Joy and happiness not the same thing, pastors insist

Christians can experience joy even in loss—provided they don’t confuse joy with happiness but accept it as a gift from God, several pastors noted.

“Joy is not the same as happiness. It is a deeper contentment that sustains us whether we are happy or not,” said Van Christian, pastor of First Baptist Church in Comanche.

He pointed to the example of the Apostle Paul, who was able to write in Philippians 4:11-13 about how he learned to be content in all circumstances.

“Joy can be experienced in loss through the absolute certainty that Christ is with you, empowering you to make it through all things,” Christian said. “Joy provides the security needed when every-thing else crumbles beneath you.”

Matt Snowden, pastor of First Baptist Church in Waco, defined joy quite simply as “belonging to Jesus Christ.” He also pointed to the New Testament book of Philippians.

“Philippians is Paul’s epistle of joy. He wrote it in jail. How can joy and jail live together? Paul counted on the ‘help of the Spirit of Jesus Christ,’” Snowden said.

“Jesus has not changed. He understands. When he experienced the loss of his friend Lazarus he wept. We need to be honest about our pain. Jesus also called forth life. We experience joy when we serve others.”

Phil Christopher, pastor of First Baptist Church in Abilene, reflected on how joy enters the life of a person who has experienced loss.

“Joy comes through the healing of and leaving the regrets of the past. Joy comes in the combined gifts of hope and peace as we have hope for the future and peace in the promise of ‘God with us’ in everything. Joy is a gift of grace and often comes as a surprise we never expected,” Christopher said.

“Joy is experienced in loss through the gift of memory. Even though the memories might still be tender and bring tears, the memories bring an abiding joy. We might lose something or someone of significance, but the loss cannot take away the relationship, the shared experiences and the deep memories.”

Joy can be a byproduct of endurance for Christians who persevere through life’s valleys—even “the valley of the shadow of death,” said Mark Bumpus, pastor of First Baptist Church in San Angelo. God provides sufficient light to walk out of the valley, he stressed.

“Not run out of the valley, … not stand paralyzed in the valley, but walk—some-times one methodical footstep placed in front of the other … through and out of the valley,” he said.

“It may be more perseverance that leads you out of the valley than joy, but ultimately there is joy because of the confidence we have in our faith in the resurrection and the fact that the shadow of death ultimately cannot harm us. … And ultimately, there is a way out. ‘Through’ implies movement and a way out. Maybe there is some joy in that.”

 




Christmas loss: How to help

Chaplain Mark Grace vice president of mission and ministry at Baylor Health Care System, offers suggestions to churches as they seek to minister to people who have sustained loss.

Facilitate communication. “Find ways to help your members talk about loss. And that means that the pastor has to talk about it from the pulpit in an emotionally and theologically responsible way,” he said.

However, he added, resist clichés such as “Have faith, and everything will be OK” or “Don’t ask, ‘Why me?’ Ask, ‘Why not me?’”

“Don’t talk about it if all you … (can offer are) … pat answers that ignore the truth of the biblical teaching,” Grace urged.

Give grieving people—and people who have worked through the grief process—time and space to voice their own experiences, he recommended.

“Let the grieving speak,” he said. “The most powerful witnesses to hope and faith are those in your own congregation who are recovering from their own losses, as evidenced by their having been able to reinvest in life, to talk about their loss with insight and without being overwhelmed by emotion.”

Offer service opportunities. “Provide ways for people in grief to serve others during the holiday season,” he said. “This usually doesn’t apply to people in the first three to six months after the death of a loved one, but it can be very meaningful for people searching for a way to both honor a loved one’s memory while building new holiday traditions and reinvesting in life.”

Develop a list of local resources. Seek out counselors certified in grief recovery. Discover grief support groups. If there is not a local group, consider starting a church-based grief support group. Chaplains—such as the pastoral care staff at Baylor Health Care System—can be valuable resources for congregations as they seek to launch grief support groups, Grace added.

 

 




Christmas on Fifth Street lights up Baylor campus

WACO—Christmas on Fifth Street brought more than 8,000 people to the Baylor University campus Dec. 2 for a live nativity scene, musical performances, carriage rides, a petting zoo, pictures with Santa and the 45th annual Kappa Omega Tau tree lighting ceremony.

The handbell choir from Columbus Avenue Baptist Church in Waco performed as a part of Christmas on Fifth Street.

“We were pleased with the attendance and the way the event unfolded,” said Michael Riemer, associate director of student activities at Baylor. “We offered some new things that we’ve not offered in the past.”

This year’s event included ice skating on Fountain Mall and caroling by the Baylor department of modern foreign languages, as well as a performance by Mandisa, ninth-place finalist in season five of American Idol, who joined the Baylor Religious Hour Choir for their “Cocoa, Cookies and Carols” concert.

