Cross Plains church helps wildfire victims through recovery

Posted: 1/20/06

A handwritten sign by fifth and sixth graders at First Baptist Church in Cross Plains is intended to lift the spirits of wildfire victims.

Cross Plains church helps
wildfire victims through recovery

By John Hall

Texas Baptist Communications

CROSS PLAINS–Everywhere Shayne Childers turns, he is reminded of the wildfires that devastated his community. Charred fields line the roads. They cry to him from across the street as he picks his son up from school.

Dozens of houses were burned, and two people died in the town.

“Everywhere you drive, everywhere you park … everywhere you go, you see the remains,” said Childers, associate pastor of First Baptist Church. “It is a constant remin-der.”

Childers sees victims of the wildfires daily. Between 60 and 150 people take part in a church-provided lunch for fire victims and individuals helping in the recovery process.

The church “is trying to love these people and meet their needs,” Childers said. He hopes volunteers can let people know God cares for them and will help through a tough time.

The congregation also supplies clothing and food to people in need. Some people have lost nearly all their possessions. Some families have found shelter with relatives and friends. Others have turned hotels into temporary homes.

“They're scattered all over the place,” Childers said.

The need for help is great in the area, but Childers is quick to note that more supplies are not necessary at this point.

Thanks to the generosity of towns near Cross Plains, the church has a gym full of items. He routinely asks congregations to keep the town in their prayers and call back in six months. Other items may be needed then.

Recovery is multi-tiered for an area that lives off its ranching efforts, Childers said. Homes need to be built. The land also needs to recover.

For some time, burnt fields will not produce like they once did. Hay was lost for livestock. It is difficult to estimate the economic impact of the fires.

The recovery process already has started. People are taking inventory of what they have lost and are removing debris. Childers said he is surprised how positive everyone has remained. They are anxious to put their lives back together.

First Baptist Church will be with them throughout the entire process, the minister said. The lunches and distribution of supplies will continue as long as it they are needed.

“It's going to be a lengthy process,” Childers said.

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




Disaster relief gifts enable ongoing recovery

Posted: 1/20/06

Disaster relief gifts enable ongoing recovery

By John Hall

Texas Baptist Communications

DALLAS–Disaster recovery continues in South Asia and Louisiana, and Texas Baptists remain integrally involved in both locations.

Texas Baptist donations have enabled the Baptist General Conven-tion of Texas, Baptist Child & Family Services and Texas Baptist Men to continue rebuilding lives throughout Louisiana and Sri Lanka.

BGCT, Baptist Child & Family Services and Texas Baptist Men leaders continue using the funds collected as early as December 2004. More than $180,000 still is earmarked for tsu-nami-related ministry, and nearly $400,000 is available for hurricane-related response work.

Disaster relief gifts to the Baptist General Convention of Texas have enabled Texas Baptists to minister longterm in Sri Lanka and Louisiana. Texas Baptist Men work on this trade school in eastern Sri Lanka. (Photo by John Hall)

This marks the first time in TBM, Baptist Child & Family Services and BGCT history that Texas Baptists have shifted their ministry from purely disaster relief to service that includes recovery on such a large scale, officials noted. Leaders are listening to the needs of local Christians and seeking to meet them strategically.

About 185 congregations have helped the recovery process in Louisiana through a partnership between the BGCT and the Greater New Orleans Baptist Association.

Texas Baptists are helping New Orleans Baptists rebuild their churches and reach out to their respective communities. Funds are being allocated to churches and families who were affected by Hurricane Katrina.

“Recovery can take years,” said Milfred Minatrea, a BGCT staff person helping coordinate Texas Baptist relief efforts.

“We have long-term and strategic investments in churches in Louisiana and Southeast Texas.”

Texas Baptist Men is meeting needs through partnerships of its own. Gospel for Asia, an evangelical group that has partnered with TBM since January 2005, continues to share needs. Texas Baptists will finish another building near Batticoloa that will complete a trade school.

TBM also will work with the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship in the near future to build homes in Sri Lanka. CBF has been ministering in Sri Lanka for about a year.

These relationships help TBM expand its ministry in the island nation, said TBM Exe-cutive Director Leo Smith. Texas Baptists will continue to spread the gospel to a country largely comprised of non-Christians.

“There are a lot of people who are being touched,” Smith said.

“In Southeast Asia, when we were over there, it opened the door for the Muslims and Buddhists. It changed what they thought Christians were. They saw people care and love them.”

Baptist Child & Family Services continues developing a foster care program for Sri Lanka. The effort is the first of its kind in the country.

While Louisiana and South Asia remain on the minds of many people, Minatrea reminds Texas Baptists they also are ministering to victims of wildfires across North Texas, providing supplies and committing to the rebuilding process, and in Southeast Texas, they are helping victims of Hurricane Rita.

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.




DOWN HOME Faithful companion & beloved friend

Posted: 1/20/06

DOWN HOME:
Faithful companion & beloved friend

I miss Betsy most in the mornings.

She and I were the early risers in our family. Most of the time, especially on weekday mornings, when the alarm went off long before dawn, she'd get up to give me company. She'd hang out in the bathroom while I shaved, and she'd eat breakfast with me in the kitchen. I miss her quiet, faithful presence in the mornings.

