Month: May 2020

Regathering the Church

Brothers and Sisters, May is already here and Lord willing, we will be able to begin regathering with our local churches for worship this month. Although the specific plans for every church will vary in countless ways, here are two important considerations as we approach this time.

First, the goal of the church is not a return to normal. If normal is our goal then it has become our idol and we miss what God is seeking to do in us and through us. Remember the Israelites’ regular reminiscing about the good ole days back in Egyptian slavery as God led them to the Promised Land (Exodus 16:3; 17:3; Numbers 11:4-5; 14:2; 16:13; 20:3-5)? Their fears and idolatry led them into a 40-year detour, as an entire generation wasted away in the wilderness. God regards our bellyaching with no more admiration; therefore beware of idolizing those good ole ‘normal’ days. When churches begin to regather for corporate worship there will be differences and adjustments from a couple months ago, but God remains the same, therefore, we rely on him, not a sense of comfort derived from a cushion of normalcy.

Second, as church leaders think through regathering, we must be prayerful purposeful and prudent.

We must be prayerful, seeking the Lord’s guidance to be clear, for his glory to be displayed and for people to be drawn to Christ. Pray diligently, passionately and regularly for God to move as we regather.

We must be purposeful. What is the biblical purpose for worship and gathering as a church? The Scripture gives us clear purpose that supersedes circumstances calling us to be a redeemed people gathering to worship God intentionally, discipling and being discipled in the truth, and taking the gospel to the lost. The coronavirus has impacted the economy, school schedules, vacations and much more, but it has not changed the purpose Christ has given his church! Stay focused on his purpose and make the most of the time at hand.

Finally, we must be prudent as we make plans to regather. Prudence is the ability to make wise, reasonable, practical and skillful decisions in light of present risks. Prudence derived from scriptural wisdom, the Holy Spirit and wise counselors is essential as church leaders seek the Lord’s clear guidance for their congregation’s regathering. Prudent decisions will vary among congregations, but they must be birthed in prayer and flow from the purpose Christ has given his church. 

As churches seek to regather, please be in prayer for your church leaders to be prayerful, purposeful and prudent in their planning, and that believers not miss what God is doing in and through the church as a result of this crisis.

Author proposes “viral vitality” as remedy for pandemic”s spiritual slump

NASHVILLE—Despite layoffs and sell-offs, shutdowns and lockdowns—even heartbreaking disease and death—the author of a new ebook proposes that “there can be a distinct vitality in our souls” amid the bleak circumstances of a viral pandemic.

“A vitality is available in Christ that can enhance our daily lives, even in a time of social upheaval and widespread grief,” says Art Toalston, author of A Pandemic Proposal: Viral Vitality … Hope for the Human Soul. “As long as we have a heartbeat and can breathe, why not venture forward with an optimized view of life? A coronavirus pandemic cannot alter God’s creation of the human soul.”

Seven Texas Southern Baptists are among the contributors of chapter 8, a collection of brief contemplations by 42 pastors and laypeople reflecting on Scriptures that promote spiritual vitality in their own lives.

Toalston, retired longtime senior editor of Baptist Press, acknowledges that in crisis conditions, this “may not be a euphoric vitality.” However, he maintains, “just as our physical bodies, when well, function as they were intended to do, so too can the spirit within us.”

In chapter 4 of the book, Toalston explains how this might be lived out: “Oddly, or perhaps providentially, a gripping pandemic can be an opportune moment to connect your life, your energies, your readiness to pray, and your finances to a cause, a movement that encompasses the totality of the soul in venturing forth in God’s plan and blessing.”

This passage reflects Toalston’s own experience of taking advantage of “an opportune moment” to respond to the pandemic’s disruption of his own life.

Toalston, who describes himself as a “journalistic adventurer and spiritual disciplines advocate,” lives in the Nashville area. In mid-March his part-time job with the Southern Baptist Historical Library and Archives was suspended when the facility closed to comply with pandemic guidelines.

Toalston began “asking the Lord what I could do to be productive. That’s when and where the thought came to write a book drawing on the Scripture I had memorized over the years.”

Over the next two weeks, he said, “I experienced moment after moment when the Lord took me to various Scriptures that I had copied to note cards over the years and had memorized, meditated upon, and re-memorized whenever they had faded from memory. And it seemed that the Lord gave me the ideas for starting each chapter and ideas for the flow of each chapter. It was a humbling experience.”

