Even before classes begin, Texas Baptist students serve

Incoming freshmen at Texas Baptist universities were active in making a difference in their new found communities, even before they began classes.

Approximately 80 Howard Payne University students joined in communitywide efforts to clean up Lake Brownwood. They removed five tons of garbage from the lake that day.

More than 150 East Texas Baptist University students spent their last Saturday of the summer serving others in the Marshall community. ETBU students divided into 16 groups and performed a variety of service projects, both near campus and throughout the city of Marshall.

New students participated in S.M.A.S.H. (Students Making a Second Home) activities in order to be introduced to ETBU.

Blair Prevost, director of student activities, said: "Community service is an important tradition and part of college life at ETBU. Individual students, student organizations and various sports teams all intentionally incorporate this significant part of the Christian life into what they do. As such, we want to make sure we introduce the idea of service and community involvement to all our new students from the beginning of their time at ETBU."

While learning the culture and traditions of Dallas Baptist University during the school's Student Welcome and Trans-ition Week, students experienced servant leadership firsthand.

More than 150 new students volunteered to help with community service projects. Dallas Baptist University's Nikki Hixson was part of a team that served on a painting crew at Habitat for Humanity Dallas during the school's SWAT week.

More than 600 students participated in service projects at 19 local ministries and organizations across the DFW Metroplex.

The student projects ranged from stocking shelves in local food pantries and landscaping to playing with children and visiting with residents in a nursing home.

Approximately 80 Howard Payne University students joined with community organizations to work on four projects—the Corinne T. Smith Animal Center, Lake Brownwood, the Brownwood Area Community Garden and a historic home being renovated for use by the Heart of Texas Christian Women's Job Corps.

Thirty-five HPU students served the Christian Women's Job Corps by aiding in renovations to a two-story, historic home on Center Avenue.

East Texas Baptist University freshman Lauren Fedor of Canton painted a piece of playground equipment at William B. Travis Elementary School in Marshall.

"The students got us off to a good start," said Bettie Evans, director of the organization. "Several of the students were asking if they could come back and help some more, so we are looking forward to working with them in the future."

Incoming Baylor University freshmen did their project during orientation in July.

They partnered with the Texas Hunger Initiative and the Food Planning Task Force of McLennan County to canvass Waco neighborhoods to increase awareness and participation in the Summer Food Service Program to ensure all children had access to healthy and nutritious meals during their summer break from school.

Many children have little to eat when school is out.

 




Grieving parents learn lessons about trust from tragedy

LUBBOCK—In the Lubbock-Cooper school district, seniors teach a seminar on a topic of their choosing. Kelsey Vines' turn came Sept. 2, 2008.

Thom Vines appreciates the memorial garden dedicated to the memory of his daughter, Kelsey, created by her twin sister, Kayla, and members of her graduating class. (PHOTO/George Henson)

"You can lead the class on anything you want to, and she led the class on Matthew 6:34—which I don't think is a coincidence," said her father, Thom Vines. "It says, 'Don't worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will take care of itself.'"

A few hours later, Kelsey was killed. She was driving home from school when the steering controls on a 48,000-pound dump truck broke and hit the car she was driving.

Kayla, her twin sister, was sitting next to her, but her physical injuries were limited to an ankle and a few scrapes and bruises.

The days that followed were traumatic for all the members of the Vines family, as well as for Kelsey's boyfriend, John Michael Vestal.

Her father turned to Scripture to heal his broken heart and bruised faith.

"As much as anything in the past years and months, it's Proverbs 3:5 that I keep coming back to. We don't know why this happened. We certainly don't like that it happened. But we don't lean on our own understanding. We trust God," Vines said.

That deep-seated trust led Vines and Vestal to write a book, Tragedy and Trust: Can You Still Trust God After Losing a Child?

Vines describes Vestal as "without a doubt the single best human being I've ever met—a deep, deep abiding faith and rock solid."