“Performing with Mandisa can only be described as electric,” said Ryan Anderson, Baylor senior and program coordinator for the concert. “The energy she brought to the stage was contagious, and it was hard for anyone in the audience to even sit down. … Singing with her will probably go into my top three memories of being a Baylor student. Mandisa loves the Lord, and her spirit and encouragement was something the choir will not quickly forget.”

The 45th annual Kappa Omega Tau tree lighting ceremony—along with numerous musical performances—drew a huge crowd to the Baylor University campus for Christmas on Fifth Street. (PHOTOS/BAYLOR)

A live nativity scene in front of the Bill Daniel Student Center on the Baylor University campus drew attention during the annual Christmas on Fifth Street celebration.

The purpose of the concert was to raise awareness of Baylor Religious Hour’s international mission trip to Ghana, where the choir will work with the ministry OneWay, singing at churches schools and hospitals.

Other Christmas on Fifth performers included The Kappa Pickers, Scott & Clare, the handbell choir from Columbus Avenue Baptist Church in Waco, Phil Wickham and Matt Wertz.

Kappa Omega Tau used the tree-lighting event as a fund-raiser to generate support for the Mocha Club charity’s educational project, which funds job training centers in schools in Kenya and South Africa.

Events like Christmas on Fifth are what endear people to Baylor, Riemer said.

“It’s programs like these that students experience over the years that connect them back to the university and connect them to other alums and to people who will come to Baylor after them,” Reimer said.

 

 




Forgiveness for black church arsons theme of new drama

WASHINGTON (RNS)—For playwright Marcus Gardley, the theater is his pulpit, and plays are his sermons.

His latest production, Every Tongue Confess, seeks answers to the questions that swirled around the spate of arsons that hit black churches in the South in the 1990s.

“How deep does your forgiveness go?” Gardley asks in an interview. “Do you have the capacity to forgive someone, even if they burn down the church?”

Phylicia Rashad stars in Every Tongue Confess at Washington’s Arena Stage. (RNS PHOTO/Courtesy of Joan Marcus/Arena Stage)

As a high school senior, Gardley, now 32, would rush home to check the latest news on the fires between reports on the O.J. Simpson murder trial.

“That decade, 300 churches burned in the South. Three hundred,” he said. “I thought, well, why is that not getting at least the amount of coverage (as the Simpson trial) or more? They haven’t found the people that are burning these churches. Why is this not considered a big deal?”

Actress Phylicia Rashad, best known for her role as Clair Huxtable on The Cosby Show, portrays Mother Sister, the preacher of a church in Boligee, Ala., whose members fear the next arson could hit them.

Her character echoes Gardley’s sentiments as the church faces the fires that burn around and within them.

“Three hundred churches have burned in the last 10 years, and the government ain’t done nothin’ but turned its back,” Mother Sister preaches. “They can’t see that our church is all we got. It’s where we baptize our babies, marry our young’uns, bury our dead. It’s where we embrace God.”

The play, commissioned by Washington’s Arena Stage, premiered Nov. 9 and is scheduled to run through Jan. 2.

Rashad called the play “epic” in its treatment of broad themes of recognition and forgiveness that transcend beyond the arsons that shook the South a decade and a half ago.

“The church burnings, yes, that’s a very big part of it, but it’s more about what’s going on in people that leads to church burning,” she said in an interview. “How is it that you profess love for God but can’t accept another human being?”

As he researched the fires, Gardley was struck by the news accounts of Timothy Welch, a member of the Ku Klux Klan who was convicted of burning two churches. Years earlier, he had sat outside a church he later torched, listening to the service inside.

“He didn’t realize he had community all along,” said Gardley, who believed the church should have been his community instead of the Klan.

The playbill includes a note of forgiveness from a burned church’s pastor to Welch.

Rashad and Gardley compared the outreach to rebuild the churches, which spanned racial and regional lines, to the play’s message about discovering how people are more alike than they are different.

“I felt like the big message of the play is these are all our churches,” said Gardley, the son and nephew of ministers.

Rashad said the play aims to build human, not just racial, understanding, commenting: “I think the real understanding comes when we recognize our humanity in each other. That’s not just between blacks and whites. That’s between all religions as well.”

Clocking in at just under two hours, Every Tongue Confess captures the ethos of the black church, with recordings of gospel artist Shirley Caesar, a tambourine-playing black woman and a white female soloist who comforts Rashad’s character with a stirring rendition of “His Eye is on the Sparrow.”

As his characters struggle with interracial relationships, lynchings and dreams of a better life in the big city, Gardley demonstrates how interconnected they all are.

Their names invoke both the church and the fires around them: Gossiping church members are called Brother and Elder. Mother Sister’s son, Shadrack, and Benny Pride, the daughter of an arsonist, are plays on the names of Shadrach and Abednego, two of the three men who survived the fiery furnace in the Old Testament book of Daniel.

