February 28, 2014 • ISSUE 25
+FEDERAL JUDGE RULES TEXAS MARRIAGE LAW UNCONSTITUTIONAL
+IMB’S ELLIFF ANNOUNCES
RESIGNATION AT AUSTIN MEETING
Right across the street
from a large public high school,
Mosaic of Arlington is collaborating
with other like-minded churches in sowing gospel seeds among a diverse student body with hot
cheeseburgers, warm smiles and other acts of kindness.
Gary Ledbetter
Christians as a marketing niche
T
he TEXAN turned down an ad for the upcoming Noah movie starring Russell Crowe. We’d heard enough stuff about the altering of the story and had enough doubts about other content to make us pass. When it comes to movies we have a “when in doubt, don’t” attitude. There are companies that market popular movies to Christian audiences, but some of the efforts are clumsy or even goofy. The first such effort I remember had to do with a television miniseries about a nuclear exchange that devastated the country (“The Day After”). The network provided discussion questions to help youth ministers deal with the trauma kids would experience after the broadcast. Shortly thereafter I got a similar packet for an R-rated western about a preacher who straightened things out with a Colt revolver. The entertainment industry doesn’t get Christians, especially those of us who believe the Bible to be God’s perfect revelation of himself. Back to Noah. I’ve read with interest the articles discussing the response of Christians to a movie almost no one has seen yet. The director, Darren Aronofsky (“Black Swan,” “The Wrestler”) was mortified that anyone would suggest, after a preview screening, that he change the movie to accommodate biblical literalists. The reports of those who’ve seen it suggest that the movie not only (understandably) fills the biblical narrative with drama not recorded in Scripture but also changes the message a bit to accommodate modern sensibilities regarding environmentalism and overpopulation. I’m not sure if all that is true but it wouldn’t surprise me. I don’t think it will annoy me as much as clumsy propaganda like “Avatar” does. I really like some of Russell Crowe’s movies. “Cinderella Man,” “Master and Commander” and “A Beautiful Mind” are “watch ‘em again” movies at my house. The idea that the story
of Noah, or even some version of it, would be given a modern treatment with amazing special effects sounds pretty cool to me. Of course I expect I’ll be disappointed that the biblical story was not grand enough for Mr. Aronofsky. He could tell it with only modest embellishments but he won’t do that and will not understand why we care. The reason I’m not offended is that the director is making no claim to represent the plain message of Scripture. He, like many of our co-religionists, feels free to make the text say what he thinks it should say. I look forward to seeing the movie but I’m not taking a bus full of church people to it as an alternative to Bible study. My hope is that will be a ripping adventure story well played. If that is not to your taste, skip it, but also skip that vast majority of movies that play loose with the details of history. A second issue has to do with Christians as a market. I’m uncomfortable with being a marketing niche for movies, music, TV or even books. For one thing it implies that Christian art is only for Christians, and along with it, the truth that it carries. Sometimes Christian art has been marketed with the assumption that it could not compete in terms of excellence with other books, music, etc. This has often been true and a few careers have flourished based on this “ghettoizing” of Christian culture. But imagine the calculus of Newton or the portraits of Rembrandt or the concerti of Bach, or the fiction of Tolkien or Chesterton relegated that little “religious” niche of the book store or gallery. Each of these works had religious intent—were founded on biblical assumptions about truth, virtue and beauty. But Western culture owns them in a way it will not own most modern musicians and writers who believe in Jesus. But other artists have a religious message. Artists who scoff at reality or the ability to know what’s true are making a religious statement. I recently went into a small bookstore that featured the works of neo-atheists Richard Dawkins and Sam Harris under the subject “science and nature.” Atheism was to the bookstore owner simply the truth. That is a religious statement. Imagine the chaos of grouping every writer, painter and musician in sections according to his worldview. But in this country we do that only with Christians. Thus you’ll find Lewis’ “Chronicles of Narnia” in the religion section but not the counterpoint, anti-religious children’s books of Philip Pullman (a movie called “The Golden Compass” was based on his books). Where were we? Oh yes, the Noah movie. Of course I’d love to see the stories of Noah, Joseph, Caleb, Deborah, Gideon and other heroes told well and with respect to the Author of the story. I guess Christians are going to have to make those movies. In the meantime, I don’t expect non-Christians to treat the Bible as true or historical—especially not in a day when most who call themselves “Christian” and many who call themselves “Baptist” similarly disrespect it. We embarrass ourselves when we freak out because the lost and liberal do not understand the Bible. Of course they don’t; neither did we when we ourselves were lost and liberal.
Contents
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Moore: Christians not hypocrites to refuse gay marriage business Christian photographers, florists and bakers are not hypocrites to refuse their services for same-sex weddings, Southern Baptist ethicist Russell D. Moore has written in response to the charge from other evangelical Christians.
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IMB President Tom Elliff announces resignation If ever a pin could have been heard dropping, it was on Tuesday morning (Feb. 25) as International Mission Board President Tom Elliff, a veteran pastor and missionary and former SBC president, surprised the board of trustees with news of his resignation.
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Pastors, staff urged to help with compensation survey Church staff are encouraged to complete the 2014 SBC Church Compensation Survey: a tool used by churches of all sizes to determine fair wages and benefits. Participants will be entered for a chance to win an iPad. The survey and complete contest rules are available here.
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SBTC DR efforts focus on Filipino fishing community SBTC DR relief continues to concentrate in the Philippines around the fishing village of Agojo, near Roxas City in the province of Capiz on Panay Island. Typhoon Haiyan still looms large in its destruction.
Right across the street from a large public high school, Mosaic of Arlington is collaborating with other like-minded churches in sowing gospel seeds among a diverse student body with hot cheeseburgers, warm smiles and hope
TEXAN Digital is e-published twice monthly by the Southern Baptists of Texas Convention, 4500 State Highway 360, Grapevine, TX 76099-1988. Jim Richards, Executive Director
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Stress relief counselors minister in the Philippines “The efforts of the SBTC, IMB and Baptist Global Response are helping the neediest of the fishing community of Agojo, not only physically but also spiritually,� said SBTC DR coordinator and chaplain Garry McDugle.
