WEST MONROE – A popular game show uses the line “and the survey says.” During the recent meeting of the Louisiana Baptist Convention in West Monroe, the “survey said” there is great potential and surprising receptivity to reach people for Christ across southern Louisiana. The results of months of telephone surveys across south Louisiana were presented to messengers via video as part of the LBC's Missions and Ministries Team report. The survey showed unexpected openness by people in southern Louisiana to a “come to church with me” invitation by a Southern Baptist. “The Southern Baptist response to Hurricanes Katrina, Ike, Gustav, Rita and others has increased the receptivity of those living throughout the southern regions of Louisiana,” said LBC Executive Director, David Hankins. “We are excited about these findings and are strategizing on ways to maximize our opportunities to share Christ in these areas.” Of the people surveyed, 64 percent said they had not been contacted by a member of any church during the previous six months, and 61 percent said they would welcome contact from a Southern Baptist. Furthermore, 54 percent of the people surveyed said they would be willing to attend a Southern Baptist church. “People … [Read more...]
Thanksgiving: A significant part of our American heritage
By Kelly Boggs, Editor Thankfully, the founders of the United States were literate. If they had been unable to commit their thoughts to writing, the rabid secularists that now infests our great nation would have already succeeded in erasing the significant role Christianity played in America’s founding. There is no more poignant reminder of our religious heritage than the national holiday of Thanksgiving. Some historians try to deny the religious motivation for the Pilgrims’ voyage to the New World. However, upon reading the thoughts of these brave adventurers, there is no doubt as to why they left family and friends to undertake such a difficult and dangerous journey. As they prepared to leave their ships and set foot on dry land, the Pilgrims drafted and signed the Mayflower Compact. In part, it reads: “In the name of God, Amen, We, whose names are underwritten, the Loyal Subjects of our dread Sovereign Lord King James, by the Grace of God ... Having undertaken for the Glory of God, and Advancement of the Christian Faith and the Honour of our King and Country, a Voyage to plant the first Colony ....” Given the context in which the Mayflower Compact was produced, it is difficult to interpret it as anything but a … [Read more...]
Thanksgiving’s true focus should be on spirituality
By Paul Brewster, Barlow-Vista Baptist Hampstead, NC Few things reveal the hollowness of American Christianity with any more clarity than the collapse of Thanksgiving. In this age of contention over the role of Christianity in the public square, Thanksgiving has survived because it has been emptied of its true spiritual and religious significance. Many have deemed it a “secular holiday,” the blatant contradiction built into the linguistic root of “holiday” notwithstanding. Just how far have we moved? One Amazon.com customer has compiled a list of secular Thanksgiving children’s picture books, to which the customer offers this preface: “It can be difficult for parents and teachers to find picture books that approach Thanksgiving in a secular way. This is a list of titles that do not interpret the holiday in a religious manner. “Although several of these books mention characters being ‘thankful,’ they do not depict anyone saying grace/giving thanks to a higher power.” In other words, these books go out of their way to obfuscate the truth about Thanksgiving in America. Of 25 such titles for sale at Amazon.com, one is entitled Thank You, Thanksgiving. The title gives away the absurdity of the proposition. If there is no … [Read more...]
Christianity isn’t dying, cultural Christianity is
By Ed Stetzer, LifeWay Research You’ve heard it suggested the United States is simply Europe on a 50 year delay. Supposedly most churches will be museums before our grandchildren reach adulthood. Though new numbers from Pew Research released this month point to a decline in American Protestants, no serious scholar believes Christianity in America is on a trajectory of extinction. And, as a Ph.D. researcher and practicing evangelical Christian, I say to those who’ve read recent reports and come to that conclusion: “Not so fast.” You see, many in the U.S. who identify as Christian do so only superficially. These cultural Christians use the term but do not practice the faith. Now it seems many of them are giving up the Christian label, and those cultural or nominal Christians are becoming “nones,” people with no religious label. Christian nominalism is nothing new. As soon as any belief system is broadly held, people are motivated to adopt it, even with a low level of connection. Yet, much of the change in our religious identification is in nominal Christians no longer using the term and, instead, not identifying with any religion. In other words, the nominals are becoming the nones. I’ve seen this in my own family. … [Read more...]
Don’t let stress sour your Christmas spirit this year
By Dwayne Hastings, Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission By mid-December, you may be grimacing when you hear Andy Williams croon, It’s the most wonderful time of all, on the radio. By then you might be yearning to hear the strains of Auld Lang Syne. But before the Christmas whirlwind begins: Take a deep breath and pray for peace and hope to fill your heart. Most of us have problems with stress sometime during the year, but the Christmas season seems to bring out the worst in all of us. One-third of Americans live with extreme stress year-round and nearly half of Americans (48 percent) believe that their stress has increased over the past five years, according to a survey released by the American Psychological Association in October. Most of those surveyed (75 percent) tagged money and work as contributing factors to the tension in their lives. Richard Swenson, a physician and author of several books on stress, including Margin: Restoring Emotional, Physical, Financial, and Time Reserves to Overloaded Lives, says, “Stress is such a common term that we might tend to trivialize it, assuming it’s a convenient fiction for the weak who do not wish to do their best. “Such an attitude would be a … [Read more...]
