Submitted by philip on Fri, 04/18/2014 - 10:03 After putting more than $4.2 million in repairs on the former Joe D. Waggonner Federal Building in Shreveport which was to house the Judge Paul Pressler School of Law, Louisiana College has abandoned its efforts and placed the building up for sale. Editor’s note: Leigh Guidry, reporter for The Town Talk, provided a thorough treatment of the circumstances regarding Louisiana College’s Judge Paul Pressler School of Law in a recent issue of Alexandria’s daily newspaper. The Baptist Message offers its readers the results of Ms. Guidry’s research, with permission from The Town Talk. PINEVILLE – Louisiana College has spent about $5.5 million on a law school that never opened its doors nor admitted a student. LC announced formation of the Judge Paul Pressler School of Law in 2008 and subsequently purchased the former Joe D. Waggonner Federal Building in Shreveport in 2011 to house it. The college’s administration has consistently declined to release information on the cost of the law school. A real estate listing from August 2010 put the Waggonner Building’s value at $1.5 million. However, according to records at the Caddo Parish Assessor’s Office, LC paid $400,000 for the … [Read more...]
Baptist men, Angola inmates find joy at 18th annual Revival
Submitted by philip on Fri, 04/18/2014 - 10:07 Angola inmate Wayne Fritz looks at a tract explaining salvation given to him by Louisiana Baptist men during the recent Angola revival. By Mark H. Hunter, Regional Reporter ANGOLA - Ben Raney was walking through a large, crowded dormitory in the Main Camp of the Louisiana State Penitentiary when he noticed inmate Gabe McCkeel sitting alone on his bunk-bed. The men chatted for a moment then Raney sat down next to McCkeel, gripped his hand and prayed for him. When Raney got up to leave both men were smiling. “He said he was a Christian but just needed some assurance,” Raney said later. A member of Pedico Baptist, this was his fourth visit to Angola. Altogether 180 Baptist men from 25 churches visited about 4,000 Angola inmates on April 4 and 5 for the 18th annual Louisiana Baptist Convention revival. The men led 84 inmates to salvation and 98 other decisions and also distributed 3,020 personal hygiene kits that were collected over the winter by many of the state’s Baptist churches, according to Wayne Jenkins, director of the LBC’s Evangelism and Church Growth office. “I get more joy coming here than any other work - whether it be professional work or ministry work,” … [Read more...]
Vidalia moms eager to rappel for Over the Edge for Adoption
By Joey Martin, Special to the Message VIDALIA – First Baptist Church Vidalia members Dawn Moss and Carrie Vest of Vidalia will have no practice run when they rappel off the 24-story, 308-foot tall One America Place building May 9 in downtown Baton Rouge. Then again, it serves as a good illustration for their cause. “You don’t get a practice run in foster care or adoption,” they both said. Currently, Moss and Vest, who call themselves “Forever Moms,” are two of six volunteers set to rappel for the very first time. Louisiana First Lady Supriya Jindal and Duck Dynasty star Korie Robertson will also be participating in the “Over the Edge for Adoption” Mother’s Day Weekend Rappel. The program, an initiative of the Louisiana Family Forum, aims to unite more than 300 foster care children awaiting adoption in Louisiana with a family. “Adopting one child won’t change the world, but for that one child the world will change,” Moss said. “There are no unwanted children,” Vest added. “Just unfound families.” Both ladies decided to accept the challenge of rappelling from their pastor, Bill McCullin of First Baptist Church Vidalia. “Brother Bill asked (husband) David if I was brave enough to do it,” Moss said. “I am scared of heights. … [Read more...]
Hunt: Leadership key for a church to experience revitalization, growth
Submitted by philip on Fri, 04/18/2014 - 10:17 Johnny Hunt, pastor of First Baptist Woodstock, Ga., spoke at the SEND North America Church Growth and Revitalization Conference at First Baptist Pineville recently. Hunt told more than 150 pastors that leadership was key in the revitalization and growth of a church. By Brian Blackwell, Message Staff Writer PINEVILLE – In a day when an average of 890 Southern Baptist churches are closing their doors each year and nearly 72 percent of the convention’s churches are either plateaued or declining, reversing this trend is vital, Johnny Hunt said. “There are many that we need to help nurture back to health,” according to Hunt, pastor of First Baptist Woodstock, Ga. “That is what this initiative is all about. Some need more help than others. Some need to lend their help. If we all participate in this, we will see the Lord do a great work.” Hunt was the main speaker at the SEND North America Church Growth and Revitalization Conference, which was attended at First Baptist Pineville by nearly 150 pastors, church staff members and laypeople. The one-day conference was sponsored by the North American Mission Board and Louisiana Baptist Convention. Among the reasons churches die, … [Read more...]
State churches hosting Day of Prayer events
Submitted by philip on Fri, 04/18/2014 - 10:19 By Brian Blackwell, Message Staff Writer A large number of Louisiana Baptist churches are planning to host events in association with the annual National Day of Prayer on May 1. Created in 1952 by a joint resolution of the US Congress and signed into law by President Harry S. Truman, the National Day of Prayer is an annual observance held on the first Thursday of May, inviting people of all faiths to pray for the nation. Jay Johnston, state coordinator for the Louisiana National Day of Prayer Task Force and associate pastor at First Baptist Covington, stressed the importance of Christians coming together to pray. “This day provides an opportunity for pastors and church leaders to bring government leaders, business and community leaders together to pray for the United States and her leaders as well as for each other,” Johnston said. “The National Day of Prayer provides us an opportunity as United States citizens to pause in the midst of busy lives to give thanks to God for the vast richness and blessings of this land, to praise God for His marvelous work, to confess our sins and to turn from our ways to the ways of Christ as well as asking God for wisdom and guidance … [Read more...]