As the title implies, every character has a confession to make. And as the fires grow, they do.

Gardley said the play was shaped by his experience as a teenager attending a Foursquare Gospel church in Oakland, Calif., where the words of Martin Luther King Jr. hit home.

“What I learned at the church is more about the power of diversity,” he said, “and about what it really means to accept people for the content of their character.”

 

 




Charity warns: beware of holiday debt

BRADFORD, England (ABP) — A Christian debt-counseling charity in the United Kingdom is calling on people to avoid using credit cards and loans to pay for their Christmas shopping this year.

Christians Against Poverty, a ministry that advocates poverty relief through debt counseling advice and practical help, warned Nov. 25 that poor Christmas shopping habits can burden families with significant debt.

Bad habits and compulsive purchasing as part of Christmas shopping can burden families with significant debt, according to Christians Against Poverty, a ministry that advocates poverty relief through debt counseling advice and practical help. (RNS photo by Aaron Houston/The Star-Ledger)

Matt Barlow, the charity's chief executive officer, said tough economic times can tempt shoppers to rationalize "at least we'll have a great Christmas" and use that as an excuse to overspend.

"If you've already caught yourself saying this, we want your alarm bells to be ringing loud and clear," Barlow said in a press release.

The charity's research has found that half of homes with out-of-control debt have at some time taken out a loan to cover the cost of Christmas. That's likely to get worse, Barlow said, as economic uncertainties continue into the New Year.

"We're not party poopers," he said. "We just want people to enjoy Christmas and not be anxious about whether they will be able to pay it all back."

CNBC has reported research finding that a record 43 percent of American shoppers plan to spend less for Christmas this year than they spent in 2009, compared to 11 percent who plan to spend more. 

Christians Against Poverty suggested 10 ideas for avoiding holiday debt:

1. Decide what you have to spend. Make a list and be realistic. Paying in cash may help you keep control.

2. Manage expectations early. If things are tight don't be afraid to say so to family members. They are probably in the same boat.

3. Suggest that relatives pool expenses to buy children gifts they want instead of overindulging them individually.

4. Substitute expensive decorations with things like paper chains and cookies that add to the fun without costing much.

5. Never take out a Christmas loan. The consequences could be disastrous in terms of family debt.

6. Give vouchers for services like ironing or baby sitting instead of buying them. Homemade gifts like cookies and fudge show you've spent time and care.

7. Don't feel guilty if you can't afford the latest present for your children. You can't buy love, and it lasts longer in the memory than any toy.

8. Avoid the trap of reciprocal gift giving and buying out of obligation.

9. Don't overspend in the January sales, no matter how good a bargain you might see. Make a budget and stick with it. If possible leave the credit cards at home.

10. Enjoy low-cost entertainment like lights in town, family board games and holiday programs at churches and schools.

Sam Brink, minister of church resources and mission support for American Baptist Churches of Wisconsin, proposed another checklist after the holiday season is over.

— "Was my Christmas experience one of good news for me and for those around me?

— "Do I feel comfortable today with the amount of money that I/we spent over the Christmas holidays?

— "What of myself did I give away this Christmas?

— "Did I/we have a Christmas spending plan and did I/we stick to it?

— "Did it really feel more blessed to give than to receive?

— "What do I/we need to do this year to make sure [next] Christmas will be different?

— "How did my/our church help me/us to celebrate Christmas in a financial healthy way?"

 

–Bob Allen is senior writer for Associated Baptist Press.




Texas Tidbits

ETBU council considers vision. The East Texas Baptist University centennial council held its first meeting to develop a vision of how ETBU best may fulfill its mission over the next 25 years. The university invited 100 alumni, faculty, staff, students, trustees and friends of ETBU to form the council. The group’s mission is to “investigate the strengths and challenges of the institution, consider where we have come from over the past 100 years as well as the current context of Christian higher education, draw conclusions about the best direction for the future growth and development of the university, and recommend how we might advance that vision,” ETBU President Dub Oliver said. Members of the centennial council are organized into six working groups—mission, academic program, students and student life, church and society, resources, and leadership and governance. The council is scheduled to meet again April 7-8 and Sept. 15-16 before presenting its report and recommendations to the school’s board of trustees in November 2011.

Foundation awards $4.8 million in grants. Baptist Health Foundation of San Antonio recently announced 76 grants totaling $4,825,574 for health-related programs to organizations in the eight-county region around San Antonio. Since 2005, the foundation has awarded 390 grants totaling about $25.5 million. Baptist recipients this year included: Baptist Health System School of Health Professions, $548,790 for 623 scholarships; Baptist Health System clinical pastoral education, $10,500 for 35 scholarships; Wayland Baptist University, $19,000 for 12 scholarships; Oakwood Baptist Church in New Braunfels, $25,000 for a counseling center; Baptist Temple Church in San Antonio, $7,500 for a community health fair; Canaan Missionary First Baptist Church in San Antonio, $7,500 for Canaan Cares; First Baptist Church of Bandera, $7,500 for playground equipment; and True Vine Baptist Church in San Antonio, $7,500 for its Health Trackers program. Baptist Health Foundation of San Antonio was established in September 2004 from sale proceeds of Baptist Health System to Vanguard Health Systems.