Gary Ledbetter, Editor Jerry Pierce, Managing Editor Sharayah Colter, Staff Writer Russell Lightner, Design & Layout Stephanie Barksdale, Subscriptions Contributing Writers Jane Rodgers, Tammi Reed Ledbetter, Bob Smietana, Paul F. South To contact the TEXAN office, visit texanonline.net/contact or call toll free 877.953.7282 (SBTC)
Briefly //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// MOORE: CHRISTIANS NOT HYPOCRITES TO REFUSE GAY MARRIAGE BUSINESS Christian photographers, florists and bakers are not hypocrites to refuse their services for same-sex weddings, Southern Baptist ethicist Russell D. Moore has written in response to the charge from other evangelical Christians. Moore, president of the Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission, posted a response Sunday (Feb. 23) to a column by Kirsten Powers and Jonathan Merritt published the same day at The Daily Beast, a popular news and commentary website. Powers, a Daily Beast columnist and Fox News analyst, and Merritt, a senior columnist for Religion News Service, said Moore and other Christians are selectively invoking the Bible when they refuse to serve for same-sex weddings while not declining for other “unbiblical” ceremonies. As an example of an unbiblical wedding, Powers and Merritt cited a ceremony between a Christian and a non-Christian or involving a divorced person who does not have a biblical basis for divorce. “If you refuse to photograph one unbiblical wedding, you should refuse to photograph them all,” Powers and Merritt wrote. “If not, you’ll be seen as a hypocrite and as a known Christian, heap shame on the gospel.” There is a distinction, Moore responded, between a same-sex ceremony and a heterosexual wedding, even if a man and woman do not have biblical grounds for marriage. “In the case of a same-sex marriage, the marriage is obviously wrong, in every case,” Moore wrote at his blog. “There are no circumstances in which a man and a man or a woman and a woman can be morally involved in a sexual union.” Moore’s blog response followed more extensive comments on the distinction in a “Question and Ethics” podcast posted Feb. 20 at The Gospel Coalition blog. 2 TEXANONLINE.NET FEBRUARY 28, 2014
PASTORS, STAFF URGED TO HELP WITH COMPENSATION SURVEY Ministers and church employees are invited to participate in the 2014 SBC Church Compensation Survey: a tool used by churches of all sizes to determine fair wages and benefits. Participants will be entered for a chance to win an iPad. The survey and complete contest rules are available here. “GuideStone continues to be an advocate for pastors and church staff, ensuring that they are compensated fairly,” said O.S. Hawkins, president of GuideStone Financial Resources. “That’s why we partner with LifeWay Christian Resources and Baptist state conventions to produce this bi-annual study.” Survey results are not reported individually. Compensation and benefit information can be contributed anonymously. Each Southern Baptist church employee who participates in the survey plays a vital role in building one of the largest databases of church compensation information in the United States. Survey results provide a baseline of compensation data among similar-sized churches within each state convention. Therefore, a higher number of participants leads to a more accurate baseline of compensation data. “We receive numerous requests to answer compensation surveys throughout the year,” said Al Fausch, director of business and financial administration at Calvary Baptist Church in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. “We don’t participate in them all, but we always try to complete GuideStone’s survey.” Churches often don’t contribute to salary surveys because they don’t have time or receive enough valuable information in return. But according to Fausch, GuideStone’s survey is worth the time because it provides customized reports to allow administrators, personnel/finance committees and minister search teams to better determine adequate compensation for ministers and staff. That can be essential information for thousands of churches, which makes the survey worth the few minutes it takes to complete. Like many other church leaders, Fausch has accessed previous survey results when hiring new staff to ensure that employees are being compensated at competitive levels. “The results are easy to navigate,” Fausch said. “I encourage everyone to participate. We are helping each other as well as ourselves by establishing accurate benchmarks.” At the conclusion of the survey, GuideStone and LifeWay will compile the submitted data and provide all users with access to the results. “This survey, which is one of the most comprehensive of its kind, will help scores of churches as they seek to provide for those who are called to lead their congregations,” Hawkins said. Southern Baptist church ministers and staff have until May 31 to complete the online survey. Survey results will be released this summer. Survey participants will receive advance notification of the results and can begin to access the data upon notice. The winner of the iPad will be notified via email. Contact GuideStone Financial Resources with any questions or issues. Call toll free 1-888-98-GUIDE (1-888-984-8433) Monday–Friday between 7 a.m. and 6 p.m. CST to speak with a customer relations specialist, or send an email to info@GuideStone.org.
PAGE: HOPEFUL FOR COOPERATIVE PROGRAM UPTICK Southern Baptists face “challenging days” with Cooperative Program giving, Frank Page, president of the SBC Executive Committee, told committee members in Nashville, voicing hope for an upswing in giving. While sharing his passion for CP and its role in supporting missions and ministry around the globe, Page said the momentum for the “1% CP Challenge” continues to grow for churches to increase CP giving by 1 percentage point of their budgets. “I have written personal letters to almost 3,000 pastors thanking them for their involvement” in the 1% CP Challenge, Page said Feb. 17. “Our state executives are saying, ‘Frank, please don’t stop. Our people are just starting to get it.…’ We won’t stop. “It is my passion that fuels my heart belief in this,” Page said. “I supported this before I was paid to support this. As a pastor I strongly supported over 10 percent of our church’s undesignated receipts to the Cooperative Program.” Giving through CP is the best way to “concurrently, consistently and, yes, completely fulfill Acts 1:8 as a church body,” he added. “Through that, you’re involved in missions and ministries all over the world, all the time.” Philanthropic giving has increased in recent years, and 53 percent of churches say giving is up, Page reported. Despite increased giving in other areas, CP giving has continued to decrease through the years. In the last five years, CP gifts forwarded by churches have dropped 11 percent. “In 1982, the average Southern Baptist church forwarded on 10.7 percent of its undesignated receipts to the Cooperative Program,” Page said. “But in 2012 it was down to 5.41 percent. It’s pretty much declined two-tenths of a percent every year.” One potential bright spot, Page said, is that the current 5.41 percent has
