By Staff, Baptist Message NASHVILLE, Tenn. – John Moore has been named the national collegiate ministry leader at the SBC’s LifeWay Christian Resources. [img_assist|nid=7237|title=John Moore|desc=|link=none|align=left|width=67|height=100]Moore, a graduate of Louisiana Tech University and New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary, worked in the collegiate ministry area of the Louisiana Baptist Convention for nearly 30 years before moving to LifeWay in 2006. In his new position Moore will work with Baptist collegiate ministers throughout the United States determine strategic priorities for ministering to college and university students. … [Read more...]
LC President Joe Aguillard recovering from heart surgery
By Staff, Baptist Message PINEVILLE – Louisiana College President Joe Aguillard, 54, is home recovering from quadruple bypass heart surgery after suffering a heart attack March 28 while at work. School spokesperson Amy Robertson said Aguillard came through the surgery fine and recovering well from surgery. He was released Friday, April 8, from Rapides Regional Medical Center and is continuing his recovery at home. There is no timetable on Aguillard's recovery and return to work, however, his doctors have asked that he have no visitors as this time until he has time to regain some of his strength. LC Vice President Tim Johnson has been named acting president by the school’s board of trustees. … [Read more...]
Letter to the Editor: Take a stand against Bell’s ‘Love Wins’
Letter to the Editor To the Editor, As a youth pastor and former BCM student, I am quite familiar with Rob Bell. I was first introduced to Bell at a BCM where our leader occasionally used his videos as lessons for our meetings. Many of us were instantly hooked. The charisma Bell has in the Nooma videos quickly and easily attracts young people. However, with Bell’s most recent book being released, we as Christians must take a stand. Rob Bell is not emergent or even post-modern, but rather, I believe, he is a heretic. We should not let this type of false theology [Bell’s most recent book, Love Wins, is said to deny core Christian beliefs including the existence of a literal hell] get anywhere near our students. It shouldn’t be on the shelves of our offices, youth rooms, or Christian book stores. It is against this false doctrine that we must take a stand; for it is a cancer that spreads among the body of Christ rapidly, affecting mostly the younger generation. We must teach firm doctrine, making our students aware of antichrists among us. Young and old must know that our faith is based on Christ’s teachings. To skew Jesus’ words … [Read more...]
Young, Southern Baptist … and irrelevant?
By Pastor Brad Whitt, Temple Baptist Simpsonville, S.C. I’m not “young, restless and reformed.” I guess you’d say that I’m young, Southern Baptist and, it seems, increasingly irrelevant. You see, I’m just a pastor’s son who grew up with a love for my denomination – a Southern Baptist boy by birth and conviction. As I travel around the SBC, I can see that I’m in the majority; nonetheless, I can’t get away from the overwhelming feeling that in our current denominational world, I am presented as the dinosaur – albeit only a 37-year-old one. It’s obvious when I see who is lifted up as the future of our convention – the hip and cool up-and-comers with whom I have little in common – that my breed is in danger of becoming extinct. I don’t mind wearing a coat and tie when I preach (at least on Sunday mornings), and I still love to hear a powerful or dynamic choir special. I believe in giving an invitation at the end of every service. Public invitations are still effective. The church where I serve baptized more than 100 people just last year. I like for the auditorium lights to be on so that I can read my Bible. Also, I don’t get so tired from preaching on … [Read more...]
Justification by faith makes a difference
By Kevin McFadden, Professor of Christian Studies at Louisiana College [img_assist|nid=7242|title=Kevin McFadden|desc=|link=none|align=left|width=78|height=100]Many Christians know that Jesus Christ died for their sins but have difficulty seeing how this has any direct bearing upon their daily lives. The goal of this and next issue’s essay is to explain how Paul understood Christ’s death for our justification to make a remarkable difference in the believer’s life. I will be reflecting on Romans 5-8 where Paul explains the results of justification by faith. These chapters are meant to give Christians, who live in a world plagued by sin and death, the hope that God through Christ has secured our freedom from this sin and death. I must begin by explaining what exactly justification by faith is. Perhaps the easiest way to define this doctrine is by contrasting it with its opposites. First, justification is the opposite of condemnation. Both are declarations of a courtroom – condemnation is the declaration that a person is evil and guilty; justification is the declaration that a person is righteous and innocent. This is important, because some have argued that justification means that … [Read more...]
Questions We’ve Pondered: Bill Warren
By Bill Warren, Professor of New Testament and Greek at NOBTS Question: What is Palm Sunday all about? Bill Warren responds: Palm Sunday, the Sunday before Easter, marks the beginning of what has traditionally been called “holy week,” the last week in the ministry of Jesus when he was crucified and then resurrected on Easter Sunday morning. The term “Palm Sunday” comes from the use of palm branches as Jesus makes his triumphal entry into Jerusalem after the walk from Jericho up to Jerusalem. The entry itself is a “street play” or “living parable” in the sense that Jesus stages the event to make a point that others should understand: God’s king is entering his city. Jesus and his disciples had walked all the way to Jerusalem, so walking the last part downhill at the Mount of Olives was not going to be difficult, but instead of walking it, Jesus rides down the hill as a display of who he is, namely the fulfillment of the prophecy in Zechariah 9:9 (see Matthew 21:4-5 and John 12:14-15) where the Messianic king will come riding into Jerusalem on a donkey’s young colt. Presented in all four Gospels (Matthew 21, Mark 11, Luke 19, and John 12), the importance of this event for the last week is that it establishes that Jesus is … [Read more...]