Discipleship discount available. The Baptist General Convention of Texas has partnered with NavPress to offer discipleship materials to churches at a discounted rate. By using the discount code D12L24QB6, Texas Baptist congregations can receive a 10 percent discount on discipleship materials. A portion of the money used to buy materials also will be invested into Texas Baptist ministries. To order from NavPress, call (800) 366-7788 or visit www.navpress.com

BCFS, UTSA help foster care youth. Only 2 percent of foster care youth in Texas earn a college degree, but Baptist Child & Family Services and the University of Texas at San Antonio are teaming up to help young people make the transition from foster care to higher education. With the help of a $600,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, BCFS and UTSA will provide enrollment and financial aid information, leadership training and housing support to prospective college students served by BCFS’ San Antonio Transition Center. The center is a one-stop-shop for resources to help foster and at-risk youth as they enter adulthood. The center offers life-skills training, job placement, counseling and educational support.

Journal honors HBU. First Things, the journal of the Institute on Religion & Public Life, recognized Houston Baptist University in two categories during a special issue on higher education. Journal editors asked, “Is there anywhere to go to college in the United States today where you’ll get a socially useful diploma, you’ll have the chance of getting an actual education, and you won’t get your faith beaten out of you?” After collecting information on more than 2,000 schools, HBU ranked No. 3 in the “Schools on the Rise, Filled with Excitement” category and No. 11 in “Seriously Protestant Schools.”

Foundation awards prize to BCFS. The San Antonio board of the BKD Foundation presented $10,000 to Baptist Child & Family Services, naming the agency the recipient of its second annual Community PRIDE (Passion, Respect, Integrity, Discipline and Excellence) award.

 

 




On the Move

Kerry Horn to First Church in Eagle Lake as pastor.

Joe Loughlin has completed an interim pastorate at First Church in Corsicana.

Jonathan Raffini to First Church in Big Spring as minister to students.

Danny Reeves to First Church in Corsicana as pastor from First Church in Edna.

Chris Tucker to First Church in Quitaque as pastor.

Milton Tyler to First Church in Sonora as interim pastor.

 




Around the State

• The B.H. Carroll Theological Institute will hold an open house at its new office location at 301 S. Center, Suite 100, in Arlington from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Dec. 14.

Dallas Baptist University will present 503 degrees to students during winter commencement ceremonies Dec. 17. Included will be 284 undergraduate degrees, 216 master’s degrees and three doctoral degrees. Dallas Mayor Tom Leppert will be the keynote speaker for the morning ceremony, while Norman Blackaby, professor of biblical studies at DBU, will speak at the afternoon graduation.

• Leroy Kemp, professor of Christian studies at the University of Mary Hardin-Baylor, will present “George Whitfield: Pioneer Evangelist” at the Jan. 13 ministers’ forum on the UMHB campus. The noon meeting is free, and participants are encouraged to bring a lunch.

• John Meier, assistant director of music at The Church of St. John the Divine in Houston, will be the featured organist at a Feb. 4 organ recital at Houston Baptist University. The 30-minute recital will begin at noon.

• Epsilon Pi Alpha, a service fraternity at Hardin-Simmons University, joined with Abilene firefighters to sell T-shirts to raise funds for breast cancer research. The group sold about 200 shirts and presented a check for $3,050 to the firefighters. A softball tournament whose winner played the HSU baseball team raised more than $2,000, which was donated to the Alliance for Women and Children to help provide breast cancer screenings.

Howard Payne University’s moot court team competed in two recent competitions. In a competition of 46 teams from 13 schools held at Texas Wesleyan Law School, all five HPU teams placed in the top 17, with four teams advancing to the round of eight finalists. The top HPU team took second place. Robert Davis, a senior from Universal City, was named the top speaker of the tournament. At their next tournament at Texas Tech Uni-versity, all five teams advanced the round of eight, and three teams made it to the final four. Davis was named second-best individual speaker at the tournament.

East Texas Baptist University’s football and baseball fields have been named fields of the year by the Texas Turfgrass Association. This is the second consecutive year for the baseball field to be recognized.

Anniversaries

• Iglesia El Buen Pastor in Fort Worth, 50th, Oct. 17. Robert Arrubla is pastor.

• Ferguson Road Church in Dallas, 60th, Dec. 12. Wayne Wible is pastor.

• James Miller, 30th, as pastor of The Heights Church in San Angelo, Jan. 18. A celebration will be held during the 10:45 a.m. service Jan. 16. John Hatch will be the keynote speaker. A luncheon will follow.

