Archives For May 31, 2012

“There is a new form of idolatry that is creeping into the ranks of Southern Baptists…. We’ve got to be so careful not to become Spurgeon-ites. We’ve got to be so careful not to become Calvin-ites and Arminian-ites….If we’re not careful, we’re going to become no different to the Hittites and the Jebusites and the Amalekites. Before we know it we’re just going to become another religious denomination of parasites instead of a people who lift high the name of the Lord Jesus Christ.”

South Carolina pastor Don Wilton preaching at the SBC Pastors Conference in New Orleans.

From the platform

Posted by Meredith Flynn

“It’s hard to believe it hasn’t really started yet.” That’s what Chris Flynn said as we finally got back from a whirlwind day in New Orleans. And he’s right- the convention doesn’t technically start until tomorrow, but the Pastors’ Conference was in full swing yesterday, as four sets of fathers and sons co-preached, co-worshiped and co-challenged in front of a large audience Sunday evening.

Before that, we went to church at First Baptist, New Orleans, where IMB President Tom Elliff didn’t give a traditional international missions message, but instead focused on fathers. At the end of the service, he invited all fathers (biological and spiritual) to come to altar and pray for strength and wisdom to lead their families. Really moving.

One other note about the church: During the announcement times before and after the service, leaders updated members on various community outreach projects, including an initiative called Fuel the Future that provides backpacks of food for hungry kids. The backpacks, currently helping 170 children in New Orleans, are handed out on Fridays so that they’re sure to have something to eat over the weekend. Church members donate the food or money to purchase a specific list of non-perishables. I thought it was a great example of identifying a real need and rallying together to meet it.

After church, we stood in line for a po’boy at Mother’s, a landmark restaurant in the French Quarter. (The photo below doesn’t really do justice to the sandwich – a “Ferdi” with baked ham, pork and “debris,” which is the stuff that falls off the roast beef as they carve it).

Before the Pastors’ Conference session started, we headed over to the convention hall to register as messengers. And this is where my favorite part of any convention began. Talking, talking, talking. To old friends, people who remember you from when you were too young to remember them, and ministry co-workers you haven’t seen in years.

The evening ended with a message from Tony Evans, pastor of Oak Cliff Bible Fellowship in Dallas, Texas. And in just an hour from now, they’ll start again in the convention hall. Today, we’ll hear from pastors like David Jeremiah, David Platt, James MacDonald, and Fred Luter. Keep checking back here for the latest!

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Father’s Day is a lot like Mother’s Day—only you don’t have to spend as much money.

Tony Evans, speaking at the SBC Pastors Conference, which happened to be on Father’s Day

From the platform

You can go home again

eric4ibsa —  June 17, 2012

Posted by Eric Reed

(New Orleans) — When I visited New Orleans in 2005, a few months after Hurricane Katrina, I stopped at the church where I had served for almost ten years. The doors were off their hinges, a few windows hung open, and the playground was overgrown. The whole neighborhood was a ghost town, with house after house marked with the dates they were searched by recovery crews and the number of bodies found inside.

I slipped into the familiar sanctuary and up the stairs to the balcony. The pews and choir loft were destroyed, the walls lined by water seven feet deep for three weeks.

All I found of the years I had served was one red Bible from the set we had purchased for the pews. From my home in Chicagoland, I had tried to contact the friends and church members we had known and loved in the previous decade, but had located few of those who had fled the city as the waters rose. Looking down on the place where we had worked and worshiped, I wept. Not much was left of our work, it seemed.

Today, I was back in that sanctuary, worshiping with the people who have returned.

Seven years after the flood, there is a church worshiping in that place again. And more important, there is a church reaching the people who have returned to our former community.

Our former congregation was virtually decimated in 2005. Only a couple of families remained after Katrina, wondering how to restore their homes and their church. A neighboring SBC church had a few families, but their facility was completely wiped out. God brought all these things together, with wave upon wave of hearty Southern Baptist construction teams, and over several years a new ministry has been born.

It did my heart good to see people from the neighborhood worshiping there. Present with them this morning were IMB missionaries, former church members in town for the convention, and yet more construction teams from Arkansas.

