Time to ‘show up, pay up & speak up,’ Bell insists

Posted: 11/18/05

Michael Bell (right), pastor of Greater St. Stephen First Baptist Church in Fort Worth, and Michael Evans of the Baptist General Convention of Texas enjoy worship at the Texas Baptist African-American Fellowship rally.

Time to 'show up, pay up & speak up,' Bell insists

By Craig Bird

AUSTIN–It's time for African-Americans “to show up, pay up and speak up” in the life of the Baptist General Convention of Texas, Michael Bell told the 2005 meeting of the Texas Baptist African-American Fellowship at Austin's Rosewood Avenue Baptist Church.

Speaking on the eve of his election as the Texas convention's first African-American president, Bell closed the fellowship rally by challenging participants to “walk through the door that has finally opened” because “a lot of people–of all races–have worked too long and too hard for make this day happen.”

Bell, pastor of Greater St. Stephen First Baptist Church in Fort Worth, spoke after Marvin Griffin, a patriarch of African-American Baptist pastors in Texas, brought the crowd to its feet numerous times.

Griffin, pastor of Ebenezer Baptist Church in Austin for 36 years, preached from Mark 1:15, where Jesus announced “The kingdom of God is at hand.”

Whatever “we do or don't do, the kingdom comes because God brings the kingdom,” Griffin pointed out. “He wants our cooperation, but he will bring it in when he wants to bring it in. There have been times in the BGCT when we've had difficulties and doctrinal confrontations, but that hasn't prevented the kingdom of God from coming. And even during the times Satan hinders us, God is at work because the kingdom is coming. … Cheer up, little flock, because it is the Father's pleasure to give you the kingdom.”

Griffin underlined the future and present realities of the kingdom by saying, “The kingdom of God is coming,” while the crowd chanted back, “The kingdom of God is here” four times to end his message.

Bell repeatedly challenged the crowd to be full partners in the work of the convention, including supporting the Cooperative Program unified budget.

“You know what you do when someone in your church puts $5 in the offering plate but causes $5,000 worth of trouble, don't you?” he asked. “You give him $5 back and tell him to sit down and shut up. We are at the table now, but if we want to be heard we need to pay our way.”

He praised the ethnic diversity of the BGCT. “God didn't make everybody short, black and bald,” he said, rubbing his hand over his head. “And he didn't make just roses, he made daffodils and bluebonnets. He wants to use all of us to win the lost and love people into wholeness.

“It's time for us, as African-Americans, to make room for something big in our lives because God has already set some stuff up. He is looking for people who will cooperate with him in reaching the lost and hugging Texas to us. He is looking for people who are willing to be disturbed or being inconvenienced to do what he calls them to do.

“The door is open. There is no need to keep wasting time looking for the keys. It's open. Let's walk through and be part of what God has for the Baptist General Convention–all of the Baptist General Convention of Texas–to do.”

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BWA leader brings more than fraternal greetings to BGCT

Posted: 11/18/05

BWA leader brings more than
fraternal greetings to BGCT

By Craig Bird

AUSTIN–Denton Lotz, general secretary of the Baptist World Alliance, presented Baptist General Convention of Texas Executive Director Charles Wade with a framed membership certificate signifying the recent acceptance of the BGCT as a full member in the 100-year-old Baptist fellowship.

Lotz noted when the BWA was founded 100 years ago, “85 percent of the world's Christians lived in Europe and the United States, but now 60 percent of Christians live in the southern hemisphere. There are 400 million believers in Africa, 550 million in Latin America and 360 million in Asia.

“The church has moved south–and I don't mean south to Texas but south of the equator,” he said during the BGCT annual meeting. “God didn't call just the NATO countries when he gave us the Great Commission. He gave it to Christians everywhere.”

Lotz pledged that BWA will continue its work supporting Baptist churches around the world as they preach the gospel, will help the needy through Baptist World Aid, and work to promote and protect human rights and religious freedom.

“We want religious freedom for everyone, everywhere,” he said. “We want Hindus and Buddhists and Muslims to be free to worship–but we demand the same freedom for Christians.

“We will continue to tell countries like Saudi Arabia and Yemen that since you take advantage of your freedom to build mosques in the United States and Europe, then you need to grant us the freedom build churches and freely share our faith in your countries.”

Denton Lotz, general secretary of the Baptist World Alliance, presents to BGCT Executive Director Charles Wade a framed membership certificate marking Texas Baptists' acceptance into the worldwide fellowship.

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Opportunity knocks during CityReach

Posted: 11/18/05

Eva Agueera accepts Christ as her Savior following a gospel presentation by Robert Flores of Iglesia Bautista Principe De Paz in Austin.

Opportunity knocks during CityReach

By Miranda Bradley

AUSTIN–Opportunity knocked this week for Eva Agueera, a five-year Austin resident. When she answered the door, Robert Flores stood with a Bible in hand. After a brief conversation in her apartment doorway, Agueera accepted Christ as her Savior.

