UMHB students ministered in Philippines_92004

Posted: 9/17/04

UMHB summer missionary
back from Philippines

Christy Crothers of Temple worked this summer with children on Isla Verde, a small island in the Philippines. She was among more than 120 University of Mary Hardin-Baylor students who served as summer missionaries.

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.




U.S. News ranks six Texas Baptist schools among top half in nation_92004

Posted: 9/17/04

U.S. News ranks six Texas Baptist
schools among top half in nation

By Ferrell Foster

Texas Baptist Communications

This year's college rankings are in–at least according to U.S. News and World Report magazine–and six Texas Baptist schools are rated in the top halves of their respective categories.

Baylor University, the only school affiliated with the Baptist General Convention of Texas that is considered a “national university” in the rankings, garnered a tie for 84 with Iowa State University. There are 248 national universities in the rankings.

The BGCT has three schools in the top half of the “Western Universities-Master's” category, and Hardin-Simmons University is highest at 41. It is followed by the University of Mary Hardin-Baylor at 47 and Houston Baptist University at 58. There are 129 schools in the category.

Two BGCT schools are in the “Western Comprehensive Colleges-Bachelor's” category. East Texas Baptist University ranks 13, and Howard Payne University is 17. There are 41 schools in the category.

The rankings are based on a formula that considers “peer assessment” scores, average freshman retention rate, average graduation rate, percent of classes with less than 20 students, student-faculty ratio, admissions selectivity, SAT/ACT scores, student acceptance rate and other factors.

The rankings appear in the Aug. 30 issue of U.S. News & World Report.

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.




Adrian Rogers announces retirement plans_92004

Posted: 9/17/04

Adrian Rogers announces retirement plans

CORDOVA, Tenn. (ABP)–Adrian Rogers, prominent pastor and standard-bearer for the Southern Baptist Convention's “conservative resurgence,” announced he will retire in six months from the church he has led 32 years.

Rogers, pastor of Bellevue Baptist Church in Cordova, Tenn. a suburb of Memphis, announced his plans to the congregation Sept. 12, his 73rd birthday.

“He said tonight that he was announcing his retirement; that he would continue to pastor for six months,” said Mark Dougharty, Bellevue Baptist's associate pastor.

Adrian Rogers

Rogers told the congregation that during the six months a search committee will seek his successor. Bellevue, with more than 28,000 members, is one of the largest Southern Baptist congregations in the country.

Rogers was three times elected president of the Southern Baptist Convention–the first in 1979, launching a succession of fundamentalist presidents who took control of the largest non-Catholic denomination and reshaped it around biblical inerrancy and conservative social values.

Rogers reportedly plans to continue his worldwide radio and television ministry in retirement. He also plans to start a training institute for pastors and will teach at Mid-America Baptist Theological Seminary in Memphis, which he helped found.

Born in West Palm Beach, Fla., Rogers was pastor of First Baptist Church in Merritt Island, Fla., before moving to Memphis in 1972.

He is only the third pastor of Bellevue Baptist Church since 1927–a legacy that includes the famed R.G. Lee.

Under his leadership, the congregation moved from its downtown Memphis location to the current 377-acre campus in Cordova.

Rogers was elected SBC president in 1979 with the help of a movement spearheaded by Paige Patterson, then president of Criswell College, and Paul Pressler of Houston. He declined to serve a traditional second term at the time but later was elected in 1986 and 1987, helping solidify the fundamentalist hold on the convention and its trustee system.

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.




Shepherd church committed to obedience, no matter what_92004

Posted: 9/17/04

Shepherd church committed to obedience, no matter what

By George Henson

Staff Writer

SHEPHERD–Leaders of First Baptist Church in Shepherd believe the key thing about being a “key church” is obedience–even when obedience requires a double dose of persistence.

Since becoming a part of the Baptist General Convention of Texas' key church program, the Southeast Texas church between Livingston and Cleveland has helped start about 12 missions, Pastor Preston Baker said. Four of those congregations still are meeting.

“We've had a lot more failures than successes,” Baker acknowledged, “but you've got to willing to do that. You've got to be willing to take a risk. You've got to be obedient.”

Volunteers (left to right) Diane Hayes, Juanita Coker and Edyth Zarske work in the Helping Hands food pantry started by First Baptist Church in Shepherd.

