Children’s home residents repay kindness to Kokomo church

Posted: 3/31/06

Children’s home residents repay
kindness to Kokomo church

By Miranda Bradley

Texas Baptist Children’s Home

GORMAN—For 25 years, Kokomo Baptist Church sent a monthly gift to Texas Baptist Children’s Home. Over spring break, children’s home residents repaid the favor.

On New Year’s Day, a 35-mile-wide wildfire destroyed 60 homes and two churches around the Kokomo community, near Gorman. Four families in the 50-member Kokomo Baptist Church lost their cattle, houses and land.

But the church continued to give to others, collecting an offering for another church that burned in another community.

Brenda Gilbert, volunteer coordinator for Texas Baptist Children’s Home, presents Woodward Browing, deacon of Kokomo Baptist Church, with a check made possible by donations from TBCH staff and children. Kokomo, a 25-year TBCH supporter, lost its building in a raging brush fire in January. They continued to give to the children's home even when they were without a church home. (Photo by Miranda Bradley)

“As soon as we sent them a check, just days later, we got a check from them,” said Deacon Woodrow Browning. “It just goes to show how we have been supporting each other during this time.”

Likewise, Texas Baptist Children’s Home wanted to lend support to a church whose members had supported its ministry for a quarter-century.

Staff members and residents at Texas Baptist Children’s Home—a Children at Heart ministry—took up a collection and presented a check to Browning during a spring break mission project, when they helped community residents dig through ashes to recover personal items.

“God is so good,” Browning said tearfully. “It’s amazing how God blesses. Funds have come in, and he just continues to bless.”

In hindsight, Browning has trouble understanding how the blaze consumed the church so fast.

“It was a brick-veneer building with a metal roof,” he said. “There is no grass around the church.”

Fires cutting across the dried grasslands were spurred on by 45-mile-per-hour winds from noon into the night.

“It looks like the fire jumped and landed right on top of the church,” Browning said.

The church is rebuilding, and its new sanctuary’s frame already is taking shape. The new building includes classroom space, and the church added onto the floor plan to allow for growth.

Since the fire, Kokomo has met in a member’s garage and plans to do so until its new facility is complete. Even so, Sunday school attendance has increased from 25 to 35.

Spring Break Ministries
HPU students 'build relationships' on spring break
Student mission volunteers spring into action
Aggie BSM tours Texas
DBU students clean homes in New Orleans
KidsHeart draws 100 volunteers to the Valley
Honest student laborers discover hidden treasure
UMHB students assist FBC New Orleans
Wayland students serve in the surf, sun and city
Children's home residents repay kindness to Kokomo church

Browning has seen Kokomo rebuild once before. In 1969, the church was engulfed in an electrical fire that reduced the structure to scorched rubble. He was among the first to join in early 1970 when the church met temporarily in a Gorman funeral home.

Despite its past, Kokomo is rebuilding in the same location again. In June 2006, the church will celebrate its 100-year anniversary. They plan to start a new decade with a stronger structure and a brand-new vision.

“We’re tired of playing church,” Browning said. “With this new building, we hope to reach a lot more people for Christ. There are people around here who need Christ in their lives, and we want to help them.”

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.




IMB won’t seek trustee’s removal

Updated: 4/04/06

IMB won’t seek trustee’s removal

By Greg Warner

Associated Baptist Press

TAMPA, Fla. (ABP)—Trustees of the International Mission Board decided not to seek the removal of one of their own for criticizing trustee actions, but they adopted new guidelines to prohibit and punish such criticism in the future.

After a closed-door executive session March 22, trustees of the Southern Baptist agency announced they had voted unanimously to rescind their January action against Oklahoma trustee Wade Burleson, who published statements on his weblog criticizing two trustee decisions from November.

The new guidelines require trustees to refrain from public criticism of not only trustee policies—like the November decisions defining a proper baptism and prohibiting use of a “private prayer language” by missionary candidates—but all board-approved actions.

Likewise, the new guidelines require trustees “to refrain from speaking in disparaging terms” not only of fellow trustees but—after an amendment —of all IMB personnel.

In interviews after the meeting, board members said the guidelines could have prevented the showdown with Burleson and now will give trustees other options besides removal for dealing with conflict among board members.

Burleson, who insists he did not violate any board trustee policies and was never confronted with specific charges, said March 22 he is pleased with the guidelines and will abide by them.

“I’ve said all along, the authority over trustees is guidelines,” said Burleson, pastor of Emmanuel Baptist Church in Enid, Okla., who did not speak during the open portion of the trustee meeting. “I can assure them there will be no one more faithful to the new guidelines, and to hold other trustees faithful to the guidelines.”

Trustee Mike Smith, chair of the trustee orientation committee, said the guidelines, drafted jointly with the trustee administration committee, were in the works for two years, before Burleson was elected to the board.

“We knew that it would be seen as a Wade Burleson document, but that wasn’t our intention,” said Smith, a director of missions for the Dogwood Trails Area in East Texas.

Several trustees said the guidelines are not retroactive and won’t be used against Burleson, who was accused of “broken trust and resistance to accountability” for allegedly disclosing trustee deliberations on his blog.

Burleson’s removal, if it had been approved by Southern Baptist Convention messengers in June, would have been the first time a trustee had been removed from an Southern Baptist agency, historians said.

Trustee chairman Tom Hatley said the Burleson controversy and the problems it created were “a small price to pay” for the significant improvements that had resulted. Trustees have improved their accountability procedures and discovered the need for “better and faster ways to communicate with Southern Baptists,” said Hatley, pastor Immanuel Baptist Church in Rogers, Ark.

Hatley said IMB trustees are now more aware of the younger generation of Southern Baptist pastors and leaders who rallied to Burleson’s defense. “This high-tech generation is fearless,” he said, adding their fearlessness is often taken for insolence.

Marty Duren, a Georgia pastor whose blog, sbcoutpost.com, has followed the IMB controversy and criticized trustees, said he is doubtful the 27-year “conservative resurgence” could have succeeded if the new IMB policy had been in place in SBC agencies when moderate Baptists were in control.