While he is glad his daughter chose to spend her last 11 months of life in a relationship with such an exemplary young man, Vestal's character also is the source of some pain.

"Kelsey was already a Christian, but we watched her faith flower with him. And what they lost together, could have had together, that's part of the pain," he admitted.

Vestal's spiritual maturity beyond his years served as a steadying influence for Vines after his daughter's death. "After the accident, as much as anybody, he became my spiritual teacher," he said.

Vines wrestled with the question: "Why do you trust God?"

"I thought long and hard about this, and then I suddenly realized the answer was right there in front of me all the time. The reason we trust him is because he loves us," Vines said.

"Why does he love us? Because he created us, and we are his children. Just as I love my children, he loves us on an infinite scale.

"So, I can accept it. I don't understand why this happened —how this was part of his will. But I know he loves us, and therefore, for some reason I do not understand, this is the way it had to be."

Even so, Vines acknowledged he still misses his 18-year-old daughter, even after three years have passed.

"To be sure, there's still human grief. The first thing we think of each morning when we wake up is Kelsey. The last thing we think of at night is Kelsey. Every day I have one or two of what I call 'Kelsey moments.'

"Despite all that, we love our Lord, and that's what keeps us going. And I remind myself every day that I will see her again," he said. "We will always have grief. On this side of the grave, it will never be over, but what awaits us beyond is wonderful.

"The last three years have been the most horrible and most wonderful time of my life.

"The horrible is easily apparent—we lost our child, which for a parent is as bad as it gets. But the growth and the coming to the Lord and the joy we've found in that has been wonderful."

Becky Vines finds solace in knowing her daughter is in the arms of her Heavenly Father. She recalls stories that remind her of her daughter's faith.

One story is of a young man Kelsey offered a Bible to at the end of her junior year in high school.

He refused, but on the second day of school following the summer break, he asked Kelsey if he could still have the Bible.

Days later, he was at the visitation at the funeral home asking her family if they wanted it returned.

"I told him to wear it out," her father said.

Kelsey's parents agreed healing has been a process.

"I know where she is, and that gives me peace. I say, 'I know where you are, and I know you're safe and that I just can't call you on the phone.' And that's the way I have to handle it," her mother said.

For her father, a couple of dates mark his healing. The first is July 22, 2009.

"The accident site had always been the place where Kelsey died. … On July 22, it just popped into my mind, 'That's where Kelsey went to heaven.' Not where she died, but where she went to heaven.

"It took me 10 months, but that was a real turning point—when I was able to look at the place not as a negative, but a positive. I go by that spot nearly every day, and it's still painful, but it's also a place of hope," he said.

The second marker was last fall when he made contact with the driver and the owner of the dump truck to let them know of his forgiveness of them.

Vestal, now 22 and a teacher and coach in the Lubbock-Cooper school district, said the book allowed him to track the spiritual journey and see God's hand in his life.

"It's been cool to see how far God has taken us. It's three years later, and we're still here. God has a plan for our lives, and the plan God had for our lives did not stop. It continues on. The plan God had for our lives did not change at all," he said.

Just as all their lives have continued, her mother said, Kelsey lives on as well.

"People still send her Facebook messages: 'I got baptized today because of you.' Kids go on mission trips and tell her story, so she's still giving testimony for the Lord."

Figuring out why is not something Vines worries about anymore.

"We don't know, but we trust—that's the core of the book, the core of our experience," he said.

The book is available on Amazon.com as a paperback and an e-book.

 




Texas ranks second nationally in food insecurity

AUSTIN—Texas has the second-highest rate of hunger in the nation, the U. S. Department of Agriculture announced Sept. 7. And according to a new report sponsored in part by the Texas Hunger Initiative , hunger even exists in some of the state’s wealthiest counties.

According to USDA, 18.8 percent of Texas households, or one in five were at risk of hunger between 2008 and 2010.