held since 2012, a possible indicator the CP Challenge is beginning to resonate with more churches. “We pray [the decrease has] ceased and will now tick back up,” Page said. “That’s our hope and prayer. We’ve been putting a lot of energy and effort, particularly trying to engage young ministers and unengaged ministers, to say, ‘We challenge Frank Page, president of the SBC Executive Committee, told committee members that Southern Baptists face “challenging days” with Cooperative you to study it, look Program giving. But he also expressed hope for future. at it.… Can you find a better way to be inlining staff. From 2000 to 2013, the volved in Acts 1:8?’” number of state convention staff has Biblical stewardship is the key to dropped from 1,750 to 1,350, Page rereversing the downward trend of givported. Some conventions are becoming, Page said. To help, the Executive ing “extremely focused” to better meet Committee is renewing efforts with the needs of churches, he added. state Baptist conventions to imple“Now some of them say we didn’t ment comprehensive plans for biblical have a choice; we had to—the money stewardship. quit coming in,” Page said. “But some “I’m going to push churches to do have done this purposefully…. State more, to give more,” Page said. “When conventions are trying to do that which I ask you to give more, they believe their churches are calling it doesn’t come to the for and that’s to send more to the naExecutive Committee. tional level so that we might touch this We’re lowering our Colost world for Christ.” operative Program alloWhile giving patterns and trends cation so when you hear continue to fluctuate, Page said he will me beating the drum remain firm on his commitment to proand asking for more, moting the Cooperative Program. it’s to go to these other “I know that church giving is differentities and agencies to ent these days but I will not back away do that which God has from what I believe is the best Acts called them to do.” 1:8 strategy that [Southern Baptists] While CP giving numever had,” he said. “… I will tell you I’m bers among churches excited about the unity that we’ve had have decreased, Page said state giving in this body by the Spirit, a passion for percentages have risen. reaching this world for Christ and I’m The average percentage of CP gifts excited about it.” forwarded to SBC causes from 33 state In related news, Page announced that conventions has gone from 34.7 percent in 2001 to 38.2 percent, according Ashley Clayton has been promoted from special assistant to the president to the latest figures. But because CP with Cooperative Program and Stewgiving from churches has decreased, ardship to vice president for Cooperathe dollar amount from states has only tive Program and Stewardship Develincreased from $182 million in 2004 to opment. Look for a related BP story to $183 million in 2013. be posted this week. State conventions also are stream-
—Briefly section was compiled from staff reports and Baptist Press
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SURVEY: MOST PASTORS SAY RELIGIOUS LIBERTY ON DECLINE By Bob Smietana Most Americans say religious liberty is important, but they don’t always agree on how much liberty is enough or too much. Religious liberty is the issue at the heart of the upcoming Supreme Court hearings between Hobby Lobby and the Obama Administration over the HHS contraceptive mandate. It’s a dispute that is unlikely to go away, no matter what the Supreme Court decides. American preachers, it turns out, are more than a bit uneasy about religious liberty these days, according to a survey by LifeWay Research, a division of LifeWay Christian Resources of the Southern Baptist Convention. The survey found that seven out of 10 senior pastors at Protestant churches said religious liberty is on the decline in America. About seven in 10 also said Christians have lost or are losing the culture war. The telephone survey of Protestant senior pastors was taken Sept. 4-19. Seventy percent agree with the statement, “Religious liberty is on the decline in America.” Twenty-seven percent disagree. Self-identified evangelical pastors (81 percent) are more likely to agree than mainline pastors (47 percent).
FEDERAL JUDGE RULES TEXAS MARRIAGE LAW UNCONSTITUTIONAL San Antonio federal district judge Orlando Garcia struck down as unconstitutional Texas’ 2005 marriage amendment that defines marriage as one man and one woman. Garcia wrote in his opinion that the law demeans homosexual couples by denying them marriage rights “for no legitimate reason.” “Without a rational relation to a legitimate governmental purpose, state-imposed inequality can find no refuge in our United States Constitution,” wrote Garcia, who was appointed by President Clinton to the United States District Court for the Western District of Texas. The law remains in effect, however, pending appeal to the federal 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans. The president of the gay rights group the Human Rights Campaign called it “a historic day in the heart of the South,” according to the New York Times, while Jonathan Saenz of Texas Values called the ruling “the most egregious form of judicial activism of our generation.” The Texas marriage amendment was approved by 76 percent of voters in 2005 following two-thirds majority approval in both Texas legislative chambers. “While we remain confident that the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals will reverse this decision, regardless of what the courts say, marriage is the union of one man and one woman. We will remain vigilant in ensuring that this truth is defended and fought for in the great state of Texas,” Saenz said in a statement. A more complete report will be posted at texanonline.net.
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Researchers also asked pastors to respond to this question: “Many Christian leaders have talked about society being in a culture war. Regardless of how you feel about that terminology, how would you explain the current situation?” Nearly six in 10 (59 percent) say Christians are losing. One in 10 (11 percent) say the culture war is already lost. Few (10 percent) say Christians are winning the culture war. Evangelical pastors (79 percent) are more likely than mainline pastors (60 percent) to say Christians are losing or have lost the culture war. Mainline pastors (30 percent) are also most likely to say they “don’t know” when asked about the culture war. By contrast, 13 percent of evangelicals said they don’t know. Overall, one in five pastors (19 percent) said they don’t know.
Culture shifts
Some of the unease about religious liberty is due to shifts in American culture and church practice, said Ed Stetzer, president of LifeWay Research. In the 1960s, nearly two-thirds of Americans were Protestants. Today, they make up less than half of the population, according to the General Social Survey. Fewer Protestants means less cultural power, Stetzer said. In the past, he said, Christians—and Protestants in particular—took it for granted that Americans would look to the church for guidance on moral issues. Churches, he said, were seen as being good for society and so they were given special privileges—like exemptions from taxes and other laws. “Even if people did not go to church, they looked to the church,” Stetzer explained. That’s no longer the case, as the government and culture no longer defer to Protestant Christians, which makes pastors and their congregations nervous. “They feel like in some ways there was a pact made at the founding of the country—between God and America,” he said. “That pact has been broken.” That’s not all bad news, Stetzer said. “The fact that ‘Christian’ is not just a demographic category can have a positive side,” Stetzer said, as it means that Protestants and other Christians have to be more active in living out their faith. But it also has political and social consequences, as a sizable number of Protestants and other Christians run into conflicts with societal norms on issues like sexuality and marriage and other issues. Protestants (and like-minded religious people) have to think through a new strategy that defends their religious liberty but also acknowledges that conflict, Stetzer said. Several recent court battles also may play a role, said Thomas Kidd, professor of history at Baylor University, and author of God of Liberty: A Religious History of the American Revolution. Kidd pointed to the Hobby Lobby case as well as the Supreme Court’s 2012 Hosanna-Tabor ruling. Both involve disputes between the government and religious groups over exemptions from federal law.
