row_wade_63003

Posted: 6/27/03

Attempt to revisit Roe nixed

By Jenny Hartgraves

Staff Writer

DALLAS–Efforts by Norma McCorvey–“Jane Roe” from Roe vs. Wade–and her legal team to reverse the 1973 abortion case were rejected June 19 as a federal judge ruled her petition for reconsideration did not come in a “reasonable time.”

Thirty years after the United States Supreme Court legalized abortion, McCorvey filed a motion June 17 in the downtown Dallas County Courthouse to reopen the case. Her efforts were made possible by a legal team headed by Allan Parker of San Antonio and joined by Virginia Armstrong, professor of political science emeritus at Hardin-Simmons University.

McCorvey's team believed they had a strong case based on the basic issue of whether or not an unborn child is a person.

“The Supreme Court said specifically it was not in 1973, but now scientific evidence proves that they were wrong,” Armstrong said. Other issues included in the petition were the effects of abortion on McCorvey, the effects of abortion on women in general and the methods and motives of the abortion industry. All the data collected was unavailable in 1973.

David Godbey, federal judge in the northern district of Texas, said in his eight-page order that this type of petition must be filed in “reasonable time,” meaning “weeks or months, not decades.”

“Whether or not the Supreme Court was infallible, its Roe decision was certainly final in this litigation,” Godbey wrote. “Other parties in other cases may be able to re-examine those issues, but not McCorvey in this case.”

McCorvey filed a Rule 60 motion, a provision that permits a litigant to request the federal courts “relieve” a party from a final act of the courts.

In January 1973, the Supreme Court ruled 7-2 in Roe vs. Wade to overturn state laws prohibiting abortion. More than 40 million legal abortions have been performed in the United States since that ruling.

McCorvey began working for an abortion-rights organization but became a Christian in the 1990s. Since then, she has become an anti-abortion activist.

Upon filing the motion, she said, “I'm sorry I signed the affidavit (in Roe v. Wade). I want to do everything in my power to help women and their children.”

With reporting by Staff Writer Kambry Bickings and Baptist Press

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.




tidbits_63003

Posted: 6/27/03

Texas Tidbits

CenturyMen travel to Europe. The CenturyMen, a 100-voice men's chorus, is traveling in Germany, Austria and Switzerland through July 8. The chorus of music ministers, including many from Texas, is directed by Buryl Red. On this tour, the CenturyMen will work with Baptist missionaries Doyle and Arlee Searcy, Scott and Kathy Hinton, Rick and Nancy Dill, Wayne and Pam Jenkins, Carlos and Shannon Ichter, and Tom and Barb Suiter. Daily ministry updates and prayer concerns are listed at www.centurymentour2003.com.

bluebull Baylor staffer to White House. Jerome Loughridge, chief of staff to Baylor University President Robert Sloan, has been named a White House Fellow for 2003-2004. He will assume the new role Sept. 1. Loughridge, a 1995 Baylor graduate who also holds a master's degree in public policy from Harvard, is among 12 people chosen for the prestigious fellowship from among more than 1,000 candidates. Loughridge and his wife, Tricia, are members of Highland Baptist Church in Waco.

bluebull Music conference planned. The Church MusiConference West, slated for July 25-26 at Wayland Baptist University in Plainview, is aimed at ministers of music, youth and children's choir directors, accompanists and other music leaders in churches. The conference includes six 75-minute classes, reading sessions, exhibits, networking opportunities with fellow church musicians and a banquet. The cost is $50 per person. For more information, contact Robert Black at (806) 291-1067 or Dan Turner at (806) 935-3176.

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_63003

Posted: 6/27/03

TOGETHER:
Numbers paint picture of missions

Summer brings a change of pace for most of us. Family vacations are most often planned for this time of the year. Churches take on a different dynamic, too, as the sounds of children and youth can be heard throughout the week. Camp programs, Vacation Bible Schools, summer mission trips, Super Summer youth evangelism conferences, recreational activities and local community mission involvement all contribute to the “hum” around the church house.

That hum goes on statewide, as well. Rosemary and I, along with scores of Baptist General Convention of Texas staff, attended the annual meeting of the Hispanic Baptist Convention June 22-24. In a few days, the African-American Baptist Fellowship will convene in Houston, July 8-11. What I love about these meetings is the way entire families show up. There are activities for children and young people. And the adults celebrate and rejoice in the achievements of their children and grandchildren.

