Friday, December 26, 2008

Regional Prayer Training Workshops ~ Find Nearest Location

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“Churches of Strength”

Super Saturday Seminars


“We proclaim Him, warning and teaching everyone with all wisdom, so that we may present everyone mature in Christ. I labor for this, striving with His strength that works powerfully in me.”
Colossians 1:28-29

Date Region Location

February 28 West Central Lincoln Ave., Jacksonville

June 6 Hispanic Immanuel, Aurora


June 6 Metro Peoria Woodland

June 13 North Machesney Park

August 1 East Central FBC, Mattoon

August 8 Chicagoland Broadview

August 15 Suburban Chicagoland Friendship, Plainfield

August 22 Deep South Second, Marion

August 29 Mid South Logan St., Mt. Vernon

September 12 Gateway/Metro East Bethel, Troy

September 26 North Central Vale, Bloomington

October 17 Northwest Northside, Dixon


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GPS? "Every believer sharing; every person hearing"

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SBC's NEI = GPS

By Geoff Hammond

ALPHARETTA, Ga. (BP)--We have heard a lot about change over these last 18 months or so, and there's no doubt it is certainly headed our way. But when it comes to the mission field of North America, change is already here and it has been happening all around us. Just this August, the U.S. Census Bureau reported that by 2042 ethnic minorities would be the majority in the United States. And our children will lead the way -- the majority of children in the U.S. will be ethnic minorities by 2023.

We already see this trend in our schools, the workplace, where we shop and in our neighborhoods. The North American mission field is changing and Southern Baptists need to respond to those changes. We need to see North America for what it has become: a growing blend of ethnic and national backgrounds. That makes sharing the Gospel more difficult in some ways, but it also opens up remarkable opportunities to impact the world with the salvation of Christ while we share it right here in our own neighborhoods.

That is one of the reasons I am so excited about the National Evangelism Initiative -- God's Plan for Sharing (GPS) -- that Southern Baptists throughout North America have begun embracing. This evangelism emphasis will prayerfully draw us together as Southern Baptists until 2020. Our goal is nothing less than every believer sharing and every person hearing.

Unlike previous national evangelism campaigns, GPS is not a one year or five year emphasis. It also differs because the process of development has not been a top-down approach, but rather a grass roots effort.

From the beginning—even before my tenure as NAMB president began—GPS has been about partnership. Members of our evangelism team have worked tirelessly to seek the input and direction from directors of evangelism, ministry evangelism leaders, prayer evangelism leaders and state directors of mission from our state Baptist convention partners and individual Christians. It is that partnership and melding together of ideas that has made GPS flexible and adaptable so it will ultimately be more useful to churches and individual Christians no matter where they live and no matter what audience they are trying to reach. It can be contextualized to any context.

That partnership has been a great thing. There is more synergy when Christians work together and I believe we will ultimately arrive at a stronger destination when we partner together.===>Click headline to compelte article . . .


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SBC @ Prayer ~ "Prayer is non-negotiable" says state prayer leader

Prayer Front & Foundational in new "GPS" strategy

By: Mike McCormack

NEW ORLEANS--National and state Southern Baptist evangelism leaders from across North America met in New Orleans Dec. 2-4 for their annual evangelism winter meeting, which this year was focused on the new "God's Plan for Sharing" (GPS) denomination-wide evangelism emphasis.

The gathering was a continuation of what has been two years of planning, designing and strategizing for the evangelism emphasis that will run from 2010 to 2020. The campaign -- a product of a partnership between NAMB and state and local evangelism leaders within the SBC -- has a goal of having "every believer sharing" and "every person hearing" in North America by 2020.

More than 100 attended the meeting, which included state directors of evangelism, state prayer coordinators, leaders of the Conference of Southern Baptist Evangelists (COSBE) and NAMB staff.

Author and Bible teacher Henry Blackaby addressed the group, as did Chuck Kelley, president of the New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary (NOBTS). Attendees spent much of their time in workgroups related to GPS, discussing goals and needed actions leading up to the campaign's 2010 launch.

But the primary focus of the evangelism conference was prayer -- the first of four "mileposts" that make up GPS. The other mileposts are "engaging," "sowing" and "harvesting." Throughout the conference, prayer and reliance upon God were front-and-center.

"Prayer is a non-negotiable," said Ron Clement, the Colorado Baptist General Convention director of evangelism and prayer. "King David said to the people, 'Seek God's face always.' Jesus said in Luke 11: 'Always pray and never give up.'"

Clement, who was charged with outlining GPS to attendees, also challenged the group to pray earnestly to God and actively seek God. He led the group in a time of focused prayers of repentance and preparation for the future.

Amid a sense of preparation and participation, Blackaby addressed the crowd. His tone was markedly direct and serious.

