Residents of Florida, Georgia and Alabama need your prayers today as they deal with the aftermath of Hurricane Helene. The storm quickly intensified before coming ashore in the Florida panhandle on Thursday afternoon before zipping north into Georgia and Alabama overnight.
Disaster relief crews are on standby as first responders do their work and assessors move into the area.
Despite the tragedy, it’s a blessing to know that people who care are quick to rush to the help of others facing dark days.
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You are learning every day. You don’t need a scientific poll to realize that. Some sort of media or influence is affecting your thinking and view of the world every day.
An election season billed as the most important of our lives lends itself to stories where falsehoods outpaced the truth, at least for a time.
Southwestern Seminary Professor Malcolm Yarnell says this is why Christians should stay tethered to the truths of Christ.
“Let’s not turn our politicians into messiahs [and] political parties into a church,” he said. “That is where we begin to confuse the Kingdom of God with the kingdom of this world.”
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For the past two and a half years Baptist Press has had the privilege of bringing you Good News for Today. We’ve tried to find a way to report news accurately and fairly with a biblical and Christ-centered perspective.
Due to some changes at Baptist Press, unfortunately, today marks the end of our radio and podcast feature.
Thank you for listening. We do not take our readers…or listeners for granted. Thank you for the opportunity to share news and content with you over radio stations across North America.
After 76 years, the work of Baptist Press will at our website. We hope you’ll read our stories there.
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The world’s greatest problem is lostness. You can help share the light of Christ. Learn how at IMB.org.
Millions of elementary through college students gathered at flag poles on their campuses yesterday file in the U.S. and 63 other countries to pray in the student-led “See You at the Pole” initiative in its 33rd year.
The early sunrise, clouds and rains variously served as the backdrop for social media photos attesting to student participation.
The event is designed to spark a continual prayer movement and lifestyle change, with resources available through the partner ministry Claim Your Campus, and was preceded in some communities by prayerwalks and student ministry events, organizers said.
Held annually on the fourth Wednesday in September since 1991, See You at the Pole grew from a DiscipleNow weekend in Burleson, Texas, in early1990. Compelled to pray, a small group of teenagers drove to three area schools, stood under flagpoles and prayed for schools, leaders and friends.
Word of the Burleson event spread, drawing 45,000 students in prayer under flagpoles in four states in September 1990, and a million at school flagpoles in September 1991, according to event promoters. Today, events are held in Canada, Korea, Japan, Turkey, the Ivory Coast and beyond, with students “responding to God and taking seriously the challenge to pray,” promoters said.
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Vice President and Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris told an interviewer Tuesday (Sept. 24) that she would be in favor of eliminating the filibuster for votes on abortion-related legislation in the Senate. That, in essence, would clear the way for abortion legislation to pass the Senate with a simple majority rather than the 60 votes needed to overturn a filibuster.
Harris has made abortion a centerpiece of her campaign, pledging to sign any bill that “restore[s] reproductive freedom nationwide,” according to her website.
Ethics & Religious Liberty President Brent Leatherwood said it appears such abortion extremism is a hard sell for many Americans.
“I’ve often found that calls to end the filibuster are the result of an inability to win consensus on an issue. It means you are losing,” Leatherwood told Baptist Press in written comments.
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The world’s greatest problem is lostness. Learn how you can help at IMB.org.
Words are important.
Southwestern Seminary professor Malcolm Yarnell says, “Christians ought to have a leavening influence on their society.” “But when we forget our primary allegiance to Jesus Christ [in favor of] political parties, movements or leaders, we begin to run into trouble.”
An average of Gallup polls in 2023 found that 68 percent of Americans identified with the Christian religion. However, that reflected a consistent drop from the high point of 96 percent in 1956.
Christians are being educated by something, he added. That can be the culture, social media, mainstream media or the church. All have a way of affecting our worldview to some degree.
Yarnell spoke of C. Gardner Taylor, a preacher and contemporary of Martin Luther King Jr. Very concerned with social issues, Taylor’s wife would at times comment on her husband’s sermon “thickness.”
