By Baptist Press HOUSTON (BP) – In a Feb. 13 verdict that left both sides claiming victory, a Houston jury handed down a decision in a lawsuit against the city and administrators for their dismissal of a petition by a coalition of pastors and civic leaders opposed to the city’s Equal Rights Ordinance. Though the jury – in a 10-2 verdict – found nearly 2,500 forgeries among the 54,000 voter signatures, they dismissed the city’s allegations of fraud. With no definitive winner revealed by the verdict, the decision will not be finalized until 152nd District Court Judge Robert Schaffer issues his judgment. Schaffer was out of town and did not preside over the reading of the verdict. Following the verdict lead defense attorney Geoffrey Harrison claimed the verdict as a win for the defense and Mayor Annise Parker, who championed the ordinance as a “personal” issue. Defendants in the lawsuit are Parker, former Houston City Attorney David Feldman, City Secretary Anna Russell and the City of Houston. “If the court’s ruling follows the jury’s verdict this will be a complete and total vindication for the city,” Harrison told reporters following the verdict. “And the petition, which we declared failed back in August, will indeed be … [Read more...]
Louisiana Notables
ON THE MOVE Emily Carpenter new as children’s director at First Baptist Church, Jonesboro. Everett Geis, Sr. new as transitional pastor at Ringgold First Baptist Church. Seth Ott has resigned at Youth Minister at Watson Baptist Church, Denham Springs. HOMECOMING Fair Park Baptist Church, West Monroe: 66th Anniversary, March 8, Pastor: Waymond Warren. REVIVAL Palestine Baptist Church, Bogalusa: Harvest Day, March 1, 10:45 a.m. Evangelist: Joe Aulds. Pastor: Fred Brumfield. First Baptist Church of Head of Island: Revival, March 1-4, 10:45 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. Sunday; 6:30 p.m. Monday through Wednesday. Evangelist: Marvin Wilson. Worship: The Wilsons. Pastor: Rocky Brown. New Covenant Church, Denham Springs: Messages on repentance, holiness and biblical revial, March 1-4, 10 a.m. and 6 p.m., Sunday; 6:30 p.m., Monday through Wednesday. Speaker: Richard Owen Roberts. Pastor: Keith Zachary. Faith Baptist Church, Bastrop: Revival, March 8-11, 10:30 a.m. March 8; 7 p.m. nightly March 9-11, Evangelist: Joe Aulds. Pastor: Bodie Spicer. Pilgrim Rest Baptist Church, Covington: Revive This Nation, March 8-11, 6:30 p.m. nightly. For more information, call 985.892.1242. Speaker: Jonathon Beames. Pastor: Lonnie Thompson. Crockett Point … [Read more...]
Every People Group Task Force continues work on plan
Submitted by philip on Mon, 02/23/2015 - 14:15 The LBC's Church Planting Director James Jenkins listens intently to Lee Wesley, pastor of Community Bible Baptist Church in Baton Rouge, during the recent meeting of the Every People Group Task Force on how Louisiana Baptists can reach various ethnicities around the state. By Brian Blackwell, Message Staff Writer ALEXANDRIA – The Every People Group Task Force met recently, continuing charting a plan on how Louisiana Baptists can reach those of various ethnicities in the state. James Jenkins, church planting director for Louisiana Baptists, said the charge of the task force is three-fold: ● Evaluate the ethnic diversity in Louisiana and its implications for Louisiana Baptists, ● Create avenues for input and involvement in LBC life by non-Anglo leaders and congregations, ● Lead Louisiana Baptists in effective engagement with ministry among all people groups in the state. The task force was appointed as a result of the President’s 2020 Commission, which was affirmed by messengers during the 2013 LBC Annual Meeting in Alexandria. The President’s 2020 Commission report was crafted collaboratively by 400 Louisiana Baptist pastors, leaders, staff members and laypeople working in 20 … [Read more...]