Duren, pastor of New Bethany Baptist Church in Buford, Ga., was among a handful of young pastors who attended the IMB meeting in Tampa.

Several said the guidelines signal a narrowing of dissent within the SBC.

“It is unconscionable that Baptists would move away from our cherished distinctives” of individual freedom and the right of dissent, said Benjamin Cole, pastor of Parkview Baptist Church in Arlington. In January, Cole threatened to ask the Southern Baptist Convention to remove all of the IMB trustees, saying their action against Burleson had done “irreparable harm” to Southern Baptists’ confidence in them.

While rescinding the action against Burleson was a good move, Cole said, the issue that is energizing opposition to the growing narrowness of the SBC's conservative leadership “has nothing to do with Wade Burleson” but everything to do with Baptist freedom.

The four-page “Trustee Responsibilities” document, approved overwhelmingly with only three votes against, replaces the 47-page 1987 booklet, “Ordered by God,” which trustee leaders said most trustees had not read.

The new document details rules for trustee attendance, advocacy, responsibilities, accountability and discipline. When discipline of a trustee is necessary, the document says, a number of options are available, including investigation, censure, suspension for a period of time, or removal by the Southern Baptist Convention, which appoints all denominational trustees.

The guidelines call on the trustees to employ biblical principles to seek resolution of individual differences that could damage trust. They are prohibited from “participation in any unauthorized caucus … on a recurring basis to advance a specific agenda.” And trustees are instructed not to share “non-public information” with anyone other than trustees and senior IMB staffers.

Trustees are “to speak in positive and supportive terms as they interpret and report on actions by the board, regardless of whether they personally support the action,” the document says.

“Trustees are to exemplify what it means to be Christ-like in decorum and sincerely committed to the Southern Baptist cooperative missions tasks,” says another section. “In this respect, trustees are to speak the truth in love. Trustees are to refrain from speaking in disparaging terms about IMB personnel and fellow trustees.”

“Individual IMB trustees must refrain from public criticism of board-approved actions,” notes the section on trustee conduct. “Experience has shown that it is not possible to draw fine lines in this area. Freedom of expression must give way to the imperative that the work of the Kingdom not be placed at risk by publicly airing differences within the board.”

Smith, introducing the document, said, “Certainly in here it’s alright to have disagreement. (But) when we leave here we ought to be positive.”

But other trustees said they were troubled if the policy will prevent them from explaining their disagreement to their constituents.

Several trustees offered amendments, which were discussed at length until it was decided to postpone action until the next morning. In the meantime, the two committees who brought the recommendation reworked the document, incorporating several changes requested by trustees.

Debate on the revised document resumed the next morning.

“I believe my trusteeship is primarily to the Southern Baptist Convention,” said Allen McWhite, director of world missions at North Greenville University in Tigerville, S.C.

Any trustee should be able to express “honest disagreement” with a board action he or she feels is “not in the best interest of the Southern Baptist constituency,” he said. “No trustee should ever be put in the position where he or she could not do that.” Under the new policy, the “only alternative” for a trustee in that position is to resign, McWhite said.

“When we become trustees, we give up some things,” including the freedom to speak against the board, responded Ken Cademartori, pastor of Mason-Dixon Baptist Church in New Freedom, Penn. If a trustee wants to speak publicly against an IMB action, he or she can resign, he said.

Other provisions in the guidelines include a requirement that trustees “are to covenant with the Southern Baptist Convention by wholeheartedly affirming the current edition of the Baptist Faith & Message,” the SBC’s doctrinal statement.

IMB trustees first adopted that requirement in 2001. The new document adds, however: “Annually new trustees will be given the opportunity to express this covenant by signing a statement affirming the BF&M at orientation.”

Trustees previously required all missionaries to affirm in writing their agreement with the doctrinal statement. Several trustees said they should not ask the missionaries to do something they had not also done.

The new trustee guidelines also note: “Trusteees who are interested in any aspect of the operations of the board or the IMB are encouraged to use all available channels and opportunities for securing all relevant information from within the board and IMB structures.”

The board debated at length a policy to require IMB staffers to provide trustees with any requested information. But Hatley referred the motion to the administration committee for review.

Burleson declined to predict what will happen at the SBC meeting in June. Although he has been invited to participate in various upcoming meetings informing Southern Baptists of the dissatisfaction in the convention, Burleson said he has not decided if he will attend. “I’ve learned over the last 20 years I don’t like politics.”

Trustee Rick Thompson, pastor of Council Road Baptist Church, who had spoken in favor of Burleson’s position, called the decision to rescind “a good move.” Asked if the new guidelines would have prevented Burleson’s earlier criticisms of the board, Thompson said, “They’re very specific, and Wade is a man who abides by policy.”

California trustee Jerry Corbaley, a member of the administrative committee, likewise said he was pleased with the guidelines, which provide trustees with several ways to deal with “personal conflicts.”

Corbaley, director of missions for the North Coast Baptist Association, said the guidelines are not retroactive and so would not be applied to Burleson’s earlier blogging. But he added, there might be some earlier materials still available on Burleson’s blog site that would not comply with the new guidelines.

Nonetheless, he said, “let the people of God start fresh.”

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.




Immigration debate energizes faithful

Posted: 3/31/06

Immigration debate energizes faithful

By Robert Marus

ABP Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON (ABP)—The debate over immigration reform currently dividing America at large and congressional Republicans in particular is—ironically—uniting a wide array of the religious community that views immigration reform as a moral issue.

The Roman Catholic Church, mainline Protestants and Hispanic evangelicals have been at the forefront of a movement to deal with the nation’s problem with illegal immigration in a way that attempts to balance enforcement of the law with compassion for migrant workers. The union of the groups comes despite some voices in conservative circles arguing for a policy focused on harsher enforcement of existing immigration laws.

“We’ve got an immigration system (that) impacts on basic human dignity and human life. The status quo is morally unacceptable, because we witness abuse in the workplace, by smugglers and people dying in the desert,” said Kevin Appleby, an immigration-policy specialist for the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops.

“We feel there’s an obligation to speak out and say, ‘Look, the system is broken—it doesn’t acknowledge the reality of migration today, and we need to change it.’”