“Sometimes she would tell him that his sermon was a bit ‘thin’ to let him know he was getting too much into political and social issues,” Yarnell said. “Those issues need to be addressed, but if it was his primary proclamation, it was robbing from the emphasis on the Gospel.”
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Feeling overwhelmed? Tennessee pastor Abraham Creemens encourages you to look to Jesus.
“The first step on this journey of hope is to recognize that there is only one Savior, and it is not you. It is not me, or your pastor or the most spiritual person in the world. It is Jesus. We turned the world upside down and Jesus turned it right-side-up. Paul explained this in 2 Corinthians 5:21: He made the one who did not know sin to be sin for us, so that in Him we might become the righteousness of God. “
Creemens says when life is too much, you can look to the empty tomb where Jesus overcame the grave.
“See the beauty of the resurrection. Jesus died a real death. But the grave was not strong enough. The invitation is to lean into the person, purpose and promises of God every day and lay your concerns at the entrance of the empty tomb.”
Read the full piece at Baptist Press.
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More than 2 billion people are facing food insecurity. Learn how you can help at IMB.org.
In north Georgia close to 50 football players on the team at Shorter University made decisions for Christ this year before the season started, and 17 followed through with believer’s baptism.
Zach Morrison, in his seventh year as head coach, described what happened after players arrived at the school in early August for preseason training and conditioning camp. “We took them to a couple of local churches,” he said, “and about 150 players visited Life Church.”
That Sunday, Morrison recalled, Life Church Pastor Jason Stockton preached and closed with an invitation. Team chaplain Topher Stockton (no relation) said 48 players followed Christ that morning.
Morrison says local pastors have been meeting with the players talked through what their decisions meant, and what baptism is and is not.
Coach Morrison said in addition to helping the players learn the playbook, he’s making sure these new believers learn the first step in being disciples of Jesus.
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There is a sense of loss when people leave a church. There are also times when that loss is coupled with celebration.
Christ Fellowship Church Cherrydale, South Carolina began 15 years ago, sent out by another young church, Crosspoint in Clemson, S.C. As church planter in residence at Crosspoint, Matt Rogers learned about looking at the bigger picture and serving in a ministry that remains small even though it is in consistent growth.
Christ Fellowship, with attendance of 500-600 each Sunday, is currently in the middle of showing what that looks like.
Five families have recently pledged to go overseas and help start new churches, with two of them already on the field. Another will have their last Sunday this weekend. The final two will be gone by the end of the year.
Rogers says the families will be missed, but the sorrow is worth the pain to carry the Gospel forward.
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The world’s great problem is lostness. Learn how to share hope at IMB.org.
In 2022, opioid abuse resulted in 82,000 Americans’ deaths, the most ever recorded, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). In 2021, an estimated 2.5 million adults in the U.S. dealt with opioid use disorder, while more than 10 million people misused prescription opioids in 2019, according to the CDC. Many churches felt the impact.
Lifeway Research found around 2 in 3 pastors (64 percent) say a family member of someone in their congregation has been affected by opioid abuse. Around half (51 percent) say a local neighbor they know or a member of their congregation is dealing with opioids, while 45 percent say a member of their congregation has been personally affected by opioid abuse.
Most pastors say their church is currently serving people with opioid addictions, but that support is primarily spiritual. Almost 3 in 4 (72 percent) offer spiritual support including prayer or discipleship. Fewer say they’re providing physical support including food, shelter or clothing (41 percent) or a 12-step program or other support groups for substance abuse (32 percent).
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How do you get through the mundane seasons and tasks of life? In a Baptist Press Toolbox, Jacki C. King writes, “Many of us find ourselves in long seasons of mundane tasks and routine responsibilities. There are parts to our jobs and ministries that don’t feel particularly fulfilling or productive. Whether it’s printing handouts, putting in attendance, or setting up and taking down events, these tasks can often feel monotonous and unrewarding.
While these mundane tasks may not be glamorous or exciting, they are essential for the health and growth of our ministries. Everyone, from the most seasoned leader to the newest volunteer, has to deal with these less-than-glamorous aspects of their work. It’s how we respond to these seasons that matters.
More than 2 billion people face food insecurity everyday. You can help. Learn how at IMB.org.
