Monday, December 10, 2012

WEEK OF PRAYER: 'How on earth am I going to explain this to my wife?'



Posted on Dec 7, 2012 | by Don Graham/Baptist Press

EDITOR'S NOTE: This year's Week of Prayer for International Missions in the Southern Baptist Convention is Dec. 2-9 with the theme of "BE His heart, His hands, His voice" from Matthew 16:24-25. Each year's Lottie Moon Christmas Offering for International Missions supplements Cooperative Program giving to support Southern Baptists' 5,000 international missionaries' initiatives in sharing the Gospel. This year's offering goal is $175 million. To find resources about the offering, go towww.imb.org/offering.

CENTRAL ASIA (BP) -- The first time Doug Page* set foot in the remote Central Asian town where he was sent to serve Christ, a single question echoed through his mind: "How on earth am I going to explain this to my wife?"

The Southern Baptist doctor scanned the dozens of small, sand-colored dwellings that littered the surrounding hills. And very soon, Page and his wife would be living in one of the homes made of mud.

"I remember getting off the little plane on a little dirt airstrip and being met by some locals in a pickup truck and driven up a hill," Page says. "No paved roads, just one hole in the ground after another ... weaving our way around donkeys and goats and sheep ... and thinking, 'Wow, this is a pretty rough place.'

"I felt I could probably survive here, maybe live in a sleeping bag in a hole somewhere," he adds with a laugh. "But I wanted her to be comfortable and happy and be able to minister and live."

"Her" is the love of his life, Alice*, his wife of nearly 30 years. They started dating during his freshman year in college, and though Alice swore she'd never marry a doctor or a preacher, she found herself with both.

Page was glad he'd come alone for this first introduction to the couple's new home; he would use the scouting trip to prepare Alice for the primitive conditions they'd have to endure. It was a far cry from the simple but comfortable lifestyle they enjoyed back home in Mississippi. But despite his initial shock, Page says there was a "certain wildness" about this part of Central Asia that drew him in.

The town lies in a shallow valley locked deep within the country's rugged interior. The lone highway connecting it to the outside world is plagued by bandits during warmer months and cut off by heavy snowfall that chokes mountain passes in winter. Charter flights are the only secure means of reaching the area. From the air, the town is a pallid oasis, a speck of life surrounded by desolate, sun-kissed mountains.

Most of the few thousand residents here survive as farmers or shepherds, but years of drought and conflict have withered harvests, dwindled herds and decimated livelihoods. More than a third of the town's children are malnourished; life expectancy is less than 50 years. Adult literacy is under 20 percent.

Electricity a bit 'overrated'

Like most of their neighbors, the Pages live in a simple, mud house, which they have outfitted with a Western toilet, shower and kitchen sink. These "luxuries" aren't available during the region's glacial winters, however, since nighttime temperatures dip below -20 F and threaten to burst pipes. Electricity is spotty, available for only a few hours each night.

Staying warm is especially difficult. Kerosene heaters provide a little respite from the cold, but some nights are so bitter that sheets of ice form on the walls inside the Page's home. "I put toothpaste and shampoo bottles in our bathroom and they just turned to ice.... I didn't know toothpaste could freeze," Page laughs.

The couple have learned to stockpile food, fuel and firewood; they also must constantly sweep snow from the mud roof to avoid leaks or collapse. Even driving is a chore. Besides the challenge of navigating icy roads, the SUV's brakes freeze; a blowtorch is used to thaw them each morning.

The learning curve was steep for the Pages, who have spent most of their lives in the southern United States weathering heat waves instead of blizzards. Survival techniques came by watching their neighbors. Alice learned to dry apples and tomatoes on the roof in the sun and preserve onions and potatoes by burying them in the yard. Doug stored up barrels of kerosene and salted slabs of beef.

Trial and error also was a good tutor. During the Pages' first winter in town, their new cast-iron water heater burst because it hadn't been fully drained.

"That first winter was pretty harsh," Page says. The couple's supervisor gave them the option to spend winter in the nation's capital, complete with full-time heat, running water and electricity. But the Pages turned the offer down because they knew winter was when the hospital would need Doug most.

Despite difficult circumstances, the Pages have maintained a positive attitude. "I think electricity is a little bit overrated," Doug says with a grin. But the cold weather and poor infrastructure are only half the challenge. Security is always on his mind.

Personal safety

Sunlight glints off coils of silver razor wire snaking its way around the mud walls of the Pages' home. The protective barrier is a constant reminder of the risks Doug and Alice face simply by being here -- to say nothing of sharing the Gospel. Deportation, prison, kidnapping and murder are very real threats for Christian workers in Central Asia, even more so for the nationals with whom they partner.

Bars cover the Pages' windows and a guard stands watch at their home 24/7. Doug's frisky, blue-eyed mutt, Cleo, adds another layer of protection, though the dog's playful nature means there's a chance she might just as well lick intruders as bite them.

Trips to nearby villages outside the relative safety of the town are dangerous. But Page often puts himself in harm's way if a patient needs his help. Security was so tight during one out-of-town visit that Page was given an armed escort so he could safely use the bathroom.

"When we drive around we pass people with AK-47s.... You'll hear something explode once in a while," he says. "[But] we're not paranoid. My wife and I don't sit around worrying about things that can happen."

Page recalls waking one evening to the sound of bomb blasts rattling his bedroom window. "We just said a little prayer together and went back to sleep."