Agueera's was the first home visited by Flores, a member of the Iglesia Bautista Principe De Paz evangelism team. The team of 20 meets three times a week for training so they can make the most of their door-to-door ministry.

Leady Santos, 16, said she always is eager to share Jesus with others.

“Sometimes they will be skeptical because I'm so young. But, I'm doing this for God, even if they don't open the door.”

Pastor Nestor Menjivar said he has a different goal for his team than most.

“We are not doing this to grow our church,” he said. “We're trying to get the word of God out there, to plant a seed.”

Menjivar's ultimate goal is to seek out possibilities for new churches in homes or apartment complexes.

Much of the community around the church does not have transportation to and from church. That was the case for Agueera, who had not attended church services since she moved from Mexico. Without a car, she was unable to take part in worship services she loved so much. That, Menjivar said, drives the motivation for satellite churches.

“Evangelism is different these days,” he said. “You have to keep a kingdom view, or you will become discouraged.”

Dozens of people have converted to Christianity as a result of the evangelism teams' ministry. Some of them do not attend Iglesia Bautista Principe De Paz. But Menjivar does not complain.

“And that's OK with me,” he said. “We're just planting the seeds for a ministry that will come later. Maybe the harvest is not for us to reap.”

Flores has only been involved in the ministry two months, but he said his greatest thrill is when a person accepts Christ as Savior.

“Whenever you see something like that, it feels great,” he said after leading Agueera to Christ. “You know you will see them in heaven then.”

Menjivar credits ministries like the door-to-door evangelism effort for increasing the church's visibility in the area.

“People know who we are,” he said. “The difference between us and some other ministries is we are not saying they need to join our church. We're inviting them to meet Jesus Christ. That's the best gift we can possibly give them–the opportunity for salvation.”

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One family, one mission

Posted: 11/18/05

Newly elected BGCT president Michael Bell (left) and incumbent Albert Reyes respond to reporters' questions during the annual meeting in Austin.

One family, one mission

By Ken Camp

Managing Editor

AUSTIN–Rallying under a banner of "One Family–One Mission," messengers to the Baptist General Convention of Texas annual meeting took decisive steps toward demonstrating the diversity of the Texas Baptist family.

Messengers elected the convention's first African-American president, approved a governance plan that mandates at least one-third non-Anglo representation on a streamlined BGCT Executive Board and heard the convention sermon preached by a Vietnamese Texas Baptist pastor.

Even the entry of a last-minute nominee for convention president–the first contested race in eight years–reflected a desire for diversity, judging by the nominating speech appeal for diverse voices to be heard and for messengers to be offered meaningful choices.

Messengers elected as president Michael Bell, pastor of Greater St. Stephen First Baptist Church in Fort Worth. He succeeds Albert Reyes, the first Hispanic BGCT president.

David Currie of San Angelo, executive director of Texas Baptists Committed, nominated Bell, urging messengers to “make history” and “send a powerful signal” about Texas Baptists through the election.

Bell won the president's race by a four-to-one margin over Rick Davis, pastor of First Baptist Church in Brownwood and former director of the BGCT Center for Strategic Evangelism.

David Montoya, pastor of Calvary Baptist Church in Mineral Wells, nominated Davis. Although he praised Texas Baptists Committed–a powerful moderate organization that has endorsed a slate of candidates for nearly two de-cades–for its leadership in resisting fundamentalism, Mon-toya insisted it was time for Texas Baptists to “once again have a choice” in its elected leaders.

BGCT messengers also approved changes to the state convention's constitution and bylaws that streamline governance and ensure a greater non-Anglo presence on the BGCT Executive Board.

Their actions resulted in “the most sweeping changes in BGCT governance since 1959,” said Wesley Shotwell, pastor of Ash Creek Baptist Church in Azle and chair of the BGCT Governance Committee.

The governance changes reduced the Executive Board from 230 to 90 members, with three people from each of 30 sectors across the state. Sectors are drawn according to county lines and determined by a formula that factors in resident church membership, number of churches and amount of Cooperative Program giving.

Executive Board committees will assume duties previously assigned to BGCT Administrative Committee and to coordinating boards and commissions.

Revised bylaws stipulate at least 30 percent of the board membership will be non-Anglo.

An attempt to require that women make up at least 30 percent of the Baptist General Convention of Texas Executive Board was withdrawn by its author due to a technicality.

But Aaron Brown of First Baptist Church in Copperas Cove urged the board to take seriously his recommendation that the nomination process pay as much attention to gender as to race and ethnicity.

Currently, Brown said, women make up only 23 percent of the Executive Board but represent at least half of the state's population.

Brown's motion could not be considered, however, because it was introduced in the Monday evening session of the annual meeting, and the standing rules of the convention require any proposed bylaws changes to be introduced in the opening session on Monday afternoon.

Cassandra Northcutt of First Baptist Church in Longview spoke to messengers as chair of the Committee to Nominate Executive Board Members.

“We work very, very hard at gender representation,” she said. “We look at this every time we meet.”

In his president's message to the convention, Reyes challenged Texas Baptists to follow New Testament examples rather than North American sensibilities when it comes to handling conflicting cultures.