Retiring

• Gene Meacham, as director of missions of Caprock Plains Baptist Area, Jan. 31. He was pastor of three Texas churches—Dawn Church in Dawn, First Church in Ropesville and First Church in Hale Center. He and his wife, Lavonne, were missionaries with the Foreign Mission Board, serving from 1975 to 1985 in Malawi and Transkei, now part of South Africa. He has been director of missions for Caprock Plains Area 10 years. He also has served on the Executive Board of the Baptist General Convention of Texas and has been a trustee at Wayland Baptist University.

Deaths

• L.D. Monical, 76, Nov. 19 in Lake Jackson. After serving several years as a deacon at First Church in Lake Jackson, he was interim pastor of more than a dozen area churches. In 1967, he became pastor of Holiday Lakes Church in Angleton, where he served more than 20 years. He is survived by his wife of 52 years, Deanna; son, Marcus; daughter, Marty Lynn Dunn; brother, Harold, and five grandchildren.

• Glen Godsey, 86, Nov. 20 in Plainview. He served in the U.S. Army in World War II and received a Purple Heart medal. He was a 1952 graduate of Wayland Baptist University. After his ordination at First Church in Plainview in 1949, his ministry has been directed toward Hispanics. He was pastor of Mexican Mission in Plainview, Mision la Trinidad in Olton and Primera Iglesia Mexicana in Plainview. He also served on the associational staffs of Tierra Blanca Association, Big Bend Association and Permian Basin Association prior to joining Caprock Plains. He was preceded in death by his wife of 65 years by one month. He is survived by his son, Lynn; daughters, Yolanda Rodriguez, Corina Cavaness and Betty Godsey; brothers, W.P. and Clyde; sister, Margaret Stout; six grandchildren; and eight great-grandchildren.

• Jim Byrd, 73, Nov. 23 in Dallas. He was a professor and pastor, serving churches in Arkansas, Oklahoma, Texas and Germany. He also served as vice president of the Texas Baptist Missions Foundation. He was preceded in death by his brother, John; sister, Marie; and infant daughter, Kimberly. He is survived by his wife of 51 years, Wencie; sons, Scott, Lance and Bart; brother, Bill; sisters, Alice and Lela Mae; and five grandchildren.

• Sadie Jo Black, 80, Dec. 5 in Waco. She was an alumnus and retired professor of Baylor University. She supported the university and its students through endowments to beautify the campus and scholarships to support the education of students. She graduated from Baylor in 1950, and returned to the campus as an assistant professor of home economics, where she retired in 1992 after 35 years of service. For her exemplary service and philanthropy to Baylor, she was awarded the James Huckins and Pat Neff medallions within the Baylor University Medallion Fellowship. In 2010, she received the Baylor Legacy Award. She was a member of First Church in Waco.

Ordained

• Justin Perez, to the ministry at New Life Church in Beeville.

• Caleb Hixon to the ministry at First Church in White Settlement.

• Frank Burg as a deacon at Friendship Church in Abilene.

 




NAMB trustee resigns

CUMMING, Ga. (ABP) — A trustee has resigned from the Southern Baptist Convention’s North American Mission Board saying he does not share the vision of the agency’s new president.

“I believe that throughout my life, and particularly as I’ve gotten older, that it’s very important to take your body where your heart is,” Lester Cooper, pastor of Concord Baptist Church in Cumming, Ga., told church members Nov. 28. “If you’ve got your body somewhere where your heart’s not, that just not where it ought to be.”

Lester Cooper

“I just wanted to share with you this morning — for whatever it’s worth to anybody — that this past week I resigned as trustee of the North American Mission Board,” he said.

Cooper added in an interview with Associated Baptist Press that “My heart is not with the North American Mission Board.”

Cooper, former director of missions of the Atlanta Association of Southern Baptist Churches elected as a NAMB trustee in 2008, said watching changes made since the election Sept. 14 of Kevin Ezell as the agency’s president “is not what I signed on for.”

On Sept. 30 Ezell announced an early retirement incentive for employees age 54 and over. The goal is to reduce staff by a net 25 percent by year-end, including new people brought in by Ezell.

Cooper said he agrees with the strategy of focusing on church planting in urban areas with large populations but doesn’t think the way to do it is by losing senior staff members recognized as leading experts in the field.

“I can’t imagine how you can see 80 people leave an organization that has 260 people in it and have any idea of how you are going to function or come to the conclusion of who is going to go before you have been there two months,” Cooper said. “It’s not reasonable, and I cannot get a satisfactory answer from anybody where we are going.”

He also said that since a Great Commission Task Force report adopted by the Southern Baptist Convention calls for a restructuring of NAMB within seven years, he doesn’t understand why decisions are being handed down so quickly and without vote by the board of trustees.

