Voces: ¿Dónde están los graduados hispanos de los bautistas de Texas?

Tradicionalmente, cuando nos encontramos con un artículo titulado «¿Dónde están ahora?», nos informan sobre dónde se encuentran en este momento personas con las que crecimos o que alguna vez fueron famosas.

Hoy, sin embargo, quiero compartir no solo dónde se encuentran ahora muchos graduados hispanos de escuelas afiliadas a los bautistas de Texas, sino también dónde podrían estar en el futuro.

Educación continua e impacto institucional

En primer lugar, nuestros graduados bautistas hispanos continúan su educación de grado y posgrado.

Un número cada vez mayor de estudiantes de nuestras instituciones reconoce el valor de obtener títulos avanzados para alcanzar el potencial para el cual Dios les creó y aumentar su impacto en el Reino. A menudo trabajan o sirven a tiempo completo para proveer para sus familias o pagar sus estudios, haciendo todo lo posible por evitar obtener préstamos educativos.

A medida que obtienen estos títulos, los graduados hispanos de las instituciones bautistas de Texas se están convirtiendo en profesores a tiempo completo o parcial.

Muchos también están asumiendo funciones de liderazgo en los lugares donde enseñan. Al hacerlo, aportan una perspectiva cultural muy necesaria, ya que nuestras instituciones buscan reclutar, retener y graduar a estudiantes de la población hispana en rápido crecimiento de nuestro estado, que ahora supera los 12 millones de personas.

Liderando la Iglesia

A medida que crece la población hispana, más iglesias de habla inglés reconocen la necesidad de ampliar estratégicamente sus esfuerzos para alcanzar a la comunidad circundante. Por lo tanto, están incorporando a graduados hispanos bilingües de nuestras instituciones para dirigir los ministerios «en español».

Estos ministerios «en español» no están aislados, sino que están plenamente integrados en la vida de toda la iglesia. El miembro hispano del personal suele ser reconocido como uno de los pastores de toda la iglesia y desempeña un papel clave en el presente y el futuro de la congregación.

Muchos consideran que este modelo de ministerio es una de las mejores formas de alcanzar a la población hispana actual. Algunas congregaciones están adoptando un enfoque aún más audaz al nombrar a un líder hispano bilingüe y bicultural como su pastor principal, un paso elogiable en la dirección correcta.

Los graduados hispanos de nuestras instituciones también están pastoreando iglesias bautistas hispanas en todo el estado. Más de 1,000 iglesias bautistas de Texas se identifican como hispanas, y me atrevería a decir que la mayoría están dirigidas por uno de nuestros graduados o han sido influenciadas de alguna manera por uno de ellos.

La gran mayoría de estos pastores son bivocacionales, balanceando el trabajo con el ministerio, para proveer mejor para sus familias, o sirven a tiempo completo en sus iglesias, confiando en que el Señor proveerá para sus necesidades básicas. Aun así, dirigen con todo su corazón las congregaciones a las que Dios les ha llamado, maximizando sus recursos limitados. Nuestros pastores son mis héroes.

Superando las expectativas

Si desea saber dónde sirven muchos otros graduados hispanos de nuestras escuelas, mire al personal de Texas Baptists.

Somos muy bendecidos con muchos hispanos en el personal y líderes ministeriales hispanos en todos los niveles, incluyendo a nuestro director ejecutivo, el Dr. Julio Guarneri.

Esta diversidad también se está haciendo una realidad en nuestras instituciones y otros ministerios con quienes colaboramos. La Baptist General Convention of Texas se parece cada vez más a la gente de nuestro estado, lo cual es clave en nuestro esfuerzo por ganar a los perdidos para Cristo.

Recientemente formamos un equipo para desarrollar un programa que apoye a estudiantes hispanos que cursan un doctorado en nuestras instituciones bautistas de Texas. El primer paso fue una encuesta para recopilar datos de bautistas hispanos actuales con doctorados sobre su jornada doctoral.

El objetivo es desarrollar un programa que proporcione ánimo, apoyo y entrenamiento a estudiantes doctorales hispanos que complemente su aprendizaje formal.

En total, 28 de los 32 doctores completaron la encuesta. Estas cifras tal vez no parecen mucho para algunos, pero cuando llegué a Texas hace casi 30 años, prácticamente se podían contar con los dedos de una mano los doctores bautistas hispanos. El hecho de que ahora haya más de 30 es absolutamente digno de celebración, aunque sin duda necesitamos más.

En todas partes

Si pensamos en todos los programas que ofrecen nuestras instituciones de educación superior, probablemente podemos decir que hay un graduado hispano en casi todas las carreras.

Los graduados hispanos de las universidades y seminarios bautistas de Texas desempeñan muchas otras funciones en las congregaciones; y también son plantadores de iglesias, misioneros, educadores, consejeros profesionales, líderes empresariales, emprendedores, músicos, médicos, ingenieros, trabajadores sociales y mucho más.

Están marcando una gran diferencia en su mundo y son un ejemplo extraordinario para quienes les siguen.

Así que, si me pregunta: «¿Dónde están ahora?», le respondería: «¡En todas partes!»

Gabriel Cortés es el director de educación hispana de Texas Baptists.




Voices: Where are Texas Baptists’ Hispanic graduates?

Traditionally, when you come across a “Where are they now?” article, you’re given an update of where people we grew up with or who were once famous are at the moment.

Today, however, I want to share a glimpse, not only of where many Hispanic graduates of Texas Baptists-affiliated schools are now, but also where they may be in the future.

Continuing education and impacting institutions

First, our Hispanic Baptist graduates are continuing their graduate and postgraduate education.

A growing number of Hispanic students at our institutions recognize the value of pursuing advanced degrees to reach the potential for which God created them and to increase their kingdom impact. They often work or serve full-time to provide for their families or pay for school, doing all they can to avoid obtaining educational loans.

As they earn these degrees, Hispanic graduates from Texas Baptists institutions progressively are becoming faculty members on a full-time or part-time basis.