CHARLES WADE
Executive Director
BGCT Executive Board

It is the stated goal of the BGCT to “reach all people.” We want, as a pastor in the Valley expressed, our churches and convention to look like the face of Texas. We want Hispanics, African-Americans, Asian-Americans and anyone else to feel as much at home in the BGCT as do Anglo-Americans. And if we are to do that effectively, we must encourage one another, and in order to do that, we must know one another.

For more than 40 years now, the Mexican Baptist Convention in Texas, now called the Hispanic Baptist Convention in Texas, has been an integral part of the BGCT. We cannot even think about the BGCT without thinking of the 1,200 Hispanic congregations, the Hispanic Baptist Theological School (now Baptist University of the Americas) in San Antonio, and the gifted and dedicated Hispanic members of the BGCT staff.

It was another great Convencion this year. These brothers and sisters are poised for the greatest advance of the gospel we have yet known in Texas Hispanic culture, in outreach to Mexico, in helping churches across America start Hispanic congregations.

The giving of the Hispanic churches through the BGCT Cooperative Program continues to climb as these churches see more and more how their giving helps them to be part of a great mission and ministry outreach throughout Texas and around the world. The BGCT priorities of starting churches and equipping leaders who can build strong and healthy churches are exactly the priorities that move the hearts of our Hispanic churches.

If you attend the African-American Fellowship meeting in Houston, you will be welcomed and blessed. There are more than 700 black congregations affiliated with the BGCT. There are growing numbers of our African-American brothers and sisters who work on our staff and who serve on the committees of our convention. More and more of their churches are giving generously through the Cooperative Program.

In the next five years, there will be 1.2 million more Hispanics in Texas than now. There will be 154,000 more African-Americans, 203,000 more Anglos, and 135,000 more of all others, mostly Asians. That means that if Texas Baptists are going to be true to God, we must share the good news of Jesus Christ with all these people. There must be more than 1,100 new churches, mostly among Hispanics. There must be more intentional multicultural congregations. And even if Texas were not adding so many new people, we would have a mission field all around us, because at least 10.5 million people now living in Texas have no relationship to a church.

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.




truett_grads_63003

Posted: 6/27/03

Members of the 2003 class of Truett Theological Seminary pose in the seminary's Powell Chapel.

Truett Seminary to produce 79 graduates in 2003

WACO–Baylor University's Truett Theological Seminary honored 79 members of the class of 2003, including 35 spring graduates, during baccalaureate ceremonies.

Bill Sherman, pastor of First Baptist Church of Fairview, Tenn., delivered the baccalaureate address on “The Compulsion of the Cross.” Sherman told the graduates, “The Christ of the cross compels us to believe and to believe strongly, … to act and to act greatly, … to love and love supremely … and to praise and praise gloriously.”

Sherman admonished the seminarians, using the words of British World War I chaplain G.A. Studdert-Kennedy, to “serve in such a way that you will hear God as you stand before him in eternity say, 'Well done' rather than, 'Well!'”

The year's outstanding students, as voted by the Truett faculty, were Scott Daniel Bertrand of Houston, Andrew Donald Black of Waco and Andrea Louise Hall of San Antonio. All three earned the master of divinity degree in May.

The student body's Professor of Choice Award was given to Hulitt Gloer, professor of preaching and Christian Scriptures and visiting professor at Baylor Law School.

In an emotional ceremony, William Treadwell III, rector of St. Peter's Episcopal Church in McKinney, presented an inaugural award named for his late father–the William Charles Treadwell Jr. Award for Excellence in Christian Education and Leadership–to Michael Warren McEntyre of Knoxville, Tenn. McEntyre had served as a graduate assistant to Treadwell, associate professor of Christian education and leadership/administration, who died April 23, 2002. Treadwell had been a member of the Truett faculty since 1995 and was lauded by students and faculty members for helping form the character of the young seminary.