It's not foolishness or arrogance, he says. Just a genuine trust in God's calling on their lives and the understanding that obedience to the Great Commission doesn't come with any guarantee of personal safety -- or without sacrifice and pain.

Compelled by love

Page admits there are moments when he questions what he's doing, whether he's actually making a difference among so much suffering. But it is during those periods of doubt that Page's calling keeps him on the field, a calling 30 years in the making.

"I had a very strong sense as a teenager that God really wanted me to do something special. And it was very important to me to find out what that was," Page says. "I can remember being awake at night as a teenager, just praying and asking God to please show me what He wanted me to do with my life."

The son of a Southern Baptist pastor, Page remembers that Sunday morning at church in Texas when he finally discovered what God's plan was. As his mother played piano during the invitation, Page walked the aisle and announced his decision to serve the Lord overseas as a doctor. He would be Jesus' heart, hands and voice to a people who didn't know Him, sharing love as Christ did -- preaching and healing.

Page turned down an appointment to the U.S. Military Academy at West Point and enrolled in a pre-med program at a nearby university. What he didn't yet understand was that God's timing would keep him stateside for the next 30 years -- teaching, maturing and preparing him for ministry -- before finally sending him overseas in 2003, at age 47, first to East Asia and then Central Asia.

But Page's commitment to follow Christ goes beyond simple obedience. It's about a sense of urgency -- and love.

"We honestly feel that we are not sacrificing much, that God has given us so much that we're thankful for. And that we're obligated, compelled because of our love for Him," Page says.

"There are people here who are dying every day and lost for eternity. ... And I don't want to miss an opportunity that God puts before me to share with somebody. I pray that I'll be bold to do that."
--30--
*Names changed. Don Graham is a senior writer with the International Mission Board. Southern Baptists' gifts to the Lottie Moon Christmas Offering for International Missions and through the Cooperative Program help Southern Baptist missionaries around the world share the Gospel. Gifts for the offering are received at Southern Baptist churches across the country or can be made online atwww.imb.org/offering where there are resources for church leaders to promote the offering. Download related videos at www.imb.org/lmcovideo.

    Sunday, November 25, 2012

    Jacksonville pastor Tim Maynard elected FBSC president


    Nov 21, 2012 
    By JONI B. HANNIGAN/FBW
    Managing Editor
    ORLANDO (FBW)—Officers elected at the Nov. 12-13 meeting of the Florida Baptist State Convention annual meeting of 2,922 Southern Baptist churches and missions across Florida are from as far south as Okeechobee, as far north as Jacksonville and in north-central Florida’s Ocala.
    Jacksonville pastor Tim Maynard, 58, was elected FBSC president with 640 votes cast, receiving 374 or 59 percent of the votes while Clayton Cloer, senior pastor of First Baptist Church of Central Florida received 264 votes or 41 percent of the vote.
    The election marked only the second contested election for president of the state convention since 1999.
    Maynard, pastor of 3,500-member Fruit Cove Baptist Church, served three years as the president of Florida’s State Board of Missions prior to the election. He was nominated by Marvin Pittman, a laymen from First Baptist Church in Bartow and newly elected president of the SBOM.
    ELECTED Tim Maynard, FBSC president. FBC photo
    Just hours after the election, Maynard told the Florida Baptist Witness he was already feeling the “weight” of how to bring Florida Baptists together to “refocus on what’s truly important.”
    “I really have a heartbeat for seeing genuine unity happen in this convention,” Maynard said. “One of the things that really, really matters to Jesus is unity. If we can’t stand as a unified people, I don’t know that we have much to share with the state. I think it’s going to require a true heart change, genuine repentance in the hearts of the people.”
    Maynard said he believes some “housekeeping” is in order for Florida Baptists who have issues to address, but he is prayerful the “momentum that we’ve built in these past few days” will continue.
    “That’s hopefully where we will begin the journey and where God leads us in this, we will see,” he said. “When we come together its just a beautiful thing. It’s a great testimony to us and to our Lord and its something that I would like to see continued.”
    Elected to serve with Maynard was layperson Jack Roland of First Baptist Church, Ocala, first vice president; Chris Coram, associate pastor of North Jacksonville Baptist Church, second vice president; and Randy Huckabee, pastor of First Baptist Church of Okeechobee, recording secretary. Roland topped Kevin Goza, pastor of Trinity Baptist Church in Apopka. The other two officers ran unopposed.
    ELECTED Elected to serve the FBSC are (l-r) Tim Maynard, pastor, Fruit Cove Baptist Church, Jacksonville, president; Jack Roland, laymen, First Baptist Church, Ocala, first vice-president; and Chris Coram, associate pastor, North Jacksonville Baptist Church, second vice president. Not pictured is Randy Huckabee, pastor, First Baptist Church, Okeechobee, recording secretary. FBC photo
    In nominating Maynard, Pittman had noted his leadership in the state and in his church, and cited Fruit Cove’s commitment to missions and the Cooperative Program, which funds the mission enterprise of the Florida and Southern Baptist conventions. 
    The church gives at least 10 percent through the Cooperative Program annually; $80,000 to $100,000 to the Lottie Moon Offering for International Missions; and $45,000 to the Annie Armstrong Easter Offering for Missions, he said.
    “Tim’s leadership style is to cast a vision and to invite others to join him,” Pittman told messengers. “His cooperative and humble spirit [and] his personal commitment to the task encourages those around him to come together to reach the common goal.”
    William Rice, pastor of Calvary Baptist Church in Clearwater, in nominating Cloer, first gave an encouraging word about both pastors. “I am glad today we have not a contest between political opponents but a choice between spiritual brothers,” Rice said. “I know and love both of these men and trust their heart and character, but today my choice is the man I nominate for the office of convention president, Dr. Clayton Cloer, pastor of the FBC of Central Florida.” 
    Rice praised Cloer for his leadership, and said the former Florida Baptist Pastors’ Conference president had spearheaded “the fight to amend our state constitution to preserve the sanctity of biblical marriage and he led the revision task force calling our churches to repentance and renewal.”
    Information from the 2011 Annual Church Profile for Fruit Cove Baptist Church lists 70 baptisms and primary worship service attendance of 1,404. The church gave $369,053, or 10.71 percent, through the Cooperative Program from total undesignated receipts of $3,446,235. According to the ACP, the church also received $81,258 for the Lottie Moon Christmas Offering for International Missions and $20,804 for the Annie Armstrong Easter Offering for North American Missions. Fruit Cove gave $68,620 to the Jacksonville Baptist Association and $13,478 to the Maguire State Missions Offering, with total missions giving in 2011 of $602,374. 
    Maynard, pastor of Fruit Cove since 1993 and a native of Kentucky, previously served two churches in Kentucky. He earned the master of divinity and doctor of ministry degrees from Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Ky., and a bachelor’s degree from University of the Cumberlands in Williamsburg, Ky. He also has served as an adjunct professor of New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary. 
    Maynard and his wife, Pamela, have been married for 35 years. They are parents to two adult children. 
    With reporting by James A. Smith Sr.

