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SBC DIGEST: New Ky. associate exec; World Congress of Families; other news


ELIZABETHTOWN, Ky. (BP) — Curtis Woods has been elected by the Kentucky Baptist Convention’s Mission Board as associate executive director for convention relations and communications.

Woods, who began his duties July 1, has served as Baptist campus minister at Kentucky State University since 2006.

KBC President Adam Greenway said he believes Woods now holds the highest staff position by an African American among the “old-line” state Baptist conventions.

While Woods is responsible for maintaining good relations with all Kentucky Baptists, he will be relied upon specifically to relate to African American Baptists and promote racial reconciliation within the convention, according to a news story in the Western Recorder, the state convention’s newsjournal.

Woods is capable of “bridging the gap that, all too often, has separated us in the Southern Baptist Convention,” KBC Executive Director Paul Chitwood said.

Woods also will oversee the KBC’s external communications department formerly led by Robert Reeves, who is assuming a teaching position at Anderson University in South Carolina.

Following Woods’ election, Greenway said Woods is testimony “of the grace of God, not only in the color of his skin, but in the content of his character.”

Chitwood, meanwhile, said of Woods’ election, “I celebrate this, I know Kentucky Baptists will celebrate this, and I am trusting that our African American Baptists will celebrate this.

“But this is about much, much more,” Chitwood said. As with Fred Luter’s election as president of the Southern Baptist Convention, Chitwood said Woods’ selection is not just about naming an African American to a top post in the Kentucky convention. “While that’s incredibly important,” he said, “this is about the right man in the job. … It’s just across the board: He is a top-tiered leader who will excel in this position.”

Prior to his work at Kentucky State, Woods served on staff at Oak Cliff Bible Fellowship in Dallas and Old St. James Baptist Church in Pine Bluff, Ark. He holds a master’s degree from Dallas Theological Seminary and currently is pursuing a doctorate at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville. His undergraduate degree is from the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff.

The KBC has welcomed more than 165 ethnic congregations in recent decades, more than 90 of which are African American. Chitwood said he hopes Woods’ election sends a strong message to them: “that African American individuals, leaders and churches will hear us keeping the promises that we’ve made with regard to inclusion, equality, to an open door—not just a seat at the table, but even to leadership roles in our convention.”

Woods’ work will strategically poise the state convention for the future, Chitwood added, noting, “I hope we are sending a signal that we want our KBC staff to look like Kentucky.” Recent news reports indicate that for the first time in U.S. history more that half of the babies born were brown in color, leading to the projection that over the next few decades the face of America will change dramatically. “We want, as a convention, to be poised to evangelize the ever-growing diversity of population in our state,” Chitwood said.

The KBC Mission Board, in a special meeting June 26, also named several others to the convention staff, including Chuck McAlister as leader of the newly formed evangelism and church planting team. He will begin Sept. 1.

The evangelism and church planting team is one of the three areas of focus the convention has adopted in the new organizational structure. The others are missions mobilization and church consulting and revitalization.

McAlister will be responsible for overseeing collegiate and ethnic ministries in the state, as well as developing strategic evangelism strategies for Kentucky Baptists to implement in their associations and churches.

Since 2009, McAlister has served primarily as an evangelist through Promise of Hope Ministries in Hot Springs, Ark., of which he is the president. He also serves as director of constituent relations for Baptist Global Response. He previous led The Church at Crossgate Center in Hot Springs, Ark., for 17 years. In 1996, McAlister and his wife Janice launched the award-winning national cable TV program “Adventure Bound Outdoors.” He also has authored several books.

In Kentucky, McAlister served as pastor of Old Cedar Baptist Church in Owenton from 1979-81. He holds a master’s degree from Southern Seminary and a doctorate at New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary.

PATTERSONS ADDRESS FAMILY CONFERENCE IN SPAIN — Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary President Paige Patterson and his wife Dorothy spoke, respectively, on religious freedom and the ability of mothers to empower the next generation during the sixth World Congress of Families in Madrid, Spain.

People from 80 countries attended the congress, an international forum for discussions on the value of family as it directly affects the structure of society. Its members seek to support and affirm policies, legislation and ideas that undergird the family unit toward as a key facet of a constructive society.

Paige Patterson, in his presentation “Religious Symbols in Public Spaces, a Right?” noted various instances worldwide in which one group or another physically or litigiously sought to remove symbols of faith from display in both the private and public sectors of a culture. Among such instances: the 2002 vandalism of more than 230 Islamic monuments in the western India state of Gujarat; the burning of copies of the Quran by American soldiers and civilians; the Taliban’s destruction of Buddha statues; and the pressures on Alabama Supreme Court Chief Justice Judge Roy Moore to remove a statue of the Ten Commandments from state property, which resulted in his removal from office.

“Each of these events and hundreds of others like them emphasize both the intensity of religious convictions and the complications that frequently result when public policy collides with religious conviction,” Patterson said during the May 25-27 congress. “In response, one can wring his hands in consternation and hopelessness, or he can attempt to set just standards equitable to all faiths and ask the human family to inculcate these principles in all religious matters.”

Patterson pointed to the United Nations’ Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution as offering helpful insight to applying the ideals of religious liberty to the public square.

“Both of these declarations recognize the crucial nature of religious liberty,” Patterson said. “Indeed, religious liberty is the fountainhead of all liberties, and without this freedom, no society is genuinely free.”

A distinction must be made, however, between “religious liberty” and “religious toleration,” Patterson said.

“I once complained to a statesman about the lack of religious liberty in his country,” Patterson recounted. “Offended, he insisted that his country had religious liberty. I responded that what he intended was that a person had a right to remain in the ‘religion of his birth,’ but not the right to change his faith and not the right to a free market place of open discussion of the values and essence of all religion.”