"Jesus said in John 20:21: 'As the Father has sent me, so send I you,'" Blackaby said. "Do you feel the weight of that assignment that God has granted you? It's actually the same as He gave His Son. And that's why God is seeking to conform us to the image of His Son."

The gravity of God's calling warrants serious prayer, Blackaby said. He pointed specifically to Solomon's prayer and God's reaction to it recorded in 2 Chronicles 7 as a model for every believer's prayer life.

"I want you to see a pattern in the life of Solomon, which is a pattern you and I need to look at very carefully," Blackaby said.

Second Chronicles 7 begins with the phrase "When Solomon finished praying" and goes on to record God's response to that prayer, he noted.

"That's the key," Blackaby said. "All that happened next was because of the prayer life of Solomon. So I ask myself the question, 'How central to my relationship with God and His assignment for me is my prayer life? Is God responding to my praying?'"

Blackaby also drew attention to the God-sent fire that consumed the sacrifices Solomon had placed on the altar. He compared the sacrifice of Solomon to offerings -- both tangible and intangible -- that individual Christians offer today.

"We pray without any offerings," he said. "Ask God what you need to already have on the altar. The fire cannot consume what you have not put on the altar."

The centrality of prayer -- the first GPS milepost -- is key to evangelism, because prayer gives birth to evangelism, Blackaby said.

Making an analogy between agriculture and the four GPS "mileposts," Kelley drew on history to highlight how successful evangelism campaigns had been for Southern Baptists up through the mid-1970s. Kelley, who studied the history of Southern Baptist evangelism as part of his doctoral work, described how, from 1955 to the mid-1970s, yearly baptisms in the Southern Baptist Convention crested near 450,000 in 1974 and quickly fell off.

"I watched that passion [for evangelism] become institutionalized," Kelley said of the mid-1970s. "From 1955, when we baptized 415,000 people, until today, we have never baptized 450,000 people. More churches, more Southern Baptists, more money, more resources, more missionaries, more strategies. More of everything but fruit. What happened to the harvest?"

Kelley compared the state of Southern Baptist evangelism and baptism today to "grandchildren of farmers keeping the farming stories alive over dessert and coffee at family reunions." Despite the challenges ahead, there are great opportunities, Kelley said. One such opportunity especially true in New Orleans, Kelley said, is social turmoil resulting in openness to the Gospel.

Joe McKeever, associational director of the Baptist Association of Greater New Orleans, led the group in a time of prayer for the New Orleans area.

"There has never been a revival in New Orleans," McKeever said, quoting Kelley. "But since Katrina, with thousands of your people coming to minister and share their faith, now I believe we are on the verge of a great revival. No city in America has been seeded with the Gospel like New Orleans."


Michael McCormack is a writer for New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary. For more information on God's Plan for Sharing, visit www.nei2020.com

This article was originally published in BP News and is reprinted with permission.

For additional insight about GPS, please read Dr. Geoff Hammond’s article, “God’s Plan for Sharing in a Changing North America’.





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Tuesday, December 23, 2008

SBC @ Prayer ~ "WIndow on the World" gives global vision to your prayers



Wednesday Window on the World

Unite your hearts in prayer for the peoples of the world. Visit Wednesday Window on the World each week for prayer requests from around the globe.



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Monday, December 22, 2008

LifeWay Resources Equip Congregations to Pray



Help to Train Your People to Pray

Pastor, the New Year is a great time to help your church family make renewed commitments to disciplines that will help them grow. I am preparing to preach a sermon on Dec. 28th called, "Prepare Spiritually for the New Year." I'll challenge persons to ask God what area of their life they need to submit to Him or what discipline they need to commit to. Special emphasis will be given to the discipline of prayer.

I've listed several print resources and complimentary downloads below that deal with prayer. I hope this will be helpful for you.

Merry Christmas, Pastor!
blessings
Craig Webb, Editor

View back issues of Pastors Today or view sermons and preaching articles in Proclaim Online.
Download 17 One-Page Prayer Study Briefs

go to a page to download prayer studiesRick Ezell uses his Wednesday nights to teach his church family about prayer. Here are a couple of the series he has done.

Studies that Deal with Prayer
I'll teach a 6-week study on Wednesday nights beginning in January called Pray in Faith. It's part of Growing Disciples series which deal with six disciplines for new and growing believers. In this study, participants will learn to hear from God in prayer, respond to God through confession, praise, worship and thanksgiving, and join His work through petition and intercession. Special emphasis is given to experiencing the greater insight and authority God grants to united prayers of agreement with others.

Also, I have just completed a study of Disciple's Prayer Life with a small group. It is the most complete and in depth study of personal prayer I know about.
6-Sermon Series on Corporate Prayer

The following six sermons were preached by Lloyd Stilley as a part of an emphasis on corporate prayer in his church. He was inspired by and drew heavily on John Franklin's new book And the Place Was Shaken: How to Lead a Powerful Prayer Meeting. It includes a complimentary download of an order of service for a prayer summit.

