Prisoners’ religious freedom challenged_111703

Posted: 11/14/03

Prisoners' religious freedom challenged

By Robert Marus

ABP Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON (ABP)–A federal appeals court has struck down part of a law that is the latest in a series of federal attempts to protect certain aspects of religious freedom.

On Nov. 7, a three-judge panel of the Cincinnati-based 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals unanimously said part of a federal law designed to protect prisoners' religious freedom was unconstitutional.

The judges said the portion of the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act, known by the acronym RLUIPA, dealing with inmates violated the First Amendment's ban on government endorsement of religion.

“RLUIPA has the effect of impermissibly advancing religion by giving greater protection to religious rights than to other constitutionally protected rights,” wrote Judge Ronald Lee Gilman for the panel.

Congress passed RLUIPA in 2000 as a response to the Supreme Court, which in 1997 overturned a similar 1993 law as it applied to state and local governments.

Both RLUIPA and the earlier Religious Freedom Restoration Act, known as RFRA, were designed to restore a high legal standard of protection for free exercise of religion. The Supreme Court had lowered that standard with its 1990 Employment Division vs. Smith decision.

In that case, the court threw out a legal test that required a government entity to prove it had a “compelling state interest” before it burdened an individual's or group's religious freedom. RFRA restored that standard, putting the burden of proof on the government in such cases.

The Supreme Court struck down RFRA as it applied to state governments on the grounds that it violated states' rights. However, it still applies to federal entities.

In the latest case, four Ohio inmates of various religions sued the state government, claiming their rights to free exercise of religion were being unnecessarily violated by prison officials. While a lower court agreed, the 6th Circuit did not, agreeing with attorneys for the state that RLUIPA emphasized religious rights while ignoring other fundamental rights of prisoners.

Saying that there is little “evidence that religious rights are at greater risk of deprivation in the prison system than other fundamental rights,” the judges noted that, under RLUIPA a non-religious prisoner would have much less legal recourse than a religious prisoner who believed that prison officials were violating his fundamental rights.

“The primary effect of RLUIPA is not simply to accommodate the exercise of religion by individual prisoners, but to advance religion generally by giving religious prisoners rights superior to those of non-religious prisoners,” the opinion said.

The 6th Circuit's ruling applies only in the four Midwestern and Southern states covered by the 6th Circuit. It is in conflict with rulings by the San Francisco-based 9th Circuit and Chicago-based 7th Circuit, which have upheld the constitutionality of RLUIPA.

The discrepancy between federal courts makes it likely that the Supreme Court will ultimately agree to hear a case on the constitutionality of RLUIPA.

The 6th Circuit's decision also only applies to the part of RLUIPA dealing with prisoners' rights. The court did not rule on the other main aspect of the law, which restored a high level of legal deference to churches and other religious organizations in zoning disputes with municipal governments and other property-use issues.

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_111703

Posted: 11/14/03

Texas Tidbits

bluebull NASA leader at UMHB. NASA administrator Sean O'Keefe spoke to 1,000 people in Walton Chapel at the University of Mary Hardin-Baylor Nov. 5 about the future of NASA. Delivering the university's McLane Lectures,

O'Keefe (center) with Drayton McLane and UMHB President Jerry Bawcom.
he encouraged students to be leaders for tomorrow in exploration and discovery, calling it an adventure. "My hope is that many of you will help to participate in the adventures to come, whether you are working for NASA, discovering new ways to heal the sick or teach the young, or charting new pathways in business enterprise like Drayton McLane," he said, referencing the namesake of the lecture series. Regarding the Columbia shuttle disaster, O'Keefe said, "We should recognize that every step of the way in the age of flight, we have achieved our breakthroughs and triumphs only after having suffered through enormous setbacks, learning from them and rebounding to continue our unceasing efforts to explore the unknown."

bluebull DBU honors faculty member. Curtis Lee, associate professor of biology, has been named Faculty Member of the Year at Dallas Baptist University. He was cited for being among students' top pick when choosing classes over a number of years. Lee and his wife, Sharon, are members of South Oaks Baptist Church in Arlington, where she serves as minister of education.

bluebull Baylor regents hear reports. At the conclusion of the Baylor board of regents meeting Nov. 7, the university issued a news release saying regents "heard interim reports" from three review committees named at the September regents meeting. Those committees are charged with examining concerns about faculty relations, the faculty hiring process, admission of provisional students, preserving Baylor traditions, the university's financial model, indebtedness, conflicts of interest among regents, tuition increases and pending litigation against the university. Regents also approved a new department of statistical science.

