“Jesus saves. So come on, Southern Baptists, we can no longer be at ease in Zion while people all around us are dying and going to hell. Therefore, we must repent. Therefore, we must have remorse and do what Israel did in Psalm 80.” said Fred Luter, president of the Southern Baptist Convention, during the President’s Sermon to more than 5,000 messengers June 10 at the Baltimore Convention Center. “... In the name of Jesus we have the victory.” BALTIMORE (BP) -- The Gospel found only in the name of Jesus will change an America that has blown it with God and is quickly becoming more pagan than Christian, Southern Baptist Convention President Fred Luter told messengers on the eve of his last day in office. Luter drew enthusiastic, soulful responses from worshipers at an evening revival service June 10 during the SBC annual meeting in Baltimore as he preached from Psalm 80:18-19, the meeting's official theme Scripture calling for "Restoration and Revival through Prayer." "As your president for the past two years, my heart's desire has been that God would make us one and that God would send revival and renewal through the churches of the Southern Baptist Convention," Luter said. "Brothers and sisters, the only way that will … [Read more...]
Cooperative Program, other Southern Baptist ‘family’ matters discussed in Baltimore
by Joni B. Hannigan, Baptist Press BALTIMORE (BP) -- A three-day discussion among Southern Baptists became a focal point of the exhibit area of the SBC annual meeting in Baltimore as a procession of diverse, articulate Baptists conversed about core values. The dialogue at the Cooperative Program exhibit took place from casual chairs on a simple platform in a high-tech production area that projected the discussion on a massive two-sided high-definition screen overhead and streamed it on the Internet. Nearly 125 different speakers addressed such topics as Southern Baptists' hallmarks of cooperation, international missions, church planting and theological education as well as matters related to ethnic diversity, social justice and sexuality. C. Ashley Clayton, the SBC Executive Committee's vice president for Cooperative Program and stewardship development, said the June 9-11 Cooperative Program hub evolved in response to the desire to facilitate important conversations amicably without controlling the outcome. Like Southern Baptists themselves, the speakers were from every area of the country -- as well as Cuba. Many were young leaders interspersed among bivocational and mega-church pastors, church planters, seminary presidents … [Read more...]
Kelley: Caskey Center receives $4.5 million in donations
Submitted by philip on Fri, 06/13/2014 - 12:10 Chuck S. Kelley, president of New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary, gives a report June 11 during the last session of the Southern Baptist Convention annual meeting. He said NOBTS is shining the light of Jesus in a city that is largely unchurched and desperately needs the Gospel. The seminary is opening a counseling center to provide mental help to the community and introduce people to Jesus, Kelley said. He added that the seminary trained more than 3,800 students last year, has 10 online degrees and has the largest seminary extension center in the southeastern United States. By Brian Blackwell, Message Staff Writer BALTIMORE, Md. – Two months after the announcement for the formation of a program at New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary to provide free theological education for Louisiana Baptist bi-vocational and smaller church pastors and staff members, $4.5 million in donations has been received for the program. The additional donations have provided an expansion of the Caskey Center for Excellence, which received an initial amount of $1.5 million to support 100 students for the fall. However, additional separate donations of $1.5 million each within a week’s … [Read more...]
Crains share how CP-sponsored BCMs mattered in their lives
Submitted by philip on Fri, 06/13/2014 - 12:13 Jacob Watts, a student at LSU, thanks Southern Baptists June 10 during the Southern Baptists Convention annual meeting, for the opportunity to help plant a church with Brian and Hannah Crain, behind him, on the LSU campus in Baton Rouge. Watts and Crain spoke during the Executive Committee report at the Baltimore Convention Center. BALTIMORE – During the first part of the Executive Committee’s report to messengers, Brian and Hannah Crain, who this year planted Progression Church on the campus of Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, were welcomed to the stage by Frank S. Page, president of the SBC Executive Committee. The Crains were heavily influenced by the Baptist Collegiate Ministry at University of Louisiana, Monroe, which is supported by the Cooperative Program. “It was through the BCM that I taught my first Bible study, that I preached my first sermon, that I led my first ministry event and the first time I ever led any ministry team,” Brian Crain said. “... The BCM taught me one thing, and they taught it well: They taught me how to make disciples.” Because of Southern Baptist collegiate ministry, Crain said he recognizes that Jesus did not call him to be a … [Read more...]
Children are united with inmate fathers at AWANA Lifeline Returning Hearts
Submitted by philip on Tue, 06/04/2013 - 10:45 A joyous boy leaps into the arms of his incarcerated father at the ninth annual AWANA Lifeline Returning Hearts celebration that took place at Angola prison on May 18. By Mark H. Hunter, Regional Reporter ANGOLA – When the announcer at the recent AWANA Lifeline Returning Hearts celebration called the name of the first Angola inmate to come down out of the grandstands to greet a child he had not seen for nearly a year, Tracey Sanders burst into tears. “I started boo-hooing,” said Sanders, a second grade school teacher and volunteer from Satsuma Baptist Church in Livingston. “When I saw the joy of the children seeing their dads, and the joy of the dads seeing their children – I just couldn’t help it. “As a teacher I see so many children who do not have a father figure,” Sanders said. “I have students right now whose fathers are incarcerated.” Satsuma Baptist sent 27 volunteers and brought 26 children to the ninth annual event. More than 760 children, accompanied by 540 volunteers from 24 states, spent the day with about 340 inmate fathers, grandfathers and uncles. More than 340 mothers and grandmothers also came to the prison; they participated in a separate event just … [Read more...]