May master's-level graduates, their hometowns and the schools from which they earned undergraduate degrees included Scott Daniel Bertrand, Houston (Baylor); Andrew Donald Black, Waco (Baylor); Robert Wayne Brasier, Tulsa, Okla. (Oklahoma Baptist University); Jerrod Cameron Clark, Las Vegas, Nev. (Baylor); Daniel McFerrin Cook, Waco (Baylor); Melissa Ann Frazier, Belton (University of Mary Hardin-Baylor); Amy Regan DéAwn Fritts, Friendswood (Baylor ); Steven Edward Fry, Dodge City, Kan. (William Jewell College); Andrea Louise Hall, San Antonio (University of Texas at San Antonio); Eric Peter Herrstrom, Arlington (Baylor); Ronald Leslie Higgins, Plano (Baylor); Garin Lynn Hill, Gate City, Va. (Carson-Newman College); Eric Holt, New Caney (East Texas Baptist University); Jeffrey Lincoln Huckeby, Levelland (Wayland Baptist University); Lance Ross Hutchins, Lumberton (ETBU); Ed Johnson III, Austin (Dallas Baptist University); Christine Danette Brown Jones, Heber Springs, Ark. (Ouachita Baptist University); Sallie Elizabeth Liss, Talkeetna, Alaska (Howard Payne University);

Carol Marie McEntyre, Sparta, Tenn. (Carson-Newman); Michael Warren McEntyre, Knoxville, Tenn. (Carson-Newman); Michael Jean Mitchell, Cameron (Texas A&M University, University of Southern California); Edward Clayton Polson, Ridgeland, Miss. (Mississippi College); Velma Porraz, Houston (Houston Baptist University); James M. Solomon, Memphis, Tenn. (University of Memphis); Steven Kenneth Solstad, Lawton, Okla. (Cameron University); Stephanie Ann Spitzer, Athens (University of Texas at Austin); Shelley Lynn Springate, Johnson City, Tenn. (Carson-Newman); Scott Taylor, Covington, Ind. (Indiana State University); Ragan Malone Vandegriff IV, Orlando, Fla. (Baylor); Jeremy Matthew Webb, Waco (Baylor); Myles Philip Werntz, Shreveport, La. (Ouachita); David Arthur Wiley, Jackson, Miss. (Mississippi State University); Allison Gail Wright, Sugar Land (Baylor).

Doctor of ministry graduates included Gary Lynn Hall, Lubbock (Texas Tech University and Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary); and John Aubrey Petty, Shreveport, La. (Baylor and Southwestern Seminary).

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.




weimar_63003

Posted: 6/27/03

Weimar church wheels and deals for new space

By Jenny Hartgraves

Staff Writer

WEIMAR–The term spiritual “tune-up” has taken on new meaning at Calvary Baptist Church of Weimar.

As the only Baptist church in Weimar, the congregation of 70 has cruised into something larger and more permanent–the local Ford dealership.

However, this trade-in wasn't easy for the church. It took some divine planning to organize the move.

Before (top) and after photos of Calvary Baptist Church's building show its transformation from an abandoned car dealership to a place of worship. The service bays became a sanctuary, and the new-car showroom became Bible study classrooms. The employee lounge was transformed into the church kitchen.

Calvary Baptist Church started seven years ago in the living room of Bill Fluker after First Baptist Church of Weimar decided no longer to be Baptist. With the help and initiative of James and Faye Stansberry, a small Baptist Bible study soon grew to include guest speakers, sermons and worship music.

Fluker, who now is chairman of deacons, never expected the kind of growth God planned for this congregation. It wasn't long before the church moved to new property, which included one small meeting room and a house on an acre of land.

After being landlocked there for five years, the stunted church began to experience spiritual claustrophobia, Fluker said. “When you see a certain stage of fullness in your church, you become stymied, and there is no more growth.”

As chairman of the building committee, Fluker began to seek new locations for the church. When the Ford dealership, which had been vacant for a long time, was put on the market, he met with the owners to negotiate a price. When the owners realized the building was to be used for a church, they agreed to help finance it.

“As a human, I worry a lot about the finances of it all, but God has been faithful, and he continues to provide the money for us,” Fluker said.

With a new location secured, the church knew it needed strong labor to complete the reconstruction. They turned to the help of Texas Baptist Men Retiree Church Builders, a group of men and their wives who travel throughout Texas to build facilities for churches that otherwise could not pay the labor costs. Twenty trailers of men and equipment unloaded in Weimar June 4, where the volunteers spent two weeks turning concrete and metal into a house of worship. Church members provided meals and support to these hard-working volunteers.

Now, metal and grease of the old service bays have been replaced by pews and hymnals in the newly constructed worship center, and the glass showcases that once displayed the newest car models now are classrooms to develop new-model Christians.

With the population of Weimar, located about halfway between Houston and San Antonio, near 2,000 people, Calvary's new location at the intersection of Interstate 10 and Highway 155 is highly visible, and “it reminds the community that we are a viable and active church,” said Pastor Johnny Teague.