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: Three great things about BGCT ’03_111703

Posted: 11/14/03

TOGETHER:
Three great things about BGCT '03

Years from now, we may look back on the 2003 Baptist General Convention of Texas session in Lubbock as one of the most significant events in our history. Three things make me hopeful that is true.

First, we changed the format. We offered 44 breakout events, providing opportunities for leadership development and an occasion to discuss important issues. Response was greater than expected, and many rooms were overflowing. I heard the encouraging words “candor” and “openness” used to describe the workshops, as well as the comment: “This is real help for my church. Do this again.”
wademug
CHARLES WADE
Executive Director
BGCT Executive Board

The missions program was moved to the middle of the convention, and Texas Baptist Men and Woman's Missionary Union of Texas met Sunday evening rather than Tuesday afternoon. The result was improved attendance at all these missions-oriented events.

My thanks to the officers of the convention, the order of business committee and our staff for the creativity, tenacity and hard work involved in making these successful changes. Of course, we want to continue to improve, so we will evaluate carefully feedback received as we begin making plans for next year.

Second, we celebrated the founding of a new missions enterprise, WorldconneX. God is guiding as we enter into a new missions paradigm where churches feel a personal, hands-on responsibility for doing missions in the world. Bill Tinsley, the first elected leader of WorldconneX, and his board have asked Stan Parks to join the staff to help give birth to this new missions vision.

In my judgment, WorldconneX has enlisted two of the finest mission practitioners in the world. Both have first-rate minds and a passion for missions. Together, they bring a broad range of experience and expertise to this great challenge.

Third, we entered into a partnership with the National Baptist Convention of Mexico. We pledged to work with them in building bridges of understanding and mutual commitment to reach the people of Texas and Mexico for Jesus Christ. Our Texas Partnerships Resource Center is helping coordinate this effort from our side of the Rio Grande.

We met Tuesday afternoon with the combined leadership of NBCM, BGCT and Hispanic Baptist Convencion to continue the planning process, resolve several matters and hear encouraging reports.

For years, our churches and institutions have worked in Mexico, and Mexican pastors have contributed to our outreach to immigrants in Texas. Now, there is a way for us to help coordinate, encourage, evaluate and improve all our efforts.

Pray with me for the success of these initiatives. You never know what will grow from a mustard seed!

For example, in 1951 Wayland Baptist University admitted its first African-American students, becoming the first university in the old Confederate states to integrate. One student was George May, later a leading Texas Baptist pastor. In Lubbock, our convention elected as second vice president his son-in-law, Dennis Young, who has become one of our finest leaders . He will serve with new BGCT President Ken Hall of Buckner Baptist Benevolences, and First Vice President Albert Reyes of the Baptist University of the Americas.

Pray for the elected leaders of our convention as they help us move forward in advancing all the interests of the Redeemer's kingdom by assisting our churches and related ministries to be the presence of Christ in the world.

We are loved.

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.




Veggies uprooted to a new garden_111703

Posted: 11/14/03

Veggies uprooted to a new garden

CHICAGO (RNS)–A federal bankruptcy judge has approved the sale of Big Idea Productions, makers of the best-selling VeggieTales video series, to Classic Media, owner of “Rocky and Bullwinkle,” “Lassie” and “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer.”

Classic Media will pay a reported $19.3 million for Big Idea, according to the Chicago Tribune. The sale is expected to close by mid-December.

Classic Media had agreed in September to pay a reported $7.5 million for Big Idea. But an open auction was held Oct. 27 for the company's assets, including rights to Bob the Tomato and Larry the Cucumber, stars of the VeggieTales series, which has sold close to 30 million copies.

“I'm very pleased Classic Media has been confirmed as the new owner,” said Phil Vischer, founder of Big Idea and voice of Bob the Tomato. “Everyone at Big Idea is looking forward to working with them to advance our ministry to families in new and exciting ways.”

Despite VeggieTales' popularity, Big Idea has had significant cash flow problems. According to the Tribune, the company lost more than $18 million in 2002, the same year it released the self-financed “Jonah: A VeggieTales Movie.” The film earned more than $24 million at the box office but cost close to $20 million to produce, little of which was recouped.

In April, Big Idea also lost a $10.6 million lawsuit to its former distributor, Lyrick Studios, which also distributes “Barney.”

Three new VeggieTales episodes are scheduled for 2004, including “An Easter Carol,” in February. Classic Media plans to continue producing additional VeggieTales in the future.

