Storylist for 5/15/06 issue

Storylist for week of 5/15/06

TAKE ME TO: Top Story |  Texas |  Opinion |  Baptists |  Faith in Action |  Faith & Culture |  Book Reviews |  Classifieds  |  Departments  |  Bible Study



Frank Page, South Carolina pastor, to face Floyd in SBC race

Brownsville attorney will lead investigation into Valley funding

Rebecca St. James single 'Wait for Me' focuses on sexual purity

Artist's mural places San Antonio children on Noah's Ark

Classes in world religions increase respect for religious freedom, study shows

Da Vinci Code's premise based on a hoax, scholars say

Classes in world religions increase respect for religious freedom, study shows

Bill amended to allow chaplains freedom to pray according to conscience

Paige Patterson endorses Floyd for SBC president

Pat Robertson labels Americans United 'communist'

Critics note Floyd's stingy CP giving, controversial ministry innovations

Tennessee Baptists reject Belmont's offer; lawsuit for control looms

Fellow IMB trustee criticizes Burleson

Dobbses say IMB response 'inaccurate'




Called to ministry


Women in Ministry
Called to ministry: Big dreams, openness to God's calling guide student

Baptist women in ministry face ongoing challenges

Dangerous ground transformed by church


Buckner sends shoes to children orphaned by hostage massacre

Carpenter's Helpers meet neighbors' needs

Students share gospel on Galveston Island

Ex-offender ministry yields transformation

Texans nominated for SBC committees

On the Move

Around the State

Texas Tidbits


Elders—common title, different definitions

Herschel Hobbs on church governance

Who has authority to make decisions for a church?

Small churches adapt to survive

Baptist Briefs


Baptists help after tornado


Christians called on to counter Da Vinci Code claims

Bible reading on rise, survey reveals


Reviewed in this issue: Finding Our Way Home: Turning Back to What Matters Most by Mark R. McMinn, Seventeen Roadblocks on the Highway of Life: And How to Move Around Them by Brian Harbour and Holy Blood, Holy Grail: The Secret History of Jesus, The Shocking Legacy of the Grail by Michael Baigent, Richard Leigh and Henry Lincoln.


Cartoon

Classified Ads

Texas Baptist Forum

Around the State

On the Move


EDITORIAL: Is it Code or evangelistic opportunity?

DOWN HOME: Call to daughter transcends time

TOGETHER: Texas Baptist students go into world

2nd Opinion: ‘Put our money where your mouth is'

RIGHT of WRONG? Insisting on retirement package

Texas Baptist Forum

Cybercolumn by Berry Simpson: Stuck


BaptistWay Bible Series for May 14: Can right motives lead to wrong actions?

Family Bible Series for May 14: Hannah offers insight into difficult situations

Explore the Bible Series for May 14: Everyone needs hope, encouragement

BaptistWay Bible Series for May 21: Momentary delight, lifelong disaster

Family Bible Series for May 21: No time like the present to begin serving

Explore the Bible Series for May 21: Prayer and fasting should be followed by action

Updates • Tennessee Baptists reject Belmont's offer; lawsuit for control looms

Fellow IMB trustee criticizes Burleson

Dobbses say IMB response 'inaccurate'

Previously Posted
IMB reinstates missionary couple

School allows Christians equal access

NAMB trustees regroup, move on after Reccord's resignation

Memphis Declaration voices dissatisfaction

U.S. allies violate human rights

Baptist foster care continues in troubled Sri Lanka

Feeding the hungry disarms terrorists, author insists

Law mandates training for camp workers

Attorney will guide BGCT church-starting investigation


• See complete list of articles from our 5/01 2006 issue here.




Frank Page, South Carolina pastor, to face Floyd in SBC race

Posted: 5/19/06

Frank Page, South Carolina
pastor, to face Floyd in SBC race

By Greg Warner & Robert Marus

Associated Baptist Press

TAYLORS, S.C. (ABP)—Frank Page, a South Carolina pastor with a record of strong financial support of the denomination’s budget, reportedly will be nominated for Southern Baptist Convention president next month.

Page’s decision ensures that messengers to the June 13-14 annual convention will have a choice between two distinct visions for the SBC’s future. It also means Wade Burleson, widely speculated as a candidate for the post, will not be nominated.

Page is expected to face Arkansas pastor Ronnie Floyd, who is the favorite of the SBC’s established leadership, which has controlled the presidency for 27 years. But Floyd has been criticized for his church’s weak support of the Cooperative Program, the SBC’s central budget that supports the denomination’s ministries and agencies.

First Baptist Church of Springdale, Ark., where Floyd has been pastor for 20 years, gave $32,000—or 0.27 percent of its $12 million in undesignated receipts—to the Cooperative Program last year. During the same period, First Baptist Church of Taylors, S.C., where Page is pastor, gave $535,000—or 12.1 percent—of its $4.4 million in undesignated receipts.

A blue-ribbon SBC panel, alarmed by sluggish CP giving, is calling for Southern Baptists to elect officers who represent churches that contribute at least 10 percent.

Page was unavailable May 19 but his staff confirmed his decision. Burleson said he talked to Page earlier in the day. "He's going to allow his name to be nominated," Burleson, pastor of Emmanuel Baptist Church in Enid, Okla., told Associated Baptist Press.

Burlseon has been an outspoken advocate for the need of new leaders in the SBC who will be more inclusive of conservatives with different views and not enforce narrow parameters of “conformity.” Burleson said recently he would be nominated for president if a candidate did not arise who was committed to the same goals.

“Because Frank is announcing that he will be a candidate for the presidential nomination, I stand by what I said,” Burleson said in an interview. “The conversations I have had with Frank have been wonderful,” he added, suggesting Page will seek the same goals Burleson has articulated.

“We must stop narrowing the parameters of cooperation in the area of missions and evangelism,” Burleson wrote in a May 16 blog posting. “We cannot, we must not, define Southern Baptists in more narrow terms than our Baptist Faith and Message, and more importantly, we cannot disenfranchise committed, conservative Southern Baptists who hold to the integrity of the Scriptures but differ on the interpretations of minor doctrines of the sacred text.”

This will be the first time since 1994 that the SBC presidency has been seriously contested, with at least two candidates announced ahead of time.

