EDITORIAL: Forget holy smoke, what about people?

Posted: 3/17/06

EDITORIAL:
Forget holy smoke, what about people?

Does God expect you to be holy?

Do you know what “holy” means?

If you answered yes to either question, welcome to the minority. Not just the minority of Americans, but Christians.

A new survey by The Barna Group reveals only one-third of Americans (35 percent) agreed “God expects you to become holy.” More surprisingly, less than half (46 percent) of born-again Christians believe God calls them to holiness.

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Maybe the majority’s excuse is they don’t know what being “holy” means. When the Barna pollsters asked Americans for a definition, the No. 1 answer was “I don’t know” (21 percent). Other answers included “being Christ-like” (19 percent), making faith your top priority in life (18 percent), living a pure or sinless lifestyle (12 percent), having a good attitude about people and life (10 percent), focusing completely on God (9 percent), being guided by the Holy Spirit (9 percent), being born again (8 percent), reflecting the character of God (7 percent), exhibiting a moral lifestyle (5 percent), and accepting and practicing biblical truth (5 percent). Answers provided by Christians and the public at large were “virtually identical.”

Regardless of their definition, about three-quarters of Americans (73 percent) believe “it is possible for someone to become holy, regardless of their past.” Just half (50 percent), believe they know someone who is holy. And only one in five (21 percent) consider themselves holy.

So, what does “holy” mean? “The Hebrew word for ‘holy’ means ‘marked off’ or … ‘to cut off’ or ‘to separate,’” explains Millard Erickson, former theology professor at Baylor University’s Truett Seminary. He cites two characteristics of holy people. They are “specially set apart or sanctified to the Lord.” They also “live lives of purity and goodness.”

That seems like a pretty high standard. Does God expect people to be holy? Both the Old and New Testaments say yes. God told the ancient Hebrews: “I am the Lord your God; consecrate yourselves and be holy, because I am holy” (Leviticus 11:44). Echoing that commandment, the Apostle Peter instructed the Christian church: “As obedient children, do not conform to the evil desires you had when you lived in ignorance. But just as he who called you is holy, so be holy in all you do; for it is written, ‘Be holy, because I am holy’” (1 Peter 1:14-16).

Admittedly, holiness isn’t a hot topic among most Christians. A couple of reasons probably explain this fact: First, many Christians who talk up holiness aren’t good role models. Some are so overly pious and full of themselves they project an angry, judgmental image of Christianity, which we instinctively reject. And some fail to live up to the standards they set for others, so when they say “holy,” we think “hypocrite.” Like the so-called Christian leaders of morally bankrupt businesses or preachers who prey on women. Second, holiness seems too hard. We can relate to the Apostle Paul, who called himself a “slave to sin” and basically said: I can’t do what I know I should do, and I can’t stop doing what I know I shouldn’t (Romans 7:15). Hardly holy, huh?

Whatever our reasons for downplaying holiness, Barna’s results are alarming. This is not an esoteric theology debate. This is a probe into the central core of our faith-life:

• Our passion for holiness measures our passion for God. Holiness—uniquely otherness—is a defining factor of divinity. If we believe we are created in God’s image, we theoretically aspire to reflect that image. The more we are set apart for God’s service and the more our character aligns with God’s moral purity, the closer we are to being who God created us to be.

• This isn’t about a long list of “don’ts.” While the overly pious seem to have captured the definition of holiness, they’re missing the point. If we’re set apart for God, that means we see God’s plan in all phases of our lives, not just church on Sunday morning. It’s complete integration of faith and life; it means who we are and Whose we are define how we live at home and work and in the community. And rather than behavior by omission—“We don’t smoke and we don’t chew and we don’t go with girls who do”—holiness manifests itself in commission—warmly, winsomely embodying the loving presence of Christ for all the people we touch in our lives.

• Rather than a skewed version of holiness building yet another barrier between Christians and the world, true holiness resurrects a ramp between the world and God. What could be more attractive in a weary, contentious world than the fruits of the Spirit—love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control—that characterize holy people?

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.




Faith-based funding figures disputed

Posted: 3/17/06

Faith-based funding figures disputed

By Robert Marus

ABP Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON (ABP)—In response to growing criticism of his “faith-based initiative,” President Bush touted White House figures showing growth in federal funding of religious charities last year.

The figures give a different picture than a recent study by a non-partisan group that monitors Bush’s initiative. And the discrepancy between the two sets of statistics underscores the difficulty in measuring the effects of the policy precisely.

Bush, speaking to a White House-sponsored conference for leaders of religious and community charitable groups, said the federal government had given nearly $2.1 billion in grants to religious charities in fiscal 2005. That amount reflected an increase of 7 percent over last year’s figure.

But, in recent months, several religious leaders Bush initially recruited to push his faith-based initiative have turned on it. They have criticized the president for talking about funding social services through religious groups publicly but reducing the overall pool of funds available to charitable groups by cutting discretionary spending on social services.

A study, released in February by the Roundtable on Religion and Social Welfare Policy, seemed to confirm that view. It tracked 99 federal grant-making programs between 2002 and 2004 to gauge how much they gave to groups the study considered religiously affiliated. It found that, while the share of the funds given to faith-based providers versus secular providers remained steady, the total amount of funding had decreased over the period, from $670 million in fiscal 2002 to $626 million in fiscal 2004.

The White House immediately attacked that study. Jim Towey, head of the White House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives, accused its authors of “cherry-picking” because they did not take into account new federal programs that had appeared during the period covered—nor did it include grantees the White House considers “faith-based,” but that were simply renewing government grants they had received since before the faith-based initiative even existed.