Shepherd and the surrounding area are home to several pockets of population, and many of the people who live there will not come to church in town, Baker said. “Some don't want to come to town, and some don't want to go to 'that big church.' We're trying to give them alternatives.”

First Baptist Church–which averages about 150 in attendance each Sunday–has gone where those people live to offer Backyard Bible Clubs, conduct door-to-door surveys of spiritual needs, hold outdoor gospel music concerts and serve barbecue to the residents.

“And sometimes it has all just come back void,” Baker admits.

That doesn't stop the church from trying, however.

“We're often putting feelers out, and if we get any response we try to start a Bible study or a mission there. We're not giving up on these people,” he said.

The lack of immediate success has not discouraged the congregation, Baker insists.

“The majority has seen the need, and even the mission churches that failed probably baptized 10 people. We don't give up an area. We wait awhile and try again,” he said.

“We're not the only church here, and we're not saying we're the only one doing anything. All we're trying to do is whatever we can to reach our community for Christ. We are at least showing people that we care, and we are establishing contact points which may help us reach people in the future.

“We're just trying to be practical about it–we know a lot of people are not going to come here, so we are trying to find a way to go to them.”

Besides the four missions still operating–two of which were started in partnership with Tryon-Evergreen Baptist Association–the church has had several successful outreaches to the community.

While Shepherd's population is only about 2,000 people, the Helping Hands food pantry the church started 10 years ago helps feed 40 families a month. Other churches, as well as school and civic organizations, now help with the ministry. Bibles in Spanish and English also are available for the asking.

The church sustained an afternoon children's ministry with Bible study and tutoring at an apartment building that drew many children. The church has led a senior-adult Bible study on its property and another at the local nursing home.

“We've had our successes and good ministries,” Baker said. “And like the Helping Hands ministry that grew out of the concerns of a Sunday school class, all of these were started because someone had a burden to do something to reach out. These haven't been my ideas, but the ideas of laypeople.

“We do tell people, 'If you feel a call and want to start a ministry, we'll help you and support you.' We've done a lot of ministry that wouldn't have been done without a particular person feeling a call and being available at a particular time.

“It's been a joy for me to be a part of it. I've been almost as much an observer as a participant. It's great to watch someone grab hold of a ministry and stick with it.”

C.H. Murphy, director of missions for Tryon-Evergreen Association, said that while the Shepherd church is the smallest church participating in the key church program in the association, it has not stopped them from being in the forefront of the association's work.

“They have a great kingdom vision,” he said. “Anytime we need help for a mission or to start a church, all we have to do is give them a call, and if they can help, they will.

“We've had some good ministry through the efforts of First Baptist Church in Shepherd. They've had some disappointments, but they have kept on keeping on.”

Being a part of the key church effort helps keep the church focused on missions, Baker said. A key church council helps decide how to distribute the 3 percent of the church budget dedicated to key church efforts. He estimates 15 percent of the church's receipts go toward mission efforts, even though finances are a constant struggle for the rural church.

“We try to give missions the same level of priority as our youth, education and music ministries. It's definitely a priority,” he said. “It's easy to become a selfish church and just think about ministering to the people who are already coming, and I think becoming a key church helps you not to be that selfish church but to look outside your four walls.

“We're sold on the key church program, and we believe there are a lot of benefits, even from what may seem to be failures. If you're not willing to take risks, you're not going to get into this.

“We never go into an area expecting failure, but we sometimes know an area may be harder than others. We're sure are not trying to fail, but we don't fear it either. If you believe there's somewhere you're supposed to minister, you don't stop because of failure–you keep going until you find success.”

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.




After 57 years of service, Levelland church secretary files away memories_92004

Posted: 9/17/04

After 57 years of service, Levelland
church secretary files away memories

By John Hall

Texas Baptist Communications

LEVELLAND–When Charlene Shifflett started working at First Baptist Church in Levelland, she struggled to figure out office machines. Little did anyone–including Shifflett–realize she would outlast the machines many times over and become the “backbone of the congregation.”

She laughs frequently as she looks back on her 57 years as the congregation's financial secretary, a position she accepted shortly after graduating from high school. She retired Aug. 29.

“I was just looking for a job,” Shifflett said with a giggle.