Among younger Southern Baptist there is a rising invovlement
Submitted by philip on Mon, 02/23/2015 - 14:20 According to a survey, younger Southern Baptists appear to not be abandoning the American church. By Tom Strode, Baptist Press NASHVILLE (BP) – Southern Baptists appear to be defying the prevalent notion that young adults are abandoning the American church – at least by one measurement. Attendance by younger generations reached a 10-year high at the Southern Baptist Convention’s 2014 meeting in Baltimore, according to an annual survey of attendees. The survey, conducted by the SBC Executive Committee, showed nearly one-fourth (24.68 percent) of attendees were younger than age 40. That surpassed by more than 4 percentage points the previous best for the age group, recorded in 2013. The 2014 survey also showed 10-year highs for SBC attendees who are under 45 (33.44 percent, a gain of more than 3 percent over the previous high in 2013) and under 35 (15.93 percent, again an increase of more than 3 percent over the earlier high, which came in 2012). Though not a scientific sampling, the dramatic upswing in younger-generation participation at the SBC annual meeting since 2005 – especially during the last three years – reinforces what he has “noticed anecdotally,” said … [Read more...]
Thousands expected to attend Louisiana Life Marches
Submitted by philip on Fri, 01/09/2015 - 13:04 Dr. Richard Land, President Southern Evangelical Seminary and former head of the SBC’s Ethics and Religious Liberty Commision and Northwest Louisiana Baptist Association Director of Missions Lane Moore led a large crowd of participants over the Texas Street Bridge in Shreveport during last year’s Louisiana Life March North. An estimated crowd of 5,280 people attended the inaugural event. Meanwhile at last year’s fourth annual Louisiana Life March South, which took place in Baton Rouge, an estimated crowd of 3,500 attended that event which went through the streets of downtown Baton Rouge and ended on the steps of the Louisiana State Capitol. By Brian Blackwell, Message Staff Writer Standing up for the lives of the unborn is the unofficial theme of two Louisiana Life Marches scheduled for later this month. Scheduled for Jan. 17 in Shreveport/Bossier City and Jan. 24 in Baton Rouge, the Louisiana Life March is a chance for different denominations, ages and ethnic and racial backgrounds to march together and pray to declare their opposition to the Supreme Court’s Roe v. Wade decision that legalized abortion in 1973. According to the Louisiana Department of Health and … [Read more...]
The Response Louisiana features day of prayer at LSU’s PMAC
Submitted by philip on Fri, 01/09/2015 - 13:07 By Brian Blackwell. Message Staff Writer BATON ROUGE – The United States is a nation in crisis. Christians concerned for the direction in which the country is headed plan to gather on the campus of LSU in Baton Rouge on Jan. 24 for a day of prayer. Called for by Gov. Bobby Jindal, The Response Louisiana will take place from 10 am to 4 pm at the Pete Maravich Center and will include people of all ages, denominations and ethnic and racial backgrounds whose purpose is the same – fasting and praying for a historic breakthrough in the country. The event is free but participants are encouraged to register for tickets, as seating will be limited, at theresponsela.com. Those wishing to promote or volunteer at the event can also receive more information at the event website. Louisiana Baptist leaders emphasize the importance of this day of prayer in the state. “You will be blessed,” Louisiana Baptist Executive Director David Hankins said on his video invitation that appeared on The Response Facebook page. “God will come down. And we’re praying that the state and the nation will be changed.” In a YouTube video by long-time KTBS reporter Rick Rowe, Fred Lowery, retired pastor … [Read more...]
