Football Coach Dennis Dunn, and now the Louisiana College Wildcats, have taken the slogan “Football isn’t just a sport, it’s an attitude” to a whole new level. PINEVILLE – Football Coach Dennis Dunn, and now the Louisiana College Wildcats, have taken the slogan “Football isn’t just a sport, it’s an attitude” to a whole new level. And this team’s attitude is summed up best by the coach himself: “Wins on the field will take care of themselves,” Dunn said. “I want these young men to be good dads, husbands and productive citizens.” Teaching them to be centered on Christ is the means to that end, said Dunn. “The way things differ at LC is there’s a spiritual aspect to the football team,” said Daniel Mujure, sophomore line backer who played for Dunn in high school at Shreveport’s Evangel Christian Academy. “Yes, we have to make plays and score more points, but … a team under the anointing of God is able to do things they shouldn’t be able to do. I saw it in high school when I played for Evangel. Coach Dunn has the anointing of God, and he passes it on to his team.” That anointing travels well beyond the gridiron. For instance, during Fall Camp, the team had meetings every night with … [Read more...]
It seems impossible now, but churches will bloom in the desert; God promises it
Tom Smith gets discouraged sometimes – and he’s not ashamed to admit it. NIGERIA, West Africa—Tom Smith gets discouraged sometimes – and he’s not ashamed to admit it. As a missionary strategy coordinator, Tom and his wife, Shirley, face the daily challenge of reaching the Futa Toro (FOO-tah TOR-oh), a Muslim people numbering more than 2 million. It’s not just their size that gives Tom pause. It’s their far-flung locations and bewildering diversity. The Futa Toro actually comprise two major subgroups of the Fulani peoples of West Africa: the semi-nomadic, cattle-herding Fulbe (FULL-bay) and the more settled Tukulor (TOO-kuh-lor). They live in many clans and castes scattered throughout northern Senegal and parts of The Gambia, Guinea, Mali and Mauritania. “It’s easy to become discouraged when we see the immensity of the task and so few results, so few workers, so few believers,” Tom says, rubbing the sun from his weary eyes after a long day’s drive through the scorched back roads of northern Senegal. “Sometimes I wonder why God called me.” At such moments, however, a divine voice speaks in silence to his heart: “You just do your part. Don’t worry about My part; I’ll take care of … [Read more...]
Pray for more prayer warriors for the Tuareg people during this critical time in their history
In Niger’s desert sands the Tuareg people still live in the nomadic lifestyle of their ancestors, still survive where water and food are increasingly scarce, and still practice the Islamic faith passed down to them. But Tuareg now search for hope as their way of life is progressively threatened each day. NIGER, West Africa—In Niger’s desert sands the Tuareg people still live in the nomadic lifestyle of their ancestors, still survive where water and food are increasingly scarce, and still practice the Islamic faith passed down to them. But Tuareg now search for hope as their way of life is progressively threatened each day. The Tuareg have long lived off the land they don’t own, possessing the land only as long as they live on it. Years of drought have killed their animals and left them wondering how much longer they can survive without seeking jobs in the city. “The way of life that is historically (Tuareg) doesn’t look like it will exist another decade,” says Warren Hessling, who along with his wife, Sharon, serve as strategy coordinators for the Tuareg people. Sharon recalls how a woman in a Tuareg village said she feared her family would “die out here like camels” if they didn’t get more … [Read more...]
Teens and parents can communicate
About the time youngsters turn 13, many teens and parents stop talking with each other. BATON ROUGE – About the time youngsters turn 13, many teens and parents stop talking with each other. Both feel slighted, disrespected, unnecessary to the other, and double walls of conversation-cutting self-protection grow higher and thicker. What’s a parent – or a teen - to do? The Turning Hearts Tour, which early in December at Florida Boulevard Baptist Church completed its inaugural year, provides answers. The Tour is an intense one- or two-day event that combines powerful worship with straight talk in separate sessions for teens and for parents. This is a conference not for the faint of heart. From graphically-told stories of horrid childhoods to a bludgeoned and bleeding Jesus on video screeens (clips from Mel Gibson’s ‘The Passion of the Christ’), the first session is all about bitterness and the need for forgiveness. The second session forces communication between parent and teen. They sit apart from anyone else, in family groupings, and respond to questions from the leader. “Parents, what do you remember about the first moment you set eyes on this human being?” Another: … [Read more...]
Keith Manuel joins LBC staff to encourage personal evangelism
The Louisiana Baptist Convention recently called a New Orleans pastor to lead in personal evangelism. ALEXANDRIA – The Louisiana Baptist Convention recently called a New Orleans pastor to lead in personal evangelism. Keith Manuel Ph.D., who was pastor of Calvary Baptist Church in the Algiers section of New Orleans, is to start work Jan. 8 as an Evangelism Associate. “No one accidentally gets saved; someone intended to tell them about Jesus,” Manuel is known to say often. “We must be intentional about personal evangelism, because who shouldn’t take evangelism personally?” The obvious result of not being intentional about personal evangelism is no baptisms, pointed out Thom Rainer, president and CEO of LifeWay Christian Resources, in recent news articles. He was reporting on statistics compiled by LifeWay from the Annual Church Profiles. In 2005, the last year for which complete statistics are known, baptisms were down by 4.15 percent, or 16,097 fewer than in 2004 – the lowest number of baptisms since 1993. “Southern Baptists should view this report as a wake-up call,” Rainer said. “We must focus our efforts, prayers and resources on reaching people for Christ. Baptism is the … [Read more...]