Governments should avoid “sponsorship of partisan religious symbols in public places,” Patterson said, but temporary religious symbols that do not create physical danger should be allowed as exercise of religious liberty. Governments, he said, should respect peaceful symbols from every faith in the effort to support the formulation of a just and free generation as it rises to leadership.

“The relationship of this issue to families and family life is that parents attempting to rear children in a culture of death have every right to expect governments to ensure justice and equal opportunity for religious expression, thus aiding the family in its assignment,” Patterson said.

Dorothy Patterson, professor of theology in women’s studies at Southwestern, in her presentation, “A Modern Paradigm for Motherhood: Mothers Empowered to Empower a New Generation,” noted the opportunity mothers have to shape the world’s next work force and thus society as a whole.

“Being a mother is often perceived to be a thankless and joyless, as well as an overwhelming, task,” Dorothy Patterson said. “Many look at rearing children as a hardship tour in the duties of life — burdens and sacrifices, self-denial and boredom, an interruption and an inconvenience.” Patterson said women have been “brainwashed to believe that the absence of a titled, payroll occupation condemns a woman to failure, boredom and even imprisonment within the confines of her home.”

Though motherhood requires many sacrifices, it is a high and rewarding calling, Patterson said, one that she describes as her crowning achievement and highlight of her life’s work.

“Motherhood is important enough to demand a woman’s diligent preparation, foremost commitment, full energies and greatest creativity for many reasons,” Patterson said. “Each generation must be sure there is another generation. A mother does her job without the enticement of a paycheck, but she cannot be duplicated for any amount of money.”

BREWTON-PARKER ON SACS PROBATION – “Extremely disappointed” was Brewton-Parker College President Mike Simoneaux’s reaction to the academic probation placed on the Georgia college by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools in late June.

SACS failed to recognize the progress the college has made in the past year, Simoneaux told Georgia Baptists’ Christian Index newsjournal.

The college remains fully accredited to award baccalaureate and associate degrees throughout the reaffirmation process, which occurs every ten years, Simoneaux said.

“Enrollment is up, finances have improved and we are in the process of hiring new faculty,” Simoneaux said. In addition, he said the college “has hired Dr. Tim Searcy [formerly of New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary] as our new academic vice president, who brings many years of experience in academics and accreditation to Brewton-Parker.” Searcy previously has served at Louisiana College and New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary.

“We are poised to grow,” Simoneaux said, “and I am confident we will be able to overcome, with God’s help, this latest challenge.”

The south Georgia college, which is affiliated with the Georgia Baptist Convention, has been struggling with declining enrollment and financial resources but has a rebuilding plan in place under the new administration of Simoneaux, who was named BPC president in July 2011.

FIRE DESTROYS WINDERMERE LODGE — A July 22 fire at Windermere Baptist Conference Center at the Lake of the Ozarks in Missouri destroyed a deluxe two-story lodge and caused additional damage to a maintenance building.

Whispering Oak Lodge burned to the ground due to a mechanical failure in a dryer unit, according to Chris Bachman, fire marshal of the Mid-County Fire Protection District, who was assisted by the state fire marshal.

The lodge was a 7,200-square-foot facility capable of sleeping 46 people. Windermere was one of five Missouri Baptist Convention subsidiary corporations to break from the convention in 2000-01 by changing their charters to create self-perpetuating trustee boards. The convention’s efforts to regain Windermere remain in court.

Firefighters were called to the scene at 2:57 a.m. Sunday and found the structure fully engulfed. No guests were in the lodge at the time, Bachman said, and firefighters went to work for the next three hours negating flames that were shooting 30 feet from the roof.

It was then determined that the fire would go to a second alarm situation. That prompted a more intense response that included 16 pieces of equipment and 27 personnel responding from six departments including Mid-County FPD, Camdenton Fire Department, Osage Beach Fire Protection District, Sunrise Beach Fire Protection District, Southwest Fire Protection District and Lebanon Fire Department.

Data and communication equipment was damaged inside the maintenance building, Bachman said.

LIFEWAY, PENNY WISE OFFER OFFICE SUPPLY SAVINGS — LifeWay Christian Resources has announced a savings program with Penny Wise Office Products, a major national supplier, giving churches the purchasing power of a much larger company.

Penny Wise offers a wide selection of name-brand office products such as 3M, HP and Bic substantially below retail price, with prompt, free delivery. Coupled with LifeWay’s aggregate purchasing power, church customers will receive sizable savings, according to Jennie Taylor of LifeWay’s retail marketing department.

Penny Wise offers the largest online office products ordering network in the nation, according to a LifeWay news release, and online buyers receive an additional 3 percent discount for all orders. LifeWay customers also can order by toll-free phone, email or toll-free fax.

While no office supply company can guarantee their prices are the lowest on every product every day, LifeWay’s program assures our members the lowest price available, Taylor said, explaining, “If you buy a product from Penny Wise, see it advertised for less and send the ad to Penny Wise within 30 days, Penny Wise will credit your account.”

Also, customer satisfaction is 100 percent guaranteed, Taylor added. “If you aren’t happy, neither are they. They will send UPS out to pick up your return, absolutely free of charge.

For more information on the program or to request a catalog, call 1-800-464-2799 or go to LifeWay.com/pennywise. LifeWay customers should use the savings code “LIF” to receive discounts and benefits.
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Compiled by Baptist Press editor Art Toalston from reporting by Drew Nichter and Todd Deaton of Kentucky Baptists’ Western Recorder; Sharayah Colter of Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary; Joe Westbury of Georgia Baptists’ Christian Index; Allen Palmeri of Missouri Baptists’ Pathway; and the communications office of LifeWay Christian Resources of the Southern Baptist Convention.

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