Page was courted as a candidate by Burleson and other conservatives eager for a change in the SBC’s direction. As recently as May 16, Page declined the nomination.

“I did not have a peace about it, and I can’t move forward if I don’t have that,” he said.

It is not known what factors changed his mind. Staff members at Page’s church did not comment on the situation May 19.

Page’s church in Taylors, located in the Greenville-Spartanburg area of upstate South Carolina, has an average weekly attendance of about 2,000. It gave $535,000 to the Cooperative Program through the South Carolina Baptist Convention in 2005—or 12.1 percent of its undesignated budget of $4,407,392.

Floyd’s Springdale church, located in the fast-growing Fayetteville-Springdale-Bentonville-Rogers area of northwest Arkansas, has an average Sunday morning attendance of about 7,000.

Floyd already has won the endorsements of three SBC seminary presidents—Paige Patterson of Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary; Danny Akin of Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary; and Al Mohler of Southern Baptist Theological Seminary—all loyal to the current SBC leadership. The endorsements prompted a rare warning from Morris Chapman, the SBC’s chief executive, who said it is inappropriate for agency leaders to become involved in SBC politics.

The church gave $32,000 through the Arkansas Baptist State Convention to the Cooperative Program last year, or one-fourth of 1 percent of its undesignated receipts of $11,952,137. According to church leaders, the congregation gave an additional $189,000—about 1.8 percent of undesignated receipts—directly to the Southern Baptist Convention’s budget, bypassing the state convention, and another $300,000 to “Southern Baptist causes,” including $25,000 to SBC seminaries.


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 May 28: A parent’s worst nightmare

Posted: 5/17/06

BaptistWay Bible Series for May 28

A parent’s worst nightmare

• 2 Samuel 13:20-21, 30-33; 14:25-15:10; 18:6-15, 33

By Joseph Matos

Dallas Baptist University, Dallas

2 Samuel’s record of the fallout following David’s sin against Uriah and Bathsheba brings the trifecta of bad parenting by otherwise exceptional leaders to completion.

Recall Eli. He was a good priest and judge over Israel, even serving as mentor to young Samuel. Despite that, his two sons were corrupt (1 Samuel 2).

Then Samuel grew up and was a model judge and priest as well. He even went on to anoint the first two kings of Israel. Yet, like Eli before him, he could not control his own sons. In fact, one of the reasons the people of Israel clamored for a king was the prospect of Samuel’s sons succeeding him (1 Samuel 8:1-6).

Now we see David. He would go down in history as Israel’s model king because of his devotion to Yahweh. However, with respect to his relationship with his children, he followed in the footsteps of Eli and Samuel. They were as ineffective in their private family lives as they were effective in their public ministries. Such incongruence is beyond explanation.

Ironically, Saul, ineffective as a leader, was the father of Jonathan, one of the most loyal and trustworthy people in the Old Testament. That is equally difficult to explain.

In his rebuke of David after the Bathsheba/Uriah incident, Nathan declared to him the consequences (2 Samuel 12:10-12, 14). First, “the sword will never depart from your house” (v. 10). Second, the Lord said through Nathan, “Out of your own household I am going to bring calamity upon you” (v. 11). Third, if that were not enough, the Lord continued: one who was close to David would take David’s wives and sleep with them out in the open. The Lord remarked: “You did it in secret, but I will do this thing in broad daylight before all Israel” (vv. 11-12).

On hearing this, David confessed his sin. As a result, Nathan assured him the Lord had taken away his sin, and his life would be spared. But because David’s actions resulted in utter contempt for the Lord, the son conceived from the union between David and Bathsheba would die (vv. 13-14).

David was forgiven, but the consequences were not removed. The son soon died. From there, without specifying which action corresponded to which prediction, 2 Samuel 13-19 report the fulfillment of the above declarations.


Amnon and Tamar

The first incident illustrating the chaotic situation in David’s household was Amnon’s rape of Tamar (chapter 13). She was Absalom’s full sister, but Amnon’s half-sister. Amnon lusted after her for some time before finally deceiving her and taking her to bed. Absalom offered words of comfort and then took her into his own home. Still, Tamar was “a desolate woman” (v. 20). David became “furious” (v. 21), but apparently did nothing else about it.

This mirrors the actions of many parents. Because of their own mistakes, they feel ill-equipped or hypocritical in bringing correction to their children. Does this explain David’s lack of response?


Absalom and Amnon

Though he took a long time to act (two years), Absalom finally exacted revenge on Amnon for his violation of Tamar. His ploy was to get David and his sons, including Amnon, to attend a festival he was hosting. David refused to go but blessed him and, at Absalom’s pleadings, permitted Amnon to attend. David was protective of Amnon since he was the heir apparent. Absalom’s men subsequently struck down Amnon at his orders. David’s other sons fled.

When the report of Amnon’s death got back to David, Absalom fled.


Absalom and David

What followed the next several years was division between Absalom and David. Absalom lived in virtual exile. After two years, seeming reconciliation between them ensued. But it was a tense reunion. Absalom had returned; but he used this as opportunity to undermine the authority of his father. He campaigned at the city gate to hear the peoples’ cases, stating no representative of David was available to do so. After two more years, Absalom gained the affection of the people of Israel and organized a coup (2 Samuel 14:25-15:10).

This time, David fled. He fled with his officials and his household, but he left his concubines behind (15:14-16). Ahithophel, longtime advisor to David, defected to Absalom’s side. Ahithophel then advised Absalom to sleep with the concubines David left behind. Absalom followed the advice, sleeping with the women in a tent pitched on the roof of the palace. By this act, he communicated to Israel that he had successfully replaced David (16:15-22) and fulfilled in literal fashion Nathan’s prophecy to David.


Absalom’s Death

All this culminated in a final battle between the armies of David and Absalom. David’s troops were roundly winning the battles when, in a freakish moment, Absalom’s hair caught in some tree branches. Joab and his men identified Absalom and killed him, ignoring David’s prior orders to take him alive (18:5-15).

Joab sent word to David of the “victory.” However, what others believed to be a victory because David’s kingdom was preserved, David interpreted as defeat. Recall his sorrowful response: “O my son Absalom! My son, my son Absalom! If only I had died instead of you—O Absalom, my son, my son!” (v. 33).