Access "When the Church Prays, 6-Sermon Series on Corporate Prayer"

How to Lead a Powerful Prayer Meeting
John Franklin wrote And the Place Was Shaken: How to Lead a Powerful Prayer Meeting to help pastors change the way their church family prays together. As a companion to this book, he provided 26 one-page handouts to be used at a weekly church-wide prayer meeting or in a small group. The material seeks to educate people about prayer, then provide application for them. Learn about the book and access the complimentary downloads now...




Pray in Faith - 6-Week Study by T.W. Hunt & Claude King will help you teach your people to pray together

And the Place Was Shaken:
How to Lead a Powerful Prayer Meeting by John Franklin

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Saturday, December 20, 2008

Results of Churches Praying & Caring & Sharing the Gospel. Together

What a year 2008 has been in San Diego! God has worked in a mighty way among our churches, drawing people to Himself and equipping us for even more effective ministry. Here are a few highlights:

  • 28 church plants continue to minister in communities around San Diego, with 28 additional starts in various stages of the planting process. All are strategically located and focused.
  • 33 student missionaries served throughout San Diego County in Summer 2008, and touched the lives of thousands through Upward sports camps, block parties, Vacation Bible Schools, and more.
  • On August 26, we held a day-long Prayer and Fasting event which focused on God’s heart for our cities;approximately 125 people participated that day, and they now continue to pray faithfully for San Diego. Hearts were forever changed as city leaders spoke to us about overwhelming needs.
  • 33 churches (a combined total of 3,733 individual volunteers) participated in Faith in Action, choosing to “be the church” by serving their communities. They cleaned yards, painted fences, washed cars, held community block parties, and much more. In San Diego County this year, good deeds were done in Jesus’ name.

When we thought about how to extend this period of service, we knew we needed to identify our county’s greatest needs. Monthly meetings with city & county officials have proven immensely helpful in moving forward with strategies that will help transform San Diego.

As I reflect on God’s goodness in 2008, our first implementation year as a Strategic Focus City, it excites me even more to see what He’ll do in 2009. We trust God will be faithful to bring to completion all He has started, and to begin new efforts so that more might know Him. Here are a few of the things we’re greatly anticipating:

  • Faith In Action Xtreme, an opportunity for exponential involvement by churches as they serve our communities and cities over a period of time from Easter through September 2009.
  • Expansion of partnerships and cooperation between churches of all evangelical faiths to reach San Diego County for Christ.
    An even greater number of new churches, outreach initiatives, summer missionaries, and volunteers like you.
  • Increased opportunity to share the Gospel, more people accepting Christ as Savior, and individuals being baptized, all leading to more lives transformed for the Kingdom.

Our prayer for 2009 is that God will lead us to see the city and serve its needs, so that we can join where He is already working. Thank you for all you do so that more might come to know Christ—Merry Christmas!



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Friday, December 19, 2008

GPS - God's Plan for Sharing

On December 2-4, over 100 evangelism leaders from across the country gathered in New Orleans for a very successful winter meeting. The meeting has set the pace and has helped us gain momentum for what promises to be a great year in 2009.

Recently, the "Church Planting Update" at NAMB produced four wonderful articles in regard to the four spiritual mileposts of the GPS: Praying, Engaging, Sowing, and Harvesting. One of them was even written by SBC President, Johnny Hunt. Follow the links and enjoy both inspiration and information.

May God richly bless you and your family this Christmas season and in the year ahead. Blessings, Ken Weathersby, NAMB

National Evangelism Initiative

Brochure Available

The National Evangelism Initiative (NEI) brochure is available in English, Spanish, Chinese, and Korean. To order, please contact: Kristi Cribier or Cathy Thero. Please include your mailing information and quantity needed.

Evangelism Resources

All evangelism resources may be ordered online from our order fulfillment center (PBD) or by calling 1-866-407-6262.

January Call to Pray

Recognizing both the power of prayer and the urgent need for men to pray, the North American Mission Board is issuing a call for Baptist men to engage in focused prayer in January. Women can pray for all the men they know to participate and join them by asking God to answer the prayers powerfully.

The result could be the largest-ever combined prayer effort by Southern Baptist men in praying for God to do a fresh work among them and across North America.

To help men do this, NAMB's mission education team has prepared a 31-day prayer guide (click here) to lead men in seven areas of prayer: recognize God's plan for men; call to holiness; confession and repentance; passion for the bride of Christ (the church); models of mission action; the hearts of men; and workers for the harvest. Click here to read a Baptist Press article about it.




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Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Three Rules for Praying from New Orleans DOM

How to Pray When You Don't Feel Like Praying

By Joe McKeever

Dr. Joe McKeever
Joe McKeever is currently serving as Director of Missions for the Baptists of New Orleans


If there is a church on the planet which teaches young Christians and new believers how to pray, I've not heard of it. And yet, "Teach us to pray" (Luke 18:1) is one of the primary requests the twelve apostles had of the Lord Jesus. He clearly spent time teaching them to pray, both by His example and His instruction.

