Transitional living program keeps teen orphans from falling through the cracks

Posted: 12/14/07

Transitional living program keeps teen
orphans from falling through the cracks

By George Henson

Staff Writer

CHISNAU, Moldova—Children’s Emergency Relief International wants to find adult sponsors not only for young children living in orphanages, but also for teenagers who have aged out of the institutions and have no place to go.

Children typically leave Moldova’s orphanages at age 16, at which point they are expected to find a place to live, secure a job and manage their own finances. When many find the challenge too difficult, then end up on the streets or in jail.

CERI is expanding a program designed to help those orphans with the support system they need to succeed in life.

Clay Palmer from Bethel Baptist Church in New Caney places new winter boots on the feet of a child in an orphanage in Transniestria.

For a number of years, CERI has helped orphans get a start through its independent living program. That program will soon be greatly expanded, said Tatiana Ceban, director of the transitional living program.

“We are currently working on the curriculum and hope to begin in March,” she said.

CERI’s central Moldova office works with three orphanages in the region. In those three orphanages, 199 will age out and will need to live on their own in the coming months.

A key component will be life-skills training—helping the young people know how to fill out a job application, budget their money, develop interpersonal skills, provide for their health and safety, and plan for the future. Gender education also will be a part of the program.

“They really have no role models for how men and women are to act,” Ceban said. “We will help them to see how to act appropriately.”

Their education will include information about the dangers of human trafficking—a major problem in eastern Europe. Teenagers also will learn computer and written communication skills, complete exercises to enhance their creative thinking skills and study the Bible.

CERI staff members are interviewing orphans who soon will be on their own so that they can adapt instruction to their individual circumstances, Ceban said.

See Related Articles:
Volunteers share warmth of God's love with needy people in Moldova
Miles cannot diminish connection between Texas volunteer and Moldovan orphan
• Transitional living program keeps teen orphans from falling through the cracks
Former atheist shapes God-centered program in Moldova

CERI will help create a circle of support for each young person. Staff will seek to find a family member with whom the teenager can make a connection, as well as link the young person to a teacher, a mature friend, an advocate, a social worker, a mentor and a sponsor.

Mentors will be Christian young adults 21 to 23 years old from Moldova’s churches. The mentors will be carefully selected, trained and encouraged, Ceban said.

The program will begin by meeting in churches, but Ceban hopes donors will help the young people survive by providing for a building for the training.

Financial support for individual young people also is needed. Many have no family whatsoever, and without financial support, their options are limited.

But with help, success is possible.

Sisters Lilia and Elena were orphaned as young children. When they left the orphanage, CERI sponsors enabled them to share a 4-by-4-meter room and attend school. Now, both are approaching graduation. Lilia will graduate soon as a licensed nurse. Elena will graduate from the university and be an elementary school teacher.

Alisa is another success story. Her parents are still living, but both are alcoholics, and she asked to be removed from the home to escape the abuse there. She attends a school that will allow her to work as a police officer, notary or some other profession related to the law. Her sister, Luminita, attends hairstyling school.

Their two younger sisters, Doina and Anisia, live in an orphanage during the week but stay with them in a small room on the weekends.

The need for sponsors in the transitional living program is great. The amount varies but typically is between $85 and $150 per month and usually involves a one-year to four-year commitment. For more information, contact CERI at (281) 360-3702 or visit www.cerikids.org.



News of religion, faith, missions, Bible study and Christian ministry among Baptist churches, in Texas, the BGCT, the nation and around the world.




Volunteers share warmth of God’s love with needy people in Moldova

Posted: 12/14/07

Volunteers with Children’s Emergency Relief International, the global arm of Baptist Child & Family Services, fit children in Moldova’s Transniestrian orphanages with warm socks and winter boots.

Volunteers share warmth of God’s
love with needy people in Moldova

By George Henson

Staff Writer

TIRASPOL, Moldova—Mission volunteers from Texas, West Virginia and Tennes-see converged on Moldova’s Transniestrian region to warm the hearts—not to mention heads and feet—of impoverished people.

Children’s Emergency Relief International, the international arm of Baptist Child & Family Services, facilitated the trip. Volunteers delivered shoes, winter boots, socks and hats to 31 churches, three correctional facilities, three adult-care facilities for the elderly or disabled, three day-care centers and 12 orphanages.

See Related Articles:
• Volunteers share warmth of God's love with needy people in Moldova
Miles cannot diminish connection between Texas volunteer and Moldovan orphan
Transitional living program keeps teen orphans from falling through the cracks
Former atheist shapes God-centered program in Moldova
Children beam with joy as they receive new shoes and socks from volunteers with Children’s Emergency Relief International.

Toddlers received sneakers provided through Buckner International’s Shoes for Souls program. Older children, teenagers and some adults received winter boots bought by CERI donors. More than 4,000 people received the footwear.

When the Soviet Union broke up in 1991 and Moldova declared its independence, the eastern region, Transniestria, wanted to stay tied to Russia. After skirmishes, U.N. peacekeepers stopped the conflict, but Moldova continues to embargo goods going to that region. Only Russia recognizes Transniestria as an independent nation.

Poverty is endemic. Many children in Transniestria’s orphanages still have parents living, but the children are sent to institutions so they can have food, clothing and shelter their parents cannot provide them. Resources in the orphanages are scarce, but children in some outlying villages have even less than the children living in orphanages.

While they were gratified to help, volunteers said it was difficult to see children with cold, dirty feet because both shoes and socks were worn through, exposing them to the cold, wet winters of Moldova. Many adults, some more than 80 years old, also received help.

At one stop, a juvenile detention center for boys ages 14 to 18, about 50 of the 59 boys were wearing slider sandals on a cold, wet, muddy day.

Volunteers sort socks by size before giving them to children in Moldova’s Transniestrian orphanages.

Jonathan Gray, minister of youth at Second Baptist Church in Houston—North Campus in Kingwood, said the trip made an impact on him.

“This is my very first mission experience outside of something local, and I’ve just been realizing what a blessing it is to me to be here. More than ever before, I think I realize how much service is a part of living life to the full, like the Bible talks about,” he said.