The topics covers are:

  • Chapter 1 — Your Soul
  • Chapter 2 — Your Circumstances
  • Chapter 3 — Your Relationships
  • Chapter 4 — Your World
  • Chapter 5 — Your Future
  • Chapter 6 — If You’re Addicted
  • Chapter 7 — Our Vision & Vitality
  • Chapter 8 – Contemplations – These brief scriptural reflections offer grassroots perspectives to end the book.

Texans who wrote reflections are:

  • Joshua Crutchfield, Madisonville; pastor of First Baptist Church, Madisonville; former vice president of the Southern Baptists of Texas Convention – Revelation 21:1
  • Jimmy Draper, Colleyville; former SBC president; former president, LifeWay Christian Resources; former pastor, First Baptist Church, Euless – Jeremiah 17:23-24
  • Susie Hawkins, Dallas; author of From One Ministry Wife to Another; wife of O.S. Hawkins, president of GuideStone Financial Resources of the SBC – John 10:27-28
  • Amy Hebert, Amarillo; mom, writer and wife of Andrew Hebert, lead pastor of Paramount Baptist Church – Psalm 37:23-24
  • Gary Ledbetter, Grand Prairie; Southern Baptists of Texas Convention director of communications and ministry relationships; editor, Southern Baptist TEXAN – Ecclesiastes 2:21, 24; Matthew 6:33
  • Clara Molina, Fort Worth; conference speaker and author; member of the Southern Baptist Hispanic Leaders Council; wife of Bruno Molina, language and interfaith evangelism associate, Southern Baptists of Texas Convention – Philippians 4:8

In discussing his expectations for the book, Toalston says he’s hopeful “the book makes its way to non-Christians” so their lives can be changed as his was. “After I turned to Christ in 1971 on the front porch of my aunt’s house in Newton, Miss., the difference has been night and day,” he said. He pointed out that chapters 1 and 6 include the plan of salvation.

“Second,” Toalston said, “I hope the book makes its way to church members. We need to eradicate anything ho-hum about our faith. We need to optimize our lives by tapping into its supernatural dimension, reflected, for instance, by the fruit of the Holy Spirit described in Galatians 5:22-23 as love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness and self-control.”

“And third,” Toalston said, “I hope it can join with others in challenging the prevailing secular mindset in our country that is dismissive or ridicules the supernatural things of God. Just because something is supernatural doesn’t make it anti-intellectual or nonexistent.

“Christians are intelligent people who are part of an extraordinary heritage of faith through the ages, and that remains viable today and in each new era of the human story. All of life is supernatural, from the cosmos to the tiniest microbes, as is the birth, crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus.”

Editor’s Note: Toalston’s A Pandemic Proposal is now available on Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Pandemic-Proposal-Viral-Vitality-Human-ebook/dp/B086Q5GYLW

Texas Southern Baptists plan, prepare for National Day of Prayer

On Thursday, the Southern Baptists of Texas Convention will join with churches and believers worldwide in the National Day of Prayer. Signed into law in 1952 by President Harry Truman and held each year on the first Thursday in May, the National Day of Prayer is the country’s largest annual gathering focused specifically on prayer.

The occasion, usually marked by large physical gatherings, has transitioned primarily online in the wake of COVID-19 social distancing measures from state and local governments. 

This year, the SBTC’s participation in the National Day of Prayer is in concert with the convention’s “We Will Pray” prayer strategy, designed to get both large and small groups within SBTC churches to pray with renewed passion and intentionality.

SBTC prayer strategist Ted Elmore said the resource is designed to call church members to their knees in repentance and faith.

“It will also help you walk through Scripture together, developing timely and practical prayer strategies for your congregation,” Elmore added.

SBC pastors and churches across the country also participated May 5 in an effort to pray for revival across the country, led by 95-year-old North Carolina pastor Fred Lunsford.

“He [God] extended my years for a reason, and he wanted me to pray for spiritual awakening and to get as many people praying as I could,” Lunsford told Baptist Press. “God spoke into my heart, and I yielded to it. It’s not me; it’s the Lord.”

Over 260,000 people pledged to take part in a day of prayer and fasting in the lead-up to Thursday’s National Day of Prayer.

The SBTC’s Prayer Ministry has curated resources to help spur the convention’s churches toward a greater emphasis on prayer.