“I've seen God move in big ways,” Fluker said. “People are getting involved, helping the church and becoming a part of it all. When you're building a new church, people have to be willing to become part of the foundation.”

Overall, the entire community has supported Calvary Baptist Church and its endeavor to expand. The church now looks forward to establishing a new youth program to coincide with the current Bible study and marriage courses. They also will expand their Sunday School classes from four to 10.

With growing pains relieved, Calvary Baptist Church hopes to rev up its impact in the Weimar community.

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_63003

Storylist for 6/30/03 issue


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


Patterson elected unanimously to lead Southwest

A PAIGE FROM HISTORY: Patterson in his own words

Paige Patterson Profile

Enrollment trends of Southwestern Seminary

A note to Baptist Standard readers about the summer print schedule

BGCT ministry tour

Truett Seminary to produce 79 graduates in 2003

Weimar church wheels and deals for new space

On Thursdays, church heats up fire station

Retired teacher left major gift to Temple church, UMHB

THREE ALARM GOSPEL: Ministry to first responders

Fisherman refuses to belly up to the beer

Baptist Health taps Gaston as v.p.

Fire destroys historic sanctuary of First Baptist Church in Jasper

Tight budget taps out church funds

Oklahomans give Texas church a lift

BGCT to offer more curriculum online

'Third Culture' churches unite Asians with diverse expectations

BGCT reorganizes in music

On the Move

Around the State

Texas Tidbits

MISSION IMPOSSIBLE: Baptist worker held in Russia

Discrimination alleged by Missouri convention employee


Israeli scholars say James ossuary a fake; others not so quick to quit

Study says prison ministry effective

Attempt to revisit Roe nixed

Some Bush supporters question his action for the poor

Dobson returns to his roots with video series on raising boys

Black named Senate chaplain

Texas Baptist Forum

On the Move

Around the State

Cartoon

Classified Ads

EDITORIAL: At Southwestern, Patterson will finish what he started

DOWN HOME: Just buggin' you: count blessings

TOGETHER: Numbers paint picture of missions

He Said/ She Said

CYBERCOLUMN: Freedom

ANOTHER VIEW: Parents must reinforce messages

Texas Baptist Forum

Explore the Bible for July 13: Freedom brings possibilities and responsibilities

Family Bible Study for July 13: The law of Moses is not equipped for salvation

Explore the Bible for July 6: Use your freedom for the benefit of others

Family Bible Study for July 6: Nothing but the blood of Christ can save

See articles from our 6/23 issue here.




patterson_elected_63003

Posted 6/25/03

Patterson elected Southwestern president

By Toby Druin

Editor Emeritus

FORT WORTH–Pledging he would not "clean house" but would build a faculty committed to Southern Baptist Convention guidelines, including the 2000 Baptist Faith & Message, Paige Patterson was elected eight president of Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary June 24.

The co-architect with Paul Pressler of the fundamentalist takeover of the SBC was elected unanimously in a called meeting of seminary trustees. Thirty-three of the 40 members of the board–all who were present–answered "Yes" as chairman David Allen, pastor of MacArthur Boulevard Baptist Church in Irving and professor at Criswell College, asked for a roll call vote.

Paige Patterson

Patterson, president of Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary in Wake Forest, N.C., for almost 11 years, will assume the Southwestern presidency Aug. 1. His wife, Dorothy, also was elected a full professor at Southwestern, with full benefits but no salary.

Denny Autry, pastor of First Baptist Church of Lindale and chairman of the 10-member search committee that recommended Patterson, said the 60-year-old native Texan was the only candidate the panel interviewed.

"We received a number of recommendations from the Southern Baptist family," Autry said. "We could have taken two approaches, one interviewing each individual candidate or determining (at first) which candidate we felt most comfortable with and moving to the end result. We prayed over all the recommendations, and Dr. Patterson came to the top."

Both Patterson and Autry emphasized that no contact, formally or informally, was made by the search committee or any other trustee before the search committee spoke to him initially on May 15.

Even after that contact, Patterson said, "My position has been that I was president of Southeastern Seminary. In my wildest imaginations I never dreamed I would be standing here today."

Patterson added that he was so happy with his circumstances at Southeastern that he had no interest in moving to Fort Worth where he was born while his late father, T. A. Patterson, former executive director of the Baptist General Convention of Texas, was working on his doctoral dissertation at Southwestern.