Weldon Knight of Kingwood has traveled to Moldova three times, and his wife, Joanne, has been four times. They also have sponsored four Moldovan children through CERI programs and remain in contact even with those who are now adults.

One particular scene Knight witnessed continues to haunt him. A young boy arrived wearing leggings that were soaked, muddy and full of holes. In order for the boy to keep the leggings and stay warm, he asked the mother if the feet of the leggings could be cut away before the new socks were put on. The mother gave permission, but then hit the boy in the head, because she was angry that he had embarrassed her.

“Anytime I’m putting shoes on a child’s feet, I think of the verse that says, ‘If you do it to the least of these, you do it to me.’ Well, today, I saw Jesus hit in the head,” Knight said with a cracking voice at the end of one day.

Ted McElroy of Houston first traveled to Transniestria two years ago. A very special part of his experience this year was seeing how children he met on his first trip had grown, he said.

The groups also attended church services in Transnies-trian churches. Seth Polk and Terry Vaughn, both of Cross Lanes Baptist Church in Cross Lanes, W.V., preached the English sermons. Translators interpreted the message into Russian for the locals, and then they translated the sermons of the local ministers to English for the Americans.

The Moldovan mission fit well with the West Virginia church’s emphasis on missions, said Polk, pastor of the congregation. Each year, the church is engaged in local missions, plans two other mission efforts within West Virginia, works on one mission project outside the state but within the United States, and involves members in two international mission trips. The church also dedicates 25 percent of its undesignated gifts to the Cooperative Program unified budget.

The church had been trying to work a Moldovan trip into its plans for a couple of years at the insistence of Vaughn, who was baptized by CERI Executive Director Dearing Garner while Garner was pastor of First Baptist Church in Kingwood.

The trip’s focus on ministering to widows and orphans attracted his attention, Polk said. After Garner made a trip to the church to give details of CERI’s mission, Polk knew it was something in which he wanted his church involved.

A focus on missions is important to the health of a church, Polk said.

“When we go, God blesses at home as well. In our culture, it’s so self-centered, but missions is God-focused and people-focused. It’s helps us to remember that our focus is not supposed to be on ourselves,” Polk said.

CERI teams have traveled to Moldova eight years. The agency was born out of a medical mission trip Garner led while pastor of the Kingwood church. After his retirement as pastor, he maintained his interest in the orphans and impoverished families of Moldova.

CERI also sponsors trips in January in which groups celebrate Christmas with orphans, since Romania observes Christmas according to the Orthodox calendar. CERI also sponsors summer camps with a Vacation Bible School format.

News of religion, faith, missions, Bible study and Christian ministry among Baptist churches, in Texas, the BGCT, the nation and around the world.




Storylist for week of 12/17/07

Storylist for week of 12/17/07

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



Former atheist shapes God-centered program in Moldova



Happy New Year? For Christians it began with Advent


Miles cannot diminish connection between Texas volunteer and Moldovan orphan

Transitional living program keeps teen orphans from falling through the cracks

Volunteers share warmth of God's love with needy people in Moldova

Former atheist shapes God-centered program in Moldova

TBM sends chainsaws to Oklahoma, blankets to Iraq

Laredo ministry seeks to offer children in need a healthy start

On the Move

Around the State

Texas Tidbits


Advent: Red Letter Days
Happy New Year? For Christians it began with Advent

Christian motorcyclists and mudders bring Christmas cheer in Beaumont

Churches push Advent Conspiracy to teach real giving

Fair-trade items offer Christmas gifts with a conscience

Christmas brighter for children of military families, thanks to UMHB student project

For some, happy holidays means no gifts

International students share Christmas joy

Who were those ‘wise men from the East' bearing gifts?

2nd Opinion: The two sides of advent


Interracial New Baptist Covenant program focuses on unity in Christ

New Jersey church makes good on $1 million pledge to Gulf Coast

Baptist Briefs


Seven tips for the 2007 tax-filing season

Does ‘Compass' point kids in the wrong direction?

Romney garners praise, criticism for church-state views in speech

Practical tips on helping the homeless

‘Can you spare some change?' Many Christians unsure how to respond

GodTube offers Christian alternative to YouTube

Christian website offers YouTube alternative for wary Baptists

Faith Digest


Book Reviews


Cartoon

Classified Ads

Texas Baptist Forum

Around the State

On the Move


EDITORIAL: The gospel in one stunning eyeful

DOWN HOME: Topanga's lucky tree wasn't aglow

TOGETHER: Tune your heart to the wait

RIGHT or WRONG? Meaning of persecution

2nd Opinion: The two sides of advent

What if Christmas had not come?

Finding the ‘spirit of Christmas'

Texas Baptist Forum



BaptistWay Bible Series for December 16: Live the unbound life

Bible Studies for Life Series for December 16: Being changed by the Savior

Bible Studies for Life Series for December 23: Being changed by the Savior

We're sorry, but the Explore the Bible lessons will not be posted for at least the remainder of 2007.


Previously posted
Executive Board may vote on short-term interim executive director

South Texas Children's Home names president, CEO

Brothers find home for Christmas

Family Place helps mother leave fear behind

Mission workers help bring clean water, love of Christ to Ethiopia

Romney: ‘No candidate should become the spokesman for his faith'

Study links video violence to aggressive behavior

Adams provides pastoral care to HIV/AIDS community in New York

Stem-cell breakthrough may not end debate—at least for now

Baptist pastor on hit list in Turkey

Veteran Baptist journalist Roy Jennings dies at age 83

British Baptists: ‘Sorry about slavery'


See articles from the previous 12/03/07 issue here.




2nd Opinion: The two sides of advent

Posted: 12/14/07

2nd Opinion: The two sides of advent

By Jason Patrick

As a pastor, I’ve experienced a few difficult Advent seasons in recent years. The season of great expectations seemingly arrives when I’ve experienced significant personal losses.

As a 24-year-old pastor in west Texas during the Advent season of 1999, I was going through the initial stages of a divorce; yet I was fortunate to have the comforting church family of Champion Baptist Church hold me up.