Coming on the heels of the announcement, the Texas Food Bank Network, the Texas Hunger Initiative and First Choice Power released “Hunger by the Numbers: A Blueprint for Ending Hunger in Texas.”

The 508-page report includes a scorecard for each of the 254 counties in Texas, as well as recommended resources for funding and programs to fight at a local, statewide and national level.

“Hunger by the Numbers: A Blueprint for Ending Hunger in Texas” incorporates the newest national data on hunger made available by Feeding America, the nation’s network of food banks, along with U.S. Census data and statewide data on usage of federal and state programs.

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Baptist Global Relief

“As Texans read this report, they will learn some startling facts about the size of the hunger problem in their state, which currently ranks second-worst in the nation when it comes to hunger," said Jeremy Everett, executive director of the Texas Hunger Initiative, a partnership involving the Baylor University School of Social Work’s Center for Family and Community Ministries and the Texas Baptist Christian Life Commission .

“They also may be surprised to learn the extent of the hunger problems in their own back yards.”

In Harris County, where Houston is located, 18 percent of the people are food insecure. In Hidalgo County, in the lower Rio Grande Valley, the number is 24 percent.

Even Montgomery County, home to The Woodlands and some of the state’s most affluent ZIP codes, has a food insecurity rate of 15 percent, meaning one in seven residents is at risk of hunger.

For more information and to view each county’s hunger scorecard, visit www.firstchoicepower.com/HungerGapReport .




Texas Tidbits

ETBU awarded foundation grant. The Butterfield Memorial Foundation awarded a $50,000 grant to East Texas Baptist University. The grant from the Christian charitable foundation serving community health needs will fund scholarships for upper-level nursing students in the Frank S. Groner Endowed Memorial School of Professional Studies. ETBU nursing students who demonstrate a strong commitment to the Christian faith and see nursing as a means to use their gifts and skills as a ministry are eligible for Butterfield Memorial Foundation scholarships.

Tillman to direct theological education. The Baptist General Convention of Texas has tapped Bill Tillman, T.B. Maston Professor of Christian Ethics at Logsdon Seminary, to leads its theological education efforts. Tillman began on a part-time basis Aug. 16 while he completes his fall teaching schedule at Logsdon. He will begin serving as full-time director of theological education Jan. 1. Tillman has been the T.B. Maston Professor of Christian Ethics since 2000. He taught at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary from 1981 to 1997, first as an assistant professor and later as an associate professor. A longtime Texas Baptist leader on education and ethics, Tillman has served on numerous BGCT boards, including the Christian Education Coordinating Board and the Texas Baptist Christian Life Commission. He holds bachelor's and master's degrees from Southeastern State College, now Southeastern Oklahoma State University. He earned his doctorate from Southwestern Seminary.

Historical Society event slated for Amarillo. The Texas Baptist Historical Society will hold its annual fall meeting at 11 a.m. Oct. 24 in the Heritage Ballroom A1 of the Amarillo Civic Center. The luncheon meeting will include the election of officers, recognition of the history award winners, and a presentation on Mary Hill Davis by Jennifer Hawks, a student at Baylor University's Truett Theological Seminary. The cost of the luncheon is $10 payable at the door. For reservations, contact Autumn Hendon at the Texas Baptist Historical Collection, autumn.hendon@texasabaptists.org, (972) 331-2235. Deadline for reservations is Oct. 17, and seating is limited.

Baylor core curriculum makes "A" list. Baylor University was one of only 19 institutions nationwide to earn an "A" for its core curriculum, according to a report on the state of general education at the nation's colleges and universities from the American Council of Trustees and Alumni. No other Big 12 university and only three other Texas institutions made the "A" list. The study—posted at www.WhatWillTheyLearn.com— looked at curriculum offerings at 1,007 major public and private colleges and universities in all 50 states. Institutions are assigned a letter grade ranging from "A" to "F" based on how many of seven core subjects they require— composition, U.S. government or history, economics, literature, math, science and foreign language at an intermediate level.

