pray that I will feel more of the sorrow, compassion and courage that God feels.


Brett Younger is senior pastor of Broadway Baptist Church in Fort Worth, 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.




CBF workshop encourages college ministers to persevere_71105

Posted: 7/11/05

CBF workshop encourages
college ministers to persevere

By Analiz Gonzalez

Associated Baptist Press

GRAPEVINE (ABP)—“Churches need to do better jobs connecting with college students and keeping them in the denomination,” former college minister Ryan Clark told a Cooperative Baptist Fellowship workshop.

“Students often go to college and don't get connected to a church,” he said.

Helping college students move into their dorms or inviting them to get involved in the church worship team can help draw them into the fold, Clark added. He also stressed the importance of communicating church activities through fliers, calendars and newsletters to keep those who are interested informed, and said free luncheons draw in students in search of a free meal.

David McDuram, college minister at First Baptist Church of Arlington, encouraged churches with small college groups to persevere. “Free yourself (from) beating yourself up over not having 600 students. … (It's OK to) try and fail,” McDuram said.

Even if the group is small, it is important for children to know there will be a ministry for them when they start college, he insisted.

Church newsletters keep college students informed when they go to school out of town, he noted. Recreational and mission trips for college students help unite the group.

Clark said college ministries can reach out to more students if they become recognized by the university as an official organization. Once formally recognized, the group can set up information booths during events like orientation and make some contacts.

According to the “M Collegiate Resource,” a newsletter issued by McAfee School of Theology, certain things are needed to become a campus organization: a faculty sponsor; a constitution and bylaws; identified student leadership; and meeting times, description of purpose, and instructions on becoming a member.

The newsletter also said relationships are essential to college ministry. “A student will go to your church regardless (almost) of worship style, if they have a personal connection and feel at home in your church,” it said.

The newsletter said it's also good for college ministers to have conversations with students outside the church setting.


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.




United Church of Christ endorses same-sex marriage_71105

Posted: 7/11/05

United Church of Christ
endorses same-sex marriage

By Robert Marus

Associated Baptist Press

ATLANTA (ABP)—Leaders of the United Church of Christ voted overwhelmingly July 4 to endorse same-sex civil marriage and encourage their local congregations to extend religious marriage to gay couples.

Meeting in Atlanta, about 1,000 delegates to the denomination’s General Synod overwhelmingly approved the measure on a show-of-hands vote, according to a release from the denomination.

The resolution is the first action fully supporting same-sex marriage by any major Christian denomination in the United States. Several others, including the Southern Baptist Convention, have publicly opposed the practice.

A preamble to the resolution noted that “Scripture itself, along with the global human experience, offers many different views of family and how family is to be defined. This unfolding revelation and understanding needs to be weighed carefully by people of faith considering the issue of equal marriage rights for couples regardless of gender. Jesus radically challenged his traditional cultural roles and concepts of family life.”

It continued, “Civil/legal marriage carries with it significant access to institutional support, rights and benefits. There are more than 1,400 such rights and benefits in the federal statutes alone. Efforts to ban civil marriage to couples based on gender denies them and their children access to these rights and benefits and thus undermines the civil liberties of these couples, putting them and their children at risk.”

It also called on its local congregations to offer religious marriage ceremonies regardless of gender. Because of the UCC's congregational government style, the action is not binding on local congregations.

The 1.3 million-member denomination has its roots in two Reformed religious traditions—the Puritan Congregationalists who were among America's first settlers, and German Protestant immigrants who settled in the Midwest in the 1800s. It is not related to the much more conservative Church of Christ movement.

The UCC has developed a reputation for being the most socially liberal of the nation's historic Protestant denominations—particularly on the issues of race relations, women in church leadership and sexuality. For more than 30 years, UCC officials have passed resolutions supportive of gay rights.

However, in a nod to the fact the recent decision may cause a conservative minority to leave the UCC, delegates amended the resolution to acknowledge “the pain and struggle (its) passage will engender.”

The leader of a conservative movement in the denomination released a statement to the media condemning the resolution shortly after its passage.

The UCC “tragically declared independence from the ecumenical Christian church worldwide, and the truth of God's Word,” said David Runnion-Bareford, executive director of the UCC Biblical Witness Fellowship. “Marriage between one man and one woman is a reality established by God in creation and reflected in the church itself. This resolution does not validate same-sex relationships, but only invalidates and de-legitimizes the UCC as a religious body.”


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