    Sunday, November 11, 2012

    Mount Dora First Baptist honors area public school educators


    Nov 8, 2012 
    By CAROLYN NICHOLS/FL Baptist Witness
    Newswriter
    COMMUNITY First Baptist Church in Mount Dora hosts an annual luncheon for teachers. Courtesy photo
    MOUNT DORA (FBW)—First Baptist Church in Mount Dora recently hosted its fourth annual Teacher Appreciation Day. It is an opportunity to share the Gospel, encourage teachers, and help needy students, according to Pastor Thomas Jamieson.
    Area school principals, teachers and members of Lake and Orange counties’ school boards attended the worship service and luncheon Sept. 9. Jamieson, who started the tradition in 2008, presented principals of six schools checks for $400 to be used to help the schools’ neediest children. In years past, Jamieson said some schools used the funds to buy underwear and clothes for students.
    “First Baptist Church takes the welfare of the children in our community very seriously. In light of our current economy, we know there are many needs within our public schools, and we’re blessed to be able to help meet some of those needs,” Jamieson said.
    The congregation, including more than 100 educators, heard Jamieson preach from John 10:10 about “Abundant Life.” He sprinkled anecdotes from his previous career as a public school kindergarten teacher into a sermon that urged teachers to include values in their teaching since “there is no success if the soul and spirit of a person is neglected,” he said. Abundant life is a forgiven life, a forever life and a life free from baggage, he added.
    During the luncheon 17 teachers received gift cards from local stores, restaurants and car care centers. Among the prizes were tickets to First Baptist’s Dinner Theater Dec. 14-15.
    “Teachers have told me that this is the only time in the year they get 
    together for fun. It’s something the teachers and principals—even the lost principals—look forward to,” Jamieson said.
    Among the schools participating in the Appreciation Day were Seminole Springs Elementary, Sorrento Elementary, Zellwood Elementary, Wolf Lake Elementary in Apopka, Triangle 
    Elementary School in Mount Dora, Mount Dora Middle School and Mount Dora High School. 
    “These schools know we are committed to them. You don’t earn their trust in the first or even second year. We have to remember that Christ commanded us to feed the poor, whether or not we see fruit from it,” Jamieson said.
    Appreciation day is not First Baptist’s only contact with local schools. During football season, the junior varsity and high school teams from Mount Dora meet at the church at 3:30 p.m. before every home game for a meal together. Also, administrators from the area schools will furnish First Baptist with a list of their neediest students, and the church will provide Christmas dinners for the families. The families will come to the church to receive the “fixings” for the meal. In every contact, the Gospel is presented, Jamieson said.
    “I don’t know how many seeds have been sown through all of this, but I know some are germinating, and some are being harvested,” he said.

    Sunday, November 4, 2012

    LSU's 'Painted Posse' undaunted for the cross



    Posted on Nov 2, 2012 | by Mark Hunter/Baptist Press

    BATON ROUGE, La. (BP) -- When someone in LSU's Sports Department airbrushed hand-painted crosses off the bare chests of the "Painted Posse" in a widely distributed photo following the LSU-South Carolina game, it sparked a controversy over political correctness and censorship of university students' religious views.

    The Posse, a group of Christian students who proclaim their faith by wearing the crosses, had a meeting and asked themselves, "What would Jesus do?" They publicly forgave the university for the incident and are urging everyone to put the incident behind them.

    That is, until the LSU-Alabama game on Saturday (Nov. 3). Thousands of fans, clad in LSU purple and gold and Alabama red and white, will fill Tiger Stadium -- with some from both sides also wearing crosses to support the Posse and their testimony of faith in God.

    When news first got out about the altered photo and LSU was contacted by national and local media, LSU spokesman Herb Vincent claimed they altered the photo from the Oct. 20 game because they didn't want to offend anyone.