Charlene Shifflett

She remembers toying with a mimeograph machine, a messy printer that makes copies by pressing ink through a stencil, with the help of one of seven pastors she would serve. It took awhile, but together they figured out how to work each piece of office equipment.

Shifflett becomes even more upbeat as her thoughts transition to the congregation and staff members. It is the love she felt among the staff members and church that kept her going.

“It just became my home,” she said, referring to pastors as brothers, church members as brothers and sisters and younger people as her children.

And members of the congregation think of her the same way. Loyce Newman, one of Shifflett's friends and a member of First Baptist Church, said many people view the secretary as a sister. Younger members see a mother, and the youngest children consider her another grandmother.

Shifflett's pure heart shines in every moment of her life, Pastor Steve Vernon added.

Newman said she turns every life difficulty into a ministry opportunity.

Beyond her work, she has ministered in the nursery and taught Sunday school.

She's also a “walking reference,” Vernon said. She seemingly knows everything about the church's history. She remembers pastors, staff and members alike. The congregation knows Shifflett puts her heart into her work and performs up to the highest standard.

“It's a little hard to put in words,” Newman said of what Shifflett means to the congregation. “She's been an all-around person in the church.”

Shifflett is thankful for the relationships she has had during her tenure, but has sensed it's time to retire. The decision does not sadden her. She laughs again as she talks about a “surprise” retirement banquet Aug. 29 the congregation knew she knew about.

She will continue being a part of the congregation and is training her successor. When her protégé struggles, Shifflett reminds her gently that “after 50 years, you won't have to worry about it.”

Retirement may be a far cry from handling the books regularly. She plans to spend more time with her grandchildren and hopes to follow her passion, painting. In particular, the secretary wants to teach children to be painters so they can experience the same joy she has in her hobby.

“I don't know if I'll even want to balance my checkbook, but I'll always paint,” she said.

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




Texas Tidbits_92004

Posted: 9/17/04

Texas Tidbits

Singles witness at state park. About 150 single adults spent part of a holiday weekend sharing their faith with vacationers at Garner State Park in south central Texas. It was the final event of the Single Adult Labor Day Conference at nearby Alto Frio Baptist Encampment, sponsored by the Baptist General Convention of Texas' Christian Life Commission. The singles divided themselves into teams–face-painting, bracelet-making, water-giveaway, prayer-walking–and spread out around the park. They ended the day by serving more than 500 hotdogs to visitors.

UMHB ministers' forum slated. The University of Mary Hardin-Baylor's College of Christian Studies will sponsor a monthly on-campus forum open to ministers of any denomination. Tony Martin, UMHB religion professor, will speak on wisdom literature of Israel at the first lunchtime forum, 11:45 a.m. Sept. 23. Participants may purchase lunch at the school's dinning hall or bring their own. For more information about this or other College of Christian Studies programs, call (254) 295-5075.

Kingwood congregation marks church-starting milestone. Iglesia Bautista Hispana Woodridge in Kingwood recently was recognized as the 1,000th church start facilitated by the Baptist General Convention of Texas Church Multiplication Center since 2000. Eduardo Mecca is pastor. The congregation is tailored to reach middle- and upper-income Hispanics who prefer to worship in Spanish, a demographic few Texas Baptist churches are serving, said Abe Zabaneh, director of the center.

Dead Sea Scrolls come to Houston. Hidden for almost 2,000 years in remote caves in the Judean desert, the Dead Sea Scrolls will be exhibited at the Houston Museum of Natural Science from Oct. 1 through Jan. 2. Regarded as the greatest archeological find of the 20th century and rarely seen outside Jerusalem, these scrolls include some of the earliest surviving textual records of the books of the Old Testament. For ticket information, visit www.hmns.org or call (713) 639-4629.

UMHB program accredited. The University of Mary Hardin-Baylor's community counseling program has been accredited by the Council for Accreditation of Counseling and Related Educational Programs. Council accreditation is important when a graduate seeks national counselor certification and state licensure as a professional counselor.