Cooper, 64, said if he were to serve out his term and be re-elected he would be a NAMB trustee until he was 70 and that at that age “I don’t need any more stress in my life.”

“I do not really see the direction I see it going in as being something that I think is helpful,” he said. “I don’t think that I should stay and stand in the way of what others think need to be done.”

Cooper said three NAMB staff members taking the early retirement option are members of his church.

“I’ve never seen anything like it,” said Cooper, a pastor for more than 30 years with a long record of denominational service. “It’s a new day for Southern Baptists, and I really don’t know what it looks like.”

Ezell said in a statement Dec. 8 that he admires Cooper and appreciates the service he has given as a member of the board of trustees. Ezell said the timing of the voluntary retirement incentive package was driven primarily by changes being implemented by Guidestone Financial Resources.

“The package we offered was as generous as we could make it and we are also providing employment assistance for those who are seeking work after leaving NAMB,” Ezell said. “These reductions are driven by my firm belief that we need to send more resources to the North American mission field.”

Ezell said just over two months on the job he is moving forward as quickly as he can.

“We haven’t shared details of a new direction yet because we are still in the important phase of meeting with and listening to our state partners,” he said. “We will have a clearer direction to share after NAMB’s next board of trustees meeting in February.”

 

–Bob Allen is senior writer for Associated Baptist Press.

Related ABP stories:

Update: Ezell elected NAMB president on split vote (9/15)

Ezell elected NAMB president (9/14)

NAMB presidential nominee defends church’s giving record (9/13)

La. Baptist Convention exec challenges Ezell pick at NAMB (9/9)

Al Mohler’s pastor recommended as new NAMB president (9/2)




Baylor parents bond over call to prayer

WACO—While her children attended Fort Bend Baptist Academy in Sugar Land, Evelyn Janssen already was in the habit of gathering weekly with fellow parents to pray for their children, teachers and school.

Once Janssen’s children, Hayley and Corbin, moved on to college at Baylor University, she found a natural extension of that call to prayer through the Fort Bend chapter of the Baylor Parents League.

Baylor parents Robin and Ricky Baker are actively involved in “First Call to Prayer” as part of the northeast Tarrant County chapter of the Baylor Parents League.

Each month, 67 groups of Baylor parents from Los Angeles to Washington, D.C., Minneapolis to the Rio Grande Valley, meet together for “First Call to Prayer,” blanketing the Baylor campus in prayer and bringing peace of mind to participants.

“It’s been such a gift to be able meet together and pray for the kids,” said Janssen, whose family attends Sugar Creek Baptist Church in Sugar Land. “It’s such a support for the parents, especially those of freshmen. Our kids even look forward to it. They give us lists of things they would like for us to pray about for them. For the kids to know that all the parents are praying is really special.”

Judy Maggard, director of the Parents League at Baylor, said the Parents League creates a network of parents who receive encouragement and support from each other through shared experiences. As one of many activities, the League’s call to prayer allows Baylor parents to “stand in the gap” for Baylor students, faculty and administrators through monthly prayer and fellowship.

Maggard said the First Call to Prayer has three objectives:

• Encourage, support and gain strength from other parents as they spend time talking with God about the needs of the students, faculty and administrators.

• Unite with individuals who are not able to join the group physically but will join online to pray at the same time

• Gain peace of mind in knowing each student is blessed with prayer.

As the fall semester winds down at Baylor, many Parents League chapters throughout the country combine taking care of their children’s spiritual as well as physical needs. The Keller home of Jim and Lori Horvath was loaded with healthy snacks and homemade treats for the Dec. 2 gathering of the northeast Tarrant County chapter of the Baylor Parents League. While parents assembled care packages for their students, roommates and friends, they focused their prayer time on their students’ health as they study for finals.

Baylor parents involved in the Boerne chapter of the Baylor Parents League met at the home of Debbie and Mark Littlestar for a combined First Call to Prayer/Boxing Party.

“Our December prayer was based on exams, covering heavily over health during exam time and flu season,” Lori Horvath said.

A mother of two Baylor graduates, Ryan and Daniel, and a Baylor junior, Garrett, Lori Horvath said the call to prayer has been invaluable to Baylor families.

“Even though our children may be from different walks of life on the Baylor campus, their common denominator is that all of their moms and dads get together every month and pray for them,” Lori Hovath said. “We give such thanks that there’s a place like Baylor that stands firm on that commitment and doesn’t waver and continues it in their Parents League with First Call to Prayer.”

 

 




Harry Potter presents a gospel narrative, professor says

AUSTIN—A bespectacled teenaged wizard with a lightning-shaped scar on his forehead may not fit most people’s picture of Christ, but Christian pop culture observer Greg Garrett definitely sees the similarities.

“Harry Potter is one of the most clearly identifiable examples of a Christ figure in contemporary fiction,” said Garrett, English professor at Baylor University and author of the recently released book, One Fine Potion: The Literary Magic of Harry Potter .

