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"Helping Louisiana Baptists Impact the World For Christ"

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Louisiana Baptist Convention President Eddie Wren encouraged messengers to wait on God.

Speakers press messengers to unite for the Gospel

November 22, 2019

By Brian Blackwell, Message Staff Writer

ALEXANDRIA, La. (LBM) – Wait on God and He will deliver in His timing, Eddie Wren said during his Louisiana Baptist Convention president’s address Nov. 11.

Referencing Isaiah 40:27-31, Wren, pastor of the First Baptist Church in Rayville, exhorted Louisiana Baptists to “wait on the Lord. Keep following Him and wait on Him.”

“Though the world tells us the church is falling apart, and the world tells us the church is antiquated, though the world tells us we need something else, we must not be shaken,” Wren told messengers. “The rebellious time we live in is no time to compromise. Never believe God doesn’t know where we are. Never listen to the lies of the devil as he tells us God cannot help us.

“Though we may be experiencing some difficulties, it’s not the end,” he proclaimed. “Don’t give up; don’t give in. Wait on the Lord and in due time He will renew your strength, He will lift you up and He will change your situation. And you will be renewed. You’ll leave the rubble and despair behind and by God’s grace you’ll soar.”

JAKE ROUDVOSKI

During two Bible study sessions, Jake Roudvoski, professor of evangelism and church leadership with New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary, offered his observation “that the greatest need in the evangelical world and our own convention is for us to experience the renewal of the holiness of God.”

“When we recapture the vision of the holy God who is sovereign, then it would lead us to trust Him not matter what happens in our lives,” he said.

Drawing from Isaiah 6:1-8, Roudvoski said one of the main reasons why Southern Baptists are struggling to share the Gospel consistently is because they do not view God as Holy.

“If you see God as holy, you would want to serve Him faithfully and share Him consistently with others,” he said.

In his second message based on Revelation 2:1-7, Roudkovski said Louisiana Baptists need to repent and be revived.

“For many of us, our love for Jesus Christ has become stale and not as passionate as it once was,” he said. “We need to receive this relevant complaint from Jesus

Christ and renew our first love.”

JEFFREY FRIEND

During the convention sermon, Jeffrey Friend, pastor of the Suburban Baptist Church in New Orleans, thanked Louisiana Baptists for the support, encouragement, financial resources and other assistance they provided to rebuild the church facilities after an EF-3 tornado heavily damaged the campus, Feb. 7, 2017.

“It’s a precious things to me to be able to say it loud that I’m Southern Baptist and proud,” Friend said.  “As I was sitting in the debris after the tornado hit on that Tuesday, I began to talk to my master, ‘Lord, what am I going to do?’

Friend, whose church previously sustained damage from Hurricane Jeffrey Friend Katrina in 2005 and Hurricane Gustav in 2008, said at times he has felt like the man the Good Samaritan helped, who was left battered and torn on the side of the road. In the end, the man was restored.

“God gave me an opportunity to tell you what a certain man never got to tell the Samaritan,” Friend said. “After the Samaritan did so much for him, he left. But nowhere did it say a certain man got the opportunity to say thank you.”

JAMIE DEW

Jamie Dew, the newly elected president of NOBTS, shared with messengers that the school will emphasize servanthood during his tenure, and, that this is the focus in its new mission statement: “New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary and Leavell College prepare servants to walk with Christ, proclaim His truth, and fulfill His mission.”

The seminary also has adopted four areas to strengthen — Leavell College, enrollment strategy, marketing and communications and denominational relationships – while continuing to proclaim the truth of the Gospel and fulfill Christ’s mission, he said.

“We believe that New Orleans as a city and that New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary as a school is vastly cooler than Southern Baptists think that it is,” he said. “We have to retell the story of the school. “This is a faculty that inspires me,” he continued.

“This is a faculty that I am proud to line up by and be numbered among. These are men and women that have given their lives, not just to the academic profession of preparing the next generation servants, but they are themselves practitioners of the Gospel ministry. Virtually all of them serve in local church and they are doing it in locations where difficulty and darkness abounds.

“They are on the front lines of Gospel ministry in a way that I’ve never seen faculty do,” he offered. “I don’t know a better faculty, I don’t know a better city to learn in, to prepare and be a pastor and servant of Jesus Christ.”

PAUL CHITWOOD

Paul Chitwood, president of the International Mission Board, challenged messengers to preach and teach with urgency about the Lord’s coming.

“Might it be that we fail to understand the urgency of the Bible’s closing verse, ‘I am coming soon said the Lord Jesus?’”

Chitwood asked, referencing Revelation 20:21-22. “On the day that He comes, the opportunity to repent will have passed because at that point you cannot be saved,” he said. “And that’s why there must be an urgency that accompanies the preaching of the Gospel.

“We are here because so many have yet to hear and yet to prepare for that day,” Chitwood said. “That’s why your church does its work where your church is located. That’s why your church extends its reach across Louisiana by partnering with other sister churches in the Louisiana Baptist Convention. That’s why your church does its work among the nations by partnering with all the churches in the Southern Baptist Convention to see that the Gospel gets to the nations. Just as God in His grace led us to hear, God in his grace wants them to hear. It’s up to us.”