Empower Conference closes with reminder about ‘Christ in us’ & salvation for Buddhist woman who heard ‘revival’ was going on By Sharayah Colter HOUSTON
John Morgan, pastor of Sagemont Church in Houston, which served as host for the Southern Baptists of Texas Convention’s Empower Conference this week, closed the conference on Wednesday (Feb. 26) by encouraging attendees to remember that the only hope of evangelism is “Christ in us.” Morgan followed a long list of preachers and speakers, including Southern Baptist Convention President Fred Luter and New York Times best-selling author Eric Metaxas, and musicians such as Phillips, Craig & Dean and The Old Paths. “The ministry of Christ in this world is nothing more and nothing less than Christ in you,” Morgan said, “You know when Jesus went back to heaven, he said it’s best for me to go back, because when I’m in Jerusalem, the people of Capernaum don’t see me. It’s best for me to go back, because if I don’t go back, the Comforter won’t come, and my plan is for me to be in you through the person of the Holy Spirit, so that when you are born again, I move into your life.” Something is not adding up, though, in the juxtaposition of the number of people who say they’re Christians and the picture the world is seeing, Morgan explained. “There are 1 billion professing Christians on the planet today,” Morgan said. “If they’re all Christians, that means God is in 1 billion people all over the planet right now. It would look to me like with 1 billion people living and looking like Jesus, the world would say, ‘Behold, they’re not like those religious people. They are different.’ Something would happen around the world. But we would rather sit and argue who’s the most spiritual and who’s doing it right, rather than letting go and
Eric Metaxas (right), author of the New York Times bestseller “Bonhoeffer: Pastor, Martyr, Prophet, Spy,” poses for a photo during a book signing at Sagemont Church on Tuesday night. PHOTO BY RICK LINTHICUM
Phillips, Craig & Dean performed contemporary Christian music hits such as “Let My Words Be Few” during the SBTC Empower Conference Feb. 24-26 at Sagemont Church.
let God have his wonderful way—his marvelous way.” And while those arguments continue, Morgan said, the world watches. And as they watch they form an opinion of the God those Christians they know say FEBRUARY 28, 2014 TEXANONLINE.NET 5
your life, or do you go around doing this church stuff and believe that one day we’re going to hit the key—we’re going to get the right music, the right preaching, the right kind of services and all this other stuff that we spend hours talking about, or are we just going to lift up Jesus who said, ‘If you lift me up, I will draw people to me’?” When that happens, Morgan said, revival will come.
Sagemont Church pastor John Morgan reminds listeners during the closing sermon of the 2014 Empower Conference that ‘Christ in us’ is a vital ingredient God uses to bring people to faith in Jesus. PHOTO BY JERRY PIERCE
they serve. “You see, folks, the way you treat your neighbor, the way you treat the schoolteacher, the way you act at a ballgame, the way you act at the supermarket, the way you act at the bank, the way you act in everything you do, when you go into the restaurant, determines whether those people ever see God. Do they see God in your life? That’s what I’m asking you. Now really, do they see God in
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DIVINE APPOINTMENT Though the three-day event at Sagemont was an evangelism conference geared to pastors and church leaders, a Buddhist woman from across town heard a “revival” was going on at the church with the big cross on Tuesday night, Morgan told the conference. At her mother’s encouragement, the woman drove until she spotted the 170-foot-tall, 97-ton steel cross that sits on 448 tons of concrete in Sagemont Church’s front yard. Once inside, she found a brochure about Buddhism on a table at a missions exhibit. She picked it up, thinking it was about becoming a Buddhist. “One hour after she left the mission booth, with tears in her eyes, kneeling just behind those television cameras, this 50-year-old lady gave her heart to Jesus Christ, and next Wednesday night she’s going to be baptized right there in that baptism pool, and I say, glory, glory, glory, glory to God!” Morgan said he prays the conference was indeed not a conference, but a revival, just like the woman’s mother thought she’d heard and as the woman who found Christ experienced for the first time. “I pray we’ve had revival. That is yet to be seen,” Morgan said. “But now we’re going to blast off like a shotgun.”
Two miles from Kiev riots, FBC Odessa mission team remains safe, determined to share gospel By Sharayah Colter Eight adults from First Baptist Church of Odessa, serving on a mission team in Kiev, Ukraine remain safe amid riots that began ravaging the city Feb. 18 after weeks of peaceful protests. The group traveled to Ukraine on Feb. 13 with Michael Gott International and is scheduled to return to Odessa on March 2. Pastor Byron McWilliams said that the team is seeing a greater openness to the gospel because of their presence amid the tumult. “The [Ukrainian] students who are coming look at these Americans are saying, ‘Wow, you’re staying in the midst of this,’” McWilliams told the TEXAN. “It’s building their credibility. The students have said, ‘You care about us enough to stay.’ I think it is opening doors for the gospel more than anything.” The team is teaching classes, eating and sleeping at Central Baptist Church—the largest Baptist church in the area—just two miles from Independence Square where fighting between police and protestors has now led to 67 deaths, according to Ukraine’s Ministry of Health. Hundreds have been injured, the ministry reported. The U.S. State Department’s advice to Americans in the Ukraine was to remain indoors. McWilliams said
the U.S. embassy in Ukraine knows where the team is, has each team member’s name and would be ready to help evacuate the group should the situation worsen or an order be issued for Americans to leave. McWilliams said the team plans to stay because they believe that “God has got them there for this time and that they are not going to come back early unless they are forced to.” The pastor said the group had their “greatest test” when they met together to decide if they should stay or leave the country. “They unanimously decided that they feel they are needed more than ever,” McWilliams said. In fact, in McWilliams’ last email conversation with missions pastor Jesse Gore, he learned the group is only requesting prayer for one thing. “The team would ask specifically that they would pray that doors for presenting the gospel would be open and that God would use this for his glory and they would be able to present the gospel even more,” McWilliams said. “The families at home are probably the ones who are struggling the most, so pray for them that God would give them a peace that he is in control” and they would be reminded of his omniscience. “They are just as