    "We don't want to imply we are making any religious or political statements, so we airbrushed it out," Vincent said. "It was just a straight sports communications message, no politics involved, no religion."

    From now on, Vincent said, they'll just not use photos that could be construed to have religious overtones.

    The Posse, formed in 2003 and featured in hundreds of photographs from ESPN to local newspapers, said they don't want to further the controversy.

    Posse member and LSU senior Sloan Bishop, a member of the Baptist Collegiate Ministry there, helped craft a statement released to local media and posted on the Posse's Facebook page.

    "We talked about how we wanted to respond and end it in the most Christ-like way possible," Bishop, who attends The Ring church held at Grace Baptist in Baton Rouge, said in a phone interview. "None of us feel attacked in any way. We bear no ill will toward LSU or staff members."

    The press release reads, in part:

    "In light of the recent airbrushing of our crosses by LSU staff members and the discussion that has followed, the Painted Posse -- a group of Christian LSU students -- would like to thank the public for the outpouring of support both for the group and for Christ.... The University has reached out to our group and apologized for this incident.

    "We ... do not agree with the University's recent decision to airbrush crosses out of the photo of some of our members. We also respect the opinions of those who do not agree with us. Despite what happened, our main focus is to represent Christ. This Christ is our Savior who died on a cross to save us from sin, was raised again, and now lives in our lives.

    "Our goal as the Painted Posse is to portray Christ through our actions while cheering on our Tigers! Our group will return to our normal seats, with our normal, painted uniforms on November 3rd, wholeheartedly supporting our Tigers. We are humbled by the many who have shown support for our beliefs, but we would encourage all fellow members of the LSU family to please switch the focus from this story and the Posse to supporting our beloved university.

    "We encourage anyone who would like to honor Jesus Christ to join us by wearing a cross on November 3rd. We strongly discourage the wearing of a cross as a way to protest the university or its recent decision. We desire that no further negative light would be shone upon the university that we love. We acknowledge the efforts of the LSU administration and look forward to serving the university as both fans and students."

    Bishop's father, a deacon at First Baptist Church in Covington, La., when asked about the issue, he said, "I'm so proud of each one of these young men that they are taking a stand. It really surprised me that LSU airbrushed that out. When Sports Illustrated and ESPN have run their pictures it wasn't airbrushed out. They're not trying to cause a controversy. I think it's awesome what they're doing."

    Posse member Cameron Cooke told CampusReform.org, "The cross painting is important to me because it represents who I am as a Christ follower. And it reminds me who I need to act like in Death Valley."

    Posse member Joel D'Aubin told the NBC affiliate in Baton Rouge, "We all have a passion for LSU football and for Christ. Just being able to be that example every single Saturday is an awesome experience."

    The Posse's Facebook page, which has more than 1,300 "likes," has been filled with hundreds of comments.

    Tiger fan Paula Jones Bergeron wrote, "I'm on a mission and need everyone's help. The Alabama game is Nov. 3 and everyone needs to wear a purple or black shirt and wear a large cross, a shirt with a cross on it or face paint a cross on your face. The media will be everywhere and my goal is to have a campus of crosses."

    Jason Williams wrote, "This BAMA fan stands behind you! Wear your crosses! May God richly bless you and, of course, Roll Tide!!"
    --30--
    Mark Hunter is a correspondent for the Baptist Message (www.baptistmessage.com), newsjournal of the Louisiana Baptist Convention.

    Sunday, October 28, 2012

    Bakkan oil field fuels need for church plants in Dakota region



    Posted on Oct 26, 2012 | by Diana Chandler/Baptist Press
    WILLISTON, N.D. (BP) -- Unemployment is nearly nonexistent in the boomtown of Williston, N.D., enriched by a flurry of drilling in the Bakken oil field that reaches into Montana and Canada.

    "I believe God is moving us towards becoming a missionary outpost for this entire region."
    -- Pastor Ashley Olinger
    Schools and the housing market are hard-pressed to accommodate the many families and workers the economy has drawn to Williston, where the estimated population of 30,000 is more than double what it was two years ago.

    There's only one Southern Baptist church in town.

    Ashley Olinger, its pastor, sees in the changing landscape an opportunity to plant churches but says he will need resources from across the Southern Baptist Convention to respond to God's call.

    "I'm a truck driver from northern Canada trying to wrap my head around such a spiritual opportunity. I don't even know how to describe it," said Olinger, who pastors Cornerstone First Baptist Church in Williston. "It's daunting, exciting, and I guess my greatest fear is we drop the ball and miss the opportunity that God has placed in front of us."

    Olinger's not speaking of a short-term evangelistic outreach but an opportunity to plant several vibrant churches in the area that will flourish from an estimated 50 years of Bakken drilling.

    "I believe God is moving us toward becoming a missionary outpost for this entire region," Olinger said. "Ministry goes beyond chaplaincy to single guys, to family ministry, to youth ministry. Church planting and long-term discipleship is a huge, huge part of it.

    "I believe that God will not only allow churches to be planted across this region, but those that are here temporarily, we'll be able to send back to wherever they're from, hopefully as missionaries back to their hometowns."

    That's why the church planter who came to Williston from Canada more than two years ago is corralling support by hosting a Bakkan Oil Field Summit Nov. 12-14, hoping to attract partners and support for church planting.

    "In our region, there are only two or three of our [SBC] churches located up here," he said. "The next closest one [to Williston] is 50 miles away, the church in Watford City. The next closest would be in Minot, which is 100 miles away."

