The Report

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

FRANK COX

 It was my good pleasure to listen and talk to Frank Cox yesterday, in Fultondale, Alabama.  Frank Cox is a candidate for president of the Southern Baptist Convention meeting in Indianapolis, June 10-11, 2008.

I listened as Dr Cox shared his heart as to why he is allowing himself to be nominated to the highest position in SBC life by one of the most beloved evangelists in America, Junior Hill.

Frank Cox spoke plainly and honestly and did not dodge any question asked of him. He looked me in the face when we talked personally. (I believe that is always a sign of good character in a man.)

I learned the following about Frank Cox:

His daddy is a long time Southern Baptist pastor. He and Frank's momma taught Frank to believe God's Word was God's Word and that it is perfect in every way. (Thank God for godly parents)  Frank was saved in a revival meeting  while still a young fellow. Later he was called of God to preach the gospel when he was a teenager. (Thank God for His glorious call on the lives of young men. Frank knows what it is like to be a young man with the call of God upon him.)  Frank's ministry as a gospel preacher started at a time when the American culture was in a major transition. (Frank knows what it is like to confront a changing culture with the gospel of Christ.)

As he shared the story of his journey it became evident that the values of a godly desire to be a loving husband and father were ingrained deeply into the heart and soul of Frank Cox. (It is very true that Frank Cox has had a blessed ministry of which he gives God all the glory, but Frank understands what it means to suffer as a man and as a servant of God) Frank's first wife died young, leaving him with a little boy to raise.  Many men would have quit, but not Frank. He hunkered down, bit the bullet, trusted God with all of his heart and took care of his boy and preached the gospel of Jesus.  Twenty-eight years have passed and the evidence of a devoted life is evident in the fact that the man is still preaching the same gospel, loving that son and the two other children God has blessed him and the fine lady who became his wife and loved Frank's first son as her own. Frank Cox has a strong Christian family. (I believe that is another sign of character in a man.)

Frank Cox is a Southern Baptist in the very best ways a person can be.  He is theologically sound. He has a heart for evangelism and missions. (He spoke of the need for biblical evangelism and missions at least six time in less than thirty-five minutes yesterday.) 

The Cooperative Program giving of the church he has served for so long and faithfully speaks for itself. North Metro gives 13.1 percent to missions through the CP. This does not include other mission support he has lead the church to support related to Southern baptist causes. It also does not include sponsoring many missional endeavors both here in the states and on the foreign mission field.

Frank Cox has lead North Metro Baptist Church to do its best Frank said he believes every Southern baptist church should just do its best as a supporter of the Cooperative Program.  (He does not advocate a set percentage for any church. He just believes that each church should seek to do its best to support the CP.)  He has also lead the church not to forget to be a missional presence in its community, nation and world, living incarnationally to advance the Kingdom of God sharing and living out the gospel.

Frank Cox knows the body politic of the SBC. He has served as a trustee of the EC and in several other positions within the SBC and his state convention. He understands the importance of the role of trusteeship to the proper function of our boards, agencies and institutions.

Frank has never forgotten where he came from. He is a fan and supporter of small church pastors having been one himself. Actually he has experience serving as a pastor of every size of church within the SBC. (Frank still preaches in small churches with the same love for the preaching of the gospel to men, women, boys and girls as he does in a mega-church.

Frank Cox is a pastor with a heart for the gospel in evangelism and missions. He is a true Southern Baptist statesman who understands the nature and climate of our beloved convention in the postmodern world. He will lead us to confront our culture unashamedly with the gospel on our lips, ministry and missions in our hands and love for lost people in our hearts and a solid theology in in our minds.

I believe the SBC meeting in Indianapolis, June 10-11, 2008 should elect frank Cox as its next president. Frank Cox is a man of character.  Hard work can get a man many places, but it is character that sustains him. And it takes godly character to sustain him.

