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  • A voice for the hurting in African American communities

    LANSING, MI – God has brought Michigan African American Churches into a deeper partnership with each other through the Michigan African American Fellowship of Southern Baptists. Unfortunately, many of our urban areas are suffering due to what may appears to be overwhelming social issues. These issues include high unemployment, high dropout rates, useless killings, teenage pregnancy, and too many single mom households. Despite these challenges, Dr. Stan Parker, Pastor of Faith Fellowship Baptist Church and President of Michigan African American Fellowship, is still very optimistic for the future of African American families and churches. Dr. Parker stated “God is still in charge, he is able to bring healing to the various homes where many of these social ills are occurring”. He believes our churches, especially African American Churches must be about the Lord’s business, which is soul winning. Dr. Parker stated the term “soul winning” still has meaning and value in the African American community, however, the issue at hand is our churches must make it relevant again. This is why our churches must continue to respond with love to those who are hurting and are vulnerable to being attacked by the evil one. We can take heart in knowing that throughout history our churches have served as the only institution which remains when times are difficult. When asked if there is a solution, Dr. Parker responded by saying, “The answer is Jesus. We must not just talk about Jesus; we must live and serve as Jesus did.” Dr. Parker travels throughout the state encouraging pastors to continue to minister by including social ministries as part of the church's ministry. Many churches have responded positively to Dr. Parker’s challenge. Many African American Churches are providing social ministries such as food pantries, clothes closets, job seeking skills workshops, before-and-after school programs along with housing assistance programs. These types of social ministries in urban areas have opened the doors for sustainable relationships to be developed and relationships are where we touch the soul of an individual, then a family, and before you know it a community is transformed. Social Service Ministries has a long standing history in the African American community and has served to open the eyes of the spiritually blind, and ushered many into the marvelous light and life of Jesus Christ. The Michigan African American Fellowship churches are continuing to work together to bring the message of hope and healing to the hurting. This includes providing the traditional ministries of Sunday school, Vacation Bible Schools, Backyard Bible clubs, and inspirational morning worship services. These ministries connected to the Social Service ministries speaks a language of love which meets many families and individual right where they are. Dr. Parker is excited and believes God is going to move this year in ways which will bring results in very productive, life-changing growth in the African American Community. He believes Michigan churches will experience a record year in baptisms. As Henry Blackaby says, discover where God is working and join in. If you are interested in partnering with the Michigan African American Fellowship in serving urban areas within the state contact Dr. Stan Parker at 517-853-9897. ABOUT THE AUTHOR Sarah Houston is a Sophomore at Michigan State University, serving as a student missionary with Just For Christ, Campus Ministries. #FEBRUARY17

  • The joy and pain of a pastor’s wife

    DETROIT, MI – As a young lady I found myself trying to break free of the church and the fact that my daddy was called to be the Senior Pastor of a local Detroit Baptist Church. In middle school and high school, I found myself doing pretty much what other girls my age were doing, yet, while still being dragged to that church every Wednesday evening for Bible study and every single Sunday morning, week after week, year after year. There were times when the expectations of a preacher’s daughter seemed unfair, and though I didn’t like having to live up to other people’s standards, I did not want to disappoint my father. After high school I began serving alongside my dad in the choir, and eventually serving in the usher ministry. I would watch my mother and father as they served and gave their lives to God, many times without understanding the many challenges they endured, or the rewards they received. Fast forward, and now I find myself married to a wonderful husband who I invited to church 25 years ago. At the time, I did not know that would be the beginning of the very thing I had told my father I did not want. Wouldn’t you know it; I met a man whom I invited to church who would eventually be my husband. Three years later he answered not only a call to ministry, but after ten years serving with my father, became a pastor by way of church planting. Now I am a pastor’s wife. Being a pastor’s wife has its challenges. To be fair, the rewards and the wonderful work of God in our lives and the life of the church far outweigh the challenges we seem to face so often. But being a pastor’s wife is a very lonely place. Very few women understand what it’s like to stand by the side of a man that God has chosen to lead people and be the very target of the onslaught of the adversary. I now face the same challenges, and endure the same trials that my mother, as a pastor’s wife endured. At the same time, I am constantly encouraged by God and His word. My word to pastor’s wives would be: Allow the Spirit of God to encourage your heart, the Word of God to empower your mind; serve alongside your husband to engage your hands, as the Lord seeks to Equip your Life, as a minister of reconciliation. Make your work one of a supporting ministry where needed, remembering that it’s okay to be who you are because God made you special. Be his help-meet, and walk with him, remembering that he’s not perfect, but through much prayer and your support together God will accomplish much for the kingdom. Colossians 3:15 “Let the peace of Christ rule in your hearts, since as members of one body you were called to peace. And be thankful.” ABOUT THE AUTHOR Daphne L. Gaddy, Church Planter Wife, Women’s Ministry Leader at Victory Fellowship Community Church. #FEBRUARY17