He noted a conflict in the early church between Hebrew and Greek culture was settled by giving power, authority and resources to a group that was underrepresented.

“It wasn't an American model. It was a New Testament, Jesus kind of model,” he said.

Reyes urged Texas Baptists to welcome “those who have come to the table late” and recognize them as equal partners in the gospel.

In the convention sermon, Nguyen sounded some of the same themes.

“We can't let our little differences hinder our work,” he said. “We need to encourage one another, to partner together, if we are truly to be one family to accomplish one mission together.”

In other business, messengers to the annual meeting:

bluebull Approved a $49.4 million budget. Of the total, $41.3 million depends on Texas Baptist Cooperative Program giving–a 3.5 percent increase over 2005. The balance will be provided by gifts to the Mary Hill Davis Offering for Texas Missions, endowment income, allocated funds and fees. The budget proposal as approved by messengers includes a provision that the convention's strategic plan direct 2006 budget priorities.

bluebull Honored Irby Cox of Dallas for 35 years of service as BGCT recording secretary. Cox and his wife, Margaret, worked with the registration process at the annual meeting 39 years and directed it since 1970.

bluebull Referred to the 2006 Committee on Convention Arrangements a motion by Samira Izadi of Wilshire Baptist Church in Dallas that in future flag processions, placement of the Christian flag should be above all others.

“As Christ is Lord of all and Lord above all, I think it would be just the right thing for the flag of Christ to be above all,” said Izadi, a native of Iran. “It would be idolatrous, as each flag represents a different entity, to place a flag above the Christian flag.”

The annual meeting drew 2,440 messengers and 844 visitors–down from the 2,937 messengers and 708 visitors who attended the 2004 convention in San Antonio. In 1997, the last time the BGCT met in Austin, the meeting attracted 6,100 messengers and 283 visitors.

Mark Wingfield and Teresa Young contributed to this article.

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Hispanic Baptists celebrate family & mission

Posted: 11/18/05

Hispanic Baptists celebrate family & mission

By Jenny Pope

AUSTIN–Hispanic Texas Baptists gathered at Primera Iglesia Bautista of Austin to worship and celebrate the theme of this year's Baptist General Convention of Texas annual meeting, “One Family–One Mission.”

Alcides Guajardo, president of the Hispanic Baptist Convention of Texas, introduced BGCT President Albert Reyes, the convention's first non-Anglo president, and First Vice President Michael Bell to the crowd. Bell was elected BGCT president the next day, becoming the first African-American to hold the post.

Hispanic Texas Baptists gather for worship at a rally prior to the Baptist General Convention of Texas annual meeting in Austin. (Photo by Jenny Pope)

“Reyes has done a great job in moving our convention ahead,” Bell said. “Now, together, we must all go ahead and make the difference that God has called us to make.”

After worshipping in English and Spanish, Javier Elizondo, first vice president of the Hispanic Baptist Convention of Texas, delivered a message that challenged “traditional Hispanic Baptists” to look for new ways to give and minister based on all three parts of Jesus' Sermon on the Mount–evangelism, teaching and healing.

“This message is important because we continue to give missionary funding as if there is just one part–evangelism,” Elizondo said.

“We at BGCT believe that (ministry) is three-pronged. We have seminaries. We have hospitals. We have Buckner children ministries and senior ministries.

“We believe in serving the whole. As leaders, we need to focus and teach our pastors that they need to think. It's more than just politics; it's being a true disciple of Christ.”

“Ultimately, tonight is an opportunity for the Hispanic Christians to come together, unite and focus on the specific needs of the Hispanic community,” said Noe Reyes, music minister of Primera Iglesia Bautista. “But most importantly, it's a time to gather as a statewide body and worship the Lord Almighty.”

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Work together to accomplish mission, Nguyen urges BGCT

Posted: 11/18/05

Work together to accomplish
mission, Nguyen urges BGCT

By Haley Wright

AUSTIN–Texas Baptists are a family of believers working together to accomplish God's mission of reconciling the world to himself, Pastor John Nguyen of Vietnamese Baptist Church in Garland told the Baptist General Convention of Texas annual meeting.

Nguyen delivered the convention sermon during the closing session of the two-day meeting.

Pastor John Nguyen of Vietnamese Baptist Church in Garland preaches the convention sermon at the BGCT annual meeting.

For Texas Baptists to cooperate like family members, they must work together, Nguyen said. Partnership unifies strength, multiplies the potential for ministry and satisfies the heart of God.

“Partnership and unity produce far greater results than individual endeavors,” he said.

Together, Texas Baptists can accomplish more than they can alone, Nguyen continued. They can work like a team of horses, pulling more together than each could by themselves, he said.

Nyugen challenged Texas Baptists to encourage one another. He used a passage from Acts 9:15-30 to illustrate how Barnabas reached out to Saul, who became the Apostle Paul–early Christianity's greatest advocate.

“Because of people like Barnabas, Paul became a vital part of a new family of faith to preach the gospel of Jesus Christ to the gentile world,” he said.