Frank Cox has godly character and he will seek to lead the SBC toward the same.

cb




Thursday, May 15, 2008

POSTMODERN UMPIRES

More and more we see the denial of absolutes among people as the ideas of postmodernity gain strength and acceptance within our culture. For many truth is not truth until they say it is. It does not matter what the strike zone has been over the centuries, many "umpires" are now making their own strike zones and declaring the historic, well established strike zones as INDECIPHERABLE.  The following "UMPIRE" story illustrates the point:

Three umpires were discussing a game which had been rather difficult due to arguments over balls and strikes with both players and coaches.

The PREMODERN umpire said, "There are balls and there are strikes, and I call them what they are."

The MODERN umpire says, "There are balls and there are strikes, and I call them as I see them."

The POSTMODERN umpire says, "There are balls and there are strikes, but they are nothing until I call them balls or strikes."

No wonder it is hard to play "BASEBALL" today.  Some of the UMPIRES are  constantly trying to change the rules.

You know I am not really talking about baseball. In truth, baseball umpires, in general, understand the rules of the game and adhere to them no matter what the coaches and players do.

I am talking about "PREACHERS" and especially Southern Baptist preachers who should know better.

In a recent comment thread of a popular Baptist blog, Bart Barber made a very valid point and I want to use it here to make my point specific as to what much of our problem is within the SBC today. Bart stated that many folks today seem to see the Bible as "INDECIPHERABLE."

It seems that today,  many preachers say the Bible is inerrant.  They even say it is sufficient. Yet, for some reason, they speak as if the Bible is indecipherable. They all but refuse to accept any absolutes.

They really get frustrated and indignant when those of us who identify ourselves unashamedly as Baptist say things like; "Baptist ecclesiology is biblical ecclesiology."

They want to constantly reinvent the wheel as if the wheel has ceased to roll.

Well, they are wrong. Wheels still roll just fine. Balls and strikes are still balls and strikes even if the umpire does not understand the game he is supposed to be calling.  And, Baptist ecclesiology is still biblical ecclesiology, no matter how many preachers who have been completely saturated with postmodern ideas and faulty doctrine try to superimpose it over established and biblical theology say it is not.

Therefore, BATTER UP and lets call them what the are because some things are unchangeable no matter what culture says or does.

cb

Sunday, May 11, 2008

COWEN BACK IN THE SADDLE AGAIN


"Whoopi-ty-aye-oh

Rockin' to and fro

Back in the saddle again

Whoopi-ty-aye-oh

I go my way

Back in the saddle again"

This Gene Autry song fits Dr. Gerald Cowen and has all of his life. When I heard he was going to retire from Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary my first thought was; "Sure." "I bet he will be retired for about two days." 

Now here he is, back in the saddle again doing what he does best; teaching others to shepherd the flocks of God. My respect for Dr. Cowen goes back years. He has always been a stand-up guy. It was Gerald Cowin who gave me strong counsel when I was very wrong a few years ago. He cared enough to call my hand.  I am glad he was around to help me.

I am also glad to see SEBTS is in the forefront of theological education in a missional way by helping Dr. Cowen establish a Bible Institute in El Salvador. 

You can take it to the bank that those who graduate from this school will have a good understanding of biblical ecclesiology.  Gerald Cowen is a churchman. They will also know biblical evangelism and preaching. Dr. Cowen is a practitioner of evangelism and an excellent preacher.

Read the following Baptist Press article.  This is great Baptist news of the highest order; A great teacher, working in cooperation with a great seminary, going to do a great work, to advance the Kingdom of God, to the glory of God. All God's people said; A-MEN.

Prof to launch school in El Salvador 

By Staff
May 8, 2008


WAKE FOREST, N.C. (BP)--A new Bible institute and master's-level school in El Salvador is being initiated by a Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary professor.

Gerald Cowen, senior professor of New Testament and Greek and former dean of Southeastern's undergraduate college, hopes to begin the school this fall at Vida Nueva Baptist Church in San Salvador, capital of the Central American nation.