A group of local and national church leaders are working to help the situation in Springfied, Ohio where a relatively small town has become the focus of the national immigration discussion.
Tensions rose in the city after the Republican presidential ticket spread claims on social media and during the presidential debate that immigrants in Springfield were eating people’s pets. Bomb threats forced the closure of city buildings, schools and hospitals, and made the city the subject of national and international news for a week or more.
Kenny Felix, president of Southern Baptist Convention National Haitian Fellowship and a leader from the Christian Leadership Coalition recently joined with local pastors, elected officials and community leaders to see how they could help.
The National Haitian Fellowship has around 500 partnering churches across the U.S.
About five Haitian churches serve the migrants in the area.
The pastors met with the Springfield Mayor Rob Rue to learn how they could help ease tensions.
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Days after an unnamed tropical storm-like system dumped historic rainfall across the Cape Fear region of southeastern North Carolina, disaster response volunteers with N.C. Baptists on Mission are assisting those impacted by the storm.
As the region continues to grapple with flooding and other storm-related damage, Baptists on Mission has opened two disaster recovery sites at Beach Road Baptist Church in Southport and First Baptist Church in Leland, where approximately 100 volunteers are expected to serve.
According to Tom Beam, disaster response coordinator for Baptists on Mission, volunteers have faced obstacles as flooding has forced road closures throughout the area. Beam said that in spite of setbacks and detours, assessments and recovery assignments are already underway.
As much as 12 to 20 inches of rain fell across the region in just two days, with much of it coming during a 12-hour window between 5 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday, weather officials said. Rainfall in excess of 12 inches in a 12-hour period is expected to occur once every 200 years across coastal southeastern North Carolina, officials said.
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Medical professionals can use their skills to bring more than physical healing. Learn how at IMB.org.
Each summer thousands of elementary, middle and high school students flock to Lifeway summer camps. In addition to games and ice cream machines, those kids love missions.
This week, Lifeway President Ben Mandrell presented $678,283.32 to the International Mission Board and the North American Mission Board. That’s right students across America gave more than $678-thousand to missions.
Lifeway camps have been around for 40 years…and the total missions offerings have exceeded $17 million.
Lifeway camps give students the opportunity to hear stories of faithful missionaries and God’s work around the globe and you can tell these stories are well received by the campers.
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Speaking of missions… MedAdvance has drawn health care professionals across the country since 2007. Doctors, nurses, therapists, nutritionists, pharmacists, fitness instructors, community health workers, other specialists and non-medical attendees gather at the annual event to hear how the IMB is using global health care strategies to reach the lost all over the world.
At a conference earlier this September, a doctor who worked with NASA attended to see how she can have an impact on the mission field. A retired hospital administrator attended previous events and came to Houston to reconnect with IMB friends, offering encouragement and prayer.
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Kentucky pastor Todd Gray wonders what drives you to pray. In a piece in Baptist Press he writes that family members who don’t know Jesus motivate him to pray.
“There are few things more concerning than the awareness that a member of one’s immediate family has rejected the gospel and is living their life in danger of hell. The reality of their spiritually dangerous position must prompt us to passionate prayer as we ask God to bring conviction into their heart and faithful witnesses across their path.”
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The world’s greatest problem is lostness. Learn how to share the light at IMB.org.
The financial appropriations decision making process is working its way through Congress.
Some of the priorities highlighted by the ERLC in the letter include pro-life issues, religious liberty concerns and opposing taxpayer funding for harmful “gender transition” surgeries.
“As a nation, our values and priorities are most clearly displayed through the allocation of our resources,” ERLC President Brent Leatherwood said in the letter. “It is our desire for those resources to be used in a way that promotes life, religious liberty and the flourishing of all our neighbors. It is in light of these core principles that we highlight the areas of concern and support below.”
Draft text for nearly all 12 appropriations bills has been released in both chambers, and the bills have passed through both the House and Senate appropriations committees. The deadline for the government to pass the required 12 appropriations bills for the 2025 fiscal year is Sept. 30, but Congress is expected to pass a continuing resolution to extend that deadline at the current funding levels.
