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Louisiana Baptist associations announce needs for affected churches, residents

August 18, 2016

By Message Staff Directors of missions from the southern areas of the state are asking for donations that will be distributed to thousands of people affected by last weekend’s massive flooding in south Louisiana. “The greatest needs we have right now are prayer for the pastors who have personally experienced loss and for their financial issues,” said David Carlton, director of missions for Evangeline Baptist Association. “Some have no flood insurance.” The Bayou Church, which is a member of the Evangeline Baptist Association of churches, is collecting bleach, rags, mops, deodorant, soap, toothbrushes and school supplies from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. though Thursday, Aug. 18. The church is located at 2234 Kaliste Saloom Road in Lafayette. In Baton Rouge, one church opening its door for donations is Istrouma Baptist Church, 10500 Sam Rushing Drive. These items may be dropping off from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. through Thursday: First aid kits 50-ft. heavy duty water hoses Crow and pry bars Square shovels Squeegees Brooms Rubber gloves Hard hats Five-gallon buckets bleach Mosquito repellent Gatorade Bottled water Hammers Dust masks One-gallon spray bottle Box fans Extension cords … [Read more...]

As water rises, First Baptist Lake Arthur, community prays and waits

August 18, 2016

By Message Staff LAKE ARTHUR – The sandbags are stacked high around First Baptist Church in Lake Arthur, most of the congregation has evacuated and now all they and the rest of the southwest Louisiana town can hope for is a miracle from God. Threatening to flood the community is the Mermentau River, whose crest occurred earlier Thursday, Aug. 18, at 10.73 feet. The river previously was expected to crest at 11.5 feet on Friday. So far, they are holding up as the community and local churches have banded together to help one another during this time. “We are holding each other’s hand during this time,” said Pastor Jered. “The Lord has shown up and showed off his greatness during this time.” The Lake Arthur Police Department has issued a dusk-til-dawn curfew until further notice for the town of 2,700 residents. Thomas said water was not in the town yet, though he expects to know if water will come into Lake Arthur between later tonight and sometime Friday. Lake Arthur Mayor Robbie Bertrand said in a Facebook post Thursday morning that overnight all levees held, with some amount of leakage due to pressure from the buildup of water against them. Bertrand said the east part of town does not have a levee or pump and … [Read more...]

OLYMPICS: Gold medialist Brianna Rollins: I want to be known as ‘the athlete who glorified God’

August 18, 2016

By Michael Foust, Christian Examiner RIO DE JANEIRO (Christian Examiner) – A trio of American sprinters swept the 110-meter hurdles final Wednesday night during the Olympics, but it was the post-race interview that many TV viewers will remember. Brianna Rollins won the gold medal with a time of 12.48 seconds, while teammates Nia Ali (12.59) and Kristi Castlin (12.61) captured the silver and bronze, respectively. It was the first Olympics since 1972 that a country had swept the event. To read the rest of the article, click here. … [Read more...]

Louisiana College brings Jesus and basketball to Jena

August 17, 2016

B By Craig Franklin JENA, - For Louisiana College Head Men's Basketball Coach Reni Mason, basketball is nothing more than a platform to build the kingdom of God. Mason and his assistant coach, Jonathan Brooks, and two other student-athletes -- Raheem Regis and Travis Schutlz -- represented Louisiana College and Jesus Christ August 11 and 12 when they conducted a free basketball clinic at First Baptist Church Jena for aspiring players from kindergarten through 12th grade. "We teach the fundamentals of basketball, but the most important reason we conduct these camps is to share the Gospel," Mason said. "We start each day with a devotion, get into our drills, and end with a devotion. Everything we do starts and ends with God." "I'd like to thank Pastor Dominick DiCarlo and the Jena First Baptist Church family for allowing us to come and conduct this clinic," Mason said. Louisiana College sponsors basketball camps for three weeks each summer, but this year expanded with free clinics to areas outside of the campus after. "This year we conducted two of these clinics, the first was at Alpine Baptist Church in Tioga and the second was here at First Baptist in Jena," Mason said. "We've averaged about 65 youths between … [Read more...]

Your pirogue is our pirogue

August 17, 2016

My Martha Bailey, First Baptist Covington Although I had planned another post for today, my heart won’t let me write about anything except the punch in the gut that our neighbors to the west all the way to Lafayette received last weekend. Caught completely off guard, residents in that area received anywhere from 15-28 inches of rain in a 48-hour period. With such an extreme amount of water falling in such a short window of time, the rivers and tributaries could not accommodate the runoff. The flooding resulted in the deaths of eleven people, 20,000 people having to be rescued from homes and vehicles, and 11,000 victims seeking refuge in shelters. Unfortunately, many of those people hadn’t even gotten over the flood that hit this area only five months ago. Some of them had just completed the restoration of their homes after the March flood. Others were still in the process. How discouraging that must be. Twenty Southeast Louisiana parishes have been declared as disaster areas. It is being referred to as a “historic flood event”. Meteorologists are comparing it to the devastation caused by a hurricane that hit this area in 1940, over 75 years ago. But even though what has happened in our state has been categorized as … [Read more...]