"The group in El Salvador with whom I will be working has the vision and the leadership to impact all of Latin America," Cowen said in an SEBTS news release. "This is our goal."

Cowen, who will serve as the first president, plans to work toward a fully accredited program of study.

Southeastern will partner with Cowen's theological initiative by assisting the school financially in building its library as well as by sending professors to teach on an annual basis.

Daniel Akin, president of Southeastern Seminary, said Cowen is well prepared and equipped for this new assignment.

"Gerald Cowen has a passion for evangelism and theological education," Akin said. "I have seen him weep for lost souls, and I have watched him train students out of his Greek New Testament for 20 years. He has a great heart for Mexico and all of Latin America. Having served as dean of our college for more than a decade, Gerald also has the administrative skills and experience to make this institute and seminary a success. We are delighted to partner with Dr. Cowen in this exciting adventure.

"The prospects for providing theological training for ministers in El Salvador and beyond to all of Central America is an awesome prospect," Akin added. "Gerald Cowen is the right man at the right place at the right time."

Bruce Ashford, director of Southeastern's Lewis A. Drummond Center for Great Commission Studies, noted that Cowen has worked in Central and South America for many years, leading mission trips that have led to thousands of professions of faith.

"The Lord has blessed the work of his hands and will continue to do so as he builds a Great Commission Bible college and seminary in San Salvador," Ashford said.

David Nelson, dean of the faculty at Southeastern, also voiced a vision for theological education in that part of the world.

"Southeastern has an ongoing commitment to helping to provide theological education in strategic locations around the globe for the sake of the Great Commission, and this partnership enables us to extend that ministry even further," Nelson said.

Cowen was commissioned along with others heading to the mission fields during a Southeastern chapel service in April. Cowen arrived at Southeastern in 1992 from Criswell College in Dallas. He holds master of theology and doctor of theology degrees from New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary.
--30--
Based on a news release from Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary.

© Copyright 2008 Baptist Press

Wednesday, May 07, 2008

PATTERSON SPEAKING WISELY

During the last few years I have openly disagreed with some of the statements and actions of Paige Patterson. I have also defended many of the statements and actions of Paige Patterson in that same period of time.

He has responded to the report on the decline of the SBC. His response is very worthy of serious reading and evaluation. His evaluation does contain the grit and razor-edged manner of speaking he is famous for and it reminds me of the Patterson of the days of the Conservative Resurgence as he points out four precise reasons for a decline in the SBC.

I paraphrase his reasons for the decline here and I am in agreement with his summation of the problem.

1. The busyness of the age. (reality)
2. Our failure to witness. (bulls-eye)
3. Shallow preaching from Baptist pulpits. (TEN RING AT 1000 YARDS)
4. In our hot pursuit of cultural adaptability we look more and more like the culture and the world. (The more I read the theology and cultural philosophies of so called leaders of postmodern Christianity as it confronts the culture of Postmodernity, the more I agree with what Patterson is saying here. Guys like McLaren, Pagitt, and Jones are about 10 miles wide and 1/4 inch deep as far as biblical and theological truths are concerned and Willow Creek should be ashamed for having McLaren to speak to any group who will seek to lead students in the following of Jesus.)

This article may be a little long, but very worth the time to read it. (It is not as long as some of the commentary coming from other places of late blasting guys like Malcolm Yarnell and Bart Barber for their good faith efforts to bring a resolution for a regenerate church membership to the SBC.)



FIRST-PERSON: Of grinches, goblins, gremlins and ghosts
By Paige Patterson
May 6, 2008


Paige Patterson
FORT WORTH, Texas (BP)--There are a good many things about which most of us maintain a healthy skepticism. Some of those are listed in the title of this essay. However skeptical you may be, there are two categories of humans for whom at least one of the above is very real -- the terrified and those who love to tell ghost stories to keep the fearful tied in a knot. While statistics and their interpretation are not unimportant (3,000 saved on the Day of Pentecost), they often function in Southern Baptist life to remind me of a search for goblins that have no reality.