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While the Consumer Price Index (CPI), the most widely used measure of inflation, grew 6 percent from June 2022 to June 2024, both the average compensation and pay package for full-time senior pastors climbed more than 13 percent, while staff ministers’ grew more than 7 percent and office personnel’s increased by at least 10 percent.
“The upward movement in full-time pastor salaries does not make up all the financial ground they lost between 2018 and 2022,” said Scott McConnell, executive director of Lifeway Research. “Many pastors financially ‘took one for the team’ during the pandemic, and it is encouraging to see many churches responding to begin to close this gap.”
For senior pastors, compensation, which includes salary and housing, grew 16.6 percent in the past two years, and pay package, which includes salary, housing, retirement and insurance, climbed 13.9 percent.
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More than 2 billion people face food insecurity everday. You can help. Learn how at IMB.org.
While the debate between Donald Trump and Kamala Harris is in the rearview mirror and may be the only time the presidential candidates take to the debate stage, Southern Baptist Convention President Clint Pressley says believers should recognize the “transcendent policy issues of our time,” which he lists as the sanctity of life and marriage, gender issues and religious liberty.
“Cling tenaciously to a biblical worldview, and don’t be manipulated,” he said. “Pray for God to give us wise and discerning leaders. Trust that God is sovereign and that Christ’s kingdom is not of this world.”
Texas ethicist Dan Darling encouraged church leaders to keep a healthy perspective during a contentious campaign season.
“Pastors have an opportunity in this election to help their people steward their citizenship well by weighing the issues, voting, and conducting themselves in a way that honors Christ,” Darling, public policy professor at Southwestern Seminary said.
“Even though the partisanship of the election can be wearying, American Christians should be thankful for the opportunity to influence policy, both local, state, and national. This is a privilege many millions of people around the world only wish they had. We can do that while also remembering that our ultimate citizenship is in Heaven.”
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A recent State of the Bible study revealed Gen Z is the least likely to turn to the faith community and medical professionals for help navigating mental health issues, researchers found. Instead, Gen Z is more apt to turn to a trusted family member or social media for help, although only 15 percent of Gen Z would turn to social media platforms for help.
Regarding fears, financial stress or hardship strikes extreme fear in 31 percent of Gen Z, compared to 21 percent of Gen X, 20 percent of Millennials and 12 percent of Boomers.
Grief and loss? Thirty-one percent of Gen Z are extremely fearful, outpacing 21 percent of Millennials, 19 percent of Gen X and 14 percent of Boomers. Extreme fear of family stress or trauma befalls 29 percent of Gen Z, 20 percent of Millennials, 19 percent of Gen X and 10 percent of Boomers.
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Lostness is the world’s greatest problem. Learn you can help at IMB.org.
Thousands of residents in New Orleans are finally receiving power after Hurricane Francine made landfall across the Gulf Coast late last week.
Disaster Relief workers from at least Arkansas, Louisiana, Missouri, Oklahoma and Texas are working in Louisiana. Feeding teams, chainsaw teams and chaplains are work.
Thousands of meals are being served as people pick up from the heavy winds and rains.
You can learn how to affect those affected by visiting SendRelief.org.
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Generation Z, the first to grow up with smartphones and tablets, is the most fearful and anxious of any age, the American Bible Society (ABS) said in its latest release from the 2024 State of the Bible.
But regular Bible engagement, a practice that attracts only 11 percent of Gen Z, reduces anxiety by half and can improve other markers of emotional health, study authors said in releasing chapter six of the study Sept. 12.
Scripture engaged Gen Z can score just as well as any other group on several measures of emotional health, but the group ranks lowest in Scripture engagement among all generations. As such, all findings regarding Bible engaged Gen Z members are from a comparatively small cohort, study authors said.
Extreme fears of grief and loss, family stress or trauma, and financial stress or hardship are chief among their concerns, cited among nearly a third of Gen Z respondents, followed by moderate levels of fears of those matters among 45 percent of Gen Z, study authors said.
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Sometimes hardships are caused by holy circumstances and sometimes they are the result of less than circumstance.
A Lifeway Bible Study points to Paul’s preaching in the first century and the Bible’s written word that has lasted over the centuries.