On March 30, the Senate took up debate on the Border Control Act, a bill sponsored by Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-Tenn.). It is similar to a bill, already approved in the House, that would focus on enforcement in preventing undocumented workers from making their way into the United States—mainly along the U.S./Mexico border.

In the week leading up to the Senate action, hundreds of thousands of immigrants, Hispanics and allies protested the House bill, including strikes by high school students from California to Virginia and a march that drew a reported half-million people to downtown Los Angeles. The protests also included a group of mainline and evangelical Protestant ministers, Catholic priests and Jewish rabbis who marched, in their clerical garb, on Senate offices March 27.

The demonstrators and other critics of the House bill have described its proposed measures for cracking down on illegal immigration as “draconian,” including provisions that would build a wall along the Mexican border and criminalize providing humanitarian aid to those immigrating illegally.

For instance, the National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference, an umbrella group for Hispanic-American evangelicals, has said the House legislation “would in essence deport the 11.5 million undocumented immigrants (estimated to be in the United States) and create punitive consequences for faith-based organizations that assist any undocumented individual.”

Partially in response, the Senate Judiciary Committee voted March 27 to approve a separate immigration-reform bill that explicitly exempts religious groups from prosecution for providing humanitarian aid to undocumented immigrants and sets up programs that would register immigrant workers, get them to pay taxes and penalties, and place them on the path to permanent status or full citizenship.

Four Republicans—who spanned the spectrum from Pennsylvania moderate Sen. Arlen Specter to very conservative Kansas Sen. Sam Brownback—joined the committee’s minority Democrats in approving the alternative bill. Sen. Ted Kennedy (D-Mass.), one of the alternative bill’s main supporters, credited “the faith community” with forcing it to the Senate floor.

The reform the Kennedy bill represents is needed badly, said Alejandro Camacho, a Texas Baptist pastor who regularly works with Hispanic immigrants.

“It is just ridiculous how the laws have separated our families and our congregations,” said Camacho, pastor of Iglesia Bautista Cristiana in McKinney, and director of a nonprofit organization called Immigration Services.

Camacho handles immigration-law cases for undocumented immigrants in Texas—almost all of them Mexican natives. He noted the vast difference in wages between the two neighboring countries—blue-collar workers can easily make 10 or even 20 times their previous salary by simply crossing the border—drives many heads of Mexican households to cross the Rio Grande in search of work.

But they often leave all or part of their families behind, sending any extra money they earn back to Mexico. The difficulty often comes, Camacho said, when such workers feel they need to return home.

“I have a lot of people, a lot of families who are in (federal deportation) proceedings because they messed up—because they went to go see their father who is dying,” he said.

When such workers—who often are poorly educated and unaware of the vast array of U.S. laws governing immigration— attempt to return to their jobs in the United States and get caught, current law bars them from re-entering the country for a several-year waiting period.

Worse, Camacho said, “If they come back illegally, they will be barred forever.”

He also noted that stepped-up enforcement of immigration laws in the days since 9/11—designed to thwart terrorists attempting to cross U.S. borders—have snared many immigrants for reasons entirely unrelated to terrorism.

“This is nonsense, really,” he continued. “Immigration (law) as it is, it destroys, it destroys; it’s very inhuman.”

Supporters of the harsher House bill have criticized the Senate alternative as weak on law enforcement. They also say it opens the door to further economic hardship for blue-collar American workers, who must compete with an onslaught of immigrants willing to work for lower wages.

“The bill essentially provides for a sweeping amnesty program for the 11 million-plus illegal aliens already in the United States,” said a statement from the American Conservative Union. The group said the bill risks border security because it “undermines respect for the rule of law and encourages more illegals to storm our borders.”

Carol Swain, a law professor at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, has written that a similar guest-worker program proposed by President Bush is “another amnesty program that places the interests of illegal immigrants ahead of those of low-skill, low-wage Americans— primarily poor whites, blacks and immigrants from disfavored countries— who compete with the illegal population for jobs in the service sector.”

But the Catholic Church’s Appleby said that the U.S. economy would be seriously impaired if all illegal immigrants were deported tomorrow, because there are simply not enough other workers to replace them—and there will be even fewer in the future.

“We benefit from the presence of these immigrants overall, economically,” he said.

Economists have noted that there are very few goods and services currently sold in the United States that do not depend on illegal-immigrant labor somewhere in their supply chain. The fact that Mexican immigrants are willing to work for less compensation, and in more dangerous conditions, than the vast majority of American workers keeps prices down on a vast array of goods.

However, Appleby added, even if the United States benefits economically from immigration, giving illegal immigrants paths to legal status is just a beginning for truly moral immigration reform.

“By the same token, (immigrant-)sending countries like Mexico are benefiting from the status quo. … They, in our opinion, should be doing to create more jobs in sending communities so these people can provide for their families where they are,” he said. “A person should have a right not to migrate, a right to stay where they are. And that is the goal over time—that migration is driven by choice and not by necessity.”

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.




NAMB trustees impose controls on agency’s president

Updated: 4/04/06

NAMB trustees impose controls on agency’s president

By Robert Marus

Associated Baptist Press

ALPHARETTA, Ga. (ABP)—Trustees of the Southern Baptist Convention’s North American Mission Board met in an eight-hour closed session March 23, emerging with recommendations that impose “executive-level controls” on NAMB President Bob Reccord and other administrators at the agency.

Reccord was not fired, and board leaders said he technically was not “disciplined.” But the board will enact guidelines to improve accountability on the CEO, apparently aimed at reining in some of his more controversial activities.

Meanwhile, NAMB Chief Operating Officer Chuck Allen resigned, along with two mid-level executives he hired.

In the special called meeting at the board’s suburban Atlanta headquarters March 23, trustees heard the findings of an ad hoc panel appointed in February. The committee was formed to respond to news reports, first published by Georgia Baptists’ newspaper, the Christian Index, outlining allegations of poor management at the missionary-sending agency.

Those news reports also detailed NAMB’s failure to meet expectations since it was formed in 1997 by the merger of the Home Mission Board and two other Southern Baptist agencies.

