“There can be no revival without repentance,” thundered Evangelist Jerry Spencer at the Labor Day Camp Meeting at Milldale Baptist Church and Conference Center, located in the country about 15 miles north of Baton Rouge. ZACHARY – “There can be no revival without repentance,” thundered Evangelist Jerry Spencer at the Labor Day Camp Meeting at Milldale Baptist Church and Conference Center, located in the country about 15 miles north of Baton Rouge. Milldale brought several words to light that we don’t much talk about today, at least not with any focus on Christians doing anything about “confessing” and “repenting” and “begging God’s forgiveness.” We’ve been programmed to use these words in telling nonbelievers what they need to do. But revival – and that’s what these words together add up to for Christians – is what Milldale is all about. “We believe we’ll have a visitation from God, that the blessings of God, the presence of God, will be here,” said Jimmy Robertson in the week before Labor Day. He was founder in 1963 of the Milldale church and camp meeting and today is co-host of the camp with Danny Greig, pastor of Milldale Baptist. Several people said the camp meeting achieved its purpose. “You hear God’s … [Read more...]
LBC launches EKG initiative in October
After a year of testing, LBC launches the Empowering Kingdom Growth-Louisiana initiative in October. Ten orientation sessions are planned to equip pastors and lay leaders with the essentials for a successful experience. ALEXANDRIA – After a year of testing, LBC launches the Empowering Kingdom Growth-Louisiana initiative in October. Ten orientation sessions are planned to equip pastors and lay leaders with the essentials for a successful experience. EKG-LA is a three-phase process. A church is led to examine its heart for God, its strategy of missions and its practices with Kingdom resources. The primary resources are two study books by Ken Hemphill: EKG, The Heartbeat of God and Making Change. Both volumes are published by B&H Publishing and supported by LifeWay resources. The second phase of the process involves the church in an Acts 1:8 experience that includes a study of The Acts 1:8 Challenge by Nate Adams. “The Kingdom of God is not a trivial slogan. Neither is the EKG-LA process an inconsequential initiative destined for insignificance,” said David E. Hankins, LBC executive director. “Our God is passionate about His Kingdom. The Lord spoke so often about the Kingdom and its importance to the ways of God. I want … [Read more...]
Pourciau announces presidential bid
Pastor Chuck Pourciau has agreed to allow his name to be placed in nomination as a candidate for the 2007 presidency of the Louisiana Baptist Convention. SHREVEPORT – Pastor Chuck Pourciau has agreed to allow his name to be placed in nomination as a candidate for the 2007 presidency of the Louisiana Baptist Convention. “This all started several months ago, when a group of pastors, who I respect a lot, came to me and asked me to pray about running,” Pourciau said. “After much prayer, I feel like it is the Lord’s will that I run. “I am not a political animal, nor am I running against anybody,” he said. “If the Lord wants me to be known, let me be known for His two greatest commandments. Whether I will get elected is in His hands.” A native of Louisiana, and NOBTS graduate – M.Div. and Ph.D – Pourciau was ordained a pastor in September 1984. “If elected president, Chuck Pourciau will emphasize missions – both in giving and participation,” wrote Wayne DuBose, senior pastor of First Baptist Church in Minden, in presenting Pourciau to Baptist Message readers. “He will bring a passion for evangelism and growth to his presidency. And, he will seek to help lead the Louisiana Baptist Convention to position itself … [Read more...]
American church needs real revival
I’ve heard many “calls” for revival recently but with very little teaching and exposition on revival. I’ve heard many “calls” for revival recently but with very little teaching and exposition on revival. It seems that in these urgent days there are too few leaders who actually are leading God’s people corporately to repent, pray, seek holiness and return to God. Do we not realize that scripturally it is impossible to have a call for revival without a call for repentance? This has always been God’s requirement for His people. The passionate, unceasing corporate prayer that is always present in revival is desperately lacking as well. In short, I see little evidence of sincere brokenness among God’s people for our present condition or the condition of our nation. We call for revival without actually crying with tears and brokenness for revival. The “call for revival” seems almost like a spiritual fad, with no true passion and sincerity of heart. Many will say “amen” when they hear mention of the need for revival. But the “call” is fleeting and soon passes away. And then we quickly move on to other activity and return to our business as usual with no follow-through by the leaders of God’s people. We must … [Read more...]
GLAAD tries to hide ugly reality
“Public-relations specialists,” observed Alan Harrington, “make flower arrangements of the facts, placing them so that the wilted and less attractive petals are hidden by sturdy blooms.” The deceased novelist’s description is quite accurate, and it is a technique that has been mastered by many activist organizations – especially homosexual activist groups. “Public-relations specialists,” observed Alan Harrington, “make flower arrangements of the facts, placing them so that the wilted and less attractive petals are hidden by sturdy blooms.” The deceased novelist’s description is quite accurate, and it is a technique that has been mastered by many activist organizations – especially homosexual activist groups. It would be an understatement to say that homosexual activist groups have been successful. Led by organizations like the Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD) and Lambda Legal, activists now have a majority of America embracing behaviors that less than twenty years ago were considered repulsive and even illegal. Homosexual activist groups have done a masterful job of hiding the unattractive reality of aberrant behaviors behind gaudy blooms springing forth from piles of public relations manure. A … [Read more...]