Many also are stepping into leadership roles where they teach. By doing so, they provide a much-needed cultural lens as our institutions seek to recruit, retain and graduate students from the fast-growing Hispanic population in our state, which now exceeds 12 million people.

Leading the church

As the Hispanic population grows, more churches are recognizing the need to expand their efforts strategically to reach the surrounding community. So, they are bringing bilingual Hispanic graduates from our institutions to lead “Español” (Spanish) ministries.

These “Español” ministries are not isolated. They are integrated fully into the life of the whole church. The Hispanic staff member usually is recognized as one of the pastors for the entire church and plays a key role in the congregation’s present and future.

Many consider this model of ministry one of the best ways to reach the Hispanic population today. Some congregations are taking an even bolder approach by calling a bilingual and bicultural Hispanic leader as their senior pastor, a commendable step forward in the right direction.

Hispanic graduates of our institutions also are pastoring Hispanic Baptist churches across the state. More than 1,000 Texas Baptists churches identify themselves as Hispanic, and I would venture to say most are led by one of our graduates or have been impacted in some way by one of our graduates.

The large majority are bivocational—balancing work and ministry—so they can provide for their families better, or they serve full-time, trusting in the Lord’s provision for their basic needs. Still, they wholeheartedly lead the congregations God has called them to, maximizing their limited resources. They are my heroes.

Exceeding expectations

If you would like to know where many other Hispanic graduates from our schools serve, look no further than our Texas Baptists staff.

We are extremely blessed with Hispanic staff members and ministry leaders at all levels, all the way to our executive director, Julio Guarneri.

This growing diversity also is becoming a reality in our institutions and partners. The Baptist General Convention of Texas increasingly looks more like the people in our state, which is key as we seek to win the lost for Christ.

We recently formed a team to develop a doctoral cohort to support Hispanic Baptists pursuing a doctorate at our Texas Baptists institutions. The first step was a survey to collect data from current Hispanic Baptists with doctorates regarding their doctoral journey.

The goal is to develop a framework for the cohort to provide encouragement, support and training that will complement their learning.

In total, 28 of 32 doctors completed the survey. These numbers may not seem like much to some, but when I arrived in Texas almost 30 years ago, you practically could count the number of Hispanic Baptist doctorates with one hand. The fact there are more than 30 now is absolutely worth celebrating, though we certainly need more.

Everywhere

When you think of all the programs our higher education institutions offer, you probably can say there may be a Hispanic graduate in nearly every single career.

Hispanic graduates of Texas Baptists colleges, universities and seminaries serve in many other congregational roles. They are church planters, missionaries, educators, professional counselors, business leaders, entrepreneurs, musicians, doctors, engineers, social workers and more.

They are making a tremendous difference in their world and are setting extraordinary examples for those coming behind them.

So, if you ask me, “Where are they now?” I would say, “Everywhere!”

Gabriel Cortés is Texas Baptists’ Hispanic education director.




Commentary: How to support women in ministry

In my work as Baylor University’s associate director of ministry guidance, I have the privilege of working with women and men discerning a call to vocational ministry.

It is a gift to hear their stories and to bear witness to God’s work in their lives. I especially love hearing about the mentors, ministers and church communities that formed them as disciples of Christ.

While my male students tend to receive praise and encouragement across the board, regardless of denominational tradition, the experiences of my female students unfortunately are more varied and measured.

Some of these women arrive on campus still searching for the language to describe what they feel called to do, and sometimes a church’s tepid or partial endorsement makes it more difficult for them to imagine what is possible.

Inevitably, my female students who are most confident in their calling are those who grew up in traditions or congregations where women were affirmed fully in all levels of ministerial leadership.

They had mentors, opportunities and examples. Because they saw themselves in their church’s pastoral teams, they did not have to question whether they could be called or reconcile their big God-filled dreams with human limits.

Usually, male and female students from these empowering environments also are more equipped for critical thinking, and their faith is less threatened by ideas that might differ from their own.

State of women in Baptist life

Baptist Women in Ministry’s recent State of Women in Baptist Life Report 2025 supports these observations, noting: “Congregational culture is where theology meets practice, and thus is where Baptist women in ministry are either empowered or undermined.”

The data presented reinforces the important role congregations play in forming and affirming the women in their midst.

More specifically, the report names six practices congregations that empower women share: (1) affirmation of women in various leadership roles, (2) intentionality toward gender in the world of the church, (3) non-hierarchical organizational structures, (4) support networks for women, (5) addressing gender issues and (6) creating egalitarian staff policies.

The statistics provided in Part Two of the report remind us we have work left to do truly to embody these practices.

One simple suggestion

I have one simple suggestion for moving us forward: If you support women in ministry, join a church that affirms, encourages and empowers them.

Perhaps that recommendation seems too rudimentary even to write down, but I am continually surprised by the people who claim to be advocates for women in ministry who nevertheless attend churches that exclude women from positions of ministry leadership and/or refuse to ordain women to the gospel ministry.

These individuals do not hesitate to offer words of support in an academic context or in their mentoring of female ministry students, yet they excuse themselves from the faithfulness of solidarity in their choice of a local church.

For the family

One of the reasons I hear often from these would-be allies of women in ministry is they have chosen to worship in a complementarian church for familial reasons. Perhaps these churches have robust youth groups or an excellent music ministry. I normally smile and nod politely, because careful and constructive confrontation is not one of my gifts.

But here is what I wish I could say: “I have children, too.”

Indeed, it is in large part because of my children that my husband and I intentionally have chosen to worship in spaces that affirm women.

We never want either of our children—one boy and one girl—to question God’s calling on their lives. Because the local church plays a large role in one’s theological formation, we wanted to be in a space that valued and nurtured the gifts of our son and our daughter equally.

We have witnessed firsthand the deep-seated faith, active curiosity and quiet confidence that accompanies college students reared in such faith communities, and we wanted that for our children.

But this choice has not come without sacrifice. The congregations that tend to be the safest, most supportive places for women are not usually megachurches with large youth programs. Far more often, they are small to medium spaces that demand a lot of time and energy from every member of the congregation.

