By PHILIP TIMOTHY, Message Staff Writer MINDEN – With the help of God, one man’s vision is rapidly turning into reality. Warden John Lewis, a member of First Baptist Church Haughton, wanted a chapel built on the grounds of the Bayou Dorcheat Correctional Center, which is located inside the National Guard’s Camp Minden, to help fill a need at the facility. With the help of First Haughton, First Baptist Church in Arcadia, the Louisiana Baptist Builders, some willing volunteers and project coordinators Bill and Joyce Temple the need is going to be met – and much sooner than he had hoped. [img_assist|nid=6780|title=Roof and walls of the new 24,000-square-foot chapel are in place with an expected completion date of November 1.|desc=|link=none|align=left|width=100|height=75] “Work is really coming along well,” Joyce Temple said. “Thankfully, we are building on one of their old basketball courts, so we already have the walls up, the shingles on the roof, vinyl siding on the north and south end and Bill is putting up the drywall right now. “About the only thing we are waiting on are the windows, which should be in Tuesday and we can finish the vinyl siding,” Temple said. “Then it is just a matter of finishing up the work … [Read more...]
Cripps earns grand champion crown at Baptist Golf Fellowship Fall Tourney
By JOANNE BRECHTEL, Administrative Editor ALEXANDRIA – The 2010 Louisiana Baptist Golf Fellowship Fall Tournament recently hosted its two-day event at Links on the Bayou Golf Course in Alexandria. The tournament is co-sponsored by the Louisiana Baptist Message and the Louisiana Baptist Foundation. Monday medalist play presented an opportunity to play the round with friends or acquaintances, making it a special time of fellowship as well as presenting challenges. “The greatness of God and the beauty that He has created in His world is re-emphasized during play,” one pastor said. Winners of this event were recorded in the following categories by ministers and laymen. The grand champion winner was Ples Cripps of Dry Prong, a layman. Winners in the minister’s division of the medalist round included: [img_assist|nid=6782|title=Golfers for the Louisiana Baptist Golf Fellowship Fall Tournament take their carts as they prepare to hit the links.|desc=|link=none|align=left|width=100|height=65] Championship flight: Jim Phaup, Zwolle, first place; Jerry Pipes, Alpharetta, Ga., second place; Harry Forester, Shreveport, third place. First flight: Brian Rankin, Tullos, first place; John Hebert, Pineville, second place; Don … [Read more...]
The Counseling Connection
By MICHELLE LOUVIERE, Director of Counseling Celebration Church, Metairie Question: I have a daughter who is a preteen. She seems to struggle with self-esteem issues. How can I help her? Michelle Louviere responds: Being a teenager has always been a challenge but never so much as what adolescents currently face today. Where males tend to struggle with purpose and whether or not they have what it takes to succeed in life, females struggle more with how they compare in the area of beauty to their peers. Little girls who twirl around in their pink tutus ask the age-old question – “Am I pretty?” With the media focusing on outward attributes and setting unrealistic expectations for beauty, it is normal that girls struggle with esteem issues. Parents can play a major role in helping their daughters with self-esteem issues. Although the recent push has been to try to teach females to be more aggressive and masculine, the real solution lies more in helping daughters understand their beauty through the eyes of Christ. Scripture paints a beautiful picture for young women as being His princesses, who He has intimately created and delights in. Fathers play a profound role in helping young girls develop a healthy self-esteem. … [Read more...]