You would think this most basic of all Christian disciplines would be taught to every new believer and youngster growing up in the church.

The fact that any of us learn to pray at all is a tribute to dogged determination to acquire this skill in contacting the Almighty and connecting His will with our world.

In his book, "Prayer: Does It Make Any Difference?" Philip Yancey points out that Jesus gave very few rules for prayer. "His teaching reduces down to three general principles: Keep it honest, keep it simple, and keep it up."

That's as good a starting place as we can find.

Keep it honest.

"They who worship Him must worship in Spirit and in truth." (John 4:24) Coming into the Lord's presence requires that we do so with our spirits, not just our bodies, and in the Holy Spirit. Further, we must come in truth. Whatever else 'truth' means here, it clearly requires honesty on the part of the worshiper.

The man was begging the Lord to heal his son. Jesus said, "If you can believe, all things are possible." He answered, "Lord, I believe; help my unbelief." (Mark 9:24) That was an honest statement, and we happily note that our Lord was not offended by it. In fact, Jesus gave the man the object of his prayer and made his son whole.

Somewhere I read of a churchman whose prayers were the prettiest in church. The pastor frequently called on him for public intercessions since his words were so pious and holy. In fact, the teller of the tale reported, the man had cobbled together bits and pieces of other people's prayers he heard from time to time to fashion a pretty garment but one that had no connection to his real life. Then one day, the man's child died. He was devastated and his faith shaken. That day, he walked out into the yard and shook his fist at God and cursed him. The narrator said, "That was the first prayer that man ever prayed."

It's not a prayer until you are honest with God.

That's why the prayers of children are so refreshing. They've not learned the religious language and neat formulas for adult prayer. They tell God what's on their minds.

Our first-born son Neil started to elementary school just at the time when television networks began broadcasting afterschool soap-operas. One of these was a somewhat scary thing called "Dark Shadows." For reasons beyond me, as a six year old, Neil loved it. At supper one evening, he prayed, "And, God, thank you for Dark Shadows." I've smiled at that ever since. Only a child would thank God for his favorite television show.

My mom still smiles at the message on back of a greeting card that a friend sent. The youngest child was asked to say the blessing at a family meal. In his prayer, the little boy said, "And Lord, we thank you for this wonderful child you sent this family." He was referring to himself. Only a child would thank God for himself. The rest of us are too sophisticated for such.

Keep it simple.

"Ask and you shall receive," Jesus taught (Matthew 7:7). What could be simpler?

"If you being evil know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will the Heavenly Father give good gifts to those who ask Him" (Matthew 7:11).

Ask Him for what you need. Does the definition of prayer come any clearer than this?

Once there was a pastor whose public prayers droned on and on and on to the discomfort of the patient congregation. One Sunday morning, in the midst of one of these endless monologues, a little white-haired woman on the front row of the choir tugged on the preacher's coattail and said, "Pastor, call Him Father and ask Him for something."

A man begging for mercy from Jesus was brought before the Lord. Anyone could clearly see the man was blind and a beggar at that. A list of his needs would include the obvious -- healing -- but also a bath and fresh clothing and a job. The Lord looked at him and said, "What do you want me to do for you?" (Luke 18:41)

The answer to that question is your prayer.

"Lord," the beggar said, "I want to receive my sight." Jesus answered, "Receive your sight; your faith has made you well" (18:42).

Keep it up.

The Lord has set up principles for the operation of His Kingdom on earth so that prayer is required from His children in order to accomplish His purposes. Don't ask me why; He did it because He wanted to (see Matthew 11:26; that seems to be the reason God did a lot of things). Perhaps it was to grow His children and to give us a part in the running of the universe.

"You have not because you ask not," said James in 4:3.

In the passage where our Lord teaches us to "ask and you shall receive," we're taught that the tense of the verbs He used makes that passage read like this:

"Keep on asking and you shall receive; keep on seeking and you shall find; keep on knocking and it shall be opened unto you" (Matthew 7:7).

Persevering or continuing in prayer does not imply we are trying to overcome some reluctance on God's part in granting our request. Something else entirely is going on here. By requiring that we continue in prayer until an answer comes, the Lord is giving us an excellent method for testing our prayers and perfecting our faith.

The best way to continue in prayer is to have a definite place set aside in your home and a definite time set aside in your day to get with the Lord. Each believer will find his own place and time. For me, the time is the first thing in the morning and the place is my study. I have a Bible on the table with the marker at the spot where I left it yesterday. I open the book and pick up reading where I left off.

The threefold instruction to keep it honest, keep it simple, and keep it up says little, obviously, about the methods and manners we use in praying. That's as it should be. How we pray is not nearly as important as that we do it in the first place.

