![]() ![]() Ridgewood, Port Arthur, revamps to retain teens and disciple parents Written by Norm Miller Posted Tuesday, March 17, 2009
What is Age-Integrated Discipleship? Come see it in action! Four times a year (Jan. April, July and Oct.) 1. Stay a Saturday night in the home of a GFBC family (based on availability) 2. Attend a GFBC Sunday service 3. Enjoy a fellowship meal after the service 4. Participate in a Q&A session with GFBC elders If this interests you, send an email to info@gracefamilybaptist.net
These words, taken from the foreword of a new book, Turning the Ship, pinpoint the problem that troubled Dustin Guidry, pastor of Written by Guidry, the book chronicles how he and staff members came to grips with, and solved their unwillingness to place their children in age-segregated, church discipleship programs, be they Sunday school, children’s church, youth department and camps, even the nursery, all of which were the traditional methodology at Ridgewood. Following a long season of soul-searching and scriptural study, Guidry and staff have returned to a biblical model of discipleship and to those days long gone cited in the opening sentence above, cited from the foreword of Guidry’s book, and written by Voddie Baucham, pastor of Grace Family Baptist Church in Spring, Texas. According to Baucham, Guidry has “done what many thought was impossible. He has taken a neo-traditional church and moved it toward family integration. In Turning the Ship, he offers an honest, hard-hitting, no-holds-barred look at the origins, the path, obstacles, and the tremendous rewards of his church’s journey. This is not a panacea. Nor is it a program-oriented marketing scheme designed to get every church on the same path in forty days. This is one man’s story of triumph, tragedy, heartache, and joy as he pursued biblical ecclesiology with tenacity that at times resembled Jacob wrestling with the angel.” Taking the cue from “The whole premise of the book is basically rejecting the secularization of the church, and relying on the sufficiency of Scripture for all matters of faith and practice,” Guidry told the TEXAN. This includes promoting biblical manhood and womanhood, he said. “This is a genuine move of God that’s happening,” Guidry said. “And it’s defying the norms of the culture of rebellious teens and the disconnect between children and parents.” Guidry cited Guidry paraphrased the essence of what church leaders told him about what’s happened at Among other things, Guidry attributes such perceptions to male church members assuming their biblical role of spiritual headship in the home. “ Guidry notes that the change holds an evangelistic appeal: “The people who are lost and hurting see the realness, the genuiness here. There’s something in them that says, ‘That’s right.’ “We don’t claim perfection, but we try to follow the one who is,” he explained. “It’s such unity that gives us a platform for the gospel. We have untold witnessing opportunities with neighbors and co-workers. People see a difference, and they want what they see.” Baucham -- whose church also enjoys the fruits of family-integrated discipleship -- notes in the foreword that Turning the Ship isn’t “for the faint of heart.” Ridgewood Deacon James Roberts, who is also a senior petro-chemist, agrees with Baucham. Roberts read the book and sent the following email to Guidry: “It was not easy reading some parts because it was true. It was not easy staying in the boat while it was turning. It was not easy having my mask removed. It's always going to hurt when you must face correction. Praise the Father, Son, and the Holy Spirit for the heart and the strength to get through it. ‘You will know the truth and the truth will set you free.’ I have a lot of regret for wasted years, but now I have seen the truth. I'm learning and growing more than ever. I'm excited about finally being on the right path and going in the right direction. I can only pray that others will face the correction and allow God to complete His work. ‘For I am confident of this very thing, that He who began a good work in you will perfect it until the day of Christ Jesus.’ I thank God for how He is using you. Continue to stand for Him!” Guidry is as humbled by that email as he is about the progress and future of The current issue of To get your copy of Turning the Ship, log on to www.turningtheship.net ISSUE: CONTENTS
Jerry Pierce | Managing Editor Bonnie Pritchett | TEXAN Correspondent MELISSA DEMING | TEXAN Correspondent Norm Miller Norm Miller | TEXAN Correspondent Jim Richards | Executive Director MELISSA DEMING | TEXAN Correspondent Tammi Reed Ledbetter | News Editor NORM MILLER | TEXAN Correspondent MELISSA DEMING | TEXAN Correspondent MELISSA DEMING | TEXAN Correspondent MORE... |
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