Statewide Hispanic convocation set. Baptist men from across Texas are expected to attend the Hispanic Baptist Convocation of the Laity at Highland Lakes Camp and Conference Center near Austin Oct. 15-16. Already 800 men have been trained at several mini-convocations this year, and the number is expected to surpass 1,000 during the convocation at Highland Lakes Camp. As a result, volunteers have established about 80 Brotherhood chapters in Hispanic Texas Baptist churches, and the number is expected to surpass 100 soon, said Eli Rodriguez of Dallas, coordinator of the convocation. Key events at the convocation include a leadership awards program honoring Alcides Guajardo, president of the Hispanic Baptist Convention of Texas, and Javier Rios, president of Varones Bautistas, "Ring of Honor" awards to Baptist men who have served 25 years or more and recognition of training teams. Key speakers include Alfonso Flores, pastor of First Mexican Baptist Church of San Antonio; Charles Wade, executive director of the Baptist General Convention of Texas; E.B. Brooks, director of the BGCT church missions and evangelism section; and Leo Smith, executive director of Texas Baptist Men.

Correction: An article in the Sept. 6 issue of the Baptist Standard, "Texas offers theology students multiple-choice answers," inadvertently referred to East Texas Baptist University as East Texas State University. ETBU offers two 60-hour associate degrees, and those credits can be applied toward the 120 to 133 hours required for a bachelor's degree.

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




TOGETHER: Give generously to support missions_92004

Posted: 9/17/04

TOGETHER:
Give generously to support missions

In this new century, Texas Baptists already have started 1,008 new churches. We are ahead of our goals and grateful to God for his blessings on our efforts to work with established churches in giving birth to new congregations all across our state. Hispanic church starts number 608 of these, and there have been new churches started in 18 different languages.

You are doing some of your best mission work when you give through the Texas Cooperative Program and the Mary Hill Davis Offering for Texas Missions. We have increased our commitment to new church starts through both of these missions-funding channels.

CHARLES WADE
Executive Director
BGCT Executive Board

This year's Texas missions theme–“Plant … Water … Harvest”–comes from Paul's admonition to the Corinthian church that in God's economy of evangelism and missions, one person may plant a gospel seed, another may water the seed, but only God can give the harvest. But God does call us to plant and water, and he calls us to wait patiently for the harvest. At the appropriate time, God will send us into the fields to gather the harvest he has provided.

I have been in Happy, Alice and Pearsall this past week, talking with pastors and church members about our partnership in the gospel of Christ. Every time I go into the fields of Texas, I am renewed in my heart and stretched in my soul. Texas Baptists want to touch all of Texas and as much of the world as possible. There seems to be nothing too big or daunting that you will not, with God's help, set out to accomplish.

Woman's Missionary Union of Texas sponsors more than 30 Christian Women's Job Corp sites where volunteers are at work helping women who need job skills have the opportunity to accept a “hand up, not a handout.” Your gifts to the Mary Hill Davis Offering for Texas Missions make this possible. The testimonies of these women who can now care for their children, who now take justified pride that they can achieve their goals, who have become mentors for others, who have found that Jesus really does make the difference in their lives will cause your heart to swell with gratitude that you had a part in helping make that possible.

One of the most exciting developments in our state mission strategy is to see our Texas Baptist institutions grow more and more involved in helping our churches do mission work. Texas WMU has taken note of these effective mission efforts and assigned some of the Mary Hill Davis Offering to assist our universities, hospitals and child-care ministries in direct mission activities. This collaboration is one of the ways Texas Baptists are going to be more effective in missions work than we ever have been.

I encourage you to be a part of all we are doing together by giving generously through your church to the Mary Hill Davis Offering.

While Texas WMU is busy with helping hundreds of mission activities come to pass across Texas, our Texas Baptist Men also are at work. Hurricanes have devastated much of Florida and the Gulf Coast in recent days. Our Texas Baptist Disaster Relief units were among the first to arrive, and they will continue to be involved as long as needed. The BGCT receives funds to aid in disaster relief. What you have given before made it possible for us to be there early, and what you give now will enable us to stay late and be ready for whatever comes. Every dollar given for disaster relief is used for disaster relief when you give it through the BGCT.

I thank God every time I think of you.

We are loved.

Charles Wade is executive director of the Baptist General Convention of Texas

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




Overseas transplants may promote human organ trafficking_92004

Posted: 9/17/04

Overseas transplants may
promote human organ trafficking

By Mandy Morgan

Religion News Service

WASHINGTON (RNS)–If Thomas Diflo, a doctor, hears his patients talk about going abroad to buy a kidney, heart or lung, he advises against it. If they do travel out of the country to purchase an organ, he will refuse to provide follow-up treatment.