Lisa Montiel, the Roundtable’s research scientist and a professor at the affiliated Rockefeller Institute of the State University of New York at Albany, said her study was interested in tracking growth of new funding for faith-based groups.

The Roundtable study also showed only a small percentage of the federal grant money it studied went to congregations or other small local organizations—the very types of groups Bush has said the faith-based push was designed to help. According to that study, congregation-based groups got less than 10 percent of the federal funding over the three years studied, their share decreasing every year.

Meanwhile, large regional, national or international faith-based groups got the lion’s share of the funding—with nearly 54 percent going to such groups in fiscal 2004. Many of those are groups, like Catholic Charities or Lutheran Social Services, that provide services essentially secular in content and that would have been eligible for federal funds before Bush’s initiative. 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.




Church: Help families cope

Posted: 3/17/06

Church: Help families cope

Many people bring their family to church with one question in mind, said Bo Prosser of the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship—“Can your Jesus help us cope?”

“Our job as ministers is to help people be connected enough that God can work in their lives,” Prosser said at Family Ministry 101, a recent training event at Wilshire Baptist Church in Dallas.

Prosser, CBF coordinator of congregational life, and Diana Garland, dean of Baylor University’s School of Social Work, led the one-day workshop. Family Ministry 101 is one of three workshops being offered in the newly launched Family Ministry Academy, a continuing education opportunity provided by the School of Social Work’s Center for Family and Community Ministries.

Churches may need to examine their schedules to ensure they are drawing families together instead of pulling them apart, Garland said.

Age-graded Sunday school classes and class names that label members as single adults or place them in other categories may need to be revisited, she added.

Garland, author of Family Ministry and Sacred Stories of Ordinary Families, described family as a set of relationships that endures over a lifetime despite life’s separations. Through families, people attempt to meet their needs for belonging and attachment, meet those needs in others and share life purposes, help and resources.

Belonging is a sense of entitlement—“your right to come into my home and get the cereal without asking,” she explained. Attachment is “the people we want with us when life is awful, even if they can’t do anything, can’t fix it,” she said.

Both Garland and Prosser stressed the importance of sharing stories and memories as the way to help nurture belonging and attachment. In the research that led to her book, Sacred Stories, Garland interviewed 110 families across the nation and across denominations.

“It was in the stories that I heard the real faith, not Sunday school-answer faith,” she said.

Garland urged church leaders to focus on families’ strengths, to “see families less as ‘problems to be fixed’ and more as mysteries rooted in God’s image and through whom God works,” she said.

For more information about the Family Ministry Academy and future workshops, contact the Center for Family and Community Ministries at (254) 710-4417 or visit www.family-ministry.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.




IMB chair urges committee to reconsider

Posted: 3/17/06

IMB chair urges committee to reconsider

By Steve DeVane

North Carolina Biblical Recorder

RICHMOND, Va. (ABP)—The chairman of the Southern Baptist International Mission Board is asking the board’s personnel committee to take another look at two controversial measures the board passed in November.

Chair Tom Hatley, pastor of Immanuel Baptist Church in Rogers, Ark., announced the decision in a letter to Southern Baptist pastors. The IMB released the letter, as well as an “open letter” to all Southern Baptists, two documents supporting the decisions and other materials.

The information focuses on the trustees’ votes on speaking in tongues, the use of a private prayer language by missionary candidates and candidates’ mode of baptism. In his letter, Hatley told pastors they can comment on the matters through an e-mail address for trustees, imbtrustees@imb.org.

“As chairman, I am asking our personnel committee to take a fresh look at these documents with the intention of providing further clarification,” he said. “Your suggestions will be passed along to this committee as they are received.”

During a November meeting in Huntsville, Ala., the IMB trustees approved a policy stating that a missionary candidate will be disqualified if he or she practices tongues or a “private prayer language.”

They also adopted a baptism guideline stating that future missionary candidates must have been baptized in a church that practices believer’s baptism by immersion alone, does not view baptism as sacramental or regenerative, and embraces the doctrine of the security of the believer.

Exception clauses were included in both for special situations. Neither the guideline nor the policy is retroactive, and neither will be applied to anyone already in the missionary appointment process.

Critics of the policy and guideline warn the IMB and Southern Baptist Convention are becoming too exclusive and narrow.

The controversy surrounding the IMB changes was a factor in a dispute between IMB trustees and Oklahoma trustee Wade Burleson. In an unprecedented move, trustees tried in January to remove Burleson from the board for discussing board deliberations on his weblog. Hatley has since said he will ask trustees in March to drop the challenge against Burleson, pastor of Emmanuel Baptist Church in Enid, Okla.

Some critics of the policy on the private prayer language also have suggested it might have been approved as a way to embarrass IMB President Jerry Rankin—who has acknowledged he uses the practice—or pressure him to resign.

Hatley responded to that suggestion in his letter to pastors. “Trustees have been blamed for having the motive of trying to hurt our president,” Hatley wrote. “The force that pushed the issue to this higher level, however, included the president and a few others on staff and on the board.”

Rankin said last month he insisted the full board deal with the issue because of its importance.

“I did insist it come before the full board because I think you have to be very circumspect in your processes,” he said in a question-and-answer session with Baptist editors. “It was at my insistence that the full board act on it, rather than it just being a committee that puts this in place.”

Rankin said in February he didn’t think the issue was dead. “I think there’s a lot of reaction … that’s been generated across the convention to revisit it,” he said. But Rankin said he wasn’t confident the policy would be reversed.

“As much as there’s been reaction against it, there’s been a lot of support for it as well,” he told the editors. “I think even controversy strengthens the resolve of our board to kind of justify or defend what they’ve done.”