God bless Arkansas Baptists, and Illinois Baptists, and campus ministries such as the team at SIU Carbondale, who continue to make New Orleans their ministry construction project. As I toured the classrooms filled with bunk beds used by the visiting work teams, I understood what one member told me: “It’s good to be a Southern Baptist in New Orleans now.”

It wasn’t always so. In my experience, our New Orleans neighbors were more interested in Mardi Gras than in the gospel.

“People are grateful for what Southern Baptists have done to restore New Orleans,” she continued. “Today, they will listen when we share the gospel.”

In the aftermath of Katrina, city planners estimated it would take 30 years for the population—and the neighborhoods—to return to their pre-flood numbers. A driving tour confirms that.

But my old neighborhood is looks better than a ghost town today. And to hear the brothers and sisters who continue Christ’s work there as they tell stories of hope and restoration, we see they are well on their way.

An old building is restored and a church is reborn seven years after Hurricane Katrina sent most of the congregation fleeing from New Orleans. Much of the work is thanks to work crews and mission teams from Southern Baptist churches across the nation.

 

“Men, stop acting like five-year-olds. Women, stop treating your husbands like five-year-olds. Men, stop leaving your pants on the floor, or your wives will pick them up—and wear them.”

Josh Bailey, from the introduction to his sermon at the SBC Pastor’s Conference.

From the platform

By Meredith Flynn

I’m in New Orleans this week for my ninth Southern Baptist Convention. From Dallas at age 16 to this convention, my second in New Orleans, at age 30, you might say I’ve grown up here. And while there are arguably (well, let’s be honest, inarguably) “cooler” things to do in the summer, I’ve loved them all. Mostly because this is my family (literally – because my whole family still comes, and figuratively – because Southern Baptists form their own kind of family).

There is one very new component to my convention experience this year: I’ve brought along a newcomer! My husband of eight months, Chris, is at his very first SBC after only a few years of attending a Southern Baptist church. Every day this week, check here for a brief (hopefully fun) report of the convention through his eyes (told by me, but usually with him sitting next to me). And be sure to read the July 2 edition of the Illinois Baptist for more of his New Orleans adventures.

For now, check out these pictures from our first day:

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Breakfast at Cafe Du Monde, famous for strong coffee and beignets
(fancy donuts with powdered sugar).

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New Orleans architecture on display in the French Quarter.

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Chris ate his first Disaster Relief meal (thankfully, not in the midst of
an actual disaster). Texas DR volunteers prepared delicious jambalaya
for a block party hosted by Oak Park Baptist Church on Saturday.

By Meredith Flynn

For the next week, the IB staff is in New Orleans covering the Southern Baptist Convention annual meeting. Check back here often for updates from the convention floor, the latest from other meetings and events, and some fun bits and pieces you might not see anywhere else.

Tonight’s post: Crossover, the SBC’s annual missions partnership in the convention’s host city. Visitors come a day early to work with local churches in block parties, door-to-door evangelism, prayer walking, and a host of other outreach events.

New Orleans church-goers understand missions. In the seven years since Hurricane Katrina, the city has seen thousands upon thousands of volunteers, people who want to bring hope to a place that had lost all hope. Oak Park Baptist Church on New Orleans’ Westbank has hosted many of those volunteers on its third floor, which was converted into dormitory-style housing after Katrina.

The city can be a draining place to do ministry. When you ask Pastor Bobby Stults if the work is tiring, he smiles, hangs his head in mock despair, and asks, “Does it show?”

Oak Park has seen its neighborhood change drastically in the five years since Stults became pastor. Rapid migration out of the city’s center meant a mostly Anglo neighborhood very quickly became a mostly African American one. Stults, who came to New Orleans to attend seminary in 1995 and never left, has led the church to make a conscious decision (followed by years to conscious effort) to become a community church. A place where its neighbors feel welcomed, accepted, ministered to.

That’s why Stults planned a block party, with the help of volunteers from Texas, Illinois and Arizona, that also featured six African American rappers from a sister church. “This is the music of our community,” he said.

His church has gone through attendance ups and downs, as people have gotten comfortable (or uncomfortable) with Oak Park’s new mission. But the people who worship at the church now are unified behind the idea that this mission field is their responsibility, and they’re led by a pastor who knows, even when the work is draining, that God has placed them here for such a time as this.