  • First Person: 'We don't get religion'

    JACKSON, MS (BP) – "We don't get religion," New York Times executive editor Dean Baquet said, his words sparking a whirlwind of attention. The "media powerhouses," as Baquet put it in an NPR interview Dec. 8, "don't get the role of religion in people's lives." As a Christian, I can understand Baquet's observation. In order to "get" religion, one has to "get" faith. This often seems to be a challenge for those who see themselves as intellectuals. They have a faith; however, their faith is limited to their understanding of the thoughts and observations of other "intellectuals" -- thoughts and observations collectively known as science. It is understandable why many place their faith in science as the ultimate explanation of what we observe as we analyze our surroundings. Science provides a means by which the physical circumstances which affect us can be justified and explained. Because of the testable and re-creatable nature of scientific principles, we develop confidence, or faith, in our scientific explanations. Science, however, has its limits. Science, for example, argues for a spontaneous natural occurrence of the formation of the universe, yet struggles to explain what happened prior to this moment of origin. Scientists continue to argue about how something -- that something being the entirety of the universe -- came from nothing. Different theoretical explanations are described in scientific "models" of the origin of the universe. Consider, however, that the renowned scientist Stephen Hawking has explained that, in order to be valid, a model of the origin of the universe does not have to prove reality; it only has to "work" in a theoretical argument. Science, in other words, only has to appear to be correct. Faith in a spiritual Creator, however, demands a much higher standard. For spiritual faith to be true, the spiritual Creator has to be eternally valid. Such a Creator is not bound by our concepts of scientific truth or physical reality. Such a Creator would be, instead, the author of all physical law and would therefore supersede these very concepts and, at the same time, would not invalidate them. Indeed, belief in this Creator does not deny an instant of origin. In fact, Genesis 2:4 describes Genesis, chapter 1, as "This is the account of the heavens and the earth when they were created, in the day that the Lord God made earth and heaven" (New American Standard Bible). The concept of a Creator reaches beyond the finite point of creation into the eternity of an existing supreme being. Like train tracks stretching into the distance, the principles of both spiritual faith and scientific faith converge into the acknowledgement of a single moment of origin of existence, an instant of physical creation. At this point, however, these faiths instantaneously diverge to the greatest extreme imaginable. Those who practice a scientific faith often do so in a derogatory manner toward those who practice a spiritual faith. Spiritual faith is often condemned as insupportable by physical evidence and theoretical equations, with its practitioners called unenlightened, fearful and naïve. As Christians, however, we trust in what we have personally experienced in God through our relationships with Jesus Christ. We concede that we can't prove God or Christ by any equation, but neither can anyone disprove by equation our experiences of faith. As the Bible states, "Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen" (Hebrews 11:1, King James Version). It is very difficult to consider a hope as reality, and to then trust what is evidenced only by that hope. Yet, that is the very nature of spiritual faith. My hope is that Mr. Baquet's recognition that he does not "get the role of religion in people's lives" would lead him and others like him to explore the possibilities of Christian faith. They may find it surprising that they are the ones who are restricted in their enlightenment, limited in their universal experience to only the physical realm while fearful of a co-existing spiritual reality, and naïve of the incomprehensible fullness of living a spiritual life based on faith in Jesus Christ. ABOUT THE AUTHOR Doug Parkin is a pharmacist in Jackson, Miss., and a member of First Baptist Church. #FEBRUARY17