“We are very enthusiastic about the addition of Big Idea to our portfolio of kids' and family properties,” said Eric Ellenbogen, chairman and CEO of Classic Media. “The creators at Big Idea are enormously talented, and VeggieTales is a wonderful name in family entertainment. We look forward to many new productions and to supporting the Big Idea mission and the great relationship they have established with their audience.”

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_111003

Posted 11/7/03

Article List for 11/10/03 issue


GO TO SECTIONS:
Texas       • Baptists      
Religion      • Departments      • Opinion      • Bible Study     
OUR FRONT PAGE ARTICLES
By any and all names, youth work is changing

Ministerial searches go digital

Carbon-14 dating confirms biblical link to Hezekiah's Tunnel

HOPE program brings new direction for teens in Round Rock complex



HOPE program brings new direction for teens in Round Rock complex

Hall completes triple crown with inauguration at Howard Payne

Buckner and church partner to provide food service

New Texas-based seminary names first four faculty, Corley to lead

Wayland students back on the air with news show

Weekday education brings unchurched to the church

Fire damages science building under construction

100 mayors support Baylor's Bush library

Houston pastor put on two-month leave after misconduct allegations

Russian orphans ready for adoption

SBTC elects Osborne president and marks fifth anniversary

Churches urged to address multicultural needs of Texas

On the Move

Around the State

Texas Tidbits


Linguistic duty translates into new home for Congo family

DBU students devote fall break to Guatemala trip


By any and all names, youth work is changing

Youth will look to athletes as role models, Strum says

Road to youth evangelism ministry passed through rural Texas paths

Religious involvement helps parents of teens

SHARED SPACE: With six you get an eggroll

Ministerial searches go digital

Headhunters stake out new territory in churches

Small church grows strong leaders

BGCT: Smaller Texas churches can grow

Prayer spurs smaller church to revival

Bivocational pastor of the year credited with helping other pastors


FFH stands for wholesome fun for the whole family



Prof says BF&M needed for Trinity view

Southern Seminary to close day-care center

Mississippi won't cut out CBF leaders

Missouri breaks ties with Jewel

Virginians may withhold from Averett

D.C. convention looks ahead despite cuts

Designated gifts boost CBF despite drop in church giving

Baptist Briefs



Carbon-14 dating confirms biblical link to Hezekiah's Tunnel

Spiritual sleuth studies violent religions to fight crime

Evangelistic skateboard video finds unlikely host

Methodists have cut 259 jobs

In tough times, Israel finds a friend in evangelicals

Prof calls for raising up the sacred in burial acts

COMPANIONS IN DEATH: No One Dies Alone

Officials claim no underground church in China


Court ruling on 'under God' will matter either way

Did bishop slander by citing 'spirit of Satan'?

Georgia Methodist home settles discrimination case

Scholars see shift in church-state views

Census tracks grandparents raising grandchildren



On the Move

Texas Baptist Forum

Classified Ads

Cartoon



EDITORIAL: What do you have to do to call your church 'Baptist'?

DOWN HOME: Letterman's in for tiring, happy time

TOGETHER: Advance the kingdom of heaven

ANOTHER VIEW: You don't need 911 to dial heaven

He Said/ She Said: Front Seat

Cybercolumn for 11/3: Grace, hope & marriage by Brett Younger



Explore the Bible lesson for 11/9: Paul desires 'good things to run wild' in heart

Family Bible Study for 11/9: God will provide his followers a bold witness

LifeWay Explore the Bible Lesson for 11/16: Christ has given new meaning to 'triumph'

LifeWay Family Bible Series Lesson for 11/16: Complacency can strangle ministry still today

See articles from previous issue 11/03/03 here.




CYBERCOLUMN: Gentle breath of the wounded healer_duncan_111703

Posted 11/14/03

CYBERCOLUMN:
Gentle breath of the wounded healer

By John Duncan

I’m sitting here under the old oak tree, remembering my Uncle Faye.

I’m not sure why we called her “Uncle Faye.” She was more correctly titled an aunt, a relative once or twice removed on the family tree, as they often say in the mountains of North Carolina. We called her “uncle” for some reason unknown to me. Maybe she just spoke it once, and it kind of caught on.

John Duncan

Uncle Faye lived in Spruce Pine, N.C., on Pine Branch Road, just below the Baptist church. She had a black fluffy dog, always had a shawl draped over her chair, watched the television with the volume turned up loud, liked to sit on her porch swing and watch the cars pass by or eyeball the rain dripping from her roof, and never missed church.