To accomplish one mission, Texas Baptists also must overcome differences, Nguyen concluded.

Even Paul and Barnabas had differences to overcome, he explained, but their disagreement had a multiplying effect. Though they decided to go separate ways, two missionary teams reached out to the world instead of one.

“They were still one family; they still had one mission to accomplish–just two different teams,” he said. “When we overcome our differences, we testify to the community and the world that we are one as Jesus prayed for us in John 17:20-22.

“We can't let our little differences hinder our work. We need to encourage one another, to partner together, if we are truly to be one family to accomplish one mission together.”

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Resolution reaffirms biblical sexual values but not boycotts

Posted: 11/18/05

Resolution reaffirms biblical
sexual values but not boycotts

By Mark Wingfield

AUSTIN–Messengers to the 2005 Baptist General Convention of Texas annual meeting reaffirmed a 1992 statement on sexual values but removed an endorsement of boycotts.

The resolution reaffirming sexual values was one of five presented to messengers at the BGCT annual session.

The resolution notes the Bible “upholds a high sexual ethic of fidelity in marriage and abstinence outside of marriage.”

It declares “behaviors such as homosexuality, adultery, incest and pornographic activity” to be “distortions of this ethic and therefore wrong.”

The resolution calls for all people to “uphold a lifestyle of biblical sexual values” and to oppose “objectionable sexual material in television, movies, music and other media.” It also urges churches to teach biblical sexual values to children and youth while acknowledging God offers forgiveness and restoration for all who sin.

However, a provision in the final paragraph of the 1992 resolution was struck this year.

Mark Newton, pastor of First Baptist Church of San Marcos, asked messengers to remove the words “and sponsor boycotts” from a sentence outlining proper advocacy measures.

The provision in the resolution was exercised by the Southern Baptist Convention to boycott the Walt Disney Co. between 1992 and 2005, garnering international attention.

One messenger asked that the resolution on sexual values be tabled. Roy Kimball of Highland Park Baptist Church in Austin said he realized crafting the wording for such a resolution is a difficult task.

However, he added, “If we are going to start listing sins that are wrong, none of us may qualify for God's love.”

The motion to table the resolution was ruled out of order, and Kimball did not speak for defeat of the resolution.

Four other resolutions were adopted with no debate.

One called on Texas Baptists to become better educated about mental illness and how to help the mentally ill and their families.

It also asked the Texas Legislature to “increase funding for mental health services and to pass legislation” for mental illness treatment to be covered by health insurance.

Another resolution affirmed the Baptist World Alliance and congratulated the international fellowship on its 100th anniversary.

Two final resolutions expressed appreciation to the host city and convention officers.

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Restructured BGCT designed to offer one-stop shop for Texas

Posted: 11/18/05

Restructured BGCT designed
to offer one-stop shop for Texas

By Jenny Pope

AUSTIN–The restructured Baptist General Convention of Texas creates a “one-stop shop” for Texas Baptists, leaders said during a BGCT annual meeting seminar.

Sherrill Spies, a consultant who worked with the BGCT on restructuring, told a group of church leaders about the most pressing requests the BGCT discovered in listening to churches–easier access to products and services, development of servant leaders, distribution of staff across the state and the need for more coordinated efforts.

“We listened intently to you, Texas Baptists,” she said. “And we're doing everything we can to stay relevant to God's kingdom work.”

The four new BGCT teams include congregational strategists led by Andre Punch; a missions, evangelism and ministry team led by Wayne Shuffield; a leadership team led by Jan Daehnert; and the service center led by Gus Reyes.

Congregational strategists will consult and develop strategic planning for churches through designated specialists in nine geographic areas.

This approach replaces the former model where BGCT consultants would drive from Dallas several weekends in a row to spend one day helping a church, Punch said.

“The most important thing is that each congregational strategist will be highly trained” to be a good listener and encourager, Punch said. “This will be a totally different type of service that will primarily meet the needs of the local church. We are your servants.”

The missions, evangelism and ministry team combines the former church health and growth, church missions and evangelism and the associational missions groups to provide a more centralized, collaborative area of expertise, Shuffield explained.

“As a former pastor and consultant in the BGCT …, it was very confusing to know where to go for help,” Shuffield said. “Now, anyone can fire an arrow and hit the target, but it's not up to you to know where to aim–that's our job.”

The leadership team will help churches to “no longer assume what leadership is,” Daehnert said, “but to help define leadership for churches. We are here to discover, equip and support leaders for their congregations, families, communities and global missions.”

With more than 5 million one-day leadership seminars in the United States last year, “it's clear that many folks are hungry and desperate to know how leadership works,” he said.

Perhaps the most recognized change in structure falls into the hands of the new service center, where anyone can call a toll-free number and reach a BGCT staff member late into the night for assistance and ordering support materials and supplies, Reyes said.

“A new day is coming where we're a one-stop shop, where you can reach us anytime of the day, in any language you choose, at a time that is most convenient for you,” Reyes said.