  • Pastors preventing substance abuse

    BIRMINGHAM, AL – Nearly 1 in 10 Michigan residents abuse illicit drugs. It’s a higher rate than the national average. Drug abuse among men, women, and youth in Michigan, as well as the rate of drug-induced deaths, is rapidly increasing. Drug and alcohol use among the state’s adolescents is skyrocketing, resulting in high numbers of youth, under the age of 18, arrested for drug abuse violations. Some of these drug-abusing adolescents are as young as twelve years old. The Michigan Department of State Police reports that 61% of people incarcerated in Michigan have a history of drug and alcohol abuse. (1) Some believe that Michigan’s rising drug epidemic results from the state’s high unemployment rate, bringing great financial pressures to residents due to lack of employment opportunities and unexpected job losses. Others cite recent budget cuts that have reduced the number of Michigan’s substance abuse prevention programs. (2) Michigan’s Most Abused Substances (in order of abuse) Marijuana Heroin Prescription Opiates Cocaine Alcohol Methamphetamine How Pastors Can Help Pastors, alarmed by the rising statistics for drug and alcohol abuse, can often help prevent substance abuse in their church and community. Here are some suggestions: Speak/preach often about the increasing rate of substance abuse in your church and community. From your pulpit, promote SBC Sunday emphases, such as Substance Abuse Prevention Sunday on March 19, 2017. Plan a special service, talk about the problem, invite a guest speaker to give information, ask a former abuser to give a testimony, etc. Educate your church members on the most abused substances in your community/state. Teach them how to recognize substance abuse signs, and encourage them to report a possible abuser to church leadership. Research, check out, and make a list of qualified health care providers and drug/alcohol treatment centers in your area. Keep the information available and updated in order to contact in an emergency, enlist help, or recommend treatment to abusers and/or their family members who care for them. Plan separate church events/programs for youth and parents that expose the dangers of drugs and alcohol, offer insights into understanding commonly used drugs, addictions, and the health/emotional consequences of illegal drug/alcohol abuse. How to Recognize Drug Abuse and Addiction Here are a few common physical and behavioral signs of drug abuse/addiction: anxiety, irritability, hyperactivity, lethargy, and unpredictable mood swings tremors, shakiness, red eyes, runny nose, problems with coordination a constant need for money; poor work or school performance; unexplained confusion unusual weight gain or loss; physical withdrawal symptoms when not taking the drug; changes in attitude or friends for no reason. [Some information above found at: http://addictionblog.org/FAQ/identifying-addiction/how-to-identify-drug-abuse/.] Online Resources For a directory that lists information for inpatient and outpatient treatment centers in Michigan, please see: https://www.mentalhelp.net/care/substance-abuse/mi/. For the Southern Baptist Convention’s website that recommends drug treatment programs for addiction and substance abuse by state, please see: http://www.drugtreatmentprogram.net/tag/southern-baptist-convention/. (The SBC website with recommendations specifically for Michigan Drug Treatment Programs and Rehabilitation Centers is: http://www.drugtreatmentprogram.net/state/michigan. You can call the 24-hr help line at 866-923-1134 to talk to a live counselor.) The Michigan Department of Health and Human Services: http://www.michigan.gov/mdhhs/0,5885,7-339-71550_2941_4871_45835---,00.html. Endnotes: 1. Found at: https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/docs/state_profile_-_michigan.pdf and https://www.thetreatmentcenter.com/michigan/. Accessed: Jan. 10, 2017. 2. Found at: http://aforeverrecovery.com/blog/drug-abuse/drug-and-alcohol-abuse-growth-in-michigan/. Accessed: Jan. 10, 2017. 3. Found at: http://www.ncbuy.com/health/drugs/us_mi.html. Accessed: Jan. 10, 2017. 4. Found at: https://mic.com/articles/80091/which-drug-is-your-state-most-addicted-to-this-map-reveals-a-disturbing-trend#.exEVE5ysm. Accessed: Jan. 10, 2017. 5. Found at: https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/docs/state_profile_-_michigan.pdf. Accessed: Jan. 10, 2017. ABOUT THE AUTHOR Denise George, author of 30 books, is co-author of the new Penguin Random House book: The Lost Eleven: The Forgotten Story of Black American Soldiers Brutally Massacred in World War II. She is married to Dr. Timothy George, founding dean of Beeson Divinity School, Samford University. #FEBRUARY17

  • Reaching the urban community

    YPSILANTI, MI – A Sunday morning service in the African American community looks different in 2017 than it did thirty years ago. Years ago the church was the bedrock in the community, but times have changed, and thoughts about church and God are not as allegiant. There are challenges that may have contributed to this change such as the need to work, competing childrens’ extracurricular activities, the relevancy of the church, and the apathy that has bubbled up in the society. Director of Ministries at Reach Church in Ypsilanti, Ebony Robinson asks the questions “So how do we reach a community that may not be as “excited” about God and religion as their forefathers? How do we reach a community where the concern is about social injustices not which worship song is being sung? How do we reach a community who may have felt like God has forgotten them? And how do we do that despite the numerous challenges that may be prevalent?” Robinson says, “At Reach Church we do not believe we have all of the answers – by no means – but we do believe that when a person is personally “reached” we are attempting to make a difference. If we can get over these hurdles separating us, we believe a person can experience the love of Christ. Reach Church has an Outreach System that serves the purpose of drawing people to church and inviting them into a relationship with Christ. While Reach does a number of things, two are having a particular impact. First, church leaders engage the congregation to participate in this effort by implementing the Reach One campaign. This campaign challenges and encourages every member to invite and/or share their faith at least once per week, with the use of invite cards and other tools. Robinson adds, “Most people are going to share their “faith about something” but it may not be their faith of Our Heavenly Father. I have witnessed the power of an established relationship with the Father when it is leveraged. I have seen college students bring their suitemates, mothers bring their adult children, and managers bring their team members from the workplace. It only takes one person to inspire another person to action and it has the likelihood to transform a community. Yes, one person can influence those around them to do something different – in this case draw them to church so they can meet Christ. We give the congregation the tools and the confidence to share their faith on a weekly basis to Reach One.” Another impactful opportunity is through events at church. Sometimes the community may not try something if they feel like there may be a chance they will be singled out. So holding an event gives that person a chance to be a part of the crowd. Being one guest versus many guests is not as intimidating for a person. At Reach they focus on events that will reach the immediate community; college students, and families that live around the church. For example, they held their first Fall-O-Ween (Fall Harvest) around Halloween. To promote this family-fun day they canvassed the community and used social media. Families came to the event who would have never come to any church. They had fun and felt the love of Christ through our volunteers’ cordial spirit and willingness to serve. The next Sunday the service included more guests than normal because they saw the significance of the church. Robinson says, “When I see God grow a member in their faith, a person in our community walk in the church for the first time or in a long time, I see a community transforming.” ABOUT THE AUTHOR Ebony Robinson is Director of Ministries for Reach Church, Ypsilanti, MI. #FEBRUARY17