safe there in the midst of a danger zone as they would be in their own home, because God is watching over them,” he added. The pastor asked that fellow believers pray for the team’s safety. McWilliams encouraged Gore in their last conversation to remain steadfast and to remember that God is not surprised by the events of the past three days. “‘Hold the fort, man,’” McWilliams told Gore. “‘Stand firm. Keep doing what God has called you there to do. Share the gospel any chance you get.’ I of course don’t need to tell him that, because he sees it the same way I do. God knew before they went over there that this was going to happen. It’s no accident that they’re there right now.” In a Facebook post, Gore implored friends to pray—not for his safety, but for the people of Ukraine. “I again plead with the people seeing this post to lift up the country of Ukraine in prayer. #prayforukraine,” Gore posted. FEBRUARY 28, 2014 TEXANONLINE.NET 7
IMB’s Elliff announces resignation at Austin meeting By Tammi Reed Ledbetter AUSTIN
If ever a pin could have been heard dropping, it was on Tuesday morning (Feb. 25) as International Mission Board President Tom Elliff surprised the board of trustees with news of his resignation. A handful of trusted colleagues and board members sworn to secrecy kept their word so the veteran pastor and missionary could relate the news from his own heart. “God gave me what is specific leadership,” Elliff said in recalling a moment months ago when he was awakened to sit by his fireplace and be alone with God. He discerned “not only the decision he wanted me to make, but that I was to make it now,” he explained, aware that his three-year tenure had been brief. Former board chairman Jimmy Pritchard picked up on what some might view as a frustration, recalling advice he received from another Texan when the presidential search team drew close to settling on Elliff in 2011. “Richard Land said, ‘Three years with Tom Elliff would be better than 10 years with anyone.’” Pritchard, pastor of First Baptist Church of Forney and SBTC president, voiced the depth of gratitude expressed during a standing ovation to thank Elliff and his wife Jeanie for the determined pace they’d kept in ministry in serving the missionaries deployed worldwide by the largest non-Catholic denomination. 8 TEXANONLINE.NET FEBRUARY 28, 2014
Texan Jimmy Pritchard of Forney prays for the IMB presidential search team which includes three Texans, James Gross of Conroe, Jaye Martin of Houston and John Meador of Euless. Tom and Jeanie Elliff made it clear to the TEXAN that nothing other than the leadership of God motivated his announcement to step down as the leader of the 168-year-old Southern Baptist mission-sending entity. In a subsequent press conference Elliff was asked if he’d consider returning to service as a missionary, responding that between visiting his own kids spread across the globe and keeping commitments to speak overseas he will be on the field for years to come. PHOTO BY TAMMI REED LEDBETTER
“He has given us a passion for what matters,” added current board chairman David Uth, pastor of First Baptist Church of Orlando. “Every one of us in this room has had an incredible blessing of serving with Tom Elliff.” Staff and trustees alike conversed in the hallway after the news was announced, clearly moved by their association with the Elliffs. Uth reminded the board to keep their focus on the missionary mandate. “The stuff that doesn’t matter? Hey, it’ll be all right,” he said in remarks delivered prior to an hourlong plenary session. Uth quickly appointed the committee that will seek Elliff’s successor, adding that he had sought input from Pritchard, who chaired
the last search. The three Texans who will be a part of that assignment are James Gross, pastor of West Conroe Baptist Church in Conroe; Jaye Martin, a member of First Baptist Church of Houston who directs an evangelistic ministry for women; and John Meador, pastor of First Baptist Church of Euless. At a time when pending news is rarely kept quiet, trustee Byron McWilliams, pastor of First Baptist Church of Odessa, noted his appreciation for Elliff’s integrity in announcing what was a surprise to most of the board. “Having spent this last weekend with Tom at my church, it proves his immense integrity that he held the confidence so close,” McWilliams said.
“So here’s what I want you to know—you can rest assured in this— we’re going to run through the finish line. Along with you, we must go together to the ends of the earth.” “We are going to miss his impeccable leadership and his genuine heart for the nations,” McWilliams added. “He has done more in three years than many would do in a lifetime. I’m incredibly sad to see him go but all in the IMB know that there is only one indispensable man, the Lord Jesus.” The next task for Southern Baptists is to “rush the throne of God in prayer so that the committee finds God’s man to fill this most important position,” McWilliams said. Psalm 46:10 provided Elliff with the text for his decision, he said, quoting it. “‘Be still, and know that I am God. I will be exalted among the nations.’” He encouraged the search to be done with “utmost expediency, but not with careless haste or abandon” and “with prayerful and tireless deliberation.” His instruction to the few staff members with whom he had confided prior to the announcement was to “do this the way it ought to be done—not just the right thing, but the right thing the right way.” Jeanie Elliff, who has been his constant partner in ministry, echoed her husband’s appeal for prayerful and tireless deliberation. “Praying for the new leader to come,” she told the TEXAN following the news,
adding that her prior battle with cancer did not motivate her husband’s decision. She noted a recent doctor’s visit found them both in good health. “There’s one person out there whom God has right now,” Elliff reminded trustees as he reiterated the board’s responsibility to pray for the search committee. “We must work and pray together as we have to make this transition as seamless and effective as possible,” he added, cautioning that field personnel “don’t need any hiccups.” Reflecting briefly on his tenure, Elliff said, “As I look at the many initiatives we’ve seen put in place by working together— and that’s the key word, together—over these years, both the pace and the implementation of those initiatives has been almost breathtaking to me.” He marveled at how easily the changes he championed were accomplished, crediting the grace of God and harmonious spirit of staff, trustees and personnel serving abroad. Taking a moment to compose himself, Elliff concluded, “So here’s what I want you to know—you can rest assured in this— we’re going to run through the finish line.” Not ones to say they weren’t up to it or drop their bags and give up, Elliff said he and his wife would run the course the Lord set before them with wholehearted reserve. “Along with you, we must go together to the ends of the earth.”
2014 SBTC MISSION OPPORTUNITIES LONGVIEW JULY 12 MOBBERLY BAPTIST CHURCH
Come learn to think and live missionally
SEND MONTREAL
Evangelism & church planting. Planned 2014 vision tour dates: March 10-12, May 5-7, Sept. 8-10 and Oct. 27-29 Contact Barry Calhoun at bcalhoun@sbtexas.com or 817.552.2500
SEND BOSTON
Evangelism and church planting. Planned 2014 vision tour dates: April 29-30 and Sept. 30-Oct.1 Contact Barry Calhoun at bcalhoun@sbtexas.com or 817.552.2500
UTAH-IDAHO STATE CONVENTION
Evangelism, church planting, leadership training and more. Planned 2014 vision tour: March 23-27. Contact Terry Coy at tcoy@sbtexas.com or 817.552.2500
ECUADOR Evangelism and church planting.
