By Joni B. Hannigan, Baptist Press PHOENIX (BP) – Sensitive to the need for greater diversity in leadership and increased participation of ethnics, the Southern Baptist Convention voted overwhelmingly June 14 to ask for greater accountability regarding their involvement in SBC life. During a news conference after the vote, Paul Kim, pastor emeritus of Antioch Baptist Church in Cambridge, Mass., leaders to also have the opportunity to express their love for Southern Baptists in Christ. We have to work together.”[img_assist|nid=7388|title=Ethnic Panel|desc=The ethnic study workgroup, members of the SBC Executive Committee, answer questions during a press conference.|link=none|align=right|width=640|height=411] It was Kim who asked messengers at the 2009 SBC annual meeting to study how ethnic churches and leaders could better partner with others to serve the SBC. After a two-year workgroup study of the motion, the SBC Executive Committee approved a 10-part recommendation for the Phoenix meeting, citing the “need to be proactive and intentional in the inclusion of individuals from all ethnical and racial identities within Southern Baptist life.” For the first time in … [Read more...]
Crossover 2011: ‘Living Water’ brought to Arizona desert
By Staff, Baptist Press PHOENIX (BP) – Even as scorching temperatures bumped 102 degrees in Arizona’s Urban Corridor, Southern Baptists mobilized in Crossover 2011 to bring the Living Water to people throughout the region’s parched deserts. [img_assist|nid=7390|title=Crossover 2011|desc=Intentional Community Evangelism volunteers Victor Benavides , left, and 82-year-old Hiram Acree, center, a member of North Peachtree Baptist Church in Doraville, Ga., share the gospel with a young man headed down a street in north central Phoenix during Crossover 2011.|link=none|align=left|width=640|height=429]Some 5.2 million people live and work in the corridor, which stretches from the Phoenix metro area down to Case Grande and Tucson. Several hun dred of those people are new believers in Christ, following a week of community evangelism and Crossover’s Saturday events. Phoenix was the 23rd year for Crossover, an evangelism event coordinated by the North American Mission Board, local associations and churches, which precedes the Southern Baptist Convention’s annual meeting. This marks the second time the annual meeting has converged in Phoenix, the first time in 2003. “This past week, Arizona Baptists have truly shown their neighbors the … [Read more...]
FBC Ponchatoula holds Chautauqua to minister to seniors
By Frank M. McCormack, Special to the Message [img_assist|nid=7392|title=Chautauqua sketches|desc=Joe McKeever, speaker, writer, artist and former director of the New Orleans Baptist Association, sketches a cartoon of Margaret Hardin at First Baptist Ponchatoula’s first-ever Chautauqua, which took place May 31 through June 2.|link=none|align=left|width=100|height=67]PONCHATOULA – For three days this summer – May 31 through June 2 – Ponchatoula’s First Baptist Church held its first-ever Chautauqua, an adult education and arts event with roots stretching back to the late 19th and early 20th centuries. “Chautauqua” may not be a common term today, but around 1900 in rural America, the events were quite well known. They originated in 1874 in Chautauqua, New York, when a Methodist minister organized the first such assembly, which featured Bible instruction, arts and educational lectures, musicians, preachers and other speakers. Soon thereafter, the original Chautauqua inspired dozens of spinoff events across the country. At First Baptist Ponchatoula, the Louisiana-style Chautauqua was specifically designed for senior adults and was the brainchild of Johnny Presley, the church’s … [Read more...]
Reflections on the 2011 SBC
By David E. Hankins, Executive Director of the Louisiana Baptist Convention It was good and hot. The hot part you could surmise. After all, it was in Phoenix, Ariz. in June! But it was also good – good fellowship, good preaching, good conduct. Although the attendance was lower than expected, the business was completed efficiently and orderly. The officers executed their work with dignity and warmth. The reports from our ministries were inspiring and encouraging. Both mission boards commissioned new missionaries as a part of their presentations. The emphasis this year centered around 1) the urgency of reaching the nations with the gospel, and 2) the importance of pursuing this together through Cooperative Program ministries and through all our denominational partners. There were no task force reports and no issues that embroiled the convention in controversy. Overall, it was a quiet, peaceful meeting, marked by goodwill and a desire to move forward in kingdom advance. Perhaps the most significant facet of the 2011 SBC meeting is that it was the inaugural convention for three of our most important leaders: the new Executive Committee President Frank Page, the new NAMB President Kevin Ezell, … [Read more...]
The 10 percent gay myth: Let’s get the facts straight
By Kelly Boggs, Editor Baptist Message “For the great enemy of truth is very often not the lie – deliberate, contrived and dishonest – but the myth – persistent, persuasive, and unrealistic,” President John F. Kennedy told the 1962 graduating class of Yale University. America’s 35th president continued, “We subject all facts to a prefabricated set of interpretations. We enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought.” Though Kennedy spoke these words almost half a century ago his wisdom has never been more relevant, especially when applied to the subject of homosexuality. Homosexual activists and many in the media have for some time now touted research done by Alfred Kinsey in the 1940s that asserted 10 percent of males in the U.S. were homosexual. The fact that Kinsey’s controversial research methods and suspect findings have been subject to debate and dispute has not stopped activists or the media from continuing to trumpet the 10 percent figure. The motive, of course, is clear: If it were true that a significant portion of the population were engaged in a particular behavior, how could that behavior be deemed deviant? Perhaps it is … [Read more...]
What do you respect from your pastor?