Advent: Red Letter Days
Happy New Year? For Christians it began with Advent
Christian motorcyclists and mudders bring Christmas cheer in Beaumont
Churches push Advent Conspiracy to teach real giving
Fair-trade items offer Christmas gifts with a conscience
Christmas brighter for children of military families, thanks to UMHB student project
For some, happy holidays means no gifts
International students share Christmas joy
Who were those “wise men from the East” bearing gifts?
• 2nd Opinion: The two sides of advent
What if Christmas had not come?
Finding the ‘spirit of Christmas'

Two years later, while pastoring a church in Waco, Advent arrived soon after I received the news that my ex-wife and daughter were moving to Virginia. I knew the time I spent with my daughter would suffer significantly. They eventually moved back to Texas four years later, and I am thankful. But at the time of their departure, I leaned heavily upon Downsville Baptist Church. They held their pastor up.

Last year’s Advent season made more sense. I completed a doctorate at Baylor University, and I had been dating a wonderful young woman for a year. We were moving toward marriage. We were just waiting for the right door of ministry to open—a full-time pastorate or a teaching position at a university or a seminary. But the doors remained locked or were eventually closed. The seemingly futile search for a “job” wore down my love’s patience, and she ended our relationship in mid-November. Heartbroken by her loss, I needed to take a Sunday off. My church family understood. Their cards and phone calls expressed their readiness to be at my side.

Now, here again, I find myself in the midst of a painful Advent season.

On Dec. 9, the second Sunday of Advent, I preached for the fourth Sunday since life was turned upside down. The past three weeks, I’d been preaching through my grief, preaching to myself as much as to my congregation, attempting to convince myself again of the hope of Immanuel. Then during our time of invitation, as we sang “Softly and Tenderly,” a glimmer of the wonder of Advent shone through the gray clouds.

The glimmer’s name is Beth. Beth is married to Tim. They are a wonderful couple in their 30s with three children. Tim and Beth were present for me six years ago when I needed someone to talk to about my daughter’s move to Virginia. Beth is one of my few congregants who takes hold of the opportunity to see the invitation time of the service as more than the evangelistic call to come to Christ. During almost seven years as Downsville’s pastor, Beth has come forward on a few occasions to request that I pray with and for her in the midst of her own difficult seasons.

On that Sunday, Beth incarnated our Baptist conviction of the priesthood of the believer. As the second verse of “Softly and Tenderly” was coming to a close (my typical time to nod at our music minister to let her know two verses would suffice), I noticed Beth leaving her pew and coming forward. “Softly and Tenderly” would continue. When she reached the front of the church, she took my hands and whispered, “Today, I pray for you.” Beth softly spoke a prayer for comfort, encouragement and hope. After her “Amen,” she looked up, and tears were streaming down her face. And again, I was reminded that the pastor’s pastor is the church.

Advent is difficult again, but with Christ and his church, hopeful expectation continues to promise grace.


Jason N. Patrick is pastor of Downsville Baptist Church in Waco, Texas.

News of religion, faith, missions, Bible study and Christian ministry among Baptist churches, in Texas, the BGCT, the nation and around the world.




Seven tips for the 2007 tax-filing season

Posted: 12/14/07

Seven tips for the 2007 tax-filing season

By Sherre Stephens

Get Organized.

Early preparation for the upcoming tax filing season is best. A survey for the 2006 tax season showed that 2 in 5 Americans procrastinate when it comes to filing their tax return. Whether you are an early or late preparer, here are tips to aid in preparing your 2007 tax return.


Identify Last-Minute Savings Opportunities.

Maximize retirement plan elective deferrals. The 2007 basic deferral limit is $15,500 or $20,500 for age 50 and above. If you’ve missed maxing out your deferrals for 2007, consider an IRA.

New MSN Money and Zogby Poll Finds 2 in 5 Americans Procrastinate on Their Taxes.

Contribute to a traditional IRA. Eligibility for making deductible contributions to a traditional IRA depends on two factors: 1) if you are covered by a retirement plan at work and 2) your modified adjusted gross income (AGI). The maximum contribution limit for 2007 is $4,000, or $5,000 if age 50 or above. Remember, your nonworking spouse may be eligible for an IRA and an additional deduction can be beneficial. To qualify, you must be legally married at year’s end and file a joint tax return. For more details on IRAs, see IRS Publication 590.

Consider a SEP, Keogh or SIMPLE plan contribution. You may be your own boss or a small business owner, so a Simplified Employee Pension Plan (SEP), Keogh or SIMPLE may be the appropriate avenue to reduce gross taxable income. See IRS Publication 560 for more information.


Note: Making the most of a retirement plan is good for you now and good for you in the future. Don’t pass up this tax tip. Although the deferral amounts for 2008 are unchanged, the maximum limits for IRAs (traditional and Roth) increase to $5,000, or $6,000 if age 50 or above.


Make Last-Minute Estimated Tax Payments.

Underpayment of taxes can result in an unwanted surprise after filing your 2007 return. In addition, the IRS can assess penalties and interest on the underpayment amount. The underpayment penalty can occur whether you are a W-2 employee or self-employed. How can this happen? If you are a W-2 employee, the withholding on your paycheck may be misaligned. If you are self-employed, there are rules about paying estimated taxes.


Note: Making an estimated payment by January 15, 2008, for the short fall amount may resolve this potential tax issue.


Make the Most of Tax Deductions.

Itemize deductions. The list is myriad and some impose thresholds in order to take the deduction. It can be tempting to take the standard deduction, especially if the filing deadline is imminent.

Calculate sales taxes. If your sales taxes are more than your state and local income taxes, take this deduction. IRS Publication 600 provides tables to guide in making this decision — based on income and size of household.

Deduct charitable contributions. To be deductible, you must contribute to a qualified organization. Unfortunately, there are those who pose as charitable entities only to get your money. Before you make a contribution to an organization other than your church or other widely recognized charitable organization, check the IRS Web site. (Keep in mind, some organizations not listed on the IRS Web site may be covered by a group exemption, meaning they are subordinate units whose parent organization has received an exemption letter.) Not only can you verify if the organization qualifies, you can check out what the IRS calls its “Dirty Dozen.” This is a list of its top 12 tax scams.