Diflo and others in the medical community warn that Americans traveling overseas for body parts are fueling a trade in human organs that exploits the world's poorest people.

But in the United States, where more than 85,000 people are on waiting lists for organ donations, desperate patients are taking dramatic, risky action, even though the exchange of money for human organs has been illegal since 1984.

Some Americans go so far as to seek destitute people overseas who may believe they have no other choice than to sell their bodies in order to support their families, reported Eric Cohen, a resident scholar at the Washington-based Ethics and Public Policy Center.

“There are practices that happen in other parts of the world we shouldn't promote by going over there to buy” organs, Cohen said. “We don't want a system where living people would rather have money than their organs.”

Twenty years ago, Robert Veatch, a professor of medical ethics at Georgetown University, argued that allowing the sale of organs would unethically encourage poor people to offer their body parts for economic gain. But he since has changed his views.

“Let's admit that we've failed and let the poor do whatever they have to do to survive,” Veatch said. “If they are utterly desperate, the one thing that is worse than banning the sale of organs is letting them starve to death. In a better world, we'd have a decent welfare program so no one would be coerced.”

But the poor aren't the only ones who see the need to deal.

According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 6,000 Americans will die this year while waiting for an organ donation. Only 25,000 transplants took place in the United States last year, and the demand for organs is growing rapidly.

“The need for Americans to go abroad is contingent on the shortage of existing organs in the United States,” Veatch said.

The health care and legal systems of some developing countries may not ensure top-notch medical care and accountability, according to critics of the international organ trade.

“You don't know what you're getting involved in,” Veatch said, adding that people engaged in the organ trade may not be trustworthy. “There are anecdotes of people getting transplanted and having medical complications.”

Jim Cohan, a Los Angeles-based international organ transplant coordinator, said sending Americans abroad for transplants is about saving lives and prolonging the quality of life. In the past 12 years, Cohan has arranged for 450 people to have transplants in such countries as China, Mexico, the Philippines, South Africa and South Korea.

“Without me, most or all of those people would die,” said Cohan, who charges $125,000 for coordinating a kidney transplant and $240,000 for arranging a lung, heart or liver transplant. The fees include travel and surgery expenses for the organ recipient and a companion.

“I'm the last stop. People who have been on a waiting list for years are the ones I'm able to do my work with.”

Reports indicate some donors do not give their organs voluntarily.

In 2001, a U.S. State Department official testified he had heard of organs being harvested from Chinese prisoners while they were still alive. He also had been told Chinese prisons scheduled executions to accommodate the needs of organ recipients.

“In China, the vast majority of donors are prisoners who have been executed,” said Diflo, an associate professor of surgery at New York University Medical Center who has treated six patients with trafficked organs who were not under his care before the transplants.

“I know about it from patients I've seen and some of my other contacts. The patient makes the arrangements through an organ broker to travel to China.”

A Chinese Embassy spokesman denied the practice, calling such stories “fabrications.”

“Any form of trade of human organs is prohibited by the Chinese government,” said spokesman Sun Weide. “The Chinese public health institutes accept voluntary organs upon their death to rescue the very sick people and for scientific research. Bodies of executed criminals may be used, but the prisoners or their families voluntarily approve that.”

Michigan State medical anthropologist Debra Budiani conducted hundreds of interviews with doctors, patients, religious leaders and asylum seekers in several Middle Eastern countries and said all of the asylum seekers feared what might happen if they received medical treatment. They had heard rumors of others undergoing operations, only to discover they had missing organs unrelated to their illness.

Last year, 20 percent of organ donors in the United States were classified “other unrelated,” according to the Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network, a public-private partnership that coordinates organ donation in the United States.

Federal and state legislators are trying to devise ways to avoid the corruption of human organ sales while at the same time encouraging organ donation.

Earlier this year, President Bush signed into law the Organ Donation and Recovery Improvement Act. It authorized $25 million to be spent reimbursing organ donors' travel and other expenses as well as promoting public awareness of organ donation. Outright payment for organs remains illegal.

“The current system of organ donation strikes the right balance between promoting medical progress and preserving the dignity of the human person,” ethicist Cohen said. “If we tried a system of paying for organs, the organ supply would go up but the ethical cost is too great.