Louisiana Disaster Relief teams respond to Moore after tornado
Submitted by philip on Tue, 06/04/2013 - 10:48 Members of a Louisiana Baptist Disaster Relief unit from the Baton Rouge area work to put up a tarp on this heavily damaged house in Moore, Okla. By Brian Blackwell, Marketing Director MOORE, Okla. – Charles Watson described the scene of a tornado-ravaged area in suburban Oklahoma City as worse than what was portrayed on television. As the blue hat – leader – of the Louisiana Baptist Disaster Relief unit from the Baton Rouge area surveyed the damage upon arrival to Moore on May 24, Watson noticed not only total destruction in neighborhoods but in other areas, homes not leveled but severely damaged. Throughout their week-long stay in Moore, the team of 15 from six different churches cut down and removed trees from homes, installed tarps on roofs and cleaned up yards. But even through the devastation that included the deaths of 24 people including school children who died when the storm touched down on May 20, Watson said the residents there have displayed a resilient and grateful attitude. “We have met people who have lost everything,” said Watson, who began serving on a Louisiana Baptist Disaster Relief team during Hurricane Katrina ministry in 2005. “And they have … [Read more...]
With vote, the Boy Scouts fall to political correctness
By Kelly Boggs, Editor Baptist Message The National Council of the Boy Scouts of America has made a decision on the organization’s official position concerning the legitimacy and moral nature of homosexuality. As a result, Christians and conservatives will now be forced to make a decision. BSA leadership voted on May 23 to allow those who openly identify themselves as homosexual to be members. The organization did not, however, change its policy on Boy Scout leadership. Openly homosexual leaders will still not be allowed. Many conservative churches sponsor BSA troops and many more are Scouts and leaders. All of these will have a decision to make concerning whether or not to remain a part of an organization that has legitimized a behavior they believe is immoral. The BSA has come under increasing pressure from homosexual activist groups in recent years. The activists’ goal was to have the Scouts accept homosexuality as natural, normal and healthy. Financial pressure, the ploy of many activist groups, was brought to bear on BSA. Homosexual activists successfully lobbied corporations and non-profits to pull funding from the Boy Scouts. Additionally, efforts were made to keep BSA troops from using any public facilities for their … [Read more...]
Gosnell trial – A stark reminder of abortion’s inhumanity
By Penna Dexter, Columnist The gruesome trial of Philadelphia abortionist Kermit Gosnell has ended. He’ll spend his life behind bars for murdering newborns not quite killed in abortion. Gosnell called his filthy clinic the Women’s Medical Society, a respectable sounding name for a disgusting facility that was somehow allowed to operate, without inspection, for more than 15 years. When it was finally investigated, authorities called the clinic a “House of Horrors.” Gosnell was also found guilty of involuntary manslaughter in the death of a woman who died of a drug overdose while emergency workers tried to break into the clinic’s barricaded door. And he was convicted on more than 200 other counts including performing illegal late-term abortions. Both pro-lifers and pro-choicers were hoping for a conviction in this case. Pro-choicers had to show Gosnell is an outlier, an exception – that what he did was unethical, unscrupulous, illegal as opposed to what they portray as “safe,” legal abortion. In response to the verdict, Planned Parenthood deemed Gosnell’s crimes “appalling.” NARAL Pro-Choice America called his actions “atrocities” as if the abortions they support are not. Even with all its gruesomeness, it wasn’t until four to … [Read more...]
America still cries out to God when tragedy strikes
Submitted by philip on Tue, 06/04/2013 - 10:56 By Ed Stetzer, President of LifeWay Research When tragedy strikes, deep and abiding religious convictions, shared by so many in our country, rise to the surface and reveal what was thought to be discarded. Much has been written about the secularization of America, and in some ways that is the case. Pew Research found that one in five adults in our nation have no religious affiliation, a group identified as the “Nones.” Oftentimes, research like this and other anecdotes about the waning influence of Christianity on the public square are presented as proof that America is no longer a religious nation. This supposedly demonstrates that we have left our religious traditions in history’s dustbin. Then, a tragedy strikes. Those times of grief reaffirm our identity as a religious nation. Shortly after the horrific news of the tornado devastation in Oklahoma, #PrayforOklahoma quickly rose to the top of Twitter’s trending list as millions shared their prayers for the people who lost loved ones and had their homes destroyed. In times of prosperity, far removed from tragedies, many people in our culture reject expressions of faith. In the moments of hopelessness, … [Read more...]
Abortion: When murder, supposedly, is not murder
By Evan Lenow, Assistant Professor of SWBTS CNN recently reported on a tragic story about a woman whose boyfriend tricked her into taking an abortion-inducing drug after she told him she was pregnant. The boyfriend, John Andrew Welden, is now facing first-degree murder charges for killing the unborn child. Welden told his girlfriend that his father, a doctor, had prescribed her an antibiotic for an infection. In reality, Welden gave her an abortion-inducing drug, and the pregnancy was terminated. This story is undoubtedly tragic, and Welden deserves to face punishment for first-degree murder. However, the undercurrent of this story works against the tide of abortion-rights advocates. Note with me the moral inconsistency of the logic of our laws and of abortion advocates. The pregnancy of Remee Lee was terminated by her boyfriend, the supposed father of the child. Since it was against the will of the mother, Welden is being charged with first-degree murder. However, if Lee had terminated the pregnancy herself, it would have been perfectly legal and perhaps even applauded by abortion advocates, even if the abortion had been against the will of the father. Why is this a problem? The charge of first-degree murder implies the … [Read more...]