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Reyes urges Texas Baptists to share power, resources

Posted: 11/18/05

Albert Reyes challenges Texas Baptists to follow New Testament teachings about stewardship of power, authority and resources.

Reyes urges Texas Baptists
to share power, resources

By Craig Bird

AUSTIN–There's nothing like a good, first-century church fight to teach Texas Baptists how to act in the 21st century when the battle lines also highlight ethnic, cultural and economic differences, and the details are spelled out in the Bible, Albert Reyes insisted at the Baptist General Convention of Texas annual meeting.

And how the issues were resolved in a productive manner–giving equal place and honor to those who came “late to the table”–is even more instructive, he told messengers in his president's address to the convention.

Referencing the first recorded conflict of the newborn Christian church as recorded in Acts 6:1-7, Reyes drew parallels and lessons from that first-century event to 2005 Texas.

“As the East converges West and the South converges North, they intersect in a place we call Texas,” said Reyes, president of Baptist University of the Americas in San Antonio.

The resulting clashes are “not unlike the early church, which faced multiple barriers that prevented the rapid expansion of the gospel,” he pointed out. Congregations were drawn along social, economic and cultural lines.

“Conflict is normal when cultures converge–that's just what happens. The command to preach the gospel will always involve barriers that need to be overcome. But how we deal with those situations is what is important. Acts tells us that the disciples called the whole congregation together and faced the issue with courage and wisdom.”

The solutions were surprising and highly productive.

“The church set aside seven men to take over the food distribution–and none of them were from the side that had the power,” he said. “The under-represented group was empowered with authority and entrusted with the resources. And what happened? The Bible says, 'The word of God increased; and the number of the disciples multiplied in Jerusalem greatly; and a great company of the priests were obedient to the faith.'”

That growth seems directly related to the unorthodox resolution, Reyes said.

“Somehow, this story does not make economic or social sense,” he continued. “How can a system exist where the last are first and equality is seen as central to the organization's mission and future? How can a system exist that gives equal treatment in terms of resources to those who have little to contribute … Why doesn't this system resonate with American economic models of capitalism and free trade?

“The answer is simple. It wasn't an American model; it was a New Testament, Jesus kind of model.”

The solution echoed Jesus' teaching in the parable of the workers, where those who came to work later in the day got the same reward as those who worked all day, Reyes pointed out. “Only in the realm of grace is the equal treatment of all workers possible.”

Reyes challenged Texas Baptists to ask hard questions, like: “Who controls our denominational resources today? Do we have any part of our family that is being overlooked, especially in light of our new missional opportunities? Are we using a Jesus/kingdom approach to the distribution of resources for future maximum kingdom impact, or are we operating from an American model of proportionate distribution based on patterns of the past?”

He also urged BGCT churches to welcome “those who have come late to the table, those who have less” as equal partners in sharing the gospel in Texas.

“The streams of convergence are around the corner and already here,” he said. “We have unparalleled kingdom opportunities before us. We each can be a missionary without a passport or a plane ticket, because the ends of the world have come to us.”

The necessary response to those opportunities calls for “unprecedented coloration among our churches and our institutions and our convention structures,” he added.

Recalling the merger in the 1960s between the Texas Mexican Baptist Convention and the BGCT, he asked: “Who could have imagined that half a century later we would be living in a state where soon every-other resident will be Hispanic, where we worship in 50 languages? We have discovered that we are a culturally diverse family and, even more than that, we like it that way!”

As Texas Baptists face ongoing decisions about issues of control, power and allocation of resources, the determining factor must be what will be the most effective way to share God's love with other Texans, whatever their culture or economic status, he insisted.

“We are meeting in Austin on the very land once called Mexico,” he noted.

“We would not have a capital called Austin if it were not for those who sacrificed–Anglos and Tejanos and African-Americans–who gave their lives so we might have freedom and a place called Texas.

“Freedom and sacrifice: These two form a Texas tradition. We love our freedom, and we are willing to sacrifice our lives for others to enjoy it. Would we do any less for the freedom of those around us who face eternity without Christ? Would we be willing to share and give away what is not really ours to begin with so others might have hope?

“In Christ, the answer is always yes!”

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Where Have All the Prophets Gone? by Phil Strickland

Posted: 11/18/05

“Where Have All the Prophets Gone?”


By Phil Strickland
Executive Director, BGCT Christian Life Commission

(The speech was delivered to the Texas Baptists Committed breakfast at the Baptist General Convention of Texas meeting, Nov. 14, 2005, in his absence by George Mason, Senior Pastor, Wilshire Baptist Church, Dallas, Texas)

“Now you are the body of Christ and individually members of it. And God has appointed in the church first apostles, second prophets, third teachers, then workers of miracles, then healers, helpers, administrators, speakers in various tongues … "(1 Cor. 12:27-29).

Prophets! I thought we got rid of them a long time ago. Actually, I haven’t seen many around lately. Where have all the prophets gone?

You may remember the Pete Seeger song made popular by Peter, Paul and Mary—Where Have All the Flowers Gone. Well, I think we need new words to that tune. On any given Sunday morning in a Baptist church there are plenty of flowers in front of the pulpit, but not a prophet to be found behind it.