Frank Page: Cooperative Program remains important
by LONNIE WILKEY, Baptist Press NEWPORT, Tenn. (BP) – In 2006, the election of Frank Page as president of the Southern Baptist Convention sent a signal that the Cooperative Program is still important to Southern Baptists. Page, who by his own admission thought he never stood a chance of being elected, defeated two more widely known Southern Baptist leaders (Ronnie Floyd and Jerry Sutton) who were pastors of churches that gave a relatively low percentage of undesignated gifts through the Cooperative Program for Southern Baptist national and international missions and ministries. [img_assist|nid=6785|title=Frank Page, president elect of the SBC Executive Committee, tells EC members he will set forth a 10-year vision and strategy|desc=|link=none|align=left|width=75|height=100]On the other hand, First Baptist Church in Taylors, S.C., where Page was serving at the time, gave 12.4 percent through the CP giving channel the year prior to his election. Fast forward four years to this year’s SBC annual meeting in Orlando, Fla. Southern Baptists elected a pastor (Bryant Wright of Georgia) who had led his church to cut back its gifts through the Cooperative Program. It would appear that Southern Baptists now have sent a … [Read more...]
Making a difference in the lives of senior adults
By MARILYN STEWART, Regional Reporter NEW ORLEANS – With a work schedule that includes two jobs and responsibilities as a husband and father, who could squeeze in more? Philip Peavey, minister of preschoolers and children at First Baptist Church, Kenner, can. Peavey visits five nursing homes and a rehab center weekly sharing God’s love with an often overlooked group of senior adults, and the care-givers who serve them. [img_assist|nid=6787|title=Nursing home residents view a puppet show put on by a 24-member team from First Baptist Church, Rainsville, Ala.|desc=|link=none|align=left|width=100|height=67] Peavey leads by example in the simple ministry and involves others in serving “one-on-one.” Children at his church get involved by helping Peavey decorate gift bags. “All the senior adults need is a touch, a smile, a few words of encouragement, a prayer,” Peavey said. “It just means a lot to them.” Peavey began visiting nursing homes nine years ago on his own and found he was welcomed at places where caring visitors are in short supply. Peavey’s ministry – going room-to-room, visiting, and praying with residents – opened doors for service to families and staff members, as well. “There’s nothing hard about this … [Read more...]
LBC Executive Board approves 5.58 percent reduction of budget
By PHILIP TIMOTHY, Message Staff Writer WOODWORTH – The Louisiana Baptist Convention and its entities will have to do more with less this coming year. The Executive Board of the LBC approved the business and finance committee’s recommendation, as presented by Chairman Scott Teutsch, pastor of Eastwood Baptist Church of Haughton, for a 5.58 percent reduction in the 2011 Cooperative Program Budget at its regularly-scheduled fall meeting Sept. 28 at Tall Timbers Baptist Conference Center. The recommended budget for the coming year is $21,284,217 – or $1,258,940 less than it was in 2010. “It is a pretty significant reduction,” said Dale Lingenfelter, the LBC’s Business and Information Services Director. The LBC Executive Board also heard reports from its administrative, business and finance, missions support, and properties committees, as well as from the Moral and Civic Foundation and heads of each of the LBC’s entities – the Louisiana Baptist Message, Louisiana College, Louisiana Baptist Children’s Home and the Louisiana Baptist Foundation. Louisiana Baptist Message Editor Kelly Boggs told the Board he is even more committed to having the paper “sound the clarion call that the Cooperative Program is not broken, and … [Read more...]
On Cooperative Giving, Our Common Method For Reaching the Peoples of the World with the Gospel
On Cooperative Giving, Our Common Method For Reaching the Peoples of the World with the Gospel WHEREAS, these are unprecedented times of globalization, communication, declining Western Civilization, and a great opportunity for sharing the saving grace of our Lord Jesus Christ and shining the light of the Gospel; and WHEREAS, these times call for an unprecedented level of cooperation to accomplish the goal of bringing the Great Commission message to every people group in Louisiana, North America and the world; and WHEREAS, the recently adopted Great Commission Resurgence Report adopted by the Southern Baptist Convention was an attempt to refocus the energy, creativity, leadership, institutions and financial resources of Southern Baptist churches and entities on the task of reaching people who have never heard the Gospel; and WHEREAS, the Southern Baptist Convention’s history includes several decades of churches attempting to resource its national and global mission endeavors independently before discovering a cooperative missional model that has become the envy of the evangelical world, a model that has 1) developed an unprecedented international strategy for reaching generations with the Gospel, 2) leveraged the … [Read more...]