David had won back his kingdom, but at what price? He lost his son.

Fortunately for David, another son, Solomon, would give him opportunity to redeem himself.


Discussion questions

• Where did David go wrong? Could he have prevented any or all of the problems in his family?

• What could David have done to rectify the situation with his children?

• What price has your family paid for your achievements, as good and honorable as they may be?

• How do you balance ministry (work) and foster a healthy family life?

• Does doing all the right things guarantee your children will be faithful?

• When is it too late for a parent to make things right with a child?

• Could Paul have had the incidents of 1 and 2 Samuel in mind when he penned the qualifications for overseers? Read 1 Timothy 3:4-5.


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




Cybercolumn by Brett Younger: My speech to the high school seniors

Posted: 5/17/06

CYBER COLUMN:
My speech to the high school seniors

By Brett Younger

Your alarm goes off way too early. It’s irritating, but you’re used to ignoring it. Then your mother starts her imitation of your alarm, which is harder to ignore. You plead, “Five more minutes, Mom.” She bellows, “You don’t have five minutes,” but you know you do, if you skip the milk and put your fruit loops in a plastic bag you can eat in the car.

The bathroom mirror is also irritating. Your hair looks like you slept on it, while wearing a hat, and being electrocuted. You sprinkle some water on your head and hope for the best.

Brett Younger

You’re almost awake when you get to chemistry, which is super frustrating. For some unknown reason, chemistry has rules, but 90 percent of the rules are broken 90 percent of the time, and then the teacher says, “This is one of those odd cases, just memorize it.” Consequently the exceptions to the rules make up the rules and the rules are wrong more than they’re right.

English literature isn’t much of an improvement. Who decided Pride and Prejudice is interesting? Mrs. Bennet makes your own mother look normal, Keira Knightley is a lot more appealing than Elizabeth, and something is seriously wrong with Mr. Darcy.

Calculus isn’t the most helpful class in the world. Integrals, derivatives, optimization, implicit differentiation—these are not words that come in handy very often. The teacher drones on and on, sounding like she’s speaking a foreign language, which makes it different from your next class.

Because your Spanish teacher doesn’t speak a foreign language. He’s a football coach whose Spanish might get him through a visit to Taco Bell.

Your friends want to go to Mama’s Pizza for lunch. You point out that you went to Mama’s yesterday, but apparently, “Let’s do something different” isn’t a persuasive argument. Your friends almost never do anything out of the ordinary. They tell the same Chuck Norris jokes over and over.

You’re late getting back to European history, but you didn’t miss anything. For what seems like a century, you’ve been reviewing the revolutions of the 19th century, a century you’re relatively certain will not be coming back.

You’re glad when school is over. When you get home, you go online to the same places you went yesterday—bored.com, stupidvideos.com, killsometime.com. You check your e-mail, play a little Minesweeper, some Free Cell for variety.

There’s nothing on TV. You’re not sure you “get” Oprah. You briefly consider reading the phone book but take a nap instead.

When your parents get home, the inquisition begins: “How was your day?” “Who did you eat with?” “What did you learn?” “Did you talk to any one who’s cute?”

Then the nagging starts. Your parents can’t seem to get that the more they tell you to do something, the less likely you are to do it in a timely manner. It’s a simple rule.

You fear that certain parental phrases will be ringing in your head for the rest of your life: “Pick up your clothes.” “Make your bed.” “Finish your vegetables.” “Don’t stay out late.”

The lectures fit into two categories—the importance of things of which you already know the importance, and things that aren’t important but which your parents inexplicably believe to be important.

It’s probably been this way forever. It was more this way than not 2,000 years ago. It’s easy to forget that Jesus’ disciples were younger than they look in stained glass, which seems to add about 20 years. No one is certain, but in all probability, the disciples were teenagers or close to it.

All the disciples had Jewish mothers. It couldn’t have been long since they pleaded with their mothers to sleep five more minutes. They had bad hair days. They got tired of the same old thing for lunch. They faced the same fear of ending up with a dull job and no life.

The most excitement they ever knew began when John the Baptist showed up. John is an alarm clock without a snooze button. He’s a wild character shouting that a normal day isn’t nearly enough, that things have to get better, and he means now. John imagines a world of justice and compassion, the kind of world the best high school seniors imagine.

John the Baptist is standing with two of his students when Jesus walks by. John says: “That’s the one. That’s the one to follow. You know how cocky I can be, but I’m not worthy to tie his sandals.”

The disciples start following Jesus. He turns and asks, “What are you looking for?” They answer nervously, “We thought we’d see where you’re staying.” In other words, “We don’t have anything better to do, so we’re wondering what you’re doing.” Jesus offers the invitation that will change their lives, “Come and see.”

They stay with Jesus all day, because he’s interesting. They have no idea what they’re getting themselves into. They don’t know that they will end up leaving behind their nets, homes and friends. They’ll change their ideas about almost everything.

We go to church to discover what we’re getting ourselves into. We don’t know what we’ll be leaving behind or what ideas we’ll change. We are here to open ourselves to God, who’ll lead us to new places. We are here because the people who follow Jesus have extraordinary lives.

The sad truth is that most people are bored. They’re tired of measuring their lives by how they’re doing in their family’s eyes or in the eyes of people doing better than they are or worse than they are. If you’re going to have a full life, you need to remember that you’re not your bank account or your ambitions or your parents’ ambitions.

Your parents are good people, but some parents—not yours, yours are fine—desperately want their children to make enough money that they can be sure that they’re not moving back home. They want you to have success, but you recognize that some of the most miserable people are successful. Don’t set your sights on a successful life, set them higher. Live a joyful life. Plan for the future, but leave room for the Spirit.

Don’t be superficial with your faith. Don’t work toward a job you’d be embarrassed to talk to God about. Don’t turn your head when you see someone hurting. Don’t believe the lies on MTV or Fox News. Don’t waste your life on things that don’t matter, not when there is so much that does.

Stay curious. Listen to the lonely. Feed the hungry. Love and be loved. Find good friends who know how to laugh. Care for children. Make the world less racist, less militaristic and less materialistic. Think about the faith you have and the faith you wish you had. Make the church more like Christ. Make your lives wonderful.