Still, I miss her almost as much when I arrive home from work in the evening.

Years ago, when my daughters were little, they ran to the door to hug and kiss me when I came home from work. Eventually, they got too busy. But Betsy always came running, at least until she grew old and nearly deaf and couldn't hear me. Even then, as soon as she figured out I was home, she'd come to greet me. I miss the way she always seemed happy to see me, no matter what happened that day.

Then again, maybe I miss her most late at night.

Whether I was working or reading or just watching TV, she always lingered nearby, usually only a few feet away and sometimes right by my side. She didn't demand much. For her, it was enough to be in the same room. After the 10 o'clock news, she followed me to the bedroom, ready for rest and anticipating a new day. I miss her loyal, trusting companionship.

I miss Betsy more than I dreamed possible. Her steady, sweet disposition always cheered and comforted me. Her big, brown eyes always persuaded me to do whatever she wanted. And her genuine affection always made me glad I did.

Unfortunately, even beloved pets succumb to the cruel, irrepressible ravages of age. Betsy arrived in our home in November 1991. Joanna and I bought her as a puppy for our daughters' birthdays, when Lindsay turned 8 and Molly 5. She grew up with our girls. If you asked anyone about our family, everybody mentioned Betsy. She was a Knox.

But just as the force of time altered our family, it took its toll on Betsy. This fall arrived, and Molly left for college, Lindsay anticipated her December wedding, and the debilitations of old age set in for Betsy.

I watched her change, even as I denied it was happening. Week by week, however, the signs of her decline (I won't degrade her dignity by reciting them now) became increasingly obvious. As much as we loved her, we didn't want to see her suffer, and we came to realize prolonging her life would be selfish on our part. If we truly loved her, we had to let her go.

When I took Betsy to the veterinarian's office, he confirmed our feelings–an act of grace I will cherish all my days. He gently reassured me, and as I told her how much Jo and Lindsay and Molly and I all loved her, Betsy died in my arms.

Now, I know that with all the pain and evil and suffering in this world, the death of a pet is a relatively minor tragedy. But still, the passing of a noble friend–even of the canine variety–is an event to be mourned. And a life to be celebrated with gratitude.
–Marv Knox

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




EDITORIAL Stewardship encompasses all of life

Posted: 1/20/06

EDITORIAL:
Stewardship encompasses all of life

Soon and very soon, people from all over the globe will settle down in front of our TV sets for two solid weeks, mesmerized by the XX Winter Olympics in Torino, Italy. We'll cheer for athletes we've never heard of competing in sports we only think about once every four years. And don't say you won't, because you know you will. “The thrill of victory and the agony of defeat” are the best drama on TV (with the slight exception of any episode of Lost).

One of the most attractive aspects of the Olympics always has been the uniquely individual nature of the competition. Of course, I love baseball and football, respect basketball and have developed a growing appreciation for hockey. Team sports are thrilling and larger than life. But individual sports, such as the majority featured in the Olympics, are so compelling because they highlight a solitary competitor striving against nature, time, gravity, human limitations and/or other individuals with the same dreams and aspirations. When you watch many of these solo competitions, you witness the world in microcosm.

knox_new

Many factors determine which athletes climb up on the medal stand and which ones pack up and head for home. They include everything from climate to equipment to talent to genetics to funding to, sometimes, sheer good fortune. But the No. 1 factor inevitably is this: Stewardship of individual resources. Sure, raw ability plays a part. (Remember Eddie the Eagle, the British ski-jumper? Everyone knew his physical skills wouldn't fly him to a medal.) Every other factor, however, is impacted by stewardship of resources–how well the athletes use everything at their disposal. The medal stands are populated by athletes who commit themselves to gaining quality experience, training extremely hard and well, understanding the dynamics of both the sport and the specific competition, eliminating distractions, resting body and soul, and focusing intensely on the one thing that matters at the moment: The competition. We call them champions.

The Apostle Paul apparently loved the ancient Olympics. He enlivens his letters with athletic metaphors. The most famous one states: “But one thing I do: Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead, I press on toward the goal to win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus” (Philippians 3:13-14). Paul understood the similarities between athletic prowess and successful Christian living: Forget what is behind. Strain toward what is ahead. Press on. Keep the goal in mind. In other words, steward all that you have–time, talent, energy, passion, funds, focus–toward being and doing what God has called you to be and to do.

This issue of the Baptist Standard includes a focus on stewardship. Most of the time–as is the case with this package of articles–when we say “stewardship,” we mean “money.” That is entirely appropriate. One of the stellar teachings of the Bible is the importance of financial generosity and of contributing a tithe and more of our financial income to support the Lord's work. We can't begin to imagine how many more people would come to faith in Christ and how much pain and suffering would be alleviated if God's people would tithe to their churches and provide generous offerings for other Christian causes.

But we miss the mark if we narrow our understanding of stewardship to finances. The gospel is holistic; it encompasses all that we are. When Jesus saves us, he doesn't simply claim our wallets, because he needs our money. He claims our wristwatches, because he is Lord of our time. He claims our shoes, because he wants to guide where we go. He claims our gloves or equipment or baking pans or toolboxes, because he wants to direct us as we work. He claims our books and TVs and computers and musical devices and conversations, because what we think and how we shape the thinking of others matters to him. He cares about our diet and exercise and sleep, because our bodies belong to him, not us.