LifeWay recently released statistics gathered from reports of the churches. Doomsayers and analysts immediately began to explain to readers what the numbers "meant" and why such catastrophic shrinkage had occurred in Southern Baptist churches. So, to paraphrase Luke, "since many have taken in hand" this assessment, maybe one more will do no harm. In fact, another perspective might even be helpful.

At the outset one can only say that the picture does not look the way those of us who played a role in the Conservative Renaissance had imagined and hoped. We did not embark upon that massive effort merely for the sake of truth, even though such would surely have been noble. Neither were we convinced that full confidence in the truth of Scripture would result in more evangelism and missions because we knew of historical cases of orthodoxy that apparently produced spiritual pride, atrophy and sometimes detestable legalism. But we could discover no place in history where any movement based on questioning the authority and accuracy of God's Word ever produced evangelistic fervor, missionary zeal or healthy churches. This latter truth, which vitally affected the eternal destiny of millions, drove us to risk the movement thus spawned. We prayed and hoped that revival would follow, and we have not yet abandoned that hope. So while I am mortified by the picture of dropping baptisms, I fear that some proposed interpretations and solutions have little more to commend them than do the "gremlins." Consider these observations:

-- Thumbing through the recently arrived 2007 Annual of the Southern Baptists of Texas Convention, I counted about 500 churches (or 25 percent) that did not respond with an annual report. The national average may be lower, but I know that fewer churches are responding. I also suspect that a major reason for no response is embarrassment about those statistics. Nevertheless, if 98 percent had responded, how would baptisms look? No one knows.

-- The small membership loss is actually not such a tragedy. I want to grow, but I want to do so legitimately. There is a need to purge our rolls of two to four million more who never attend and are not involved in any way. Let's be honest: We lie to ourselves and to the world to count people as "members" who no longer have anything to do with our churches. If we cleansed our rolls, we would take a giant step toward integrity and the blessings of God -- and our ratio for baptisms in relation to membership would fall considerably. It would not be "good" until it is at least one to one, but it would be much improved.

-- Thrashing the Conservative Renaissance as though it were somehow responsible for this decline is irresponsible. One need only ask for the evangelistic and missionary statistics for the moderate churches whose leaders provided the opposition to conservatives in order to debunk this allegation. The present state cannot please our Lord, but it is a safe bet that He is more pleased about what we are attempting globally than about the social and environmentally based programs of moderate and liberal churches. If the Conservative Renaissance had not happened, our evangelism would look exactly like moderate churches, which are in decline.

-- "Mean spiritedness" is certainly never pleasing to God. But I am less than certain which Baptists are guilty of the charge of "mean spiritedness" and, therefore, share in the cause of the decline. Without doubt an abuse of congregationalism has occurred in Southern Baptist life. The turning of opportunities to seek the leadership of the Holy Spirit and determine strategies to get the Gospel to all into monthly town meeting debates and expressions of personal opinion has driven many from the churches and still more from congregationalism. This is tragic.

But I cannot help but suspect that an incipient post-modern influence is the womb from which part of this criticism arises. The world and much of "Christianity" is irritated that Southern Baptists on one hand continue to oppose abortion, the practicing of homosexuality, gender confusion, the alcoholic beverage industry that annually kills, harms, and creates so much sorrow in the social order, and on the other hand support biblical role assignments in the home and church. We can always improve the graciousness with which we articulate our positions, but we have no choice about what we endorse and what we reject if we follow Christ and the Bible. Jesus Himself warned, "If you were of the world, the world would love its own. Yet because you are not of the world, but I chose you out of the world, therefore the world hates you" (John 15:19).

The same is true for doctrine. To be unapologetically Baptist, embracing the exclusivism of Christ in salvation, the inerrancy of God's Word, and the concept of a regenerate church witnessed by baptism and disciplined to live for Christ is to the minds of some, "mean-spirited." Again, sensitivity of expression will help, but doctrinal clarity is not popular nor has it ever been.