We all pitch in our gifts to support and build up the body. And that work can be exhausting. We could use a few more laborers in the fields of harvest.

Imagine the possibilities

When someone proudly tells me they support women in ministry only for me to find out they have excused themselves from this work in spaces that need their life and witness, it can be difficult for me to reconcile. Not necessarily for myself, but for the church.

If everyone who claims to support women in ministry joined a congregation that empowers women, imagine the possibilities.

Think of what we would be teaching our children. Think of our witness to the community. Think of our faithfulness to support those God has called. Think of the students—male and female—we could assist in discerning a call to ministry and the foundation our combined efforts could provide them.

I implore you again: If you affirm women in ministry, please stop telling me and show me. Join a church that empowers women.

Mandy McMichael is associate director of ministry guidance and J. David Slover Associate Professor of Ministry Guidance at Baylor University. The views expressed in this opinion article are those of the author.




Editorial: Don’t rush past yesterday

This editorial will be a bit meta, as the kids say. It will be about what news and opinion is—a reflection on where we’ve been. Reflecting on reflecting is the “meta” part.

The days are full and fast. Yesterday’s gone. Tomorrow’s a breath away. The news cycle churns.

What are we doing with the time we hold in our hands like sand? What are we doing with the present?

Some of us are adding to the churn. There’s work to be done. If the present is all we really have, there’s urgency. We have to keep moving, stay busy.

Some of us hard drivers think of Scripture like Ecclesiastes 3—a time and a season for everything—and Psalm 1 or 119—meditating day and night—as applying to other people or as something we can do on the fly.

But does it? Can we? Do we?

Yesterday may be gone, but its importance is still alive and well, informing our today and tomorrow. We must not rush past yesterday.

We must give space and time to reflection, but reflection with a purpose.

Biblical history

As Bible-believing, Bible-preaching people—who also should be Bible-reading, Bible-studying people—the idea of reflecting on the past should not be a problem for us. That’s what the Bible is—reflection with a purpose.

Part of the Bible’s authority is its record of God’s interaction in human history. We are supposed to learn from that record and shape our lives by it. At least, that’s what we say we believe we should do with the Bible.

Yet, how much of our present do we give to learning and being shaped … by Scripture? We give plenty to being shaped by the world. So much of what we do is evidence of that.

Reflect on this: How many people do you know who quit attending worship because of the music or something the pastor said? You might be one of them.

While you reflect on that, take a look at this story of church leaders in the Democratic Republic of Congo trekking as much as 45 miles a week through deep mud just to copy a portion of Scripture to take back to their churches for Sunday worship.

Whose attitude and behavior yesterday best prepare them for tomorrow? This is the purpose of reflection.

I tell you, we must not rush past yesterday.

Reflecting on history

Part of what’s behind this editorial is my reading of Ukrainian history over the last couple of weeks. I’m trying to have better grasp of what informs Ukraine’s present. It’s a complicated history, and learning just how complicated it is has opened helpful windows of understanding.

We owe it to our brothers and sisters in Ukraine and elsewhere to understand more about their history, particularly as they face current hardship and especially as we take steps to come alongside them in their suffering.

Also, part of what’s behind this editorial is my reflecting on the business sessions of the 2025 Baptist General Convention of Texas annual meeting.

I’m not equating the situation in Ukraine with anything in the BGCT, though both have complicated and contested histories.

The vote for BGCT president and the vote on a motion to investigate Baylor University were close. In fact, the vote on the Baylor motion was very close. BGCT leadership—and the rest of us—need to reflect on why. There is important information for who the BGCT is and where the BGCT is going in that reflection.

BGCT reflection

Since there’s no real campaign for BGCT president, we don’t know why people voted for either Debbie Potter or Kevin Burrow. We do know of the 750 votes counted, 57 percent were for Potter and 43 percent were for Burrow. That’s pretty close. And worth reflection.

The vote on the Baylor motion was even closer. After a raised-ballot vote was too close to call, messengers were asked to stand and raise their ballots to vote. From my front-and-center seat, the standing ballot vote looked just as close, but I could not see the room as completely as could those on the platform. They ruled the opposition carried, and the motion failed.

I’m not calling into question the determination of the chair. I am saying when a vote is that close, we do well to try to understand why and to learn from it.

Votes are important. They provide us important information about who we are, where we’ve been and where we’re going. We ought to reflect on votes and their outcomes. This is all the more true when votes are very close.

Those in favor of the motion to investigate Baylor represented a fairly broad spectrum of messengers to the 2025 BGCT annual meeting. The previous day, very few of them voted in favor of a motion to defund Baylor. What tipped the balance so much between the two Baylor votes, and what does that indicate for the BGCT as a whole? That’s worth reflection.

I don’t know the answers with certainty, but I guarantee they are connected to our history.

Those who lead the BGCT shouldn’t rush past November.

Reflecting forward

Some of us reflect to a fault. We go beyond reflection to rumination. We get stuck in the past, try to live in the past. We live out the opposite side of Ecclesiastes 3 from the hard drivers. We don’t move forward. Forgetting about the future, we’re not even in the present.

Our reflecting on the past must move us toward the future. And a more productive future, at that.

As people of the Bible—shaped by the Bible—this should be second nature. After all, Israel’s past and biblical reflection on it all pointed forward to Jesus. From there, all reflection points forward to the restoration of all things in him. Yes, reflection has a purpose.

Advent is a season of reflective anticipation. Or it’s supposed to be. How much reflection are you doing this December? Me? It’s hard to do much reflection in such cluttered times. But I must give space and time to reflect on the necessary things in a forward direction.

Don’t rush past yesterday. Notice it. Reflect on it. Learn from it. Grow from it. It points to our future.

Eric Black is the executive director, publisher and editor of the Baptist Standard. He can be reached at eric.black@baptiststandard.com. The views expressed in this opinion article are those of the author.




Commentary: Religious liberty: Tensions in Baptist identity, Part 6

In Part 5 of this series, I cited Karen Bullock’s Pinson Lecture on Baptist distinctives. One of the elements of Baptist identity she discusses some might argue is the most difficult to defend. It certainly has been the source of much controversy—both in the church and in the public square.

