Posted: 2/06/04
TEXAS BAPTIST FORUM:
Liberal un-Christian stance
Marv Knox just can't seem to get it. He continually takes every opportunity to malign the Southern Baptist Convention, as in his Jan. 12 editorial about the SBC's proposal to defund the Baptist World Alliance.
He ignores the fact that many people take time to be informed about what the SBC does stand for, which are our basic Christian principles, in spite of the liberal thinking of the Baptist General Convention of Texas.
Everything was fine with him back when the liberals were in control, but now he attempts to poison people's minds toward the SBC. This is such an un-Christian stance for him to take.
Helen Watson
Winnie
Christian worldview
John King worries that “Christian worldview” may be a dangerous concept; he believes it opens the door to theocracy and is therefore contrary to Baptist sensibilities (Jan. 12).
I've never viewed it as an ideological Trojan Horse for theocracy. Rather, the Christian worldview–in my understanding and that of most evangelical philosophers and theologians–is simply the Christian answers to life's ultimate questions. It is simply basic, foundational theology.
Everyone has a worldview; a person's worldview is his or her perspective on the meaning of life–why there is something rather than nothing and why humanity and human persons exist.
The Christian worldview begins with the idea that, in the words of InterVarsity Christian Fellowship's lecturer-at-large James Sire, “God is God, and I am not.” We take that for granted, but it starkly contrasts with other worldviews that view the self as a spark of the divine or deny the very existence of a personal God.
Nothing in the Christian worldview encourages theocracy; many Baptists and other free-church Protestants who eschew theocracy are in the forefront of the development and communication of the Christian worldview. The Christian worldview is simply shorthand for a Christian philosophy of reality that is God-centered.
Roger E. Olson
Waco
Illegal aliens
I want to give another view to the article on ministry to illegal aliens (Jan. 26).
There is nothing wrong helping those in need who enter our country legally.
I do have a problem with aiding and facilitating undocumented persons who are found here. Any undocumented person should be given basic needs and turned in to U.S. Citizenship & Immigration Services. To do any less is facilitating and aiding someone who does not have a legal standing to be here.
To act according to the ideas presented by David Guel is to undermine the legal guidelines of immigration set up by the U.S. government. This is a case where we must have a balance between law and grace, not blatant civil disobedience.
Guel's example of the Hebrew midwives disobeying Pharaoh is at best an apple-and-oranges comparison. The Old Testament example is a case of not committing murder. This is a case of being in America without legal status.
Michael L. Simons
Cleburne
Political churches
The coming months will demand strong faith if members are to survive in their political churches. The questions: “Do I love my Savior and my church enough to stay, or shall I leave? Can I survive in my church when its leaders are constantly downing my choice of politics and preaching the opposite political party?”
Pastor, go ahead and promote your preferences for voting! But how many members and lost people will part company with you?
Many born-again Christians belong to both political parties, even though some pastors deny it.
Most of the voting adults I have known have the intelligence and knowledge to make up their own minds as to which candidates they sincerely believe to be the best ones. They don't need the prejudices of dominating clergy to constantly ignore their wisdom.
The “priesthood of the believer” ought to include all believers in their political choices as well as their religious decisions. Some of us have the “right to be wrong” in the eyes of others.
Our judgment and/or approval by God is between each one of us and his Lord, and not by church-elected leaders.
Gilbert Thornton
Longview
Strange world
You know it's a strange world when France and Willie Nelson stand up for the Prince of Peace and religious leaders applaud the apostles of war.
Robert Flynn
San Antonio
Memorial & grace
In the year since the tragic bus wreck Feb. 14, 2003, Memorial Baptist Church in Temple has become a stronger, more loving and unified church.
The church has sold the location it occupied since 1913 to an African-American congregation and meets in an elementary school and at Meadow Oaks Baptist Church.
Groundbreaking for a $4 million, 34,000-square-foot facility will be Feb. 15 at 4 p.m. on 10 acres. Construction should be completed by June 2005.
Sunday school has increased 38 percent since moving out of the old building in November. Sunday evening attendance is up 50 percent. And a mid-week service has increased 35 percent. Giving has increased 10 percent.
More than $1 million from the estate of member Johnnie Punchard added to money from the sale of the property and donations from members totals more than $2 million in the building fund. A “re-pledge” campaign gave members an opportunity to reassess pledges made 18 months ago, since some lost spouses in the wreck and others had been affected by medical bills. Nearly $400,000 was pledged for the next 18 months.
Memorial is evidence of God's grace.
Robert Mattson
Temple
BWA: Noble cause
How sad I was to read the comment made by the president of the Southern Baptist Convention, Jack Graham, referring to the Baptist World Alliance. In Baptist Press, he said the BWA is “becoming a marginalized organization which is having a smaller and smaller influence for the gospel.”
I have known the BWA for 44 years.
When I was a teenager, they met in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. My father was the coordinator of that congress and an eyewitness of many miracles God performed. The impact of that congress opened the country for an incredible expansion of the gospel that continues to this day.