Who are these "mean-spirited" among us? Is it also "mean-spirited" to make broad imprecise allegations of "mean-spiritedness"? Are some who make these charges guilty themselves?

-- The allegation that the "young leaders" are leaving Southern Baptists, and we will never reach our world if we do not change and adopt methods that appeal to the culture is to me the strangest of all. Who are these young leaders? How many left? How are they doing now? Did they leave "because they were never really a part of us" (1 John 2:19)? I have spent the last 33 years of my life working with young people destined to become leaders. People in Florida like Anthony George; in North Carolina like J.D. Greear; in Texas like Nathan Lino, Byron McWilliams, Brad Jurkovich, Michael Lewis and Mark Howell to name just the first ones that come to my mind today. They would never refer to themselves as "young leaders." They know too well that they were called to be servants and pastors and that "leadership" is something arising out of what my father liked to call "moral ascendancy."

In the church, genuine leaders are not simply proclaimed to be leaders. In Baptist life, both young and old leaders have been recognized as such either because they were great preachers/teachers of biblical revelation or because they were wonderful, consistent soul-winners or because they built great churches or because their spirits and attitudes were the sources of great encouragement to others. They did not yield to those who were "despising their youth" but were "examples to the flock" (1 Timothy 4:12). This is precisely what most, like the ones mentioned above, have done. But some self-proclaimed "young leaders" appear to be more concerned about embracing the culture, rejecting the past and demanding personal liberty rather than following the biblical road to leadership.

-- The suggestion that sensitivity to the culture and the incorporation of that culture into the church and its worship is the change, which if implemented, would start us on the road to evangelistic effectiveness is misguided. I am the first to admit that dullness and "Baptist tradition" were too often the rule in our churches. There is no excuse for being boring or settling into numbing sameness. For years I inveighed against high church music, not because I did not like it but because it communicated with less than 10 percent of the people. But has somebody missed the obvious here? The more attune to culture Southern Baptists have become and the more we have incorporated the world into our worship, the more our baptisms have dropped! Although I am not certain that there is a connection, as will become evident in what follows, I admit that I am suspicious.

Well, the time has come to identify the real problems -- not ghosts and goblins. The first failure is the busyness of the age, which has robbed churches of serious prayer. Once Southern Baptist people were almost entirely from the working class and not highly valued in the social order. When we were not respectable, we sought the intervention of God. And He responded powerfully. We will continue to have downward trends until we recognize that it is "not by might nor by power but by my Spirit says the Lord Almighty" (Zechariah 4:6). Prayerlessness is foe number one.

The second culprit is our failure to witness. We are so adept at "marketing" and "programming" that we have failed to share Christ individually on a consistent basis. In fact, because meaningful church membership has been traded for numerical addition, most of our people hardly witness at all.

Third, the shallow state of preaching has exacerbated the lethargy of the church and left the lost with no real Word from God. The pastor ought to be the major source of theological understanding and the most able teacher of the Bible. Anemic pulpits create anemic churches and denominations.

Finally, our churches, in their hot pursuit of cultural adaptability look more and more like the culture and the world. Even at its best, the church is not good at being the world. In looking like a faint imitation of the world, the holiness of God and a thirst to be like Him have apparently been lost. And with the loss of holiness has come the corresponding loss of power and appeal!

Well do I recognize that these four culprits offer nothing new, nothing glitzy, nothing mysterious, nothing cool. But for all their antiquity, their simplicity, their lack of creativity, they are just as true today as ever. Style, culture, dress, drink, etc. have almost nothing to do with how churches perform. The need today is not for self-appointed analysts manipulating statistics and pontificating about their meaning, but who are usually less than stellar soul-winners, Bible teachers or pastors. The great need is for us to sense our spiritual poverty, seek God's face, and do his bidding. Folks, it is really that simple.