Johann Gerhard Oncken: Every Baptist a missionary
By Lloyd A Harsch, New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary Throughout history, God has chosen the most unlikely of people for His service. One such person was Johann Gerhard Oncken. He was born out of wedlock in Germany on Jan. 31, 1800. His mother soon dropped out of the picture, leaving his upbringing to her Lutheran parents. At age 14, Oncken was apprenticed to a Scottish merchant. The merchant’s mother, a devout Presbyterian, made sure that Oncken attended church regularly. It was in Scotland that Oncken first encountered a recent innovation in church life, Sunday Schools. As part of his job, Oncken traveled in Scotland, England, France, and Germany. On one such trip to London in 1820, he stayed at Mrs. Dallimore’s London Coffee House. This Congregational family’s devotions drew Oncken toward faith and after a sermon on Romans 8:1 at a Methodist church, he was converted. Oncken immediately began spreading his new-found faith, having as his first convert the black slave of an American merchant. During the next 50 years of Oncken’s amazing leadership, German Baptists grew from nothing to 31,194 adherents in 165 congregations. There were an equal number of Baptists throughout Scandinavia, and Central … [Read more...]
Questions We’ve Pondered
QUESTION: Ephesians 5:20 says that we are to give “thanks to God always for everything.” What does this mean since I can’t walk around all day doing this and am not always thankful for some things since they are very horrible and damaging? NOBTS PROF. BILL WARREN RESPONDS: Ephesians 5:20 speaks of a worship context, with the giving of thanks to God being a hallmark of Christian worship. We express gratitude for the salvation that God has freely given us in Christ in our words and by how we live our lives, so worship centered around giving thanks to God should be natural for Christians. The opposite of giving thanks is ungratefulness, a cardinal social sin still today even as it was for the Greco-Roman culture. When a benefit is bestowed, the normal reaction is to show gratitude for the gift. To not show gratitude is a social insult to the giver. So for the Christian, giving thanks to God for His gracious gift of salvation in Christ is simply the honorable and right thing to do. To not do so would be to insult God, fail to appreciate the importance and sacrificial nature of His gift, and a horrible trait to develop internally since such an attitude causes alienation from others as well as from God. That is why giving … [Read more...]
Trials and tribulations can be overcome with God’s help
Submitted by philip on Mon, 11/19/2012 - 13:45 Gary Frazier – a speaker and end-times author from Dallas, Texas – gave four reasons he believes those alive today are the final generation alive before Christ returns. By Baptist Message staff WEST MONROE – “The stuff we face in this life, it may be over our heads but it’s under God’s feet,” said SBC President Fred Luter, during the Louisiana Pastors Conference at First West. Luter said he learned that as a result of Hurricane Katrina, when his home and the church he pastors – Franklin Avenue Baptist Church in New Orleans – as well as the homes of most of his congregation, were under several feet of water for three weeks after Hurricane Katrina in 2005. Citing Habakkuk 3:17-19, Luter said Christians should realize three things about facing difficult times: Life is full of fears; Life is full of frustrations; Life should be full of faith. “The reason you can make it through the trial is trust and confidence in God,” Luter said. “If God brings you to it, he will bring you through it.” The two-day Pastor’s Conference featured sermons and testimonies by pastors selected to speak because they had overcome tribulation. “Overcome,” from John 16:33, … [Read more...]
Calazcon, wife share testimony, culture with Kingsville Baptist Church
Submitted by philip on Mon, 11/19/2012 - 13:47 During a recent presentation at Kingsville Baptist Church Henrry Calazacon (in white shirt) and his wife Diana (striped skirt) shared their testimony and Ecuadorian culture. Joining the couple at the presentation were (from left) Lydia Garza, Pastor Bart Walker of Kingsville Baptist, Pineville Mayor Clarence Fields and David Garza, a Hispanic pastor in Pineville who served as Calazacon’s interpreter. By Brian Blackwell, Marketing Director BALL – Henrry Calazacon arrived in Central Louisiana recently with a message of thanksgiving and hope nearly 2,500 miles from the rainforest in Ecuador. “So whatever language we speak, as long as we live in Christ, that points us to the way we should live,” Calazacon said during a presentation at Kingsville Baptist Church through interpreter David Garza, a Hispanic pastor in Pineville who with his wife Lydia worked as a missionary from 2001-2008 in Ecuador. “Our mission is to come and share the good news of Christ who saves us from the sins we have. That is the most important decision anyone came make in this life.” Calazacon and his wife, Diana, were at Kingsville Baptist to share their testimony and culture … [Read more...]
NAMB changes, state opportunites present an “extra” challenge for Louisiana missions
Submitted by philip on Mon, 11/19/2012 - 13:55 LBC Executive Director David Hankins told messengers during the annual meeting that in honor of 200 years of Baptist ministry in Louisiana, a GBO goal of $2 million has been set to meet mission needs in this state. WEST MONROE – As the North American Mission Board redirects resources to new work states and church planting, southern states, including Louisiana, are faced with the challenge of meeting their own growing missions opportunities. “Louisiana Baptists are happy for those resources to be re-routed to areas outside of Louisiana that do not have a strong Gospel witness,” LBC Executive Director David Hankins told messengers during the annual meeting in West Monroe. “I told Dr. Ezell that Louisiana Baptists will rise to the occasion so that mission opportunities in our state will not go unattended.” Hankins noted that the Georgia Barnette State Missions Offering is the way to ensure that Louisiana Baptists can walk through the doors of opportunity God is opening across the state. “Last year, even in a flat economy, Louisiana Baptists gave a record offering of $1.7 million to state missions,” said Hankins. “This year in honor of 200 years of … [Read more...]
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