Franklin Avenue’s family conference tackles area’s problems
By Diana Chandler, Regional Reporter NEW ORLEANS, La. – New Orleans’ primary crime problem is homicide, with rates 10 times the national average and five times that of comparably-sized cities, according to a newly-released U.S. Department of Justice report focusing on crime trends here. As New Orleans civic leaders move to reduce crime in the area, Franklin Avenue Baptist Church Pastor Fred Luter is already tackling the problem by strengthening families in faith. That was the purpose behind Franklin Avenue’s recent family conference, the first of a planned annual event. [img_assist|nid=7245|title=Pastor Fred Luter|desc=Franklin Avenue Baptist Church Pastor Fred Luter is trying to strengthen families in faith to help address crime in the area. The church’s inaugural family conference was the first step in his efforts.|link=none|align=left|width=640|height=505]“I believe the family is key to a lot of the things that are happening or not happening in our society,” Luter said. “God created the family before He created the church.” Luter’s long desire to hold such a conference was strengthened by a killing on the steps of the church on Father’s Day in … [Read more...]
Ross: Building close relationships with one’s children is essential
By Brian Blackwell, Special to the Message ALEXANDRIA – Many Christian parents have forgotten that a close relationship with their teenager is the pipeline that carries spiritual impact from them to their child, Richard Ross said during a recent parenting conference at Calvary Baptist Church in Alexandria. The problem, Ross said, is those parents believe managing their child’s life leads to a positive outcome. Not so! Teens begin to turn their heart back toward their mom and dad when the parents devote quality time to building or repairing a relationship damaged by the angst of being a teenager. “Our churches are spiritually alive when our homes are spiritually alive,” said Ross, who led the Be Conference the last weekend in March. “At the end of the day the battle is won or lost by what goes on at home.” [img_assist|nid=7247|title=Richard Ross|desc=Richard Ross, professor of youth ministry at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Forth Worth, Texas, said too many Christian parents have forgotten that a close relationship with their teens is essential.|link=none|align=left|width=640|height=480]About 225 people participated in the event, which was designed to better equip … [Read more...]
Bill Glass Ministry presents ‘Day of Champions’ at St. Gabriel
By Marilyn Stewart, Regional Reporter Note: Inmates’ names changed for privacy ST. GABRIEL – God took them from the dope house to the church house, from death row prisoner to preacher. Now they go back into prisons with the gospel, and take others with them. Former jewel thief Jack “Murf the Surf” Murphy and the Bill Glass Champions For Life prison ministry presented a “Day of Champions” program recently for the 3,000 men and women at the Louisiana Correctional Institute for Women and the Elayn Hunt Correctional Center in St. Gabriel. Louisiana Baptists were part of a multi-denominational team of 250 that shared the gospel in lockdown, hospice, the prison yard, and around the lunch table the last Saturday in March. Including 220 first-time commitments, 560 decisions were recorded. [img_assist|nid=7249|title=Sharing the Gospel|desc=A college co-ed from Texas, one of 20 from different Texas colleges, shares the gospel with one of the inmates at St. Gabriel during a ‘Day of Champions’ presented by Jack Murphy and the Bill Glass Champion for Life prison ministry.|link=none|align=left|width=640|height=536]“We’re not going out to have church,” Murphy said to participants … [Read more...]
Explosion forever changed the life of law school dean Michael Johnson
By Mark H. Hunter, Special to the Message SHREVEPORT – As a 12-year-old boy growing up in Shreveport, James Michael “Mike” Johnson wanted to be a firefighter just like his dad. That is, he did until his father was nearly killed in an explosion. [img_assist|nid=7252|title=Michael Johnson|desc=Louisiana School Law School Dean Michael Johnson wanted to be a firefighter before his father, who was a firefighter, was involved in a near-fatal explosion. The near-tragedy altered the course of Michael Johnson’s life.|link=none|align=left|width=100|height=67]“That altered the course of our lives,” Johnson said in a recent interview. Instead of becoming a firefighter, he became an attorney specializing in defending individuals and groups in religious and free speech cases. As dean of Louisiana College’s Judge Paul Pressler School of Law, Johnson, 39, will help a new generation of students practice law from a biblical, conservative, Constitutional world view. The Baptist school earlier this year purchased the former Federal building in downtown Shreveport and classes are scheduled to begin August 2012. “We really believe that it is important to acknowledge our Judeo-Christian … [Read more...]
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