In Jerry Price’s words, “Jason Lupo, a messenger from Llamar Baptist Church in Delhi, introduced the motion that a nominee for the office of LBC president must be a member of a church which contributes at least seven-and-a-half percent of the undesignated receipts through the Cooperative Program. As the election of LBC president is governed by the articles of incorporation, the Committee on Order of Business, in accordance with Article 17 Section 1, recommends that the motion be placed on the agenda of the 2012 annual meeting, that it be published in full in the Annual, and be referred to the Executive Board of the Convention for study and recommendation.” Hear all the speakers from the 2011 Pastors Conference and Annual Meeting online at www.lbc.org. … [Read more...]
Shady Grove blossoms anew
By Karen L. Willoughby, Managing Editor JIGGER – Five years ago, a half-dozen people talked about disbanding Shady Grove Baptist Church.[img_assist|nid=7646|title=Shady Grove|desc=Twenty-five years after voting to do away with Vacation Bible School, and five years after talking about disbanding, Shady Grove Baptist Church is alive and growing. Today, at least 80 people each week gather for Sunday morning worship at the church where Kent Nugent is pastor. There’s a full band – fiddle, mandolin, drums, 12-string, rhythm and bass guitars – and the youth group has performed twice at the Youth Evangelism Conference as well as at Christ Christ in Brownsville, Tenn., and elsewhere.|link=none|align=right|width=640|height=404] Located a rural quarter-mile from the end of a dead-end road, in a town too small to even have a gas station, there seemed little reason to continue for the church started in 1918 in a one-room schoolhouse. Matter of fact, the church voted in the late 1980s to no longer have Vacation Bible School. “That was the beginning of the end,” said Neka Williams. “I was part of the mistake. I voted to do away with VBS. What I want to tell people now is, don’t stop VBS. Don’t … [Read more...]
Sheets for Soldiers: Calvary Baptist’s Kennedy leads effort to provide troops with linens
By Karen L. Willoughby, Managing Editor FORT POLK – At least 90 soldiers returning from Afghanistan this month will sleep easy, their first nights back home in America.[img_assist|nid=7648|title=Sheets for Soldiers|desc=Threcia Green buys sheets for First Baptist Dry Prong, which took up a special offering and donated $350 to the Sheets for Soldiers project.|link=none|align=left|width=478|height=640] No sand. No bullets. No bombs. Just new sheets, provided through the efforts of Charleen Kennedy, a member of Calvary Baptist Church in Alexandria. “I am thrilled that God blessed us so much,” Kennedy said. “We were able to meet a very specific need for our troops returning home.” The Army provides items such as a bunk, desk and chair for returning soldiers who stay in barracks. No linens. No pillows. Nothing “personal.” “If you are wondering why the military does not supply the sheets, sheets are a personal item,” Kennedy emailed in her plea for sheets. “If you are wondering why the soldiers do not have their items: They will arrive before their gear and they will not have full size sheets. They usually only have twin size. And, 90 of the soldiers will be housed in … [Read more...]
Where’s the outrage against Iran over execution?
By Kelly Boggs, Editor Yousef Nadarkhani, a Christian and a pastor in Iran, has been imprisoned since 2009. His crime according to Iranian clerics: converting to Christianity and preaching the Gospel of Jesus Christ to Muslims. His sentence is death by hanging, which could be carried out at any time. The White House has condemned Iran’s plan to execute Nadarkhani and so has Speaker of the House John Boehner. However, conspicuously absent from the voices denouncing Iran are America’s death penalty opponents. News stories about Nadarkhani’s plight are also few and far between. Recently a cacophony of cries were being lifted by U.S. celebrities denouncing the State of Georgia’s planned execution of Troy Davis, who was convicted of murdering a Georgia police officer in August 1991. He was executed Sept. 21, 2011. As Davis’ execution date drew near, news stories appeared in abundance offering countless reasons he should not be put to death. Celebrities like Alec Baldwin, Sean Diddy Combs, Kim Kardashian, Sandra Bernhard, etc., lent their voices to Davis’ cause. Hundreds of thousands signed a petition calling on the State of Georgia to spare Davis’ life. … [Read more...]
A decade of studying Islam shows its a dangerous ideology
By Mark Coppenger, Professor of Christian Apologetics at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary Since Sept. 11, 2011, we’ve all been in school, so to speak, studying up on Islam. But we’ve been to two different schools. In a nutshell, one says that Islam is a great religion with awesome accomplishments, now wounded by misfortune and embarrassed by extremists who’ve perverted its basically wholesome message. The other says that Islam is a false and dangerous ideology, bad to the bone, flawed from its founding. The first is led by the likes of Joseph Esposito and Karen Armstrong; the other by Robert Spencer and Mark Durie (and Ayaan Hirsi Ali, Bat Ye’or, Nonie Darwish and others). Having “attended” both schools, I’m not convinced the first should be accredited and I’m urging folks to matriculate in the other. Of course, both schools grant the other a point here and there (“Yes, that’s an unfortunate verse in the Quran”; “Yes, the Moorish Alhambra palace in Spain is impressive.”) But the differences are substantial and critical. (And yes, the majority of Muslims aren’t aggressive and oppressive, but the majority of Baptists aren’t evangelistic … [Read more...]