She loved the Lord and the church and sat close to the pulpit, near what must have been at one time in that mountain church the amen corner. She often called on special occasions like my wedding day or at the birth of one of my children. Prayer and easing pain were her passions.

Uncle Faye lived near the Toe River. Every day at noon, like many of the local mountain folks, she listened to radio station WTOE to hear the news and to listen intently to the public reading of the obituaries.

Not many subjects stir interest like news of death, funerals and “visitation” at the local funeral home. Uncle Faye listened with ears anxious to drink down the sound of news so that it could be discussed later with friends. News discussed for Uncle Faye meant words of care, concern and prayer for the hurting as they battled the wounds of life.

I never really knew that much about Uncle Faye, except she had lived during the Depression, worked once at the local knitting mill, always visited us at my grandmother’s house when we vacationed in the mountains and possessed an unusual gift of blowing with lips puckered, a cool breeze of breath that eased the pain of the moment and put a person back into the path of the joyous present.

Henri Nouwen says, “For the minister is called to recognize the sufferings of his time in his own heart and make that recognition the starting point of his service.” He further states that Christ’s servants are wounded healers, “the one who must look after his own wounds but at the same time be prepared to heal the wounds of others.”

I think of Uncle Faye as a sweet lady whose hard life softened her to make her a wounded healer. In life, you will need people to heal your wounds.

I could not have been more than the age of 10 or 11 the summer we traveled to Spruce Pine to visit my grandmother and two aunts. My grandfather built the two-story white house that had inside a great set of stairs and a stairwell for sliding down. Sliding down the rail served as an exciting event. Fireflies buzzed at night so that you capture them and put them in jars. You slept on a feather mattress with the window open so that you could hear the chirp of crickets, a car passing by or the rustling of leaves on the trees as the breeze sailed through he mountains.

My brother and I loved to toss a baseball in the front yard of the old white house. We often threw the baseball over the boxwoods, big bushes sprouting green leaves that rose waste high. If you were adventurous, you could attempt to jump over the boxwoods, which I did many times. Running around the boxwoods once, I slipped, fell hard on the sloped and rocky grass and skinned my knee. Injured, I tearfully and slowly eased up from my fall, hopped and limped along while noticing blood on my skinned leg.

I sat down in a chair on the front porch and moaned and grimaced, only to be greeted by a smiling Uncle Faye.

“Settle down. Calm down,” she whispered. “Let Uncle Faye blow on it,” she softly spoke in hushed tones while looking into my eyes. And blow she did—a cool, gentle breeze of breath that took the sting away just long enough to stop the tears and calm the racing heart and relax the tension of that painful moment.

And so here I am under the old oak tree, remembering Uncle Faye and missing the mountains and a cool breeze of breath in life’s painful moments and thinking for all that life delivers sometimes you need a wounded healer who can understand life’s pain and blow a breeze to take away the sting.

And I am reminded when I think of Uncle Faye that God is like that—the Wounded Healer, a sympathizing priest who blows a breeze fresh and cool on the aches and pains of heart, life and soul (Hebrews 4:12).

Everyone needs an Uncle Faye, a wounded healer who blows breath so cool it sends chills up the spine, and the Wounded Healer. I feel a breeze even now, and I feel great joy!


John Duncan is pastor of Lakeside Baptist Church in Granbury, Texas, and the writer of numerous articles in various journals and magazines




Hispanic laymen challenged to set pace_110303

Posted: 10/31/03

Hispanic laymen challenged to set pace

By Orville Scott

Texas Baptist Communications

About 250 Baptist laymen from across Texas were challenged at the Hispanic Baptist Convocation of the Laity to be the vanguard in reaching the state's 7 million Hispanics for Christ.

Sponsored by Varones Bautistas (Hispanic Baptist Men), the convocation at Highland Lakes Camp and Conference Center near Austin was designed to rally laity to reach the state with the gospel of Jesus Christ, said Eli Rodriguez of Dallas, state coordinator of the convocation.

Hector Gamboa of Primera Bautista Iglesia in Ingleside ties a witnessing bracelet during a training session for Royal Ambassadors.

One of the key speakers, Alfonso Flores, pastor of First Mexican Baptist Church of San Antonio, called on participants to remember the vision of the Apostle Paul on the Damascus Road.

“It has to begin with a vision that will shake our lives,” Flores said. Christ “commands you to stand on your feet and become a vessel he can use for the glory of his name.”

Flores added: “We cannot imagine what God can do with a simple witness for Christ. Christ is not asking that we invent a new message but to be faithful in giving witness to the old, old message.”