“Many have been praying and longing for another Great Awakening to sweep our land. The resources and links on this site are created and curated by the Executive Committee in cooperation with prayer teams of PrayerLink members and are directly related to the ministries of a state Baptist convention, an SBC entity, or a Convention-approved ministry on the SBC event calendar,” Elmore said. “These are made available to the Southern Baptist family with the hope and prayer that they will help spur a movement of God as we pray together for the lost, for our nation, and for the world.”

To learn more about the SBTC’s prayer initiatives, visit https://sbtexas.com/church-ministries/prayer/. 

Mentorship & ministry: Missionary shares “Letters to an Apprentice”

After serving in remote villages of the Amazon and war-torn areas of sub-Saharan Africa, Jeremy Taliaferro knows the importance of having solid Christian mentors in his corner when times get tough.  

The native Texan has served with the International Mission Board for more than 20 years. He and his wife Susan have four children and lead a team of missionaries in Uganda, where they help minister to refugees near the South Sudan border. During his mission career, he has mentored young missionaries, and many of them continue to serve overseas. Taliaferro shares about the lessons he’s learned as an apprentice and mentor in his book, “Letters to an Apprentice: A Culture of Mentorship.” 

“I have had an amazing journey of mentorship throughout my life,” writes Taliaferro, who is member of First Baptist Church in Springtown, Texas, and also partners with Harmony Baptist Church in Weatherford. “And I want everyone to have access to life-changing mentors like I have had. However, that doesn’t just happen.”

In the book, IMB President Paul Chitwood noted that Taliaferro challenges Christians to “steward well their influence in the lives of others.”

“After riding the dusty roads of Uganda with Jeremy, walking through refugee settlements with him, and watching him interact with his children, his team members, and indigenous church leaders, I can testify to the fact that Jeremy is modeling what he encourages his readers to do … his book has inspired and equipped me to be a better mentor.”

There are no perfect mentors, Taliaferro writes. In the book, he shares openly about hard lessons and mistakes he has made as missionary and mentor. He also gives an honest look at mentors who have poured into his life through the years. 

In one chapter that Taliaferro titles, “The Missing Chapter: A Difficult Question,” he writes about a mentor who eventually turned away from his faith in Christ. Taliaferro wrestled at first with whether he should include the man he simply refers to in the book as “Pilgrim.” But he decided it was important to include a chapter about a mentor who disappointed him but still had a positive impact on his life. 

“I remember so vividly as he walked alongside me as I was starting out as a missionary,” Taliaferro writes. “He gave me wisdom and challenged my prideful ideas. I saw him demonstrate a deep love for a hurting people. I saw him lead his family and love everyone around him. But now it’s gone.”

Taliaferro goes on to write his former mentor a letter and expresses his hope that he will one day turn back to Christ. “Although you have closed the door to the Lord, I beg you not to lock it,” he writes, “it is my hope that you will leave the door cracked a bit and let him take it from there.”

Taliaferro hopes readers will better recognize the mentors they have in their life and intentionally seek out opportunities to mentor others.

“Often times we have mentors in our life, and we don’t even notice it,” he said in a video about the book, “and we don’t even recognize them as mentors until years down the road and we realize this person really impacted me.”

For more information about the book, released by Lucid Books, go to https://letterstoanapprentice.com/. Or, go to www.jtaliaferro.com.

COVID-19 financial woes called “opportunity” for pastors

GRAPEVINE—As a presidential economic advisor and head of the largest public endowment in America, Britt Harris has a unique perspective on the financial crisis caused by coronavirus. But it may surprise you.

“Crisis” should be “a positive word to you” that signifies “amazing opportunity,” Harris said during an April 30 leadership webinar hosted by the Southern Baptists of Texas Convention. Christians “have never had an opportunity like this to bring the Lord to the world.”

Financial downturn and cultural turmoil have opened an unprecedented door for Spirit-filled pastoral leadership in particular, said Harris, president and CEO of The University of Texas/Texas A&M University Management Company, which manages nearly $50 billion in endowment and operating funds. He also is a member of President Trump’s Working Group for Financial Markets and an advisor to the New York Federal Reserve—as well as a pastor’s son.

The key question for pastors leading their congregations through the pandemic, Harris said, is whether they will seize the opportunity or turn inward with fear.

Two “rogue waves” hit the economy simultaneously, he said, COVID-19 and a battle over oil prices between Russia and Saudi Arabia. As a result, both America’s gross domestic product (GDP) and the stock market’s S&P 500 Price Index plummeted. Economists forecast April through June to be the worst second quarter in U.S. history, with a 35 percent drop in GDP anticipated.