Questions We’Ve Pondered
By Bill Warren, NOBTS Professor of New Testament and Greek Question: When I read my Bible, some of the New Testament quotations of Old Testament books do not match exactly the wording that we have in our Old Testaments. Why is this? Bill Warren responds: This insightful question obviously comes from a good Bible study practice of looking up the New Testament (NT) quotes in the Old Testament (OT). Keep up that type of study! As a beginning point, let’s remember that the OT was written almost totally in Hebrew and the NT in Greek, so right away we have to think about the impact of translating from Hebrew into Greek when considering the OT quotes in the NT. Indeed, the vast majority of differences in the quotes are due exactly to these language issues. The NT writers primarily used the existing Greek translation of the OT for their writings instead of making their own translations. This makes sense when we think about it: There was no need to reinvent the wheel by making yet another translation when one was already available and acceptable. This translation began most likely in Egypt in the 3rd century B.C. The reason for Greek was because of Alexander the Great’s impact, which … [Read more...]
Scripture has a specific shape
By Michael Shepherd, Professor of Old Testament and Hebrew at Louisiana College Throughout the history of biblical interpretation, readers of the Bible have struggled to come to the text on its own terms. Theologians want the Bible to address doctrinal issues. Preachers want the Bible to speak to “practical” matters. Scientists, ethicists, et cetera all have an agenda for the Bible. They all claim to be “biblical” because they have found texts to prove the particular point they want to make. But if the word “biblical” is to retain any distinctive meaning at all, it must describe something specific to the given shape of Scripture apart from the plethora of questions its readers bring to the table. There are basically two types of readers of the Bible: (1) those who want to see what the Bible says about something and (2) those who want to see what the Bible says. It almost goes without saying that the first type represents the vast majority of Bible readers. People have their own concerns, and they want the Bible to provide insight into what they consider to be important in life. Relatively few readers reach the point where they are content to … [Read more...]
‘Something different’ planned for Pastosrs Conference
By Philip Timothy, Message Staff Writer [img_assist|nid=7631|title=Mike Walker|desc=|link=none|align=left|width=72|height=100]WOODWORTH – ‘The guys in the pews’ can expect a little something different at this year’s annual Pastors’ Conference. Mike Walker, pastor of East Bayou Baptist Church in Lafayette and president of the 2011 Pastors’ Conference, has decided to forego a lineup of ‘big-time’ speakers, and instead will bring in men who have shared similar experience as the ‘guys in the pews.’ The theme for this year’s conference is ‘Fill my Heart’ and comes from Nehemiah 2:12 “… what my God had put in my heart to do …” The conference, which will be held in First Covington’s auditiorium, will begin Sunday evening and will finish up at 2:30 p.m. Monday, so the auditorium can be prepped for the LBC Annual Meeting. Speakers will address topics such as, fill my heart for church planting; fill my heart for the rural area; fill my heart for the city; fill my heart for Louisiana; fill my heart for the nation, and fill my heart for the world. “I wanted to get speakers who have first-hand experience with each of these topics,” Walker said. “I think each speaker … [Read more...]
2011 Louisiana Baptist Convention Annual Meeting
[img_assist|nid=7655|title=2011 Annual Meeting|desc=|link=none|align=left|width=640|height=458] … [Read more...]
Her life was ordinary and yet – extraordinary
By Jerry Love, Director of Planned Giving, Louisiana Baptist Foundation BATON ROUGE – She married late in life and moved from her home in Mississippi to Baton Rouge with her husband. [img_assist|nid=7657|title=Air WACs|desc=Women aircraft mechanics work on a World War II dive bomber at Clarksdale, Miss., during July 1943.|link=none|align=right|width=640|height=536] She lived in the same house for almost 50 years. She walked to the nearby grocery store on Plank Road for her basic provisions. Because she never learned to drive, her husband or friends drove her where she needed to go. And she loved working for the Lord in her local church. If that was all there was to know about Monnie Mosley then it could be said that she lived a fairly average existence. But this strong, independent lady saw more than the average number of years in her life, 96 years to be exact, during which she touched many lives. “Miss Monnie,” as she was affectionately known to the staff of the Louisiana Baptist Foundation, was born into a farming family in northern Mississippi in June of 1909. As a child she played with the children of sharecroppers who farmed the family land, no matter the color … [Read more...]
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