Another speaker, Alcides Guajardo, president of the Hispanic Baptist Convention of Texas, also focused on Jesus' command to his disciples: “As the Father hath sent me, even so I send you.”

Guajardo, who lives at Mineral near Beeville, also noted that Jesus told his disciples: “You won't be able to do it alone. I will send the Holy Spirit.”

E.B. Brooks, coordinator of the Church Missions and Evangelism Section of the Baptist General Convention of Texas, said the New Testament church was alive. He urged participants in the convocation to “refocus on what those people did in the day the church began to grow.”

In addition to Rodriguez, area coodinators for the statewide evangelistic effort included:

Tony Alcorta of Sur Zarzamora Bautista in San Antonio demonstrates disaster-relief equipment.

bluebull West Texas, Leo Samaniego, River Ministry coordinator for El Paso Baptist Association.

bluebull Top of Texas, Pedro Nevarez and Larry Naranjo of Lubbock.

bluebull North Texas, Ben Silva of Dallas, former president of Varones Bautistas, and Sonny Aguilar of Dallas, vice president of Varones Bautistas.

bluebull East Texas, Ray Carrillo and Juan Barroso of Tyler.

bluebull Coastal Plains, Jose Leal of Dickinson and Mike Tello of Edcouch.

bluebull South Texas, Noah Rodriguez and Abel Delgadillo of San Antonio and Domingo Quintanilla of Weslaco.

bluebull Central Texas, Ciro Garcia of Austin and Leo Guerra, director of Region 21 Children's Mission and Ministry.

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.




WMU board affirms core objectives_111703

Posted: 11/12/03

WMU board affirms core objectives

By Teresa Young

Wayland Baptist University

LUBBOCK–Texas Baptists' desire for more hands-on missions opportunities is a core objective of Texas Woman's Missionary Union, according to the organization's executive director. And it's a desire the new WorldconneX network holds the promise of helping them fulfill, she added.

The Texas WMU board of directors heard reports affirming the mission organization's core objectives during its Nov. 8 meeting in Lubbock. In her report to the board, Executive Director Carolyn Porterfield shared her excitement at seeing WMU's guiding objectives being met across the state.

"We reaffirmed our core values–the lordship of Christ, the Bible, prayer, personal involvement with missions and mission education," Porterfield said.

Four guiding objectives–providing mission opportunities, providing missions education, developing missions leadership and promoting missions support–constantly provide challenges and rewards across the state and around the world, she added.

Providing missions education through multiple methods of delivery is challenging, given the various languages needed, she reported. But technology is making those avenues easier, she added, touting four websites supported by Texas WMU that help provide missions education and resources in multiple languages.

Raising funds to support mission endeavors remains a challenge as well, she said.

The new WorldconneX missions network will help make some of these objectives easier to meet by connecting resources with needs worldwide, Porterfield predicted.

The board approved a recommendation from the Hispanic WMU Fellowship to form an official partnership with Baptist Women in Mexico, specifically in support of a retirement home supported solely by that country's WMU.

In other business, the WMU board approved three new area directors–Kay Stiles of Wheeler, Lois Robinette of Ennis and Yvonne Fansler of League City. A motion from the executive committee to amend the bylaws to include a board member from the Christian Women's Job Corps Advisory Council was approved as well. The board also recognized outgoing board members Earl Ann Bumpus of Mineral Wells and Deborah Henke of Fredericksburg.

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.




Missions options leave no excuse for reisting call, messengers told_111703

Posted: 11/12/03

Missions options leave no excuse
for reisting call, messengers told

By Craig Bird

Texas Baptist Communications

LUBBOCK–It started with the slow, stirring wail of a single bagpipe. It ended with a pastor-wife team from a 17-member congregation that puts it money and its time where its heart is.

In between, the Nov. 10 evening crowd at the Baptist General Convention of Texas annual session heard about:

Handing out cold water and prayer at a fair.

Choral tours as evangelism in Spain.

Students testing well water in rural villages in Muslim Southeast Asia.

Hauling medical supplies via backpack into the interior of Costa Rica.

Wrapping Christ's love in Halloween candy.

Ministry via chainsaw.

A mission connection among Baptist churches in Duncanville, Lubbock and Rio Bravo.

It was missions night, and the single message was presented in numerous ways: All Texas Baptists are called by God to missions; the myriad options mean there are no valid excuses not to be faithful to that call.