While some recovery is expected in the second half of the year, Harris said, 20 percent of the people in most churches have found themselves unemployed.

Amplifying Americans’ economic stress are major cultural shifts stemming from COVID-19, he said. Among them: continued social distancing, an increasing number of online events and meetings, consolidation of businesses and public security measures like temperature checks as people enter buildings.

Family dynamics also are changing, Harris said. Sheltering in place has brought some families closer together. But approximately a quarter of families have experienced an increase in abuse, addiction and mental illness, he estimated. That’s all on top of the health risk posed by COVID-19.

Amid that milieu, each pastor must think of himself as a ship captain whose crew members need him to take the wheel during a storm, Harris said.

“No one expects you to be perfect,” he said. “But they do expect you to be present.” Christians need to see their pastor “operate calmly and well, prudently and wisely without fear.”

One best practice during a crisis is for organizations to select three characteristics for which they want to be known and focus on those areas, Harris said. The principle transfers well to churches.

“Twenty percent of what you do creates 80 percent of the output that you get,” he said, citing a management maxim known as the Pareto Principle. “We get distracted by that other unproductive 80 percent. This is the time” to focus intently on the productive 20 percent of a church’s ministry.

COVID-19 ministry may require reorganizing the church leadership structure into a temporary “battle mode,” he said, with experienced leaders in the congregation designated as “field generals” to oversee areas of ministry focus.

Additionally, pastors must remember that faith does not necessarily require a quick regathering of the church as soon as government officials permit public assemblies, Harris said. In Scripture, David took shelter when he fled King Saul, and Israel sheltered when the death angel passed over them in Egypt. Likewise, there is a time for Christians to shelter in safety today.

“You want to be courageous,” he said. However, “you could do a lot of damage to the kingdom if you open up too boldly or too quickly and all of the sudden there’s an outbreak of the virus in your church and someone dies. … If that happens, your church is going down probably, and you’re going to affect some of the other churches around you.”

The bottom line for church leaders is that the coronavirus did not surprise God, Harris said. The Lord wants Christians to reap a spiritual harvest even in the pandemic, and “people are looking to [pastors] to call them to that service.”

The full video from the event is available at https://training.sbtexas.com/onlinetraining/leaders-in-turbulent-times—43020/1555/.

East Texas church feeds thousands after Onalaska tornado; SBTC DR crews on site

POLK COUNTY, Texas   Jonathan Davidson, pastor of Trinity Pines Baptist Church in Trinity, and youth leader Brad Johnson were preparing to livestream the church’s Wednesday Bible study and youth program when the storm hit on the evening of April 22. They were forced to abandon their plans as winds kicked up, golf ball and baseball-sized hail pelted the building, electricity and internet failed. 

The EF-3 tornado that ripped through Polk County missed Trinity but tore through nearby Onalaska, claiming three lives, destroying 173 homes and damaging more than 300 others in the county.

After the storm, Davidson returned to his ranch home 38 miles away.

“We started calling folks to ascertain needs,” Davidson told the TEXAN. None of the church’s families were in the tornado’s immediate path, although many suffered wind damage to roofs and homes.

The next morning, Davidson and his brother, B.J., a worship leader at Antioch Baptist in Lovelady, viewed the damage first hand while transporting a generator to a member who lived near Onalaska.

“It was pretty devastating,” Davidson recalled. 

When church secretary Sheri Whitfield informed them that city officials had called for cooking teams to prepare food for the community, the Davidson brothers returned to the ranch to haul the family’s huge barbeque trailer to Onalaska’s Garland Park while Whitfield and ministry assistant Darlene Kasper rushed to the grocery store to purchase food and supplies.

As Davidson pulled the BBQ unit into the park, police officers stopped him and asked what he was doing.

“I’m a pastor. I heard you needed cookers,” Davidson replied. 

The policemen urged him to park wherever he wanted, close to the large pavilion that had escaped the tornado unscathed and where authorities intended to set up a staging area for relief efforts.

They were the only food preparers who came.

The Davidsons and Tom Fourcha, the church member who had needed the generator, got to work quickly. The three men grilled burgers and hot dogs from lunch till 9:30 that night, serving 500 meals to first responders, search and rescue volunteers and anyone who came.

Friday morning, church staff and members phoned friends and issued pleas on social media for help.

“We started sending out an S.O.S.,” Davidson said. “We were running out of food. It kinda grew.”