“Turning the body into a commodity and the dangers of creating a coercion of people who might want to sell their organs is too great. We have to think about culture as a whole.”

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.




Grace of God, openness of people sustained Wedgwood Church, pastor says_92004

Posted: 9/17/04

Grace of God, openness of people
sustained Wedgwood Church, pastor says

By Ken Camp

Managing Editor

FORT WORTH–An American flag flies outside a south Fort Worth church. The flagpole looks just like the kind students gather around for “See You at the Pole” schoolyard prayer services each year in mid-September. But an eight-sided monument at its base sets it apart.

One panel bears the inscription: “Wedgwood church shooting: Sept. 15, 1999. A disturbed gunman disrupted a youth prayer rally shouting obscenities, fired a handgun repeatedly and exploded a pipe bomb. Fourteen persons were shot. Seven died. This is a memorial to their homegoing.”

Each of the other seven panels bears the name and likeness of one of the seven fatalities–Kristi Beckel, Shawn Brown, Sydney Browning, Joey Ennis, Cassandra Griffin, Kim Jones and Justin “Steggy” Ray.

Students have continued to gather at Wedgwood Baptist Church each September on the evening after the annual early-morning flagpole prayer meetings. This year, the service fell on Wednesday, Sept. 15, just as it did the night five years earlier when Larry Gene Ashbrook violated the sanctuary, killing four young people and three adults.

“We've had college kids who were there as high school kids say, 'Is it open?' Of course it's open” for anyone to attend, said Wedgwood Pastor Al Meredith.

Openness–both in the sense of welcome and in terms of honest “transparency”–has characterized Wedgwood in the five years since the tragedy, Meredith said. And by God's grace, he added, that openness has helped sustain the congregation.

“I've heard of other churches that have had tragedies like this that just fractured under the pressure. … But that hasn't been the case” at Wedgwood, Meredith said. “Ultimately, the answer is the grace of God. It's certainly not because we're better people than others. My wife keeps reminding me: 'We're not extraordinary people. We're just ordinary people with an extraordinary God.'”

As church members shared each other's burdens and walked together through dark times, Wedgwood has experienced “a strengthening of the relationships in the body and a joy in one another's presence, as well as in God's presence,” he added.

Sunday school classes, small groups and individuals ministered to each other by “weeping with those who weep, rejoicing with those who rejoice, praying with those who are burdened, being there for people … and worshipping together–just being church to one another–being the body of Christ,” he said.

Soon after the shooting, Meredith preached a sermon series on the church's mission, keeping the congregation focused on its purpose of “knowing Christ and making him known.”

At conferences about dealing with trauma and grief, Meredith learned people who experience crisis often fall apart about six months after a tragedy–once the adrenalin rush is over.

He responded by preaching a six-part series of sermons on how people in the Bible handled depression.

“God's truth ministered grace,” he said. “It was encouraging to many people to realize that saints get depressed and even suicidal. … If we get it on the table and we can talk about it, at least we can deal with it.”

Wedgwood offered a safe place where people could discuss their doubts and anger with God openly and honestly.

“It's a healthy sign that you believe in God's sovereignty enough to be angry with him when things work out irrationally or tragically,” Meredith said. “That's a rational response. And God can handle our anger.”

Instead of admonishing Christians not to question God, leaders at Wedgwood gave people freedom to ask “why” in the middle of a situation that did not make sense.

“The only human being who ever lived a perfect life was Jesus Christ, and as he hung dying in agony, he said, 'My God, my God, why?' If he could ask why, we can ask why,” Meredith observed.

Rather than allowing themselves to become “paralyzed by what-ifs,” Wedgwood members held onto two biblical truths, he added.

“God is sovereign. And he loves us. And though we don't understand, we're going to cling to those two truths, no matter what the circumstances,” he said.

Wedgwood maintained not only its openness in terms of honesty, but also in the sense of keeping its open-door policy, Meredith noted.

“Some people suggested we ought to have armed guards at our doors, and I know some churches that do that now,” he said.

If there had been a guard at the church door five years ago, he probably would have been Ashbrook's first fatality, Meredith maintained.

“Quite frankly, there isn't enough money in the kingdom to pay for off-duty cops to stand at every one of the doors–and to do what? Screen people out? … On what basis do you screen people? Because of the way they dress? Who wants to go there? Not me.”