    Olinger presents Williston as a rich field for biblical harvest.

    "The bars and the strip clubs in town are making an absolute fortune every night. The challenge is that is the only opportunity for social interaction that a lot of these guys -- that there is," he said. "Restaurants are closed early at night because they don't have staff, which, again, presents some unique opportunities."

    Olinger is inviting to the summit anyone who wants to help the region minister to the growing population. In addition to church planters, he needs manpower for servant evangelism outreaches such as prayerwalking and hosting a Thanksgiving dinner.

    "We're just trying to pull together people that are interested in helping us reach the opportunity that God has set in front of us. I'm pretty open to working with whoever wants to come alongside of us and help us ... deal with the influx," he said. "That's been a part of my passion for some time. I was a church planter in Canada. I see my role more as equipping God's people to becoming the missionaries He intended us to be, that together we might be able to reach out into this opportunity."

    Olinger's congregation moved into a new building in July and has seen Sunday attendance double to about 230, he said, with 10-25 visitors each week. The church is adding a new weeknight worship service to accommodate shift workers and hopes to plant by January a church in Ray, about 30 miles from Williston.

    "Our approach to it needs to be long-term. It needs to be far more comprehensive than putting a tract and a Bible in man camps," he said, referring to the temporary housing facilities built for the oil field crews. "It needs to be much more than that. And that's in part why I believe God brought me here when I already had a passion for church planting. And so I think it was a natural fit."

    Olinger has the support of the Dakota Baptist Convention and the North America Mission Board, which already have cooperatively placed a church planter in the region.

    "We've got a lot of people in our church that I believe over the next few years will end up leading some of these small churches as we plant them around the region," Olinger said. "I'm excited. The workload is huge, but I believe that He's got some phenomenal things in store for us."

    Supporters may reach Olinger at Aolinger.fbc@midconetwork.com or at 701-572-2724.
    --30--
    Diana Chandler is Baptist Press' staff writer. Get Baptist Press headlines and breaking news on Twitter (@BaptistPress), Facebook (Facebook.com/BaptistPress ) and in your email (baptistpress.com/SubscribeBP.asp).

    Monday, October 22, 2012

    Families ‘on mission’ take a new look at neighborhoods

    Oct 22, 2012 
    By KRISTIN EASTERLING/FL Baptist Witness
    SERVICE Debby Akerman, national WMU president and FamilyFEST volunteer from Ocean ViewBaptist Church in Myrtle Beach, S.C., served with Binghampton Community Church during a day camp for local children. She is assisting a young boy in sewing a pin on his new toboggan given to him by FamilyFEST volunteers WMU photo
    BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (WMU)—In a unique mission opportunity, families from Florida joined volunteers from throughout the nation to serve side-by-side in projects designed to share the Gospel creatively this past summer. 
    A Pensacola family reported a new awareness of the “mission field” that exists in each community—and opened their hearts towards other like-minded families they served with.
    “FamilyFEST showed me the need out in the community that I normally do not see,” said Scott Miller, a missions volunteer from Point Baptist Church in Pensacola. “It opened up my heart.”
    Miller, along with his wife, Valerie, and their three children ranging in age from 6-13, helped with backyard Bible clubs and community surveys throughout the week.
    “FamilyFEST was an extremely positive experience for our family,” Valerie Miller shared. “It allowed us to minister as a family, meet and interact with other like-minded families, be fully focused on His work for one entire week, and truly made us realize that the ‘mission field’ is all around us.” 
    The Millers served with around 200 volunteers from 15 states who ministered at 11 different project sites. States represented by volunteers were: Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Missouri, Mississippi, Ohio, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Wisconsin.
    EVANGELISM Brook Lovett, associate pastor of children and evangelism at Concord Baptist Church in Calera, Ala., was one of 200 volunteers who joined together in Memphis to share the love of Christ. WMU photo

    Sharing the Love of Christ

    “It was such a wonderful week, seeing people from all over, working side-by-side, and serving God’s people in Memphis,” reflected Cathy Chinn, regional coordinator for MRM. “It is a very unchurched area, and we are looking for creative ways to share the gospel.
    “FamilyFEST was a week of people doing just that,” Chinn continued. “It was exciting to see various groups sharing God’s love in so many ways!”
    Randy Pool of MRM of Tennessee added that FamilyFEST was a tremendous boost for several ministry sites in the Memphis area. According to Pool, some established works were enhanced by the presence of the volunteers while others were new church plants trying to make an impact in their community.
    For example, Fayette Baptist Church is a new church plant in Memphis. The church was not yet open to the public during FamilyFEST, but FamilyFEST volunteers from the Boones Creek Baptist Association in Kentucky helped Fayette Baptist get their ministry started.
    “We were asked to take information about the church and gospel tracts door-to-door for most of the week,” shared Todd Rader, a volunteer from Ephesus Baptist Church in Kentucky. “Two of our ladies baked over 300 cookies and we distributed them to local businesses. One morning we volunteered at a local thrift store. There have already been several individuals and families that have expressed interest in the church as a result of our outreach efforts.”
    National WMU President Debby Akerman of Myrtle Beach, S.C., was among the volunteers and said, “The thought that comes to my mind and heart as I reflect on my week at 
    FamilyFEST is ‘immeasurably more than we can ask or imagine.’ More than a thought, it is Paul’s prayer for God’s work through us for His glory.”
    EVANGELISM Brook Lovett, associate pastor of children and evangelism at Concord Baptist Church in Calera, Ala., was one of 200 volunteers who joined together in Memphis to share the love of Christ. WMU photo
    Akerman said it was a joy to serve alongside many of the volunteers delivering cookies, pulling weeds, sorting clothes, and packing lunches for the homeless, among other ministries. Her afternoons were filled with “serving during block parties and backyard Bible clubs, all clearly presenting the love of Christ and the plan of salvation.”
    Bonnie Draper, FamilyFEST volunteer and youth director at Landover Hills Baptist Church in Landover Hills, Md., said, “Some of the children thought they had to pay for popcorn and snow cones at the block parties. We were able to tell them the food was free, but more importantly shared the free gift of Jesus Christ coming into their lives. We know of four that prayed to receive Christ and others were open to listening.”
    During the week, teams also assembled and distributed more than 1,000 hygiene kits in the Memphis area. 