Rankin said March 7 he appreciates Hatley’s explanation to Southern Baptists. “Much of the confusion and misperceptions regarding these actions came from the lack of clearly defined explanations for the policies,” Rankin said. “While some will not be in agreement with the rationale, these documents will help others understand the deep convictions of those on our board for moving in this direction.

“There is no question that those on each side of these issues are committed to the effectiveness of the International Mission Board and are conscientious in their desire to be accountable to the Southern Baptist Convention. … We want Southern Baptists to be assured of the doctrinal integrity and practices of our missionaries and move forward to win a lost world to Jesus Christ.”

Hatley said he edited position papers on speaking in tongues, private prayer languages and baptism.

“Most pastors and theologians among Southern Baptists of recent decades and of today regard the charismatic movement as divisive, encouraging spiritual pride and stressing minor gifts out of proportion to biblical evidence,” the paper says.

“Although there remain some charismatic churches excluded by associations that consider themselves as still belonging to state conventions and the Southern Baptist Convention, their number has declined over the years since the mid-’70s.”

The paper on baptism notes that the 1925, 1963 and 2000 versions of the Baptist Faith & Message doctrinal statement all demonstrate that Southern Baptists have interpreted Scripture to teach that baptism is an ordinance administered by the local church.

“A church’s beliefs, therefore, matter,” it says.

Greg Warner of Associated Baptist Press also contributed to this story. 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.




Texas Baptist Forum

Posted: 3/17/06

Texas Baptist Forum

Right next door

Jump to online-only letters.
Letters are welcomed. Send them to marvknox@baptiststandard.com; 250 words maximum.

“I'm looking forward to that big reunion up there. God bless you all.”

Billy Graham
The final words of his 418th crusade—in New Orleans— “probably the last evangelistic sermon I’ll ever preach” (RNS)

“Suggesting a married Jesus is one thing, but questioning the Resurrection undermines the very heart of Christian belief. … The Resurrection is perhaps the sole controversial Christian topic about which I would not desire to write.”

Dan Brown
Author of The Da Vinci Code, who is being sued for allegedly copying from Holy Blood, Holy Grail, which theorized that Christ did not die on the cross (The Washington Post / RNS)

“If Christians are being persecuted in this country, in my opinion, it's because they've asked for it. We will experience much less persecution, if it exists, when we return to preaching the love of God—that is all that has ever won people to the love of Christ.”

David Currie
Executive director of Texas Baptists Committed (ABP)

“Everybody seems to be imprisoned in their own sectarian or political affiliations. They don't seem to be able to rise above these things.”

Adnan Pachachi
Former Iraqi foreign minister and current Parliament member (New York Times)

It’s difficult for one outside the situation to resolve the question whether Baylor should “begin a journey toward Rome” (Feb. 20). What I would offer, however, is a rich resource for the wider discussion of the relation of faith and learning that lies ready to hand, which also seems to be totally ignored in the conversation—namely, the numerous Baptist liberal arts universities where faith and learning are thriving and who do not seem to be in mortal danger of an inevitable secular drift unless we move toward Rome.

Such Baptist General Convention of Texas-affiliated schools are Dallas Baptist University, East Texas Baptist University, Hardin-Simmons University, Houston Baptist University, Howard Payne University, University of Mary Hardin-Baylor and Wayland Baptist University. They are not in danger of becoming, “without exception,” secular universities. Faith and learning in fact seem to be flourishing in these environments, which do not fit well either alternative model mentioned in the Baylor debate.

Certainly, a difference exists between these universities and Baylor. These are smaller liberal arts universities who focus on teaching as opposed to a much larger research institution. Perhaps it is a matter of scale, where the smaller can more easily accomplish the goal of relating faith and learning than the larger.

Baylor has unique challenges. What I suggest is that, while looking to Rome, with all of her strengths and weaknesses, a valuable resource a little closer to home is not overlooked.

Dan Stiver

Abilene


‘Days’ of creation

David Jones asks, “Why did God spell out very clearly in Genesis 1 that the earth was created in six literal days?” (Feb. 20) Since Genesis was written in Hebrew, it actually says creation took six periods of time identified in Hebrew by the word yom.

Although yom is most commonly translated into English as “day,” it can (and often does) mean a time either longer or shorter than the 24-hour day Jones insists it means in Genesis.

Herschel Hobbs, one of the most respected Baptist theologians and Bible scholars of the past century, wrote: “The fact is that the Bible does not say dogmatically how long the creative period lasted. The Hebrew word for ‘day’ (yom), like the English word, may mean any number of things—24 hours, a generation, an era, or an indefinite period of time. Since the Holy Spirit inspired the writing of Genesis 1, it must be concluded that he did not spell out this detail. Had he said, ‘a 24-hour day’ or ‘indefinite period of time,’ that would settle it. But since he did not do so, the time element is not a vital point in faith.”

Jones may believe the universe was created in 144 hours, while his Christian brother may believe the universe is billions of years old. The Bible can support either position.

Bill Kincaid

Sanger


What matters

The letter from Wilma Brown was cute (Feb. 20), but I am curious about the teacher who told her she came from a monkey!

Did she ask her what monkey type she came from? There are many, you know—even a few baboons involved. Some people just can’t stand the thought of not knowing something for sure and certain. Some folks can’t stand the idea of how old the earth is and just how man came to be!

It’s a simple solution! It’s called “faith,” and I didn’t dream it up. The Bible tells me so. God knows, and that’s what matters to me and all folks who claim Jesus as the Savior of the world.

Dorothy Vestal Taylor

Lockhart
What matters

I agree with Tim Overton (February 13) on intelligent design but disagree that physical death entered the world with the sin of Adam. Look at Genesis 2:17—(KJ) “for in the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die”; (NIV) “for in the day that you eat from it you shall surely die”; (Holman) “for on the day you eat from it, you will certainly die”; (Contemporary English Version) “If you eat any fruit from that tree, you will die before the day is over.”