Where have all the prophets gone?

Lord knows we need them. Consider:

–One half the world is living on $2 a day. But that’s the other half, right? They are used to that;

See related article:
Prophetic voice absent but still heard at TBC event

–25% of our Texas children living in poverty. But that’s other people’s children, right? Figure that’s the way God thinks of them?

–Religious liberty is being lost without our seeming to notice. It’s oozing away through our fingers like a fist full of sand until we open it all too late to discover there is not much of it left in our grasp;

–And then there’s the dramatic and continuing shift of the world’s wealth away from the poor and the middle class to the largest corporations and the wealthiest people. But not to worry, we can trust them to do the right thing with all that money, right? After all, the marketplace evens everything out in the end. Isn’t that where we can depend upon the “invisible hand” of God to work? Or was that just Adam Smith’s hand?

–Environmental regulations are disappearing every day. But we are given by God the right to have dominion over all the earth, aren’t we? Well, something like that;

–And what about another tax cut of $70 billion dollars that will be funded by $50 billion dollars of cuts to children? That proposal will probably be passed by the House this week and is supported by the administration. 300,000 people will lose food stamps and another 300,000 will lose access to daycare. The bill cuts Medicaid by $45 billion when we already have 45 million people who have no health insurance. Something tells me that’s not what Jesus meant by “Suffer the little children ….”

Where have all the prophets gone?

Have they all disappeared? Or is it possible that some of them are around but aren’t doing their job? Is it possible that God is still appointing them, but not many of us want the job? I mean, we know what happened to Jonah, and the belly of a whale doesn’t sound like fun, does it?

Walter Brueggemann is one of our best Old Testament scholars. In books like his wonderful work, The Prophetic Imagination (and Finally Comes the Poet), he doesn’t let us relegate prophecy to biblical times. Prophets are not obsolete, although they seem rather rare these days, despite the great need for them in our churches and in our world.

I want to suggest that pretty much all of us are called to have an element of the prophet in us. Yes, I understand that is not the primary role for many of us, but I’m thinking that being overcrowded with prophets is not our problem right now.

I’m suggesting that for pastors, for example, as we call them to the role of pastor/preacher, we might also want to add the word prophet —pastor/ preacher/ prophet. Such pastors will value our values and will fight for them. The title of prophet might even apply to laymen, or, God forbid, to a denomination! These groups, with a little prophetic imagination, could become the cutting edge of the prophetic in our society, rather than the six to eight “prophets” we hear on TV whose prophetic imagination is limited to Armageddon. These genuine prophets would be ready and willing to confront the principalities and powers, whether they be school boards, city councils, the legislature, Congress, or even our own Baptist institutions.

But seldom do I go to churches and hear prophetic, or even strong ethical preaching. And the brave pastors that want me to preach for them often say a word to me before I go. It goes something like this: “Now, Phil, our church is not really in a place where it can deal with anything controversial.” Which tells me that they don’t want to do anything that involves risk. Which tells me that no prophecy is happening there since prophecy always contains an element of risk!

Back to our $70 billion tax cut being currently being considered, funded partially, as I said, with $50 billion being cut from programs that are used for poor children. If the pastor as prophet wanted to point out the injustice of that, how would that go over with some of the members of the church?

Well, I think I can answer that for Phil. They would cry “Politics!” They would suddenly become strict church-state separationists. Of course, what they really are saying is that they don’t want God and government to go together if it’s not their brand of politics. I’ll also tell you that there’s a widespread feeling in many church pews that has to be challenged. People think government is by nature always bad and needs constraining. They think government is lousy at caring for the poor and that that’s really the church’s business. But I can tell you that I have never once seen a line of those folks forming at my door begging for ways to give the church more money to care for the poor or eager to start new ministries that would do it better than the government.

So what is happening to prophetic voices? What is the juggler that trumps the pastoral voice? Is it lack of courage? Or ambition? Courage and ambition seldom hang out together. Or is it just the desire not to rock any boats?

When John F. Kennedy was in Berlin in 1963 for the birth of the German Peace Corps, he cited a passage from Dante’s Inferno in his speech. “The hottest places in hell are reserved for those who in a period of moral crisis maintained their neutrality.” It was actually a liberal paraphrase. What Dante actually singled out were “those disembodied wretches who were loth when living, to be either blamed or praised.” He said that Heaven cast them out for fear of losing its beauty; and Hell didn’t want them either, lest the wicked should glory over them. (Canto 3.)

Prophecy requires the capacity to grieve about injustice, to quit pretending that things are all right, to imagine that things could be different, and courageously to say so to the people, risking the consequences. It requires confronting the principalities and powers.

For compassion to move to action requires an alliance of love, power, and justice. As Paul Tillich said: “In both interpersonal and political relationships, love, power and justice are inseparable. Without love, power becomes tyrannical and justice is only a name for the rule of strong. Without power, love is reduced to sentimentality and justice to an impotent ideal. Without justice, love is a perverse dance of domination and submission.”