I am talking about the interlocking notions of soul competency and religious liberty.

Baptists assert faith is not something that can be compelled. Like love, humility and so many other Christian virtues, it only can be chosen.

Thus, the liberty to choose whether to believe in Christ not only is a cherished element of America’s political philosophy, but also is a core element of the church’s soteriology.

The problematic nature of religious liberty

In his recent series on Christian nationalism, pastor-scholar Nick Acker frames this core Baptist conviction this way: Both the church and the government have a role to play in a healthy society. The government’s role, among other things, is to restrain evil and promote good (see Romans 13:1-7).

But when the government uses the force of law to compel conformity to Christian dogma, it oversteps the boundaries established for it by God. In so doing, it corrupts both itself and the church.

There is plenty of evidence, both from history and from contemporary politics, to support Acker’s construal of the situation. But as Acker himself acknowledges, not everyone sees our plight as humans in this way. The problem boils down to the simple fact no legislation is either amoral or objective.

At the risk of offense, let me be both clear and emphatic. One of the most unhelpful sayings ever to catch on in our public life is, “You can’t legislate morality.”

It is true enough that moral laws do not guarantee moral conduct, and in a democratic society, it even can be argued legislation is a lagging indicator of that society’s moral health.

Nevertheless, all laws—and most administrative regulations—are moral in intent and quality, and that morality will not be religiously neutral. It will be informed by someone’s worldview—whether the Judeo-Christian consensus, enshrined in Sharia law, proposed by so-called “secular humanism,” or something else.

In turn, the perspective on the moral life that shapes our laws will shape our culture, and that influence will trickle down into the hearts, minds and hands of individuals.

Hence, we can put the logical objection to religious liberty this way. There is no “none of the above” option at the ballot box.

We must decide whose ethics will guide our democracy, and it is doubtful whether any worldview can be broad enough and nimble enough to accommodate a pluralistic society while simultaneously giving the necessary moral boundaries a nation needs to have a peaceful and profitable public life.

Remembering the past, acknowledging the present

Critics of religious liberty—and of its corollary, separation of church and state—need to remember this Baptist doctrine did not spring out of nothing. It was a reasonable reaction to centuries of persecution and corruption. Indeed, the church often was co-opted by the state, with disastrous consequences for the European continent.

We still see this process at work today. While some tout Vladimir Putin as a champion of Christian identity, this dangerous dictator continues his war of aggression against Ukraine and suppresses any voice inside his country that would hold him to account.

We may never know how many people Putin’s wars have killed, how many women have been raped by his army, or how many children have been forcibly removed from their homes and brainwashed with Russian propaganda.

Most disturbing of all is the role church leaders have played in the atrocities that have marred Western history. The Russian government seems particularly adept at subverting the church, but other ecclesiastical authorities in other times have cooperated with “the powers of this dark world” (Ephesians 6:12), usually for their own financial, political or sexual gain.

Christianity and democracy

I am sympathetic to the concerns raised by Christian nationalism. The United States of America was not founded as a Christian nation, but it is difficult to see how it could have been founded at all without the assumptions and predispositions inherent in the Christian faith.

It well may be not every culture provides fertile soil for the seeds of liberty to be planted, and it certainly is true secularism—both on the right and on the left—threatens to poison the soil in which our own nation grows.

Nevertheless, I believe freedom of religion and separation of church and state are indispensable elements of a democratic society and even may be required for any nation that wants to describe itself as “Christian.”

Judaism and Christianity share a common conviction that every human is made in the image of God and therefore possesses indescribable dignity and inestimable worth. Each person must encounter God herself or himself, and each person must decide how to respond to that encounter.

I am aware of the philosophical problems inherent in positing a religiously neutral government, and I also am aware of the ways certain people—mostly ideological liberals—have misused separation of church and state to blunt the moral influence of those with whom they disagree.

Nevertheless, my first concern is to preserve the freedom of individuals to respond to Christ with authentic faith. My second concern is to ensure the church’s freedom to speak prophetically to its government and culture.

The traditional Baptist doctrines of soul competency and separation of church and state may not help us win whatever culture war happens to be raging during a particular news cycle, but they will help us achieve these two far more important priorities.

Frankly, there will be elements of the Judeo-Christian worldview we simply must insist upon, and there are no secular equivalents for these distinctively Jewish and Christian ideas. But in so doing, we will be laying the foundation for the kind of open, free society America’s founders envisioned.

Wade Berry is pastor of Second Baptist Church in Ranger and has been resident fellow in New Testament and Greek at B.H. Carroll Theological Seminary. The views expressed in this opinion article are those of the author.




Voices: Forgiveness: 70 times seven

I am changing the story to protect identities.

Richard and Gina are two precious church members. They both work hard to make a living, to cover their bills and to give their offerings to the Lord each week without fail.

Richard lost his job. Gina works in the mailroom for a local oil and gas firm.

To help cover expenses, Gina, a great cook, bakes a load of goods each week for Richard to sell during the week to make ends meet. They needed a good central location. So, I let them sell their goods at church during the week until Richard gets a good job.

This is where mission creep sets in.

One thing leads to another

Before long, more and more come to the church parking lot to buy Gina’s baked goods.

Gina has built a great reputation for her cooking. Richard is a kind man who helps everyone who stops by. If people can buy the goods, he gladly sells them. But whatever is left, he gives to those in need.

Soon, their baked goods began to sell out. So, they added boxed lunches to their product line. They needed extra space to do all this, along with warmers, tables, take-out containers, utensils, bags, signage and chairs for those who want to eat on-site.

The sweet couple did not have all these things. So, they started using church equipment during the week to accommodate their customers.

They got tired of hauling things from their home. So, they started storing them in the church. Storing things in church takes away from the storage the church needs for its normal needs.

The couple started to put church stuff out behind the building, because they didn’t want their items to be stolen. The result? Church things were exposed to the elements and stolen.

When I found out, I asked Richard and Gina to please stop putting the church things out in the parking lot.