 




On the Move

Benji Morrison to Mount Carmel Church in Whitehouse as student pastor.

Austin Stevenson to Calvary Church in Tyler as student pastor.

 




Around the State

Baptist University of the Américas will hold its fifth annual Eagle Run Oct. 15 to benefit Communities in Schools of San Antonio. Registration opens at 7 a.m., and the run will start at 9 a.m., which will begin and end on the BUA campus. Registra-tion before Oct. 15 is $15, but on the day of the race, registration is $25. BUA students and staff also are involved in the organization's mentoring program. A community health fair will follow the run. For more information, call (210) 924-4338, ext. 207.

Blake Killingsworth has been named vice president for communications at Dallas Baptist University. He previously served as an assistant to the president for 10 years. He is a member of First Church in Cedar Hill.

Hardin-Simmons University has added several new faculty members, including Jennifer Asbury, instructor of nursing; Bob Brooks, dean of the HSU School of Music and Fine Arts; Emily Dean, assistant professor of educational studies; Kerri Fisher, assistant professor of social work; Carrie Jones, assistant professor of art; Olivia King, instructor of nursing; Truby Miller, instructor of educational studies; John Reams, visiting professor of woodwinds; Jeremy Rhodes, assistant professor of sociology; Indira Tyler, associate professor of nursing; Janet Viola, associate professor of nursing; and Bryan Yorton, associate professor of philosophy.

Anniversaries

Bill Killion, 15th, as minister of music at First Church in College Station, Aug. 11.

First Church in Howardwick, 40th, Oct. 2. Coffee and doughnuts will be served from 9:30 a.m. to 10:15 a.m. Frankie Just, the church's first pastor, will be on hand. Other guests include Doug Dubose, Genoa Goad, Bryan Knowles, Bob Miller, Jim Powell and Robert Griffin. A lunch will be followed by a service at 1:45 p.m. David Stout is pastor.

Tarrant Association, 125th, Oct. 14. A part of the anniversary celebration will be Faith in Action service weekends set for Oct. 14-16 and Oct. 21-23.

Death

Herb Weaver, 76, Aug. 30 in Tulsa, Okla. A graduate of Baylor University, he was active in Royal Ambassadors. He served five churches as an RA counselor for a total of 16 years. He worked with Dallas Association to coordinate the wilderness program at Camp Chuala. In 1980, he became RA director for Union Association, directing the leadership training camp from 1982 until 2002. He served as Region 14 director for Texas Baptist Men, and RA/Challengers director and Baptist Men on Missions coordinator for UBA. He co-authored the book 100 Years of Royal Ambassadors. He was a member of South Main Church in Houston. He is survived by his sister, Jana King.

Dick Baker, 84, Sept. 5 in Dallas. He was a 1950 graduate of Baylor University, his years as a student there interrupted by his voluntary service in the U.S. Navy during the end of World War II. While a student at Baylor, he was a part of the youth revival movement as a music leader and soloist. He began the Baylor Religious Hour Choir that remains an active choir today. He also cowrote the Baylor Fight Song. While attending South-western Seminary, he was minister of music at Birchman Avenue Church in Fort Worth. He left there in 1956 to begin a ministry of music evangelism. He was a member of the Billy Graham Crusade teams in Akron, Ohio, and Madison Square Garden in New York City. Soon after, he joined with his brother, BO, as an evangelistic team. They traveled the United States and the globe preaching the gospel through word and song. When his brother returned to the pastorate in 1973, Baker continued his music evangelism ministry and also served as vice president of Crescendo Music Publications and music coordinator for World Evangelism. In 1980, he became the first minister of music at Prestonwood Church in Dallas. The church grew from 75 members to more than 6,000 over the next 12 years that he served there. He retired from Prestonwood in 1992 and returned to music evangelism until 2007. He began composing songs in 1947 and continued writing until earlier this year, most written with his brother. More than 300 of his songs were published. His accolades include an honorary doctorate from Dallas Baptist Univer-sity and the establishment of the Richard Baker Chair of Music Missions and Evangelism at Southwestern Seminary. He also received the George W. Truett Award for Distinguished Service and the the L.R. Scarbrough Award from the seminary. He was preceded in death by his wife, Ann, and brother, BO. He is survived by his son, Paul; daughter, Lori Simmons; and four grandchildren.