The presentation mixed video clips, orchestral pieces, solos and congregational singing, skits, live interviews, letters and numerous personal testimonies to show the scope of how Texas Baptists are doing missions.

Student summer missionaries told of leading Bible studies in the parks of Vancouver, British Columbia, where Chinese immigrants made professions of faith in Christ and of a water safety project in Southeast Asia that distributed more than 3,000 copies of the Gospel of Luke in 130 villages.

Broadview Baptist Church in Lubbock reported on its Halloween ministry to a mobile-home park that involved church volunteers from youth to an 80-year-old woman. One resident, facing eviction after losing his job, met a Broadview member who was personnel director of a local company and who helped him get a new job. There were 12 professions of faith in Christ among the 300 residents who participated.

Kris and Shelly Riggs, IMB missionaries in West Africa reported on their work via video.

Texas Baptist Men volunteer Bob Mayfield reported on 14 projects ranging from Royal Ambassador camps to work in Iraq, China and Nicaragua.

Sylvania and Richard Magallenas testified to their call to missions with a small church in Rio Bravo while they were members of First Baptist Church Duncanville, how a job transfer took them to Primera Inglesia Baptista in Lubbock and they connected their former church home to their new one in a partnership.

First Baptist Arlington reported on a trip to Costa Rica last summer involving 24 people, each hefting 35-pound backpacks and hiking three days to a remote area to do medical/dental missions.

Wayland Baptist University's choir tour in Spain provided numerous instances where "God arranged it so we could share our faith despite the language barrier," a speaker said.

Otis Cook, pastor of Cornelius Chapel Baptist Church in Lubbock and his wife, Christine, told how "the smallest church in the BGCT" with just 17 members makes significant contributions to the Texas Baptist Cooperative Program. Through cooperative giving, the small congregation helps start churches and do missions far beyond their community, he said. "You can't beat God in giving. Whenever we get more than $500 in offerings, we find somebody to give it to."

At the conclusion of the missions presentation, messengers and guests gave $12,022 to the Mary Hill Davis Offering for Texas missions.

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.




Missions prof critiques ‘unbiblical practices’ at IMB_110303

Posted: 10/31/03

Missions prof critiques 'unbiblical practices' at IMB

By Mark Wingfield

Managing Editor

The International Mission Board should rid itself of “unbiblical” practices and alliances with Christian mission groups that do not enforce strict theological parameters, a missions professor has urged.

Keith Eitel, professor of Christian missions at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary in Wake Forest, N.C., outlined his concerns about the theological framework employed by the Southern Baptist Convention mission board in an eight-page paper. The document, titled “Vision Assessment,” reportedly has been distributed to all IMB trustees.
Open the complete text of Eitel's paper as a pdf file here.

Eitel said he wrote the paper over the summer to summarize his perspective on the IMB's operation after being contacted by an IMB trustee who wanted to nominate him for a position there.

An IMB spokesman said the mission board has no comment on Eitel's paper.

In the paper, Eitel appeals for IMB trustees to “synchronize” the mission board “with the theological convictions of the SBC” and to “set the board's course directly back into the evangelical roots that were the convictions of the founders of the convention.”

For this to happen, he wrote, biblical and theological inquiry must not be minimized in importance.

While criticizing previous administrations of the SBC mission board prior to the fundamentalist campaign that began in 1979, Eitel also raises concerns about the current administration of IMB President Jerry Rankin.

He especially targets the IMB's participation in mission efforts with what the board calls Great Commission Christians–other Baptist and Christian groups working toward the same missionary goals.

Eitel charges that through these partnerships there are “no mechanisms in place to filter or check the entry of unbiblical practices other than the specific theological preparation of the individual missionary.”

And that link has been weakened, he said, because under Rankin's leadership, “there has been an obvious and apparently intentional move away from requiring seminary training for the key roles related to church planting and church development.”

Before the Rankin administration, such missionary candidates were required to have at least a master of divinity degree and two years of experience, he said. “Today, one may assume such roles with as little as 20-30 semester hours, and there is a spirit or culture within the board that downplays or undermines the need to even go to seminary at all.”

Eitel adds: “If it weren't for the trustees holding the line on this requirement, I am afraid that seminary requirements would be dropped completely.”

As a result of the change, he said, “I am concerned that evangelism, church planting and discipleship are in the hands of theological novices.”

Eitel also criticizes the IMB for allowing women in leadership roles–specifically in the role of regional strategy coordinators.

“Women, while certainly capable in numerous ways to do ministry, should not be placed in doctrinal or ethical authority over men, and the strategy coordinator role often causes this to happen,” he declared.