Sturdivant, Langley retiring as DOMs, not from the ministry
Submitted by philip on Fri, 01/09/2015 - 13:19 Clovis Sturdivant (left) and Bert Langley (right) By Holly Jo Linzay, Regional reporter Two long-term directors of missions may be retiring from their positions, but both Bert Langley and Clovis Sturdivant said they will not be retiring from ministry. CLOVIS STURDIVANT WINNFIELD – Sturdivant, who recently retired from the position of director of missions for the North Central and Shady Grove Baptist Associations, first accepted the position in July 1996. “It was as much of a call of God as that of any church I have accepted,” Sturdivant said about his role as director of missions for the last 18 years. A retirement celebration for Sturdivant is planned for Jan. 25 at 2 p.m. in the Family Life Center of First Baptist Church of Jonesboro. Although he is retiring from a position, Sturdivant said he is by no means retiring from the “calling of God” to spread the Gospel. “You can definitely retire from a position, but never a calling. A calling has a beginning, and that is when God, and He only, leads you to enter His ministry as a lifelong pursuit. The end comes when you are called home to heaven,” Sturdivant noted. With this milestone in his life, Sturdivant is in the … [Read more...]
Boggs: Using Muller’s example to always seek God’s will
By Kelly Boggs, Message Editor Just days after I trusted Christ for salvation and committed my life to His lordship, I was introduced to George Muller by way of one of his biographies. Muller, who lived in England during almost all of the 1800s, was a fascinating man of prayer and faith. During his life time, he recorded over 50,000 specific answers to prayer with over 30,000 of them were answered within 24 hours. Through prayer and faith alone – without ever sharing any need with any person other than the Lord – Muller trusted God to respond to meet his needs of his ministry According to Muller’s records, God provided the equivalent of millions of dollars to underwrite the ministry of the orphanages in Bristol England. Muller had a strict rule for his staff and that no one was ever to ask anyone for money. What was the key to Mr. Muller’s faith and the amazing answers to prayer? He had a process for how to ascertain the will of God. In the biography that I read, just days after trusting the Lord, there was an appendix that that contained a simple explanation of the process by which Muller sought discern the Lord’s will. It was titled, “How to ascertain the will of God.” Following are the six steps Muller employed in … [Read more...]
Remembering a terrible anniversary – Roe v. Wade
By Barrett Duke, Vice-President of Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission On Jan. 22, our nation reaches the 42nd anniversary of the horrific Roe v. Wade decision that legalized abortion-on-demand. For more than four decades, our nation has sanctioned the killing of more than 1 million unborn children every year, resulting in more than 60 million abortions, with no end in sight. This is a tragic milestone that should cause us to repent and weep. These unborn children are the most vulnerable human beings among us, yet they are afforded no protection by society. They are deemed the property of their mothers, with no rights except what their mothers choose for them. At the moment of conception, a human being comes into existence. This is a person created in the image of God, possessing a soul and deeply loved by God. We are well beyond the days when anyone can claim ignorance of the individual personhood of the unborn. Unborn babies have their own circulatory systems, oftentimes with a blood type different from their mother’s. Within months of their conception, they are even making personal decisions. Unborn children move in the womb to get more comfortable and in response to pain. Given the opportunity, these unborn people … [Read more...]
Is abortion making humans an endangered species?
By Richard Land, President of Southern Evangelical Seminary No single issue facing the American family today has produced more heartache or tragedy than abortion. In the 42 years since the Supreme Court handed down Roe v. Wade, more than 60 million American babies have been legally aborted. Although the justifications given for abortion are many – finances, lifestyle, family size, etc. – the root cause is simple: As a culture, we have chosen to ignore the value God places on each human life. We have strict federal laws in the Endangered Species Act that protect the snail darter fish and the spotted owl. In California it’s a crime to disturb a seagull’s nest because the unhatched eggs represent the potential for life. And yet abortion remains legal and commonplace in this country more than four decades after Roe v. Wade. I still have a jarring and vivid memory of the first time I realized the full humanity of a human fetus. I was a sophomore in high school, and it was the day our biology class projects were due. One of my classmates, a girl whose father was an obstetrician, had prepared a project on the development of the human fetus. She had on display what I now know was a 12-week-old human fetus. From my lab table only a … [Read more...]
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