“Come and see” is how the disciples’ story begins. It’s a great way to start a story. “Come and see” is the invitation to explore without knowing exactly where we’re going, but to know that if we catch a glimpse of God, we’ll also catch a glimpse of who we can be. Don’t waste this one odd and precious life you’ve been given. Come and see what it means to imagine, hope, and believe.

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.




Bill amended to allow chaplains freedom to pray according to conscience

Posted: 5/16/06

Bill amended to allow chaplains
freedom to pray according to conscience

By Robert Marus

ABP Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON (ABP)—The House of Representatives has amended a defense-spending bill to appease activists who believe new military guidelines encroach on the religious freedom of evangelical chaplains.

The bill, as amended, passed the House May 11 on a 396-31 vote.

The House Armed Services Committee attached the prayer amendment to a routine military appropriations bill on a party-line vote May 3. Conservative Republicans, led by Rep. Walter Jones of North Carolina, pushed the amendment, as did conservative evangelical groups like Focus on the Family. However, top military chaplaincy officials and other groups objected to it.

The measure would override new rules recently issued by the Air Force and Navy for their chaplains. Those rules—written in the wake of charges of religious harassment against non-evangelicals at the Air Force Academy in Colorado—instructed chaplains to offer “non-sectarian” prayers at events where those of multiple faiths would be present.

The language the House passed, however, would leave the call to the individual chaplain, who “shall have the prerogative to pray according to the dictates of the chaplain’s own conscience, except as must be limited by military necessity, with any such limitation being imposed in the least restrictive manner feasible.”

Military chaplains are allowed already to pray the way they choose in the chapel services they conduct or other settings where soldiers of different faiths are not compelled to be present. But Jones and his allies assert that the new rules violate the consciences of evangelical chaplains who feel compelled to invoke Christ’s name when offering public prayers.

“Since the beginning of our nation’s military, chaplains have played an integral role, fulfilling the spiritual and emotional needs of the brave men and women who serve and they have always prayed according to their faith tradition,” Jones said. “It is in the best interest of our armed services and this nation to guarantee the constitutional right of military chaplains to pray according to their faith.”

But Rep. Pete Stark (D-Calif.) said he was disappointed that “certain members of Congress have decided to support chaplains who want to push their own religious agenda rather than the military’s commitment to religious tolerance. When chaplains join the military, they accept a duty to serve the military’s mission, in addition to their mission to God. In providing spiritual guidance to our soldiers, chaplains should never carry out their duty in a manner that divides or alienates soldiers of different faiths.”

The Navy’s head chaplain opposed the provision, saying the current rules adequately protected chaplains’ religious freedom, while the new rules would drive wedges between religious groups within the Navy and take chaplains outside of the service’s command structure.

The proposal would “lead to a loss of credibility and religious ministry and chaplains’ services to all military members,” said Rear Admiral Louis Iasiello, a Catholic priest who is chief of the naval chaplain corps, in a letter to the Armed Services Committee. “The proposed language offers an opportunity to drive wedges into the chaplain corps, due to the emphasis it puts on each chaplain doing that which is right in his or her own eyes.”

He concluded that the legislation would, “in the end, marginalize chaplains and degrade their use and effectiveness to the crew and the commanding officer.”

The National Conference on Ministry to the Armed Forces—an umbrella group that acts as a liaison between the military and several denominations or faith groups that provide credentials to chaplains—also opposed the provision, as did the Anti-Defamation League and Americans United for Separation of Church and State.

The bill is H.R. 5122. It still must gain Senate approval.


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.




Paige Patterson endorses Floyd for SBC president

Posted: 5/15/06

Paige Patterson endorses Floyd for SBC president

By Greg Warner

Associated Baptist Press

FORT WORTH, Texas (ABP)—Southwestern Seminary President Paige Patterson has endorsed Ronnie Floyd for Southern Baptist Convention president, prompting a rare rebuttal from SBC chief executive Morris Chapman and exposing a growing rift between the two Southern Baptist executives.

Meanwhile, critics of Floyd’s “dismal” financial support of the denomination are trying to enlist another presidential candidate with a better record of cooperation. In recent days, that search has focused on Frank Page, pastor of First Baptist Church of Taylors, S.C. But as of May 15 he had not made a decision about the nomination.

Floyd, pastor of First Baptist Church of Springdale, Ark., is the presidential choice of the convention’s fundamentalist leaders, who have controlled the presidency—and, hence, the SBC’s bureaucracy—for almost three decades, usually without opposition.

Floyd’s nomination, announced May 7, focused new attention to his church’s lackluster support of the Cooperative Program, the SBC’s central ministry budget, as well as his high-tech evangelism methods—particularly the firetruck-shaped baptistry and confetti cannons used in Springdale’s children’s ministry.

Patterson, an architect of the SBC’s conservative power structure and now president of Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, called the firetruck baptistry “blasphemous” in a 2000 interview—probably without knowing it was Floyd’s church.

Patterson didn’t mention the baptistry in his May 12 endorsement of Floyd, released by the seminary’s public relations office. But he did praise the Springdale church’s evangelistic commitment, which he said “inculcates the ethos of New Testament Christianity.”

He also praised Floyd’s denominational service and support of seminaries, adding: “Southern Baptists need a man whose moral fiber is unscathed by compromise with the world in respect to his home, his purity of life and his integrity. Ronnie Floyd is such a man.”

Patterson was president of the Southern Baptist Convention in 1999 and 2000.

In a cautiously worded commentary May 13, Chapman took issue with any SBC agency head serving as a convention officer or endorsing someone else for office.

“Nominating or being nominated for an elected officer of the SBC, or endorsing a nominee for an elected office, in my opinion, lessens the importance of the work to which the entity head has been called,” Chapman wrote in his blog, morrischapman.com.

“When a president of an entity publicly endorses a potential nominee or nominates a candidate for elected office, he potentially alienates some who otherwise hold him in high esteem because they differ with the person he has embraced publicly for an elected office.”

“Today political strategies, agendas, and power politics threaten to distract us from empowered possibilities of a people who rely solely upon God’s guidance,” Chapman wrote.