These same strategy coordinators–although he does not single out women alone as the culprits–because they are “theological novices,” he said, “frequently lead their teams to partner with theologically suspect organizations.”

The IMB's lack of stringency on theological and doctrinal training is a holdover from the previous administration of Keith Parks, Eitel charged. That's bad, he wrote, because Parks made clear his belief that Southern Baptists should be united around missions more than theological conformity.

Parks, he said, inherited and built upon a slippery slope toward liberalism that began in the SBC after World War I. This trend, he charged, placed increasingly more emphasis on personal experience than on a strict understanding of the Bible's edicts.

“Parks was saying that doctrine or theology divides us but missions unites us,” Eitel noted. In contrast, leaders of the fundamentalist movement within the SBC like Adrian Rogers “indicated that unless our theological convictions are solidly established squarely on an inerrant Bible, we will have no legitimate or reasonable basis for doing missions.”

Eitel concludes his paper with nine recommended actions for IMB trustees, beginning with an appeal to “recruit administrators committed to theological renewal of the board.”

He also asks trustees to “change the appointment criteria and procedures to encourage theological preparation” and to “change the entire curriculum and teaching staff” at the Missionary Learning Center, where missionaries go for specific training after appointment.

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_110303

Posted 10/31/03

Article List for 11/3/03 issue


GO TO SECTIONS:
Texas      • Baptists     
Religion
      • Departments      • Opinion      • Bible Study     

OUR FRONT PAGE ARTICLES:
212 DBU students commit to Swaziland

Burnet church readies to bring Bethlehem to life

Churches called to excellence regardless of worship styles



212 DBU students commit to Swaziland

Burnet church readies to bring Bethlehem to life

Missions network is WorldconneX; Tinsley named inaugural leader

BGCT to meet next week in Lubbock

Nominees for BGCT boards and committees

Buckner in Lubbock: A place to call home

Chaplains' personal stories called pathway to faith

BGCT-endorsed chaplains urged to keep on going, to fulfill their calls

Oldest Chinese church faces toward the future

Hispanic laymen challenged to set pace

Judicial complaint dismissed against Fort Worth judge

Haskell-Knox and West Central Baptist association

Three to receive missions awards

San Antonio church keeps food flowing, because 'children need to eat'

Darrell Baergen, longtime Baptist dramatist, dies in Abilene

92-year-old pianist honored for her service

Prayer may be scary, leaders say, but shouldn't be

New Mexico disaster relief gets boost from Texas

FAMILY FILMS: One man's quest

New tool, new desire help church find a God-focused vision

Seminary dedicates Houston campus

Texas Baptist Men serves after floods

Wayland trustees approve funding for Amarillo site

Texas Tidbits

On the Move

Around the State


Worship is as important as breathing, Gaddy say

Churches called to excellence regardless of worship styles

Organ shortage, but instrument making a comeback



New Orleans trustees reject request on sole membership

Stanley backs off statements on SBC and women

Patterson vows alliance with founders in inaugural address at Southwestern

Patterson, trustees join call for seminary offering

Missions prof critiques 'unbiblical practices' at IMB

American Baptist leader says Dobson misrepresented views

CBF not a denomination but becoming more like one, Vestal tells council

Baptist Briefs



Barna probes views on heaven & hell


'Partial-birth' abortion ban headed for implementation

Methodist ad rejected for display on Times Square due to ad content

Chapman speaks on Boykin, Episcopalians

General comes under fire for anti-Muslim comments

Religious funding battle in Georgia could impact other states

Anglican primates warn U.S. bishops



Cartoon

Texas Baptist Forum

Classified Ads

On the Move

Around the State



EDITORIAL: World hunger merits response

EDITORIAL:Promise & peril of president's plan

DOWN HOME: Furious moments & fervent thanks

TOGETHER: God's blessings flow through worship

ANOTHER VIEW: Healthy faith leads to healthy life

Texas Baptist Forum

Cybercolumn for 11/3: Grace, hope & marriage by Brett Younger

Cybercolumn for 10/20: Good News by John Duncan

He Said/ She Said: Front Seat



BaptistWay Lessons:
BaptistWay Bible Study for 11/2: A church for which to be grateful

BaptistWay Bible Study for 11/9: Leadership that inspires followers

BaptistWay Bible Study for 11/16: Instructions for walking with God

BaptistWay Bible Study for 11/23: Hope for loved ones and ourselves

BaptistWay Bible Study for 11/30: Faith that works in the workplace


Lifeway Lessons:
Explore the Bible lesson for 11/9: Paul desires 'good things to run wild' in heart

Family Bible Study for 11/9: God will provide his followers a bold witness

See articles from previous issue 10/20/03 here.