  • The aggression of depression - Part 1

    SOUTHGATE, MI – President of the Baptist State Convention of Michigan’s (BSCM) Pastor Conference shares the following story. “One year my wife and I took the girls to Fort Myers and made a purchase we didn’t think through at the time. We bought a body board down at the beach. It was a great idea until someone asked how we were going to get it on the plane! So we wound up leaving it at the Condo. That is not the part of the story that’s important. (Except to the people who stayed at the condo after us.) When I finally decided to try it out – I watched countless people out on the waves – some on surfboards, some windsurfing, some on body boards and others just swimming. They were doing great – the waves just seemed to be moving them effortlessly along. So I jumped on – only to be hit by a significant wave that caused me to lose the board, and be driven under. As soon as I could get above the water and start to get my bearings, another wave came crashing over me. This happened time and again until I was finally deposited, a ragged mess, back in the shallows.” For some, this story is an accurate depiction of what life is like when discouragement and depression sets in, and pastors can easily find themselves in the same condition. Wave after wave – while other churches, ministries, and ministers seem to be floating effortlessly, an individual can hardly keep his head above the waves to get their bearings, only to be hit again. God’s Word gives insight into people who experienced this and how God reacted to them. Two of the greatest of the Old Testament would be David – victorious over Goliath and powerful King of Israel; and Elijah – powerful prophet who called down fire and rain from heaven on the same day. David would share where he was in Psalm 34:18 – “The Lord is close to the brokenhearted; He rescues those whose spirits are crushed!” A crushed spirit. That seems even worse than a broken heart. Broken hearts can be healed, But a crushed spirit? That brings to mind concrete that has been sledgehammered into powder and pieces. Many pastors and their families have been there. But David promises – from firsthand experience – that the Lord rescues those who find themselves in that predicament. Elijah actually is a little more of a process than David. He has experienced this wonderful victory, and yet within 24 hours he is ready to call it quits. God gently restores him. He doesn’t scold him – or tell him to put on his big boy pants. He feeds him, He lets him rest, He prepares him for a journey, He assures him of His presence, tells him that he’s not alone, and then gives him an assignment, and puts him back to work. How incredibly cool is God. He speaks the same to leaders today. “You are not alone! You will get through this. There is more for you to do and accomplish.” There are some wonderful resources that the North American Mission Board (NAMB) has given to us. There is a Pastor’s Hotline – 1-844-Pastor1 (1-844-727-8671) The conversation stays confidential, and it gives a safe, secure place to talk and share. There is also a collaborative effort at www.care4pastors.com. Combining the resources of Lifeway, Focus on the Family, and Great Commandment ministries, this website gives insight, sermons, a calendar of events for couples and other great tools to help you navigate the waves that ministry brings. Take advantage of these, plus the encouragement that comes from the BSCM with the Pastor’s Conference, CEC, Galatians 6 retreats, and Date nights (coming in April!) All of these events have a purpose in moving pastors forward in their relationships, ministry, and personal life. Next month – there will be more practical tips from the life of Elijah and David. Watch for The Aggression of Depression Part 2 in the March Beacon. Until then, remember that the God who created the waves will give the ability to ride the waves rather than be swept under by them. And when He is allowed to do that, it’s quite a ride! ABOUT THE AUTHOR Billy Walker is the lead Pastor of Calvary Church in Southgate, MI. He serves as the President of the BSCM Pastor’s Conference, and the Vice President of the Billy Walker Evangelistic Association. He lives in the downriver Detroit area with his wife Laurie. You can read more at www.billywalker.org. #FEBRUARY17