Note: Deductions help reduce your tax liability, but a little research may help you steer clear of tax scams.


Don’t Forget about IDs for Dependents.

To claim an exemption for dependents, or potentially, the child’s tax credit, you’ll need an identification number (usually a Social Security number). If you have a baby near the end of 2007, the IRS recommends asking for a filing extension date rather than claiming an exemption without an ID number—see the following tip about filing extensions.


Note: In the absence of an ID number, the IRS will deny the exemption and/or tax credit. Don’t forget, a tax credit reduces tax whereas a deduction reduces your taxable income.


File your Return on Time.

If you can’t get your return filed by April 15, 2008, file Form 4868. This form provides an extension until October 15, 2008. Nevertheless, you’ll need to estimate your 2007 tax liability and include payment for the estimated tax with Form 4868. The IRS can impose a late-filing penalty of 4.5% and a late payment penalty of 0.5% of the tax due. Both penalties are assessed on a monthly basis until paid.


Note: File a Form 4868 to avoid the penalties or the denial of a claimed exemption.


Decide if You Need Help and Where to Get Help.

The IRS Web site (www.IRS.gov) offers a number of Fact Sheets, Tax Tips (available Jan. 1, 2008), and a toll-free help number 1-800-TAX-FORM (1-800-829-3676).

The Tax Advocate Service (TAS) is a free, confidential service within the IRS, available to those experiencing economically difficult circumstances.

The internet offers copious tax helps.

Tax preparation software and services are viable resources.

Checklists facilitate organization and minimize frustration. Many checklists are available on the Web. Just Google “checklists for tax preparation.”


Note: Not all Websites provide reliable tax tips. Also, be aware that “2007 tax tips” may refer to the return due in 2007 for the 2006 tax year. Similarly, some references to 2008 apply to tax changes for the 2008 tax year; not 2007.


As of this writing, Congress has not acted on reforming the Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT). It’s anticipated that the AMT will impact nearly 4 million taxpayers this year. Reform could still happen; it’s not unprecedented for Congress to make tax law changes in December. Should this happen, the IRS will have to delay processing tax returns until March instead of its normal start date of mid-January.

This article is not intended as a substitute for legal, accounting or professional advice. If legal, tax or other expert assistance is required, the services of a competent professional should be sought.


Sherre Stephens is a certified employee benefits specialist and director of executive services for GuideStone Financial Resources of the Southern Baptist Convention.


News of religion, faith, missions, Bible study and Christian ministry among Baptist churches, in Texas, the BGCT, the nation and around the world.




End of CBF/ABC partnership leaves future of medical/retirement benefits in doubt

Posted: 12/14/07

End of CBF/ABC partnership leaves future
of medical/retirement benefits in doubt

By John Pierce

Baptists Today

ATLANTA (ABP)—A seven-year partnership between American Baptists and the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship, which has allowed CBF-related churches to buy retirement and medical benefits, will end Dec. 31.

The end of the partnership is leaving some church leaders confused about the future of their benefits. The arrangement is between CBF’s seven-year-old Church Benefits Board and the 96-year-old Ministers and Missionaries Benefit Board of the American Baptist Churches.

“Churches are getting flooded with letters from both groups—much of it contradictory, by the way—and everybody is pressing for a decision here at one of the busiest times of the year,” said one pastor, who asked not to be named.

The partnership broke down when MMBB—as the American Baptist agency is known—proposed a contract extension with significant changes. The proposal would essentially have cut out the need for the Church Benefits Board as the point of contact for CBF-related participants, and CBF leaders rejected the terms mandated in the proposed agreement.

But, while the end of the benefits partnership has caused some consternation, leaders for both faith groups say it will not threaten their close working relationship.

Currently, CBF has 1,100 participants in the MMBB benefits program, representing 6.6 percent of total MMBB enrollment.

Both MMBB and the Church Benefits Board are urging enrollees to decide by Dec. 15 which organization will retain their business. That deadline has frustrated some participants, who say too little information has been provided about the medical-insurance options the Church Benefits Board will offer.

But MMBB leaders say decisions about where church employees invest retirement funds and buy health insurance can be determined after the first of the year.

Sumner Grant, MMBB executive director, said he sent a letter and response card to current plan participants in November explaining their three options—Continue with MMBB and receive the same benefits, leave MMBB and sign up for the new Church Benefits Board plan, or go with the new CBF plan for new investments, but leave assets already accumulated to be managed by MMBB.

If no response is made, Grant said, participants will remain in the current MMBB plan and participants’ employers will still be billed for benefit payments. “Obviously, if the bill is paid they will continue as members. If it is not, their membership will lapse.”

So far, most who have responded have chosen to leave MMBB.

Jim Keegan, marketing and service director of the New York-based MMBB, said of the first 101 response forms received from CBF participants, 45 elected to leave MMBB services. Another 13 decided to discontinue retirement contributions but leave current assets to be managed by MMBB, while 43 chose to stay with MMBB and continue contributions.

Meanwhile, the Church Benefits Board, headed by Gary Skeen, has negotiated contracts with new providers and is promoting its benefits programs as more flexible than those of MMBB.

According to the CBB website, the new provider for medical insurance is Educator Resources, a division of World Insurance Association. It specializes in employee benefits for private schools and churches. Retirement benefits will be offered through StanCorp Financial Group.

“CBB has identified outstanding new partners to provide high-quality medical, life and disability insurance and excellent retirement benefits to CBB clients,” according to a statement on the group’s website. “The new packages of benefits are not only competitive, but provide much more flexibility.”

One stated advantage is that CBB will no longer require clients to participate in the retirement plan in order to receive medical insurance.

But some CBF-related church leaders said that, after shifting employee benefits from the Southern Baptist Convention’s benefits agency in recent years, they are not eager to repeat that process. It’s especially daunting, they noted, during the busy holiday season.