Horn: ‘Giving beyond our walls’ is passion for younger generation
Submitted by philip on Fri, 04/18/2014 - 10:23 By Marilyn Stewart, Regional reporter LAFAYETTE – “Giving beyond our walls” is a passion the younger generation feels deeply, said Steve Horn, Louisiana Baptist Convention president and pastor of First Lafayette. And when they realize that giving through the Cooperative Program does exactly that, “They get it,” he said. Horn, who served as chairman of the Cooperative Program subcommittee for the President’s 2020 Commission, wants to help church leaders increase Cooperative Program giving – one of the KAIROS action steps outlined in the final report of the 2020 Commission. KAIROS is an acronym for Key Actions In Reaching Our State. The 2020 initiative adopted by messengers to the LBC annual meeting in November, seeks to reach every generation and every people group in Louisiana with the Gospel by the year 2020. While new members and young people often aren’t familiar with the Cooperative Program, Horn said an opportune moment is when a member comes to him with a burden for a particular ministry. “So then I can say, ‘I’m glad you’re interested in that. Now let’s talk about what we’re already doing.’ When you give [through CP], you’re giving to those types of … [Read more...]
Time has come for Christians to take a stand on morality
By Jeff Iorg, President of Golden Gate Seminary I recently met with a group of national ministry leaders who work quietly, but seriously, to make disciples – primarily among young men. One of our agenda items was discussing the issues related to helping Christians stand for their values when their convictions are labeled hate speech and may be prosecutable offenses. We discussed several options – all of which were focused on avoiding needless controversy and diminishing our efforts. No matter how hard we worked, or how creative the options we proposed, we kept coming back to the same conclusion. We now live in a culture where expressions of historic Christian convictions about morality are illegal. And, no matter how much we wished for a different conclusion – the reality is Christians are paying fines and may be going to jail in the United States for voicing their convictions in public places, in workplaces, and in educational settings. The larger question for many American Christians is, “Should we avoid this at all cost?” The global church laughs at our timidity. Harassed and/or persecuted Christians around the world have been grappling with these issues for years. One pastor friend told me, “When they held the gun to … [Read more...]
The death of darkness
By Erich Bridges, IMB Global Correspondent I saw my friend James at a church supper after being out of touch for several years. It was like we'd never been apart. We talked, laughed, hugged, sang and prayed together. I met his wife for the first time and celebrated with them over the way God had healed wounds in their marriage and family. It was a great evening; we didn't want it to end. We said goodnight, promising each other we'd meet again soon. A few weeks later, James was dead. Chronic illness caught up with him. He hung on for days in the hospital, but his body was worn out. This life seems so strong and sure for a season -- and then it's over. We try to escape death, delay it, appease it, fight it and deny it. "Do not go gentle into that good night," the poet Dylan Thomas advised. "Rage, rage against the dying of the light." Rage all you want; death will come for you one day. But darkness, its close companion, is a choice. "There was the true Light, which, coming into the world, enlightens every man. He was in the world, and the world was made through Him, and the world did not know Him. … But as many as received Him, to them He gave the right to become children of God, even to those who believe in His name," the … [Read more...]
The Civil Rights Act: We’ve come far in last 50 years
By Richard Land, President of Southern Evangelical Seminary I believe the vast majority of Americans are disappointed in the degree of racial division, mistrust and misunderstanding that still plagues our society. And I further believe that disappointment and discontent stretch through all ethnic groups and generations. In the wake of the tremendous, revolutionary victories won over institutionalized racial segregation in the 1960s, most Americans expected and hoped for far more rapid progress toward Dr. King’s dream of a nation where people were “judged not by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character.” Alas, while legalized racial segregation was dismantled rapidly in the wake of the 1964 Civil Rights legislation, racial prejudice has lingered like a stubbornly antibiotic-resistant virus that just refuses to die. Why? The Bible tells us that man is fallen and sinful (Jeremiah 17:9; Romans 3:23). Thus racism is pandemic because people are always tempted to think more of themselves than they ought to think (Romans 12:3) and less of people who are different. Ultimately, racism will be tamed not just by the law, but by the kind of inward spiritual change wrought by the transformative power of the Gospel of … [Read more...]
Listening to an old song that has been made new again
By Nate Adams, Executive Director of Illinois State Baptist Association Our youngest son, Ethan, recently mentioned to his mom and me that he had heard a couple of great new Christian songs he really liked. We asked what they were, hoping that we had been listening to enough Christian radio to perhaps recognize them. Imagine our surprise when the songs he named were 100-year-old hymns. We couldn’t help but show our disbelief. “Have you never heard those hymns before?” we asked. “Have you not been in churches that sang either of those?” Perhaps he had, we decided, but apparently not often, or not at a time that he remembered. As we then reviewed the churches our family attended since Ethan was born, we realized that each of those churches had a contemporary worship style, or at least a blend of contemporary music and hymns. As a reult, hymns that I know by heart, sometimes even by page number, have become almost lost treasures to my son. Music is just one example of the things in church life that sometimes need to change or evolve over time in order to stay relevant to new generations. However, as my son’s new love for old hymns illustrates, sometimes we let treasures that have lasting value slip away simply because we have … [Read more...]
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