  • Church partners reach family of 9

    DETROIT, MI – One Sunday in the middle of January a family of nine came to Victory Fellowship Community Church in Detroit. By the end of the service, that family responded to the preached message, accepted Christ as savior, and chose Victory Fellowship at their church home. But that is not where this story begins. On Christmas Day, Victory Fellowship invited the families of nearby Hamilton School to come to their Christmas Service, and as part of the service their children received Christmas gifts. Victory Fellowship’s pastor, Darryl Gaddy, says “It was an awesome day, and the spirit of love and blessings were in the air.” While engaging the family of nine in membership, Gaddy learned that this was one of the families who were a part of the Christmas gift outreach. However, the story still begins earlier. The Christmas Gift Outreach was made possible because the Liberty Heights Church (LHC) in Liberty Township, Ohio, partnered with Victory Fellowship. Liberty Heights donated Christmas gift boxes that allowed the Victory Fellowship to partner with three schools in the metro Detroit. Tyrone and Beacon Schools in Harper Woods, and Hamilton School in Detroit helped the churches find children in need. Gaddy says, “While the work is great, nowhere is it written one church must do it alone. Partnership among churches builds the faith, touches countless lives and transforms entire communities. This kingdom growth would not have been possible without the intentional way that Liberty Heights Church partnered with us serving in tough communities.” If you are looking for a church to partner with or a church looking to partner contact us at the BSCM. We have a growing list of opportunities waiting. Contact us at info@bscm.org or call us 810-714-1907. ABOUT THE AUTHOR Dr. Darryl Gaddy, Sr. is pastor of Victory Fellowship Community Church in Detroit, MI. #FEBRUARY17

  • Focusing on God's goals

    FENTON, MI – “Our goal for the 2016 Frances Brown State Mission Offering was $90,000 and we missed it! We only needed $1,528.68 more for the win yet somehow we came up short! If only we would have done…” When I was given the final report on what was received, I began to focus on the $1,528.68 shortfall. I measured the success of the state mission offering campaign on the amount we didn't receive. I questioned, would this failure prevent God's light from being shared in Michigan? “Trust in the LORD with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding.” (Proverbs 3:5) In leaning on my own understanding I put the emphasis on the short fall, on that portion which had not been received. When I began to trust in the Lord, my focus changed and I began to realize all that had been received, all that had been accomplished. It was apparent when focusing on the $88,471.32 that many had sacrificed personal income and many churches had given a significant amount from their budgets to share in the financial support of our state missions offering. Why would they do that? They did so because they believe by partnering together more can be accomplished together. They did that because they are moved to advancing the light in Michigan. They did that because they believe in working together to make an eternal difference in others lives. Sharing about the one and only true sources of Hope is the driving power behind their giving. Here’s is a review of just a few of the ways God’s light will continue to be shared in Michigan as a result of your generous giving to the State Missions Offering. Partnering together, Michigan Baptists gave $88,471.32 in 2016 because they understand the vision for Michigan. The Gospel will be shared in more communities throughout Michigan with the new resources made available to partnering churches because you gave. Your gifts helped many church planters, like Bill and Cindy Haas in the Upper Peninsula, who are reaching Native Americans and others for Jesus. Planting new churches is a major part of how we effectively reach all areas of our state. Your investment in the missions offering also means that retreats, children’s camps and youth conferences like the Children’s Ministry Day, are able to share the love of Christ with children, which will transform the next generation. The state missions offering also provides resources to make a difference in people’s lives, disaster relief support, as well as quality training and education throughout many community churches and resource hubs. Michigan Disaster Relief will celebrate 25 years of ministry this year because of your faithfulness to give year after year. Your giving provides the opportunities to resource all of our churches with ministry strengthening options, new Bible study kits and discipleship materials, training conferences, retreat and worship forums, all designed for men and women in leadership and ministry. The “Every Believer A Witness” conference offered in February and March of this year is one example of the conferences supported by the offering. The monetary value received is an important part of the state mission offering campaign, but valued even more is the prayer support given during the Week of Prayer of State Mission and continued throughout the year. We thank you for your continued prayer support of church starting, strengthening and sending. Thank you for "Sharing the Light" in Michigan! “I have come into the world as a light, so that no one who believes in me should stay in darkness.” John 12:46 The Frances Brown State Mission Offering and Week of Prayer for 2017 is September 10-17. Michigan Baptists Giving Totals to Special Mission Offerings in 2016 Frances Brown State Mission Offering: $88,471.32 Annie Armstrong Easter Offering (NAMB): $134,526.15 Lottie Moon Christmas Offering (IMB): $208,044.53 ABOUT THE AUTHOR Sue Hodnett serves as the BSCM Women’s Ministry Director and WMU Michigan Executive Director. #FEBRUARY17

