In Matthew 25, Jesus outlined some of the basics of daily faith – feeding the hungry, caring for the sick, visiting the imprisoned. In Matthew 25, Jesus outlined some of the basics of daily faith – feeding the hungry, caring for the sick, visiting the imprisoned. This month, Louisiana Baptists took him at his word. “I was in prison, and you came to me,” Eugene Peterson writes in The Message translation of the Bible. That is exactly what Louisiana Baptists did in conducting a revival at Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola this month – and they brought friends. During an initial service in the prison’s rodeo arena, more than 2,000 inmates cheered and applauded as dirt bike specialists performed high-flying jumps and others stunts. Then, they listened as the performers talked about life without Christ – and life with him. “I didn’t understand the big picture, ...” Brad Bennett told the inmates during his testimony. “It’s not about being a good person or a bad person,” said Bennett, who heads Real Encounter, a Missouri-based ministry that uses motorcycle performances and stunts to share the gospel. “It’s about what God has done for us.” What Louisiana Baptists did for the inmates at … [Read more...]
His command in Iraq is to reflect the presence of God
There are many reasons to join the armed forces – for college money or out of a sense of patriotic duty perhaps. There are many reasons to join the armed forces – for college money or out of a sense of patriotic duty perhaps. There are even some who join because they answered a call – not a telephone call but a call from God. Lt. Cmdr. Phillip Endel Lee is all of those. A Navy chaplain and assistant professor of preaching and pastoral ministry in New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary’s Leavell College, Lee recalls how God used a combination of factors to lead him into the military. “From the time I was 9 years old, I was working part-time jobs,” Lee recounts. “When I turned 14, I couldn’t even drive, but there were days where I would be walking around with hundreds of dollars in my pocket from selling farm produce on the side of the road.” Lee joined a local Baptist church in Tanner Williams, Ala., at the age of 15 and surrendered to fulltime Christian service at the age of 17. “I started going to church, and I knew that God was calling me to preach,” Lee continues. “I had about $5,000 in the bank when I finished high school, and that would have paid for a secular education. I knew I needed to get … [Read more...]
In Louisiana, he stands synonymous with Bible drill
Hundreds of state Bible Drill participants filled Louisiana College’s Guinn Auditorium May 7 as Beau Colle approached the podium. By Brian Blackwell LBM Newswriter Hundreds of state Bible Drill participants filled Louisiana College’s Guinn Auditorium May 7 as Beau Colle approached the podium. “How do you say thank you for 30 years of service to children’s Bible drills, youth Bible drills and youth speaker’s tournaments?” Colle, Louisiana Baptist Convention director of church development, asked the youngsters. “By standing up and giving Kenneth Mooney a round of applause.” Mooney, who was recognized for serving 30 years as coordinator of the state Bible drills, then stood beside his wife, Pam, as he accepted gifts of appreciation from LBC staff members. The mementos included a shadow box plaque containing a medallion and seals from the children and youth Bible drills and youth speaker’s tournaments and a book of letters written by persons Mooney had influenced through the years. Mooney is set to retire Aug. 31 as LBC director of discipleship and senior adults. “Out of all I do in this office, nothing pays off more in long-term dividends than Bible drill,” he says. “It not only teaches … [Read more...]
Report cites nations for religious liberty concerns
A federal panel charged with monitoring religious freedom worldwide is asking the Bush administration to take sanctions against Pakistan, Uzbekistan and several other nations for severe violations. A federal panel charged with monitoring religious freedom worldwide is asking the Bush administration to take sanctions against Pakistan, Uzbekistan and several other nations for severe violations. Members of the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom recently released their 2005 annual report to the U.S. State Department. The 1998 law that created the panel requires it to report annually on the status of religious liberty worldwide and to recommend nations that commit or tolerate “severe and egregious” violations be named “Countries of Particular Concern” – or CPCs. This year, commissioners recommended 11 nations for CPC status – including Uzbekistan for the first time. They also re-recommended 10 nations named last year – Burma, China, Eritrea, Iran, North Korea, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Turkmenistan and Vietnam. Members of the independent panel chose not to re-recommend India as a country of particular concern. The commission tagged India with that status last year in a split … [Read more...]
Poll – abortion a key issue in choice of the next Supreme Court justices
If abortion is a key issue during the next U.S. Supreme Court confirmation battle, then, pro-lifers may have an edge with the American public, a new Gallup poll suggests. If abortion is a key issue during the next U.S. Supreme Court confirmation battle, then, pro-lifers may have an edge with the American public, a new Gallup poll suggests. The poll of 1,005 adults shows that pro-lifers are more likely than pro-choicers to believe that the next Supreme Court justice must agree with them on abortion. Although there is no opening on the court, many observers believe Chief Justice William Rehnquist will step down this year. Gallup asked the public “how important” it is that the next nominee to the high court share their views on abortion. Forty-five percent said “very important,” 31 percent “somewhat important,” 15 percent “not too important” and 8 percent “not important at all.” Among the group saying it is “very important,” 53 percent are pro-life, 39 percent pro-choice. That could prove significant when pro-life and pro-choice groups ask their constituents to contact their senators. “Clearly, pro-life supporters have the edge in terms of their interest in the abortion position of future Supreme … [Read more...]