Always, the prophet must be imaginative. One does not prophesy about what is but about what ought to be. Which usually makes prophecy sound absurd to the common ear.

Let me give you an example. A pastor mentioned to me that he did not like the beginning of our CLC flyer, that it could cause controversy in his church. Here are the words, aptly authored by Joe Haag, so I’ll brag about his work:

“To follow Christ means that we allow his life to gain leverage against our lives. Against our lust for power, he endures the cross. Against our pride and arrogance, he washes the disciples’ feet. Against our upward mobility, he preaches good news to the poor. Against our self absorption, he has compassion on the multitudes. Against our tight circles of family and friends, he reaches out to strangers. Against our safe noninvolvement, he confronts the powers. Against our violence and hatred, he demands that we love our enemies. Against our self righteousness, he welcomes sinners. Against our bigotry, he tells us about a Good Samaritan. Against our frenzy, he invites us to trust God. Against all the lies which enslave us, he tells the truth which sets us free. How can we be transformed into the image of Christ? One answer is that as we surrender our lives to God’s purposes, God changes us.”

That pastor did not like the words “our pride and arrogance” or “against our self absorption.” He said, “I’m not going to say either one of those about America.” Which means, what, that he accepts the Lordship of America? Who will be left to speak a word for the Lordship of Christ?

I was amazed yesterday to meet one of our church’s first time messengers in hallway outside the meeting. She was running to and fro trying to find a way to resolve her anger. She is Iranian by birth and has been in this country only seven years. She is a Christian convert from Islam and is now in seminary. She asked me breathlessly, “Did you see it? Did you see that flag processional? Can you believe they brought the American flag in ahead of the Christian flag and all the other flags of nations after that? And the American flag was higher than the Christian flag. That is idolatry!” She is right, and I am embarrassed that it took someone so new to the faith and to our country and to us Baptists to even notice. She didn’t know whether she needed to bring a resolution or a motion, but since a motion calls for action, I hope we move that that never happen again in a Baptist meeting.

We need more laypeople like that. Mercy, is there any possibility that this prophecy notion might even apply to them? What’s happened to those laity with a prophetic word? What is trumping the laity’s ability to discern the differences in the present culture and the Kingdom of God? Could it be that we are so consumed by consumerism that we have little power to believe or to act. Do we live in this cultural imagination rather than a Kingdom imagination?

Consumerism, the thing that tells us to go shopping to solve all our problems, must be addressed in our churches. The barnacles of consumerism grow on us day after day until our hope of hearing Jesus’ words, “Blessed are the poor, for theirs is the kingdom of God,” is slim indeed.

Now here I need to start with confession time. The boat is used and the motorcycle is several years old, but I do not lack for toys. This applies to all of us.

And we need to remember that for many of our Baptist brothers and sisters, consumerism is not the issue. It’s survival. Like the fellow we met outside the Dixie House where we had just had dinner with our friends Bob and Judy Coleman. He was asking in his wheelchair how to find the nearest homeless shelter. People like these are often invisible to us. We have to intentionally put ourselves in places where we can see them. Prophets have that kind of vision. They see things and people we otherwise do not see, and they tell us about them.

We desperately need a “theology of enough.” We are stewards, not owners, of what we have, at least in Christian teaching. So do we have any walls around what we will spend on ourselves? Do we have any sense of enough for ourselves? That’s where the prophets will emerge.

Ah, but what about one more—denominations. Should they take risk and speak prophetically or declare that the only real role of the denomination is meeting the need of the churches who are a member of the BGCT? To me the answer is easy. Meeting the will of churches, vital as it is, comes in behind one other: listening for and meeting the will of God.

What trumps the prophetic role in denominations is fear of financial loss, and the lack of understanding what crosses they are willing to die on, if any. What is so compelling that a denomination will stand there and ignore the consequences? Do we know the answer to that question? The question must be asked of laypeople and pastors and churches.

A half century ago in this very city some of the brightest lights of Baptists shone in church pulpits. One of the brightest was Blake Smith, pastor of the University Baptist Church. One Sunday morning he stood tall in that pulpit and declared that it was past time that the University of Texas open its doors to all Texas citizens. The time for integration had come. What’s more, he said to his all-white church, the time had come for University Baptist Church to open its doors to all for whom Christ died.

Well, right after the benediction the predictable took place. An emergency deacons meeting was called for that afternoon. For hours those men grumbled on about what the preacher had said that morning, about whether he had the right to say those things, about the autonomy of the local church to decide who would and who would not be its members, about whether Blake Smith ought to be their pastor at all. After all long while, the moderator looked to the back of the room where an old respected judge was sitting quietly. The man said, “Judge, we haven’t heard from you on this matter. What do you think?” The judge rose to his feet and said solemnly, “Well, boys, you know I don’t like what our pastor said this morning any more than any of the rest of you. But I think Jesus liked it a lot.” Motion to adjourn.

Where have all the prophets gone?