Adam died that day a spiritual death, separated from God, hiding from God. Jesus paid the penalty of that curse upon the cross and died a spiritual death for us, even going to hell for fulfillment of that death. If Adam’s punishment included a physical death and Jesus took that punishment upon the cross, then Christians would never die.

If man was meant to live forever, the Tree of Life had no meaning.

Rex Ray

Bonham 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.




Plane mechanic finds calling at Wayland

Posted: 3/17/06

Plane mechanic finds calling at Wayland

By Jonathan Petty

Wayland Baptist University

SAN ANTONIO—When Bill Lord arrived at Wayland Baptist University’s San Antonio campus, he had no idea what awaited him.

He had spent more than 30 years working as a mechanic on helicopters and airplanes and was in line for a manager’s position with a major company’s maintenance department.

Ironically, Lord’s supervisor encouraged him to return to school and complete his degree to move up the career ladder.

Bill and Peggy Lord had no idea when he started his studies two years ago at Wayland Baptist University’s San Antonio campus, that God would call him into ministry.

But while studying in Old Testament and New Testament classes, Lord felt something he wasn’t expecting.

“Wayland requires Old and New Testament courses,” Lord said. “I thought I would get them out of the way first. That was probably where I began to recognize that maybe it wasn’t me who decided to go to Wayland, but I was being led to Wayland.”

Lord originally chose Wayland, knowing it was a faith-based institution, to experience something a little different than what he had known in the past.

“My whole life has been airplanes and helicopters,” he said. “That’s all I’ve known since I left home and joined the Marine Corps. They introduced me to helicopters, and from there my career has been nothing but that. I chose Wayland to get away from that a little bit. What’s the point of going to school if not to expand your horizons?”

Although Lord felt a call in his early classes at Wayland, he still wasn’t convinced he was called to ministry. As he continued through his course work, however, the call became more evident.

“It was a calling-out process,” he said. “The Lord separated me from that cultural stream that I was in. He kind of carved me out of that and set me up on the bank. All of a sudden, I was on the outside of the stream looking in.”

That’s when Lord realized God was preparing him for something different.

After graduating earlier this year at age 52 with a bachelor’s degree in occupational education, Lord entered the master of divinity program offered by Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary through its campus at Lord’s church, Park Hills Baptist in San Antonio.

But he knew it would be daunting to juggle a full master’s-level class schedule with a full workload.

“My job at the time was quite demanding,” Lord said. “I didn’t know that I would be able to stand up under the pressure of a full-blown master’s program. The only way I could do it was if my job situation changed.”

With the help and encouragement of his wife, Peggy, Lord wrote a letter to his boss asking to relinquish some of his job duties and to assign him to a specific shift, which would help him decide which school to enroll in based on class schedules and his work schedule.

“Well, my boss didn’t send me to school to be a preacher. He sent me to get an education and move on, so there was some resistance on his behalf,” Lord said.

Lord asked his boss to assign him to a shift. “What he came back with was an evening shift with Sunday and Monday off,” Lord said. “I would be off on Sunday and could go to church, and I would have all day Monday, which is when the seminary meets.”

Lord is taking a full course load, studying as many as 40 hours a week. “Seminary is a whole lot of work,” he said. “I’m a technician by trade, so this is all new to me. The Wayland experience was very new to me, and now the seminary is very new to me.”

Lord has stayed true to his calling throughout his education experience the last few years. However, he’s still not sure where his calling may lead.

“People ask me what it is that I’m going to do,” Lord said. “I tell them that it hasn’t been revealed to me yet. I don’t know how people make those assumptions, since I don’t know how they get called. I just know that right now, the task in front of me is to prepare for something later.”

Lord said the way things have worked out so far has been amazing, and he expects things to fall into place in God’s timing.

“I don’t set the table, I just eat,” he said. “I’ll just settle in and stay here until God moves me. He seems to be adept at making arrangements that I don’t even know about.”

Lord does know, however, that he was glad to finish his degree at Wayland in two years.

“If you had asked me last July if I was going to make the February graduation, I would have probably said I don’t think so,” Lord said. “But it’s like everything else that has happened in the last couple of years. … I don’t seem to have control over it.”

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.




Chaplain’s son needs double-lung transplant

Posted: 3/17/06

Chaplain’s son needs double-lung transplant

By George Henson

Staff Writer

DALLAS—Jeff Matthies’ life is filled with irony—deadly irony.

If he had not been such a hard worker, he would be much closer to a lifesaving double-lung transplant he desperately needs. But if he had lacked drive and perseverance, he probably would have succumbed decades ago to the cystic fibrosis that clogs his lungs.

Now, all his efforts will not save him, but a $500,000 double-lung transplant might.

Jeff Matthies of First Baptist Church in Sunnyvale needs a $500,000 double-lung transplant.

“We have to do the transplant soon, because his lungs’ ability to deliver oxygen will soon start affecting other organs, and then he will no longer be a transplant candidate,” said his father, Alan Matthies, a chaplain at Baylor University Medical Center and Buckner Retirement Village in Dallas.

Jeff Matthies was diagnosed with cystic fibrosis at age 4. Doctors gave him three to four years to live.

His mother, Pam, remembers how her son worked on being a normal boy doing normal boy things.

“He tried everything, even playing football one year. People kept telling me: ‘You’re in denial. You shouldn’t be letting him do these things,’” Mrs. Matthies recalled. But she wanted him to squeeze as much life as possible into what was expected to be a very short time.