Event

The second annual Women Leading Women Conference will be held at Pinecrest Church in Silsbee Oct. 8. Rhonda Kelley will be the keynote speaker. Registration begins at 8:30 a.m. Breakout sessions will include "Reach Women for Christ," "Nurture Women in their Faith," "Involve Women in Kingdom Work," "Support the Church Family" and "Engage the Next Generation." The cost of the conference is $20 until Oct. 1 and $25 if paid after that date. The cost includes lunch. For more information, call (409) 656-7589.

 




As wildfires rage, Texas Baptists minister to hurting neighbors

BASTROP—When Leticia Lybarger learned her house burned to the ground, she was devastated. Her property was uninsured, and she had lost everything her family wasn't able to stash quickly in their vehicles.

"God is good all the time," she said. "When you're down here, he picks you up. When you think you have nothing, you have more than you can imagine."

In seven days, the Texas Forest Service responded to 176 fires affecting more than 126,000 acres statewide. An estimated 1,600 homes were lost to wildfires.

Spicewood Baptist Church in Spicewood has at least five families who have been affected by the fires.

BGCT and Texas Baptist Men disaster ministry efforts are supported by designated gifts. The organizations already have used some of those funds in responding to a series of disasters, including the Japan earthquake, earlier this year.

To give to Texas Baptist Men, visit www.texasbaptistmen.org. To give to the BGCT disaster response, visit www.texasbaptists.org/give.

Churches and individuals who would like to assist people affected by Texas wildfires can contact Texas Baptist disaster response specialist Marla Bearden at (214) 537-7358 or go to www.texasbaptists.org/disaster for more information.

–With additional reporting by Rex Campbell




TBM volunteers provide meals for firefighters

TBM has been asked to cook 5,000 meals per day for the firefighters and first responders on the scene. TBM volunteers will work 24-hour shifts to prepare the meals, according to a notice on the TBM website.

About 30 volunteers serving with the Tarrant Baptist Association feeding unit began providing emergency food service on Labor Day.




TBM sending teams to New England; preparing for Gulf storm

DALLAS—Texas Baptist Men disaster relief has been asked to send two assessment teams to Vermont and four chainsaw teams to North Carolina to serve in the wake of Hurricane Irene, which recently struck the country’s Eastern seaboard.

The assessment teams, which will report what kind of ministry is needed where in the coordination of teams, is set to fly to Vermont on Saturday, Sept. 3.

Texas Baptist Men sent out the call for chainsaw teams, and organizers believe teams will be en route to North Carolina early next week.

“People often ask why we do what we do,” said Mickey Lenamon, TBM associate executive director. “The Bible tells us to love our neighbors as ourselves. We don’t necessarily know each person affected by Hurricane Irene, but we hope to care about them as our neighbors in a trying time. We want to be the presence of Christ. That’s what we do wherever we go.”

Meanwhile, TBM disaster relief leaders are watching closely as Tropical Storm Lee forms in the Gulf of Mexico. The storm, which could reach hurricane intensity,  likely will make landfall along  the Gulf coast this weekend.

TBM has nearly 10,800 trained volunteers that can be called upon to serve, Lenamon said.  

TBM’s disaster response efforts are supported by designated gifts. To support the organization’s efforts, visit www.texasbaptistmen.org .




Aledo church seeks to be ‘radical’ in its mission for Christ

ALEDO—When God calls people to follow, it's a call live differently, said Pastor Lee Brewer—radically different. And Brewer is encouraging First Baptist Church in Aledo to be just that.

