Archives
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Program enables watershed experience for seminary students
Posted: 2/02/08
Program enables watershed
experience for seminary studentsBy Bob Perkins
ATLANTA—A program endowed by a $100,000 gift from Oklahoma Baptist Robert Stephenson has ensured that seminary students from around the nation could participate in the historic celebration of the New Baptist Covenant.
The Stephenson Seminary Scholars program helped underwrite the participation of 178 seminary students from 16 different divinity schools.
Bailey Nelson, the program’s coordinator, said her involvement has been an inspiration.
• See latest photos and the latest video clips from the New Baptist Covenant Meeting.
(And go here to see our complete coverage of the event).“I am overwhelmed by the diversity of the group and the passion they show,” Nelson said. “They are driven and hungry. Their big question is: What’s next?”
02/02/2008 - By John Rutledge
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The security of the believer: protecting churches from attack
Posted: 1/30/08
The security of the believer:
protecting churches from attackBy Hannah Elliott
Associated Baptist Press
NEW YORK (ABP)—One day after a shooter killed two sisters at Colorado’s New Life Church, Pastor Brady Boyd told reporters the church had become a target because of its size and its notoriety.
But the toll to the former church of Ted Haggard, the pastor accused of homosexual acts and drug abuse, could have been much worse, Boyd quickly added. The church security team quickly and effectively subdued the attacker, a 24-year-old man who ultimately was shot and killed in the attack.
A growing number of churches are taking a hard look at providing for the security of members and guests. See related articles:
• The security of the believer: Protecting churches from attack
• Church security demands all hands on deck–but maybe not with arms
• What should worshippers do if their church is attacked?
02/01/2008 - By John Rutledge
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For Casting Crowns, performing and recording music is just a side job
Posted: 2/01/08
Mark Hall, center, is the frontman for the Christian group Casting Crowns and a youth pastor at Eagle’s Landing First Baptist Church in McDonough, Ga. All seven members of the band also work in full-time youth ministry. (RNS photo courtesy Song BMG Music Entertainment) For Casting Crowns, performing
and recording music is just a side jobBy Adelle M. Banks
Religion News Service
FAIRFAX, Va.—On one night, youth pastor Mark Hall puts plans together for his Wednesday night youth service at Eagle’s Landing First Baptist Church in the Atlanta suburb of McDonough, Ga. The next night, Hall is on stage in the Washington suburbs, fronting his Grammy-nominated band, Casting Crowns.
For Hall and other members of his group—all of them involved in youth ministry in Atlanta-area churches—middle-school and high-school students are top priority. It just happens they end up reaching them both on stage and off stage.
02/01/2008 - By John Rutledge
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New book examines life and contributions of ‘Daddy King’
Posted: 2/01/08
New book examines life and
contributions of ‘Daddy King’By Greg Trotter
Religion News Service
NEWFIELD, N.Y. (RNS)—Few dispute that Martin Luther King Jr.’s courageous leadership in the civil rights movement of the 1960s forever changed the course of American history. But even before he led the historic Montgomery bus boycott and other nonviolent protests, another King was pounding the pulpit and the pavement for social justice—his father, Martin Luther King Sr., known as “Daddy King” to his family, friends and members of his church.
Gurdon Brewster has decided to make Daddy King’s story better known. Brewster’s memoir, No Turning Back: My Summer With Daddy King, recounts the months in 1961 he spent with the elder King and his wife, Alberta, in Atlanta.
Gurdon Brewster welcomes Martin Luther King Sr. to Cornell University in 1979. Brewster is the author of No Turning Back: My Summer With Daddy King. (RNS photo courtesy of Gurdon Brewster) 02/01/2008 - By John Rutledge
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VeggieTales creator’s self-image: More Mr. Rogers than van Gogh
Posted: 2/01/08
The VeggieTales series’ second feature-length film is The Pirates Who Don't Do Anything. (RNS photo courtesy of Big Idea) VeggieTales creator’s self-image:
More Mr. Rogers than van GoghBy Andrea Useem
Religion News Service
WASHINGTON (RNS)—VeggieTales co-creator Phil Vischer views the new feature-length movie, The Pirates Who Don’t Do Anything, like a biblical parable.
It teaches about the Kingdom of God through an entertaining story—in this case, the tale of three bumbling vegetable friends who must band together and overcome their fears to save their friends.
02/01/2008 - By John Rutledge