Some people enjoy reading prayers written by others. I refer to such books of prayers occasionally to inspire my own prayers. Other people would feel unnatural reading a prayer written by another -- or even by themselves -- and require that every prayer be spontaneous.

Again, we will not quibble, because I don't think the Lord cares. Whatever works best for you is what's right.

We'll be adding to this subject -- how to pray when you don't feel like praying -- from time to time and we'll invite readers to leave your own discoveries on this subject in the comments section below.

Remember, the object is to learn to pray.

More On Prayer:
How to Pray When You're Too Tired to Pray
How to Pray When You Don't Feel Like Praying
Prayer's Formula
Think of Prayer as Reminding God
Putting Balance in Your Prayer Life
Sense and Nonsense About Prayer
Praying Amiss
Enough, But No More
A Prayer for Cleansing
The Hardest Prayer I Ever Prayed
The First Ten Lessons I Learned about Prayer
50 Ways to Overcome Boredom in Prayer
So Many Reasons To Pray For The Preacher
Pastor, You Will Pray or Quit!
Prayer: Come Boldly to the Throne, but Tentatively to Pontificating on Prayer
Prayer: What the Guy in the Pew Wishes the Pastor Knew
Prayer: It's Up to You
There are No Experts on Prayer. Here's Why.




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Saturday, December 13, 2008

SBC @ Prayer ~ Praying Together for City Impact


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City Prayer Requests -
  • Vancouver Focus – Prayerfully consider participating and for others to participate in the events of “Prayerwalking 2009”:
    • Dr. Dan Crawford has scheduled prayer journeys to metro Vancouver July 20-25. Contact : DCrawford@swbts.edu.
    • “Hands On Mission, Inc., part of the North Carolina Partnership, has set March 23-28 for their prayerwalking trip. Contact: homenc@carolina.rr.com.
    • Pray for prayerwalkers for the UBC campus. Contact Suzanne Perry at: ephesians178@yahoo.com.
    • Pray for other teams to come to Vancouver to prayerwalk. Contact: glenna@prayvancouver.ca.
  • Vision San Diego – Pray for Pathways Church's holiday outreach efforts: pray that many who came for the Fall Festival will return to the weekend worship service finding Jesus; and pray those without Christ who come to the Live Nativity outreach December 19-20 will see the Jesus story and be drawn to Him. Pray for relationships to blossom into loving evangelistic opportunities bearing salvation’s fruits. Also pray for God’s provisions to make these things happen as they move in faith during lean times. (Phil.4:19).
  • Cleveland Hope – Pray for Transition 2009, for the team to continue in harmony, have good communication, and that the churches of Cleveland be healthy in all ways. Pray for a restful holiday break for the staff so they may return in the New Year refreshed and restored in Christ to continue His work.
  • Embrace Baltimore – Praise the Lord for His blessings in 2008: 44 churches participated in the ”Prayer Saturated Church” training; there are 8 -12 prayer walks monthly, including “Praying The Blue Lights”; Concerts of Prayer have been happening in tandem with Call To Prayer events; 40,000+ people are now partnered in prayer; and they have seen the homicide rate go from 2nd most violent city in the United States to a 23-year low. The civic leaders recognize that the work and presence of the church has been catalytic in this cause. Pray for a continued increase in prayer in 2009. Thank you for your prayers and support.



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Monday, December 08, 2008

SBC @ Prayer ~ Prayer Drive through Devasted New Orleans

Note>>> Since State Prayer Coordinators were also invited to this meeting, I had the privilege of participating on this prayer drive ... Not a bad idea for each IBSA local association to consider: Fill up a van or bus with people who pray and tour the town ...



Praying for Our Pastors


This week, New Orleans has been hosting the national (annual)
gathering of the state directors of evangelism from across the
country. Included among these leaders were their associate staff
members, professors of evangelism from our six SBC seminaries, and
leaders in this work from our North American Mission Board. All in
all, there must have been two or three hundred here, including a few
spouses, all of them champions of the Lord's work.



Tuesday afternoon, we chartered four buses for tours of the
Katrina-affected areas of metro New Orleans. Freddie Arnold, David
Rhymes, Keith Manuel (former pastor of Calvary here, now associate
in our state evangelism office), and I were tour guides. We left the
Westin Hotel on Poydras and drove north into Lakeview, across to
Gentilly, down Franklin Avenue, eastward on Galvez to see the
Baptist Crossroads/Musicians Village home sites in the Ninth Ward,
out Claiborne Street into St. Bernard Parish, past Celebration-St.
Bernard and FBC-Chalmette churches, north on Paris Road to
Interstate 10, and then westward back into the city. We drove onto
the campus of our seminary where an official boarded each bus to
give us the grand tour of this site. Then, it was back to the French
Quarter for café au lait and beignets at Café du Monde. (Our pastors
who read this may rightfully be concerned that we did not come by
your church when we were so close. We were on a strict schedule, and
tweaked it continually in order to see as much as possible and yet
get the group back on time.)