The nine-member study panel consisted mostly of NAMB trustee officers and chairpersons of the board’s standing committees. Trustee chairman Barry Holcomb, pastor of Bethany Baptist Church in Andalusia, Ala., said he and fellow panel members had recommended appointment of a second ad hoc committee, charged with creating new policy and procedure guidelines to help prevent future controversy.

“It was a long day, but I think at the end of the day, the North American Mission Board is going to be a stronger agency,” Holcomb told reporters, in a press conference with the board’s officers following the meeting. “Southern Baptists, I think, will be pleased that the trustees of this agency have dealt with the issues that we have been presented.”

The entire business portion of the meeting was conducted in executive session, with all guests and non-voting members of the board asked to leave. The board voted, without dissent, to enter the closed session since it would involve personnel issues, Holcomb said.

In a nod to the meeting’s import, SBC President Bobby Welch, pastor of First Baptist Church in Daytona, Fla., attended. Welch serves as a trustee of all SBC agencies and boards by virtue of his office.

According to the Christian Index, the number of career missionaries funded by NAMB has dropped 10 percent since 1997, when NAMB was formed as the Southern Baptist successor to the Home Mission Board. The Index also cited a lack of a consistent evangelism strategy, a loss of momentum in church-planting efforts, and a drop in NAMB cash reserves from $55 million to $23 million.

The paper also raised questions about NAMB’s dealings with subcontractor Steve Sanford, a former church member of Reccord’s when he was a Virginia pastor. Sanford was asked to perform an audit of NAMB’s communications strategy in 2003, which NAMB officials say led the agency to outsource at least 28 positions in its communications and Internet areas. NAMB later hired InovaOne, a company founded and owned by Sanford, to perform some of those services.

The study committee’s report—a version of which was released to reporters March 24—found no clearly unethical behavior by Reccord or the board. However, it repeatedly detailed past actions and practices that could leave the agency open to criticism or make it appear less than accountable to Southern Baptists.

For instance, a change in the way that the board counts missionaries—which inflated the count to match an SBC-adopted goal of 5,000—“has the potential to be confusing to Southern Baptists,” the report said. “While NAMB has clearly defined those categories through its publications and at the convention, perhaps a better job must be done to educate Southern Baptists about the valuable role of our MSC (short-term volunteer) missionaries to Southern Baptist life.”

The report determined that the use of Sanford’s companies for both the communications audit and the resultant outsourcing did not explicitly violate any NAMB ethics policies, but could raise questions nonetheless.

“While the trustees discovered no intentional attempt by Dr. Reccord to show favoritism to a ‘friend’ by retaining and using Steve Sanford and InovaOne for NAMB’s media strategies, they do believe that this decision left both (him) and the board open to the charge of a conflict of interest,” it said.

The report also acknowledged that NAMB had spent more than $3 million since the audit on Sanford’s media ventures.

Among the other issues raised in the Index article were questions about Reccord’s extensive travel and speaking schedule, which frequently includes trips and events not directly related to NAMB or other Southern Baptist work. It also questioned his involvement with his wife’s speaking ministry, and questioned the prudence of several special initiatives that NAMB has instituted under Reccord’s leadership, in some cases investing millions in projects that were soon abandoned or placed on hiatus.

For example, the report acknowledged NAMB lost more than $1 million—at a time when it was belt-tightening in its traditional ministry areas—on an aborted series of young-adult conferences in 2004-2005. Called “Elevate,” the elaborate events were designed to bring 20-somethings together to learn how to apply their faith in their workplace. They were designed to pay for themselves, but attendance at the initial Elevate conferences was far below expectations.

NAMB officials ended up paying for the shortfalls—including extensive off-budget marketing and planning expenses—out of the board’s cash reserves. The program subsequently was suspended.

The trustee report concludes with six recommendations, including establishment of a new trustee subcommittee charged with creating the new policy guidelines to deal with such issues in the future. The recommendations are:

— The subcommittee recommend rules “to be used as a guide for directing the travel, speaking, and on-campus office time required for the president of the agency.”

— The panel create a similar set of guidelines for proper handling of competitive bidding for outsourcing contracts.

— The committee develop “controls to be used as a guide to be followed when the president of the agency wants to develop new initiatives, including the appropriate oversight and approval by the board.”

— The panel recommend criterion “for clarifying what constitutes poor management by an executive officer and how it should be handled.”

— The committee establish procedures “that will provide the agency and its head with greater levels of accountability to the board and the Southern Baptist Convention.”

— The board “task its duly elected officers, in perpetuity, with the role of monitoring these controls, utilizing them as part of the president’s annual review, and reporting the status of these controls annually at an assigned full board meeting.”

When asked by reporters if Reccord had been disciplined, Holcomb said, “Was he disciplined in an official sense in the executive session? The answer is ‘No.’”

Holcomb said that Reccord “recognizes, just as all of us do, that he’s not perfect and we’re not perfect. … I think that the recommendations that the board adopted today will help him.”

But Holcomb said some of the problems can simply be attributed to growing pains in an agency that is still quite new, relatively speaking.

“The Home Mission Board had an over-100-year history. The North American Mission Board is still an infant, and we still have a learning curve,” he said.

Allen, the chief operations officer; Benj Smith, executive director of strategic planning; and Rick Forbus, director of the leadership initiatives team, resigned the day before the March 23 meeting. Trustee leaders and other sources said the resignations were not the result of the original investigation but because of other issues that surfaced.

Reccord released a statement March 24 saying he was “thankful that the trustee process worked.” He also noted that the month-long period since the Index article was first published “has been a time of great distraction for all of our staff from the task of North American missions…. Now it is time to get back to the work. Where mistakes have been made, I have made a pledge to use this process to correct those errors and work with our trustees to make NAMB a stronger agency.”

Trustee vice chair Bill Curtis, pastor of Cornerstone Baptist Church in Florence, S.C., said that trustees would also take responsibility for righting NAMB’s ship. “The trustees are prepared to acknowledge that it is a shared responsibility where we are at this point,” he told reporters.

The full report is available on NAMB’s website at www.namb.net

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.




