Classifieds
Archive
Sign Up
Donate
Print Archive
Student Missions Blog: When I came to Taiwan, an open country with established ministry operations, I didn’t think I would be blessed to be part of the first experience someone has with Christianity.
06/27/2016 - By Ken Camp
Texas Baptists have made “strong and hopeful strides” regarding women in ministry. But churches can and must do better.
06/26/2016 - By Marv Knox
The Cooperative Baptist Fellowship will use a new deliberative process as it takes on an extremely difficult denominational challenge—deciding where it stands on the LGBTQ issue.
06/25/2016 - By Marv Knox
BGCT President René Maciel celebrates the life of a soldier, teacher, pastor and dad—his father, Eleazar Maciel.
06/24/2016 - By Marv Knox
Student Missions Blog: I came to California not knowing what to expect but knowing that I need to be obedient to the call of making disciples among all the nations.
06/24/2016 - By Ken Camp
The so-called “Baptist” pastors who spread hate over LGBT issues “have as much business being pastors as I do being a neurosurgeon,” says columnist Jon Mark Beilue. (Amarillo Globe-News)
06/23/2016 - By Marv Knox
Student Missions Blog: The word “Muslim,” especially in our immediate American context, bears an undeserved load.
06/23/2016 - By Ken Camp
The 2016 Kids Count Data Book from the Annie E. Casey Foundation documents how desperately Texas children need Baptists’ help.
06/21/2016 - By Marv Knox
Religious Americans—conservatives and liberals alike—need new guidelines for practicing faith in today’s public square. (Huffington Post)
06/17/2016 - By Marv Knox
Without moral clarity and leadership on substantive issues that matter deeply to African-Americans and other minorities, the Southern Baptist Convention’s awakened conscience will start to ring hollow.
Student Missions Blog: I am always on the clock with my students. I travel, eat, feel pain and live life with them every day.
06/17/2016 - By Ken Camp
Student Missions Blog: Even the family members who didn’t practice Ramadan weren’t allowed eat with them, but they invited us—a couple of Christians—to dine. It was such an honor and an experience I never will forget. But at the same time, it broke my heart.