I knew they needed storage, but the church doesn’t have room to store personal items. This also was complicated when other church members asked if they could store things at the church because they didn’t have money for storage.

When I said they could not, the members would ask, “Why do you let Richard and Gina do it, if we can’t?”

Do you see the problem?

Pushing

Richard and Gina were so kind to accept my guidance. They did what I asked … for about two weeks.

Then, their things began to pile up inside the church again. They even began to use classrooms for their items, which meant on Sunday mornings, some of our Sunday school classes had nowhere to meet.

When I found out, I asked Richard and Gina, as kindly as I could, to please remove their items, to stop storing in the church, or I would not be able to let them use the church grounds for their business.

They agreed. Their business was booming.

Even so, they continued to abuse the privileges we gave. Nine times they abused the privileges, even sneaking around trying to do what they wanted where I would not catch wind of it. But our sins always find us out.

On a recent Sunday, I called them into my office to tell them they no longer could use the church for their baking/catering/dining business.

It is hard to be hard on people, but those who mistake kindness for weakness, who try to game the system—especially in the Lord’s house—must face consequences.

Forgiving

Monday, Gina asked for a private meeting.

It doesn’t matter what conflicts we’ve had. I always want our relationships to continue, never to stop worshipping the Lord together.

So, there was Gina in my office. She began to cry.

She said: “Pastor, we lied to you. We have abused the church. You gave us chance after chance, and we took advantage of you and the church. I am asking you to forgive us.

“Do you remember when Peter asked Jesus how many times he was to forgive?” she continued. “He wondered if seven times was too many. Jesus told Peter, not seven times but 70 times seven. Pastor, will you forgive us 70 times seven? Will you give us one more chance?”

She began to cry some more.

She got me. She was right. Because she admitted their sin. Because she was broken. Because she reminded me of the Scripture about forgiveness.

And mostly because I remember how many times I ask God to forgive me for the same sins I commit over and over, I could not not forgive. I could not help but give them another chance. And I have.

There is a note to make with regard to forgiveness. The Lord says we must be wise as serpents and innocent as doves. We can forgive, but we also should do all we can to protect ourselves and prevent recurrence.

As a result, I forgave, but I had them sign a document stating they would not take advantage of the church again. If they broke their word, there would be no further discussion. With the next offense, all their things would be moved out without one plea.

I cemented it by having the couple come before the church as I stated our agreement publicly, since their offense had been public.

Johnny Teague is the senior pastor of Church at the Cross in West Houston and the author of several books, including his newest The Lost Diary of Mary Magdalene. His website is johnnyteague.com. The views expressed in this opinion article are those of the author.




Editorial: Being thankful it isn’t ‘otherwise’

Jane Kenyon was a poet and translator. She died young. Already, I am three years older than she was when leukemia took her. How many times in my life I also could have died young.

Her poem “Otherwise” is short. It is a powerful poem, because in simple, spare prose, it makes much of the overlooked and mundane. Through it, Kenyon expresses gratitude for everyday things many of us long since have taken for granted.

Things like getting out of bed in the morning, eating a bowl of cereal, seeing art on the walls of our home. Having a home.

You can listen to “Otherwise” here.

Kenyon knew it could be otherwise, all of it. She knew someday it would be. She wasn’t well.

I’m old enough now, I’ve experienced enough life, I’ve seen enough things go well enough to know and appreciate, to be thankful it wasn’t, it isn’t otherwise.

And I’m learning to be thankful still.

Thankful in all circumstances

One of our brothers returned to his home after the Baptist General Convention of Texas annual meeting in Abilene last week. His home is at war. It is otherwise for him. Yet, even in the midst of war, he and his fellow Ukrainians know it could be worse.

In so knowing, they teach us to be thankful in all circumstances.

Another of our brothers posted a video to Facebook last Thursday from an emergency room. On Tuesday, his wife had emergency gall bladder removal. On Thursday, he was back in the emergency room with his daughter after she was in a car accident. He was thankful for a seat belt.

“Yes … in spite [of] anything, we will be thankful. We need to be thankful. There is so much to be thankful for,” he said.

“Even if it’s hard, even if it’s unsettling, if life throws things at you, we come before the Lord, we pray together, we ask for help, and we thank [him] for things we already have,” he concluded, encouraging those watching to come celebrate with his church.

Our brother teaches me to be thankful amid all circumstances.

Are we thankful?

What about us? What do we take for granted? What, who have we grown so accustomed to in our lives that we have forgotten to be grateful for them, that we fail to imagine it could be otherwise?

We simply don’t see so much of what we ought to be, can be thankful for. Many times because we don’t look through the irritations, the inconveniences, the frustrations common to all of us. More than anything, that’s my problem when it comes to thankfulness.

Lord, thank you that the bad isn’t as bad as it could be, and thank you for the good that doesn’t have to be at all.

Some of what I’m thankful for

I am thankful for the Baptist Standard staff. Each person loves the Lord and cares deeply for people.

I am thankful for the Baptist Standard board. They are great encouragers, on top of being great leaders in their respective places of service.

I am thankful for our donors, who do far more than help pay our bills. They fuel us to pursue our mission.

I take none of them for granted.

Because I know it could be otherwise.

Eric Black is the executive director, publisher and editor of the Baptist Standard. He can be reached at eric.black@baptiststandard.com. The views expressed in this opinion article are those of the author.




Voices: Holy ground: Home alone for the holidays

When my mom died of leukemia, I was exhausted from the hospital stays, from moving into her home to care for her, and having her and her sitters live with me for a time. Our mother-daughter relationship was very close, and saying “good-bye”was anguish, stressful to the max.

When mother passed, it was a shock, as we thought she would live at least another few months. In fact, on the day she died, lab results showed her in remission from leukemia. Yet, she died from complications of the disease.

Life and death just cannot be predicted with certainty. They truly are in God’s hand, and we stand back in awe of his judgment and wisdom, weighing factors we do not know exist. To know God is to know he is purely love and mercy toward his children.