Student mission volunteers spring into action

Posted: 3/31/06

A Texas State University student removes plaster from a New Orleans home. Texas State Baptist Student Ministries brought a team that cleaned this home in less than a day. (Photos by John Hall)

Student mission volunteers spring into action

By John Hall

Texas Baptist Communications

NEW ORLEANS—Thomas Lloyd hopes to move his family back into their home by Thanksgiving—more than a year after Hurricane Katrina forced them to move out. This spring break, he praised God for extra hands that moved him toward that goal.

Lloyd is one of many Louisiana homeowners helped by more than 200 Texas Baptist students from 11 college campuses. Student volunteers stripped storm-damaged homes down to their studs March 13-17.

The Texans were among more than 1,000 college students who served in New Orleans under direction of the Southern Baptist Convention North American Mission Board and New Orleans Baptist churches this spring break.

Rebecca Zuniga, a University of Mary-Hardin Baylor student, pulls a nail from a stud in a New Orleans house.

Those teams will be followed by other groups who want to work in the city. Some groups will clean out homes, while other Baptists will begin the rebuilding process on homes already cleared.

In most cases, a team of college students removed all the furniture, appliances, flooring, sheet rock and plaster from a house within a day and moved on to the next home. The swift progress was a pleasant change for Lloyd, who was doing the same work by himself.

“It means the world to me that they’re caring and sharing,” Lloyd said of the team of University of Houston and Rice University students who worked on his house. “They’re caring for people who were devastated by this natural disaster.”

Spring Break Ministries
HPU students 'build relationships' on spring break
Student mission volunteers spring into action
Aggie BSM tours Texas
DBU students clean homes in New Orleans
KidsHeart draws 100 volunteers to the Valley
Honest student laborers discover hidden treasure
UMHB students assist FBC New Orleans
Wayland students serve in the surf, sun and city
Children's home residents repay kindness to Kokomo church

The trip provided an opportunity for college students to help a situation that touched their hearts. Many had opportunities to go other places but felt they needed to come to New Orleans. They know they cannot rebuild the city alone, but they wanted to do what they could, they said.

“I just really wanted the opportunity to come down here and show our support for the people of New Orleans, just do what we can as far as physical labor goes and be here to talk to them and show them we love them,” Caitlin Thomas of Rice said.

The work was bittersweet for the students as they removed a family’s belongings in hopes of helping them put their lives back together.

“In that pile, there are people’s clothes and there are mildewed dolls, children’s toys,” said Jason Harrell, Baptist Student Ministries director at Rice. “There’s a little girl’s room in the back. That’s in the pile. Their entire life is almost represented in this pile.

“Yeah, I see a lot of destruction, and it’s bad, but we’re optimistic because we know we’re tearing out, making way for new things to happen inside the home here. They’re going to rebuild.”

A Texas A&M University at Commerce student pulls a load of lawn supplies from the backyard of a New Orleans home.

As they worked on the construction projects, many students met the homeowners and talked with them about the hurricane experiences. Many people are living on streets surrounded by empty homes. Others live in trailers.

The students provided someone to listen to each person’s story, offering encouragement and prayer.

“I didn’t realize the people are still hurting like they are,” said Lacy Sanders, a student at Texas A&M University at Commerce. “I think it really brought to realization how much they are really hurting and how much healing it’s really going to take.”

In those moments of encouragement, prayer and cleaning, University of Mary Hardin-Baylor student Bonnie Flentge saw hope for the devastated city. She remembered coming to New Orleans with her church before the storm and again in January. Seeing the ravaged homes still breaks her heart, but she also noticed flashes of reconstruction one house at a time.

God is at work in the rubble, she believes. And he has allowed her to be part of it.

“I’m really excited to see how God uses all this devastation for his glory,” 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.




Aggie BSM tours Texas

Posted: 3/31/06

Aggie BSM tours Texas

By George Henson

Staff Writer

COLLEGE STATION—The Baptist Student Ministry of Texas A&M University used spring break to develop relationships with international students while giving those students a taste of Texas culture.

BSM representatives escorted 15 international students on a four-day tour steeped in Texana. Most of the international students were from China, but the group also included an Indian couple, a man from South Korea and a woman from Iran.

It marked the third year the BSM sponsored a tour of Texas, and the itineraries varied somewhat from year to year for the benefit of international students making return trips.

International students from Texas A&M encounter exotic wildlife at a Hill Country ranch during a tour of Texas sponsored by the campus Baptist Student Ministry.

This year, students took in sights familiar to many Texans—the Alamo and Riverwalk in San Antonio, the capitol, governor’s mansion, state history museum and a rodeo in Austin, and a Hill Country wildlife ranch.

Northridge Park Baptist Church in San Antonio and Crestview Baptist Church in Austin allowed the group to sleep at their facilities to help more students afford the trip.

Texas A&M BSM International Intern Myradel Dubard said the trip was a good way to meet students who had not been connected with the BSM in the past.

“Out of those 15 international students who went with us, we hadn’t had much contact with about half of them, and some of them had never been inside our building,” she explained.

“This gives us an opportunity to start a relationship with these students. Now, when we see these students on campus, we have a background together—a reason to stop and talk and further develop the relationships.”

Spring Break Ministries
HPU students 'build relationships' on spring break
Student mission volunteers spring into action
Aggie BSM tours Texas
DBU students clean homes in New Orleans
KidsHeart draws 100 volunteers to the Valley
Honest student laborers discover hidden treasure
UMHB students assist FBC New Orleans
Wayland students serve in the surf, sun and city
Children's home residents repay kindness to Kokomo church

Lives can be changed as these relationships continue to develop, she said.

“Now that they have some American friends at the BSM, we hope that it will extend even beyond our walls to invitations into homes, where things can really happen,” Dubard said.

American students involved in the tour also benefited from the experience, she added.

“It’s great for them, because even though all of them are involved on some level with our ministry to international students, some have a limited role, and this helped many of them grow into a more involved role in the ministry. I think we saw a lot of that on this trip.”

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.




DBU students clean homes in New Orleans

Posted: 3/31/06

A Dallas Baptist University student cleans a home in New Orleans.