Surprisingly, Jeff did relatively well during his childhood years, and as he eclipsed each prognosis, the doctor added a few years without any long-term hope.

“I remember vividly each year as his birthday came around, he would be so excited, and I was bawling while icing a cake, always thinking this might be his last year,” Mrs. Matthies recalled with tears in her eyes.

While Jeff had to go to bed earlier than most teenagers because he tired easily, he still participated in most of the rituals of the teenage years, his mother recalled. At age 18, he moved out on his own and worked a variety of jobs, eventually owning his own barbecue restaurant in Colorado City.

About three and a half years ago, the decline doctors long had predicted began, and in December 2004, he moved back home with his parents.

His condition has worsened to the point that his mucous-filled lungs were working at only 17 percent of their capacity when last tested, a significant decline from another test only 30 days prior.

To get on the transplant list, $100,000 has to be on hand. Another $400,000 is needed for the actual surgery.

In August, government assistance will help him with the cost of surgery, but his doctors doubt he will last those months without surgery.

He must wait because when he no longer could work, he filed for medical disability. The monthly stipend he receives through his disability and Social Security put him $50 beyond the economic limits for Medicare assistance.

His Sunday school class at First Baptist Church in Sunnyvale is trying to help his fund-raising effort through a “progressive garage sale” and a miniature golf tournament.

Darla Paugh, one of the teachers in the class, said Jeff has been an inspiration to the singles in their 20s and 30s, despite his illness. “He’s probably the most faithful person there,” Paugh said. “It’s been a real encouragement to others who think, ‘Jeff will be there, and if he can, I can too.’”

The first of the garage sales raised $1,300, and several more are planned. Paugh acknowledges it will take an incredible garage sale to make a dent in the huge amount of money Jeff needs. It gives people an opportunity to do what they can, however.

“People will come in and say, ‘How much is this?’ and I’ll tell them ‘$10,’ and they’ll say, ‘No, I’ll give you $20.’ It’s kind of like reverse garage saling at times.”

She also recalled a woman “who obviously had a hard life” who came by the garage sale and then left and came back with her children whose hands were filled with their change.

“Those children put their change in the jar out front for people who couldn’t find something they wanted but still wanted to help, and from the way they were dressed, it was obviously a big sacrifice for them,” she said. Paugh thanked the children, offered them a toy and invited the family to church.

Another woman described her anger at God over the death of her husband due to lung cancer, giving Paugh an opportunity to witness. “It’s more than raising money, but a mission, it’s a ministry to the community,” she said.

Alan Matthies and his family expressed gratitude to the church his family joined just last December for their care. He also acknowledged the support he has received through Buckner and especially the other chaplains at Baylor.

“It’s been really good for me to be a part of this department. It’s a source of strength. It’s been the help I need. I feel like it’s the reason God put me here,” he said.

Still, the gravity of his son’s health is sobering. “It’s staring us in the face. The end is getting closer, and it’s getting closer every day,” he said.

An account has been set up with the National Transplant Assistance Fund to help raise money. Contributions are tax- deductible and may be made online at www.transplantfund.org or payable to the NTAF South-Central Double Lung Transplant Fund at 150 North Radnor Chester Road, Suite F-120, Radnor, Pa. 19087. “In honor of Jeffrey Matthies” should be printed in the memo section of mailed checks. If he is not able to use the funds, they will be disbursed to others on the list. 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.




On the move

Posted: 3/17/06

On the move

J.B. Cagle to First Church in Millsap as pastor.

Jeff Carr to Calvary Church in Brownwood as minister of youth.

Mike Copeland to First Church in China Spring as pastor.

H.B. Graves has completed a church-starting term in Waterbury, Conn., and has returned to Knox City. He can be contacted for supply or interims at (940) 658-3192.

Amy Hobbs to Calvary Church in Brownwood as minister of youth.

James Humphries to Damascus Church in Lindale as interim pastor.

Elmer Salazar to Baggett Creek Iglesia in Gustine as pastor.

Tom Shelton to First Church in Moody as pastor, where he had been interim.

Dana Tye to Calvary Church in Brownwood as children’s minister.

Ken Williams to First Church in Evant as minister of youth. 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.




LAYING ON HANDS: Ordination practices vary widely among Baptists

Posted: 3/17/06

LAYING ON HANDS:
Ordination practices vary widely among Baptists

By Ken Camp

Managing Editor

Renowned 19th century British Baptist preacher C.H. Spurgeon rejected the practice. Texas Baptist statesman George Truett surrendered to it only at his church’s insistence. Christian ethicist T.B. Maston accepted it as a deacon but not as a minister.

Even so, most Baptist churches—not to mention the Internal Revenue Service and the United States Armed Forces—continue to value ordination. And many ministers see the laying on of hands as a vitally important affirmation by God’s people of their calling.

But how Baptists practice ordination—who initiates the process, serves on the ordaining council and lays hands on the person being set aside—varies widely.

“Ordination was a part of Baptist history from the beginning,” said Charles Deweese, executive director-treasurer of the Baptist History & Heritage Society in Nashville, Tenn.

Many historians trace Baptist roots to the radical Reformation, but most Baptists weren’t so radical that they rejected ordination. John Smyth wrote in 1609 about each congregation’s authority to “elect, approve and ordain” its own leaders, Deweese noted.

But unlike some Christian traditions, Baptists have rejected the notion of apostolic succession—an unbroken line of ordained clergy dating back to the apostles—as well as the idea that ordination conveys grace, he said.

“The normative position in our Baptist heritage is that ordination is a symbolic recognition of an individual’s giftedness. It does not convey it; it simply acknowledges it,” Deweese said.

Because of that understanding, some Baptists have rejected the practice altogether—most noticeably Spurgeon, pastor of London’s Metropolitan Tabernacle.