Planned 2014 vision tour: Aug. 16-23 FEBRUARY 28, 2014 TEXANONLINE.NET 9 Contact Barry Calhoun at bcalhoun@sbtexas.com or 817-552-2500
They say location is everything. Mosaic of Arlington—straight across from Arlington High School—is making the most of it.
By Paul F. South ARLINGTON
rom Stephen Hammond’s vantage point—due north and a stone’s throw from Arlington High School—the collaborative ministry he helped begin three years ago to the school’s 3,100 students and staff is hard to tangibly measure. Offering plates are not fuller and membership rolls aren’t spiking at Mosaic, the church he pastors, or at the half dozen other neighborhood churches involved in the outreach. The students recognize Hammond more readily as chaplain for the school’s baseball team than as pastor at Mosaic, planted in 2005 with help from the Southern Baptists of Texas Convention. But this he is sure of: The endeavor known as 10 TEXANONLINE.NET FEBRUARY 28, 2014
ServeAHS has filled hungry bellies, warmed troubled hearts, planted gospel seeds and changed a few empty lives. And it has kept at least one good teacher—maybe more—in the classroom. In 2012 when Mosaic moved to the former space of Grace Community Church with Arlington High literally across the street, it seemed strategic for Hammond to reach out to a group of pastors from other evangelistically minded churches nearby to minister to the inner city school. They knew that any return on investment would be purely spiritual. On their first visit to the school as part of ServeAHS, a volunteer team of pastors delivered roses and chocolate to the female teachers and gift cards to the male teachers. As the pastors, including Hammond, ventured down a hall delivering gifts, a teacher called out. “She came running down the hall asking us to stop,” Hammond said. “Are you the people responsible for these roses?” the teacher asked. “Yes, ma’am,” came the response. She began to cry.
“Yesterday was the most difficult day of my teaching career,” she said. “I told my husband last night that unless God told me otherwise, I was not coming back next year. Because of the rose, I just signed up to return next year.” That was May 2012. The ministry—which includes Mosaic along with Grace Community Church, University Baptist, Grace Lutheran, Park Row Church of Christ, Epworth United Methodist and Prince of Peace, a nondenominational congregation—quickly gained a rapport at the school, even with non-Christian faculty who appreciated the care given them and the students. While Mosaic’s 14,000-square-foot building hosts most of the ServeAHS activities, Students from Arlington High Schoool enter Mosaic on a recent Tuesday for ‘Feeding Frenzy,’ a lunchtime ministry that serves 300 students on a monthly basis. the other churches provide volunteer and financial support. The goal is sharing God’s “We get to show Christ’s love for Arlington love through hot cheeseburgHigh through serving teachers practically ers, dazzling prom dresses by sharpening 2,000 pencils to serving 400 and other practical means as a platform for sharing the cheeseburgers to hungry students. Our prayer is gospel message. ServeAHS that through every hug, high-five and fist bump, has also rounded up clothes AHS will hear our message of hope in Christ.” for a school family hit by a house fire, provided chaplains upon request for school “It’s been a beautiful thing,” Hammond added. “We’ve said we’re sports teams, and counseled pregnant teens going to agree on the essentials of the gospel, being that Jesus is the and fathers-to-be. School clubs like FCA or only hope for mankind. We’re going to agree that the students, facGlee Club that need meeting space have aculty and staff of Arlington High School are worth serving and we’re cess to Mosaic’s space. going to agree on doing this together despite our differences.” Hammond said above all ServeAHS is a One Tuesday each month during the school year, Mosaic hosts “kingdom partnership” with a gospel focus. 300-400 high schoolers for a cheeseburger lunch known as “Feed“When God gave us the facility, the very ing Frenzy” that features a gospel presentation and a card that alfirst week I was here, I reached out to every lows for prayer requests or a faith response to the gospel. The meal church in a quarter-mile radius of the is a big deal, especially at a school where an estimated 50 percent of school. That included churches that weren’t kids from working-class families receive free or reduced lunches. Baptist churches,” Hammond noted. The other Tuesdays, the ministry hosts “Alive,” a lunchtime Bible “I was totally OK with that,” he said. “This study led by Mosaic’s student pastor, Melvin Canales. was going to be a kingdom-minded part“I believe that our ServeAHS team is here for such a time as nership. I started asking churches and pasthis. The relationships and opportunities that God has allowed us tors what they were doing with Arlington to steward is unheard of and we don’t take that lightly,” Canales High School. Very few of them were doing said. “We get to show Christ’s love for Arlington High through anything, but all of them wanted to do serving teachers practically by sharpening 2,000 pencils to serving something. I tossed out the idea of a joint 400 cheeseburgers to hungry students. Our prayer is that through partnership. We had seven churches jump every hug, high-five and fist bump, AHS will hear our message of on board within a month’s time.” FEBRUARY 28, 2014 TEXANONLINE.NET 11
hope in Christ.” Hammond added, “Our goal isn’t to convert the high school. Our goal is to love the high school and let the Holy Spirit determine who the Father is going to draw to the Son. We are very serious about that. And because of that, the school has opened up and they’ve trusted us.” The kindness extended to faculty and staff has been a hit. Periodically, ministry teams go in two-by-two, sometimes bringing needed school supplies, sometimes a gift card, sometimes flowers, all to show their appreciation for their work in the classroom. And the teams offer to pray for the teachers and administrators, but nothing is forced. ServeAHS is careful to walk a fine line, Hammond noted. “That teacher just starts to shine. They know they’re getting some practical gift. And we offer to pray for them on the spot. Most of our teachers take a 20-second prayer. But those who don’t want us to pray publicly will give us a prayer request—like prayer for a son in the military—and we come back to the church and pray for them.” And each year, the ministry awards a Teacher of the Year and his or her spouse a plaque and a night in an upscale hotel, a steak dinner and movie tickets. When Hammond told the school’s principal the idea, she wept. “She said, ‘No one’s ever taken care of our staff like that,’” Hammond said. Through it all, from a kickoff breakfast at the start of the year to a year-end celebration, the seeds of the gospel are gently planted and nurtured. He added, “This is an amazing opportunity. We’re talking about a public high school that has thrown open its doors to seven different churches and allowed us to pray for their teachers and staff.” “At the end of the day, where there are physical needs, people are going to be interested if you can help, no matter where you come from,” Hammond said. “We’re just thankful that we’re coming in the name of Christ.” 12 TEXANONLINE.NET FEBRUARY 28, 2014
‘We just want to echo God’s love through
these burgers’ With full stomachs, Arlington High School students hear saving message at monthly 'Feeding Frenzy'
By Jerry Pierce ARLINGTON
t’s around noon and the herd of high school students who will cross Park Row Drive around 12:20 for cheeseburgers, Fritos and a serving of Christian kindness are sitting in classrooms, by now their growling stomachs waging war with their attention spans and the best efforts of a teacher. The monthly food fest across the street is one of the primary ministries of something called ServeAHS, a collaborative effort of a group of like-minded churches within a quarter-mile radius of Arlington High School, where about 50 percent of students qualify for free or reduced lunches.