DBU students clean homes in New Orleans

By Tim Gingrich

Dallas Baptist University

NEW ORLEANS—Thirty-nine Dallas Baptist University students celebrated spring break by tearing down debris from Hurricane Katrina and helping New Orleans residents mend their lives.

“It was like a ghost town,” said Angela Sacco, DBU director of student life and a New Orleans native, as vans filled with students and supplies rolled into the Crescent City.

DBU students take a break after working on clearing a house in the 9th Ward of New Orleans. Pictured are (left to right, back row) Chip Luter, Chris Hendricks, (front row) Zach Mehlhaff, Kristi Jarvis, Jamie Simmons, Audrey Cholla, Lyndsey Wharton and John Merrill.

Yuta Motegi, a business major from Japan, brought a unique perspective to the team.

“It was similar to the earthquakes in Japan—but worse,” Motegi said. “Some earthquakes shake the land and cause other problems like fire, but I’ve never seen such a mess like in New Orleans.”

DBU volunteers found the terrain challenging. “It was frustrating getting around, because everything was in shambles,” said Jason Hatch, director of the DBU Baptist Student Ministry. “You’re looking for a street sign and it’s down.”

DBU students worked in New Orleans’ 9th Ward, one of the sections hardest hit last August and home to student volunteer Chip Luter. His father, Fred Luter, is pastor at New Orleans’ Franklin Avenue Baptist Church.

Spring Break Ministries
HPU students 'build relationships' on spring break
Student mission volunteers spring into action
Aggie BSM tours Texas
DBU students clean homes in New Orleans
KidsHeart draws 100 volunteers to the Valley
Honest student laborers discover hidden treasure
UMHB students assist FBC New Orleans
Wayland students serve in the surf, sun and city
Children's home residents repay kindness to Kokomo church

Floods severely damaged the church’s sanctuary and many of the congregation’s homes. Many of the church’s members continue to be scattered throughout Texas and Louisiana. Before they return home, houses must be cleared of dangerous debris and readied for repair.

Wearing white hazardous-material suits, DBU student volunteers began the grueling task of gutting homes.

“It’s hot in those suits,” Hatch commented. Damaged home appliances had leaked hazardous chemicals during the flood, and water damage had molded much of the wood and drywall. Breathing through ventilation masks only added to the painstaking task of ripping up floors, tearing down walls and clearing out wreckage. But DBU students persevered, salvaging 14 homes in five days.

Getting down to the foundation helped the team find hope. In one house, Hatch’s team was busy piling old furniture and mildewed carpet on the curb. But in the last room, one piece of paper on the floor would not come off. Looking closer, Hatch realized it was a page from the New Testament book of Galatians. Chemicals in the water and the forces of nature had melded it to the hardwood floor.

CD offering hope

Tearing down homes was only half of the students’ mission in New Orleans.

Before the relief trip, DBU President Gary Cook commissioned the university’s student worship ministry, Glowing Heart, to record a special CD of hope to distribute to hurricane survivors, along with a package of inspirational literature.

Unzipping their hazmat suits, DBU students offered the inspirational CDs to anyone they encountered in the neighborhood where they worked.

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.




KidsHeart draws 100 volunteers to the Valley

Posted: 3/31/06

Members of First Baptist Church in Eagle Lake organize clothing for distribution at Sublime Gracia Baptist Church in Progresso during KidsHeart 2006 spring break mission trip.

KidsHeart draws 100 volunteers to the Valley

By Jenny Pope

Buckner Benevolences

MISSION—More than 100 people gathered in the Rio Grande Valley for the 2006 KidsHeart spring break mission trip, sponsored by the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship of Texas and Buckner Children and Family Services, to minister to families in the colonias along the Mexican border.

Teams served the community by holding Vacation Bible Schools, sports camps and computer classes, distributing food and clothing, and assisting with much-needed construction work.

First Baptist Church in Eagle Lake brought a 45-member team to construct a food pantry and begin work on a new congregation at Sublime Gracia Baptist Church in Progresso. They also distributed Bibles and held a block party for the community.

Members of First Baptist Church in Onalaska peer through the window of a new construction site in the Rio Grande Valley during KidsHeart 2006 spring break mission trip, sponsored by Buckner Children and Family Services in the Valley.

“The community has really embraced this church,” said Louis Herman, member of First Baptist in Eagle Lake and third-year KidsHeart mission trip participant.

Spring Break Ministries
HPU students 'build relationships' on spring break
Student mission volunteers spring into action
Aggie BSM tours Texas
DBU students clean homes in New Orleans
KidsHeart draws 100 volunteers to the Valley
Honest student laborers discover hidden treasure
UMHB students assist FBC New Orleans
Wayland students serve in the surf, sun and city
Children's home residents repay kindness to Kokomo church

“This area and the congregation have really grown so much, to the point where they not only needed a new food pantry, but a larger building for church services, too.”

Other churches that participated include the Church at Canyon Creek in Austin, Second Baptist Church in Lubbock, First Baptist Church in Copperas Cove, First Baptist Church in Onalaska and First Baptist Church in Waco.

“Throughout the years, many friendships have been formed between these churches and the Progresso community,” said Monica Skrzypinski, Buckner’s director of community relations for the Rio Grande Valley.

“As the group held hands and prayed together, you could feel the emotions, tears and love running through the circle as hope jumped from one prayer to another.

“It’s wonderful to see these two cultures melt together in one sentiment and really become like family.”

For more information about participating in Kids-Heart or about Buckner Children and Family Services in the Rio Grande Valley, visit www.bucknerchildren.org/rio grandevalley or call (956) 423-7909.

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.




Two suspects jailed in Orange church arson

Posted: 3/31/06

Honest student laborers discover hidden treasure

By Keith Manuel

Baptist Press

NEW ORLEANS (BP)—After ripping sheetrock from a moldy closet, Trista Wright was removing the debris when a flash of green caught her eye.

Wright, on a spring break mission trip to New Orleans, reached into the debris and pulled out an old, grubby $100 bill. As she dug around in the debris a little more, she discovered that an air conditioning vent secretly had served as a makeshift safe, and she pulled out another $100 bill, then another and another.