"I don't want that misunderstood," Patterson said. "I have a great love and appreciation for (Southwestern's) history. It's just that when you are totally satisfied and happy and blessed of God beyond any possible way, and someone says, 'Are you interested in moving?' the answer is 'No, I am not interested in moving under any circumstances.'"

He held that position, he said, "until crossing the Atlantic a couple of weeks ago and I felt God decisively spoke to my heart. Until then no decision whatever (had been made) on my part."

In accepting his election, Patterson said it was a "signal honor" to be chosen and that he would come with "a keen sense of what is expected and a keen awareness of the fact that no one, least of all I, has the ability to do what must be done, except for the intervention of God. Our Lord said, 'Without me, you can do nothing,' and I am more convinced of that every day that I live."

He and his wife came to Fort Worth, he said, with their minds made up that he would accept the presidency if elected, and he will notify Southeastern Seminary of his resignation, effective July 31.

Patterson will succeed Ken Hemphill, who resigned to lead a new SBC initiative called "Empowering Kingdom Growth." Hemphill had been president since 1994 when he succeeded Russell Dilday, who was fired by trustees for opposing the new direction of the SBC.

Although Hemphill and trustee spokesmen deny it, numerous sources have told the Baptist Standard and other media that Hemphill was forced out of the presidency by seminary trustees and SBC leaders who were unhappy with the seminary's declining enrollment and Hemphill's alleged failure to clear out faculty not fully sympathetic with SBC leadership.

Patterson said Hemphill assured him he felt God leading him to the new position in Nashville.

"He came at a time of considerable turmoil and came with sweetness and a gentle spirit," Patterson said of Hemphill. "And no better man could have been chosen to lead our empowering for kingdom growth. I am looking forward to reading his books."

Asked if he would "clean house" at Southwestern, as has been speculated, Patterson cited his experience at Southeastern Seminary when he assumed the presidency there.

"When we went to Southeastern, there were rumors we would dismiss faculty," he said. "I never found it be a satisfactory way to handle the situation. We knew there were faculty members who were not sympathetic with the turn in direction of the convention, but I found them to be reasonable, and we were able to work with them. Most did eventually leave, but it was never necessary to fire them."

He said he could not imagine a circumstance when he would "come in and clean house. That does not fit my style of operation. I would prefer to motivate on a higher level."

There will be changes, however, he acknowledged. "There are always retirements; churches hire faculty because they can pay more; and sometimes the grass seems greener someplace else and people leave. I would anticipate that will happen here."

In hiring new faculty, Patterson said, he will seek men and women who have a genuine walk with God and who know what that means, who are good husbands and wives, good fathers and mothers and who are consistent witnesses for Christ.

They also must be adequately credentialed with terminal degrees and proven abilities and must be people who can "contribute to theological literature through writing as well as a teaching ministry. They must be good classroom teachers. It is a sin to be boring."

"And," he added, "they must operate within the guidelines of the SBC which have been given to us and adopted by the six seminaries. They must be people who can sign their agreement with the Baptist Faith & Message 2000."

Asked if he would permit a woman to teach in the seminary's School of Theology, Patterson said it would be his purpose as a leader not to do anything in the School of Theology other than what he would want churches to imitate.

"I believe there are ample numbers of men out there," he said. "I will build the theology faculty around them."

Asked if that was a "no" to women teaching theology, Patterson said, "Well, I didn't say it that way, but it tells you the direction I am headed."

Pressed further, he said women could teach in areas of Christian education and church music, particularly if they were teaching women and children.

"My concern," he said, "is that the New Testament is crystal clear that pastors are to be men. That is not a question of the equality of essence but the assignment of roles that God gives. I believe in the equality of essence, but I believe there are specific roles given to men. As we build the School of Theology, where we primarily train future pastors, it is only appropriate, if we are going to stay with the biblical pattern, that we use only men in that capacity."

Asked if he would turn Southwestern into a "fundamentalist institution," Patterson said the issue is not, as some reporters have written, that he would require a literal interpretation of Scripture, but rather that he would uphold the "truthfulness of God's word."

"If it means to be a fundamentalist is to say Jesus is Lord, the Bible is absolutely true, and the mission of Jesus to us is to win people to faith in Christ around the world, I am guilty. If it means to be angry with it, I am not; I am quite happy with it. I am a fundamentalist with a little f, not a capital F."

Trustee Chairman Allen said he believes the main thing Patterson will bring to Southwestern is "the ability to wed scholarship and evangelistic zeal in a proper blend."

Among those welcoming Patterson to his new assignment was Jim Richards, executive director of the Southern Baptists of Texas Convention.