In the Parable of the Talents (Matthew 25:14-30), Jesus preaches about a master who went on a trip and allocated portions of his estate to his servants, “each according to his ability.” When the master returned, he held each servant accountable for the portion entrusted to him. The master rewarded the servants who used their resources wisely (someday, we'll discuss the spiritual virtue of risk-taking), but he not only condemned but also took away from the servant who did not exercise wise stewardship of what he had received.

God expects the same from each of us. We're accountable, not only for money, but for every second of our lives.

Marv Knox is editor of the Baptist Standard.

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




Garcia announces retirement; Palos to lead Hispanic work

Posted: 1/20/06

Garcia announces retirement;
Palos to lead Hispanic work

Jimmy Garcia retired Dec. 31 from his role leading Hispanic work for the Baptist General Convention of Texas, and Frank Palos will serve in that role during the interim.

“Jimmy served us faithfully for 18 years,” said Ron Gunter, BGCT chief operating officer and associate executive director.

“We are thankful for his service with us and for his continued ministry as pastor of Primera Iglesia Bautista in Dallas.”

Palos has worked on the BGCT staff 21 years, with his last position being associate coordinator of the Church Health and Growth Section.

“Frank has been closely involved with our Hispanic work in Texas for a number of years, and his understanding of that important aspect of our convention will be of great value during this interim period,” Gunter said.

Palos, a former pastor, holds a bachelor's degree from Southern Methodist University and a master's degree from Dallas Baptist University.

He also is a past officer of the Hispanic Baptist 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.




Transitional home for girls offers hope in Guatemala

Posted: 1/20/06

Buckner Orphan Care International celebrated the opening of its first transitional girl's home in Guatemala City Jan. 7. The home will hold 10 girls and provide a place for them to live as they continue their education and learn life skills. "Some of (these girls) had never had a home before, and they look beautiful now–like normal teenagers. And they all have opportunities that they otherwise wouldn't have had," said Leslie Chace, director of Latin American programs for Buckner Orphan Care International. (Photos by Randy Daniels/ Buckner Benevolences)

Transitional home for girls
offers hope in Guatemala

By Jenny Pope

Buckner Benevolences

GUATEMALA CITY–Buckner Orphan Care International celebrated the grand opening of its first transitional girls' home in Guatemala City this month. Unlike orphanages, the transitional home will provide a place for girls age 18 and older to live as they continue their education and learn life skills.

“A home like this is important for these girls, because a lot of them don't have anywhere to go,” said Leslie Chace, director of Latin American programs for Buckner.

“These girls are desperate; they're desperate for sponsors or for people to help them. We don't want them to fall into the pitfalls of their past. This home will give them opportunities–teach them how to live on their own, let them finish their education, budget their own money and get jobs to start contributing to the home.”

Buckner has wanted to start a program like this for a long time in Guatemala based on its success in the United States with transitional homes, but never had the right opportunity, Chace said. Early in 2005, the opportunity came through Isabel de Bosch, a Guatemalan businesswoman and founder of Fundaninas Girls' Home.

Buckner Orphan Care International celebrated the opening of its first transitional girl's home in Guatemala City on Jan. 7. The home will provide a place for girls age 18 and older to live as they continue their education and learn life skills.

“I got a phone call one day in Dallas, and (de Bosch) was saying, 'Hey, we've got this empty house, could you guys do anything with it?' We went to see the house and thought that this would be a good start for a transitional home,” Chace said.

Through a partnership with Fundaninas, Buckner began planning in early 2005 for the new home that would hold 10 girls–five from Fundaninas and five from the Manchen Girl's Home in Antigua, where Buckner has established relationships with many of the girls.

“We wanted to start a home with a small number of girls to see how it goes, because we're going to use it as a model home,” Chace said.

“We hope to have maybe two more homes by this time next year–one for boys and one for girls.”

Building began last summer, and finishing touches were added to the new home in late December. The Jan. 7 grand opening was “a time to celebrate and dedicate the home to the Lord and the girls' future,” Chace said.

“Most of all, we want to give them the spiritual aspect–that's the primary reason for doing this. We want to give them the Lord, help them have a connection with the Lord so that they may have fruitful lives and know how to turn to the Lord with their problems.”

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




Baptist chaplain in Kuwait seeks conversation-starters

Posted: 1/20/06

Baptist chaplain in Kuwait
seeks conversation-starters

By George Henson

Staff Writer

KUWAIT–A Texas Baptist chaplain in Kuwait is looking homeward for help in his ministry to soldiers far from home.

Rick Brunson, former pastor of Friendship Baptist Church in Weatherford, serves as chaplain for the Task Force 1st Battalion 6th Infantry Regiment.

Brunson, who was a pastor 13 years in Texas, Louisiana and Florida, said he approaches the troops in his battalion much as he did his congregations.

“I never approach a soldier by beating him over the head with a Bible. I find out his needs and minister accordingly,” Brunson said in an e-mail interview.