“At first, I thought it was Monopoly money. It was just stacks of $100 bills. The money was very old,” said Wright, who was part of a Baptist Collegiate Ministries group from Armstrong Atlantic University in Savannah, Ga.

Spring Break Ministries
HPU students 'build relationships' on spring break
Student mission volunteers spring into action
Aggie BSM tours Texas
DBU students clean homes in New Orleans
KidsHeart draws 100 volunteers to the Valley
Honest student laborers discover hidden treasure
UMHB students assist FBC New Orleans
Wayland students serve in the surf, sun and city
Children's home residents repay kindness to Kokomo church

When the students hastily totaled the money, it was more than $30,000. The discovery presented a new problem: “What do we do now?”

After consulting with the leaders of the mission trip, they decided to notify the local authorities. The sheriff’s department came, verified the identity of the homeowner and learned that the home had been in the family for several generations.

The owner of the home, who wanted to remain anonymous, had inherited the house after her mother died a couple of years ago. Wright said the woman was not surprised by the find because her mother hid things around her house all the time. In addition, her father was suspicious of placing money in banks, having grown up during the Great Depression.

Even though finding something hidden was not a surprise, the amount was a shock to the homeowner.

“The lady was speechless,” Wright said. “It was such a blessing to the family. The Lord really blessed the family at the right time because (the owner) had some medical tests done today and was very anxious about the results.”

The collegians’ honesty sparked plenty of media attention, including an Associated Press article that was picked up across the United States and in numerous countries and segments on national TV news broadcasts.

There was never any thought of keeping the money, Wright told the AP. “We were called there to serve people and to be Christ-like.” Otherwise, “I would have regretted it. Nothing good would have come of it.”

“Trista came down here to serve, because Christ served,” said Aaron Arledge, the New Orleans-area coordinator for the many Baptist collegiate teams streaming to the city during their spring break to gut flood-ravaged homes.

“It’s great that an honest group was in the house,” Arledge added. “Someone else might have just taken the money. The family thought it was a miracle. For them to have lost so much and then to find this hidden treasure was just awesome.”

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.




UMHB students assist FBC New Orleans

Posted: 3/31/06

UMHB students don hazmat gear for dirty work in New Orleans.

UMHB students assist FBC New Orleans

By Carol Woodward

University of Mary Hardin-Baylor

NEW ORLEANS—A Central Texas college minister and 19 student volunteers from the University of Mary Hardin-Baylor spent three days of spring break working to make a difference in the lives of people who lost their homes and possessions to Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath.

Trey Bledsoe, minister to college students at Canyon Creek Baptist Church in Temple and leader of the construction team, characterized as “unbelievable” the damage in New Orleans’ 9th Ward.

Student volunteers from the University of Mary Hardin-Baylor work in New Orleans’ 9th Ward, cleaning two homes damaged by the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.

“It was like a tornado came through or bomb had exploded. Houses were totally destroyed, roofs and/or foundations without houses, cars on top of cars or lodged in what was left of houses, rubble everywhere,” Bledsoe said.

First Baptist Church in New Orleans coordinated the rebuilding efforts. The student focused on cleaning two homes during their three days.

“The students constantly were reminding themselves that no matter what they smelled, felt or saw running across the floor, they were there to serve God. Every swing of a hammer was for God’s glory and a blessing of hope in a place that was hurting beyond anything we had imagined,” Bledsoe said.

Lindsey Harkrider, a UMHB sophomore, said the most meaningful part for her was building new relationships.

“From getting to meet the owners of the two houses we worked on to talking to two homeless men we met in the park, every relationship that was started was totally ordained by the Lord,” she said. “It was also so amazing to see how our whole group clicked. Most of us did not know one another very well when we left on Friday, but by the time we returned to UMHB on Thursday, I felt as if I had know them for years. It was wonderful to see everyone’s different strengths and how we all used them together to get the job done.”

Bledsoe agreed the venture became an opportunity to build new relationships.

“As a minister to students, any time I lead a mission trip with students, the most meaningful part of the trip is always seeing what God does in and through the students,” he said.

Spring Break Ministries
HPU students 'build relationships' on spring break
Student mission volunteers spring into action
Aggie BSM tours Texas
DBU students clean homes in New Orleans
KidsHeart draws 100 volunteers to the Valley
Honest student laborers discover hidden treasure
UMHB students assist FBC New Orleans
Wayland students serve in the surf, sun and city
Children's home residents repay kindness to Kokomo church

“I love watching students’ lives change in ways that no one can expect or seeing God affirm his plans in their lives. It is amazing to see preconceived notions and fears melt away into a heart for people and communities that they are not a part of and may never return to.”

Harkrider acknowledged she never had worked so hard, but she found the experience rewarding.

“It was amazing to me that I never felt tired or worn out until it was time to quit or take a break. The Lord gave us so much strength,” she said.

The trip was a time for the students to bring encouragement, hope and God’s grace and mercy to a family of fellow believers, Bledsoe added.

“We helped First Baptist of New Orleans in their mission to be light in a dark time by meeting the overwhelming physical needs of a devastated city,” 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.




Wayland students serve in the surf, sun and city

Posted: 3/31/06

Wayland Baptist University student participants in Beach Reach level a sand sculpture on the beach at South Padre Island before dusk hits. According to students, the city required the sculpture to be torn down daily to avoid riots.

Wayland students serve in the surf, sun and city

By Teresa Young

Wayland Baptist University

KENNER, La.—From the storm-ravaged Louisiana Gulf Coast to the shores of South Padre Island, 21 Wayland Baptist University students devoted their spring break to ministry.

Twelve students and three sponsors headed for the New Orleans area to work with victims of Hurricane Katrina in Kenner, La., and nine students and two sponsors journeyed to South Padre Island for the annual Beach Reach effort.

In South Louisiana, the Wayland team worked on homes and businesses damaged by Hurricane Katrina and the flood aftermath, removing furniture and old sheetrock from homes that were salvageable, in preparation for other crews who will repair the homes. Working with a youth group from Weatherford, they also cleaned out a strip mall that had stood in nine feet of water for months.