A sign outside Mosaic advertises the ‘Feeding Frenzy’ ministry to students at Arlington High School.
Other volunteers sit around tables or stand, arms around each other as they pray. Moments later, the doors open and high school students stroll in as volunteers hand them bottled water. As other volunteers keep hamburgers coming from the grill just outside the church building, students sit and mingle while Christian rock music plays at a moderate volume, then things quiet and the lights dim a bit as Canales starts to speak. A typical crowd is near 350 students, but last week’s normally scheduled Feeding Frenzy was postponed to this week and it seems apparent word was slow getting out. A volunteer estimates probably 250 students. Two projector screens display 1 John 4:19 as Canales reads it aloud: “We love each other because he loved us first.” Then he begins explaining the passage, eventually settling on social media as an analogy. “We base our value based on our likes,” Canales says, but there is no amount of likes or followers that can compare to the “ultimate post,” he adds, as a picture of Christ on the cross appears on the projector screens. “This post wasn’t just for Christians,” Canales notes. “He would have tagged everyone no matter their background.” As he closes, he mentions the response card, asking students to write in prayer requests, or if they are so moved, to signify that they are placing their faith in Jesus Christ. “More than anything, we just want to echo God’s love through these burgers,” Canales tells them.
Stephen Hammond, pastor of Mosaic of Arlington, which hosts this monthly outreach called “Feeding Frenzy,” summons the volunteers from seven nearby churches including Mosaic to gather round as he encourages and thanks them. They have spent the last half hour rolling sheets of white paper across long lunch tables followed by the laying down of napkins, condiment packets and chips in every spot a student might sit. Every few feet, a volunteer has scribbled a message in crayon on the table, usually “God loves you!” or “You are welcome here.” The large space due north of the school looks like it could have been a furniture store or grocery in a past life. In a retail strip at Park Row and Lamar just a few blocks south of the University of Texas at Arlington, it was previously owned by Grace Community Church, which Hammond served as student pastor in the 1990s and early 2000s before starting Mosaic in 2005 with “Someone asked me what my dream would the SBTC. be. I want to make it hard to go to hell Grace relocated and Mosaic from Arlington High School. I don’t want to bought the space in 2012, and the lunch ministry that began see anyone have a Christ-less eternity.” in the 1990s under Hammond re-emerged as Feeding Frenzy. After a few words from Mosaic student pastor Alvin By 1 p.m., most of the students have left. A few Canales, the volunteers gather by threes and fours, linger in conversation with volunteers or with each praying for God to move in the students’ hearts. Cana- other. les will share a gospel message briefly before calling This was no revival service; the fruit buds slowly, attention to the response card placed at every spot. Hammond says. But it’s there. “Lord, help us to be authentic representatives of Je“Someone asked me what my dream would be,” he sus Christ, whether it be through a burger or a smile,” says in an interview after the lunch. “I want to make it a 30-ish looking man prays amid two other men who hard to go to hell from Arlington High School. I don’t have formed a prayer circle with their chairs. want to see anyone have a Christ-less eternity.” FEBRUARY 28, 2014 TEXANONLINE.NET 13
SBTC DR efforts focus on Filipino fishing community By Jane Rodgers
D
ROXAS CITY, Philippines
isaster relief chaplains Garry and Sherry McDugle of Bois d’Arc Baptist Church in Palestine have spent more time in the Philippines this year than they have at home. The McDugles, who are coordinating the disaster relief efforts of the Southern Baptists of Texas Convention’s work there this spring, went to the Philippines for two weeks in December to do preliminary DR work and assess future needs in the wake of Typhoon Haiyan. They returned to the Philippines on Jan. 11 and will stay until April 6, overseeing SBTC DR efforts and volunteers in conjunction with Baptist Global Response (BGR). Typhoon Haiyan devastated the region on Nov. 8 and killed nearly 6,000 people while displacing 4.1 million others, the United Nations reported. SBTC DR relief continues to concentrate around the fishing village of Agojo, near Roxas City in the province of Capiz on Panay Island. The people of Agojo were without electricity for three months until it was recently restored, Garry McDugle said. Relief efforts in Agojo first focused on the community daycare. Many children had been hospitalized from drinking unsafe water and using unsanitary eating utensils. The typhoon destroyed the school’s teaching materials. “The daycare has been restocked with crayons, coloring books and pencils,” said McDugle, who noted that new plastic dishes and a water filtration system was also provided. “The kids were clapping and yelling when the crayons came out,” he said of the excitement at the daycare. Efforts have also focused on fixing the local elementary school, including roof repair and painting. Roof repair is being completed
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The daycare in fishing village of Agojo was not only devastated by Typhoon Haiyan, but teaching materials were destroyed. One small part of Southern Baptist relief efforts was getting needed supplies, such as coloring books, for the school. PHOTOS BY GARRY MCDUGLE
5Paula, a retired school teacher, lost her modest house in the typhoon, but thanks for volunteers from the Southern Baptists of Texas Convention, she has a new, very modest shelter from the elements and is no longer sleeping in a church.
in phases. “Painting will be done when teams arrive from the U.S; the local carpenters with whom we have contracted are doing great work,” McDugle said. DR teams are expected from First Baptist Church of Brownsville, First Baptist Church of The Colony, and the Georgia Baptist Convention over the next several weeks. “The school is right next to the ocean so its roofs were badly damaged in the typhoon,” McDugle said. Some classrooms leak when it rains and children are moved
into corners when this happens, added McDugle, who noted that the school is a center of the community and that “education is very important to the Filipinos.” “The children are very friendly and are fascinated by us and our light skin and crowd around us when we are at the school. They call us by name now when we come by (Ma’am Sherry and Sir Garry).” “The principal and teachers are extremely grateful for what we are doing but we make sure that they know this is not from us, but from Jesus who sent us here, and they have already listened to Ronald [Pastor Calina] explain the gospel message in part and why we do what we do in Jesus’ name.” Volunteer projects include construction of shelters to serve as temporary housing and the development of a public latrine system. “We are ramping up rapidly,” McDugle said, describing the pace of the work. Repair of the school has entered its second phase; several shelters for the homeless have been built using three local carpenter teams. Recovery efforts are using reclaimed materials, McDugle said. A local chainsaw operator is milling lumber for the shelters and other repairs, a cost-saving measure that is also benefiting the local economy and utilizing downed trees before they rot. SBTC volunteers also distributed clothes, shoes and food to the preschool. They continue to hold community meetings to provide information and learn of local needs. “Please continue to pray for this community and that disciples of Jesus Christ will be made here for his kingdom,” McDugle said.