Katrina unified rural association’s churches
It is the most rural of the three associations Lonnie Wascom, director of missions, oversees, but the impact the 20 churches in the association makes is huge. LATANGI BAPTIST ASSOCIATION – It is the most rural of the three associations Lonnie Wascom, director of missions, oversees, but the impact the 20 churches in the association makes is huge. Located in eastern Livingston and Tangipahoa Parishes, this small Baptist association has reached out to its two larger cousins to the east in a big way, especially during the post-Katrina era. “They do a such great job,” Wascom said. “They have formed a tight identity with the two other associations to the East, thanks to the Katrina. “They were probably the least affected physically after the storm because they were pretty far west of the storm’s path. But post-Katrina they have truly done a tremendous job of ministering to their brothers and sisters in the East. I suspect from listening to their testimony and from the experiences I have witnessed over the past couple of years, LaTangi didn’t always relate to the others. “But the storm did a remarkable thing – it brought our churches together into a unified body,” Wascom said. “This is cooperation at its … [Read more...]
WMU team’s efforts enhanced by partnering
It is said there is strength in numbers, but in a rural community numbers are not always a luxury. It is said there is strength in numbers, but in a rural community numbers are not always a luxury. Located in rural southeast Louisiana, the LaTangi Associational Women’s Missionary Union (WMU), which is directly north of the more populace North Shore, overcomes a lack of numbers by partnering with other churches. “I believe our ability to partner with other churches is a big part of our success,” said Sue Woolery, head of the LaTangi Association’s WMU. A firm believer in missions work, it has become a part of her life for Woolery and her husband, recently the pastor at Lee Hill Baptist Church in Folsom. “When we went to Norway in 1984-85 for the International Missions Board, it gave us the insight to getting involved, not only in missions, but getting involved in everything,” she said. “I am very active here, but I also try to be as active as possible in the Louisiana Baptist Convention’s WMU.” Lonnie Wascom, director of missions for the three associations -- LaTangi, St. Tammany and Chappapeela – in the North Shore area says this associational WMU team is one of the most successful he has seen in terms of number … [Read more...]
Blazing a path for His glory
Highland Baptist Church last Sunday helped Henry King celebrate his 100th birthday, which technically was Sept. 16. WEST MONROE – Highland Baptist Church last Sunday helped Henry King celebrate his 100th birthday, which technically was Sept. 16. “No gifts, please. Your presence is your gift,” was imprinted on the invitation. King’s life is a gift. He and others like him – those born from 1900 to 1920 and thereabouts – helped build this nation and the Lousiana Baptist Convention. King was a youngster when Americans got involved in World War 1. He married Lottie in 1926 – before the stock market crashed in 1929. He worked for 42 years as a shipping clerk for Brown Paper Mill in Monroe, even through the Depression years. In his 30s – 1937 to 1947 – he watched the United States become embroiled in a second world war, and not long after that, in a war against Communist aggression in Korea. In the 1950s, Henry and Lottie adopted two toddlers. They moved “uptown” into a new, larger home, and they moved their church letter from Peniel Baptist West Monroe to Ridge Avenue Baptist West Monroe, before getting involved in a new church start that today is Highland Baptist West Monroe. “I guess they wanted a … [Read more...]
First Louisiana Baptist Convention DOM pursues Acts 1:8
Arnold Nelson came to Jesus in a new-ground cornfield, freshly hacked from the brush, in 1922 when he was eleven years old. MANSFIELD — Arnold Nelson came to Jesus in a new-ground cornfield, freshly hacked from the brush, in 1922 when he was eleven years old. Along with his cousin, Nelson felt the Lord leading them to pray even there. “I hurt my foot and said to my cousin, ‘I was just about to curse,’” Nelson remembered. “[Then] I said, ‘No, I’m not going to say it.’” When the cousin wanted to know more about that change of heart, Nelson obliged. “I said I knew it was wrong, and I wasn’t going to do it anymore. We sat down and talked about how wrong we were.” After praying and giving their lives to the Lord, the two boys made professions of faith at a church revival service that very night. “I was baptized in a pool at the foot of a hill dug out just below a spring,” Nelson said. “My mother was a widow as long as I can remember,” he continued. She had four other children, a set of twin girls older than he, as well as another boy and another girl both younger than he. A teacher, Mrs. Nelson moved around a good deal, and the result was that her oldest son was “broken in by rough living,” he said. “My cousins … [Read more...]
Early Baptists in Louisiana
Early Baptists in Louisiana John Coulter From Kentucky, John Coulter moved with his family to what would become Morehouse Parish in April 1797. They were the first known Baptists in Louisiana. David Cooper Accompanied by his horse and the Lord, David Cooper of Woodville, in Wilkinson County, Mississippi, often traveled the 30 miles — an eight hour journey — to the Felicana area near St. Francisville in Louisiana to minister. Cooper, an ordained Baptist minister and a practicing physician, had been active in the Charleston Association in South Carolina, helping to constitute a church and ordain its pastor, before moving to Mississippi in 1802. In Mississippi, Cooper not only helped organize the Mississippi Association, he was also active in evangelistic and pastoral work, serving as a missionary doctor in Mississippi and Louisiana. He was married in his later years to the widow of Louisiana’s first elected governor, William C.C. Claiborne. In an 1817 letter he wrote about the area in Louisiana where he was ministering: “It is a large and populous settlement, almost entirely destitute of the gospel, except the little attention they have received from your unworthy servant, and is, of course, good missionary … [Read more...]
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