Wedgwood's attendance has grown 50 percent in the five years since the shooting. The church averages about 1,500 in worship, and worshippers have “maybe even a keener sense of God's presence” when they gather now than when they met prior to the tragedy, Meredith said.

Earlier this year, Wedgwood sent out 120 members to start a mission congregation–Meadowridge Community Church.

Looking to the future, Meredith hopes his church will cope with growth by building educational facilities, adding worship services and sending out members to start missions.

One thing Meredith cannot imagine is relocating to a new site or building a new sanctuary.

“Because of what happened here, we're tied to this corner,” he said. “At least for the remainder of my tenure here, we're committed to this corner.”

For the members of Wedgwood Baptist Church, it's hallowed ground.

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.




SBC president’s bus tour promotes effort to baptize 1 million converts_92004

Posted: 9/17/04

SBC president's bus tour promotes
effort to baptize 1 million converts

By Adelle Banks

Religion News Service

PHILADELPHIA–Standing outside his red, white and blue tour bus, Southern Baptist Convention President Bobby Welch appeared ready to take his message of energized evangelism to three churches in three states–all in the same day.

Welch is on a mission to reverse declining baptisms in SBC churches by increasing members' desire to evangelize.

On this seventh day in a nationwide tour, the “Everyone Can” campaign found a welcoming group of people at Ezekiel Baptist Church.

"Winning a million people is a piece of cake–if we will use our spiritual muscle."
—SBC President Bobby Welch

The mostly African-American congregation filled plastic bags with tracts in preparation for tour-related evangelism in their southwest Philadelphia neighborhood.

For 25 traveling days, Welch, pastor of First Baptist Church in Daytona Beach, Fla., is taking the bus to at least one stop per state on a trip scheduled to end Oct. 7.

He visited the First Baptist churches of Dallas and Denton on Sept. 10.

After visiting Canada, he plans to leave the bus behind to fly to Alaska and Hawaii.

Along for the ride is a team of five–two drivers, a trip coordinator, a photographer/videographer and a reporter for the Southern Baptist Convention's public relations service.

By day seven, the team had eased into a pattern. They readied a brief video presentation to start off Welch's sermon.

They carried in boxes of cards that declared “Witness, Win and Baptize … One Million!” Each had a tear-off section for church members to pledge a commitment to that effort and come to a kickoff in Nashville, Tenn., next June.

And they placed a mule bridle with blinders on the floor at the church's altar.

As he neared the end of his talk at Ezekiel Baptist, Welch picked up the worn leather device painted with the words “Seek” and “Save” on the two blinders.

Welch called it a symbol of what he and all Southern Baptists need to do.

“I don't want to get off track,” he said. “I need this to keep me focused. I believe the church needs that now.”

His bus tour, a modern-day version of evangelists' travels by stagecoach and train many years before, has a clear aim. After years of fewer than 500,000 baptisms, he wants to see Southern Baptists baptize 1 million between June 2005 and June 2006.

“Southern Baptists are about to do better than we've been doing,” said Welch, drawing applause from the two rows of deacons and the rest of the congregation.

“Winning a million people is a piece of cake–if we will use our spiritual muscle.”

After his sermon, he and the congregation exited the sanctuary and lined up in front of the bus for photographs. Then Welch joined others in evangelistic visits in the neighborhood.

SBC President Bobby Welch is on a mission to reverse declining baptisms in SBC churches by increasing members' desire to evangelize. He visited the First Baptist churches of Dallas and Denton on Sept. 10.

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.




Fighting the tide: TBM travels to help after Ivan_92004

Posted: 9/17/04

Fighting the tide: TBM travels to help after Ivan

By John Hall

Texas Baptist Communications

Two Texas Baptist Men feeding teams are traveling to Alabama as part of a larger Southern Baptist disaster relief effort to help those who were affected by Hurricane Ivan, which slammed the Gulf Coast early Sept. 16.

The Tarrant Baptist Association and Top O’ Texas Baptist Area feeding teams are traveling to Mobile, Ala. Gary Smith, state disaster relief volunteer coordinator for Texas Baptist Men, said the volunteers are moving to bring hope to the area.

“We hope they bring a mixture of comfort and normalcy to those people to whom they give a warm meal and a cold cup of water,” Smith said.