Last year, Brewer challenged every adult member of the congregation to be involved in hands-on missions efforts, and members have responded.

Cambodian teenagers pray during a Bible study. First Baptist Church in Aledo has partnered with a Cambodian Baptist church to minister in Cambodia, one of several places the congregation has served in the past year as it seeks to be radical in its commitment to Christ. (PHOTO/Courtesy of Kyle Vuthy)

About 190 people from the church have participated in mission work during the past 12 months, seeing hundreds of individuals around the globe come to faith in Christ. Members have served in Peru, Cambodia, Austria, Hungary, Egypt, Panama, Venezuela, Portugal and Jamaica, as well as Colorado and Vermont.

Their service opportunities have been as varied as the locations. Members shared the hope of Christ through remodeling a building used by a camp for children with special needs. They also participated in an evangelistic crusade, conducted a football camp, led a children's camp, remodeled a parsonage bathroom and taught English.

Margie Manthei, who helped teach a biblically based sexual purity program in Peru, said the church's venture beyond its community has revolutionized the way members think about the world and interact with it. They see how God is moving globally and want to participate in what he is doing.

"We have stopped being a local church and become a global church," Manthei said. "We're no longer Aledo First Baptist. We are now part of a global body of believers. Half our heart is in Peru. Half our heart is in Cambodia."

Following many of the trips, the church has allotted time for people to tell about their experiences during worship services, Brewer said. Some of the testimonies brought the speakers and the congregation to tears. Individuals were inspired to action by their friends' willingness to serve. People who participated in the trips were encouraged to go on another trip after seeing people come to faith in Christ.

"It's just brought people to life. A lot of people, by their testimonies, say, 'This woke me up,'" said Brewer, who based his challenge to the congregation on biblical passages and David Platt's book Radical. "When people get outside themselves, something happens. I don't know how to explain it."

The Baptist General Convention of Texas Partnership Missions office helped the church connect with several of the missions opportunities, including the efforts in Hungary, Austria and Venezuela. Texas Baptists' partnership efforts are supported by gifts to missions through the Cooperative Program, the primary giving channel for Texas Baptists.

"When we started our Radical year last September, I presented several Texas partnerships projects for the church to consider for involvement. Very quickly, four teams were formed to accept these projects, including Venezuela direct evangelism, Austria children's ministry, Hungary church planting, and Vermont construction. In each project, the mission teams were impacted and touched as much as those among whom they went to serve," said Steve Seaberry, who leads Texas Baptists' partnership missions efforts and is a member of First Baptist Church.

"I am so grateful to be a member of a Texas Baptist church where hands-on mission involvement is so much a part of their identity. We are constantly challenged and encouraged to be radical for Christ, to find our place of ministry in our personal Jerusalem, Judea, Samaria and the ends of the earth."

Each missions experience provided an in-depth discipleship opportunity for the participant, Brewer said. A weeklong experience where a person can focus solely on what God calls followers to do can transform a life, he noted.

"I believe it's the best discipleship money you can spend," Brewer said.

Brewer has seen the transformation take place. One person who financially supported mission work faithfully decided to go on a trip because of the church's challenge to serve. He now has served in multiple mission capacities and has taken on an extended volunteer position that recruits other people to foreign mission work.

People who were reluctant to share their faith in Aledo discovered how easy it is to share their faith while overseas, Brewer said. They return home passionate about sharing the hope of Christ with their friends, family and neighbors.

"They come back ready to witness here. I don't have a good explanation for that, but that's what I'm seeing."

 




Student adopts 30-days-on-$30 fast to identify with global poor

LONDON—Bland, boring food tastes like a gourmet treat to a person subsisting on $1 a day, Nathan Adair discovered.

“When you are really hungry, one raisin is like eating an ice cream sundae. Twenty-five-cent canned vegetable soup tastes like it came from a five-star restaurant,” said Adair, 10 days into a 30-days-on-$30 fast.