Daniel Vestal, CBF executive coordinator, said the breakup “was not our timetable” and that churches can still take their time in deciding where to buy their benefits.

Leaders of the MMBB, founded in 1911, also want to continue serving CBF-related church employees.

“CBF members of MMBB are, in truth, MMBB members,” said Grant. “They remain members for as long as they make premium payments to our plans. They are not in danger of losing any benefits as long as their employers continue to make payments.”

Both MMBB and CBF leaders have expressed appreciation for the earlier cooperative efforts in providing benefits to church-related employees. And they insist this is not a breakdown of the increasing cooperation between ABC and CBF reflected in church starts, dual missionary appointments and a shared national meeting this past summer.

“I think our partnership with American Baptists and other Baptists is going to continue and grow even stronger,” said Vestal, noting he had met again recently with ABC General Secretary Roy Medley and Progressive National Baptist Convention head Tyrone Pitts to discuss cooperative efforts.

Still, the breakup is not welcome news to those who are being forced to make an unexpected choice between benefits providers.

“I don’t know how many people this is affecting, but I would think there would be a lot of people wondering what they should do,” said one pastor affected by the sudden end to the partnership.




News of religion, faith, missions, Bible study and Christian ministry among Baptist churches, in Texas, the BGCT, the nation and around the world.




Huckabee’s surge in polls brings new media attention, scrutiny

Posted: 12/14/07

Huckabee’s surge in polls brings
new media attention, scrutiny

By Robert Marus

Associated Baptist Press

WASHINGTON (ABP)—Mike Huckabee has gone from long-shot candidate to serious GOP presidential contender in only a few weeks—and his media coverage has gone from curious bemusement to serious analysis of his past record.

The result is both good and bad for the former governor of Arkansas and pastor who served as president of the Arkansas Baptist State Convention.

Mike Huckabee

Two new nationwide polls released Dec. 10 show Huckabee suddenly in a statistical dead heat with former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani among Republican voters.

The CNN/Opinion Research poll, conducted Dec. 6-9, showed Giuliani garnering support from 24 percent of Republican voters, while Huckabee had 22 percent—within the poll’s margin of error. Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and Arizona Sen. John McCain were in third and fourth place, with former Tennsessee Sen. Fred Thompson a distant fifth.

Meanwhile, the CBS/New York Times poll, conducted Dec. 5-9, showed Giuliani with 22 percent and Huckabee with 21 percent. In that survey, Huckabee has increased his share of the Republican vote by 17 percentage points since October.

Other polls had already shown Huckabee pulling ahead of Romney in Iowa, despite the fact that Romney had outspent his fellow former governor by a margin of more than 10 to 1 in wooing voters for that state’s famous early caucuses.

The Dec. 17 issue of Newsweek, which hit newsstands Dec. 10, features Huckabee on its cover. A campaign that practically had to beg for attention from major media outlets only a few weeks ago is now beset by journalists’ inquiries.

But the attention has brought scrutiny that Huckabee has not had to endure on the national level before. The Newsweek story, for example, delves into controversies from his tenure in the Arkansas governor’s mansion, which included investigations and fines for ethical lapses and a controversy over a convicted rapist Huckabee reportedly urged paroled. The convict, Wayne Dumond, raped and killed a woman after he was released.

Just a few days earlier, an Associated Press story detailing Huckabee’s answers to a questionnaire from his unsuccessful 1992 campaign to unseat former Sen. Dale Bumpers (D-Ark.) created unwanted publicity. Among his answers were a call to quarantine people infected with the virus that causes AIDS and a harsh denouncement of homosexuality when asked about gays in the military.

“I believe to try to legitimize that which is inherently illegitimate would be a disgraceful act of government. I feel homosexuality is an aberrant, unnatural and sinful lifestyle, and we now know it can pose a dangerous public-health risk,” Huckabee said on the questionnaire.

On the HIV crisis, he said, “If the federal government is truly serious about doing something with the AIDS virus, we need to take steps that would isolate the carriers of this plague …. It is difficult to understand the public policy towards AIDS. It is the first time in the history of civilization in which the carriers of a genuine plague have not been isolated from the general population, and in which this deadly disease for which there is no cure is being treated as a civil-rights issue instead of the true health crisis it represents.”

Huckabee later said he wouldn’t retract any of his answers but that he would phrase his words “a little differently” if asked the same questions today.

In a Dec. 9 interview on Fox News, Huckabee said that, in 1992, “when we didn't know as much as we do now about AIDS, we were acting more out of political correctness than we were about the normal public-health protocols that we would have acted—as we have recently, for example, with avian flu.”

But the editors of the Washington Post, among others, took Huckabee to task for what they considered willful ignorance even of what was known about AIDS in 1992.

“Actually, in 1992, the year after basketball star Magic Johnson made the dramatic announcement that he was HIV-positive, it was already widely understood—and widely publicized—that HIV could not be spread by casual contact or even through close physical contact short of unprotected homosexual or heterosexual sex,” a Dec. 11 Post editorial said.

“It was also widely understood that the virus could be spread through blood transfusions or intravenous drug use involving needles shared with an infected person. There was nothing ‘politically correct’ about this.”

Huckabee also opposed new federal funding for AIDS research in 1992 but has since embraced government funding for combating the disease in the United States and globally.

In 1992, he also pledged not to pass any new taxes if elected to the Senate. However, he angered many anti-tax members of his own party when governor, repeatedly supporting tax increases to help fund improvements to highways and social services.

The Newsweek article also focused on critics of Huckabee’s personal style, including both Republicans and Democrats who worked with him and who characterized him as having a thin skin and a quick temper.

Huckabee told the magazine people get offended in politics. “You'll find plenty of people who will say I was the sorriest thing that sucked air into lungs,” he said. “You are going to find a lot of state legislators, both Democrats and Republicans, who are more than willing to tell you what a lousy human being I am … It was never my desire to be a member of the club, to be chummy and get along with everyone and have these guys love me. My job was to be governor.”


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Former atheist shapes God-centered program in Moldova

Posted: 12/14/07

Tatiana Ceban is working with Children’s Emergency Relief International to develop a transitional living program for young people who have graduated from the government-run orphanages in Moldova.