Of this continued impact, I am an eyewitness, since I served from 1988 to 2003 in Brazil as a missionary. The BWA influences the world in which we live on a daily basis. The gospel permeates the world thanks to this great organization.
It is a noble cause to be involved with the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ around the globe by being partners with the Baptist World Alliance. May we Southern Baptists reject the report that will be brought to the Southern Baptist Convention this year, recommending that we defund and separate ourselves from the BWA.
Eddy Hallock
Carrollton
Henry was not a Southern Baptist
In announcing the death of Carl F.H. Henry, you stated he was a Southern Baptist (Dec. 22).
Carl Henry was not a Southern Baptist and in fact was fairly critical of Southern Baptists most of his career. He wrote of Southern Baptists that their serious theological writing had ended with E.Y. Miullins and/or W.T. Conner.
For the time he was in Washington as editor of Christianity Today, he was a member of Capitol Hill Metropolitan Baptist Church. That congregation was SBC-oriented and dually aligned with the American Baptist Churches, through its relationship with the District of Columbia Baptist Convention.
Henry previously was a member of American Baptist churches and taught at two American Baptist seminaries, Eastern and Northern. Later, in a second Washington sojourn, Henry was connected with Cherrydale Baptist Church in Arlington, Va., an independent Baptist congregation closely related to Washington Bible College and Capital Bible Seminary.
Bill Brackney
Waco
Humility a key to evangelism
Concerning the Jan. 26 page 1 article on evangelism, I can only say that some evangelists’ understanding of the great commission is about as shallow as rain on a stone.
I had a vision once of a vast field that was covered with foundations for churches but no churches. One of the things that prompted me to enter the ministry was the failure of the church to live out Ephesians 4, bringing people to maturity on the meat of the word. Being born again and Spirit-filled does not equate to sanity, much less being an affective human being.
As a counselor having ministered to pastors’ wives and children, I can tell you that a man can preach “love” in theory and be completely inept in application. Our church wars are proof enough. The gospel of the kingdom of God is perfectly thorough, providing a great deal more than salvation. Spiritual maturity is not proven in endless scholarship or excellence in baptistism. Neither is it the making of human facsimiles of Jesus for the world to see.
Spiritual maturity is a humility that facilitates Christ’s manifest presence through us. Let the world see the real deal. We don’t need more 20 percent Christians having been brought up by evangelists only. We also need the teachings and ministry of the apostle, prophet, pastor and teacher.
Stan Foy
Mount Vernon
Challenge to support the BWA
Considering the critical times in which we live, in a world where Christians are severely challenged in many countries, it seems a very inopportune time for Baptists in the United States to withdraw support from the Baptist World Alliance. Many struggling unions and associations look to it for spiritual guidance and resources.
I, therefore, as a concerned Christian layman, challenge 425 churches (including the one of which I am a member) to place $1,000 in their 2004 and subsequent budgets to be sent directly to the Baptist World Alliance to replace lost revenue and show Christians around the world our support for their work.
For so many years, this network has provided spiritual support for struggling peoples in times of crisis. It would be unconscionable for us to turn our backs on them at this time.
In the furthering of the cause of Christ and fellow Baptists of various nationalities and cultures, won’t you join me in this undertaking?
Howard E. Gregory
Fredericksburg, Va.
God's valentine
Hebrews 13:5-6 contains God’s Valentine to all of us. There God tells us to not give ourselves to the love of money but be content with what we have, for we will always have God with us.
And we should not fear the possible abuse or rejection of people with power to hurt us for “never will God leave us; never will God forsake us.” We can experience the power of this Valentine by accepting it.
The assurance that comes from in-depth believing in God’s promise that we are not alone is a sound basis from which we can work to solve all our problems. Everything that opposes our growing human development pales in comparison to the knowledge that we are not alone. God accepts us by grace in spite of our sins as if we were already a perfect children of God. We are not alone. We need only to affirm this with our hearts to begin experiencing the power of it.
Of this positive Valentine from God, Romans 8:31 says, “What then shall we say in response to this, if God be for us who can be against us?” Receiving this Valentine of God’s presence with us, in spite of our sins, means we can no longer use our weakness as an excuse for our laziness.
We must obey the prophetic voice that says, “Let the weak say, ‘I am strong’” (Joel 3:10). And then get involved in the battle for the good in life.
Alvin Petty
Friona
Harbor all lawbreakers?
I read with interest and dismay “Does biblical command to care for aliens depend on their legal status?” (Jan. 26).
First of all, they are “illegal” aliens, not undocumented. They are here illegally. I believe with all my heart we need to present the gospel to all that we can and help those hurting and in need, but as Christians we are also to obey our laws as long as it is not contrary to God’s laws.
The article cited a very poor example, comparing the midwives sparing the male Jewish newborns and disobeying the king’s orders. I don’t believe our government is killing captured illegals. I ask, “Is the church to harbor and give sanctuary to all breakers of the law?
F.A. Taylor
Kempner
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