By Message Staff As Louisiana prepares for thousands of volunteers this Labor Day weekend, Louisiana Baptist disaster relief officials are reminding everyone assistance will be needed long past the upcoming holiday weekend. "It looks like we will switch from disaster relief to disaster rebuild and we will need volunteer groups from all over Louisiana and the country to help us," said John Hebert, missions and ministry director for Louisiana Baptists. Individuals and church teams can visit the Volunteer Guest Services page and sign-up for dates listed. Once the form is complete, an area coordinator will contact volunteers about potential opportunities. Through Aug. 29, the seven incident command centers in the state reported that: 18,000 meals per day are being prepped by Oklahoma Baptists at Istrouma Baptist Church in Baton Rouge. 7,000 meals per day are being prepped by Missouri Baptists at Walker Baptist Church. Another 10,000 meals are being prepared by Mississippi Baptists at Woodland Park Baptist Church in Hammond and Texas Baptists in Lafayette. Over 251,000 meals have been prepared to date. 955 projects have been assessed and more than 400 jobs have been completed. Mud-out teams are still … [Read more...]
Campers on Mission schedule work week at Camp Harris
Louisiana Campers on Mission has issued a call for anyone interested in assisting them with completing a variety of projects during their annual work week Sept. 4-9. Scheduled at Camp Harris in Minden, the organization has assignments for workers of all skills, including carpentry, general cleaning, landscaping, painting and sewing. The camp has accommodations for anyone staying there overnight. To sign-up to help or for more information on the annual work week, contact Charlie Lechner by e-mailing mail@harrisbaptist.com or by calling 318-927-3706. The organization's president Keith Brown may be contacted at 225.620.4265. … [Read more...]
Youngsters reminded at PreTeen Invasion to find joy in Jesus
By Brian Blackwell, Message Staff Writer LAFAYETTE – In a culture where many are searching for joy in the wrong places, the one source for true satisfaction is found in Jesus Christ, Eric Thomas reminded more than 400 pre-teens on Saturday, Aug. 27. And in the quest to find that joy, surrounding one’s self with a circle of godly friends is vital. “We turn up volume on that joy by being with friends who love Jesus,” Thomas said. “When we have friends who don't love Jesus and we are trying to run toward joy, they hold us back. They are like a load that keeps us from experiencing that joy. “We need to surround ourselves with a family of friends,” he added. “They can love you like Jesus has loved them.” Speaking from 2 Corinthians 5:17, Thomas told the youngsters attending PreTeen Invasion while they can find happiness with friends or at school, those earthly things will not make someone be filled with true joy. “All of us here are made to want joy,” he said. “We are made to want joy. Only Jesus can give you the joy you need.” Thomas, pastor of First Baptist Church in Norfolk, Va., was the main speaker for PreTeen Invasion at First Baptist Church in Lafayette. The event also featured music by the worship team from … [Read more...]
More workers needed for flood recovery
By Philip Timothy, Managing Editor ALEXANDRIA – Disaster relief leaders are asking for more workers to volunteer to meet the overwhelming demand for assistance in mud-out and related services caused by historic floods in Louisiana. “Our disaster relief people began working as soon as the floodwaters began to go down,” said John Hebert, Louisiana Baptists State Director of Missions. He added that Louisiana has 1,000 certified disaster relief “yellow shirts” deployed around the state “working eight to 10 hours daily.” “Their numbers have been bolstered by Southern Baptist disaster relief teams from 20 states,” adding about another 1,000 volunteers, Hebert said. But even with help from other faith-based organizations, kids helping from schools and churches organizing their members locally, the 61,000 flooded homes needing restoration far exceed the manpower available now to respond. “We are going to get a big shot in the arm this weekend, but the biggest influx of people will take place Labor Day weekend,” Hebert estimated from reports he’s receiving from around the country. “Louisiana is about to see the biggest mobilization of manpower since Hurricane Katrina.” But he emphasized even more help is needed quickly to … [Read more...]
Longview Baptist answering the call for help
DEVILLE – The phone hasn’t stopped ringing at Longview Baptist Church’s office this week. Complete strangers, desperate for help, are either calling or emailing the church seeking help to mud out their flood-ravaged home. “We sent a 12-person team to Denham Springs last Saturday with Josh Sikes, our minister of youth/education,” said Robby Poole, pastor of Longview Baptist Church in Deville. “We could do only a couple of houses but the people were so grateful. “As a matter of fact, both families want to come here to personally thank our church for helping them out,” said Poole. “In the meantime, other people in the neighborhood saw our van, wrote down the name of our church, Googled it to get our number I would guess, and have been calling non-stop since Monday.” To help as many as he can, Poole took a group of volunteers Thursday (Aug. 25) and will take another 20 Saturday (Aug. 27). He also plans on going the following week. “This [cleanup] is not going to end this week, the next week, next month, or next year,” he said. “These families desperately need our help. We are being the hands and feet of Jesus and the gratitude of these families’ faces speaks louder than words.” From the storm-ravaged areas beginning … [Read more...]
Internet pornography increases probability of divorce
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To get more out of social media act like an anthropologist
There is something marketing managers seem to forget about the internet: it was made for people, not for companies and brands. As such, it offers managers a source of insight they never had — social listening. Eavesdropping on consumers’ social-media chatter allows marketers to economically and regularly peer inside people’s lives as they are being lived, without introducing biases through direct interaction. Armed with traces of revealed opinions and behaviors, managers can at long last discover the manifestations and ripple effects of their actions on consumer behavior. Clear indications from marketing science underline how chatter affects sales, brand health, and even stock performance. Social listening competency will be critical to competitive advantage in the digital age. To read the rest of this article, please click here. … [Read more...]
Johns Hopkins University study disputes transgender and homosexual claims
Questions related to sexuality and gender bear on some of the most intimate and personal aspects of human life. In recent years they have also vexed American politics. We offer this report — written by Dr. Lawrence S. Mayer, an epidemiologist trained in psychiatry, and Dr. Paul R. McHugh, arguably the most important American psychiatrist of the last half-century — in the hope of improving public understanding of these questions. To read the rest of this article, please click here. … [Read more...]
Obamacare is splitting in two
By Peter Sullivan, The Hill Increasingly, there are two ObamaCares. There’s the one in coastal and northern areas, where the marketplaces include multiple insurers and plans. And there’s the one in southern and rural areas, where there is often little competition, a situation that can lead to higher premiums. To read the rest of this story, please click here. … [Read more...]
ISIS’ lone wolf strategy threatens West
By Barak Mendelsohn, Council on Foreign Relations A string of lone wolf terrorist attacks in France, Germany, the United States and elsewhere suggests that the phenomenon continues to spread and that it is growing increasingly lethal. Between October 2015 and August 2016 radicalized individuals, as well as “wolf packs,” carried out over 20 attacks in response to the Islamic State’s call to indiscriminately kill “nonbeliever” civilians. The lone-wolf strategy benefits the Islamic State (also known as ISIS) in several ways. First, it is cheap and relatively easy. It requires no planning on its part or even contact with, or knowledge of, the perpetrators. Second, lone wolves frustrate preventive measures since they cannot be identified ahead of time, given they have no direct connection to ISIS, and in this way, shelters the group’s Western networks from possible exposure. Third, such attacks are damaging to both a nation’s psychology and its leadership, raising fear and inciting alarmism among civilians while making governments appear helpless and even incompetent. And fourth, the worldwide proliferation of lone-wolf terrorism boosts ISIS’ image, demonstrating its reach and appeal to both enemies and sympathizers. To read … [Read more...]