Meeting those needs requires some stateside assistance. When he was transported to Kuwait, space was at a premium with no room for excess baggage. Also, he was unsure what resources would be at his disposal when he arrived. “We hoped for the moon but mostly got sand–lots and lots of sand,” he said.

Consequently, soldiers need cough lozenges and eye drops. Baby wipes–showers often are not available–also come in handy, along with facial tissue, hand sanitizer and personal toiletry items, he noted.

Soldiers also enjoy snack items in individual packages–anything from chips to candy to jerky, he added. Soldiers lack any means to cook individual meals, so uncooked food cannot be used.

Many soldiers have DVD players or a laptop for playing movies, so any kind of DVD entertainment is appreciated, Brunson said. Books and magazines also are requested.

“We have a small store here, but supplies are often limited, and lines can be extremely long,” he explained. “A few weeks ago, we had an additional 20,000 soldiers in camp. We were waiting in lines for hours for everything from meals to making purchases at the PX. Everyone did their best, but supplies did not meet the demand.”

All the items requested come under the military heading of morale, welfare and recreation resources. While these giveaways help Brunson open the door for conversation, they are in short supply.

“I have had a great success with my soldiers as I distribute morale items to them. They are much more open and accepting of the ministry I provide because I'm scratching where they itch,” Brunson said.

“When I hand out items to the soldiers, some will reply by saying, 'Thanks, Chappy!' Others will ask, 'Hey, Chappy, got a minute?' Those are the opportunities I seek.”

Those intimate conversations are vastly different than public prayers Brunson often is called on to deliver in interfaith settings.

“I use discretion when I offer public prayers, because there are so many faith groups present. I usually close my public prayers with 'the name of our Lord and Shepherd.' I have too much reverence for the name of Jesus to use it as a battering ram to prove a point,” he said.

“When I pray with soldiers on a personal level, everything is different. I always ask if I can pray for the soldier. In my six years as a chaplain, I've only been told 'no' once.

“To non-Christians I always explain that I will be praying to my God, and his name is Jesus. Then I ask permission to pray to my God for them. So far, I have never been told no.”

Wiccans, atheists, Native American shamans and followers of other faiths readily have accepted prayers in Jesus' name, he noted.

“On more than one occasion, I have had commanders with no religious faith to ask me to pray for their soldiers before going on missions or exercises. That only happens by loving soldiers in Jesus' name instead of trying to shove his name down their throats,” Brunson said.

Tangible results are beginning to be seen. “When I came to my battalion, very few of my soldiers attended any church service. Now I lead two contemporary services each Sunday and at times preach at a third service. My soldiers are embracing the gospel, and others are becoming more open to lead their buddies to the Lord,” Brunson said.

Brunson offered recent examples of lives changed by the gospel, such as a soldier who approached him, asking to talk. The soldier had been getting into trouble a lot–nothing big, but enough to get him unwanted attention from his superiors. The 30-year-old soldier hadn't really accomplished much with his life, and when Brunson asked about his plans for the future, he said he didn't have any plans.

“I shared my call experience and the education required to become a pastor/chaplain in order to get him to understand the need to set big goals and then see them happen through small increments,” Brunson said.

“When I finished my story, the soldier replied, 'I've been running from God for six years. The Lord called me into ministry then, and I've done everything possible to mess up my life in order to avoid what he wanted me to do. Your story is my story, and I know what I need to do.'”

The soldier rededicated his life to Christ and called to tell his wife. “She was ecstatic,” Brunson said. “She was ready to leave him because of his constant problems. Now, their marriage has a new life as they will both begin a new life.”

Brunson also recalled a staff sergeant who previously had not expressed a need for his ministry. “He told me he watched his dad die a number of years ago. He begged God to spare his dad's life, but the prayer was not answered. At that point, he blamed/cursed God and became a very angry person. He is a great soldier and leader, but his family life has suffered greatly,” Brunson said.

“Since his father's death, the soldier has been through two marriages, numerous other rocky relationships, an attempted suicide, and other attempts to kill himself through alcohol and binge drinking. “Less than an hour ago, the soldier accepted Jesus as his Savior and Lord. He now sees God as a wounded healer who will help him through his pain instead of the source of the pain.

“God is making a difference, one soldier at a time.”

To send Brunson items to assist in his ministry, mail them to Chaplain (Captain) Rick Brunson, TF 1-6 Infantry, HHC, 1-6 INF, APO AE 09930.

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: 1/20/06

Texas Baptist Forum

Speak up for Christmas

“Let the redeemed of the Lord say so” (Psalm 107:2).

This Christmas season has included many surprises. Some of us were surprised by the department stores that opted not to use the word “Christmas” in their ads this year.

Recently, I had another surprise. Of the scores of people I talked to about the attack on Christmas, I was surprised by the number of folk who hadn't heard about the attack. Do these people watch the news? Or should the question be, “Do these people watch the right news?” Any news agency that won't report this problem is obviously in bed with the “kill Christmas” group.

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

"When you consider that 80 to 90 percent of the American public celebrates Christmas, that (retailers) actively solicit and advertise to … make millions and millions of dollars, and they're not willing to mention the words 'Merry Christmas,' something is drastically wrong."