“Not only was he never ordained; he saw ordination as a form of ritualism that could easily lapse into popery. He detested the dogma of apostolic succession and refused to endorse the delegation of power from one minister to another,” said Bill Brackney, professor of church history at Baylor University.

“Further, he thought every church ought to have the right to select its own ministers, with no assistance from others in appointing him to the office.”

Some prominent Baptists—such as seminary ethics professor Maston—have rejected ordination for themselves but accepted it for others.

“He really saw his calling as a teacher rather than as a preacher or pastor. He was not opposed to ordination for others, as far as I know, but he did not feel it was appropriate for him. And he wore—with great delight—the cape of ‘layman,’” said Bill Pinson, executive director emeritus of the Baptist General Convention of Texas and a student of Maston.

For the most part, Baptist churches have viewed ordination as a healthy—if not essential—way to affirm an individual’s sense of calling into vocational ministry, church historian Leon McBeth said.

“Most Baptists have seen it as a recognition of God’s calling. It’s an acknowledgement on the part of a congregation they have seen evidence of that calling and way of affirming the person (being ordained) in that call,” said McBeth, retired distinguished professor of church history at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary.

In recent years, the ordination process typically has been initiated by a person who requests a church set him—or her—apart for vocational ministry, he noted.

“But in the past, churches took more initiative,” McBeth said. He pointed to Whitewright Baptist Church, whose members voted to ordain Truett against his wishes because they were so convinced God had called the young man—who aspired to become a lawyer—into the gospel ministry.

The role and composition of the ordaining council also has changed considerably over the years, McBeth observed. The council—sometimes called a presbytery—typically asks the candidate to tell about his Christian conversion and call to ministry and then answer some doctrinal questions.

“The ordaining council in recent years has been more of a rubber stamp,” he said, noting the questioning of the candidate often is scheduled just an hour or so before the announced ordination service. “For a council now to reject anyone is almost unheard of—but that wasn’t always the case.”

For instance, when William Carey—the shoemaker who sensed God’s calling to missions in India and became known as the father of the modern missions movement—initially appeared before an ordaining council, “the council recommended he go back to his cobbler’s shop,” McBeth noted.

Composition of the ordaining council in the United States—whether a mixed group of laity and ministers from the ordaining church, a group of deacons from within the church or a group exclusively of other ordained ministers from churches in the association or area—has varied widely from time to time and place to place, he added.

White Baptists in the South generally have emphasized local authority in ordination more than African-American Baptists or American Baptists elsewhere in the United States, Brackney noted.

“Most mainstream Baptists outside the Southern Baptist family today ordain candidates to the ministry using both local church and associational resources,” he said. “Frequently, an accrediting list is maintained by a regional or national organization.”

Outside the United States, practices differ even more.

In Atlantic Canada, for instance, a conventionwide ordination council appointed by the associations meets annually and interviews all candidates for ordination.

“Each must receive a two-thirds majority vote to be recommended to their local church,” said John Boyd, pastor of First Baptist Church in Halifax. “The local church would ordain the candidate at a service dedicated to that purpose.”

British Baptist historian John Briggs noted that in the United Kingdom, “we would expect the local church to do the ordaining but with representatives of the wider church taking part.”

In England and Canada, Baptists place great emphasis on ministers being included on the Baptist Union’s or regional convention’s accredited list.

“To appear on the accredited list, a candidate has to have his call tested first for training, and this would be by the local church, the ministerial recognition committee of the association and the appropriate college council.

“At the end of training, the candidate has to be commended by the college principal concerned to the Union’s ministerial recognition committee for settlement. The whole process is only completed when a local church issues a call to the pastorate; all is in suspense until this happens,” Briggs said.

When it comes time for the candidate to be ordained, the laying on of hands involves not only Baptists, but also the larger Christian community, he noted.

“Ordination is to the Christian ministry, and for many years, laity and representatives of other Christian churches have taken part in ordinations,” Briggs said.

The matter of who lays hands on the person being ordained has changed through the years, McBeth said.

“In the beginning (of Baptist churches), all Christians present could lay on hands,” he said. Later, the practice evolved into having only other ordained people—ministers and deacons—participate in the ceremony. “More recently, there’s been a recovery of the old tradition, where any Christian present can take part,” he said.

“It’s never been seen as conveying any special ecclesiastical power. It’s just an intense form of prayer.”

Robert Creech, pastor of University Baptist Church in Houston, agrees the laying of hands conveys no special grace, but he takes one additional step. He maintains ordination is not instructed in the New Testament, and early churches represented a variety of practices—not one prescribed way—for recognizing leaders.

“Despite Baptist claims to root faith and practice in biblical teachings, an honest self-appraisal raises questions about the degree to which we look to Scripture to dictate the practice of ordination versus the degree to which we have assumed a practice and then sought biblical precedence for it,” Creech said.

The Apostle Paul insisted his authority came from God, not from men, and he ministered for about a decade and half before the church at Antioch laid hands on him, he noted.

“Baptists have retained a ceremony by which those who have a vocation and evidence of some ability for the ministerial office are set apart by the believing community for the work of their calling,” Creech said. “We have been less clear about how such a ceremony fits into our doctrine of the priesthood of the believers. We have thus maintained a clergy/laity distinction whose consistency with our doctrine is difficult to explain without sounding like doubletalk.”

The distinction between clergy and laity becomes even greater when a presbytery composed exclusively of ordained ministers from other churches examines candidates and has the authority to recommend or reject them, he insisted.