The “potential for conflict exists if the president of an SBC entity is at the same time the president of the Southern Baptist Convention,” he added. The president serves ex officio on the SBC’s most powerful agency boards, including the SBC Executive Committee, which votes on funding for the agencies, Chapman noted.

Although that situation existed when Patterson served as president, Chapman did not mention him by name.

Conservatives have long acknowledged the behind-the-scenes feud between Patterson and Chapman, but it has never boiled over publicly.

Chapman has a long record of calling for more openness in SBC leadership. When he was elected SBC president twice in the early 1990s, he called for “broadening the tent” of leadership. More recently, at the 2004 SBC meeting, he warned that “crusading conservatives” need to loosen their grip on the SBC or risk driving it into exclusivism and “Pharisaism.”

Ronnie Floyd, as the presidential candidate endorsed by Patterson and the movement’s other political leaders, matches the profile for SBC presidents of the last 27 years. A former president of the SBC Pastors’ Conference, he also was chairman of the Executive Committee. He is pastor of Arkansas’ largest Southern Baptist church, with 16,000 members.

Complicating the picture for Floyd, however, a blue-ribbon SBC panel is calling for the election of officers who come from churches that contribute at least 10 percent of their undesignated receipts to the denomination’s central budget—a standard few recent presidents could meet.

First Baptist Church of Springdale and its satellite congregation, the Church at Pinnacle Hills, contributed a total of $32,000 to the Cooperative Program in 2005 through the Arkansas Baptist State Convention—0.27 percent of its undesignated receipts of $11,952,137.

The church reports giving another $189,000 to the national Cooperative Program, which bypasses Arkansas missions—1.8 percent of undesignated receipts.

The church’s CP giving has been on decline since at least 1986, including the years Floyd was chairman of the Executive Committee, which sets and promotes the Cooperative Program.

By contrast, First Baptist Church of Taylors, a much smaller congregation where Frank Page is pastor, contributed $535,000 to the Cooperative Program in 2005—or 12.1 percent of its undesignated budget of $4,407,392.

Although Page is not well known outside of the Southeast, he might have an advantage with the convention being held in Greensboro, N.C. And while denominational support won’t be the only issue in this year’s presidential election, it expects to be front and center.




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




Storylist for 5/01/06 issue

Storylist for week of 5/01/06

TAKE ME TO: Top Story |  Texas |  Opinion |  Baptists |  Faith in Action |  Faith & Culture |  Book Reviews |  Classifieds  |  Departments  |  Bible Study



Attorney to guide Valley funds investigation

Darfur peace deal still not settled

NAMB cancels Reccord's PR, Internet, jet contracts

Camp volunteers must be trained under new law

Ronnie Floyd to be nominated for SBC president

Aid can fight terror, veteran congressman says

Agency continues orphan placement as Sri Lankan fighting heats up

Religious freedom panel again finds some U.S. allies on list of violators

Dobbses 'excited' to continue work in Guinea

Conservative group repents of 'triumphalism'

Darfur peace talks faltering

NAMB 'moving on' after resignation, but won't disclose Reccord's severance

Plano Christian student group wins suit for privileges

IMB reinstates missionary couple

Sam Currin indicted in tax fraud case

Nash nominated as CBF missions coordinator

Playboy visits Baylor despite warnings




CHURCH WITHOUT WALLS: Authentic worship outside


CHURCH WITHOUT WALLS: Authentic worship outside

Hispanic Baptist youth challenged to ‘get into Jesus'

Hispanic Texas Baptist Congreso calls for immigration reform

DBU students minister in apartments

Texas Senate honors Strickland

Expert explores myths of multihousing ministry

High Pointe responds to community

Homegrown churches make gospel readily accessible

Immigration prayer walk set in Wichita Falls

Prayer walkers see walls come tumbling down

On the move

Around the state

Texas Tidbits


Baptists and Jews share love of liberty

Volunteers for China needs instructors this summer

CLC sets world hunger offering goal

Katrina effort unites African-American Baptists

N.C. Baptists elect new executive director-treasurer

Offering changes lives in Thailand


Prayer walkers see walls come tumbling down


Christian chat rooms may offer safer Internet alternatives

Faith-based initiatives director resigns

Public prayer in Jesus' name debated


Reviewed in this issue:“All Churches Great and Small: 60 Ideas for Improving Your Church's Ministry” by Kirk Farnsworth and Rosie Farnsworth; I Saw the Lord by Anne Graham Lotz; and Letters from Dad by Greg Vaughn with Fred Holmes.


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Classified Ads

Texas Baptist Forum

Around the state

On the move


EDITORIAL: ‘Morality' is more than sex we don't do

DOWN HOME: Postman delivers tidings of mortality

TOGETHER: Faithful servants, doing God's work

RIGHT OR WRONG? Responding to the poor

Texas Baptist Forum

Cybercolumn By John Duncan: Ascension gifts


BaptistWay Bible Series for April 30: Competing loyalties require discernment

Family Bible Series for April 30: Don't let fear interfere with sharing the gospel

Explore the Bible Series for April 30: When God wants to do a new thing, saddle up

BaptistWay Bible Series for May 7: Behaving nobly in a dog-eat-dog world

Family Bible Series for May 7: There is no substitute for caring for one another

Explore the Bible Series for May 7: God's light awaits at the end of the journey

Previously Posted
Reccord resigns as NAMB president after trustee investigation

Missionaries refuse to resign under pressure

Resolution on Baptist dissent submitted

IMB isolationism contrary to missions trend, experts say

BJC chief refutes ‘top 10 lies' about church & state

Five commandments for religious Americans in political life

ETBU students build in Laredo

Many ‘religious' people seldom attend church

Moldovan orphans warmed by individual, corporate generosity

BGCT launches probe of church-planting funds in the Valley

Lilley installed as Baylor president


• See complete list of articles from our 4/17 2006 issue here.




Dangerous ground transformed by church

Posted: 5/12/06

Ruth Ollison, pastor of Beulah Land Community Church in Houston, visits with a member of her neighborhood. Ollison regularly walks her community, meeting people and inviting them to church.