When we planned mom’s funeral service, I was half-numb and chose for a soloist to sing “Holy Ground.” I knew that was the right song but did not know why. Was this a poor choice, because we were burying our loved one in the ground? Were we thinking the burial site was holy? I surely did not mean to communicate that.

What is holy ground?

Recently I came to understand the concept of holy ground better. It is anywhere we meet God, where he speaks to us and transforms us—as God said to Moses at the burning bush, “Take off your sandals for you are standing on holy ground” (Exodus 3).

Holiness is where God stands and teaches us with tenderness and tough love. It can mean where God frees us.

Ann Voskamp has written we meet God in our “breaking”—which I take to mean our grief and deep sorrow. The God of mercy and love does not wish us to stay broken, but to be healed and refreshed in our relationship with him and ready to accept new life circumstances.

I stayed broken too long. I made God meet me over and over and carry me through years when I could have been more productive for his kingdom. But drawing me to intimacy and dependency on him, it was all holy.

Holy rebuilding

Thanksgiving, Christmas, birthdays, anniversaries with the empty chair—I have been there. Now, most of the chairs are empty.

New babies have been born into the family, but they do not replace a precious spouse, revered parents, grandparents, aunts and uncles. We older folks are the “elders” now—the patriarch and/or matriarch in a long line of believing family.

It is wise to prepare for this phase of life and pray for every kind of leadership strength—physical, emotional, financial and spiritual.

Note to the young: Use every day of life to finish strong. The end requires of us all we are.

If you are alone or lonely this holiday season, if you feel broken by recent grief or grief that seems to last forever, remember: This can be your season of “holy ground” as God rebuilds you.

I see the picture of a broken, hardened pot reworked on the potter’s wheel and made even more beautiful and useful than before. That can be us with the touch of the master potter’s perfect pressure and heat.

There are some changes that only come through fire, a burning bush and the holiness of God. Refining fire changes the heart and life.

Ruth Cook is a longtime Texas Baptist. The views expressed in this opinion article are those of the author.




Editorial: Church, sometimes we’re the problem

“The local church is the hope of the world.”

I heard this more than once during the last couple of days.

“The local church is the hope of the world.”

Sometimes, it’s hard to see that.

That’s a hard word, but I have to be honest. Church, sometimes we’re the problem.

I know this stings. I know this hurts. The treatment often does, and I mean this as treatment, as medicine—to get better, to be well.

I also heard more than once, “The church at its birth was the church at its best.”

Oh, the jab of “was.” Is our best really “was?”

Lord, help us. May it not be so.

Can the church at 2,000 years be the church just reaching its stride?

Lord, help us. May it be so.

But, alas, there’s so much history—too much history—to the contrary.

Alas, church, we so often have been the problem.

Here. Take a sip of medicine.

*******

Like a person who wants to eat everything bad and live everything good and somehow stay healthy, we have come to think we can nod our heads at the preaching and go on ignoring the teaching, believing none will be the wiser.

But just like a person letting themselves go is obvious to anyone with eyes to see, so is the church’s neglect of its own Scripture obvious to the world.

Yes, we agree that to love God with our whole heart, mind, soul and strength and to love our neighbor is the greatest commandment, but we have yet to believe it with all that we do and think and feel.

Oh, yes, we proclaim going and making disciples of all people, baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit, is our greatest commission, but we haven’t cleared our schedules yet to do it.

It’s bad enough when it’s just me. It’s worse when it’s the church.

When it’s us together neglecting the doing of our professing, the gross effect is … gross. The Christ-deficient individual is magnified in the Christ-deficient church.

Who are you calling “Christ-deficient,” editor?

Sometimes, the medicine upsets the stomach.

*******

Our bickering, our complacency, our enculturation, our pride, our entitlement, our so-called faith without our faith in action—these are our Christ-deficiency.

These are the decay poisoning our blood, rotting our bones, atrophying our muscles, eroding our minds and our lives. These are the proof we are not remaining in Christ, that we are neglecting what we profess to believe.

We are Christ-deficient when we chase satisfaction and ignore sanctification.

We are Christ-deficient when anger overruns reason and fear siphons off courage.

We are Christ-deficient when we point the finger of judgment instead of extending the hand of compassion, when we are stingy with grace and mercy and liberal with condemnation.

We are Christ-deficient when we put more stock in worldly power than in taking the position of the worldly powerless.

A Christ-deficient church is made of Christ-deficient individuals. We are Christ-deficient when you or I am Christ-deficient. So, the cure is for me and for us.

Sip. Cough. Yep, the medicine is bitter. If we’ve lost the taste for grace.

There is grace here, and grace is powerful, even if the medicine is bitter.

*******

Grace is this: Christ-deficiency is absolutely curable.

Oh, the sweet grace of Christ-sufficiency.

The cure is confession—honest and specific confession.

The cure is repentance—full and complete repentance.

The cure is Christ himself.

“To live is Christ.”

“I no longer live. It is Christ who lives in me.”

“Put on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make no provision for the flesh.”

When we put on Christ, when Christ lives in us, we obey Christ’s commands.

When we obey Christ’s commands, we put on Christ, and he lives in us.

That bitter medicine is not so bitter after all. No, this is good medicine. And we must take it alone and together if the church really is to be the hope of the world, if the church again is to be the church at its best.

Oh, but grace is more.

Grace is this: Even when we don’t take the medicine, Christ is risen and alive and powerful and active and at work in this world. And that is grace for the world. Because Christ is the hope of the world. Even when the church isn’t quite there with him.

Ah, but when we are, my, my, my. When we are there with him, we are hope alive in the world, a light all can see through the darkness.

Grace is this: Even as some of us have yet to take the medicine, others have, and though they may not be completely cured yet, they are the radiance of Christ in the dark places all too common in our world.

That we would all join them.

*******

Church, while we celebrate what we have done right in the world, we also must not deny what we have done wrong.

We have enacted the Great Commission, however imperfectly, leading many millions to hope, to salvation, to life. We have embodied the Great Commandment, however incompletely, extending God’s compassion to multitudes. These are rightfully celebrated.