By Argile Smith, Associate Dean of Pastoral Ministry Louisiana College What do you look for in a pastor? What kind of profile should he fit? Answering these questions raises an important issue for pastors and congregations alike. At issue is the way we arrive at our perspectives regarding who a pastor should be and what he should do. If you’re like most church members, you love your pastor. Because you love him, you want him to fulfill his calling so he can glorify the Lord in his ministry. Sometimes, however, our love for our pastor doesn’t prevent us from developing some rather unrealistic expectations of him. We can, unintentionally, allow unreasonable standards to creep into our thinking about a pastor’s profile. That’s when we can get into trouble. Unrealistic expectations of a pastor come to us from a variety of notions that we collect along the way. For instance, more than a few of us tend to gather all of the positive character traits and exemplary work habits of other pastors we have known through the years. Then we blend them together to form what we consider to be an appropriate job description for a pastor. When we give in to … [Read more...]
Questions We’ve Pondered: Archie England
By Archie England, NOBTS Professor of Old Testament and Hebrew Question: Enemies of God’s people deserve a swift destruction. Right? If so, then why did God send Jonah to spare the wicked Assyrians? Archie England responds: Jonah detested the command of God! “Go to Nineveh,” God had said (1:2). Jonah refused to do so: He got on a ship to “escape the presence of the Lord.” He later revealed why: He feared that a just God might actually bring salvation to an unjust people (4:2). Jonah feared that the goodness of God might do kindness to a nation that deserved only swift destruction. Such thought angered the prophet (4:1), motivating him to subvert God’s plan to send him as a messenger of warning to the people of Nineveh. Jonah detested the Assyrians! They deserved judgment. God, instead, granted His enemies compassion and grace. From least to greatest, all of Nineveh heard (somehow a mad, Hebrew-speaking prophet communicated with an Accadian-speaking population) and repented to Israel’s God. Humbled by a rather cryptic prophetic proclamation (3:4), all of Nineveh fasted, believed and called upon the Lord, and turned from wickedness (3:5-10). Jonah was … [Read more...]
Shreveport church prospers despite pastor’s illness
By Quinn Lavespere, Message Staff Writer [img_assist|nid=7398|title=Woodridge Shreveport|desc=With Woodbridge Pastor Floyd Davis (center) battling illness, his deacons, staff (Minister of Music Dick Powell (left) and church secretary Lois Gordon (right), and the church body rallied around him and drew closer together.|link=none|align=right|width=640|height=480]SHREVEPORT – Sometimes, God uses the most devastating situations to bring about the best of things for His people. Despite losing the services of longtime pastor Floyd Davis and associate pastor Chuck McInturf to illnesses for several months, Woodridge Baptist Church has prospered. “I tell people that this all surprised me, but it didn’t surprise God,” Davis said. “None of this caught God off guard.” Davis, who is in his 33rd year as Woodridge Baptist pastor, was diagnosed last Thanksgiving with aplastic anemia. The pastor recalled details of his battle with the disease. “About a month and a half before I was diagnosed, I started noticing that I was experiencing shortness of breath, and it got progressively worse, Davis said. “By the time I got in the hospital, my shortness of breath had gotten severe, and I got an infection and was running a high fever.” Though he … [Read more...]
SBC meeting spotlights diversity, unity, unengaged
By Michael Foust, Baptist Press [img_assist|nid=7400|title=SBC Messengers|desc=Messengers to the Southern Baptist Convention Annual Meeting vote during the SBC Executive Committee report in the morning session June 14 at the Phoenix Convention Center. More than 4,700 messengers registered for the 158th annual meeting.|link=none|align=left|width=640|height=398]PHOENIX (BP) – Southern Baptist Convention messengers meeting in Phoenix June 14-15 adopted an historic report encouraging ethnic diversity, witnessed dozens of leaders standing together in support of a landmark unity pledge, and saw hundreds of pastors and laypeople volunteer to lead their churches to embrace one of the world’s 3,800 unengaged people groups. It was the lowest-attended annual meeting in 67 years, with just over 4,800 in attendance, but the substance of the meeting led plenty who attended to argue it shouldn’t be judged on numbers. “I do believe it could prove to be the most spiritually significant convention over the last 50 years,” Southern Baptist Convention President Bryant Wright, who was re-elected to another one-year term, told Baptist Press after the Phoenix gathering. Wright pointed to the sluggish economy and to the travel time from most SBC … [Read more...]
Wright re-elected president of SBC
By Barbara Denman, Baptist Press PHOENIX (BP) – Atlanta-area pastor Bryant Wright was elected to a second term as president of the Southern Baptist Convention, defeating California pastor Wiley Drake by a vote of 2,274-102 June 14 at the SBC annual meeting in Phoenix. Wright, pastor of Johnson Ferry Baptist Church in Marietta, was nominated to a second term by David Platt, senior pastor of The Church at Brook Hills in Birmingham, Ala. Drake, pastor of First Southern Baptist Church in Buena Park, Calif., nominated himself. [img_assist|nid=7402|title=SBC Officers|desc=Newly elected officers of the Southern Baptist Convention are: Bryant Wright, president and pastor of Johnson Ferry Baptist Church in Marietta Ga.; Fred Luter, first vice president and pastor of Franklin Avenue Baptist Church in New Orleans, La.; Eric Thomas, second vice president and pastor of First Baptist Norfolk in Norfolk, Va.; John Yeats, recording secretary and communications director of the Louisiana Baptist Convention. Not pictured is James H. Wells, registration secretary and director of missions for the Tri-County Baptist Association in Nixa, Mo.|link=none|align=left|width=478|height=640]Of the 2,384 votes cast, Wright … [Read more...]
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