Manuel Zamorano
Protester, who called off his boycott of Macy's department stores after the chain reinstituted "Merry Christmas" in its advertising (RNS)

"When did it become the responsibility of department stores to preach the gospel? It is not the purpose of retail establishments to advance the cause of Christ. I do not recall Jesus ever saying, 'Why haven't you turned my marketplace into a house of prayer?' If Christ is missing from Christmas, don't blame department stores. The real reason is somewhere closer to home. … No wonder Christ seems to be missing from Christmas–Christians keep looking for him in the mall."

James Evans
Pastor of First Baptist Church in Auburn, Ala. (EthicsDaily.com)

"The speaker believes a Christmas tree is a Christmas tree, and it is as simple as that."

Ron Bonjean
Spokesman for House Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill., explaining Hastert's decision not to label the Capitol Christmas tree a "holiday tree" (Washington Times/RNS)

"I think the 'Person' of the Year should be God. On the one hand, more people seem certain they know God's will on the social issues of the day. On the other, all of us feel the need to find answers as we confront the 'acts of God' dominating the news, like diseases and global catastrophes."

Coleen Rowley
Former FBI agent and one of three "whistleblowers" honored as Time magazine's "Persons of the Year" in 2002 (RNS)

But it's better not to know the news than to do nothing after hearing it. I guarantee you that if enough Christians lodged a complaint against stores that refuse to use “Christmas” this week, they'd be talking about “Christmas” next week!

Edmund Burke spoke a truth when he said: “The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is that good men do nothing.”

Doug Fincher

San Augustine

Speak up for serious matters

The usual hot buttons of “In God We Trust,” “… one nation under God,” and so forth have been temporarily put on the back burner. Instead, we have changed to the hot buttons of Christmas, as politicians and religious leaders go for more money and political influence.

I heard a well-known religious figure say on the radio that if you don't call a decorated tree a “Christmas tree,” it is an attack on Jesus! The speaker of the U.S House of Representatives made a point of renaming the tree at the Capitol a “Christmas tree.” Some organizations want to boycott businesses if they don't use politically correct greetings–as defined by religious/political leaders.

Jesus told us to feed the hungry, clothe the naked, visit those in prison and minister to the sick. Did he really intend to mandate certain words of greeting and correct terminology for decorated trees at this time of year and then just forgot to mention it?

Our nation is facing serious problems, not the least of which is corruption in our political system. We have hungry, homeless people and families who have lost loved ones in Iraq. How would Jesus respond to our lack of concern for serious matters?

I think he would weep.

Carl L. Hess

Ozark, Ala.

Circle grows narrower

Please look at Paul Pressler's last book, where he and others promised those of us with charismatic leanings a place at the Southern Baptist Convention table. Check with Wallace Henley in Houston as well.

I serve Central Baptist Church of Hixson in Chattanooga, Tenn., and have hosted Fresh Oil and New Wine conferences for years. Six hundred-plus Baptist churches cooperate with us.

We want to stay (in the SBC), but the circle of so-called orthodoxy grows ever narrower. If the gifts of the Spirit have ceased, then let the convention say it. Scholars may not believe in the supernatural, but no reputable New Testament scholar denies the gifts are clearly taught.

The action of the International Mission Board is one more step down for a declining denomination whose only hope is a fresh openness to the Holy Spirit.

Ron Phillips

Chattanooga, Tenn.

Decision hurts missions

Regarding the International Mission Board's decision not to appoint missionaries who use “prayer language” in private: I know there's debate about the nature of speaking in tongues in the Scripture. There are zealous and sincere people on both sides.

However, it is wrong for the IMB to limit God by eliminating missionaries who have their own (presumably Spirit-filled) way of praying.

Our church's mission giving will no longer include this organization.

“But one and the same Spirit works all these things, distributing to each one individually just as he wills” (1 Corinthians 12:11).

Darryl Hall

Garland

Obituary embarrassing

I must tell you how disappointed I was with the Standard's coverage of the death of Dr. Adrian Rogers (Nov. 21).

My disappointment and embarrassment is that something so insensitive and one-sided would be printed about a Christian brother at his death.

It would have been better to ignore his passing rather than reprint an article from another agency. I find it difficult to believe that your talented writers could not write their own story.

Dr. Rogers was a man of dignity and humility, and whatever your theological and political differences, he deserved better treatment from your paper. Poor form, sir.

Keith Sanders

Keller

Design for intelligence

Kansas should be commended for taking a stand for teaching intelligent design.

The opponents of teaching intelligent design call such teaching “bad science.” Actually, Darwin's theory of evolution is bad science similar to the alchemist teaching of the past.

Teaching intelligent design in schools moves the teaching of biology out of questionable theories, just as atomic theories moved physical science out of the theory of the alchemist. Just as atomic theory showed heavy metals could not have “evolved” from lighter metals, archeological research now shows higher-order animals appeared rather rapidly–not over thousands of years as thought by Darwin's theory.

Teaching intelligent design in our schools will help today's students seek better scientific understanding of living organisms.

Bill Osborne

Houston


No hypocracy if you check the facts

If Mark Johnson (Jan. 9) had checked out the facts, he would not have accused the Southern Baptist Convention of hypocrisy regarding its stand on Disney and on The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe.