As to the kind of relationship Patterson would seek for Southwestern with the BGCT, Patterson said the answer "is easy. I fully intend to have a wonderful relationship with anybody, regardless of affiliation, who maintains the absolute lordship of Christ, the inerrancy of God's word and the mission of winning men and women to Christ."

Patterson's election drew a strongly positive response from Al Mohler, president of Southern Baptist Theological Seminary and current chairman of the council of SBC seminary presidents.

"The election of Paige Patterson as president of Southwestern Seminary is one of the great moments in the history of the Southern Baptist Convention," Mohler said in a Baptist Press report. "Dr. Patterson is one of our greatest leaders and the Martin Luther in the reformation of our convention and the recovery of biblical inerrancy and authority."

Mohler predicted Patterson "will take Texas by storm" and "win the hearts of Texas Baptists to the great cause of the gospel and truth as represented by their beloved Southwestern Seminary."




storylist_62303

Storylist for 6/23/03

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



Southwestern trustees to consider Patterson for president June 24

Texans like to talk about faith

Opportunity knocks at this camp for Texas' hard knock kids

Three interns serve BGCT trio

Texas recounts journey to provide water for Iraq

Irving church offers missions learning lab for students

BGCT calls Christians 'back home' to transform Texas city centers

DBU Baseball: Faith's on first

Evangelism Conference adds missions for 2004

Evangelism school suggested

Teen's 'special need' is to make everyone smile

Toombs' 'Little Tommy' character headed to Texas camps

“Bringing Up Boys” takes Dobson back to his roots

MissionsFest 2003 had family emphasis

Coleman, Penn played key role in church music, history society told

SARS outbreak knocks out summer missions plans

Cooperation brings water flowing to Macedonian village
On the Move

Around the State

Texas Tidbits


SBC: Hawkins reports on Annuity Board options, urges fitness

SBC: SBC reduces funding to Baptist World Alliance as protest

SBC: Baptist World Alliance report includes plea for unity

SBC: Appeal on chaplains policy tops SBC business

SBC appeals to homosexuals to become heterosexual

SBC: Rankin: 'Break down the walls of Islam'

SBC resolves families need help, decries gay unions

SBC: Texas pastor explains change of view

SBC: Women are 'jewels' of God's creation, humorist says

SBC: Graham addresses homosexuality, IMB and BWA

SBC: IMB has spent from reserves for three years

SBC messengers cut BWA allocation by $125,000

SBC: Baptist World Alliance report includes plea for unity

SBC: Hawkins calls Baptists to exclusive message

SBC: Motions touch on chaplaincy, state conventions, calendar

SBC: Black History Project focuses on Black leaders

SBC: Jack Graham re-elected president of SBC without opposition

SBC: Family first priority at SBC Pastors' Conference

SBC: Pastors' Conference: Graham calls Southern Baptists to be salt and light

SBC: Mohler: Scripture mandates evangelism 'to the Jew first'

SBC: Vines tells Pastors' Conference 'All religions not the same'

SBC: Kingdom Family Rally promotes 'Seven Pillars' to strengthen families

SBC: WMU focuses on God's call, inspirational testimonies

IMB cuts 61 home office jobs in response to $10 million shortfall

North Carolina giving plan OK, study committee reports

Baptist Briefs



Presbyterians avoid fight over homosexuality



On the Move

Around the State

Texas Tidbits

Classified Ads

Cartoon

Texas Baptist Forum



DOWN HOME: Dogss get all the mosquito breaks

EDITORIAL: SBC & BWA illustrate approaches to unity

Together: Retreat can aid ministers' marriages

ANOTHER VIEW: Pastors should prohibit proselytizing others' members

Cyber column: Higher Ground

Texas Baptist Forum



BaptistWay Lessons:
Baptistway Lesson for July 6: Trouble brewing in God's family

Baptistway Lesson for July 13: Restoring the relationship

Baptistway Lesson for July 20: God's charges against Israel

Baptistway Lesson for July 27: God's heart yearns for his people

See previous lessons here.

LifeWay Lessons:
Explore the Bible Lesson for June 29: Paul exhorts Christians to continue maturing

Family Bible Study for June 29: God's holy lamb is worthy to be worshipped

See articles from our 6/09/03 issue here.




learning_lab_62303

Posted: 6/20/03

Student summer missionary Martha Ann Trull, one of more than 200 sent out this year through the Baptist General Convention of Texas, tells a Bible story to children gathered at a mission site of Oak View Baptist Church in Irving. Twenty student missionaries spent 10 days at the Irving church before heading to other work in the Northwest this summer.

