By Brian Blackwell, Message Staff Writer ALEXANDRIA, La. (LBM) – Louisiana Baptists are in the final year of implementing the President’s 2020 Commission Final Report, an initiative undertaken during the leadership of Waylon Bailey, pastor of the First Baptist Church in Covington, and the LBC president in 2012-2013. The 2020 recommendations were crafted collaboratively by a commission of 400 Louisiana Baptist leaders, staff members and laypeople, working in 20 subcommittees of 20 members each. Ten “key actions in reaching our state” – known as KAIROS – were developed to engage two audiences – the next generation and every people group. These measures for improving the spiritual health and growth of the state were adopted by messengers at the 2013 Louisiana Baptist Convention Annual Meeting. This article is the third in a series published by the Baptist Message to report what successes have been achieved toward the ambitious goals of the statewide initiative, as well as to note what objectives remain to be done. KAIROS TWO Assist churches with the development of a disciple-making process for the local congregation. The best strategy for making disciples is through small groups such as Sunday School, said Sean … [Read more...]
Working together: Mineral Springs receives $10,000 from Louisiana Baptists
By Message Staff DUBACH, La. (LBM)– Louisiana Baptists donated $10,000 to the Mineral Springs Baptist Church in Dubach to help offset expenses incurred after a fire destroyed most of the congregation's facilities on Saturday. A check from the Louisiana Baptist Convention was presented on Tuesday. John Hebert, Louisiana Baptists missions and ministry team director, presented Pastor Greg Tipton with the funds from the LBC disaster relief ministry. He said he hopes the gift will encourage the congregation as they rebuild. “Our friends at Mineral Springs where Pastor Greg Tipton serves have experienced a tremendous tragedy in the loss of their church,” Hebert told the Baptist Message. “The thoughts and prayers of Louisiana Baptists are with them and this money from the Disaster Relief Fund is a symbol of our support. We pray that this money will help them in the short term take care of some things that are needed so that they can continue to worship together as a congregation.” The fire was discovered around 9:30 a.m. Saturday, and despite valiant efforts to extinguish it, the flames destroyed the congregation’s worship center, sound room, office space and nursery. The fellowship hall received smoke damage. The … [Read more...]
Evangelist asks Louisiana Baptists to join Gospel event to 15 million this weekend
By Message Staff ALEXANDRIA, La. (LBM)--Evangelist Sammy Tippit has planned a special online outreach event this weekend that may reach up to 15 million people in 68 countries in what could be one of the largest evangelistic efforts ever. Tippit has established partnerships with more than 1,000 churches worldwide, the Brazilian Baptist Convention National Mission Board, the Northwest Baptist Fellowship of India and many others for the evangelistic event. This past month he and his international partners trained around 2 million people through Facebook and the What's App messaging platform in how to share their faith with family and friends. These trained volunteers are now conducting outreach in their respective communities to invite others to watch the weekend broadcast. The one-hour program will be streamed live on Friday at 8 p.m. across social media channels and satellite television, and will be available throughout the weekend at facebook.com/sammytippitministries. The special broadcast in English and 10 other languages will feature a message by Tippit, president of the Conference of Southern Baptist Evangelists, and music by Jennifer Turner, the wife of country music star Josh Turner. Jay Begbie, pastor of … [Read more...]
Skills of a church planter: Resilience
By John Hebert, Louisiana Baptist missions and ministry team leader ALEXANDRIA, LA. (LBM)--Do you know what Winston Churchill, Bill Gates, Walt Disney, and Colonel Sanders have in common? It has nothing to do with their fame or notoriety, I would suggest. Instead, it is the trait that I contend was the cause of their renown -- resilience. I have observed that resilience is a characteristic most successful people possess, and I know firsthand that this is certainly true of successful church planters and church leaders. -- Winston Churchill was defeated in every election for public office until he became prime minister at age 62; -- Henry Ford went broke five different times before founding Ford Motor Company and becoming one of the wealthiest men in history; -- Bill Gates was a Harvard drop-out who founded a failed business (Traf-O-Data) before launching Microsoft; -- Colonel Sanders hawked his secret recipe hundreds of times before he found a restaurant that would accept it; and, -- Walt Disney was fired by a newspaper editor because he “lacked imagination and had no good ideas.” These men were resilient when they failed and church planters and leaders must be resilient to succeed. There is a rather … [Read more...]
Mineral Springs Baptist celebrates the church that was not destroyed by fire
By Message Staff DUBACH, La. (LBM) – Standing a few feet from the rubble left behind from an early morning fire on Saturday, Pastor Greg Tipton said Sunday afternoon that God has a bright future planned for Mineral Springs Baptist Church in Dubach. “This is what’s left of it,” Tipton told his congregation assembled on the church parking lot. “But I’m here to tell you today the church is good because the church is not the building. "The church is the people," he emphasized, "and the people of God are good today." “This is going to be the first part of our rebuilding starting today,” he continued. “Right now, the church is rebuilding our campus.” During his brief message based off 1 Corinthians 13:13, Tipton shared about how faith, hope and love are crucial to moving ahead. “Those three things are things that are necessary for this church, not just to rebuild a building, but for us to build the Kingdom in a good way,” he said. A fire that was discovered around 9:30 a.m. Saturday destroyed the congregation’s worship center, sound room, office space and nursery; and, the fellowship hall received smoke damage. Tipton said Mineral Springs Baptist has received offers from other churches to allow them to meet … [Read more...]