  • The chaplain's sacred moments

    GRAND RAPIDS, MI – I came along side his bed and he said “I don’t need a chaplain because I believe just like the Indians.” I asked him what kind of Indians and he told me all about it. I asked him, “Do you truly believe what you just said because your doctor told me that you only have two weeks at the most before you go to the “happy hunting ground.” He already knew this because his doctor had explained it to him before they sent for me. He looked down at the floor then raised his head with tears running down both cheeks and said, “I really, really need to get ready to meet Jesus. I’ve been impressing other truck drivers for many years with the Indian story but I know Jesus is out there. How do I apologize to Him?How do I get ready to meet Jesus? I want to go to heaven.” After a short trip down the Bible’s “Romans Road” he prayed to receive Christ as his Savior. We were both a tearful mess in happiness. I never made it back in time for the second hospital visit because he didn’t wait the two weeks to go meet Jesus. To be a Chaplain is to be in the right place at the right time and that is a matter of being inside the will of God’s calling. You can find yourself as a minister of the Gospel in a hospital, prison, battlefield, or disaster scene and that is what it means to have the Chaplain’s Sacred Moments. If you are called by God to be a chaplain or feel called to give prayer support to our Michigan Chaplains please feel free to contact me (bdennis@bscm.org). You can also visit our Baptist State Convention of Michigan website (www.bscm.org) and visit the Chaplaincy page under “Sending” or directly at bscm.org/chaplain. There are several topics addressed about the chaplaincy and links for even more information. 2017 BSCM EVENTS FOR CHAPLAINS Soon, we will be scheduling a one-day Chaplain Training and Fellowship Meeting at BSCM Ministry Building (8420 Runyan Lake Road, Fenton, MI 48430). It will be a good time to swap “Sacred Moments Stories” and learn from each other. I am working with the Salvation Army to make Crisis Intervention Classes available to our chaplains. These will help our Michigan chaplains get the required classes for their endorsement from the North American Mission Board. Watch the BSCM.org website for the dates and locations of the upcoming meetings and classes. ABOUT THE AUTHOR Chaplain Bob Dennis is the new Chaplain Coordinator for the BSCM. He became a North American Mission Board endorsed chaplain for the State of Michigan after ministering as a pastor in the Woodland Baptist Association for many years. He currently is a chaplain assigned to the Grand Rapids Home for Veterans. #FEBRUARY17

  • Bigger expectations

    DETROIT, MI – “If I tried to place my finger on the right word, it might land somewhere between you and me, seated in the back of a friend’s car, stopped in Michigan’s darkest city, paused in prayer for the light to come. It reminds me I never quite grasp God’s glory – that I never quite have big enough expectations. Allow me to explain.” FRē Outreach, the sex trafficking outreach at Legacy Church, has branched out from its suburban hotel outreach in Novi, Michigan to cross with international interests. The North American International Auto Show draws nearly one million people to Detroit, and human trafficking is escalated in the city of Detroit during these two weeks. Minors makeup a large demographic of individuals that are sexually exploited, and information on them is sought by both police detectives and the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. I wake up once a month to take pictures of missing kids to local hotels. In the hopes that one child might be seen or found, our FRē Outreach team is dedicated to the search for missing kids and to the hotel staff we educate on sex trafficking. On January 15, our team took the latest pictures and our educational packets into the hive of the Michigan sex trade, every hotel and motel in Detroit. We were given a peek into the hive. As I predicted, my expectations were too small for God’s glory. I often find that prayer is a companion we see as small but mighty, as the mustard seed can move mountains. I regret that I have never seen a mustard seed literally move a mountain, as it would be a wonder of the natural world. However, I have seen such a wonder through the power of prayer. Our team spent months in prayer for God’s protection, His direction, and His motivation to put our hands and feet to work. Then, the outreach came. Prayer was essential. The WMU Prayerwalking team and members of the FRē team joined together in their cars and prayed as we traveled through the city. Have I yet stated that God will conquer our expectations and prove them to be inconsequential? Here is what my eyes beheld. I never expected that I would be calling the Toledo Police on a tip. I never expected that a woman at a motel would listen to us. I never expected that God would put me in a motel in Detroit, have me stand face-to-face with her honest eyes, have me equipped with 12 photos, and have one of those photos spark a memory in her mind. The staff member remembered seeing one of the girls on our posters; she had recently come to the hotel for a room. A missing girl from Toledo made it onto our posters for the outreach, and we happened to visit the motel where she would be recognized. Prayer, an open conversation with God, is more potent than I can comprehend. It took one million international visitors, all the hotels and motels of Detroit, five carloads of willing servants, and one motel employee to hear the whisper in my ear. I never anticipated the opportunity to pass on information concerning a child’s case. Prayer enabled our outreach serve one lost sheep, and I heard the word – God is faithful. ABOUT THE AUTHOR Rachel Lipovsky is a writer at Divinely Enchanted, a soon-to-be university graduate in marketing and management, and a mad lover of Jesus and his ministries. You can find more about the author and her work at DivinelyEnchanted.com. #FEBRUARY17

