2006 Archives
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Acton School a hot commodity in business education
Posted: 9/29/06
Acton School a hot commodity
in business educationBy George Henson
Staff Writer
AUSTIN—The Acton School of Business may be little-known among Texas Baptists, but Hardin-Simmons University’s Austin campus has become a hot commodity in the world of business education.
09/29/2006 - By John Rutledge
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Diplomats need to know religion
Posted: 9/29/06
Diplomats need to know religion
By Kim Lawton
Religion & Ethics NewsWeekly
NEW YORK (RNS)—Former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright is breaking ranks with the conventional wisdom of her profession.
Diplomats traditionally were taught to keep far away from potentially controversial subjects like religion, she said. But now, Albright is making a high-profile plea that religion play a more prominent role both in the making of foreign policy and in the training diplomats receive.
Former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, seen here at a recent book-signing, says religion should play a greater role in foreign affairs and diplomacy. (RNS photo courtesy of Religion & Ethics NewsWeekly) 09/29/2006 - By John Rutledge
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Around the State
Posted: 9/29/06
Around the State
• Recording artist Randy Travis will bring an inspirational concert to the University of Mary Hardin-Baylor Oct. 7 at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $30 and can be purchased in advance by calling (254) 295-5444.
• Reid Ryan, founder and CEO of the Round Rock Express and Corpus Christi Hooks minor league baseball clubs, will speak at the Oct. 9 11 a.m. chapel service at the University of Mary Hardin-Baylor.
The Heights Baptist Church in Richardson went offsite for its “Aloha, with Love” Vacation Bible School. The church held its VBS from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. each evening after the local water park closed for the day. The curriculum was centered on Bible stories with water themes. The church reported an increase in attendance of more than 100 children over last year, and was especially pleased to have reached more older children. Pictured is Matthew McBrayer crossing a water obstacle course. • Houston Baptist University’s College of Nursing will offer an international sprituality and health conference Oct. 12. Religious traditions and the relationship of these traditions to providing culturally sensitive nursing care to members of a diverse community will be identified. Practices in relation to caring for the ill, birthing and dying process in Muslim, Jewish, Buddhist and Hindu faith traditions will be explained.
09/29/2006 - By John Rutledge
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Associational changes take on a variety of forms
Posted: 9/29/06
Associational changes take on a variety of forms
By John Hall
Texas Baptist Communications
“The world is changing. Churches are changing. So, why would Baptist associations be any different?” some observers of Baptist life have asked.
09/29/2006 - By John Rutledge
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Rapid change likely ahead for Baptist associations
Posted: 9/29/06
Rapid change likely ahead for Baptist associations
By George Henson
Staff Writer
Associations have led a rollercoaster existence throughout their history, and their future should to prove just as exciting, according to Paul Stripling, executive director emeritus of Waco Regional Baptist Network and author of Turning Points in the History of Baptist Associations in America.
Stripling wrote the book at the invitation of the Southern Baptist Associational Directors of Missions task force for the commemoration of the 300th anniversary next year of Baptist associations.
Paul Stripling 09/29/2006 - By John Rutledge
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Christian teens likely to become apathetic 20-somethings
Posted: 9/29/06
Christian teens likely to become
apathetic 20-somethingsBy Hannah Elliott
Associated Baptist Press
DALLAS (ABP)—Six out of 10 teens involved in a church probably will not continue their spiritual commitment into early adulthood, according to research by the Barna Group.
09/29/2006 - By John Rutledge
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Book Reviews
Posted: 9/29/06
Book Reviews
Terrify No More by Gary A. Haugen with Gregg Hunter (W Publishing Group)
According to National Geographic, about 27 million slaves live in our modern-day world. These slaves range from girls as young as 5 years old, forced to sell their bodies in the sex-trafficking underworld, to whole families bound to toil away their lives making bricks or cigarettes in South Asia and other regions.
The four-fold purpose of International Justice Mission and its teams of investigators, undercover operatives and attorneys is to venture into the shady corners of the globe to rescue people helpless and oppressed by bondage, to bring the perpetrators of abuse to justice, to minister to the victims through compassionate aftercare and to change communities so the injustices no longer are acceptable.
What are you reading that other Texas Baptists would find helpful? Send suggestions and reviews to books@baptiststandard.com. Join Gary Haugen, International Justice Mission’s president and founder, as he takes readers through both heart-breaking and exciting real-life journeys into the darkness of evil to radiate the light of God’s truth and grace by “defending the fatherless and the oppressed in order that man, who is of the earth, may terrify no more” (Psalm 10:18).