Maybe we need to remember this admonition from Jeremiah. It has little to do with culture, styles or attire but everything to do with what is really of consequence: "Thus says the Lord: 'Stand in the ways and see, and ask for the old paths, where the good way is, and walk in it; then you will find rest for your souls.'"(Jeremiah 6:16).
--30--
Paige Patterson is president of Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Fort Worth, Texas.

© Copyright 2008 Baptist Press

Wednesday, April 30, 2008

A GLOBAL CULTURAL SHIFT

The attached video presentation is living proof our world is in a "CULTURAL SHIFT" of GLOBAL proportions. This music video is of a Finnish rock band called: THE LENINGRAD COWBOYS performing the State Anthem of ALABAMA (now known as the SABANATION) before a group of screaming RUSSIAN teenagers. The bigger illustration of the fact we are in a global cultural shift is the fact that former official SOVIET RED ARMY CHOIR now known simply as the RED ARMY CHOIR joins the Finnish rock group in singing our beloved ANTHEM.

Any American would know that had Alabama been in charge of foreign affairs back during the days of the CUBAN MISSILE CRISIS we would have NUKED the SOVIET UNION into dust and "whupped" Castro with a good hickory limb and opened up fishing camps and B-B-Q joints all over Cuba and introduced the Cubans to real football.

Now, all jokes aside; If the RED ARMY can sing SWEET HOME ALABAMA before a screaming crowd of Russian youth surely Southern Baptists are capable of working together to share the gospel, in its purity, to all the world, faithfully carrying out the Great Commission, working together with other New Testament churches without compromising our BAPTIST IDENTITY or being constantly challenged to do so by those who would desire us to cease to be who we are.

cb

Monday, April 21, 2008

A DANGER TO EMERGING, CONTEMPORARY AND TRADITIONAL NEW TESTAMENT FELLOWSHIPS

I have been reading the writings of Brian McLaren lately. That of which I have read brings me to the conclusion that New Testament churches and pastors of any "stripe" or "model" need to be very careful about who their youth ministers and church leaders, in general, are reading and listening to these days. The following Baptist Press article by David Roach who is a writer for SBTS and serves as a correspondent of BP well proves such a concern. 

It is long for a blog post, but it is worthy of contemplation for those who are serious about biblical discipleship of God's flocks.


Lessen focus on eternity, McLaren says at Willow Creek student ministries conference
By David Roach
Apr 18, 2008


SOUTH BARRINGTON, Ill. (BP)--The emphasis Christians place on the traditional Christian doctrines of hell and the second coming of Jesus inhibits believers from living effective lives of service in this world, according to speaker and author Brian McLaren.

McLaren explained his views April 9-10 at Willow Creek Community Church in South Barrington, Ill., as a featured speaker during the Willow Creek Association's annual Shift student ministries conference. During the conference's opening session, Bo Boshers, executive director of student ministries for the Willow Creek Association, said he does not agree with all McLaren's views but that all youth ministers should consider his thoughts.

In his most recent book, "Everything Must Change" (Thomas Nelson), McLaren commends Willow Creek pastor Bill Hybels as one of only a handful of evangelical leaders properly addressing global poverty and equity for the world's population.

"Some of us came from a religious tradition or a religious background where our main role was to recruit kids to go to heaven," said McLaren, a controversial leader within the emerging church movement. "And that's a good thing. Mortality rates are still pretty high, and we all have to face that decision. But I'm here to challenge you to think bigger and deeper and in more layers and dimensions about your role."

In a later conference breakout session, McLaren elaborated, "There are some ideas that are not truly ideas of the Gospel but are ideas of the modern understanding of the Gospel. The problem isn't the Bible. The problem is modern rings that we put around the Bible. And what we need to do -- some of us in our thinking -- is to find the courage to snip the ring so that our faith ... can really have a future."