Nathan Adair's evening meal consists of two scoops of rice, tomatoes, half a potato and some green peas –at a cost of about 21 cents–while his 3-year-old daughter, Emerson (left); wife, Lindsay, and even 7-month-old Payton enjoy more typical fare. Adair is spending 30 days living on $1 a day–the lifestyle of one-third of the population in India. (PHOTO/Courtesy of Nathan Adair)

Adair, a Baylor University graduate who grew up at First Baptist Church in Arlington , began his 30-day experience to identify with the more than 1 billion people globally who live on $1 a day or less.

In particular, he wanted to focus attention on the living conditions of one-third of the people in India, hoping to raise awareness—and money—for a solar micro-enterprise project to benefit an orphanage there.

When Adair began selecting a dissertation project for his master of business administration degree at London’s University of Westminster, he wanted to do something that would make a difference in people’s lives.

“I did not want to simply piece together an academic report that would benefit no one,” he said.

When Adair and his wife, Lindsay, attended West University Baptist Church in Houston , they met Kirby Trapolino, director of Peace Gospel International , and began to support his ministry, which seeks to improve the lives of people in the developing world.

So, when he started to consider an MBA project, Adair contacted Trapolino to talk about initiatives Peace Gospel wanted to implement. He learned about an orphanage in India located in a community where electricity is unreliable at best. He and Trapolino agreed a micro-enterprise initiative there would be a worthy project.

“In an effort to resolve this issue and generate much needed revenue for the orphanage, we are designing a solar system that will power the facility as well as charge batteries,” Adair said. “These batteries will be rented by members of the community to power lights, fans and small appliances in their homes, drastically improving quality of life.”

Adair views his decision to tackle the project in India—and enter a 30-day experiment in simple living—as God’s design.

“Growing up in a Christian home and attending Baylor allowed me to go beyond my comfort zone and trust God’s plan for my life. It is not a coincidence that I became involved with Peace Gospel, studied for an MBA and began working on this project. It is clear that this is God’s path for me,” he said.

“I knew that to truly commit to this project, I needed to empathize in some small way. Peace Gospel’s mission is to speak up for and support those without a voice. Throughout the Bible, many verses speak of exactly that. The 30-day challenge was a way to put myself in their shoes and raise awareness and funds for this important project.”

Based on the first 10 days of the 30-day experiment, Adair found the initial four days the most difficult.

“A combination of eating approximately 35 percent of the calories normally consumed and giving up caffeine made for a miserable beginning,” he acknowledged. “Overwhelming support and prayer were the only way I did not give up. My wife and family have been very supportive.”

With a 3-year-old, Emerson, and 7-month-old, Payton, at home, mealtime presents its own challenges, since it essentially means preparing four distinct menus.

“The logistics and planning have been difficult to sort,” he said. “Also, the lack of energy has been substantial. Two young daughters only amplifies this fact.”

But Adair insisted it is worth the effort, because he is gaining a new understanding of how much of the world lives. People who live on $1 a day or less “see food as an essential fuel to stay alive,” and they don’t take that for granted, he noted.

“Some of these people may not have a guaranteed next meal waiting for them. This cycle becomes an obsession,” he said. “One thing that has helped me tremendously is a never-ending supply of clean water to drink. This is not the case for these people.”

To spread the word about his experience, Adair began writing a daily blog at http://indiasolarproject.blogspot.com . He posts his daily menu—typically small portions of rice, potatoes, peas, tomatoes and pasta—as well as his experiences.

One recent series of entries recorded his impressions during a four-night family camping trip.

“My favorite part about camping has always been the food—hot dogs, beans, breakfast taquitos and, of course, s’mores,” he wrote at the beginning of the trip. While his family enjoyed typical campfire fare, he ate eggs, rice and oatmeal.

But at the end of the trip, he reported, “With much support and blessing, I made it through our camping trip without falling into temptation.”