    Beyond FamilyFEST

    FamilyFEST volunteers came to be blessing to the community, but were blessed themselves as the prayers of the coordinators were answered, and then some.
    “FamilyFEST not only had an impact on the community but on the volunteers as well,” said Denise Bronaugh, adult ministry and communication specialist for Tennessee WMU. “That was evidenced at the celebration 
    dinner that was held on the last night of our week. From the 70-year-old man who confessed that this was his first missions trip to the 6-year-old who was excited she got to tell someone about Jesus, you could sense that their lives had been changed as well. Most volunteers said they wanted to go home and make an impact in their own community with what they learned at FamilyFEST.”
    “God honored the fact that families came together to work in different neighborhoods of Memphis to share Jesus Christ,” said Sherry Hall, director of the Mid-South Baptist Association WMU. Since FamilyFEST ended, Hall said four groups of volunteers have already made plans to return in the spring and summer of 2013. 
    “Every church should be involved in a family-oriented mission trip,” said Brook Lovett, associate pastor of children and evangelism at Concord Baptist Church in Calera, Ala. “FamilyFEST created a passion in our church for the work we need to do [at home] in Calera. It made our church family and the families in our church healthier and stronger.”
    FamilyFEST in Memphis was a partnership between national WMU, Tennessee WMU, Mississippi River Ministry (MRM), and the Mid-South Baptist Association.
    Kristin Easterling is a senior at Auburn University in Auburn, Ala. She served as an intern last summer at national WMU on the Corporate Communication Team. 

    Wednesday, October 17, 2012

    State-by-state advocacy of U.S. religious liberty launches


    Tennessee, with its state capitol in Nashville, is one of nine states whose legislatures are forming religious freedom caucuses in a new nationwide effort to combat religious discrimination. Photo Terms of Use

    Posted on Oct 16, 2012 | by Anne Reiner/Baptist Press

    WASHINGTON (BP) -- Representatives from nine state legislatures have announced the formation of state-level religious freedom caucuses in a new nationwide effort to combat religious discrimination.

    "There is a renewed interest in religious freedom in the country, and this growing attention is bringing together people of all religious faiths and political ideologies," Tim Schultz of the American Religious Freedom Program (ARFP) said during a teleconference Oct. 9. "Freedom of religion is a right that all lawmakers, and this includes state legislators, have a role in protecting and defending.

    "This is not an issue just for the courts," Schultz noted.

    With the assistance of a bipartisan group of more than 120 lawmakers -- 16 were present for the teleconference -- ARFP plans to inaugurate religious freedom caucuses in all 50 states by the end of 2013. The current states with caucuses are Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Idaho, Kansas, Missouri, New Hampshire, Oklahoma and Tennessee.

    The formation of these caucuses is based on two ideas, Schultz said: 1) Religious freedom is important to the majority of Americans from all faiths, and these individuals oppose "state-sponsored injury to religion" and 2) the free exercise of religion is a constitutional right that is foundational to all freedoms and must be protected by state lawmakers.

    Schultz -- state policy director for the AFRP, which is an initiative of the Washington-based Ethics and Public Policy Center -- explained how the caucuses will function:

    -- Even though these are the first state caucuses with a religious freedom agenda, they will work in a manner similar to other legislative caucuses.

    -- Each caucus will consist of lawmakers who come together to discuss various public policy issues pertaining to freedom of religion both in their state and throughout the country.

    -- There will be a multi-state information-sharing component to connect the caucuses across the country. This will help build legislative expertise beyond that of a single caucus in one state capital.

    State Rep. Stephen Precourt of Florida said during the teleconference, "Religious freedom caucuses -- that is, legislators of all political and religious affiliations working together -- can work to help ensure the courts do not end up being the sole recourse for violation of religious freedom and, even better, to prevent the courts in the first place from being a means to push religious discrimination."

    Ron Lindsay, president and CEO of the Center for Inquiry, which is affiliated with the Council for Secular Humanism, meanwhile expressed some skepticism about the effort in comments to Baptist Press.

    "Freedom of conscience is a fundamental right, and any effort to strengthen that right should be welcome," Lindsay said. "Unfortunately, 'freedom of conscience' and 'religious liberty' are sometimes improperly invoked by those who seek to impose their religious views on others, directly or indirectly. Whether the American Religious Freedom Program will help strengthen the right to freedom of conscience or subvert this right largely depends on the understanding of religious liberty that will guide its activity."

    Specific religious restrictions discussed in the teleconference were the removal of crosses from cemeteries in Tennessee and the Obama administration's abortion/contraception mandate.