More than 30 Southern Baptist disaster relief units remain staged in Georgia and Louisiana to respond to the destruction caused by Ivan, according to Jim Burton, director of volunteer mobilization for the Southern Baptist Convention North American Mission Board. He expects that number to climb as the damage is assessed.

Ivan and its 130 mph winds made landfall on the east side of Mobile Bay and has been blamed for seven deaths in the United States by late Sept. 16. According to reports, the storm knocked out power to more than 1.1 million people in Alabama, Mississippi, and Florida.

Southern Baptist disaster relief units have returned to portions Florida and continue serving residents who are recovering from hurricanes Charley and Frances.

Yet another storm, Hurricane Jeanne, has formed in the Atlantic and is moving toward the United States.

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




Storylist_92004

Storylist for 9/20/04 issue

GO TO SECTIONS:
Texas       • Baptists      
Faith       • Departments       • Opinion       • Bible Study     
Our Front Page Articles
Frances leaves indelible mark on Florida church

Grace of God, openness of people sustained Wedgwood Church, pastor says

Number of poor Americans lacking health insurance rises for third year



Fighting the tide: TBM travels to help after Ivan

Grace of God, openness of people sustained Wedgwood Church, pastor says

Church serves community on 911

BaptistWay Bible study materials for adults become self-supporting

BGCT first vice president nominee encouraged by signs of progress

Detours lead to linkage between churches in Waco, Boulder

Church benefits as families give up cable TV

DBU SWAT team

Same song, second verse for disaster relief volunteers in hurricane season

Six BGCT-related schools post increases in fall enrollment; three universities show drop

Reorganization will help BGCT meet Texas churches' needs, leaders agree

Executive Board will consider streamlining BGCT governance

Students urged to examine, obey God's calling to ministry

UMHB students ministered in Philippines

U.S. News ranks six Texas Baptist schools among top half in nation

Shepherd church committed to obedience, no matter what

After 57 years of service, Levelland church secretary files away memories

Volunteers develop longterm love for borderland

On the Move

Around the State

Texas Tidbits

Previously Posted

Frances leaves indelible mark on Florida church

Hope floats at First Baptist Church, Canyon Lake

Members of Canyon Lake church develop varied ministries

Evangelist wins souls by offering chance to win motorcycle

Chapel of Hope founder praying, anticipating a lot of little miracles

Outreach has nothing to do with canned meat or unwanted e-mail

Texas Baptists connected by family ties to churches in Minnesota-Wisconsin Convention

Offering enables Texas Baptists to wrap arms around state


'Uncle Charlie' leading Ugandan orphans to Christ




Adrian Rogers announces retirement plans

SBC president's bus tour promotes effort to baptize 1 million converts

Six children of Baptist leaders among casualties from Russian hostage crisis

FamilyNet slashes budget; lays off 19 staff

Baptist Briefs



Unrest in Middle East sets back archaeological research



Overseas transplants may promote human organ trafficking

African-Americans most religiously observant, survey says

African-American church leaders angered by gay-rights, civil-rights comparisons

Kindergartner reads her favorite Bible stories to nursing home residents

Secretary of State describes crisis in Darfur as 'genocide'

Number of poor Americans lacking health insurance rises for third year


Previously Posted
American Protestant ministers unfamiliar with other faiths

Congressman outed by gay-rights website

Americans United critiques churches' pro-Democratic activities

70-year-old swims English Channel for missions



Classified Ads

Cartoon

On the Move

Around the State

Texas Baptist Forum



EDITORIAL: '04 decisions will impact decades

EDITORIAL: Contest: Care for the poor

DOWN HOME: Small-car-proof what's important

TOGETHER: Give generously to support missions

ANOTHER VIEW: The '50s weren't what they used to

Texas Baptist Forum



BaptistWay Bible Series for Sept. 26: God gives strength, mercy enough to perservere

LifeWay Family Bible Series for Sept. 26: God encourages us by allowing us to know him

LifeWay Explore the Bible Series for Sept. 26: Resisting temptation requires God's assistance

BaptistWay Bible Series for Oct. 3: Live knowing you will have to give an account

LifeWay Explore the Bible Series for Oct. 3: Jesus still calls people to drop, kneel & follow

LifeWay Family Bible Series for Oct. 3: Showing love to others can bring about change


See articles from previous issue 9/06/04 here.