Along the way, we prayed. When we passed Lakeview Baptist Church,
someone on the buses prayed for this congregation which is facing a
great challenge after their merger with Sojourn, and for Pastor
James Welch. At Pontchartrain Baptist Church, we prayed for Pastor
Jerry Smith. At Gentilly, for Pastor Ken Taylor. On Franklin Avenue,
for Pastor Fred Luter at FABC and Pastor Oscar Williams at Good News
BC a couple of blocks away. We prayed for Craig Ratliff at
Celebration-St. Bernard, for Pastor Warren Jones at New Salem, for
Pastor John Jeffries at FBC-Chalmette, for Pastor Chad Gilbert at
Edgewater, and others (I'm certain I'm leaving out someone).

Which brings us to the subject of today's epistle: how should we
pray for these pastors?

Continued at: http://www.joemckeever.com/mt/archives/001032.html


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Sunday, December 07, 2008

It Takes More than Prayer to Impact a Community



Passion turns Thomas Road 'Inside-Out'
By Norm Miller

LYNCHBURG, Va. (BP)--Thomas Road Baptist Church is booming. In the last 17 months, hundreds have become Christians and hundreds more have joined the church through a variety of ministries that bring non-members into the church, and send members out into their communities.

If you ask the church's pastor, Jonathan Falwell -- successor to and son of the late Jerry Falwell, founder of Thomas Road -- he'll tell you that what's happening has been in the works since his father first started the church more than 50 years ago.

Church membership has surged since a 2006 relocation to a former electronics factory of almost a million square feet. But since May 2006, when Jerry Falwell died and Jonathan became pastor, church ministries yielded nearly 1,200 baptisms and 2,700 new members. In September and October, the church baptized 200 people. Every week more than 18,000 people attend Thomas Road ministries, equal to about a third of those living within the city limits of Lynchburg, Va. -- population 62,000.

The growth spurt began two years ago when Rod Dempsey, Thomas Road's pastor of discipleship, presented a ministry called "Community Interest Groups" to then-pastor Jerry Falwell and Jonathan, then the church's executive pastor.

"Dad loved the idea," the 42-year-old Jonathan Falwell told Baptist Press. "'This is the church being the church. This is outreach,'" he said, recalling his father's words. "Dad totally bought into the idea and was 100 percent behind it."

Community Interest Groups, which Jonathan characterized as "outside of the box for many traditionalists," now attract thousands of people to the church every Wednesday night, about half of whom are members of other churches, and about one-fifth of whom are not members of any church.

The groups meet for eight-week semesters covering a range of topics, from horseback riding to home remodeling. Currently nearly 70 classes are offered, including Alzheimer's support, martial arts, cake decorating, drawing, fly fishing, debt reduction, classic car restoration, hunting, weight loss, home-based businesses, interior design, motorcycling, hiking/camping and GED preparation. The classes are taught by qualified persons and are free to the public. And there is no expectation that participants must listen to a sermon or attend the church at any other time.

"To whom much is given, much is required," Dempsey told Baptist Press. "We have a lot of people who can give back to the community using their talents, gifts and abilities. The idea is to get people on the property and use the bridge of common interests" to share the Gospel. "When God gives you this kind of creativity, you need to use it to reach others."

Whereas Community Interest Groups brought outsiders into the church, the idea has since been reversed to include sending church members into the community to undertake scores of service projects that have included food distribution, school and home repair and landscaping.

"My motto is: 'Meet a need, melt a heart, make a disciple,'" said Tim Grandstaff, Thomas Road's pastor for missions, who heads up what has become the church's Inside-Out ministry. The idea germinated when the younger Falwell preached a sermon in 2007, noting, "We have a dream of having 5,000 of our members, of you, involved as lay ministers, meeting the needs of our members, meeting the needs of our community, feeding the hungry, providing shelter to the homeless, helping the less fortunate, and letting the world see Christ within us."

More than 1,250 people worked in the church's Compassion Weekend, April 18-20, serving as gardeners, housekeepers, builders, cooks and even gas pumpers. Some teamed with local charitable organizations while others went to nursing homes, the hospital and individual homes for ministry.

"We didn't decide for ourselves what we would do," Grandstaff said, noting that church leaders met with Lynchburg's mayor and city council members to about about community needs and how the church could meet them.

Projects members completed included a seven-week food drive; home repairs; renovating playgrounds; gas buy-downs; supplying school bus drivers with coffee and mugs, and teachers and school administrators with doughnuts and thank you cards; and making college care packages for local students.

Other organizations may provide food and clothing to the needy, Grandstaff said. "But what makes us different is that we do it in the power of God. We are earning the right to be heard," he said.