This Filipino couple not only got new shelter but also eternal life through the gospelinfused work of SBTC disaster relief volunteers.
The daycare at Agojo has been reconstructed with help from SBTC volunteers, Baptist Global Response and local carpenters. 5Filipino children have been especially receptive to Southern Baptists relief workers, who have not only helped rebuild homes and a school but have also shared the love of Jesus.
“The principal and teachers are extremely grateful for what we are doing but we make sure that they know this is not from us, but from Jesus who sent us here, and they have already listened to Ronald [Pastor Calina] explain the gospel message in part and why we do what we do in Jesus’ name.” FEBRUARY 28, 2014 TEXANONLINE.NET 15
Sherry McDugle hands out oranges to children in the fishing village of Agojo on the Philippine island of Panay, which was devastated by Typhoon Haiyan. PHOTOS BY GARRY MCDUGLE
Chaplains by any other name Stress relief counselors minister in the Philippines By Jane Rodgers ROXAS CITY, Philippines
“The efforts of the SBTC, IMB and Baptist Global Response are helping the neediest of the fishing community of Agojo, not only physically but also spiritually,” said SBTC DR coordinator and chaplain Garry McDugle, who is overseeing SBTC efforts to aid those devastated by Typhoon Haiyan last November. Agojo is located near Roxas City in the province of Capiz on Panay Island. McDugle and his wife Sherry made their second trip to the region on Jan. 11 and will stay till April 6. “Many are rebuilding their homes; some are in makeshift shelters and still others have nothing,” Garry McDugle said. DR chaplain Sherry McDugle has found ample opportunities to minister to women in their distress and anxiety. Among these is 16 TEXANONLINE.NET FEBRUARY 28, 2014
Paula, a 72-year-old retired elementary school teacher made homeless when the typhoon destroyed the small concrete residence on the beach she had built with her modest pension. Like other Filipinos, she had no insurance. Paula was among the hundred or so who rode out the storm in the open air Catholic chapel in Agojo. She told Sherry McDugle that she had “prayed the rosary over and over again” until the storm passed. No one in the community was injured, and for weeks after the typhoon, several women spent the night in the chapel because they lacked other shelter. “After two months, Paula was the only one left there. Some in the community were upset that she was living in the chapel, so we made building her a shelter a priority,” said Sherry McDugle, who noted that Paula received land from a nephew on which the shelter now sits. Exacerbating the situation, Paula
apparently suffers moments of disorientation. “She just gets off-track a little sometimes when you talk with her,” Sherry McDugle said. A cultural divide exists that SBTC workers are working to overcome. “Our ministry here is quite odd to some,” Sherry McDugle said. “Most of the population is Catholic and they do not understand that our work is for the glory of Jesus Christ and not simply ‘good works’ which will ‘get us into heaven.’ This gives us the opportunity to share the gospel in a way that they have never heard before.” “We have let ourselves be known as stress relief counselors, because that is the word used by the people here for chaplains. It is something they understand,” she explained. God’s work is evident in the example of Ryan, a young Filipino teacher and IT worker employed at AMA College in Roxas City. Ryan also works for the local Southern Baptist church pastored by Ronald Calina, which meets at the college on Sundays. Quiet, meek, hardworking, easy-going Ryan is a Baptist believer, as are his two sisters. Ryan’s mother died a few years ago. His father is Catholic. “Being baptized in another belief system here means that you will probably be excommunicated from your family and friends of the Catholic faith,” Sherry McDugle said. “It is hard for young Christians here.” Ryan’s father works constantly, so Ryan as the oldest child cares for his younger sisters, as is the Filipino custom. In this case, the family connections surprised even the McDugles. Another young Christian worker at AMA College, Ladymie, is “a fireball for Jesus,” said Sherry
McDugle, who had been praying for boldness for Ladymie. The young woman shared with Sherry her concerns for a Christian friend, Rizamie, 16, and her younger sister, Mickmie, 8, also a believer. Rizamie had fallen ill and stopped coming to church because of the magic her father had paid to have performed on her in order to cure her. “After Rizamie had drunk the potions and let the spiritualist perform his magic, her problems with her faith began,” Sherry McDugle said. “She kept hearing voices when she went to church and the voices told her that church was a bad place to be.” Ladymie requested prayer for Rizamie, who grew increasingly ill from a potassium deficiency. “We held hands and together we prayed for Rizamie, whom I had never met,” Sherry McDugle explained. The next day, the McDugles learned that Rizamie and Mickmie were none other than the younger sisters of Ryan. Rizamie had been hospitalized, so the McDugles
accompanied a group including Ronald Calina and his family and Ladymie, to the hospital. A poignant sight awaited. Rizamie, looking far younger than her 16 years, was curled up in a tiny ball, IV fluids dripping into her thin arm. Mickmie sat beside her brother, Ryan, as he napped on a hard bench. The small room was crowded with another patient and family. Despite the lack of privacy, the McDugles talked and prayed with Ryan and his sisters. “I was asked if I would lay hands on Rizamie as we all gathered and prayed for her, and after we prayed, she began to smile.” The next Sunday, Rizamie returned to church, smiling and healthy. “Jesus is alive, not made of stone like the statues here. Jesus is faithful to his Word even today, and these Filipino believers know they do not have to pray over rosary beads for Jesus to hear them and answer prayers,” Sherry McDugle said. —Garry McDugle contributed to this story
Begin planning now, using resources available online beginning in February, how your church will emphasize the importance of supporting the Cooperative Program. In addition to the resources offered at whatisCP.com, churches can request a convention ministry staff member to preach at their church April 6. TOGETHER – REACHING TEXAS, TOUCHING THE WORLD
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