Though he did not specify at Willow Creek which traditional doctrines need revision, McLaren wrote in his 2007 book "Everything Must Change" that the doctrine of hell needs radical rethinking. He argues that people who believe in hell may be inclined to dominate and take advantage of other people, rather than help them.

"Many of us have been increasingly critical in recent years of popular American eschatology in general, and conventional views of hell in particular," he wrote. "Simply put, if we believe that God will ultimately enforce his will by forceful domination, and will eternally torture all who resist that domination, then torture and domination become not only permissible but in some way godly."

The orthodox understanding that Jesus will return at a future date and forcefully conquer all His enemies also needs rethinking, according to McLaren.

"This eschatological understanding of a violent second coming leads us to believe (as we've said before) that in the end, even God finds it impossible to fix the world apart from violence and coercion; no one should be surprised when those shaped by this theology behave accordingly," McLaren wrote.

The book of Revelation does not actually teach that there will be a new heaven and a new earth, he wrote, but that a new way of living is possible within this universe if humans will follow Jesus' example.

By going to the cross, McLaren argued in his book, Jesus committed an act similar to the Chinese student at Tiananmen Square in the late 1980s -- he placed himself in harm's way to demonstrate the injustice of a society that would harm a peaceful and godly man.

However, traditional Christian theology has asserted that Jesus died on the cross as substitute for sinful humanity, taking the punishment that men and women deserved for their sin. Traditional Christian theology also contends that those who do not trust Jesus for their salvation will be punished in hell eternally for their sins and that Jesus will return at a future date to conquer all evil.

At Willow Creek, McLaren outlined some of the world's most pressing problems and explained how humanity is facing several serious crises.

The "prosperity crisis" refers to the fact that humans have turned the quest for prosperity into a religion that exalts possession and consumption at unsustainable levels, he said. The "equity crisis" refers to the growing gap between the world's ultra-rich and its extremely poor, which prompts the poor to resent and even hate the rich minority, while the "security crisis" refers to the danger of war and violence arising from intensifying resentment and fear among people at the opposite ends of the economic spectrum, he said.

In attempts to solve these problems, humans often have resorted to imperialism, revolution, scapegoating and isolation, McLaren said. But Jesus offered an alternative strategy that offers people the prosperity, equity and security they seek, he said.

Jesus told people, "Listen everybody, I want you to stop believing those other stories," McLaren said. "That's in part what the word 'repent' means. I want you to think again about what's going on here. I want you to have a fresh vision of what's going on in this world.

"Repent doesn't just mean feel guilty. That's certainly part of it, but repent means something much bigger than that. It means realize that your entire way of seeing things is misguided and wrong."

The world's hope consists in believing Jesus' teaching that a life of care for others and stewardship of resources is ultimately more fulfilling than a life of seeking wealth and security at the expense of caring for the needy, according to McLaren.

"Jesus is saying that switching sides -- choosing to serve the needs of the poor instead of working the system that favors the rich -- is a way of 'laying up treasure in heaven,' of working for a higher spiritual economy rather than the 'unclean' imperial economy," McLaren wrote.

Citing the Lord's Prayer, he told conference attendees that youth ministers must shift their thinking and teach teens that involvement in earthly matters is more pressing than focus on eternal matters.

"As youth workers, a shift is happening and a shift is needed," he said, "that you become agents of recruiting people, young people, to consider devoting their entire lives to living not just for themselves and their own selfish interests, not just for their nation and their own national interests, but to work as agents of the Kingdom of God, joining with Jesus Christ in His good news of the Kingdom of God."

In the breakout session, McLaren said the world is moving from an era of modern thinking to an era of postmodern thinking and youth ministers must transition their teaching accordingly.

While modern thinking emphasizes analysis, postmodern thinking moves beyond reason and analysis to a focus on larger realities, he said.

"We're in a period of profound shift in our world today," he said. "And what has been familiar to us and our churches is in some ways shaking and crumbling and being reconfigured."