Dangerous ground transformed by church

By John Hall

Texas Baptist Communications

HOUSTON—Ruth Ollison ministers on dangerous ground—at least it used to be.

When Ollison and her husband pulled up to a duplex eight years ago in central Houston, she didn’t want to get out of their car, let alone consider purchasing a building the city already had stamped “dangerous.” The drug house in front of her seemed to be in total disarray and needed complete restoration.

The same could be said for the neighborhood. Litter and debris lined the streets. Dealers sold drugs nearly around the clock in a lot across from the duplex. Gambling took place in the boarded-up house next to the duplex.

It’s the kind of neighborhood where Jesus would hang out, she concluded.

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Ollison soon realized God “assigned” her to minister in this neighborhood. She bought the duplex and started Beulah Land Community Church.

The congregation began as a “ministry of presence,” she said. Where others shied away from the drug dealers, Ollison addressed them—and the rest of the community—directly. She walked the streets, meeting people, inviting them to church and initiating conversations about spiritual matters.

The church’s first service lasted 12 hours and featured pastors from around Houston. The event marked the beginning of change.

“That invoked the presence of God,” she said. “The presence of God has been here ever since.”

One by one, people are turning their lives around and committing themselves to God, she said.

Spiritual changes have led to outward changes, Ollison said. The Holy Spirit is affecting every aspect of people’s lives, she added. Much of the litter is gone from the neighborhood. Most of the homes are painted. Lawns and empty lots are manicured.

Drugs have been curtailed. Beulah Land now owns the buildings where drugs were sold and illegal gambling operated.

People are more friendly and approachable now, Ollison said.

The neighborhood “was amazingly dreadful,” she said. “But there’s been a lot of transformation. There’s enormous potential, that’s the thing—potential. It’s all here. There’s no difference in this dirt, this grass and these trees than the dirt, grass and trees in the most expensive neighborhood in town.”

As the community has changed, Beulah Land has grown. The church renovated the dilapidated duplex. The congregation meets every day at noon—for prayer during the week and for worship on Saturday and Sunday. The church soon will move into a new building and already has enough people to fill it.

Ollison’s approach has not changed, however. She still walks the streets of central Houston every day, meeting and inviting people to church. She just has a little more help now. More than 60 people who attend her church also are engaging people in spiritual conversations.

“I think if Jesus was here now, this would be a lot like the neighborhoods that he was in,” she said.

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




Baptist women in ministry face ongoing challenges

Posted: 5/12/06

Baptist women in ministry face ongoing challenges

By John Hall

Texas Baptist Communications

ABILENE—When she was growing up, Amanda Cutbirth didn’t know women could be ministers. But she knew God was calling her to ministry.

“I didn’t know if women could be ministers,” the Logsdon Seminary student said.

“I didn’t know what my parents would think. I didn’t know what I could do. We never had a woman minister at my church.”

Julie Pennington-Russell

So began her journey of discovery. She studied the Scriptures and talked with people she admired. She spent hours in prayer. There was no doubt in her mind. God wanted her in vocational ministry.

Cutbirth is one of a growing number of female students in seminaries throughout Texas. Between 14 percent and 19 percent of students at Logsdon Seminary each year are women. Nearly one-third of George W. Truett Theological Seminary’s student body is female.

Slightly more than 26 percent of students at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary are women. At Texas Christian University’s Brite Divinity School, women have consistently made up at least half of the school’s student body.

Each of these students believes she is led to serve in some way—whether on the mission field like Cutbirth or on a church staff in the United States.

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“I know for sure I’ll be in ministry somewhere,” Cutbirth said. “If not overseas, then in a church in America. My heart is with other cultures.”

These women may be called, but some Baptists have wondered if they will fulfill that calling in Baptist churches.

A growing number of congregations seem willing to call a woman as a preschool, youth or children’s minister, but many are reluctant to consider female candidates for other positions such as senior or associate pastors.

Of nearly 5,700 Baptist General Convention of Texas-affiliated churches, four are led by female senior pastors. The convention’s annual statistics do not indicate how many women serve on staff of Texas Baptist churches.

Therein lies the disappointment for many women. All Texas Baptist seminary students are endorsed by their respective churches, which means congregational leaders acknowledge a student is called by God and has demonstrated a commitment to wanting to fulfill that calling. But that same congregation may not be willing to consider hiring a woman.

"I don’t want to discourage them in any way, but I want them to be realistic that their ministry may not include being the pastor of a church."

–Paul Powell, dean of Truett Seminary

“I think there are a lot of us who have grown up in churches or go to churches who support us … but the practicality of hiring us may not be there,” said Shannon Rutherford, a third-year Truett student.

Truett Dean Paul Powell said he realizes the reality of this situation, but there is little seminaries can do about it.

According to Baptist polity, seminaries cannot dictate doctrine to churches and cannot tell them who to call.

He and Logsdon Dean Tommy Brisco say their seminaries support women looking for church staff positions, just as they do men. Professors recommend them to search committees regularly. But the reality is some churches do not want women in certain positions.

“I don’t want to discourage them in any way, but I want them to be realistic that their ministry may not include being the pastor of a church,” Powell said.

“Our role as a seminary is to equip those the church is sending,” Brisco said.

Even those women who are hired may not be on a level playing field as their male counterparts, critics claim. Some churches have pastors, associate pastors, music pastors and youth pastors, but use the term children’s “minister” or “director” to avoid applying the term “pastor” to a female employee.

Some women feel they are not treated the same as male church staffers. They say their ministries are not supported financially or spiritually by staff members like other ministries within the church.

Susan Shaw, a professor at Oregon State University working on a book about Southern Baptist women, believes women still are not on equal footing as their male counterparts when it comes to ministry in Baptist life.

A woman’s movement within Southern Baptist life was set back by the controversy in the Southern Baptist Convention during the 1980s, Shaw noted. Baptists focused on the struggle between two groups seeking control of the SBC, and the role of women faded into the background.

Now, attitudes about the role of women within Baptist life fall largely along generational lines, Shaw said. Women raised before the controversy generally are satisfied with believing they can be missionaries and pastors’ wives.

Women who matured during the controversy tend to feel betrayed by their denomination, Shaw found. They were told in Girls in Action classes—a Woman’s Missionary Union missions organization—that they could be anything they wanted. Then they found out they couldn’t in most churches.