We also are right to examine our imperfection and incompleteness, acknowledging the Great Commission and Great Commandment are for us, too, that we are not finished being made disciples, nor are we finished loving the Lord with our whole selves or loving our neighbor.

Church, sometimes we have been the problem, but not always. Sometimes, Christ alive in us has been the solution when there was no other way.

Lord, may this be true in us again. And again and again, until there is no need anymore.

Eric Black is the executive director, publisher and editor of the Baptist Standard. He can be reached at eric.black@baptiststandard.com. The views expressed in this opinion article are those of the author.




Voices: The power of a daily family devotional

The alarm clanged. I’m not a morning person, and I hated that loud thing.

Staggering through the house, I woke up kids. Three sleepy girls stumbled from beds, made their way to the den and turned on the television.

I kept my eyes on the clock and gave orders: “Turn off the TV. (These days, it would be “turn off the cell phones.”) Eat this, wear that, comb your hair.”

Mornings were chaotic at our house during those years with young children.

The frenzied activity halted for 15 minutes each day. Regardless of where our daughters were in their routine, their dad would say, “Come on, girls, it’s time.”

Planting devotional seeds

Dad, dressed in suit and tie, called us all to the living room. He chose the middle section of the sofa, and our three daughters argued over who would sit next to him, until we adopted the rotation system.

We put the hurry-scurry on hold while we spent a few minutes with the Lord. We had no clue how important this daily custom would mean to each of us in later years.

My husband, their preacher-dad, read a chapter from a children’s Bible. The children’s edition featured pictures and stories in modern, simple English.

After the story, we memorized a Scripture. He chose one each week for us from the 1972 edition of the Living Bible. The Living Bible is easy for children to understand and learn.

After the story, we recited the new Scripture in unison, and then we each prayed. Listening to our daughter’s prayers could be eye opening. We discovered their depth of understanding and heard their candid ideas and needs.

After the serenity pause, the dash-about activities began again. The youngsters ran to pick up lunches and rush out the door.

Family devotionals began with the birth of our first child. The habit continued until our grown daughters left the nest. The children’s Bible sits on our library shelf these days. It is a sweet memory of yesteryear.

Now, the two of us, husband and wife, keep the tradition. We read a passage silently from our adult Bibles and then discuss it.

Fast forward 50 years. Our daughters can still recite those Scriptures, and through the mountains and valleys of life, those godly words brought comfort.

Bearing devotional fruit

Our firstborn developed early-onset dementia before she reached age 50. For 10 years, we watched this smart, vivacious, young woman decline with this horrific disease.

One day, while she was in the early stages, we waited for a doctor. Sitting on the exam table, she said, “I’m so scared.” She knew what awaited her with this illness.

I replied, “Quote your favorite Scripture.”

She looked at me and smiled: “Don’t worry about anything, instead, pray about everything. Tell God your needs and don’t forget to thank Him for His answers” (Philippians 4:6 NLT).

It was one she’d leaned at her dad’s knee.

We discussed the Scripture and what it meant. Over the next few years, the ones where memory existed and she could still speak, she quoted this one constantly to herself over and again.

Another favorite verse she recited as long as she could: “Just as you trusted Christ to save you, trust him too for each day’s problems. Live in vistal union with him” (Colossians 2:6 NLT).

She learned others: Romans 8:28. Romans 8:38-39. Psalms 23. 1 Peter 5:7.

Her retention eventually totally failed, and I quoted them to her. Occasionally, a flash of lucidity entered her brain as her dad or I cited them, and she smiled. Deep down inside her frail body and deteriorated mind, the Scriptures spoke.

I often wondered how she would have coped without them. Or how would we? These Scriptures carried comfort during dark days.

Sustained by devotionals

In late October 2024, hospice gave us the sad words: “She is transitioning rapidly now. We can’t say when she will go, but it will be soon.”

I didn’t know when she was going, but I knew where.

On October 26, I stood by her bed and watched her tiny, atrophied body slip away. Oxygen helped the irregular breathing. Often the gasps stopped, but then breath continued with its slow, unpredictable irregularity.

I prayed Philippians 4: 6 over her, and I personalized each phrase:

“Don’t worry about anything, sweet girl. Don’t be afraid. You are going to heaven. Don’t worry about leaving us. We are fine and we will see you again in heaven.

“You and I are praying about everything, and God knows our needs. He’s taking care of us, and you will be well and happy again. He knows you need to laugh and hug again. God will provide your needs, and we thank him because he hears us.”

As I reworded the familiar Scriptures, too weak to open her eyes, she blinked. She heard me, and I believe God allowed her understanding in that moment we shared.

Those Scriptures she learned as a child brought her peace and encouragement during the death hour, as they did us.

The power of those family devotionals helped us through life and death. When we began the routine, we didn’t know how vital and essential these Scriptures would become to us.

Suggestions for family devotionals

  1. Set aside 10 or 15 minutes each day for family devotions. Work out the best time for your family. Some may prefer morning, and others may prefer before bedtime.
  2. Read from a children’s Bible and show the kids the pictures. Switch to an adult Bible when the children outgrow the children’s Bible. Read a chapter each day.
  3. Let your children ask questions.
  4. Choose one Scripture and recite it daily until all have memorized it.
  5. Allow each one to pray after the recitation of Scripture.

Children will remember and cherish, and that alone is powerful.

Gay N. Lewis is married to Paul H. Lewis, pastor of Second Baptist Church of Rosenberg, and is the author of 15 Christian novels and two blogs. You can find her books on Amazon. The views expressed in this opinion article are those of the author.




Letter: Editorial: What is the BGCT? Show up to shape it

Letter: Editorial: What is the BGCT? Show up to shape it

I would like to offer a clear and gracious clarification in response to how my intentions were presented in this editorial. The article places the presidential nominations within the broader conversations surrounding women in ministry, ordination and pastoral titles.

While I recognize these ongoing discussions within Baptist life, I want to be clear that at no point have I ever made Dr. Potter’s gender, her ordination or the title she carries in her ministry role a factor in allowing my name to be put forth as a nominee.

As a committed Texas Baptist, I wholeheartedly affirm the autonomy of every local church to seek the Lord’s direction and govern themselves accordingly.

