By Barbara Denman, Baptist Press [img_assist|nid=6024|title=Southern Baptist missionaries work at the Good Samaritan Clinic in Jimani Dominican Republic to treat Haitian earthquake victims|desc=|link=none|align=left|width=100|height=64]HIALEAH, Fla. (BP) – The joint Southern Baptist response to the Jan. 12 Haiti earthquake will launch in the coming week with four “strategically-selected” medical teams, leaders of the Southern Baptist Disaster Relief Network decided Jan. 26 at the Florida Urban Impact Center in Hialeah, Fla. Plans to respond to Haiti’s urgent, intermediate and long-term needs were addressed at the meeting by assessment teams that had just returned from the quake-ravaged nation along with representatives from the Florida Baptist Convention, North American Mission Board, International Mission Board, Baptist Global Response and other Southern Baptist disaster relief representatives. The group wrestled with logistical arrangements and how to send mission teams and respond to needs in a country where transportation and in-country support for teams is extremely difficult. Access to airports and shipping docks remains highly restricted, the teams reported. “At this point, all we can sleep safely in … [Read more...]
Disaster relief still needed in American Samoa
[img_assist|nid=6026|title=North American Mission Board missionary Ronda Corn and village resident, survivors of the recent tsunami, survey damages.|desc=|link=none|align=left|width=100|height=67]PAGO PAGO, American Samoa (BP) – Southern Baptist disaster relief work continues on American Samoa, seven weeks after an earthquake – measuring 8.3 on the Richter scale – struck the South Pacific island, triggering a deadly tsunami that killed 31 people, including six Southern Baptists. But disaster relief volunteers onsite say many needs created by the disaster remain unmet. Water purification has emerged as the key disaster relief ministry operation in American Samoa since the Sept. 29 tsunami, according to Bruce Poss, disaster relief coordinator for the SBC’s North American Mission Board. As of mid-November, volunteers had purified more than 4,000 gallons of water in 17 villages throughout the island, which is located about six hours south of Hawaii. Natural water supplies in most locations on the island have been tainted, so authorities have urged Samoans to boil the water, Poss said. But villagers are unwilling to spend their limited money on propane fuel to boil water when they need it to cook food – making water purification … [Read more...]
Annie Armstrong offering reaches $56.5 million
By Mike Ebert, Baptist Press TALLADEGA, Ala. (BP) – Southern Baptists gave $56.5 million in 2009 to the Annie Armstrong Easter Offering for North American Missions. The amount was 2.7 percent (or $1.5 million) off the previous year’s giving mark and $8.5 million below the stated goal of $65 million. Richard Harris, interim president of the North American Mission Board, shared the total in an address to the Woman’s Missionary Union board of trustees at the Shocco Springs Baptist Conference Center in Talladega, Ala. The $56.5 million received in 2009 is the fourth-largest total in the offering’s history. In a year filled with 10 percent unemployment, a bleak housing market and other distressing economic news, Harris said the amount given to “Annie” was a blessing. “Only God could do that,” Harris told the WMU leaders Jan. 10, “and only through the faithfulness of people like WMU ladies out there lifting up the opportunities and needs.” Harris expressed his appreciation for WMU’s year-round efforts to promote missions and missions giving. “I appreciate the partnership we’ve shared,” Harris said. “We are about the same thing – trying to advance the Kingdom for missions. I thank all of you for what you are doing. … [Read more...]
CP Reaches ‘more souls,’ says young pastor
By Karen L. Willoughby, Managing Editor [img_assist|nid=6029|title=Andy Johnson Pastor Cross Roads Baptist Church Farmerville|desc=|link=none|align=left|width=70|height=100]FARMERVILLE (BP) – When Cross Roads Baptist Church realized they had more income than budgetary needs last fall, it didn’t take long to decide how to spend it. They upped their giving to missions through the Cooperative Program from 10 percent to 12 percent. [img_assist|nid=6030|title=Cross Roads Baptist Church is a congregation of 100 in Farmerville Louisiana|desc=|link=none|align=left|width=100|height=59]“The Bible tells us in 1 Corinthians 4:2 that stewards are to be found faithful,” said Andy Johnson, pastor of the Farmerville, La. congregation. “Rather than roll those finances over into a CD or put them away in a rainy day or a building fund, we decided that they would be put to better use for the Kingdom’s sake in the Cooperative Program. “The CP missionary force is, in my opinion, one of the most important arsenals that we as Christians have today,” the 30-year-old Johnson said of the national and international outreach supported by 45,000 Southern Baptist churches. The missionaries “are on the front lines ... think of it as a military … [Read more...]
Constitution service of Thompson Road Baptist Church in Slidell
[img_assist|nid=6032|title=Thompson Road Baptist Church in Slidell observed its Constitution service on Sunday January 17.|desc=|link=none|align=left|width=100|height=82]Thompson Road Baptist Church in Slidell observed its Constitution service on Sunday, Jan. 17. It was a mission of Calvary Baptist in Slidell for many years. The church met in a double-wide trailer and struggled to survive for awhile. Calvary sent a staff member named Randy Boyette to make one last attempt and it worked. The group grew to 50 in the double-wide and then working with the LBC Missions and Ministry office, Church Site Corp., and Baptist Mission Builders, was able to build a facility in West Slidell. With the constitution service they move from mission church status to full membership in North Shore Baptist Association. … [Read more...]