Irving church offers
missions learning lab for students

By Leann Callaway

Special to the Standard

IRVING–The missions program of Oak View Baptist Church has become a learning lab for 20 student missionaries this summer.

Nineteen of the workers served 10 days at the Irving church before departing for other assignments through the Baptist General Convention of Texas student missions office. Another, Irving resident Lindy Morff, who attends Hardin-Simmons University, will spend the entire summer term working at Oak View.

“I thought it would be a great opportunity to get more involved and get to know the needs of my community,” she said.

A young boy enters Iglesia Bautista Vida Abundante, an Oak View mission site. Inset below: Student missionaries paint in one of Oak View's newest mission sites in South Irving.

At Oak View, the students serve in the Jerusalem Project, an outreach through which the church has established 11 missions in surrounding neighborhoods. The program is led by Assistant Pastor Jim Gerlach and Sergio Matassa, a recent graduate of Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary.

Spending even 10 days with the church's far-reaching missions work made a difference in the students' lives, they reported. And for some, it provided additional preparation for a life in ministry.

John Gram, a recent graduate of Southern Methodist University, plans a career in missions.

“I think the greatest lesson I learned in college was that I wasn't at college to discover God's will for my life, but to fulfill part of it,” Gram said. “I understand that these four years that God has given me are very precious to use, so I hope to be available to be used for God's work around the world.”

A week before arriving at Oak View, Gram and Morff attended the Memorial Day weekend worship event OneDay03. Both said they already see God's work in their lives from that experience.

“God really clarified that it's not about me,” Morff said. “I think so many times we, as Christians, go to church or a Bible study seeking to be fed, and in reality, it's about giving glory to God. Just the few days that we've already been working with the children and youth, I've seen how I haven't been focusing on myself. I've been focusing on serving those people, and through that, showing them the love of Christ.”

In less than two weeks, the larger group of student missionaries led Vacation Bible Schools at Villa Martinique and Timbers apartments (with 16 professions of faith in Jesus Christ), distributed fliers and painted the church's newest mission facility.

“Sergio and I were basically the facilitators,” Gerlach explained. “We did the behind-the-scenes work and provided transportation. Sergio did most of it. Beyond that, we tried to give them a good experience.

“So when they go into the mission field on assignment, they will be warmed-up. We also wanted them to fellowship with other missionaries. They don't really get to do that when they're out on the field. We tried to provide them with time to fellowship with each other, as well as doing a lot of work. Their work, in these 10 days, is the equivalent to the work of three missionaries for an entire summer. It was a lot to cram into 10 days.”

“I've had a great time,” said Vicky Mitschke from East Texas Baptist University. “I didn't know what to expect when we came to Oak View. We've been painting and planting flowers, which I've really never done, so my family will be proud of me. I've enjoyed VBS too–just getting to know these kids and to see how sweet their hearts are and how open they are. I've been teaching the Bible studies with John, and it's been a lot of fun to see how interested the real little ones are.”

Added Jordan Gray, a sophomore at Texas Tech University: “I've been having a blast and getting to know all these people better. And it's been great to reach underprivileged kids and get to know them better. We're finding out what makes them special, and we're doing that through VBS.”

As the rest of this group headed to the Northwest, Morff continued helping Oak View make an impact on the community.

“A lot of the people at the apartments have been wondering, 'Why are (the missionaries) here?'” she explained. “It's because we love the Lord, and we want to glorify him through serving with a servant's heart.”

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.




hesaid_62303

Posted 6/23/03

He Said/ She Said:
Girls

He Said:

Boys will be boys, and girls will be girls. And never the twain shall meet in our house–at least for now.

Luke and Garrett, having just completed the fifth grade, still subscribe to the theory that girls have cooties and are not to be trusted. Soon, no doubt, they'll realize that girls don't have cooties but still aren't to be trusted.

MARK WINGFIELD

Some of their friends already have fallen to the dark side. A few, in fact, have fallen so hard they've damaged their heads, I think.

I learned this recently as I drove Luke and two other fifth-grade boys to a Boy Scout campout. The Romeo of the bunch made mention of his “ex-ex-girlfriend.”

Naturally, I couldn't pass that one by. Inquiring minds want to know.

“How many girlfriends have you had?” I asked.

“Oh, lots,” the boy replied.