  • Stanley's expansive In Touch Ministries reaching globe

    ATLANTA, GA (BP) – When pastor Charles Stanley launched "The Chapel Hour" in 1972 on Atlanta-area television stations, he probably never dreamed that 45 years later his ministry would become so expansive that it would cover most of the earth. Many may contend that few people have had the impact upon the world for good and for God like the pastor of Atlanta's First Baptist Church and the founder and president of In Touch Ministries. "In Touch with Dr. Charles Stanley" programs are seen and heard around the world on more than 2,800 radio and televisions outlets. And, through the means of modern technology and communication, the former Southern Baptist Convention president's messages can be heard on every continent in 150 countries. His sermons have been translated into 114 different languages and counting. 'The most exciting time in history' In his book "Courageous Faith," Stanley writes, "We are now closer than ever to getting His Word out to all people. With the Bible in more languages and with technological improvements, God has enabled us to reach even the most secluded tribes on the planet. "I believe we are living in the most exciting time in history, able to tell so many people in so many different countries about Jesus. Platforms for communication that no one dreamed possible when I was a boy are now everyday tools for taking the Gospel around the world." One of the communication devices Stanley was referring to is the pocket-sized Messenger, In Touch Ministries' flagship solar-powered audio device that holds up to 65 of Stanley's sermons, the New Testament, Psalms and Proverbs in a variety of languages. The Messenger can hold content in two languages at a time. There are actually eight different devices in the Messenger Lab family, each one designed to meet the needs of specific people groups who have their own communication challenges. Distribution of the solar-powered audio devices To date In Touch has given out more than 750,000 of these solar-powered audio devices valued at a total of more than $26 million. In Touch does not sell the devices, but gives them away as a part of their worldwide ministry. Since the shelf life of each device is long and each device must pass certain stress tests to ensure durability they can be used for years. Some of the devices are used to communicate the Gospel to house churches and Bible study groups. So, one device could potentially touch the lives of hundreds, if not thousands, of people. Saved from a bullet by the Messenger Many soldiers in the Ukrainian army were given Messengers, which they put in their uniform shirt pockets. In one battle one of those soldiers was shot and the bullet hit him in his chest where the Messenger was in his pocket. The device saved his life. The soldier was apparently only momentarily dismayed by being shot, but devastated that the bullet had disabled his Messenger. He sent the damaged Messenger to the offices at In Touch in Atlanta and requested one that was operational and would allow him to hear Stanley's messages. Stanley, in sharing the story of that Ukrainian soldier, held up the Messenger that stopped the bullet, and exclaimed, "The device will save your life; but the message will save your soul." In 2014 when pro-Russian separatists were fighting Ukrainian forces in eastern Ukraine a Russian soldier got a Messenger off of a dead Ukrainian soldier. After listening to Stanley's messages on the Messenger the Russian soldier accepted Christ as his Savior and decided to go to a Ukrainian church. He walked in with his military uniform on and weapon in hand, but sat down and listened to the sermon. After the service ended the congregants invited him back for the following Sunday. But they urged him not to wear his Russian military uniform or bring his weapon, to avoid causing people to be anxious and uneasy. From the Pygmies of Africa to prisons of El Salvador Brad Brown, chief information officer for In Touch Ministries, noted, "The missionaries we work with have been able to take the Messenger into the rainforest of the Congo to the Pygmies. These people are among the poorest of the poor, but are as deserving of the Gospel as anyone. We love getting the message of redemption to people who couldn't get it any other way." Brown continued, "One of our Messenger Lab devices is called the LightStream, which we've put on water towers in Africa and South America. People within the vicinity of that tower can pick up the messages from this device on their cellphone Bluetooth or Wi-Fi and download Stanley's sermons and the Bible. "We also plant the Lightstream outside refugee camps so that those inside the camps can get the good news of the Gospel," Brown said. "We also have Southern Baptist missionaries in countries where there are significant restrictions on preaching the Gospel. They are able to distribute the Messenger where large groups of people gather to listen to the Word of God. "There is a blind man in Budapest, Hungary," Brown said, "who gives out Messengers to other blind people. Those who can't see can hear. And those who can't read, can also hear. "We have missionaries in Norway, Turkey, Africa, the Middle East, Southeast Asia -- all over the world," he said, "who are delivering the Messenger to people who would never be able to hear the Gospel otherwise. We even have access to prisons in El Salvador. We have distributed the Messenger to every continent on earth, including Antarctica." A teaching partner with In Touch Bill Loveless is spending his retirement years in ministry as a teaching partner with In Touch. In 2016, Loveless went to South Sudan to distribute some Slates (electronic tablets with Messenger content and pastor resources) in a small village at the base of the Lopit Mountains. Loveless reported, "When I was praying about the trip, my friends kept telling me, 'It's dangerous over there.' But God took me to Psalm 31, which is a beautiful Psalm on God's protection, and I felt like He was saying, 'I've got your back. Don't worry about it.' "Other than the civil war that's been going on, the main problem is tribal warfare. But at no time did I feel in harm's way. All of the men carried AK-47s on their shoulders, mostly to ward off cattle thieves. If you didn't have a gun, you were a pastor." Loveless commented about how receptive the pastors and others were to his teaching and how thrilled they were to understand the truth of God's Word that they had never understood before. He told about showing the Jesus film, how the whole village turned out to see it, and the wonderful response of those who trusted Christ as Savior. Distributing 10,000 Messengers a month In Touch currently distributes approximately 10,000 Messengers a month. They are available for distribution through missionaries, church volunteer mission groups, and to those in the military and those in prison. Stanley noted, "The Gospel can penetrate any darkness, any theological or philosophical defenses, any hardened heart. People are saved because the Spirit testifies that what they've heard is the truth." ABOUT THE AUTHOR J. Gerald Harris is editor of The Christian Index (www.christianindex.org), newsjournal of the Georgia Baptist Convention. #FEBRUARY17