On his blog, Adair has challenged his readers to join him for one week the experience of living on $1 a day or at least taking part in some act of self-denial. Whether they participate or not, he hopes simply reading about his experience opens their eyes to needs around the world.

“I hope people choose to look outside their bubbles and realize that this very moment, kids are digging through trash looking for food—that children are being sold into slavery and prostitution this very minute—that widows are being spit on in the street because they are seen as unclean and worthless,” he said.

“I want them to realize that the Western way of life is luxurious compared to most. I have been very blessed in this life, and I want to give back as much as possible. We can’t take anything with us.”




Fort Bend pastor nominated for BGCT 2nd VP post

SUGAR LAND—Byron Stevenson, founding pastor of The Fort Bend Church in Sugar Land, one of the fastest-growing churches in the state, will be a candidate for second vice president of the Baptist General Convention of Texas this fall.

Stevenson's fellow pastor Phil Lineberger, a former BGCT president, announced he will nominate Stevenson when the convention holds its annual session in Amarillo, Oct. 24-26.

Byron Stevenson

"Byron is an outstanding preacher and a really fine pastor," noted Lineberger, pastor of Sugar Land Baptist Church. "I've known Byron since about 1996—quite a few years. …

"He established The Fort Bend Church in 2004 at Sugar Land Middle School. When we built our building here, he asked me several times if he could use it for major functions. Today, they have over 3,000 members and a fabulous church plant. It's one of the fastest-growing churches in Fort Bend County."

Despite the demands of a rapidly growing congregation, Stevenson has maintained his pastoral focus, Lineberger added, noting: "I've seen him tend to them as pastor. He's very relational."

Sugar Land Baptist and The Fort Bend Church have welcomed each other's pastors into their pulpits, he said. "I've preached over there, and Byron has preached over here. He's got a hummin' church; they preached me to death."

Stevenson would make a fine BGCT officer because of his leadership skills and his love for and commitment to the convention, Lineberger stressed.

"Byron is a Baptist—a Texas Baptist," he said. "He serves on the BGCT Executive Board and has been secretary of the African-American Fellowship of Texas. He's strongly supportive of our convention."

Stevenson's wife, Sonya, is executive director of The Fort Bend Church, and they have worked well together to lead their congregation, Lineberger said, adding: "He really has done a magnificent job. He and Sonya both."

Stevenson said he sees service to the convention as returning a blessing, and that is a motive for his willingness to serve as a vice president, if elected.

"This is an opportunity for me to give back to the BGCT, because the BGCT has been such a blessing to me and to my church since our inception," he explained, noting the church was launched with financial support from the convention. "I feel in a sense obligated to give back."

Both Stevenson and his church are "pro-BGCT," he said, particularly citing the convention's focus on missions and starting churches.

""My church has been a BGCT church since its inception," he said. "We believe in the mission of the BGCT and have been in support of missions since Day One.

"At the core of the BGCT is starting new churches. I'm one who can share insight—having planted my church—with new pastors and churches who are wanting to branch out and plant new churches themselves."

Advocacy on behalf of the convention is an aspect of the vice presidency Stevenson would embrace, he said. "If elected, I want to continue to be an ambassador for missions throughout the state. I want to increase the awareness of what the BGCT is doing in the lives of churches throughout the state and continue to forge partnerships amongst the affinity groups … to continue to promote the life of the BGCT.

"The BGCT is a vibrant entity and one that must continue to grow."

Stevenson earned an undergraduate degree from Southern University in Baton Rouge, La., and a master's degree in theological studies from Houston Baptist University. He also studied at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Fort Worth.

Before entering vocational ministry, he was an accountant. Prior to founding The Fort Bend Church, he was minister of program development at Brentwood Baptist Church in Houston.

He has traveled in Italy, Egypt, Jordan and Israel.

The Stevensons are parents of two daughters, Claire Alexandra and Cydney Victoria.