This generation also tends to be somewhat unhappy with moderate Baptist groups as well, Shaw said. They like the rhetoric about women being accepted in ministry but do not see any action. Churches and denominations overwhelmingly still are run by men.

Shaw believes the generation emerging after the Southern Baptist controversy falls into two groups. The more conservative group feels it can fulfill God’s calling without holding certain positions. They do not see any limitations.

Moderate Baptists tend to feel there are few if any limitations to God’s calling in their lives because they can find a way to serve as God wants them.

“They’re happy,” Shaw said of the second group. “They have role models. They have (Calvary Baptist Church in Waco Pastor) Julie Pennington-Russell. Of course we can be pastors. Look at Julie.”

This trend will continue to gain strength in moderate Baptist life, Shaw believes. As ministers such as Pennington-Russell lead dynamic, growing churches, other congregations become convinced women can serve in various roles. It is difficult to argue with results.

“Where you do see change is where people see women in ministry,” she said. “That does make a difference.”

Comparing the woman’s movement within Baptist life to the slow progression and eventual Baptist acceptance of the civil rights movement, Powell said a culture change must take place before women are widely accepted in Baptist ministry positions.

And it’s a change he believes will take place over time. He compared it to wearing braces—change takes place gradually over time until the situation is completely different.

“It’s going to happen. You might as well try to hold back the Gulf of Mexico than stop women in ministry,” he said.

Men can play a crucial role in helping advance women in ministry, Shaw said. They can be advocates for women ministers, hiring them and recommending them to churches.

Some leaders will take a man’s viewpoint more seriously because it does not come across as self-promoting, Rutherford said.

They are not trying to attain a position by advancing women. They bring a needed viewpoint to the conversation.

“It’s very important that men support the calling of women in their churches,” Rutherford said.

Women serving in Baptist churches strengthens ministry, Brisco noted. They are gifted in unique ways, but also complement the talents of men. That combination improves the outreach and service of Baptists.

“I do think Baptists are very much needing the gifts of men and women of all ethnicities to do the work God has called us to in Texas and around the world,” 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.




Big dreams, openness to God’s calling guide student

Posted: 5/12/06

Crystal Leake, a student at Logsdon Seminary, serves at the Eunice Chambliss Hospitality House in Abilene. (Photo by Dave Coffield/Hardin-Simmons University)

Called to ministry

By John Hall

Texas Baptist Communications

ABILENE—Crystal Leake occasionally flips through magazines looking for pictures of log cabins. She cuts out images that especially call to her—just as she seeks to follow God’s calling.

It is the first-year Logsdon Seminary student’s way of dreaming.

One day, she hopes she and her husband, Carl, can start an encampment where pastors can stay in log cabins at little or no charge to rest, relax and reflect.

The magazine photos help her imagine what the camp could look like—what it would be like.

But even the best images cannot capture her passion or God’s vision. They can’t, because she believes God’s vision for her life—whatever it might be—surpasses anything she can imagine.

See Related Articles:
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Leake admits she may never build the camp, but she can live with that. She knows she is called to ministry. It’s up to God to lead her to exactly where that ministry is.

“God will put you where he wants you when he wants you,” she said.

Right now, she believes God wants her in Abilene, where Leake and her husband co-direct the Eunice Chambliss Hospitality House, an effort supported by the Baptist General Convention of Texas. There, she ministers to families of inmates who come to see their incarcerated loved ones.

Her ministry focuses on relationships. She meets families and becomes their friend. She shows them she cares about their needs. Recently, a girl made a profession of faith at the hospitality house and was baptized a few weeks later.

“Evangelism happens a lot of different ways, but the big way it happens in my life is relational,” Leake said. “It happens through friendships.”

She finds those friendships outside the hospitality house as well.

She is willing to strike up a conversation with anyone God puts in her path. She shares her faith as God prompts her. That’s what makes her faith exciting.

“A Christian walk is an adventure,” she said. “It’s never boring, and you never know what’s around the corner.”

Leake has a lot of corners to turn ahead of her. She believes God could direct her in a number of different directions. She looks forward to where God’s calling may take her—even if it isn’t starting a retreat facility for pastors.

“Dream big,” she said. “Write down your dreams. Work toward your dreams. But at the same time, be ready for God to work in your dreams.”

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.




2nd Opinion: ‘Put our money where your mouth is’

Posted: 5/12/06

2nd Opinion:
‘Put our money where your mouth is’

By Jon Singletary

The World Affairs Council in Dallas recently invited U2 frontman Bono to offer a follow-up address to his comments at the National Prayer Breakfast last month.

Before an audience of Gen X rock ’n’ roll fans in jeans and T-shirts and Baby Boomer business leaders in coats and ties, Bono donned a tie with his Doc Marten’s and delivered a speech addressing foreign trade—of which Texas is the global leader—and foreign aid—for which Texas senators never seem to vote.

Trade, says Bono, is key to overcoming extreme poverty in Africa. Right now, trade rules are so skewed that cows in Europe receive more every day via government subsidies than half the population of Africa has to live on—$2 a day. Our leaders and others in the G-8 have to find ways to promote trade justice for poor countries. The ONE Campaign is where Bono and a wide array of activists, celebrities, religious leaders, grassroots organizers and everyday citizens are trying to make this happen.

These advocates also describe how vital foreign aid is to this process. The United States spends less than one-half of 1 percent of the federal budget on poverty-focused development assistance. An increase to just 1 percent of our budget will help provide basic needs such as health, education and clean water for millions of people in Africa. Bread for the World’s Offering of Letters this year offers you a chance to urge Congress to do just this.

President Bush repeatedly has made commitments that the United States will promote trade opportunities as a tool for development in poor countries. To complement this, when the leaders of the world’s most powerful countries gathered last summer in Scotland, he committed to double aid to Africa and globally by 2010.

The president has assured Africa and the world that we will address issues of trade and aid in our fight against AIDS and poverty. Congress is where the greater struggle seems to exist. Foreign operations is the area of the budget where poverty-focused development assistance is found, and Congress doesn’t want to see much of an increase here.