  • God is pro-choice

    FENTON, MI – Some of you who just read the title to this article had to race to the medicine cabinet because you had to take your blood pressure medicine in order to keep you from going into cardiac arrest. You can't believe that anyone would have the audacity to think that God would come down on the side of the pro-abortionist. Others of you may be saying to yourself or someone in your presence, "Now that's the kind of enlightened thinking I like to hear." But before any of you "blow a gasket" or enter into a joyous jig, you should consider what the title states and what it does not. Your presuppositions may have again taken over your thoughts before you know all the facts. You see, presuppositions are like wearing tinted glasses. Everything you see through those eye coverings affects and changes your perception of reality. Even though the change may be slight, nonetheless what you perceive is not always completely accurate. The problem is that we get our presuppositions much like we contract the measles. We are not quite sure from whence they come, but the evidence that we have been infected is without doubt. The question then arises, "Can we truly be without presuppositions?" The answer is no, but we can be aware that we are affected by them and adjust our actions, attitudes and decisions accordingly. Hence, It is vitally important that we see and understand things from God's perspective. That is, we must presuppose God is the ultimate source of truth and knowledge. Such an issue to which we can apply this premise is that of "Pro-Choice vs Pro-Life". First of all, I believe (presupposition! based on the fact of and faith in the living, personal, creative God) that He sets apart human life as unique and valuable since it bears His image. [Genesis 1:26-27]. Secondly He therefore preserves and protects human life as no other life on earth. [Psalm 8:4-5] We are not just plants and animals that are only pieces of an enormous floating ecosystem. Third, that kind of life begins at conception and continues to develop in the womb where God is at work; shaping the child into the precise kind of person He desires it to be. [Psalm 22:9-10; Psalm 51:5; Psalm 139:13-16; Matthew 1:18-20; Luke 1:41] Fourth, since it is God's will that every child's life be protected after birth, (thou shall not kill) it is certainly His will that such protection apply to the child in his or her prenatal state. It is, therefore, my presupposition that we are ultimately responsible and accountable to God for our actions. If my logic and presuppositions are correct then I understand God to be Pro-Choice. That is, HE CHOOSES LIFE for all humans and so should we. We should especially do so for those who do not have the opportunity to choose for themselves, the pre-born. The sanctity of human life is precious to God and thus must be precious to man. Those who do not chose life but say that before birth the human within a mother’s womb is nothing more than a mass of lifeless tissue presuppose that God is not who He says He is and that life within a womb is not precious. Their argument is based on the faulty presupposition that a woman’s right of choice, whether for convenience, health or circumstance must take precedence over the rights of the pre-born to choose life and the choice of God to give it. What we must do in addressing this or any issue is to honestly analyze our logic and reasoning, and decide whether or not we are presupposing there is a God to whom we are accountable or not. The man or woman who believes they are nothing more than animals and that there is no God will ultimately act and think as animals. The Choice is up to us. ABOUT THE AUTHOR Tim Patterson is Executive Director/Treasurer of the Baptist State Convention of Michigan. Elected unanimously in May of 2015, Patterson formerly served for 9 years as pastor of Hillcrest Baptist Church in Jacksonville, Fla. He also served as trustee chair and national mobilizer for the North American Mission Board. #FEBRUARY17

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