Baptist Briefs
Posted: 12/14/07
Baptist Briefs
Three of ten recent SBC seminary grads are Calvinist. Nearly 30 percent of recent Southern Baptist Convention seminary graduates now serving as pastors identify themselves as Calvinists, according to findings by LifeWay Research and the North American Mission Board Center for Missional Research. In the SBC at large, by contrast, the number of pastors who affirm the five points of Calvinism is about 10 percent, said Ed Stetzer, director of LifeWay Research.
Pastor’s name found on hit list. Suspected terrorists included a Baptist pastor on what appears to be a hit list, the Baptist World Alliance reported. Ertan Mesut Cevik, pastor of a Baptist church in Izmir—Turkey’s third-largest city—received increased police protection after his name was found on a list carried by three suspected terrorists. The three, who have been arrested, are suspected of planning wide-scale attacks after a large cache of weapons was found in their possession. Cevik has been under police protection since April, after he hosted a funeral service for one of three Christians who was killed in Turkey. After the funeral, a Turkish newspaper article accused Cevik and his church of engaging in “coercive evangelism” by using money and drugs to attract young people. The church denied those charges.
African-American woman named president of academic society. An American Baptist theologian has become the first African-American woman elected president of the nation’s largest professional society for religion professors. Emilie Townes, the Andrew Mellon Professor of African-American Religion and Theology at Yale Divinity School, is the new president of the American Academy of Religion. The group’s membership includes thousands of academics who teach religious studies or theology at institutions of higher learning.
Baptist Heritage Preaching Contest entries solicited. The Baptist History and Heritage Society, in cooperation with the H. Franklin Paschall Chair of Biblical Studies and Preaching at Belmont University in Nashville, Tenn., is accepting sermon submissions for its annual Baptist Heritage Preaching Contest. Sermon manuscripts are due by Feb. 15, 2008, and the first-place prize is $400. The winner will preach the winning sermon during the 2008 annual meeting of the Baptist History and Heritage Society, May 22-24, in Atlanta. The winner’s expenses will be paid to attend the meeting. For more information, visit http://baptisthistory.org/preachingcontest.htm.
CBF MKs get tuition break at N.C. schools. Seven Baptist colleges and universities in North Carolina will offer undergraduate tuition scholarships for children of Cooperative Baptist Fellowship missionaries. The schools are Campbell University in Buies Creek, Chowan University in Murfreesboro, Gardner-Webb University in Boiling Springs, Mars Hill College in Mars Hill, Meredith College in Raleigh, Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem and Wingate University in Wingate. Each school will offer an eight-semester scholarship for full-time study to missionary dependents who meet the school’s admission standards. Room, board and other costs will be funded through one of CBF’s endowments. The group is working to increase the existing $870,000 endowment to $2.5 million in order to provide for these expenses. Bluefield College in Bluefield, Va., and Mercer University in Macon, Ga., offer similar scholarships.
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