"For many believers, personal witnessing programs represent a big fear," Grandstaff added. "But we go serve people, touch their lives, tear down walls so God can use us to share the Gospel. This approach is one of the greatest missing links in the body of Christ."

What began as a weekend of community compassion has continued in ongoing ministry, and that's exactly what leaders at the church wanted.

A women's Bible study class, for example, adopted a local shelter for battered women as their own ministry and provides for many of the material and spiritual needs of those women.

Another class decided to buy 200 tickets to "Fireproof" so local firemen could take their spouses to the movie. Class members visited each fire hall, every shift, and delivered the tickets along with coffee, personal letters of thanks and printed prayers.

Another church member on a ministry team that helped with landscaping and refurbishing a local girls' home decided to join the executive board of the home so he could be attuned to and involved with meeting needs at the facility.

"That's when I know we're really getting it," Grandstaff said, "when people buy into it and take ownership, and are not waiting for me to provide opportunities to do ministry."

Grandstaff has a file folder full of letters from the mayor, other city officials, local charitable organizations and individuals thanking the church for its ministry efforts.

"People have to realize that we really do care for them and that we are not just trying to get notches in our Bibles or get people to church," said David Wheeler, a professor of evangelism at Liberty Seminary who leads a team involved with the Inside-Out project. "This whole movement has been about us going out into the community and being the church out there with them so that the church is the organism rather than just an organization."

"You can pray all you want for a passion for souls," Grandstaff noted. "But you'll never get it until you go out there and do ministry in God's name. I never would have known that if I hadn't gotten out there and experienced it for myself."

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Friday, December 05, 2008

Men. Prayer. January.

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Baptist men called to January prayer focus

Posted on Dec 5, 2008 | by Tobin Perry ALPHARETTA, Ga. (BP)--Recognizing both the power of prayer and the urgent need for men to pray, the North American Mission Board is issuing a call for Baptist men to engage in focused prayer in January.

The result could be the largest-ever combined prayer effort by Southern Baptist men in praying for God to do a fresh work among them and across North America.

To help men do this, NAMB's mission education team has prepared a 31-day prayer guide to lead men in seven areas of prayer: recognize God's plan for men; a call to holiness; confession and repentance; passion for the church as the bride of Christ; models of mission action; the hearts of men; and workers for the harvest.

"We're convinced we won't have clarity of purpose and mission in our churches without a genuine movement of God," said Jim Burton, NAMB's mission education team leader. "There's no resource we can create that can replace a genuine movement of God among men, so that's what Baptist men will be praying for in January."

Burton said state mission education leaders affirmed the idea to mobilize Southern Baptist men in prayer at the 2008 NAMB Mission Education Roundtable in New Orleans. The state leaders were concerned by a decline in Baptist men's enrollment over the past decade, but more concerned about the deep need for a movement of God among Christian men in Southern Baptist churches.

At first the plan was for state and national mission education leaders to pray together during January for the future of men's work within the Southern Baptist Convention. NAMB's Baptist Men's Task Force recommended involving local churches in the effort. Now more than 50,000 copies of the prayer guide have been printed and more have been downloaded online.

"We need to pray that God will do a work among the men of our churches," Burton said. "Many of the re-occurring issues in our culture can be traced to fathers being absent physically, emotionally and spiritually. God has called men to lead their families on mission. We cannot be a convention on mission until our men are leading their families to do likewise."

The January prayer focus comes as NAMB launches the SBC's first-ever weekly men's mission education curriculum. Baptist Men Online, a weekly e-newsletter available free of charge beginning in January, will include a missions focus article; a personal development article; weekly small-group accountability plans; urgent mission prayer requests; and monthly mission meeting plans.

In the past, Baptist Men have used monthly mission education curriculum provided first by the SBC's former Brotherhood Commission and then by NAMB. Churches that mobilize men to pray together during January are encouraged to then use the Baptist Men Online curriculum to begin or strengthen a men's ministry in their church.

"We're seeing a real desire among men to connect with God's purpose in a way that's real," Burton said. "We believe Baptist Men Online can be a vehicle to help them do that."

Tobin Perry is editor of Crusader magazine at the North American Mission Board. The 31-day prayer guide can be either downloaded from the Baptist Men's national website at www.bmen.net or ordered from Baptist state convention mission education leaders. To sign up for Baptist Men Online, visit www.bmen.net.


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Putting Feet to Their Praying



Greetings from Vision San Diego!

Next year, churches in San Diego will work together with city leaders to tackle some of the greatest needs facing the county as a part of Faith in Action Xtreme. So far we've identified five key issues, including the following:

  • Foster Care
  • Tutoring/Mentoring
  • Military Outreach
  • Elder Care
  • Juvenile Justice

Please take a moment to view a video update to hear more about this exciting initiative that will start in 2009. In just 2 minutes, you'll hear about opportunities for both local ministry leaders and those of you outside of San Diego to engage in Faith in Action Xtreme.