Youth ministry in the postmodern world must stop pointing out to teens the faults of non-Christian religions, McLaren said, because postmodern people do not view critiques positively.

"The kids walk out thinking, 'Man, I don't want to be a Christian because Christians are always attacking everybody else,'" he said. "So you end up giving the opposite message you intended to give because they're living in a world where to be critical seems like it's dangerous because they're worried that people are going to kill each other and blow each other up. We've got to realize the storm is occurring and the landscape is changing."

Though older Christian ministers may be able to remain in the bubble of modern thinking, youth pastors must trust God through this time of transition and make a change to new ways of thinking, he said.

"We're going through this kind of deep shift," he said, "and the non-youth pastors, many of them, feel they can afford to not have to face this because they will get older as their congregation gets older, and their congregation will live in the bubble of modernity as it passes from this scene. But youth pastors don't have that luxury."
--30--
David Roach is a writer for Southern Baptist Theological Seminary and a Baptist Press correspondent.

© Copyright 2008 Baptist Press

Original copy of this story can be found at http://www.bpnews.net/bpnews.asp?ID=27867

Monday, April 14, 2008

A "POTENTIAL" TRAIN WRECK

The Pennsylvania primary is to be held on April 22, 2008.  Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama are there, naturally, to garner votes in hopes of becoming president of the United States, the land of the free, except for the unborn.

The Birmingham News reported that during a forum "devoted to an issue rare on the campaign trail, the two White House hopefuls talked about the presence of God in their lives and how often they read the Bible as well as divisive issues such as abortion, abstinence and human rights within the context of faith."

Obviously, in an effort to reach out to Christian voters in Pennsylvania the two are seeking to present their Christian values and prove they have a deep and abiding faith. Naturally, each of them wants to make sure the good citizens of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania understands that their faith is of a higher quality than that of their opponent.

Their answers to the various questions gives great evidence that if these two potential leaders of the free world are Christians at all, they are at best both spiritual, biblical and theological dwarfs. The very fact that they are even considered as examples of the Christian faith by anyone who claims to be a Christ-Follower is another piece of strong evidence that the United States is riding the hedonistic "ME FIRST TRAIN" RIGHT INTO HELL.  The answers they give relating to the sin of abortion reveals that as our nation rides this train to hell there will be another "potential" train wreck for the unborn around the bend headed for eternity if either of them become president of the United States. Consider their positions on abortion as it is couched in the thin veneer of what they call faith. Or as Obama says of his religion: "religion is a bulwark, a foundation when other things aren't going well."

Examine Hillary's answer when she was asked if life begins at conception.  "I believe the potential for life begins at conception," Clinton said.  "For me, it is also not only about a potential life.  It is about other lives involved......I have concluded, after great, you know, concern and searching my own mind and heart over many years,...that individuals must be entrusted to make this profound decision, because the alternative would be such an intrusion of government authority that it would be very difficult to sustain in our kind of open society."

.."the potential for life begins at conception"...  Obviously Hillary's idea of an open society is one wherein we are so "open" our brains fall out.

Obama answered the same question; "I don't know."  "This is something that I have not, I think, come to a firm resolution on.  I think it's very hard to know what that means, when life begins. Is it when a cell separates?  Is it when the soul stirs?...."

At least Obama answered in his usual hope, lick, and a promise method which has entranced so many other theological dwarfs and the great masses of hedonistic riders of the ME FIRST TRAIN TO HELL.

As I read this kind of stuff from those of which one or the other will probably become the next leader of the free world I can't help but hear the lyrics of HIGHWAY TO HELL by AC/DC.

At the same time I know there is hope because I also hear the severed head of John the Baptist, who was offered up on the altar of hedonism by a former group of ME FIRST TRAIN TO HELL , pleasure seeking riders, crying in the wilderness; "REPENT FOR THE KINGDOM OF GOD IS AT HAND."

I just hope Hillary and Obama hear that same voice before one of them takes over the "TRAIN."

cb