Louisiana Baptists gathered for the African American Fellowship.
Ben Clapper, executive director of Louisiana Right to Life, thanked Louisiana Baptists during the Pro-Life Breakfast for their support in the pro-life movement in the state and urged everyone to get out the vote for the ‘Love Life’ amendment in 2020.
Louisiana Baptists Executive Director Steve Horn congratulated Bill Robertson on his retirement as director of pastoral leadership for Louisiana Baptists. Robertson will retire Nov. 30 and will continue to serve as pastor of Fellowship Baptist Church in Jena. Standing beside Robertson is his wife, Linda.
Blake Chatelain, a former Baptist Student Union (now Baptist Collegiate Ministry) president at Louisiana State University of Alexandria, shared how collegiate ministry influenced him as a student.
Church planter Checkerz Williams, a messenger from Celebration Church in the New Orleans area, presented a motion that the Louisiana Baptist Convention adopt the same messenger requirements as the Southern Baptist Convention. Currently, church plants must register as messengers through the sponsoring church, which allows them voting privileges. Williams is pastor of Renew Church in Baton Rouge.
Jamie Dew, president of New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary.
Louisiana Baptist Convention President Eddie Wren encouraged messengers to wait on God.
Freddie Laing, pastor of St Matthews Baptist Church in Pelican Point, Bahamas, and his wife, thanked Louisiana Baptists for their commitment to partner with them to help rebuild their facilities that were heavily damaged by Hurricane Dorian during the annual meeting. The first Louisiana team is scheduled to arrive on site Dec. 8.
Louisiana Baptists Executive Director Steve Horn and Louisiana Baptist Convention President Eddie Wren encouraged messengers in separate Annual Meeting messages.
Steve Horn, during his first report at Louisiana Baptists executive director, urged messengers to unite for the sake of the Gospel and celebrated the work done by Louisiana Baptists for Kingdom purposes.
New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary Professor Jake Roudkovski offers his observation "that the greatest need in the evangelical world and our own convention is for us to experience the renewal of the holiness of God."
Jarrod and Jennifer Hawthorne shared, during the Louisiana Baptist Children’s Home and Family Ministries report, about their passion for adoption and foster care. They are one of many families who are families who are part of the Children’s Home Connect 1:27 foster care and adoption network. For information on how you can participate in this ministry, visit www.lbch.org/foster-adoption.php/index.html.
Newly elected International Mission Board President Paul Chitwood thanked Louisiana Baptists for their role in supporting missionaries who spread the Gospel worldwide.
Jeffrey Friend, pastor of Suburban Baptist Church in New Orleans, thanked Louisiana Baptists for helping rebuild his church facilities that were heavily damaged by an EF-3 tornado Feb. 7, 2017.
John Fream, pastor of Cypress Baptist Church, encouraged messengers during the Committee on Moral and Social Concerns Report to encourage others to vote for the ‘Love Life’ amendment in 2020.
John Hebert, missions and ministry team leader for Louisiana Baptists, said “he work of the missions team is only possible because of your generous gifts to the Georgia Barnette State Missions Offering."
Katie Bolen, a member of the Louisiana State University Baptist Collegiate Ministry, shared how the organization has helped her grow in her faith on campus.
Louisiana College recognized excellence in the pastorate within groupings of worship attendance up to 125, 126 to 500 and more than 500. From left: Gonzalo Rodriquez, Good Shepherd Hispanic Baptist Church in Metairie; LC President Rick Brewer; and Luther Sanson, pastor of Twin Oaks Baptist Church and Bastrop. Not photographed is Fred Luter, Franklin Avenue Baptist Church, New Orleans.
Lloyd Whitman, a messenger from First Baptist Church in Dry Prong, submitted a motion for the LBC or an existing committee to explore ways of promoting and facilitating churches to minister to offenders, their family members and inmates who have been released. The motion was referred to the Executive Board for further deliberation.
Newly elected Louisiana Baptist Convention officers are from left Marc Taylor, second vice president, Leroy Fountain, first vice president, and David Cranford, president. Taylor is a layman at Cook Baptist Church, Ruston; Fountain is church health strategist for New Orleans Baptist Association; and Cranford is pastor of First Baptist Church, Ponchatoula.
Two Louisiana Baptist state legislators were honored for their courageous efforts during the Louisiana Baptist Convention Annual Meeting by Dr. Will Hall of the Louisiana Baptists Office of Public Policy. (Left to right) State Sen. Beth Mizell, a member of First Baptist Church in Franklinton, was given the Esther’s Courage Award, and state Sen. Gerald Long, a member of First Baptist Church in Natchitoches, received the Shammah’s Courage Award.
New Pastor Conference officers are (from left) Brad Delaughter, vice president, Satsuma Baptist Church, Livingston; David Goza, president, Jefferson Baptist Church, Baton Rouge; and James Doughty, secretarytreasurer, First Baptist Church, Monroe.
First Baptist Church in Pineville hosted the 2019 Louisiana Baptist Pastors Conference.
Perry Hancock, CEO and president of the Louisiana Baptist Children’s Home and Family Ministries, told messengers that their support as his staff helped impact the lives of more than 4,000 children and others through its various ministries.
Louisiana Right to Life hosted a pro-life breakfast.
Shellie Tomlinson encouraged women at the Pastors Conference Minister's Wives Lunch.
Cameron Weatherford, worship leader for the Annual Meeting, leads messengers in a time of praise. Weatherford is a member of Calvary Baptist Church in Alexandria and chairman of the Louisiana College Division of Fine Arts.
An attendee to the 2019 annual Pastors Conference raises her hands in worship at the opening of the event, which took place First Baptist Church, Pineville on November 10 and 11.
A Louisiana College student lifts her hands in praise during the opening session of the Annual Meeting.

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