Baylor professor Greg Garrett says Harry Potter is one of the most clearly identifiable examples of a Christ figure in contemporary fiction.

“I came to Harry Potter not as a theological project initially, but first as a parent,” said Garrett, who also is a novelist and writer-in-residence at the Episcopal Theological Seminary of the Southwest in Austin. “My son, who is 13 now, started reading the series at age 7, and I was interested and concerned.”

Like many Christians, Garrett had seen some of the viral e-mails labeling the Harry Potter series as a gateway into the occult, designed to lead young readers into a fascination with witchcraft and sorcery. But, to his delight, he discovered something altogether surprising.

“As I started reading the books and watching the movies, I began to notice a lot of affinity to the Christian faith,” said Garrett, who previously has written explorations of spirituality and Christian themes in the Matrix movie series, comic books and the music of U2.

His suspicions became confirmed when author J.K. Rowling wrapped up the final book in the seven-volume series, and she finally spoke openly in several interviews about her Christian faith. She went so far as to say she had hesitated to talk about her faith previously because it would have made the series’ conclusion too obvious to discerning readers.

“If she says she is a Christian, and I see no reason not to take her at her word, we can take it seriously when Christian themes appear in her writing,” Garrett said.

The overarching theme—introduced in the first book when readers learn how Harry’s mother gave her own life to save her son from the evil Voldemort—concerns the power of self-sacrificial love.

“Self-sacrificial love is the ‘Deeper Magic,’ to use a C.S. Lewis term, that makes it possible for Harry to become a Savior figure,” Garrett said.

Rowling follows in the footsteps of Christian writers such as Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien who used fantasy as a vehicle for communicating themes shaped by their faith, he observed.

“I see her as having more affinity with Tolkien,” whose Lord of the Rings trilogy dealt with broad Christian themes, rather than Lewis and his Chronicles of Narnia series that clearly could be read as a Christian allegory, Garrett said.

“Rowling has expressed her great love for Lewis, but she has said she didn’t set out to do what he did with Narnia,” he said. “She’s a Christian writer telling a compelling story informed by her faith and beliefs. It’s not written to save souls, but it is written with Christian resonances.”

One subtle theme Garrett sees developed in the series concerns ecclesiology—“how groups of people are driven together on a common mission.” The three friends—Harry, Ron and Hermione—demonstrate a type of Christian community, and Garrett sees the Hogwarts School as similar to the church.

“Hogwarts is a place where every member is necessary, even the ones with whom we disagree,” he said.

The series also deals with issues of free will, moral choice and the transformational power of self-sacrifice. While some Christian themes may be subtle, as the series develops—leading to an apocalyptic ending in the final installment, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows —they become more explicitly Christian, he said.

“It is the clearest contemporary retelling of the gospel story I have come across,” Garrett said.




Ousted Rep. Chet Edwards recounts religious-liberty fight

WASHINGTON (ABP) — Early on in his House tenure, someone lit a religious-liberty fire under Rep. Chet Edwards — and, despite Edwards’ position in the most Republican House district in the country to be represented by a Democrat, that fire never burned him.

Although the self-described “husband of a Baptist preacher’s daughter” has represented a very conservative and rural part of Central Texas for nearly 20 years while simultaneously and outspokenly advocating for strict church-state separation in Congress, he never suffered any significant political damage from his stances on religion. What finally did the 59-year-old in last month is the same anti-incumbent, anti-government wave that upended virtually all moderate and conservative Democrats representing “red” districts this year.

Outoing Rep. Chet Edwards (D-Texas) has earned a reputation as a staunch, if unlikely, defender of church-state separation in Congress. (Photo courtesy Edwards\' office)

“I never lost an election over this issue,” Edwards said in a Dec. 2 interview from his House Appropriations subcommittee office. “My defeat in 2010 was more about national politics and the nation’s unemployment rate than it was about church-state.”

But even if he had finally lost his seat (which he held onto even after Lone Star State Republicans re-drew district lines in 2005 specifically to oust him) over his defense of church-state separation, Edwards said, it would have been worth it.

“If you’re not willing to lose an election over important principles, then you don’t deserve to ever win an election,” he said. “And church-state separation has always been an issue that I was more than willing to lose over, because I know there are a lot of people throughout the world who have sacrificed more than elections in their defense of religious freedom.”

Inspired by Reynolds and Truett

Although Edwards still officially lists himself as a Methodist in congressional biographies, he has long attended Baptist churches — Calvary Baptist Church when he is at home in Waco, Texas; and McLean Baptist Church in Washington’s Northern Virginia suburbs. He credits a Baptist university president and a famous Baptist preacher’s sermon with inspiring in him a deep passion for religious liberty and church-state separation.