Winter sports lift youngsters Upward
First Natchitoches is going into its third year sponsoring Upward Basketball and Cheerleading, and the numbers of children participating have grown every year, said Oren Conner, minister of youth at First Natchitoches in charge of the Upward programs. NATCHITOCHES — First Natchitoches is going into its third year sponsoring Upward Basketball and Cheerleading, and the numbers of children participating have grown every year, said Oren Conner, minister of youth at First Natchitoches in charge of the Upward programs. Upward is an “evangelistic sports ministry specifically designed for kindergarten through sixth grade boys and girls that promotes salvation, character, and self-esteem in every child,” according to the website, www.upward.org. Upward also offers soccer and flag football programs. “The most obvious result is that we have families that are now involved in our church,” said Conner of the impact First Natchitoches has had in its community through Upward. “We’ve seen them gravitate to our church because they saw we were reaching out to their children. People are beginning to see that we care about their children.” In its first two years with Upward, First Natchitoches saw … [Read more...]
Louisiana’s People, Places and Events
Potpourri OAK GROVE – First church: Bayou Macon Associational Brotherhood Men’s Rally; Jan. 11, 7 p.m.; supper included; for information, call the associational office at 318-926-3251; Tom Sharplin, associational Brotherhood director; Jay Morgan, director of missions; Carl Gulde, pastor. NATCHITOCHES – First church: Sunday School Conference; Jan. 7, 4-7:30 p.m.; John and Missy Hunt, conference leaders; free; for information, call Tanya Conlay at 318-352-3737 or email tconlay@fbcnatchitoches.net; Josh Hunt, guest speaker at 11 a.m.; Thomas Rush, pastor. HAUGHTON – Koran church: Phaedra Clemons in concert; Dec. 31, 11 a.m.; George Rogers, pastor. … [Read more...]
Church news notes connect us
HAYNESVILLE – First Baptist has a new website:www.baptistsites.net/fbchaynesville. The Message checked it out: Looks pretty good! It’s apparently a free website with the master website being churchwebsites.com, which advertises itself as a Christian business that has a pastoral advisory board. BLANCHARD – First Baptist – where James Hill is pastor – has set time in early January for a Prayer Seminar as part of their Revival for Kingdom Growth emphasis. Bob Eklund, who has led prayer seminars in Texas for many years, according to the First Blanchard’s newsletter, The Lifeline, is to lead Jan. 6-7 at the church. “We will be asked to commit to a prayer strategy that will lead us to pray for a spiritual awakening starting in our church and spreading to our town and beyond,” The Lifeline reports. Discipleship groups start Jan. 14 at First Blanchard. They include The Man I Want To Be by pro quarterback Neal Jeffrey; Creative Correction by Lisa Whelchel; and In My Father’s House: Women Relating to God as Father, by Mary Kassian. SHREVEPORT – Kingston Road Baptist included in the Dec. 12 issue of its Messenger newsletter a copy of the Christmas story in the King James Version, which they’d … [Read more...]
Group returns Hurricane Katrina favor
Called “the forgotten city” during recovery from Hurricane Katrina, Bogalusa, La., may now become known as the community that never forgets. Nearly a dozen of its citizens are in Macon County cleaning up debris from the great ice storm of 2006 [in mid-December] because Illinois Southern Baptists are the ones who came to them last year when disaster relief teams seemed to be going everywhere else. DECATUR, Ill. – Called “the forgotten city” during recovery from Hurricane Katrina, Bogalusa, La., may now become known as the community that never forgets. Nearly a dozen of its citizens are in Macon County cleaning up debris from the great ice storm of 2006 [in mid-December] because Illinois Southern Baptists are the ones who came to them last year when disaster relief teams seemed to be going everywhere else. “They arrived before some of us were able to get home,” said Ira Craft. “When we heard you had a problem, we said, ‘It’s our turn.’ “ Craft, 71, is among 11 members of Bogalusa’s new Southern Baptist chain saw team who traveled more than 800 miles to Decatur on Tuesday. They joined about 35 other Southern Baptists from all over Illinois who have been staying at Tabernacle Baptist Church and … [Read more...]
Rogers overcomes life’s obstacles
Nearly five years ago, William Rogers began working on his doctor of ministry degree at age 71. LOUISVILLE, Ky. (BP) – Nearly five years ago, William Rogers began working on his doctor of ministry degree at age 71. At age 76, Rogers earned that degree from Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Ky., Dec. 8 and was the oldest graduate in his class. During those five years, the New Orleans pastor endured the death of his wife for 51 years, Joan, and the ravages of Hurricane Katrina, seeking to hold himself and his church together as he completed his degree. Rogers’ dream of earning a doctorate was a long shot from the beginning. In 2001, he received a letter from the Billy Graham School of Missions, Evangelism and Church Growth about the D.Min. program it offered at Southern Seminary. Out of school for more than 40 years, Rogers dismissed the letter without a second thought. Then came a second letter. And then a third. “I got the second letter and thought, ‘It would be a chance in a thousand to be accepted,’ and I threw it away,” he said. “The third time, something in my heart said ‘If you don’t check this out you will regret it for the rest of your life.’ So I decided to … [Read more...]
- « Previous Page
- 1
- …
- 482
- 483
- 484
- 485
- 486
- …
- 789
- Next Page »