First, the Harry Potter Books are too violent for small children under fifth grade. That is my opinion based on my survey reading of several at my local library. I know others who disagree with me. Now, I believe that we can disagree without being disagreeable on things like this.

Second, the SBC has announced as of June 2005 that Disney had made changes that the SBC wanted and that the boycott was off.

Third, The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe is an excellent book written by a famous Christian author, C.S. Lewis, who also wrote The Screwtape Letters, another classic.

Fourth, I see LifeWay’s attempt to capitalize on this movie first and foremost as promoting good moral literature and secondly as good business. That is their job, is it not?

Therefore, the SBC is not hypocritical but attentive in assisting the promotion of a great movie based on great literature from a company that changed due to our boycott. How better to follow up a boycott than to reward that company when they are doing something right. Not to do that would be hypocritical.

Michael Simons

Cleburne

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.




New Urbanism offers antidote for isolation, proponents say

Posted: 1/20/06

New Urbanism offers antidote
for isolation, proponents say

By Marshall Allen

Religion News Service

PASADENA, Calif. (RNS)–Eric Jacobsen speaks passionately about things like sidewalks and storefronts. But he's not an architect or developer. He's a pastor.

As Jacobsen sees it, city planning has an important influence on religious experience. He is an advocate for New Urbanism, the architecture movement that calls for interdependence among residents, with neighborhoods where shops and homes coexist, streets that are pedestrian-friendly and parks that are gathering places for residents.

New Urbanism has become a mantra for people interested in restoring urban centers and reconfiguring suburban sprawl. Its designs have sprouted across the country, from new towns like Seaside, Fla., to redevelopment in places like Gaithersburg, Md., or West Palm Beach, Fla. The Congress for the New Urbanism started small 12 years ago and now has more than 2,300 architects, developers, planners and urban designers.

Now Christian leaders are adopting the movement. They say the philosophy behind New Urbanism is a possible antidote to the isolation experienced by many churches and Christians. Across the country, influential Christians are thinking theologically about urban design and applying its principles to the church. They advocate for New Urbanist concepts because they force people to share with one another, dwell among their neighbors and allow for a healthy exchange of ideas.

The national advocates for New Urbanism include Randy Frazee, a teaching pastor at Willow Creek Community Church, a trend-setting Illinois megachurch attended by more than 20,000 people. Frazee says there's a “movement brewing” where Christians are striving to capture the values of New Urbanism because of an urgent need.

Frazee compared mega-churches to castles surrounded by moats. A few times a year the drawbridge is lowered to let people in, where they become a subculture separate from the outside world. They become so involved in church life that they are not involved in their neighborhoods, he said.

“You have to disengage from your community to be involved in the church,” Frazee said, describing the problem. “Now the church has become irrelevant to the community.”

Willow Creek is a laboratory for new ideas in the evangelical world.

Frazee said the push for New Urbanism will include the 10,500 churches in the Willow Creek Association, which links smaller congregations that share the megachurch's philosophy of ministry.

Jacobsen, 38, was associate pastor of First Presbyterian Church in Missoula, Mont., when he became interested in urban design. He wrote the book Sidewalks in the Kingdom: New Urbanism and the Christian Faith, and now is earning a doctorate in theology of the built environment at Fuller Theological Seminary, one of the nation's largest seminaries.

On a recent weekday, Jacobsen wore a blue dress shirt and tucked the cuff of his gray slacks into his sock, so it wouldn't snag the chain of his bicycle. He rode to the Zona Rosa Caffe–a cozy coffee house located a half block from Colorado Boulevard, where the sun-drenched city holds its annual New Year's Day parade.

Over a cup of coffee, Jacobsen extolled the virtues of the location, which bustled with passers-by. The shop's entrance abuts the wide sidewalk instead of being separated from it by a parking lot. And only a pedestrian could appreciate the stained-glass artistry of a neighboring building, he said. Someone in a car would miss its beauty.

Jacobsen said places like Zona Rosa might make an ideal “third place,” the term New Urbanists use for a location where a person spends time that is not his home or place of employment. The third place is an important part of a community, he said. It's where people from diverse backgrounds learn to interact.

For Christians, the third place also provides opportunity for spontaneous ministry, he said. Jesus did much of his ministry in the context of everyday life. Jacobsen notes in one Bible story, Jesus was on his way to heal the daughter of a synagogue ruler named Jarius when a sick woman touched his cloak and was healed.

Today's ministers may not have noticed the sick woman be-cause their ministry is too structured, Jacob-sen said.

“She's not going to call for an appointment,” he said.

Christians must see their ministry “as not just supporting the programs inside your church, but also caring about the whole neighborhood,” Jacobsen said.

Christian advocates of New Urbanism are not in the majority. In fact, Jacobsen said many Christians resist or ignore his appeals to architecture and design. But that doesn't dampen his evangelistic fervor. He says part of the challenge is the historical propensity of Protestants to dismiss architecture. The saying is: “The church is the people, not the building.”

“That slogan obscures the fact that the building influences how people relate,” Jacobsen said.