UPDATE: Disaster relief training sessions scheduled around the state

August 17, 2016

UPDATE (3:23 p.m.): Additional mud-out training opportunities have been scheduled through Aug. 23 in the Baton Rouge and Lafayette areas. The following churches are hosting sessions: Aug. 17: Istrouma Baptist Church, Baton Rouge, 6 p.m. First Baptist Church, Lafayette, 6 p.m. Aug. 18: The Grove, Prairieville, 6 p.m. Highland Baptist Church, New Iberia, 6 p.m. Aug. 20: Istrouma Baptist Church, Baton Rouge, 8 a.m. (Hispanic) Aug. 23: First Baptist Church, Jennings, 6:30 p.m. An assessment training session is also scheduled for 6 p.m. on Aug. 19 at Ascension Baptist Church in Gonzales. ORIGINAL STORY: BATON ROUGE – The Baptist Association of Greater Baton Rouge has announced two mud-out training sessions for this Saturday. Hosted at Istrouma Baptist Church in Baton Rouge, one session will take place from 8 to 11 a.m., led by Charles Watson. The other session is for college students from 7 to 9 a.m. and will be led by Steve Masters, campus director of the LSU Baptist Collegiate Ministry. The cost is $25, which covers the cost of a hat and t-shirt. Each class will be deployed immediately after the training. Participants are asked to bring work clothes, such as long pants, long … [Read more...]

Historic Louisiana flooding

August 17, 2016

By Waylon Bailey, Pastor, First Baptist Covington It’s not that we aren’t used to water. We have water everywhere. It’s that we’ve simply never (at least in 100 years) seen this much water before. How much water have we had? Most of the affected area (roughly between Hammond to Lafayette or from Interstate 55 to Interstate 49) had over 2 feet of rainfall in a short period of time. Some areas had 30 inches of rain. The flood waters rose so rapidly that people had to actually flee their homes. Two rivers crested at historic levels and Lakes Pontchartrain and Maurepas both rose over 6″ in water level. These are both large lakes. People are hurting, especially those who flooded just last March and were about ready to move back into their homes. Many of the affected people do not have flood insurance because either they are not in a flood zone or neither they nor their neighbors have ever been close to flooding before. Some houses received a few feet of water while others were flooded to the roof. Just in our church, which is not in the center of the affected area, we know of members who slept in their attic as the waters rose and one of our pastors and several of our members were stranded on Interstate 12 for 30 … [Read more...]

GuideStone announces results of internal reviews, restructuring

August 16, 2016

By Timothy E. Head, GuideStone Financial Resources communications DALLAS — GuideStone’s theme for 2015 was the “Year of Efficiency,” whereby GuideStone sought out new efficiencies in people, processes and policies. Scores of efficiencies were identified and implemented throughout the organization, including streamlining employee training and onboarding, renegotiating energy contracts and bulk mailing services, and lowered medical group sizes to help assist more churches. Coming out of that effort GuideStone has announced a realignment of certain job responsibilities and the promotion of three new executive officers from within the ranks of the organization. The restructuring dovetails with GuideStone’s update to its long-range plan, GuideStone 100, to carry the ministry to its centennial in 2018, and beyond to 2020. Many positions were combined or redeployed and a small number were eliminated. Eligible personnel were offered an early voluntary retirement package, while many other employees were reassigned to open positions. A total of nine people who were unable to be accommodated in open positions were offered severance packages. “These steps we have taken will enable us to further enhance our ministry as we prepare to … [Read more...]

Crossgate, Woodland begin the long road to recovery

August 15, 2016

By Message Staff In the 25 years Louis Husser has served as pastor of Crossgate Baptist Church, he said the situation has never been this bad. The church’s worship center and gymnasium both took in one foot of water from flash flooding over the weekend. While some of his members have come to help with clean-up efforts, he said many are unable do much because their own homes are flooded. Many in his congregation had recently finished repairing their homes from flooding in March. Husser, who had water come within an inch of coming into his own home, estimates work to clean up both structures could take at least three months and welcomes any volunteer labor help. “Pray for us,” Husser said. “We need folks to be aware. Any help we can get would be awesome.” Flooded roadways are preventing Pastor Josh Powell from reaching Woodland Baptist Church in Springfield but he knows there was significant damage. The youth building took in four feet of water, the education building and worship center each had a foot or more and the parsonage about 10 inches. Donations can be dropped off at First Baptist Springfield. His church will need one of the LBC’s shower trailer and mud-out teams, as well as cleaning supplies and … [Read more...]

Baptist churches forethought has them ready to tackle relief efforts

August 15, 2016

LAFAYETTE -- The Bayou Church in Lafayette and First Baptist Lafayette will host two important training events dealing with the flooding. The Bayou Church will host its training tonight, Aug. 15, from 6 to 8 p.m. while First Lafayette’s training event will be Wednesday evening. Both training events will be led by Louisiana Baptist Convention’s Disaster Relief. Volunteers will learn how to properly and safely assist with flood relief efforts in homes. All volunteers must be at least 14 years old. “Please share the word and join us tonight,” the Bayou Church wrote on its Facebook page. “Together, we can help our community.” Pastor Mike Walker said churches needed to seize upon this event to minister to the community. “This is a magnificent opportunity to share the Gospel of Jesus Christ with a hurting community and literally see lives transformed. “We prepared for this event five months ago as we did a teaching series on Generosity,” Walker continued. “We received a special offering to give generously to five non-profits in Lafayette and Haiti and one of the five was for Disaster Relief. “We wanted to be poised to serve people promptly without worrying about asking for donations when a crisis occurred,” said … [Read more...]

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Editorial

FIRST PERSON: As goes the family, so goes the culture

By Gene Mills, Louisiana Family Forum president BATON ROUGE, La. (LBM) – Public policy matters, especially regarding the health and growth of families, the basic building block of any flourishing society. As we have seen throughout history, as goes the family, so goes the culture. Unfortunately, for too long … Read More

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