Former atheist shapes
God-centered program in Moldova

By Craig Bird

Baptist Child & Family Services

SAN ANTONIO—Five weeks in North Carolina undid a lifetime of atheistic indoctrination for Tatiana Ceban. Nearly 14 years later, she is helping Baptist Child & Family Services craft a transitional living program for youth who have aged out of government-run orphanages in Moldova.

“The most important goal is to teach everything through God’s perspective,” she said.

Such a concept was practically unthinkable for her before 1994. Three years after Moldova gained its independence following the collapse of the Soviet Union, Little Samaritan Mission invited Ceban and 11 other teachers to its Smokey Mountain headquarters, paired them with American public school teachers and exposed them to Christian witness.

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• Former atheist shapes God-centered program in Moldova

As the only one of the group to become a Christian, she became the first member of her family to profess faith in Christ. Her mother, sister and both of her children have become Christians in recent years.

That was just the first of many life changes that took her out of the public school system after 20 years, into her own successful youth mentoring program, through the unexpected severing of her working relationship with the government schools, and into a role with Children’s Emergency Relief International, the overseas arm of Baptist Child & Family Services.

“When we geared up to take the next step to deeper involvement in Moldova, the first name our CERI-Moldova staff suggested to head up the effort was Tatiana,” Baptist Child & Family Services President Kevin Dinnin said.

“Over the years, we have built good working relationships with orphanage directors and government officials. But the introduction of a program to provide life skills to 16-year-old suddenly on their own in a safe environment needed someone with a special set of skills as an educator, a passionate advocate for children, an administrator, a motivator and a person of deep faith. We were blessed when Tatiana agreed to join us in this important effort.”

Ceban spent six weeks training with Baptist Child & Family Services—learning in a classroom, sitting in support groups of youth who have aged out of the Texas foster care system, shadowing case workers, studying mentor programs and even participating in a “lock-in” at the agency’s Kerrville Transition Center.

“I have to develop the entire curriculum from scratch for the CERI program in Moldova, so I was looking for things I could use and things that wouldn’t work because of the cultural differences between Texas and Moldova,” she said.

“There are some major differences. We have to teach about the dangers of human trafficking, and money management instruction will be different because our financial system is different. Drug abuse is not a major problem—alcohol is.”

But, like in Texas, “the most important need of kids is life skills,” she said. “They get a general education, but when they graduate from orphanage at age 16, they are pretty much helpless—no money, no family support, for many no place to stay, living on streets, vulnerable to human trafficking and crime.”

She plans to begin with a mentoring program, concentrating on graduates from the orphanages CERI already is working with, to “give them tools for life and support them.” She will look for Baptist churches to host Circles of Concern support groups, as well as serve as recruiting grounds “for young Christians who want to be involved in helping these kids,” she said. “I can train them as mentors”

On the national stage, she hopes to develop relationships with Moldovan universities and collaborate with them to train social workers.

“Perhaps in time, the universities will be asking us to offer internships for their students,” she added.

She has earned the right to be heard on the subject. Five years after becoming a Christian, Ceban resigned her job as a high school principal and established the Aletheia (Greek for “truth”) Foundation.

The mentoring program was based in public schools and targeted student in grades seven through nine—“not orphans but from poorest districts of city and dysfunctional homes,” she explained.

They met daily in groups of 12 to 15 with mentors.

“We provided food, medicine, school supplies, camps, retreats and Bible study,” she said. “Our end goal was to introduce them to church and lead them to Christianity. Our immediate educational aim was to graduate them from middle school—let them know they could go to college and provide scholarships.”

After the first year, students were paired with an elderly person. “They visited them two times a month, took them food and medicine provided by Aletheia, cleaned their houses and witnessed to them,” she explained. “The educational moment was to show them that there were people even worse off.”

Last year, the program connected 70 young people with 85 senior adults.

In September, she was notified that, while the government considered the program valuable, it no longer could be based in the public schools.

She already had declined CERI’s overtures to head up the program because “I had my own thing and was happy with it.” But when the government excluded her from the schools she realized it was “God’s design” and now, her “biggest hope” is to be able to blend that program into CERI’s transitional living program.

“We can educate the community, set up a website for orphans. Kids age out at 16, but aren’t legally adults until 18. For those two years, no one takes care of them. They are helpless. They don’t know their rights or how to get benefits—who they can ask for help. This would help all the children of Moldova. There’s nothing like that now.”

On her last day of training in San Antonio, she looked at a photo of the dedication of the BCFS Kerrville Transition Center last February.

“I dream of that day for us, a big modern building—a home for the kids to come to, centrally located so they can get to it,” she said. “That means in central Chisinau, even though real estate is very expensive. We can build something that is uniquely theirs—someplace they can come without difficulty. … Maybe at first we’ll use church facilities, but we need our own place so they will know and feel it is their place. They feel lost, in need of support—especially from Christians.

“The presence of CERI will be unbelievable. My dream is to help all the kids of Moldova. This is the small first step, but God wants us to dream big.”




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BaptistWay Bible Series for December 23: More than meets the eye

Posted: 12/14/07

BaptistWay Bible Series for December 23

More than meets the eye

• Mark 4:21-34

By Andrew Daugherty

Christ Church, Rockwall

Shortly following the series of exchanges with the scribes and Pharisees about what is lawful or unlawful on the Sabbath, the conspiracy to kill Jesus grows (3:1-6). Clearly Jesus is perceived as an emerging threat to the Pharisees, and their agenda becomes taking whatever measures necessary to destroy him.

As the Gospel of Mark will reveal later, the Apostle Peter had his own perceptions about Jesus. Jesus will ask Peter a most personal question in chapter 8: “Who do you say that I am?” Peter will answer, “You are the Messiah” (8:29). We already know that for Mark, Jesus is indeed the Messiah (1:1). However, though Peter perceives Jesus as the Messiah, he still only has a dim understanding of what exactly this means.