Christian advocates of New Urbanism cite suburban sprawl as an isolating factor for many churches. The sprawl began in part because of federal subsidies after World War II, said Philip Bess, professor of architecture at the University of Notre Dame.

Bess, who has a master's degree in church history, is a Catholic and New Urbanist. The low-interest housing loans the government provided GIs returning from the war applied only to new houses.

Meanwhile, the government was funding the interstate highway system, and zoning laws separated communities into their commercial, industrial and residential uses.

The suburbs were born, neatly dividing people by economic class and forcing them to drive everywhere–to the market, to work and to church.

Churches followed people into the suburbs. Bess said they also adapted suburban development patterns, buying sizable plots of land, erecting a church and surrounding it with a surface parking lot. Churches then offered multiple programs to draw members, who drove to the site, leaving neighborhoods behind.

Sprawl makes it more difficult for churches to achieve their objectives, Bess said. For example, anyone who can't operate a vehicle–the young, old or disabled–are disenfranchised, he said.

“Just as a matter of social justice, it's arguably better to make mixed-use, walkable environments,” Bess said.

Curt Gibson, director of neighborhood ministries at Lake Avenue Church, an evangelical megachurch in Pasadena, said New Urbanism is a hot term in the world of Christian community development. Lake Avenue has shifted focus in recent years in a way that illustrates the philosophical connection between the architectural movement and ministry, he said.

Several years ago, a survey at Lake Avenue found few of the children in the youth programs were from the low-income neighborhood surrounding the church campus. Instead, the children mostly were white-collar types who arrived and departed by the carload from nearby cities. Most attended private schools. The smallest group of students was from the struggling Pasadena Unified School District.

The church poured resources into the Lake Avenue Commun-ity Foundation, which expanded its neighborhood outreach and tutoring programs.

Now, Pasadena Unified has the largest representation of any district in the youth program, Gibson said.

“There's been a heart change at Lake Avenue,” Gibson said. “A subtle transition has happened where they recognize they need to be an active participant in the local community.”

First Presbyterian Church of Spokane, Wash., is another urban church where leaders realized low-income neighbors almost were absent from the congregation, said Kevin Finch, the church's associate pastor of mission and evangelism.

A few families from the church took the radical step of moving into Felony Flats, a crime-prone area within a mile of the church. While Felony Flats is a rough neighborhood, Finch said, it also promotes community interaction. There are sidewalks, and the homes face the street. One of the families that moved to the area hung a hammock in front of its house, and the home soon became a gathering spot for neighborhood children, Finch said.

Now the church is planning to form a nonprofit organization to create New Urbanist-style affordable housing throughout the area, Finch said.

“I see some of the principles of New Urbanism as a perfect parallel for what I think the church should be involved in,” Finch said. “And not just the church, but anyone with a heart for the city.”

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: 1/20/06

On the Move

Kevin Boyd has resigned as minister to students at Longbranch Community Church in Midlothian to help start a church in Red Oak.

bluebull George Killam to White Creek Church in George West as pastor.

bluebull Stacy Martin to Shady Shores Church in Denton as youth minister.

bluebull David Miller to Crescent Park Church in Odessa as pastor from First Church in Huffman.

bluebull Beth Simpkins to First Church in Norfolk, Va., as minister of childhood development from University Church in Houston, where she was director of children's ministries.

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.




Sponsors needed for children in Russian foster care

Posted: 1/20/06

Buckner employs two case managers and provides financial assistance and training to 24 foster families in the St. Petersburg region of Russia. (Photos by Felicia Fuller/Buckner Benevolences)

Sponsors needed for children
in Russian foster care

By Felicia Fuller

Buckner Benevolences

ST. PETERSBURG, Russia–Having spent her first year of life in the cold institutional confines of a Russian orphanage, 2-year-old Anya still struggles with social phobias and speech delays.

“Where she (lived) had white walls, caregivers with white coats –everything white–and she was very afraid of anything different,” said her foster father, Leonid Markov.

“She has about 10 words, like 'mother' and 'father'. She wants to talk (more), and she's really upset that she cannot. She's doing her best. But we can emotionally understand her.”

Anya is one of three foster children Markov and his wife, Julia, have welcomed into their home over the past four years The other children, ages 4 and 15, also have challenges linked to abuse, abandonment and institutionalization. But while some couples might be dissuaded by the difficulties, the Markovs view them as opportunities for ministry.

Buckner is seeking individuals and churches to pledge $75 per month, or $900 per year, to sponsor a foster child in Russia. Sponsors receive a photo and profile of their child, along with an annual progress report and the opportunity to correspond with the child.

“We teach the children, and they teach us–all of us, our two biological children as well,” said Markov, a physicist and print-shop owner.

“The addition of foster children highlights issues that otherwise may go unnoticed. We receive the opportunity to heal our spiritual ills and draw closer to God.”

The Markov family's strong faith in God was one of the reasons orphanage director Anatoly Ulianov asked them to consider foster parenting.

“They are active in the church and volunteer working with kids,” said Ulianov, whose or-phanage is the largest in St. Peters-burg, with more than 230 children.

“We need more families like them for this (foster care) system to be successful.”