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Volunteer uses spiritual gifts in prison

Posted: 11/18/05

Volunteer uses spiritual gifts in prison

By Laura Johnson

AUSTIN–John Luck, a volunteer staff member at First Baptist Church of Sunnyvale, wandered longer than Moses and the Israelites in the wilderness before entering the Promised Land.

“I waited 56 years wandering in the darkness,” said Luck, who served time in and out of the Texas prison system between 1969 and 2001. “Moses only wandered 40 years. I am the recipient of miracles in the church.”

At a seminar held in conjunction with the Baptist General Convention of Texas annual meeting, Luck told how he experienced a “life-changing experience with the Lord Jesus Christ” and currently leads his church's ministry to more than 35 detainees in the Dawson State Jail each week.

“Prison ministry was perfect for me,” Luck said of his opportunity at Sunnyvale to use his experience and spiritual gifts in an outreach effort. He was one of two presenters who joined facilitator Jim Packwood, minister of missions at Sunnyvale, to share how the 102-year-old church has seen tremendous growth in recent years in missions and evangelism.

In 1991, Packwood said, 300 people attended the church. Now, more than 3,000 worship. The church had one local ministry four years ago. Now it sponsors 21 ministries and eight overseas locations that help start churches

“The word of God needs to be sounded forth like a trumpet through the gifts he has given us,” Packwood said.

Pointing to 1 Thessalonians 3:1, he said his goal at the church is to not allow the gospel to “walk or trot” but to “spread quickly beyond the boundaries of the United States.”

The key is equipping church members with knowledge of their spiritual gifts, Packwood said.

First Baptist Church in Sunnyvale asks all new members to participate in an eight-week training seminar during the Sunday School hour called DNA, which stands for “Discover, Navigate and Apply.”

According to the church's DNA brochure, the class “helps in determining one's God-given gifts and how to actively use them in conjunction with other members of the body of Christ for his honor and glory.”

Luck noted most churches tend to “plug” people into areas where the church needs them. However, what really may be needed is to find the person's spiritual gifts and allow the church member to minister accordingly.

Jose Delbosque is an example of this approach at Sunnyvale. He leads services at Iglesia Bautista Sunnyvale.

Last month, the congregation baptized more than 35 individuals.

“Every culture has a different way to be reached,” Delbosque ob-served.

Relational evangelism is very important in his ministry, he said. Some-times as simple as one person sitting down with someone else for a visit over coffee and pan dulce, a sweet bread popular in Hispanic culture.

Delbosque explained how he sees entire families coming to church and following Christ because of one church member who shared Christ with one member of a family.

News of religion, faith, missions, Bible study and Christian ministry among Texas Baptist churches, in the BGCT, the Southern Baptist Convention ( SBC ) and around the world.




Baptist Briefs

Posted: 11/18/05

Baptist Briefs

Arkansas Baptists oppose gambling. Messengers to the Arkansas Baptist State Convention passed seven resolutions, including ones opposing casino and lottery gambling, the sale of beer on college campuses, and homosexual activism. Messengers also called for their leaders to increase their support for the Cooperative Program unified budget, and they took the first step in granting agency status to the Baptist Assembly at Siloam Springs, Ark. The convention adopted a no-growth budget of $19.7 million that includes $8.3 million–42 percent–for Southern Baptist Convention causes.

IMB needs child care volunteers. The Southern Baptist International Mission Board needs 40 volunteers to provide child care for missionary families in Western Europe while adult personnel attend regional meetings in Germany, April 12-18. For more information, contact Janey Barton at jbarton@wero.org.

Rotary helps CBF relief efforts in Louisiana. The Rotary Foundation has awarded a $50,000 grant to aid the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship of Louisiana's hurricane relief efforts in Lacombe, a small Creole community about 25 miles north of New Orleans.Earmarked to restore at least five houses in Lacombe, the grant was requested by Rotary Club 99 in Little Rock, Ark. Through a partnership with CBF of Arkansas, Rotary Club 99 learned about CBF of Louisiana's efforts in Lacombe and have been providing supplies, funds and volunteer labor. Rotary Club 99, the eighth-largest Rotary club in the world, first provided a much-needed cargo trailer, which representatives delivered to Lacombe last month. The trailer, along with three new chainsaws donated by Second Baptist Church in Little Rock, Ark., have helped CBF of Louisiana's rebuilding efforts.

Virginia Baptists reduce budget slightly. Virginia Baptists approved a reduced budget for 2006 during the 182nd annual meeting of the Baptist General Association of Virginia. The $14.4 million budget for 2006 is $300,000 lower than the current budget, which Treasurer Eddie Stratton said may fall short by as much as $500,000. Budget Committee Chair Darrell Foster attributed the shortfall and reduced budget to Virginia Baptists' $2.3 million in contributions to relief for victims of the South Asia tsunami and the Gulf Coast hurricanes. Also at the annual meeting, Pastor Bert Browning of Huguenot Road Baptist Church in Richmond was elected president.

News of religion, faith, missions, Bible study and Christian ministry among Texas Baptist churches, in the BGCT, the Southern Baptist Convention ( SBC ) and around the world.