The president requested a $23.7 billion foreign operations budget for next year, but the House of Representatives will not deliver. The House Appropriations Committee announced the allocation for foreign operations will be $2.4 billion below the president’s request. That’s a significant cut when you are talking about such a small portion of the federal budget.

The Senate Appropriations Committee is making its decisions about budget proposals. We hope to hear their allocations this week. As a member of this committee, Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison is invested in how our nation spends its money. She will have a say in how much the Senate would like to see allocated to foreign operations. How do we expect her to respond?

Adding to the irony of the crowd gathered at Bono’s speech was the introductory speaker. It was Sen. Hutchison. And she introduced Bono by stating her admiration for his international advocacy and how moved she was by his homily at the Prayer Breakfast, calling us to respond to the African crisis.

The senator described a recent meeting where Bono asked the senator to lobby Chancellor Angela Merkel in hopes that the German government might increase its federal spending on Africa as well. It was clear that Sen. Hutchison has deep respect for this rock star with a cause and a deeper appreciation of the real emergency that is motivating him—the 8,500 people who die each day from AIDS and the 13,500 people who contract the HIV virus each day.

The real question for Sen. Hutchison and for all Texans has to do with how our nation will respond. After her comments the other night, I have to ask Sen. Hutchison: Will you put our money where your mouth is? Will you take this step to assure that we are the generation that loves our neighbor in Africa as much we love our neighbor next door?

Bono puts it this way: Will we in the West realize our potential, or will we sleep in the comfort of our affluence, with apathy and indifference murmuring softly in our ears?

The United States can afford to keep its promises to the world’s hungry and poor people. To do this, we need to increase foreign operations appropriations for poverty-focused development assistance accounts by $5 billion. Any funding level below the president’s request of $23.7 billion for foreign operations would shortchange vital, proven and effective efforts to alleviate human suffering.

Today is the day for you to make your voice heard. If you need more information, go to Bread for the World’s website, www.bread.org, or The ONE Campaign’s website, www.one.org.

Let our senators know how you feel.


Jon Singletary is director of the Center for Family and Community Ministries in the School of Social Work at Baylor University.

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: Is it Code or evangelistic opportunity?

Posted: 5/12/06

EDITORIAL:
Is it Code or evangelistic opportunity?

Sometimes, I feel utterly naîve.

Take The Da Vinci Code, for example. I actually read the book. A long time ago. So, when I heard Opie Taylor (Ron Howard) and Forrest Gump (Tom Hanks) were going to turn it into a film, my thoughts ran along these lines: “Hmmm. The premise is hokey, and I’m sick of middle-aged leading men running around with twentysomething starlets. But in the hands of two wildly famous and likable stars, the movie probably will make a lot of money.”

Never did I expect the movie to raise such a ruckus. Oh, I know—movie audiences far eclipse book readers. (Although, if you really value a good story, read a book.) So, you could see it coming: Media, marketers and moviegoers would all get aroused by the the film premiere, as if Dan Brown’s novel hadn’t been sitting on bookstore shelves for months.

knox_new

Still, media hype has represented only a flicker of the Da Vinci furor. Every time the flames of controversy have flared up, Roman Catholic clerics and Protestant preachers have been pumping the bellows. They’re afraid the masses will be led astray by Brown’s plotline. Here’s how Eugene Cullen Kennedy, writing for Religion News Service, succinctly describes it: “The book’s plot falls into the ‘you can’t make up’ category—that Jesus fathered a child with Mary Magdalene and that the Holy Grail is not a chalice but their bloodline. Their descendants now live—where else?—in France, and the Church has covered all this up, along with the female role in the origins of Christianity. But, of course, novelist Dan Brown did make all this up.”

Does Brown’s plot deviate from orthodox Christian belief? Absolutely. If it were presented as truth, would it be heretical? You bet. Will movie patrons believe it? Only the ones who believe giant gorillas actually hang from the Empire State Building and prehistoric animals spoke English. Sensible folks from all walks of life are more likely to recognize it for what it is—a made-up story.

If you put yourself in their shoes, you can understand why some who sound the alarm act as they do. Roman Catholics are worried people will think (a) the Church manufactured the story of Christ for its own gain and (b) members of Opus Dei are as scary as that albino monk. Hard-line fundamentalists are worried somebody won’t think as they do. They believe their job is to keep their noses in the air, sniffing for the “burning rubber of error.” This renders them insensitive to sweeter-yet-pungent aromas of fiction, such as satire, irony and humor.

The Christian response to The Da Vinci Code marks where sincere, committed Christians stand along the fault line of the culture wars.

Some well-meaning Christians are mortally afraid of falsehood. They care about their souls and the souls of others, and they fear a pandemic of untrue-flu. They worry that falsity will overtake the unwary, so they try to stamp it out, even if in the stamping they damage innocent bystanders and the merely curious. Frankly, I worry for them: Do they really believe truth is stronger than falsehood? Do they believe God, who is Truth, can hold out against and overcome the Great Deceiver?

Other Christians see social and cultural phenomena—such as the movie premiere of The Da Vinci Code—as an opportunity. Yes, we live in an uncertain world. Satan will tempt us and even use books and movies to try to get us to doubt our faith. But they understand moments of danger also are moments of possibility and promise. They realize even when Satan may have life stirred up, that only means more people are spiritually aware and seeking answers. And those are the times when the cause of Christ can advance.

Fifty-five years ago, the wonderful theologian/ethicist H. Richard Niebuhr wrote a book called Christ and Culture. He urged Christians not to succumb to the temptation to follow a Christ who wages war against culture, but to embrace the Christ who transforms culture—to be agents of positive, healthy, Christlike change in the lives and institutions around them. All the hype surrounding The Da Vinci Code provides alert and caring Christians with just such an opportunity in the next few weeks. Your friends and neighbors will be buzzing about the movie, giving you a unique opportunity to speak about Christ and matters of faith when they’re open-minded and attentive. If you want to strengthen yourself with historical and theological facts, visit Jim Denison’s excellent website, www.godissues.com. He’s been writing and talking about this topic and can help you talk intelligently to others. Lean on truth; don’t fear falsehood. And don’t be afraid to speak your faith.

Marv Knox is editor of the Baptist Standard.

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.