In Acts 14, Paul challenged the people to turn from “worthless things to the living God” (v. 15). He noted that only the one, true God created everything and as such, was worthy of worship.
There are times in our lives when we should take an inventory to see if we’re prioritizing things that would honor God. Read the full piece at Baptist Press.
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More than 2 billion face food insecurity. Learn how you can help at IMB.org.
What was once a major port for enslaved people is now a harbor for diaspora groups, and Southern Baptists are playing a key role.
Diaspora refers to “the movement, migration, settlement or scattering of people away from one’s indigenous homeland.” In North America, diaspora people comprise immigrants, refugees and international students.
Christians’ outreach to internationals in Charleston is a great example of what Diaspora Missions Collective wants to accomplish in reaching all nations, people, languages and tribes with the Gospel, no matter where they live.
With help from The Hub Ministry Center, Charleston has become a modern day “Ellis Island” for refugees coming from Africa, the Middle East and Central and South America.
The center provides refugees with transitional assistance and care in transportation, education, recreation and vocational training. It also provides relational care through community and compassion.
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Visiting a friend outside his hometown of Gloucester, England, in the late 1700s, Robert Raikes encountered children cursing, gambling and fighting in the streets. He was horrified, but a local woman told him it was even worse on Sundays, the children’s one day off each week from the factory. Determined to help children in that situation learn to read and learn about the God who loved them, Raikes founded the first Sunday School in 1780.
According to a Lifeway Research study of U.S. Protestant churches with ongoing adult Bible study groups, 56 percent say the label “Sunday School” describes at least part of their groups ministry. Almost 3 in 4 (72 percent) say they are comfortable with others referring to their groups as adult Bible studies. Around 2 in 5 (39 percent) say small groups. Fewer say the terms adult Bible fellowships (13 percent), life groups (13 percent) or connect groups (10 percent) fit their ministry.
“If a group learns and obeys God’s Word, invites others to follow Jesus, forms deeper relationships and engages in acts of service inside the church and out in the community, you can call a group ministry whatever you like,” says Lifeway’s Ken Braddy.
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More than 2 billion people face food insecurity everyday. Learn how you can help at IMB.org.
Residents of the Gulf Coast are reeling from the effects of Hurricane Francine after it made landfall on Wednesday. Heavy rains and strong storms ripped across Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama.
Disaster Relief workers huddled in areas hours away from the gulf to see how they could help one the storm came ashore. When first responders give them the greenlight, they’ll work quickly to help those in need.
The storm is forecasted to drift up the Mississippi River through the weekend bringing heavy rains.
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A somber sight in New York, Pennsylvania and Washington D.C. on Wednesday as Americans marked the 23rd anniversary of 9/11. Thousands of lives were lost as a group of terrorists pulled off the deadliest attack on in American soil.
The day was marked by the annual reading of victims at Ground Zero by family members whose lives were changed forever.
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What drives you to your knees to pray? Kentucky church leader Todd Gray offers some thoughts in the Baptist Press Toolbox.
Gray writes about a wayward child, significant health issues, an empty church building, church conflict and more in the piece.
He writes, “Any Christian parent with a child living outside the will of God knows the experience of praying for that child day after day and throughout the day. Many Christian couples have had the experience of praying for a child through a particularly challenging time. The great news for us is that our children are not static, meaning that where they are today spiritually may not be where they are six months from now, and our prayers can make a difference in their lives. “
Gray also says times of spiritual warfare should drives us to our knees. “There have been a few times in my life in Christian ministry leadership that could not be explained apart from spiritual warfare. Those were times when I not only prayed for myself, but I asked my wife to pray with me and for me. When you feel that you are under spiritual attack, the best thing to do is get on your knees, if you are able to, and cry out to God to deliver you from the attack of the evil one.”
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Lostness is the world’s greatest problem. Learn how you can share the light at IMB.org.
Sept. 11 is a day many Americans can never forget and a day younger Americans should never forget. It’s a day when terrorists killed innocent Americans who were going to about their daily routine on a typical weekday. Thousands of families were affected forever as loved ones left for a work day and never returned home. Millions of Americans were impacted that Tuesday as our normal hustle and bustle ground to a halt as we prayed that God would lead first responders in their search and recovery efforts and that He would comfort those whose lives had been shattered.