“Well, how many?” I continued in an interrogative style worthy of my own mother. “Why don't you name them for me.”

And so he started rattling off names, including one girl whose name got listed over and over and over again like a stutter. Obviously, breaking up wasn't that hard to do. And neither was getting back together.

Shocked at the worldly experience of this 10 year old, I pressed on for more juicy details, sparked by his report of “going out” with these girls.

“What do you do when you go out with a girl?” I queried.

“Sometimes we go bowling or to a movie,” he said. “Sometimes I go to her house and we hang out or she comes to my house and we hang out.

“One time I took a girl swimming,” he added. “But I don't really like to do that, because my hair doesn't look good when it's wet.”

The other two boys in the backseat groaned, unaware of how soon they'll be captive that mirror on the wall as well.

She Said:

Methinks our boys doth protest too much when it comes to girls. This year, they have waxed a little too eloquently on how they hate certain girls and how certain girls are always getting on their nerves and how certain girls did this, that or the other. For two boys who don't like girls, they sure do talk about them a lot.

And that mirror thing already has hit. Hair gel has taken precedence over teeth brushing in the morning. Of course, brushing teeth never has been a priority with my boys. If they are short on time, they will skip the toothbrush altogether in favor of more time managing their hair goop.

ALISON WINGFIELD

I don't remember when this enmity with the girls began. Luke was good friends with a girl in kindergarten, but I don't recall when girls became the “enemy.”

It certainly was an issue by second grade. At our church's Vacation Bible School, I taught second graders–the girls sat with the girls and the boys with the boys. Everything was a competition between the two groups.

On the day we studied patience and humility, I asked them to form two lines at the door on their way to recreation. After specifically telling them not to have all boys or all girls in one line, guess what? They formed one line of boys and one line of girls. Big mistake. The activity they were to do was to take turns with the person in the line opposite them saying, “After you.” And then that person would say, “Thank you,” and walk out the door.

You would think I had asked them to walk off a cliff. The boys probably would have liked that more.

They did it. Reluctantly. But based on my boys, it will be awhile before their attitudes catch up with their manners.

With any luck, when their attitudes about girls do change, they'll be forced to learn some manners as well.




evangelism_conf_62303

Posted: 6/20/03

Evangelism Conference adds missions for 2004

The Texas Baptist Evangelism Conference is now the Texas Evangelism & Missions Conference.

Conference organizer Rick Davis hopes the expanded event will connect and mobilize generations of Christians to reach unchurched Texans with the gospel. Davis is director of the Baptist General Convention of Texas Center for Strategic Evangelism.

The 2004 conference will be held Jan. 15-17 at First Baptist Church in Richardson and will feature author Calvin Miller as a keynote speaker.

Other speakers include Chris Seay of Ecclesia Church in Houston, Ray Still of Oakwood Baptist Church in New Braunfels and evangelist Ronnie Hill.

While the focus of previous years' events has been on information, Davis hopes now to add more inspiration.

“We are going to try to compact things and make it more of an inspirational event,” he explained. “We want people to take what they learn and put it to work. We want to see baptisms go up. We want people to leave missional.”

The mission component has been added to better educate and inspire believers to reach the large number of non-Christians in the state, he said, noting that evangelism no longer can be separated from missions. “They're not two sides of the same coin,” Davis added. “They're the same picture of the same coin.”

Special events include a Senior Saints luncheon, film festival, missional church breakfast and a bivocational ministers' and wives' meal.

Conference information will be updated at www.bgct.org/evangelism/temc. For information beyond the website, call Coleen Brooks at (888) 269-3826.

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.




evangelism_school_62303

Posted: 6/20/03

Evangelism school suggested

FORT WORTH–An effort to establish a school of evangelism within Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary is gaining momentum, according to a report published in Baptist Press.

A report written by Philip Barber, a current Southwestern student and associate to North Carolina evangelist Ted Stone, indicates trustees are considering creating such a school.

Barber reported that Stone, a seminary trustee, made a motion at the board's October 2002 meeting that the teaching and practice of evangelism become the seminary's No. 1 priority.

After unanimously affirming Stone's motion, the board appointed Stone and trustees Denny Autrey and David Galvan to determine how best to implement the motion, Barber said.

“At a recent meeting, the committee decided to await the coming of a new seminary president before proceeding with the implementation of Stone's motion,” he added.

The desire for a school of evangelism has been fostered by evangelism professors Roy Fish and Malcolm McDowell, Barber 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.