For more on Crossover, see the July 2 issue of the Illinois Baptist. Go to IBSA.org/IllinoisBaptist to subscribe.

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Pastor Bobbby Stults (right) greets K.C. Leonard, a member of his church, during their Crossover block party June 16.

Where else could we be?

Lisa Misner —  June 16, 2012

By Nate Adams

On the cover date of this issue, I should be in New Orleans at the 2012 Southern Baptist Convention. A number of you will be there too, and I look forward to seeing you following the Pastors’ Conference Monday night, at the IBSA reception for Illinois Baptists and friends.

But I’ve also talked recently with people who will not be with us at the Southern Baptist Convention, and for pretty good reasons.

For example, our middle son Noah will be a senior next year at Judson University. He serves part-time during the school year as youth minister at Calvary Baptist Church in Elgin, and this summer he is doing a 10-week internship there.

During the week of the SBC, Noah will be leading his first World Changers youth mission trip to Owensboro, Kentucky. His three-van caravan will stop here in Springfield to pick up four students from his home church, Western Oaks Baptist Church, and to spend the night at our house. The next morning they will head out for Kentucky at the same time we leave for New Orleans.

I asked Noah if he would like to attend the national SBC with me, and then found that for a number of reasons that was the only week his group could participate in a World Changers project. He grinned at me and asked, “Missions or meetings, Dad – which is more important?”

In another conversation with a leading pastor in our state I asked, “Will I see you in New Orleans?” He too replied that his church’s summer missions plans would find him in Chicago that week. For several years, his church has partnered with smaller churches in the Chicago area. This pastor personally leads a sizable group of all ages from his church to lead VBS, perform manual labor, and assist fledgling church plants.

I think my pastor friend may have thought I was implying that he should make the SBC a priority, and so he started to explain why they needed to do the mission trip that same week. “No explanation necessary,” I assured him.
And then, remembering the conversation with my son, I followed up with my own grin. “I mean, which is more important, right?”

I don’t mean by either of these examples to imply that attending the national SBC is not important. I mean, that’s where I’ll be, and important things transpire there. But important things will transpire in Owensboro and in Chicago that week too. And part of me wishes I were going to be in one of those places as you read this, instead of New Orleans.

Maybe it’s a good question for us to ask ourselves this summer, as we plan our various conferences and vacations and weekends and even our church activities at home. Where else could we be? Is where we’re planning to go simply serving ourselves, or our families, or even our churches, or are we going somewhere to actively carry the Gospel or serve someone in the name of Christ?

I’m going to conclude that it’s reasonable and even potentially important for me to be at the SBC in New Orleans as you read this. The relationships and decisions that take place there can significantly impact our work together as Illinois Baptists. But while I’m in those meetings I may occasionally be looking out the window and praying for the groups I know that are doing something that perhaps is even more important.

Nate Adams is executive director of the Illinois Baptist State Association.

Hello, Friend. 
 
Thanks for visiting our new blog. In the era of the 24-hour news cycle and instant journalism, you need news more often than the Illinois Baptist newspaper’s publishing schedule allows. We hope this will become a frequent stop for news junkies, cultural observers, and Christian thinkers alike.
 
Southern Baptist life in the Upper Midwest is different from the deep South version: We are far outnumbered. There’s not an SBC church on every corner in every town. Our theology and polity have to be explained, and they are not readily embraced by the masses. Early church planters called this pioneer territory. The North was the Baptist frontier. 
 
It still is.
 
So to encourage and bolster your ministry, we launch this blog, a community of people called to reach the cities and towns and rural communities that represent one of the edges of Southern Baptist work. 
 
Visit the blog regularly, and look for — 
  • Tuesday News Briefing, news of interest to IBSA church leaders and members. 
  • Breaking news, when it really qualifies as breaking news. (We’ll update as merited, and we’ll try not to abuse the term “news alert.”) 
  • Commentary on happenings in our state, our denomination, and the world from the pages of the Illinois Baptist newspaper. (You’ll often get it here before the print edition reaches your mailbox.) 
  • New voices and fresh perspectives on ministry from people who may not have appeared in the paper often. We’ll explore faith and culture, and the challenge of living and leading Christianly in challenging times.  
We hope to share with you good reporting and invigorating discussion.
Thanks for stopping by. Come back soon.