Americans instinctively went to churches in their communities and neighborhoods for prayer gatherings in the middle of the day. People met in their city square to grieve, encourage one another and pray for each other. At a time of great uncertainty and sadness, people wanted to be together as they looked for answers and hope.
It’s been 23 years since that day in 2001. Even as we remember, may we never forget that our hope only comes from God above.
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“Pray for the transformation of our nation,” Ukrainian Baptist Theological Seminary President Yaroslav “Slavik” Pyzh implored a group of Christian ethics leaders in Nashville, Tennessee on Tuesday.
The seminary leader told the group that although Ukraine’s population is not precisely known, the number of Protestant believers has doubled since Russia launched its latest attack on Ukraine in February 2022, Pyzh said. Hope has countered the death and hopelessness the war has wrought.
However, he predicted that a Russian victory would mean the end of Christianity as it is now known in the country.
Despite the war, the seminary president said more than 700 new students have started classes to help the church as she grows during wartime.
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More than 2 billion people face food insecurity everyday. Learn how you can help IMB.org.
Reports showing sustained increases in food and home prices alongside a cooling labor market highlight a continuing challenge for churches.
That information impacts everything from attaining goods for ministries like food pantries to hiring new staff. Inflation sits in the middle of it all and while it remains high, the rate is decreasing.
In addition, wage increases can also impact a church’s ability to hire support staff. When your local fast food restaurant and other places raise their wages, churches must follow suit to attract candidates for custodial services or setup teams. That can lead to a ripple effect of rising pay for roles such as ministry assistants to keep pace.
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Don Hannel thought he was going to be the pastor of Pleasant Hill Church in Illinois the rest of his life. He’d been there 19 years.
But when his wife was hired as principal of Brown County Elementary School, about 50 minutes away, they began to learn about a new part of their region.
That led Don to investigate what church life was like there. God used what he learned to change his ministry post. Don discovered a need, then started a Bible study and it wasn’t long before a new New Vision Community Church was planted and he became the pastor.
“I had a kind of a holy discontent of beginning to feel like maybe God was doing something different in my life, as well,” he said. “It was a hard decision in my heart, because I know a piece of my heart is always going to be in Pleasant Hill at the church. But God began to transplant my heart for the people of Brown County. And that’s when we knew that God was calling us to start a work right there.”
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Church leader Chuck Lawless encourages us to be patient with one another. In a piece at Baptist Press he offers seven reasons. Here’s a couple:
First, Jesus was patient with His disciples. This is a model for us.
Second, people are often dealing with stresses they haven’t shared with you.
Read the full piece from Lawless at Baptist Press.
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You can use your medical training for more than physical healing. Learn how at IMB.org.
The Spurgeon Library at Midwestern Seminary has established a partnership with Reformation Heritage Books to republish Charles Spurgeon’s 63 volumes of sermons.
The partnership will produce five sets of volumes containing sermons preached by Charles Spurgeon in his church and originally published from 1855 to 1917. The first set was released in August 2024.
Seminary President Jason Allen says he’s thrilled about the new partnership as he reflects on how Spurgeon’s writings were helping him during his call to ministry and early years of serving as a pastor.
In 1855, while pastoring the New Park Street Chapel in London, Spurgeon began selecting one of his sermons each week to edit and print in a weekly pamphlet. He continued this practice throughout his ministry at the Metropolitan Tabernacle in London.
The first boxed set of sermons is available now.
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Tim Steele feels at home in front of people. He knows about the subtleties of communication such as timing, knowing your audience and being aware of your surroundings.
Those qualities have benefitted him from stages both as a comedian and pastor. From one, the audience is expecting him to make them laugh. The other comes with a much heavier weight because eternity hangs in the balance. Humor is important in both, Steele has learned.
Steele is a comedian with a brand new special at Dry Bar Comedy. He’s also the pastor of Cross Waves Church in Roseville, Michigan.
Steele says he doesn’t tell jokes from the preaching pulpit but definitely his ability to connect with an audience on both platforms.