Around the State_111003

Posted: 11/07/03

Around the State

Bethlehem Church in Farmersville was a finalist in the preaching category in the Charles Haddon Spurgeon Outstanding Church Awards from the Billy Graham School of Missions, Evangelism and Church Growth of Southern Seminary. The church's average attendance in 1998 was two, but it currently averages 441 in attendance. Billy Harris is pastor.

bluebull Chaplains receiving endorsement in October from the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship include Richard Atkinson Jr. of LaGrange, Rodney Bolejack of Temple, Jeffrey Cantrell of Austin, John Mark Ritchey of Lexington and Gwyen Driskill-Dunn of Fort Worth.

Gary and Donna Cain

Appointments

bluebull Gary and Donna Cain of Austin have been appointed missionaries by the International Mission Board of the Southern Baptist Convention. They will serve in Eastern Africa, where he will work in community outreach and ministry development. He formerly was dean of students and director of athletics at East Texas Baptist University, while she worked there as director of men's dormitories. They are members of Great Hills Church in Austin and have two adult children.

Deaths

bluebull Henard East, 90, Oct. 7 in Arlington. He was pastor of First Church in Arlington 25 years, then assistant to Pastor Charles Wade prior to his retirement as pastor emeritus. In total, he served the church more than 53 years. Among the churches started under his leadership were Fielder Road, Lamar, Northside, Meadow Lane, Mayfield Road, Parkview, Highland, Hillcrest, Woodland West and University, all in Arlington. He was preceded in death by his wife of 43 years, Laura, and his brother, Bernard. He is survived by his wife of 27 years, Wynon; daughters, Ann Morris and Donna Hill; son, Stephen; step-children, Marsha Stirrat and Mark Gillham; sister, Virginia Nollner; 12 grandchildren; four great-grandchildren; and seven step-great-grandchildren.

bluebull E.K. Bailey, 57, Oct. 22 in Dallas. His death followed a long bout with cancer. He was founder and senior pastor of Concord Missionary Church in Dallas. He was preceded in death by his brother, Raymond. He is survived by his wife of 34 years, Sheila; daughters, Cokiesha and Shenikwa Bailey; son, Emon; sisters, Vivian Flakes, Shirley Cockrell, Bonnie Kerl, Vicky Campbell; and brother, James Martin.

Clares Johnson and Jennifer Hardin want to make sure no one goes without food. The girls' quest to feed the hungry expanded when members of their church, Orchard Road in Lewisville, began filling their container. A local organization distributes the food.

bluebull King Sanders, 54, Oct. 30 in Washington, D.C. A Texas native, he most recently worked as director of constituent relations for the Ethics & Religous Liberty Commission of the Southern Baptist Convention, but he had been hospitalized since March. Prior to his five years with the ERLC, he served eight years as legislative liason for the Baptist Convention of New Mexico while a pastor in Santa Fe. He also was director of missions for Santa Fe Association prior to starting Rodeo Road Church. He also served churches in Baytown and Colleyville. He is survived by his wife of 30 years, Rose; daughter, Courtney Sanders; and son, Michael.

bluebull Polly Mercer, 71, Nov. 2 in Highland Village. She began working at Buckner Benevolences in 1966 and retired from there in 1997. One year later, she was diagnosed with Lou Gehrig's disease. She was a member of Brookhaven Church in Farmers Branch. She was preceded in death by her husband and son, both named William. She is survived by her daughter, Patti Kriss; sister, Laverne Henry; and brother, Paul Mooney.

Anniversaries

bluebull Price Mathieson, 25th as pastor of First Church in Lawn Oct. 26.

bluebull Brad Crosswhite, fifth as pastor of Lamar Point Church in Paris Nov. 8.

Events

bluebull Great Hills Church in Austin will present “A Christmas Snow” Dec. 12-15. Tickets are $10. For more information, call (512) 343-0243. Michael Lewis is pastor.

Ordained

bluebull Johnny King and Richard Schuck as deacons at Parkway Church in Bronson Nov. 2.

Revivals

bluebull Hebron Church, Bells; Nov. 9-14; evangelist, James Seigler; pastor, Houston Garner.

bluebull First Church, Vernon; Nov. 16-19; evangelist, Mike McKinney; music, Larry Russell; pastor, Derrell Monday.

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.