    In 2009, Tennessee passed its version of the federal Religious Freedom Restoration Act, stipulating that the state must have a compelling governmental interest and has chosen the least restrictive option before passing a law that may infringe on an individual's religious freedom. As new attacks on religious freedom appear, it is the state lawmakers' duty to take the lead in battling these grievances, Tennessee Rep. Brian Kelsey told Baptist Press.

    "We would hope that there would be no need to form a religious freedom caucus, but unfortunately there have been attacks on religious freedom that have stepped up in recent years, and that is the reason we are forming this caucus at this time," Kelsey said.

    In early January Tennessee's seven inaugural caucus members -- four Democrats and three Republicans -- will meet to discuss their goals for the upcoming session.

    "My hope is that we would get to a point where we wouldn't have to fight these battles on a yearly basis," Kelsey said. "I believe that all Americans cherish our right to exercise religion freely and want to protect that right as much as possible."
    --30--

    Anne Reiner is an intern with the Washington bureau of Baptist Press. Get Baptist Press headlines and breaking news on Twitter (@BaptistPress), Facebook (Facebook.com/BaptistPress ) and in your email (baptistpress.com/SubscribeBP.asp).

    Thursday, October 11, 2012

    40 Days of Prayer - Bonus Day

    Praise God for what He has done during these 40 days and for what He will continue to do in and through us! We desire to mediate on Your wonderful works. We know Your plan is to continue the work You have begun in us. We are humbled to know that You have chosen to work through us. Glory be to the Father, the Son and to the Holy Spirit. Amen.

    Wednesday, October 10, 2012

    40 Days of Prayer - Day 40

    True REVIVAL to continue past revival
    Father God, Thank You for the privilege of bringing our Church, Our Leaders, Our Members, and Our Mission to You in prayer. May the joy and love we have felt continue to permeate our lives and our church.  May we continue to abide in You and nourish ourselves daily in Your word.  May we continue to exhort and lift one another up in prayer. May we continue in sweet fellowship with our Savior, Redeemer, and Friend. May we be found faithful until Your return!  Bless and sanctify us by the power of Your blood, Lord Jesus, AMEN!

    Tuesday, October 9, 2012

    40 Days of Prayer - Day 39

    The Righteousness of the Lord to rain down
    Lord Jesus, what precious love You show us! How amazing, how AWEsome, that You would call me friend! Lord forgive us our sins. Cleanse and purify us again so that we may not be ashamed at Your coming! Your word tells us we are imputed Your righteousness only through faith. Strengthen our faith and rain down Your righteousness on us. May we keep Your righteousness through holiness, sanctified and set apart for Your work! Through the name of Jesus Christ, Our Savior and Our Friend, AMEN

    Monday, October 8, 2012

    Spurgeon on prayer "In the Holy Ghost"

    Mark the grand characteristic of true prayer--"In the Holy Ghost." The seed of acceptable devotion must come from heaven's storehouse. Only the prayer which comes from God can go to God. We must shoot the Lord's arrows back to him. That desire which he writes upon our heart will move his heart and bring down a blessing, but the desires of the flesh have no power with him.
    Praying in the Holy Ghost is praying in fervency. Cold prayers ask the Lord not to hear them. Those who do not plead with fervency, plead not at all. As well speak of lukewarm fire as of lukewarm prayer--it is essential that it be red hot. It is praying perseveringly. The true suppliant gathers force as he proceeds, and grows more fervent when God delays to answer. The longer the gate is closed, the more vehemently does he use the knocker, and the longer the angel lingers the more resolved is he that he will never let him go without the blessing. Beautiful in God's sight is tearful, agonizing, unconquerable importunity. It means praying humbly, for the Holy Spirit never puffs us up with pride. It is his office to convince of sin, and so to bow us down in contrition and brokenness of spirit. We shall never sing Gloria in excelsis except we pray to God De profundis: out of the depths must we cry, or we shall never behold glory in the highest. It is loving prayer. Prayer should be perfumed with love, saturated with love--love to our fellow saints, and love to Christ. Moreover, it must be a prayer full of faith. A man prevails only as he believes. The Holy Spirit is the author of faith, and strengthens it, so that we pray believing God's promise. O that this blessed combination of excellent graces, priceless and sweet as the spices of the merchant, might be fragrant within us because the Holy Ghost is in our hearts! Most blessed Comforter, exert thy mighty power within us, helping our infirmities in prayer.

    40 Days of Prayer - Day 38

    An outpouring of the Holy Spirit power over all God’s people
    Lord, You are the Living water and those who come to You will never thirst again.  We crave this Living water. Lord Jesus, we ask You to fill us with Your Holy Spirit! Lord in the scriptures whenever there was an outpouring of the Holy Spirit, men proclaimed Your gospel with power! We ask it Lord, so that we too would share Your gospel with power throughout our community. May we share Your love, joy, peace, and patience with those within the body and outside our walls. In the power name of Jesus, AMEN!

    Sunday, October 7, 2012

    Former Sooner picks up where he left off



    Posted on Oct 5, 2012 | by Chris Doyle/Baptist Press
    Smokey Hurst with his family -- wife Meagan and children Darrick Jr., 5, Andee, 3, Michael, 2, and Samuel, 4 months.
    NORMAN, Okla. (BP) -- He was a member of Bob Stoops' first recruiting class at the University of Oklahoma. He played in two national championship games, three Big XII championship games and four bowl games while at OU.