Of course speculation abounds in Mark about who Jesus really is, whether he is the next coming of Elijah, John the Baptist or some other ancient prophet. Peter identifies Jesus correctly, but even though Jesus is the Messiah, this will mean something different to Peter than it does to Jesus. Once Jesus begins to explain he must suffer and die, this does not fit the parameters of Peter’s expectations about what a messiah should be. Perhaps a military warrior or a political hero would be expected, but Jesus’ power will be revealed as the suffering Son of God.

Jesus tries many times in Mark’s Gospel to hide his true identity as Messiah (1:43; 3:12; 5:43; 8:30). This has become known as “the messianic secret.” Maybe it was because he did not want to give people the wrong impression about the kind of Messiah he would be. Perhaps he knew he could not reveal all of himself at once; that it would take some time before the disciples and others could see him for who he really was rather than for whom they wanted him to be.

Whatever the reason, the parables in this passage are situated in the larger context of the messianic secret in Mark. The “secret of the kingdom of God” is being revealed to the ones who have the ears and eyes to perceive the parables of Jesus. “For there is nothing hidden, except to be disclosed; nor is anything secret, except to come to light (4:22). The mystery of the kingdom of God is coming to light through the stories Jesus tells.

Our ears perk up when we hear someone say, “Let me tell you a story.” Usually, we don’t know what’s coming, and we are invited into a world of images, characters, details and plotlines that keep us curious about what might be coming next. Jesus used a method of teaching that took the most common elements of his day and made them shimmer with fresh meaning. Stories like these invited people to see ordinary things in new ways.

Just as his identity was slowly being revealed, Jesus teaches here that the kingdom of God will not remain hidden and invisible. Like small seeds that will sprout, grow and produce fruit, the kingdom of God will grow and flourish in a most unexpected way. A telling image of a mustard bush contrasts the kingdom of God over and against a popular image of a political kingdom as a mighty and powerful tree. Popular scholar and preacher Tom Long comments: “Jesus may be alluding to the depiction in Daniel of Babylon as a tree standing majestically at the center of th earth, with a top that reached to heaven, a tree that was visible to the ends of the earth, abundant enough that ‘the birds of the air nested in its branches, and from it all living beings were fed’” (Daniel 4:10-12).

What are great kingdoms and powerful rulers supposed to look like? According to Jesus, they don’t look like what we might think. Even though Peter names Jesus the Messiah, his understanding of what it means will change as he comes to see it from Jesus’ point of view. Likewise the disciples and others will come to see the kingdom of God from Jesus’ point of view, too.

The kingdom of God will not be a terrible and triumphant political kingdom. Yet, despite its seemingly small and insignificant beginning, the kingdom of God will not remain hidden and unseen. It will be a light that helps us keep vigil long enough to see the truth of God’s kingdom enlighten the kingdoms of this world that are blinded by power and prestige.

The poet Emily Dickinson once said that poems come at the truth “at a slant.” The same goes for Jesus’ parables. Parable itself means “cast alongside of.” It casts a story alongside some life situation, or in the case of Jesus, the stories are meant to illuminate truth about the kingdom of God. Parables are stories that say important things happen and are decided at the most ordinary level everyday. The ultimate questions of life are asked and decided through people lighting lamps, filling baskets, sharing what they have, planting seeds in the soil and beholding the mystery and miracle of God’s creation. Jesus brings our vision into sharper focus by inviting us to see the world from his perspective through the eyes of faith.

Malcolm Muggeridge has tried to help readers see the world through the eyes of Mother Teresa. In his introduction to a collection of her prayers and meditations, A Gift for God, Muggeridge recalls the time Mother Teresa of Calcutta appeared with a Nobel prizewinning biologist on a Canadian talk show. The biologist eloquently pontificated about the future of DNA advances and the dream of eternal biological life.

While the biologist spoke, Mother Teresa waited patiently until the host urged her to respond to the biologist’s scientific speculation. “I believe,” she replied, “in love and compassion.” The biologist later confessed that Teresa’s simple but profound words had taken him as close as he had ever come to a spiritual conversion.

As a Christian servant, Mother Teresa deftly stayed true to her own vision of the kingdom of God rather than being forced into a debate about science and religion. She skillfully helped the imaginative and brilliant biologist to see science and even himself through her eyes. Through these parables, we can begin to see the kingdom of God through Jesus’ eyes. News of religion, faith, missions, Bible study and Christian ministry among Baptist churches, in Texas, the BGCT, the nation and around the world.




RIGHT or WRONG? Meaning of persecution

Posted: 12/14/07

RIGHT or WRONG?
Meaning of persecution

The other day, my Christian neighbor and I had an “across the fence” discussion that turned to theology. When I mildly disagreed with him, he responded, “You are persecuting me!” and walked away. Just what constitutes “persecution for righteousness sake”? I think my neighbor is acting self-righteously.


When Jesus spoke in the Sermon on the Mount about persecution, it is unlikely he was thinking about the minor disagreements, slights and insults we experience in America today. John the Baptist was beheaded, and Jesus was nailed to a cross “for righteousness sake.” Many in today’s world face equally harsh persecution for their faith. Perhaps what constitutes real persecution is better illustrated than defined. Consider a few of the more serious reports of persecution of Baptists brothers and sisters reported to the Baptist World Alliance in 2007.

On Feb. 25, radical Muslims attacked a Baptist church in Bandung, Indonesia, destroying most of the church’s property and its contents and seriously traumatizing 200 children in Sunday school—many of whom had to be hospitalized.

On Sept. 27, a Baptist church in Sudan was attacked by a suicide bomber in full army uniform. Six children were killed, and church leaders asserted the attack was to suppress the church.

On Oct. 7, Rami Ayyad, 29, a member of Gaza Baptist Church in Palestine and manager of the Gaza Bible Society Bookstore, was found murdered, leaving his pregnant wife, Pauline, and two young sons. The Bible Society building has been attacked on numerous occasions.

Consider our forebearers, as well. Early in American history, Christians faced serious persecution. The Virginia Baptist Historical Society owns the rusty iron lock and key from the Culpeper, Va., jail where more than a dozen Virginia Baptist ministers and laypeople were imprisoned for their faith between 1769 and 1774.