Davidson brought another large smoker from the ranch. Dozens of church members gathered to help cook and serve. Folks from other churches and the community pitched in. 

Groups were organized. Some drove daily to Sam’s Clubs in Lufkin and Conroe for food and paper goods. Teams formed, loading dozens of meals in pickups and ATVs and delivering them to neighborhoods where residents could not leave because of damage to their vehicles. 

“Taking the meals out to the community, we were able to pray with people and ministry aspect was heightened,” Davidson said. Residents who were skeptical on the first day of meal delivery became friends.

People who “looked at us like we were crazy [at first],” by Monday were inviting the Trinity Pines volunteers inside their houses, Davidson said. 

Church and community members brought donations of money and food. Another local congregation brought 25 pans of chicken spaghetti for one meal.

“People came up and handed us cash. They sent money using Facebook Messenger. They met us at the church with donations,” Davidson said.

Davidson estimated that from Thursday to Monday following the tornado, Trinity Pines prepared, served and delivered 14,000 meals.

“We had guys standing over grill pits 12-14 hours a day,” he said.

By Monday, the church volunteers were exhausted. “I knew we could keep it up 72 hours, but no more,” Davidson said. 

When the city asked for a few more days of assistance, Davidson contacted Tony Wolfe, SBTC director of church relations, who connected him with SBTC DR.

SBTC DR crews take over

In response, Southern Baptists of Texas Convention Disaster Relief volunteers brought a mass feeding kitchen from the Unity Baptist Association in Lufkin to relieve Trinity Pines members and prepare food provided by the Salvation Army. The effort was coordinated by SBTC DR Director Scottie Stice, who contacted Alvin Migues, Salvation Army Texas disaster director, for assistance.

“The Red Cross does not deploy mass care units in a COVID context,” Stice said. “We stepped up with the Salvation Army that provided food and volunteers to help distribute it.”

The SBTC DR mass feeding unit joined a QR quick response kitchen already deployed at the Onalaska fire station to feed first responders, emergency crews and SBTC DR chainsaw teams working in the area. In addition to the feeding teams, SBTC DR chaplaincy, clean up and recovery, shower, laundry and administrative volunteers deployed. 

SBTC DR chainsaw crews were among the earliest volunteer groups to arrive in the area. “Several of their first jobs involved cutting into home sites so the fire department and EMS could access victims with medical needs,” said Daniel White, SBTC DR incident leader.

Pine Forest Baptist Church in Livingston and Trinity Pines are hosting the SBTC DR volunteers, which number from 29-40 each day.

Stice said the deployment has involved volunteers from First Baptist Bellville, First Baptist Kountze, Flint Baptist, Tabernacle Baptist of Ennis, First Baptist Pflugerville, First Baptist Leonard and Beaumont Calvary Baptist in addition to those from the Unity Association. Feeding operations will run through May 1 while chainsaw work will continue at least another week. 

SBTC DR volunteers continued to assist the Houston Food Bank this week as well. A chainsaw team also deployed to Linden following wind damage there.

Counting the cost

Of Trinity Pines, Stice said, “They went to work immediately. Even before the local government brought resources on line, the church was mobilized and out there.”

The unexpected ministry came at a cost for the church, which averages close to 100 in attendance.

Davidson estimated the church spent about $5,000 in addition to the donations received.

When asked if they would do it again, he replied, “Absolutely—in a heartbeat.” He said, “It was our church. I may have accidentally started it. It’s them and their desire to help.  It would have been somebody else if it hadn’t been us. It ended up being us. My people are awesome.”

Davidson said his congregation’s “spirit was primed and ready to go,” that they had been focusing on understanding God’s will and exploring how to “impact the kingdom.” A recent sermon series on Philippians 2 left all seeking the “mind of Christ,” Davidson said.

Another price of ministry in a COVID-19 world is that Trinity Pines, rather than resuming physical services as some smaller area congregations will do on May 3, will be self-quarantining following the tornado. To date, Polk County has reported 19 coronavirus cases. Church feeding volunteers were unable to completely socially distance and may have been exposed.

“As church and ministry groups, we are staying apart for 14 days,” Davidson said, adding that services will continue online.

A new DR world

Pandemics make DR deployments complicated, necessitating extra housing and work space, face masks and other protective gear for volunteers. SBTC DR has released additional safety guidelines all volunteers must follow.

Still, God’s work continues. SBTC DR chaplains have made dozens of contacts and seen four professions of faith among East Texas storm victims.