“Such a practice contradicts our Baptist belief in the autonomy of the local church and of the priesthood of all believers,” Creech said. “Having ordained people determine who gets ordained smacks of the Roman Catholic practice of apostolic succession. When only ordained people determine who is ordained, one struggles to maintain that ordination bestows no special grace or authority. The cleft between clergy and laity is widened.”

Allowing every Christian in the congregation to participate in the laying on of hands rather than restricting it to only ordained people helps narrow the gap, Creech maintained.

“Since the congregation ordains the candidate, the laying on of hands should be open to every person present at the service,” he said.

“To have only ordained persons lay on hands seems backwards to me.”

Rather than looking for biblical proof-texts to support ordination, Creech wishes Baptists would just be honest and admit it is “a kind of ‘union card’ allowing other churches of like faith and practice to know that someone who knew the person has placed their blessings on their ministry.”

When ordination is viewed as that kind of pragmatic practice and as strictly a local church decision, the issue of women’s ordination becomes a moot point, he insisted.

“The question of whether a woman should or can serve as the senior pastor of a congregation is a question settled by a local church when they call a senior pastor. The only question (for a church that ordains a woman) is: Do we believe after observing and examining the candidate that their theology is sound—that their calling, gifts and character are line with the gospel ministry? If so, then are we prepared to lay hands on the candidate in prayer and bless their pursuit of their calling?”

At University Baptist Church, “we have by practice and precedent already determined that we are supportive of women pursuing the calling God places upon their lives in fulltime vocational ministry,” he continued.

“The question of ordination is only the further step of what we have by practice and precedent already established. When the call of God to a particular place of ministry comes along for one who has been following that calling, we have always proceeded with ordination. That should be our practice whether the candidate is male or female.”

Most staff members at University Baptist Church are not ordained, and the church has chosen to ordain only a few people during his tenure—usually for roles such as military chaplaincy in which ordination is required, Creech said.

So, even many critics of ordination practice it and acknowledge its practicality. And some Baptists applaud the practice without reservation.

“I personally favor ordination,” McBeth said. “It’s a good thing to recognize God’s call on a person’s life. It’s a way to say: ‘We recognize God has called and gifted you for ministry. Amen, and more power to you.’” 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.




TOGETHER: Pray for courageous servant leadership

Posted: 3/17/06

TOGETHER:
Pray for courageous servant leadership

Leadership is the crucial ingredient for success in any enterprise. Leadership is the difference between a “mob” and a life-giving movement.

Leadership is not about gathering all the power to the leader. It is not about manipulating the church or organization to give the pastor, or the CEO, or a committee, or the deacons, or a board power for which they are not accountable.

wademug
Executive Director
BGCT Executive Board

Any church leader will find the Apostle Paul’s example remarkably helpful. As he was raising money to relieve the famine victims in Jerusalem, he was careful to give a report of the offering’s progress. He sent a respected leader to give an account of the use of the money they were gathering and distributing on behalf of the churches. “We want to avoid any criticism of the way we administer this liberal gift. For we are taking pains to do what is right, not only in the eyes of the Lord but also in the eyes of men” (2 Corinthians 8:20-21).

As the Enron trial demonstrates, when business leaders take advantage of their positions to misuse dollars and betray public trust, people can really be hurt. Failure to tell the truth—to respect the trust of employees and stockholders—results in brokenness and shattered lives.

And what is true for business leadership is essential for leadership in the local church and in our denominational life. I would encourage all pastors and ministers not to seek unaccountable power in the affairs of the church. That leads to mistrust, to arrogance, to mistakes that can destroy the usefulness and future of your church.

One of Jesus’ great insights was that the best leadership arises out of the heart of a servant. Servants serve a greater cause than themselves. They want what is best for others, for the common good. Their reward is in the blessings that fall on the lives of others (Matthew 20:20-28).

A goal in establishing the BGCT Congregational Leadership Team is to inspire courageous servant leadership. Our churches will make a transforming difference in members’ lives and in every community when we marry God’s truth and saving gospel to the faithful and courageous lives of servant leaders.

David Hackett Fischer’s Washington’s Cross-ing describes George Washington’s military leadership in the Revolutionary War. He took a nonprofessional army, men who “lived free” and were not accustomed to taking orders, and molded them into a fighting force. Washington, a Virginia aristocrat, had to learn a new way to lead. He rallied his soldiers when they were nearly frozen, with no shoes or blankets, and led them to victory. He did so by a “maturing style of quiet, consultative leadership. His method was beginning to work in this army of free spirits. It was uniting cantankerous Yankees, stubborn Pennsyl-vanians, autonomous Jerseymen, honor-bound Virginians, and independent backcountrymen in a common cause.” He learned to “treat a brigade of New England Yankee farmboys and fishermen as men of honor, who were entitled to equality of esteem.” He understood the need for discipline, but he also lifted a new idea of rank—“gentleman” was not a title bestowed by birth or wealth; it was a moral condition based on courage, performance and integrity. Honor was not defined by “rank or status or gender, but by a principle of human dignity and decency.”

Let all leaders pray for their people. And let us all pray for our leaders.

We are loved.

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




Cyber column by Berry D. Simpson: Thanks for asking

Posted: 3/17/06

CYBER COLUMN: Thanks for asking

By Berry D. Simpson

The other night, Cyndi was at home working on the computer, printing invitations for a church media ministry banquet, when she asked if I would stuff invitations and stamp envelopes. Later, after midnight, after we finished the project, she apologized: “I’m sorry to ask you to put down your book and help, and then you had to stay up so late. I know you already had your own projects to do without having to help me with mine.”

I said: “You and I are not easy people to help. We always want to do everything ourselves. We both maintain high standards, and we love to be creative, and that’s seldom a group thing, and we try to give each other space to live our own lives. Neither of us wants to be clingy or high-maintenance. So I am grateful for a chance to help you. You don’t ask often enough.”