In 1771, Virginia Baptist John Waller was jerked off the preaching platform, had his head beaten against the ground and then received 20 lashes with a horsewhip. David Burrow and Edward Mintz were nearly drowned by an angry mob that interrupted their preaching to “baptize” them. And Baptist preacher Elijah Brown was kidnapped and placed aboard a ship with the instructions that he was to be gotten rid of.

So, perhaps we do an injustice to our forebearers in the faith and those Christians in more than 40 nations today who face imprisonment, violent persecution and even death by casually using the word “persecution” to describe the minor slights and insults we face.

Alan Stanford

General secretary, North American Baptist Fellowship

Director of mission advancement, Baptist World Alliance

Falls Church, Va.



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.

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Around the State

Posted: 12/14/07

Around the State

The School of Christian Studies at East Texas Baptist University will sponsor a trip to Greece next summer. The trip will focus on locations associated with the Apostle Paul and his ministry. The trip departs May 30 and returns June 10 after a final evening in Vienna, Austria. A $500 deposit is due Feb. 1. For more information, call (903) 923-2182.

William Brackney was the keynote speaker for Dallas Baptist Univeristy’s Gallup Lecture. He addressed issues of Baptist identity and tradition within the academic world.

Howard Payne University bestowed two honorary degrees during Dec. 15 commencement ceremonies. James Guenther and Cynthia Clawson each received honorary doctor of humanities degrees. Guenther has served as general counsel of the Southern Baptist Convention more than 40 years. An alumnus of HPU, Clawson has been a Christian recording artist more than four decades and is a member of the Texas Gospel Music Hall of Fame. Seventy-two undergraduate degrees also were awarded.

Nearly 800 Baylor University students expected to participate in commencement exercises Dec. 15. During the ceremony, the Abner V. McCall Religious Liberty Award was to be presented to U.S. Rep. Chet Edwards.

The Collegian, Houston Baptist University’s student newspaper, has received an All-American rating from the Associated College Press—the seventh time the publication has received the designation. The staff also garnered seven Baptist Press Excellence in Journalism awards.

Anniversaries

Dan Stephens, 10th, as minister of music and senior adults at First Church in Wimberley, Nov. 11.

Lee Rickaway, 10th, as minister of education at First Church in Duncanville, Dec. 9.

First Church in Mineral, 125th, Dec. 9. Joe Burke is pastor.

Event

First Church in Alvin is planning homecoming activities for April 12. For more information, go to www.fbcgathering.com or contact Delane Hargrove at (281) 331-4827 or Billie White at (281) 585-6095.

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Book Reviews

Posted: 12/14/07

Book Reviews

Christianity’s Family Tree by Adam Hamilton (Abingdon Press)

How did all the Christian denominations come to be? What do they believe? More importantly, what can they teach me about being a better disciple of Jesus Christ? These are the questions Adam Hamilton’s Christianity’s Family Tree sets out to answer.

As the name implies, Hamilton views the various denominations as part of the whole Christian family. Seen from his self-acknowledged United Methodist viewpoint, Hamilton’s outlook on church history is charitable and lucid. He neither ignores nor dwells on the major theological differences. Instead, he finds the strengths all Christians can learn from the Orthodox, Roman Catholic, Lutheran, Presbyterian, Anglican, Baptist, Pentecostal and Methodist traditions.

What are you reading that other Texas Baptists would find helpful? Send suggestions and reviews to books@baptiststandard.com.

Christianity’s Family Tree is first and foremost a book of discipleship, and it never strays from this main goal of making “more authentic and effective disciples of Jesus Christ.” Through solid historical and theological detail, Hamilton delivers a read on the denominations that will inspire faith. It is ideal for any small group that desires to learn how the history of the various churches can deepen their journey with God.

Todd Ferguson, associate pastor for youth and children,

Willow Meadows Baptist Church, Houston

Harvest of Hope: Stories of Life-changing Gifts by Kay Marshall Strom (IVP Books)

Have you ever received a gift catalog? Not the kind offering luscious food or handy gadgets, but the kind providing opportunities to fill hungry children’s stomachs, vaccinate babies or buy “Jesus Loves Me” lambs. Perhaps you considered making a purchase but wondered if your gift could really help. Before tossing that catalog in the recycle bin, read Kay Marshall Strom’s Harvest of Hope: Stories of Life-changing Gifts that chronicles real people whose lives dramatically changed because they received such a present. From prenatal care in Senegal and wheelchairs in Poland to sewing machines in India and village wells in Cambodia, Strom personalizes the gifts wrapped in physical help and spiritual hope.

Strom closes with the story of a first-grade class that voted to raise funds to buy a goat for a family in Niger and ended up leading their community to donate “one goat, two sheep, one donkey, one camel and school supplies for 34 students.”

If you enjoy stories about the difference one Christian can make, read Harvest of Hope, peruse Strom’s appendix of reputable organizations, and then decide what difference you can make with your gifts.

Kathy Robinson Hillman, former president

Woman’s Missionary Union of Texas, Waco

Humble Leadership: Being Radically Open to God’s Guidance and Grace by N. Graham Standish (Alban Institute)

Humble Leadership replaces misguided expectations of the pastor as ego-driven CEO with a clear biblical model of leadership. Leaders should possess humility, or rather, humility should possess the leader.

After examining the scriptural model of humble leadership, Graham Standish leads the reader in self-examination of why true humility often is missing. Both deeply biblical and interesting, the book also is practical.

Humble leadership only is achieved through a vibrant prayer life, prioritizing unity and Spirit-led living, and Standish tells how to make these things happen.

Standish illustrates how the practice of humility positively has impacted his own church in common situations like conflict and building projects and denominational relationships.

A churchwide study of this book would be a good investment. At a minimum, Humble Leadership ought to be in the hands of pastor-search committee members, so they would have a clear image of what they should be looking for, and ministers, so they would be called back to the biblical roots of leadership.

Karl F. Fickling, coordinator

Intentional Interim Ministry

Baptist General Convention of Texas, Dallas



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