09/29/2006 - By John Rutledge
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2nd Opinion: Associations to celebrate milestone
Posted: 9/29/06
2nd Opinion:
Associations to celebrate milestoneBy Stephen Parks & Lynn Parks
Next year marks the 300th anniversary of the first Baptist association in America, Philadelphia Baptist Association, formed in 1707. Baptists created associations to establish doctrinal parameters and fellowship with like-minded believers. Associations provided advice on Baptist practices, helped churches find credentialed ministers and safeguarded doctrinal and ethical integrity. They enabled churches to cooperate geographically in mission, educational and benevolence ventures. For example, Philadelphia Association started Brown University. Philadelphia Association has been the prototype for Southern Baptist associations and conventions since 1707.
By the late 1700s, associations focused on mission work, and new churches sprung up all along the Atlantic seaboard and even west of the Alleghenies. In 1792, in England, William Carey proposed his association send Baptist missionaries to “heathen” populations, and the modern missionary movement was born.
Eventually, Baptists realized they needed larger networks to support expanding mission and benevolence projects. One avenue, missionary societies, received support primarily from individuals. The other avenue was larger associations of churches. So, three associations in South Carolina sent delegates to form the first state convention in 1821. In 1845, the Southern Baptist Convention was formed. Since that time, Southern Baptists have followed the model of cooperation established by associations rather than a societal model.
09/29/2006 - By John Rutledge
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Counseling center a boon to Bluebonnet pastors, churches
Posted: 9/29/06
Counseling center a boon to
Bluebonnet pastors, churchesBy George Henson
Staff Writer
NEW BRAUNFELS—Director of Missions J.K. Minton believes pastors shouldn’t be counselors. And unlike most places, pastors in Bluebonnet Baptist Association no longer have to serve in a role for which many feel neither prepared nor called.
“For many years, I have believed and preached that pastors had no business in the counseling business,” he said. “We are not qualified, and that is not our calling. Such pastoral counseling is ineffective and fraught with peril, since the great majority of counselees are women. Enough pastors have slipped into immorality by forming emotional relationships with women during pastoral counseling.
Judy Walter directs the Oakwood Counseling Center in New Braunfels, handling referrals from Bluebonnet Baptist Association churches. (Photo by George Henson) 09/29/2006 - By John Rutledge
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DOWN HOME: Language faintly resembles English
Posted: 9/29/06
DOWN HOME:
Language faintly resembles EnglishThe people who made our garage-door opener probably are very smart. And, after five years and almost 115,000 miles of testing their product, I’d say the people who built my car are keenly intelligent.
Unfortunately, English is a language with which they are only vaguely familiar.
This revelation came to me the other night, as I sat in my car, diligently decoding the owner’s manual, then climbing up a ladder to decipher the instructions written on the side of the garage-door opener.
My problem started shortly after Joanna and I bought our new (to us) home and realized we had only one remote control for the door opener. Fortunately—or so I thought—my car has three buttons on the driver’s sun visor that can be “trained” to tell a garage door to open.
09/29/2006 - By John Rutledge
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EDITORIAL: Take steps to reduce terrorist threat
Posted: 9/29/06
EDITORIAL:
Take steps to reduce terrorist threatDid you ever think we would look back at the Cold War as something akin to the good ol’ days?
As a young seminary student, I participated in a peacemaking group. In addition to efforts to ease racial tensions in our community, our primary focus was the nuclear-freeze movement. We wanted to stop proliferation of nuclear warheads by the United States and the Soviet Union. The sobering realization that both countries could annihilate the human race many times over motivated us to write letters to Congress, speak up for arms reduction, and urge Christians and other citizens to join our cause and advocate for peace. As a first-time father, I felt frightened to bring a child into a world where simple miscommunication, to say nothing of malice and aggression, could usher “nuclear winter” across the planet.
A generation later, the Soviet Union has fallen. My children are grown. The “peace movement” is quieter. And, although many of those warheads still exist, most Americans and Russians don’t think much about the Kremlin-to-the-White-House nuclear hotline.
Frankly, I miss the Cold War. I don’t want to go back. But I’d trade today’s terrorism tinderbox for yesterday’s superpower standoff—in the time it takes a suicide bomber to blow himself and his victims to Kingdom Come.
09/29/2006 - By John Rutledge