Foster care in Russia, introduced following World War II and later disbanded, was reinstated 10 years ago as an alternative to institutional care–first in Moscow, then in 30 other regions. Even so, Russia still maintains thousands of orphanages but merely a few hundred foster families, according to recent government reports.

In 1999, Buck-ner Orphan Care International partnered with the Department of Education in Vladimir, Russia, to help the fledgling foster care program gain a foothold. In 2003, Buckner expanded its support to St. Petersburg and today employs two case managers and provides financial assistance and training to 24 foster families in the region.

“The number of children needing placement continues to rise in the countries we serve, and our only limit to increasing the number of children in families is financial support,” said Amy Norton of Buckner Orphan Care International.

“In foster care, children receive individual attention and learn what it means to be part of a loving family. This prevents many of the problems associated with institutionalization.”

Buckner case manager Larisa Kruchkova, who works in St. Petersburg, says families are screened carefully to determine their motivation for wanting to be foster parents and their willingness to treat a foster child as a member of the family.

“Where will the child sleep? Where will they eat? Where will they be seated in the car?” are among the questions case managers ask, she said. “Sometimes these are the things they don't think about. They want a child; but they don't see the child's place in the family.”

Case managers visit foster families at least twice monthly to assess their progress.

Additional resources would allow them to expand family recruitment efforts, training and counseling services, she noted.

Buckner is seeking individuals and churches to pledge $75 per month, or $900 per year, to sponsor a foster child in Russia. Sponsors receive a photo and profile of their child, along with an annual progress report and the opportunity to correspond with the child.

“We ask that sponsors make a minimum one-year commitment,” Norton said.

“Our hope is that sponsors will support their sponsored child until they leave placement, but we understand that may not be feasible for everyone. The purpose of the program is to not only provide for financial needs of the child, but to give the sponsor the opportunity to invest in a child's life.”

For further information about the Buckner foster care program in Russia, contact Amy Norton at (214) 388-1442 or anorton@buckner.org. To sponsor a child, contact Candy Elmore at (214) 388-1442 or celmore@buckner.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.




Buckner addresses HIV epidemic in Russian orpha

Posted: 1/20/06

Above: Hospital 15 in St. Petersburg, Russia, is improving its medical services to HIV-positive orphans thanks to Buckner supporters like Blair and Melissa Pogue of Park Cities Baptist Church in Dallas. At Right: Buckner and Russian government officials met recently on ways to stem the surge of infections in Russia's government-run orphanages. (Photos by Felicia Fuller/Buckner Benevolences)

Buckner addresses HIV epidemic in Russian orphanages

By Felicia Fuller

Buckner Benevolences

ST. PETERSBURG, Russia–With children and young adults accounting for 80 percent of HIV cases in Russia, Buckner and Russian government officials met recently on ways to stem the surge of infections in Russia's government-run orphanages.

“In the last two years, the number of children who have come into the orphanages with HIV exposure has tripled. There is very little education about the disease in Russia and many misconceptions,” said Amy Norton, director of programs for Buckner Orphan Care Inter-national.

The number of people living with HIV in Eastern Europe and Central Asia reached an estimated 1.6 million in 2005, the World Health Organization reported. Among pregnant women in Russia, HIV infections have increased manifold in the past six years, with the total number of children born to HIV-positive mothers now exceeding 13,000.

At the heart of the epidemic are drug addiction and denial, officials say.

“It's a very big problem at the moment,” said Nugzar Dzhan Gavadze, director of a children's home in St. Petersburg, where 50 of 132 children from infancy to 4 are infected with the virus that causes AIDS.

“We don't get much money from the state, but Buckner has helped by giving money for renovations so we can have exam rooms and provide special care for children with HIV.”

Roundtable topics focused on ways to meet the medical, social, emotional and educational needs of orphans living with HIV. Panelists also discussed the importance of HIV drug therapy.

When administered early, antiretroviral medications can reverse HIV infection in infants, but financially strapped orphanages have a difficult time acquiring the expensive drug cocktails for all the children who need them.

“We have lots of kids who are living in Texas (with adoptive families) who used to live here and used to have HIV,” Gavadze said. But with antiretroviral drugs given for two months immediately following birth, “they are absolutely healthy kids now. All the kids should get the same chance.”

One child at an orphanage in St. Petersburg was not so fortunate. She came into the orphanage system too late for drugs to do any more than manage her disease. Orphanage director Anatoly Ulianov worries that she will be ostracized by her teachers and peers when she starts school in the fall or, worse, barred from at-tending school at all.

“People are still very afraid of HIV,” he said.

Key Russian government officials attending the roundtable on HIV included Galina Volkova, chief of staff at the St. Petersburg Center for HIV and AIDS; Galina Stepanova, chief epidemiologist at the St. Petersburg Center for HIV and AIDS; and Valentina Ivanova from the Committee of Education­St Petersburg. Also present were several orphanage directors, social workers and university educators.

Russian officials asked if Buckner could provide resources to train orphanage caregivers and staff and age-appropriate materials to educate children about HIV. Roundtable participants are drafting a summary of the discussion for submission to the governor of St. Petersburg and other officials.

“Buckner will continue working with the group to develop goals and action items to address this crisis and meet the needs of the children,” Norton said.

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