Call 1-877-817-4777 or email xtreme@visionsd.org to find out more information. We look forward to seeing how God will use you and your church to transform San Diego!



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Monday, December 01, 2008

A Spiritual Awakening for Spiritual Leaders




An Invitation from Dr. Henry Blackaby

Dear Friends,

Most of God’s people are aware that our nation must experience a “deep touch from God.” His renewed presence and power – in His people – is absolutely crucial. We must once again be “salt and light” in America. But my observation is that God’s people do not know how to experience a fresh encounter with God.

Our Fresh Encounter Conference, February 27-28, 2009 is designed to help you better understand God’s prerequisites for revival and spiritual awakening. We are blessed to have Will Graham and Anne Graham Lotz joining us as well. Anne believes that if the godly women of America come together before the Lord that God could initiate revival through them across the land. I believe her and continue to work with her to this end.

A spiritual awakening in our nation waits upon the repentance and revival of God’s people. Revival – God’s way – is a choice we must make! Join us at First Baptist Church of Jonesboro, GA as we meet before God for a “fresh encounter” with Him! Mark your calendar now and plan to bring your friends!

His servant & your friend,

Henry T. Blackaby



Dr. Henry Blackaby | Anne Graham Lotz | Dr. Richard Blackaby | Dr. Mel Blackaby | Will Graham



Seminars


The Man God Uses: Friday Feb. 27, 2:00 pm and Saturday Feb. 28, 1:00 pm,
Tom Blackaby

This session encourages Christian men to examine their encounters with the Father, and to follow His will in all areas of life - at home, at work, in church, and in their community.

Jesus Encounters Women: Friday Feb. 27, 2:00 pm and Saturday Feb. 28, 11:00 am, Kim Blackaby
Some of the most significant truths taught by Jesus were revealed in His encounters with women. What does Jesus have to say to women today? What is He calling us to and calling us from? How does the Jesus revealed to Mary and Martha, the Samaritan woman, Mary Magdalene and others reveal Himself to us today?

Transforming Hearts for Revival and Harvest: Friday Feb 27, 3:00 p.m. and Saturday Feb. 28, 11:00 a.m., Claude King
How do you join God in turning the hearts of His people back to Him? Identify the connections between a first love for Christ, personal and corporate revival, and spiritual harvest. Learn about ways and practical tools to guide your people toward revival and into a spiritual harvest.

The Family God Uses: Friday Feb. 27, 3:00 pm, Dr. Tom Blackaby & Kim Blackaby
Every Christian desires to serve the Lord, but historically it was through families that God brought His blessings and impacted the world. This seminar looks at the biblical precedence for God using families and God’s heart desire to strengthen and encourage families today to have an impact in His Kingdom.

Are You Neglecting It?: Friday Feb. 27, 3:00 pm and Saturday Feb. 28, 1:00 p.m.,
Will Graham

Prayer is often one of the most neglected practices of, not only the church, but also for so many Christians. In this Seminar we will investigate the historical link between prayer and spiritual awakening, the theological makeup of prayer, and on how we can pray more effectually in our own personal lives.

Worship That Leads to Revival: Saturday Feb. 28, 11:00 am, Rick Stone
Mention the word “worship” and you had better settle in for a lengthy discussion! Opinions are numerous, styles are varied, and expectations may differ. Find out how true worship in the 21st century can lead the people of God to a revival of holiness, separation, and obedience.

Unlimiting God: Saturday Feb. 28, 11:00 am, Richard Blackaby
God’s power and love have no limits. This seminar will inspire you to aim for a new level of walking with God and challenge you to reach new heights in your spiritual life that you never dreamed were possible.

A God Centered Church: Saturday Feb. 28, 11:00 am & 1:00 pm, Mel Blackaby
If you’ve almost given up hope that church can be a place where hearts are truly united, prayers are answered, and people are readily open to God’s direction, come and discover the way you always knew church could be.

Living a Life That Matters: Saturday Feb. 28, 11:00 a.m. and 1:00 p.m., Mike Blackaby
This seminar will examine how young adults can live their lives in a way that is fulfilling, exciting, and rewarding. God never wastes a life. He always knows how to use our lives to impact eternity.

Experiencing God Around the Kitchen Table: Saturday Feb. 28, 1:00 pm,
Marilynn Blackaby & Gina Blackaby

Women today have very multi-faceted lives in which they must balance their marriage, children, careers, and ministry opportunities. This seminar will help you to better understand how God is faithful in your life no matter what struggles you may face. Learn to develop a stronger relationship with the Lord that will lead to success in every area of your life.

Events

Pastors Lunch: Friday Feb. 27 at 11:45 p.m.
A challenging and enriching time for pastors and their spouses with two universally esteemed Christian leaders: Henry Blackaby and Anne Graham Lotz. Participants will be inspired to serve as instruments of revival for their churches. There is an $8.00 per person fee to attend this lunch.

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