Students expressed amazement at the devastation caused by the storm and the evidence still remaining. Homes marked with numbers indicating the dead found inside left poignant reminders of the storm’s toll.

“Six months later, you’d think there would be some sense of normalcy, but that’s not the case,” said Joe Hoyle, a sophomore from Perryton. “I’ve never seen devastation like that in my life. The flood damage in this whole community is just amazing. I’m sure New Orleans will never be the same. God has really given me a heart for the people of New Orleans, and my heart goes out to those who were affected.”

Spring Break Ministries
HPU students 'build relationships' on spring break
Student mission volunteers spring into action
Aggie BSM tours Texas
DBU students clean homes in New Orleans
KidsHeart draws 100 volunteers to the Valley
Honest student laborers discover hidden treasure
UMHB students assist FBC New Orleans
Wayland students serve in the surf, sun and city
Children's home residents repay kindness to Kokomo church

Though the working conditions were sticky, dirty and foul-smelling at best, the students agreed the trip was an amazing experience, and they saw God at work.

“We were working at one house, and the lady introduced us to a mailman who was known as a local hero,” said Molly Flowers, a freshman from Amarillo. “He lived on a boat and had used his boat to rescue more than 600 people trapped in their homes. But he didn’t really take any credit—just said that God had helped him. That really encouraged me.”

Freshman Zach Hawkins of Burkburnett shared the gospel with a family struggling with drug addiction, and he saw them rededicate their lives to Christ.

“You never know how you can change someone just by talking to them,” he said.

Senior Hugh Ellis of Lovington, N.M., was impressed by the outpouring of love and support that faith-based organizations have provided to the storm-ravaged region. “The Wayland group was always hard at work and never grumbling or complaining. They really lived out true Christianity—loving each other and taking care of each other,” he said.

At South Padre, the Wayland team was part of a 300-student brigade spending their week ministering to their peers in the spring break parties on the beach. The group cleaned beaches, witnessed to students, served free pancake breakfasts at an island church and manned free van rides to hotels, bars and restaurants, sharing the gospel during each ride.

Though the assignment was not easy, team members said God worked mightily, thanks to a strong emphasis on prayer.

“At Beach Reach, I learned the power of prayer. We were on our knees before the Lord all day long, and he answered our prayers. He used us to do his will,” said freshman Sarah Ketchem of Lubbock. “Getting to share with someone how much Christ loves them and what he did for them on the cross, gives me more joy than absolutely anything else in this life.”

Ketchem and others said a series of huge sand sculptures carved by a man from Maryland who makes the trip annually at his own expense served as valuable conversation starters for sharing the gospel. “I was standing near one that was a large picture of Christ’s face, and I asked this girl what she thought of it,” Ketchem recalled. “She told me, ‘I came here to get away from him, and he’s still here.’ I got to really visit with her about her relationship with God, and we exchanged e-mail addresses so we can keep each other accountable.”

Joe Perez, a sophomore from Panhandle, echoed the value of prayer on the trip. “To see how prayer fuels the entire week at Beach Reach was awesome,” he said. “You think sometimes that people aren’t listening when you share the gospel, but they are. We took advantage of every opportunity, and God used everything we did that week.”

Donnie Brown, director of Baptist Student Ministries at Wayland and a sponsor on the Beach Reach trip, admitted the week took him out of his comfort zone, but he saw God work in the lives of young people. He applauded the work students did during the week normally reserved for playtime. “Did the Lord save 30,000 spring breakers? Probably not. We don’t know how many accepted Christ, but we know that seeds were planted and students were obedient to the cause of Christ,” 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.




Storylist for 4/03/06 issue

Storylist for week of 4/03/06

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




Student mission volunteers spring into action


Spring Break Ministries
Student mission volunteers spring into action

HPU students 'build relationships' on spring break

Aggie BSM tours Texas

DBU students clean homes in New Orleans

KidsHeart draws 100 volunteers to the Valley

Honest student laborers discover hidden treasure

UMHB students assist FBC New Orleans

Wayland students serve in the surf, sun and city

Children's home residents repay kindness to Kokomo church


Two suspects jailed in Orange church arson

BGCT designed to meet churches' wishes

From pulpit & pumper, pastor battles blazes

Foster named BGCT communications director

Former Baptist Building may house homeless in Dallas

May men want to see 'house that faith built ' completed

Prayers enable Texas team's ministry in Spain & Portugal

Church sees school as avenue to community ministry

UT-Austin student ministry loses associational funding

On the Move

Around the state

Texas Tidbits


Previously Posted
Satellite photos fuel controversy about Noah's ark

Texans named national Acteens panelists

Children's home residents repay kindness to Kokomo church

Hospice a ministry, not just a service, providers say

Volunteers help burned-out community reclaim mementos

Wayland executive VP killed in plane crash

Schmeltekopf served as top aide to two BGCT directors



Former WMU leader McCullough dies

NAMB trustees impose controls on agency's president

Baptist Briefs

Previously Posted
IMB won 't seek trustee's removal


From pulpit & pumper, pastor battles blazes


Peace activists freed from captivity in Iraq

Afghan Christian released, finds asylum

Cuba travel rules protested

Immigration debate energizes faithful

Sudan in crisis, commission reports


Around the state

On the Move

Cartoon

Classified Ads

Texas Baptist Forum


EDITORIAL: Rahman case offers lesson in liberty

DOWN HOME: He wishes she wouldn't speculate

TOGETHER: Balance church & government duties

RIGHT OR WRONG? Seniors sealed relationship with a document

Texas Baptist Forum

Cybercolumn by Brett Younger: The joy of socks


BaptistWay Bible Series for April 2: Every choice carries its own consequence

Family Bible Series for April 2: Honor Christ's suffering with persistent service

Explore the Bible Series for April 2: Put trust only in God

BaptistWay Bible Series for April 9: Seek God's will, not his permission or forgiveness

Family Bible Series for April 9: Praise God for his grace and forgiveness

Explore the Bible Series for April 9: Pursue a vigorous righteousness


• See articles from our previous 3/20 2006 issue here.