Resolution on Cooperative Giving, Our Common Method for Reaching the Peoples of the World with the Gospel
By PHILIP TIMOTHY, Message Staff Writer WOODWORTH – The Louisiana Baptist Convention and its entities will have to do more with less this coming year. The Executive Board of the LBC approved the business and finance committee’s recommendation, as presented by Chairman Scott Teutsch, pastor of Eastwood Baptist Church of Haughton, for a 5.58 percent reduction in the 2011 Cooperative Program Budget at its regularly-scheduled fall meeting Sept. 28 at Tall Timbers Baptist Conference Center. The recommended budget for the coming year is $21,284,217 – or $1,258,940 less than it was in 2010. “It is a pretty significant reduction,” said Dale Lingenfelter, the LBC’s Business and Information Services Director. The LBC Executive Board also heard reports from its administrative, business and finance, missions support, and properties committees, as well as from the Moral and Civic Foundation and heads of each of the LBC’s entities – the Louisiana Baptist Message, Louisiana College, Louisiana Baptist Children’s Home and the Louisiana Baptist Foundation. Louisiana Baptist Message Editor Kelly Boggs told the Board he is even more committed to having the paper “sound the clarion call that the Cooperative Program is not broken, and … [Read more...]
Churches statewide keep busy with mission projects
By JOANNE BRECHTEL, Administrative Editor SHREVEPORT – A youth group and several adults from Ford Park Baptist participated in Mission Lab 2010 in New Orleans. The group assisted in yard and house cleanings, repair work, car washing and prayer walking. A block party was held in August along with a Great Big Giveaway Garage Sale. [img_assist|nid=6792|title=Doctors Nancy and Tommy Smith of the Nicaragua Medical Mission team of Temple Baptist Ruston see patients in the clinic|desc=|link=none|align=left|width=100|height=75]SHREVEPORT – Northwest Baptist Association hosted 230 World Changers, who worked on 21 houses and four cabins in the Shreveport area during their five-day summer visit. The group’s theme was ‘Unhindered.’ A worship service took place at First Baptist of Bossier City at the end of their stay with a $1,497.91 offering given to Kaleo Current Canada and urban missions. Wayne DuBose is director of missions. DENHAM SPRINGS – The WMU of Riverside Baptist provided for a Christmas in August for the Texas Port Ministry in Freeport, Texas. They also shared with a local family in need and prepared items for the Louisiana Correctional Institute for Women in September. Larry Hubbard is pastor. FRANKLINTON – The WMU … [Read more...]
Lafayette races for missions
Lafayette races for missions LAFAYETTE – Runners of all ages can take to the pavement for global missions Saturday, Oct. 16, when First Baptist Lafayette hosts its second annual “Race for the Nations.” Proceeds from a 5K race, as well as a one-mile Fun Walk, will benefit mission efforts of First Baptist Lafayette. At its heart, the event is part of the church’s commitment to fulfilling Christ’s Great Commission. Registration begins at 7 a.m. on race day. The 5K run begins at 8 a.m., with the one-mile Fun Walk starting 30 minutes later. Entry fees are $15 per individual and $30 per family. The entry fee includes the cost of a T-shirt. Race proceeds will be used to help church members travel on mission trips throughout North America and around the world, said Minister of Community Ministries and Missions Andrea McKenzie. First Lafayette members have recently traveled to Alaska, Romania, Brazil and to earthquake-ravaged Haiti to share Christ’s love. “The intent is to provide a means to help a church member if God has called them to go somewhere,” McKenzie said. “We aren’t able to provide all of the means for everyone to go, but if God has called them, we want to help in some small way.” For more information, call … [Read more...]
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