Berry D. Simpson

OK, I’ll admit I’m not usually that articulate at midnight, but during the envelope-stuffing project I was watching TV, and it left my brain with plenty of available RAM to think about why we help each other when we have other things to do.

Through our years together, I’ve tried to get better at showing Cyndi I love her. Nowadays, I also spend a lot of energy trying to understand how to love my son and daughter and new son-on-law in their lives as young adults. But I spend very little energy learning how to receive love from them.

Giving is easier that receiving.

My core assumption about most things is that it’s all up to me, and I just need to do better. Yet my attempts to be self-sufficient (so I won’t be any trouble to anyone else), making myself more lovable, or so I hoped, meant I was shutting myself off from love.

I have a friend who serves as a role model for me in this regard—a role model of who I don’t want to be. They are involved in so many things and determined to be in charge of everything and never ask for help, it’s impossible to get close to them. They are so self-sufficient they are impenetrable. I think it’s actually a conscious method they use to keep people from getting close. Staying too busy, without showing any personal needs of their own, is simply armor plating they use to keep anyone—including God—from looking too close.

The same thing happens when some young adults are so anxious to prove their independence they can’t admit to any needs in their life. Makes it is hard to know how to love them.

I was reading a book published by Navpress titled TrueFaced: Trust God and Others With Who You Really Are, and it posed this question: Why did God create us with needs?

The answer? “Without needs we cannot experience love—we cannot know when we are being loved. … Sadly, if we cannot identify our needs, we cannot know love. If we deny we have needs, we will not experience love. If we withhold our needs, we can’t receive the love others have for us.”

Before reading this, I’d never connected my needs with being lovable.

I wondered if that was the problem the Rich Young Ruler had when he asked Jesus, “What else can I do?” I think the young man had unlimited generosity and capacity to do good things with his life, and I’m sure he was sincere and would’ve done anything Jesus asked. Except, when Jesus asked him to give away all his wealth and simply follow, the man couldn’t do it. I always thought he was afraid to give up his money and influence, but now I wonder if his hesitancy was about needs. Maybe Jesus knew he couldn’t show love to this man, and this man couldn’t receive love in return, until the man understood how needy he was. As long as he thought of himself as the great benefactor who took care of everyone else and had no needs of his own, no one could love him. Including Jesus.

But exposing our needs to one another is a risky thing. Instead of loving us, people may take advantage of those same needs. Cyndi talks about this a lot—how can she risk being vulnerable to other people who have the potential to hurt her? Only because she knows God is keeping her safe. Trusting God frees our hearts to experience his safe, constant, intimate sufficiency.


Berry Simpson, a Sunday school teacher at First Baptist Church in Midland, is a petroleum engineer, writer, runner and member of the city council in Midland. You can contact him through e-mail at berry@stonefoot.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.




RIGHT OR WRONG? A woman as pastor

Posted: 3/17/06

RIGHT OR WRONG? A woman as pastor

Our Baptist congregation is more than 100 years old. We always have had men as pastors. Now, we are without a pastor and cannot find a man who will come to serve us. We have a young lady who recently made public her call to ministry. Is there any merit in considering her to fill the position of pastor for us?

Many individuals live their lives out of regret and remorse over decisions made long ago. They can see opportunity lost as a precious snowflake that lands upon the hand only to melt by the body’s warmth. Thus, life and ministry are truly gifts from the divine hand designed to reveal his grace and glory to his people. This is true in this particular congregational setting.

This congregation is in a unique position to perceive the divine hand at work. Therefore, the unmet pastoral need can be viewed via two factors: Is the divine still at work in the congregation? And how do we identify his working? The former question concerns the absence of a male minister to lead the congregation. Men historically have filled this role because of an obvious textual reading of the Scripture, but also because of the social and contextual restraints placed upon women in our ministry settings.

These restraints reflect the Apostle Paul’s description that women should not lead men and should remain silent in public. But these views are exegetically flawed; no one can build an adequate theological position based upon isolated texts. Paul also speaks of those “women who labor with me” in the gospel (see Philippians 4). The Bible itself provides insight into this and many exegetically sound approaches to biblical interpretation. Thus the second question, “How do we identify the divine working?”

The Lord declares in John 5:17, “My Father worketh hitherto, and I work.” Jesus is responding contextually to the religious leaders who persecuted him for healing a man on the Sabbath day. The religious leaders sought to uphold their socially conditioned theological view as opposed to helping a man in need. Isn’t it interesting how we sometimes get in the way of the divine plan and purpose? The Father is about healing, but they wanted to focus on upholding a religious standard.

So, too, in our case today. The Lord has given this church an opportunity to move beyond a social stigma and embrace a divine moment in its 100-year history. This opportunity is a gift! Just as churches often embrace young men who declare/announce their call to the ministry, so should this congregation embrace this young lady. She is gifted equally by the same Spirit to glorify the Lord in her life and possibly in this ministry setting.

Yes, the divine is broader than our social, contextual understanding, and he is doing greater things in our midst than we can see. Our challenge is to respond in faith to the divine leading as he reveals his glory in us. Paul thus concludes: “I pray that the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of glory, would give unto you a spirit of wisdom and revelation as you come to know him. So that the eyes of your understanding being enlightened you may know the hope to which you have been called; the riches of the glory of his inheritance in the believers; and the exceeding greatness of his power to us who believe.”

Kelvin Kelly,

minister to young couples and young people,

Abilene

Right or Wrong? is sponsored by the T.B. Maston Chair of Christian Ethics at Hardin-Simmons University’s Logsdon School of Theology. Send your questions about how to apply your faith to btillman@hsutx.edu.
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.