From the very beginning, my desire—even in considering allowing my name to be put forth—has been and continues to be to emphasize the importance of corporate prayer among Texas Baptists.

The Baptist Standard’s publication of my nomination, as well as my subsequent article “Voices: Pastoring through corporate prayer” clearly articulate what has motivated me to allow my name to be placed in nomination: a deep desire to call our churches back to the power and unity of corporate prayer. This has been—and remains—my sole purpose for allowing my name to be considered.

I am thankful for Eric’s wise words that once the annual meeting wraps up, we will all continue working together as Texas Baptists to reach our great state with the gospel.

Kevin Burrow, pastor
First Baptist Church, Eastland

Kevin, you are correct. I do not believe you or Debbie Potter have women in ministry as a main concern in accepting nominations for president of the BGCT. Both of you deserve consideration for the leadership you would bring to that role. I apologize to you and to Debbie for not taking additional space in the editorial to make that clear.

Thank you, Kevin, for correcting the record.




Editorial: What’s the BGCT? Show up to shape it

Our annual meeting is just a few days away. I say “our” because I am a Texas Baptist.

And by “Texas Baptist,” I mean I’m part of the Baptist General Convention of Texas.

Not because I’m the editor of the Baptist Standard. Baptist Standard Publishing is an independent partner of the BGCT, part of which means we have editorial independence and part of which means I am not a BGCT employee.

I’m part of the BGCT by virtue of being a member of First Baptist Church in Plano, a solidly BGCT church.

Since my family joined the church, I have been elected by First Baptist Plano to be a messenger to BGCT annual meetings. Before that, I was a messenger to BGCT annual meetings from the church I served as pastor.

Why am I a messenger? Because messengers vote. I want to have a voice in BGCT governance. I went to the annual meetings, and I voted. I will go and vote this year, too.

Before that, I attended BGCT annual meetings with my father-in-law Glenn Ward, who wouldn’t miss an annual meeting for the world, though he did miss one while undergoing treatment for pancreatic cancer.

My father-in-law believed in the BGCT so much that he invested in it for decades—serving it as an Executive Board member, serving with it through missions, promoting it and supporting it.

He didn’t just talk about the BGCT. He lived the BGCT. He didn’t think the BGCT was perfect, but he absolutely believed the BGCT was worth his investment.

The BGCT needs a lot more Glenn Wards.

We can start by showing up to the 2025 BGCT annual meeting in Abilene Nov. 16-18. Beyond showing up, those of us who are messengers can shape the BGCT with our votes.

What’s to shape?

Over the last few years, messengers have voted on statements of faith, institutional relationships, ministry roles, board and committee makeup, budgets, and leadership. Messengers decided it all—from the most controversial and consequential to the most mundane.

In recent years, messengers decided motions on affirming women in ministry, a motion on whether to affirm the 2000 Baptist Faith and Message, and a motion to amend the GC2 statement of faith. Even with these recent decisions, the same issues are still in play.

Two nominations for BGCT president are expected—Debbie Potter and Kevin Burrow. Anyone who’s followed the discussion on women in ministry within the Southern Baptist Convention, the BGCT and the Baptist Standard understands part of the significance of these nominations. For those who haven’t: Both are ordained. Both carry the title “pastor.” (See note at end of editorial.)

Some—like Kody Alvarez, pastor of Oak Grove Baptist Church in China Spring, dually aligned with the Southern Baptists of Texas Convention, and Jordan Villanueva, instructor of Christian Studies at Howard Payne University—still have questions about GC2 that may surface during the 2025 BGCT annual meeting.

Their questions revolve around denominational identity, doctrine, how GC2 is structured and language describing GC2—such as “centrist.” You can find a series of articles here on what “centrist” means.

Texas Baptists Executive Director Julio Guarneri has responded to questions about GC2, faith statements and women in ministry in his Oct. 15 and Nov. 7 weekly updates.

You can read his responses and decide for yourself if you still have questions. If you do, you can voice your questions during the annual meeting. If you are a messenger, you also can vote your convictions on these matters.

What to do

To vote our convictions on these and other matters, we need to know our convictions before arriving at the annual meeting.

We need to employ the historic Baptist principle of soul competency—“the God-given freedom and ability of persons to know and respond to God’s will,” as Bill Pinson defines it.

We need to read up on the issues. One way to do that is to read the various articles linked in this editorial. The linked articles don’t address all the issues, and they won’t answer all our questions, but they will provide some important information.

We need to study what Scripture says about the issues. We face these issues wanting to be obedient to Scripture, to walk in step with biblical conviction as guided by the Holy Spirit.

One of the reasons Baptists debate and even fight over some things—OK, so many things—is because we take the Bible seriously and want to be true to our understanding of it. Evangelism, missions, how we do church and how we do all of this together—we take these to be Bible issues, obedience to Scripture issues. So, yes, study Scripture before the annual meeting.

We need to pray—before and during the annual meeting. We need to ask the Holy Spirit to speak and to direct us. We need to ask for discernment, especially with the more heated issues.

We need to talk with others—those who agree with us and who disagree with us. We need to hear wise counsel from mature Christians.

We need to take all of this together, we need to show up, and we need to vote.

What I think

I have my opinions and convictions about the issues. It might be hard to believe, but not all Texas Baptists agree with my opinions and convictions. Thankfully, complete agreement isn’t necessary.

One reason I’m a Texas Baptist is because we who agree and disagree are going to meet together next week. We’re going to worship together, pray together, eat together, vote together, and my hope is we will leave together, not in lockstep, but still joined together in Jesus Christ and his Spirit to work together, communicating his gospel in word and deed.

May it be so.

EDITOR’S NOTE: Kevin Burrow commented on Facebook in response to this editorial, which is now published with permission as a Letter to the Editor. He correctly pointed out that I did not make clear his intentions for accepting a nomination for president of the BGCT.

Eric Black is the executive director, publisher and editor of the Baptist Standard. He can be reached at eric.black@baptiststandard.com. The views expressed in this opinion article are those of the author.