Lightning starts church fire that consumes Dubach facilities
By Message Staff DUBACH, La. (LBM) - A lightning strike that struck Mineral Springs Baptist Church in Dubach Saturday morning may have caused a fire that destroyed most of the congregation’s facilities, Pastor Greg Tipton said. Tipton told the Baptist Message the fire was discovered around 9:30 a.m. The Jackson Parish, Choudrant and Farmerville fire departments responded. No one was inside the buildings at the time. The church, which averaged between 60 and 80 for Sunday morning worship services before they met for online services, lost its worship center, sound room, office space and nursery. The fellowship hall received smoke damage. Tipton said members plan to meet at 10:45 a.m. Sunday on the church parking lot for prayer. “We are trying to regroup, and we need God’s direction on how to meet and rebuild. We will be okay with the Lord’s help. He will help us through this.” said Regina Prewitt-Aguilar, Mineral Springs Baptist's missions director, echoing Tipton's thoughts. “It’s a sad day us,” she said. “Though we lost our building we are still a church. The members our the church. Nothing will stop us from worshiping God.” … [Read more...]
Despite obstacles caused by a pandemic, First Bossier’s new facilities rise from the ashes
By Brian Blackwell, Message Staff Writer BOSSIER CITY, La. (LBM)–The novel coronavirus pandemic has not slowed the rebuilding of the facilities of the First Baptist Church in Bossier City, 17 months after a fire destroyed much of the campus. "This has been encouraging to the church body and the community around us to see the construction not stop," Pastor Brad Jurkovich told the Baptist Message. "We have had several people to say it's been so cool to see new construction going on. I believe this has given our congregation and the area hope in the midst of this pandemic." A groundbreaking ceremony Sept. 29, 2019, launched the rise of a new $20 million, 70,000-square-foot building to replace facilities destroyed by an early morning fire on Dec. 10, 2018. The worship center and Tiny Town preschool area were among the few buildings that were not damaged by the fire. Once complete in the summer of 2021, there will be a new chapel, student center, foyer and event center and space for Sunday school classes and other small groups to meet. Crews already remodeled the children's area and replaced 25 offices that were lost in the fire. Currently the worship center, foyer and small group space are undergoing a renovation. In … [Read more...]
Franklin Avenue grows outside the walls of its new facilities
By Brian Blackwell, Message Staff Writer NEW ORLEANS, La. (LBM) – Sunday mornings these days are a little different for Pastor Fred Luter. Instead of preaching to nearly 3,000 worshipers packed inside the new worship center at the Franklin Avenue Baptist Church in New Orleans East, Luter finds himself facing empty chairs as he shares his message to a virtual audience watching via Facebook Live and YouTube. Rather than dwell on the absence of faces in front of him, Luter focuses on the 10,000 or so "hidden" viewers who are listening each Sunday morning. Importantly, he maintains a priority on sharing the Word, regardless, and as a result, an average of 15 people per week since going online-only March 15 have respond by humbling their hearts to Christ for salvation or restoration or church membership, he said. Luter said he never dreamed God would use this online option to reach so many with the Gospel. "We built a big sanctuary when we relocated in 2018 and now have empty seats," Luter told the Baptist Message. "We are limited in our ministry now because we can't get out much, but our reach to share Christ has never seemed so unlimited. "Never would we have gotten this type of response if it were not for this … [Read more...]
Tall Timbers cancels summer camps
By Message Staff WOODWORTH, La. (LBM)--Louisiana Baptist leaders announced May 14 that all state convention-sponsored camps at Tall Timbers Baptist Conference Center will not take place this summer because of novel coronavirus pandemic-related safety concerns. "In light of Governor Edwards' updated guidelines and after consultations with multiple medical professionals we determined we could not safely conduct the camps given the current state of the COVID outbreak," Dale Lingenfelter, director of the business and information services team for Louisiana Baptists, told the Baptist Message. Lingenfelter noted Louisiana Baptists Executive Director Steve Horn and the rest of the executive leadership team have monitored the situation since mid-March. "There were many considerations that factored into this difficult decision," Lingenfelter continued. "Groups come to Tall Timbers from across Louisiana and surrounding states and when you take into account space for social distancing, the wearing of masks, sleeping in close quarters and then returning to their cities and churches after days of such exposure, it seemed very problematic." Groups who registered for a 2020 camp automatically will receive a refund. Tall Timbers, a … [Read more...]
Churches regather within Phase One limits
By Brian Blackwell, Message Staff Writer ALEXANDRIA, La. (LBM)--Many Louisiana Baptist churches opened their worship centers for services over the weekend, nearly two months after restrictions on public gatherings forced congregations to find alternatives to meeting together within their facilities. But reopening had limits. On Friday, Gov. John Bel Edwards issued guidance that restricted attendance to 25 percent of seating capacity and instituted other measures said to mitigate transmission of the novel coronavirus -- as part of Phase One of restarting the economy after limiting assemblies to 10 people or fewer since March 15. "As we begin to regather in buildings I pray that we never take for granted the public worship assembly," Louisiana Baptists Executive Director Steve Horn told the Baptist Message. "As we regather, I pray that just as in the days after the Old Testament era of exile, there will be a return to true and pure worship. Moreover, as we see a return to the building and a more authentic worship, may it prompt a repentance that leads to revival." Philadelphia Baptist Church in Deville reported 385 in attendance, collectively, for its service on Saturday night and three services Sunday evening, and 113 total … [Read more...]
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