“About 15 years ago, Herb Reynolds and I were having lunch together … and we started talking about church-state issues and he sent me a copy of George Truett’s speech on the steps of the Capitol in 1920 on religious liberty,” he said. “And after I read that speech, I was hooked.”

At the time Reynolds, who died in 2007, was president of Baylor University. Truett, legendary pastor of the First Baptist Church in Dallas from 1897 to 1944, delivered his famous Capitol-steps speech to Southern Baptist Convention messengers, meeting in Washington in 1920, extolling religious liberty.

“That utterance of Jesus, ‘Render therefore unto Caesar the things which are Caesar's, and unto God the things that are God's,’ is one of the most revolutionary and history-making utterances that ever fell from those lips divine,” Truett said in one of the most-quoted portions of his speech. “That utterance, once for all, marked the divorcement of church and state. It marked a new era for the creeds and deeds of men. It was the sunrise gun of a new day, the echoes of which are to go on and on and on until in every land, whether great or small, the doctrine shall have absolute supremacy everywhere of a free church in a free state.”

Reynolds’ advice and Truett’s words helped convince Edwards of church-state separation’s paramount importance in safeguarding religious freedom.

“What was so clear to me in Truett’s speech was the idea that religious freedom was a divine gift, and it is sacrilegious to infringe … on that freedom,” he said.

But Edwards didn’t see many of his fellow moderate-to-conservative Democrats in Congress talking much about church-state issues.

“I started asking around in the House and found very few members who had focused on this issue. And I decided somebody has to speak up — and that we need voices that come not just from the ACLU and other liberal organizations,” he said. “We need moderate and conservative voices speaking out in defense of church-state separation — because, after all, it is a very conservative principle, the idea that religion should be put on a pedestal high enough to be beyond the reach of politicians or politics.”

Fight over school prayer

His first chance came quickly. In mid-1995, a House committee began having hearings on a proposed constitutional amendment, championed by then-Rep. Ernest Istook (R-Okla.), to make room for “student-sponsored” prayer in public schools as well as “acknowledgements of the of the religious heritage, belief or traditions of the people.” Edwards became one of its most outspoken opponents, and it eventually the amendment was derailed.

For his role in stopping Istook's efforts, Edwards earned the scorn of the Christian Coalition. They distributed a brochure to voters in his district accusing the young congressman of being un-American — and, even worse, un-Texan — for his opposition to the amendment.

“And I thought how odd it is that I can be accused of being un-American because I was defending the Bill of Rights,” he said.

Edwards went on to weigh in repeatedly in favor of strict church-state separation in fights over things like public display of the Ten Commandments and government funding for religious charities.

He’s been given religious-liberty awards by several Baptist organizations, including the board of directors of Associated Baptist Press.

On social issues other than religious liberty, though, Edwards has often been criticized from the left. Gay-rights groups give him poor marks while the National Rifle Association rates him highly. He opposed the health-care-reform bill that President Obama signed earlier this year.

Islam and the future

In September, Edwards took some hits from friends in the religious-liberty community for issuing a statement opposing a controversial Islamic community center planned for a site a few blocks away from the former World Trade Center location in Lower Manhattan.

But Edwards said his opposition was a matter of prudence rather than the law.

“I tried to be very clear in my statement that I believe that Muslims have the right to build mosques or community centers where any other faith has the right to build such a house of worship or center,” he said. "I felt that, given some of the far-right talk-show discussions and the environment in the country, that this would actually push us backwards in terms of rights for Muslims,” he said.

Edwards believes the ongoing controversy over the site has proven his fears right. “That whole debate created a backlash against Muslims in this country and we need less of that, not more of that,” he said.

The rights of Muslims may be the next big test of religious liberty in the United States, he contended — and that fits in with a pattern in American history of threatening the rights of unpopular religious minorities.

“The pathway to losing religious liberty begins not by inhibiting the rights of the majority but the rights of the minority,” he said. “Once that foundation — that foundation of religious liberty for every citizen — is undermined, then the foundation upon which we all stand is put at risk.”

While polls show that fiscal rather than social issues were important to the voters who put Republicans in charge of the House this time around, Edwards believes the culture wars will inevitably return to the fore in the 112th Congress.

“My guess would be that, if not in 2011, in the 2012 election year there will be a rash of bills introduced to not just chip away but tear down the wall of separation between church and state,” he warned.

Baptist advocates for church-state separation who have worked with Edwards over the years are lamenting his impending departure from Congress.

“Chet has been a dedicated public servant and a great friend of religious liberty,” said Brent Walker, executive director of the Baptist Joint Committee for Religious Liberty. “His long-standing commitment to the principle of religious liberty and willingness to speak out on its behalf served as a witness to other members of Congress, who counted on his voice on the issue.”
 

Related ABP stories:

Hundreds gather in Waco to honor late Baylor president Reynolds (5/31/2007)

In reauthorizing Head Start, House rejects religious discrimination (5/4/2007)