Speaker – all believers are called to ‘go’ with the gospel
The word “go” often is deemphasized in the Great Commission – after all, going disrupts retirement and threatens sought-after comfort and ease, John Marshall observed. The word “go” often is deemphasized in the Great Commission – after all, going disrupts retirement and threatens sought-after comfort and ease, John Marshall observed. But the Great Commission can be fulfilled only by all Christians obediently going, emphasized Marshall, pastor of Second Baptist Church in Springfield, Mo. He spoke during a recent New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary chapel service. The principle of going was first modeled by the disciples, Marshall reminded them. “For the 12, ‘go’ became the manifesto governing their lives,” he said. “These were folks just like you and me. They had jobs, interests and hobbies.” The manifesto to go still governs the lives of believers, Marshall said. “The directive is still the marching order for all believers, ...” he said. “We are not afforded the luxury of influencing only those people who happen to come our way.” Expecting non-believers to come instead of Christians to go and tell the Good News is like a hunter waiting in the kitchen for a duck to fly through or like a farmer … [Read more...]
A greater crisis than HIV
Re: HIV is a crisis on earth, March 31, 2005 issue. Yes, I agree. HIV is a crisis. Re: HIV is a crisis on earth, March 31, 2005 issue Yes, I agree. HIV is a crisis. However, the greater crisis is HPV (Human Papilloma Virus). It is a sexually-transmitted disease (STD) that is transmitted by skin-to-skin contact. Intercourse is not necessary in order to contract this disease. HPV is a viral STD for which there is no cure. It affects women more than men. Less than 1 percent of the nation is affected by HIV, but over 90 percent of our nation is affected by HPV. Yet, 90 percent of all research monies under the federal government go toward HIV. Over 5.5 million people will contract HPV this year – and that is only in America! Also, 99.7 percent of all cervical cancer is caused by HPV. Over 5,000 American women will die this year from cervical cancer. More women die each year from HPV/cervical cancer than all people who die from HIV/AIDS. Seventy million Americans (one out of every four) already have a viral, incurable STD. Forty-five million of those are cases of herpes, but 25 million of those are cases with HPV. We teach this information to children in the seventh and eighth grades using The Governor’s … [Read more...]
World of religion
Week of April 11, 2005 Cooperative Program Gifts through the Southern Baptist Cooperative Program totaled $15.6 million last month, an increase of about $483,000 (3.2 percent) from the previous March. Halfway through the Southern Baptist Convention’s fiscal year, overall receipts total $98.6 million, an increase of $3.1 million (3.3 percent) from the same time last year. In addition, the total stands $7 million (7.7 percent) ahead of budget at this time. Meanwhile, designated receipts totaled almost $26.8 million last month, up $2.4 million (9.9 percent) from the previous March. For the fiscal year, overall designated receipts total $116.5 million, a decrease of a little more than $1.5 million (1.3 percent) from the same time last year. Court decision The Colorado Supreme Court has ruled that a lower court was correct in overturning a death sentence for a man who raped and murdered a woman because the jury in his trial read excerpts from the Bible during deliberations. In 1994, Robert Harlan kidnapped a casino waitress on her way home from work. He shot and permanently paralyzed a woman who tried to intervene, and after raping the waitress at gunpoint for two hours, he shot her in the head. Jurors in Harlan’s … [Read more...]
Aim of sermons must be to change lives, prof insists
The aim of every sermon should be to change listeners’ lives, Southern Baptist Theological Seminary professor Hershael York told participants at a recent preaching conference. The aim of every sermon should be to change listeners’ lives, Southern Baptist Theological Seminary professor Hershael York told participants at a recent preaching conference. “When we preach the Word, we want them to have more than merely an experience,” said York, who serves as professor of Christian preaching at the Louisville, Ky., seminary. “We want them to have an encounter with the text that does nothing less than change their life.” To preach life-changing sermons, preachers must begin their preparation by determining how the scriptural text under consideration reveals man’s fallen condition and need for the grace of Christ, York said during the conference held on the seminary campus last month. “The text always shows us that there is something in us that is deficient, that is in need of the grace of God to be applied, ...” he said. “We have to repent. We have to allow the grace of God to be applied to our lives in such a way that we grow in Christ’s likeness.” Gearing sermons toward changed lives also demands that … [Read more...]
Louisiana evangelist announces plans to be nominated for LBC presidency
Louisiana Baptist evangelist Jerry Chaddick of Lake Charles has announced plans to be nominated for state convention president in November. Louisiana Baptist evangelist Jerry Chaddick of Lake Charles has announced plans to be nominated for state convention president in November. “After being asked by several pastors from around the state to allow my name to be placed in nomination for the office of president of the Louisiana Baptist Convention and after receiving endorsement and promise of support from the Louisiana Inerrancy Fellowship and after prayerful consideration, I have agreed to offer myself as a candidate for that position,” Chaddick said. Louisiana Inerrancy Fellowship Chair Leon Hyatt of Pineville confirmed that Chaddick has received unanimous support for the presidency from the group. Chaddick is the first announced nominee for the state convention post, which is open this year. Philip Robertson of Deville is serving his second term as convention president and is ineligible for re-election. A native of DeRidder, Chaddick previously served as pastor of churches in Louisiana and Mississippi. He entered full-time evangelism in February 2004. In announcing plans to allow his … [Read more...]
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