Drop-off sites for Haiti supplies
Drop-off sites for Haiti supplies Southeastern Louisiana: Bush: Hebron Baptist Church 79614 Hwy. 41 985-886-3109 Covington Dawsey’s Hardware 78481 Highway 437 Ph: 985-892-1640 985-892-6138 985-630-2378 Hammond 116 Robinhood Dr. Ph. 985-630-7459 985-630-2378 Central Louisiana: Olla First Baptist Church of Olla 3153 Elm Street Office 318-495-5506 Fax 318-495-3140 Hours: 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. E-Mail: ofbc@ollafirstbaptistchurch.org Pastor: Johnnie Phillips Cell 318-992-3641 Northeast Louisiana Shreveport/Marshall, Texas, area Church of the Living Waters 325 Stevens St. Tatum, Texas Ph: 903-678-2455 903-678-1375 903-754-1059 … [Read more...]
Haiti Needs List
From Louisiana to Haiti Hebron Baptist Church is one of a growing list of drop-off sites for anyone who would like to give to the Haiti Relief effort. Through Monday, Feb. 15, Hebron Bush will be open Monday, Wednesday and Thursday from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m., and then from 6- p.m. to 8 p.m. Hebron Bush is located on Hwy 41, in Bush, going south towards Slidell on the left hand side. For more information, call the church office – 985-886-3109 – from 8 a.m. to 12 noon. The following items have been requested by Christian leaders in Haiti. The dropoff location is the church fellowship hall: The #1 need in Haiti is baby formula, according to Disaster Relief leaders who just returned from an assessment trip to identify places and situations that were being overlooked. Cooking utensils (pots, pans, forks, spoons, etc) Rice Beans Cooking Oil Tomato Paste/Tomato Products Spaghetti Ramen Noodles Soap Tooth Paste Towels & Wash clothes Blankets Sheets Tarps Tents Ropes Foam Mattresses & Cots Tin for shelters Medical supplies, such as 4x4’s, tape, gauze rolls, band aids exam gloves pain medications personal care items hand sanitizer liquid soap antibiotic … [Read more...]
BUCKETS OF HOPE OFFER OPPORTUNITY FOR EVERY BAPTIST TO PROVIDE HANDS-ON HELP TO HAITIANS
[img_assist|nid=6040|title=BUCKETS OF HOPE OFFER OPPORTUNITY FOR EVERY BAPTIST TO PROVIDE HANDS-ON HELP TO HAITIANS|desc=|link=none|align=left|width=495|height=640] … [Read more...]
No Ordinary Saints Helmet
[img_assist|nid=6046|title=White Castle First Baptist Pastor Greg Wilton and wife Abby hold a Saints helmet found while gutting houses after Katrina|desc=|link=none|align=left|width=67|height=100] By Paul F. South, NOBTS Communications WHITE CASTLE, La. (BP) – As Super Bowl week dawned in New Orleans, Greg Wilton’s face and a tarnished replica Saints helmet graced the front page of the city’s newspaper, The Times-Picayune. Wilton, 27, tried to quell the buzz from family and friends, but this is no ordinary football helmet. And Wilton, bivocational pastor of First Baptist Church in White Castle, La., a town of 1,946 where bayous and sugarcane stalks likely outnumber people, is more than, as he puts it, “a guy with a helmet.” He’s a guy with a message to share. First, about the helmet, which Wilton hopes someday to return to its owner. Rewind to the spring of 2006, seven months after Hurricane Katrina. Wilton, then a new graduate student at New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary, joined a group of collegians working through the seminary’s MissionLab program during spring break to gut houses in New Orleans’ devastated Upper Ninth Ward, one of the Crescent City’s hardest-hit areas by post-Katrina flooding. As they … [Read more...]
Cook reads God’s Word–aloud
by Karen L. Willoughby, Managing Editor RUSTON – Members of Cook Baptist Church signed up for back-to-back, two-hour time slots recently, for the opportunity of reading the Bible aloud. Families, Sunday school classes and other small groups, as well as individuals, sat in the foyer of the church a half-mile north of Interstate-20, and read from where the last person left off. It took 79 and one-half hours for 100 people to read from Genesis 1:1 through Revelation 22:21 in the New King James version. “We wanted to make a statement that America needs to return to hearing God,” said Mike Holloway, pastor since 2005 of Cook Ruston. “We want people across America to Hear God Speak – that’s the name we gave it – hear God speak to their hearts about their morals and lifestyles. “I wanted it in the foyer for a purpose, in front of those big windows,” Holloway said. “It was making a statement for everybody driving by, even at 2 in the morning, to see that we’re going back to hear God speak. It was a direct message to the world that we need to hear God again. We’re just calling America back – to the church first and also to America – to hear God speak.” Holloway said he hopes other churches across Louisiana and across the … [Read more...]