    What he did as a Sooner football player he continues to do today -- not on the field, but in the locker room, dorm room, throughout the campus and even on road trips. Having an influence in people's lives is what Smokey Hurst is still doing.

    While honing his athletic skills at OU, Hurst honed his spiritual strength through the Paradigm campus ministry (formerly Baptist Student Union, or BSU). And now he's back to help others do the same.

    A Class 2A defensive player of the year as a high school junior at Beggs High School in Beggs, Okla., Hurst received multiple letters from college football programs. However, there was no doubt in his mind where he wanted to play.

    "Living in Oklahoma and being the [OU linebacker Brian] Bosworth fan that I was, I was really interested in playing for the University of Oklahoma," Hurst said.

    During the week after he graduated high school, Hurst headed to Norman to start spring training. He moved in with a guy named Pete whom he knew from Beggs.

    "Pete introduced me to a college ministry at OU called BSU and a man named Max Barnett," Hurst said. "When a person meets Max, he walks away a changed person, and this is what happened to me."

    Hurst had become a Christian during his high school junior year. The timing was perfect for this young "Timothy" to be discipled by Barnett, the longtime director of OU's BSU.

    "I studied under Max the four-and-a-half years I was at OU, and it was during this time that my relationship with Christ began to blossom and grow," Hurst said. "I was challenged to live by a higher standard, follow hard after Christ and make disciples who could make disciples."

    Hurst was determined to live the Christian life while playing football at OU. He experienced many challenges from his teammates, who often questioned him on the standards he chose to follow.

    "I built upon my own convictions of why I didn't drink," Hurst said. "Some of them would say to me, 'You have the freedom to do what you want.'"

    The conversations were frequent. His teammates continued to debate with Hurst about why he refrained from alcohol. Finally, Hurst took the opportunity to engage them about their constant prodding.

    "I asked them, 'Why are you asking me these questions?' One of them responded, 'Because you don't drink.' So then I asked, 'If I drank, would we ever have these conversations?'"

    His teammates realized they were confiding in Hurst. They had an appreciation for how Hurst lived his life, and soon they came to him for advice and for his perspective on challenging issues.

    "I was able to share the Gospel over and over and over again without ever once having to say, 'Let me share the Gospel with you,'" Hurst recounted.

    Teammates were not the only ones Hurst impacted. One day, a coach noticed Hurst carrying a small packet of Bible verses he used for Scripture memorization. The coach took the packet, pulled out a card and asked Hurst to quote the verse on the card, which he did word for word.

    The coach asked if he could borrow the packet and make copies of the verse cards. Years later, when Hurst was visiting this coach in his office, he noticed the memory verse cards sitting on his desk.

    Something that challenged Hurst as a player was how the team was constantly reciting the Lord's Prayer at various occasions. As a senior he decided to write an eight-page paper on the Lord's Prayer, and he gave it to Coach Stoops.

    He told the coach he did not think the team realized the importance of the Lord's Prayer and wanted Stoops to read his paper. After that visit, instead of the team reciting the Lord's Prayer, Stoops always would call on Hurst to pray.

    The team continues to follow this pattern. With the exception of game days when they still voice Jesus' model prayer, a player is now asked to say a prayer for the team.

    Hurst married his longtime girlfriend Meagan in the spring before he graduated from OU. After graduation, he started a landscaping company that was thriving, and eventually he was able to hire 25 employees. Smokey and Meagan were living a very blessed life.

    Then in 2008 he sold the business and moved his family to Fort Worth, Texas, to start seminary. After years of putting off the Lord's calling, Hurst surrendered his life to fulltime ministry.

    "We have made a commitment to follow the Lord in obedience and faith wherever He leads us, regardless of what plans we may already have," he said.

    The Hursts are back in Norman and serving at the Baptist collegiate ministry. Smokey, who raises his own support, is once again engaging student athletes and other college students in his way of doing relational ministry.

    The Sooners have produced many popular and successful football players. Hurst may not be a player who comes to mind when recalling those who were a part of OU's national championship in 2000, but from an eternal perspective he definitely could be considered successful.

    Instead of winning trophies, he is helping change lives, just like he was trained to do in college.
    --30--
    Chris Doyle is development specialist for Baptist Village Communities in Oklahoma. This article appeared in The Baptist Messenger (baptistmessenger.com), newsjournal of the Baptist General Convention of Oklahoma.

    40 Days of Prayer - Day 37

    REVIVAL
    Father, break our hearts over our sin; reveal any evil in us. Give us holy anguish so we confess and repent.  Grant us cleansing from all unrighteousness, so we may stand before You clean and pure. Lord, renew a right spirit in us so the eyes of our hearts would be opened and we would be filled with the light of Your presence. “You, O Lord, dwell in the high and holy place, with him who has a contrite and humble spirit, To revive the spirit of the humble, And to revive the heart of the contrite ones.” Praise You, Sweet Jesus, for Your Holy forbearance, AMEN!

    Saturday, October 6, 2012

    40 Days of Prayer - Day 36

    For our education programs
    Lord, as children are important to You, may they be so to us.  As we are about the Father’s business, help us to be about the children as well. Continue to build our programs to be effective in bringing believers into Your kingdom at an early age. May our programs be so exciting our youngsters will want to invite their friends. May they be so excited learning about Your love for them they will share You with others. And Lord, through the children, may we reach lost parents...to the glory of God the Father! In the Name above all names, Jesus Christ, AMEN!