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A Lifeway Bible Study call you to look up…and when you do…look for the beauty of the Heavens and the Earth and remember the One who created it.
Psalm 8 speaks of how God has created the world with strength and power but has been mindful of us…small as we may be.
David says the creation not only reminds us of the strength of God but also His attention to every aspect of the creation and that includes us. Read the full Bible study at our website Baptist Press.com.
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God is moving among the nations. Get the details at IMB.org.
Area churches responded quickly to a school shooting in Winder, Georgia Wednesday.
Four people were killed by the 14 year old gunman.
Bethlehem Church sits three miles from the shooting and has numerous members connected to Apalachee High including students, teachers and coaches.
Pastor Jason Britt confirmed with Baptist Press that there were members harmed in the shooting but could not provide any further information. Many churches held a night of prayer on Wednesday and offered counseling services.
Barrow County School System Superintendent Dallas LeDuff said schools would be closed for the week. The system’s central office is offering resources for counseling.
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The U.S. Supreme Court refused to restore a $4.5 million family planning grant to Oklahoma while the state’s challenge to the termination of the grant works its way through the lower courts.
At issue is a lawsuit that stems from funding Oklahoma routinely received before the passage of its abortion ban in 2022, which followed the overturning of Roe v. Wade. To receive the funding under Title X of the Public Health Services Act of 1970, states are required to offer expectant mothers counseling for prenatal care, adoption and abortion, as well as referrals for abortion and adoption if requested.
Oklahoma’s abortion ban also makes it illegal to advise mothers to obtain abortions, and the new ban caused the federal government to cut the state’s family planning grant. Oklahoma sued in federal court, lost in the lower court, asked the High Court to issue an injunction
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Tennessee church leader Rodney Norvell says campus ministries are important:
Number one is discipleship and spiritual growth.
Number two is missional training.
Number three they connect students to the local church.
Read the full piece at Baptist Press.
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More than 2 billion people face food insecurity everyday. Learn how you can help at IMB.org.
Bill Denman in Independence, Missouri retired from construction work in his early 60s. He had used heavy equipment machinery to build water and sewer lines most of his adult life. First, he was an operator and then a foreman. He worked hard.
Retirement was good. He picked up a hobby as he bought a classic car and began entering it in car show competitions. It was a 1938 Ford Coupe, and Denman kept it shining as he showed it off in car shows.
He also began going on his church’s annual mission trips for 16 consecutive years. In 2002, 2004 and 2005 he went to Nicaragua with “Project Hope” to build homes. His wife Mary began joining him on these mission trips.
He said it was then that God started guiding him to take a fresh look at his classic car.
Not long after, at a car show a man asked Denman if he had a 1938 Ford Coupe. He said he did, and the man came over to his house to look at it. Denman sold it to him for $25,000.
He then went to an equipment dealer and asked about buying a skid steer. There was one for sale with an extra bucket and some other accessories. The price? $25,000. Denman wrote a check.
He’s now gone on more than 90 mission trips doing disaster relief and helping build churches, rebuild storm-damaged homes and the like.
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The Kendricks’ Brothers’ movie The Forge continues to hold strong at the box office. Just 12 days after its release, the movie has brought in more than $16 million in tickets sales. It’s consistently stayed in the top five movies ticket buyers are going to see at the theatre.
The movie filmed in the Kendrick’s brother’s hometown of Albany, Georgia is the first movie they’ve made there since Courageous.
The Forge is the story of a young business man who takes an interest in struggling teenagers and helps him grow as a follower of Jesus.
Church and pastors and have commented on social media about how the movie has been beneficial in sharing the Gospel and stirring up discipleship conversations.
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Texas church leader Dusty Thompson offers an encouraging word about the younger generation, “If you are at a place in your church life where you are trying to reach families and younger people in your community, the young people in your church will be your greatest asset to reach their peers. Call them to it and help them develop the character and competencies to not only share their faith and invite friends to church, but make disciples and grow as leaders.”
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Lostness is the world’s greatest problem. Learn how to share the light at IMB.com.
Send Relief continues to aid Sudan, as half the nation faces acute hunger and famine chases refugees and internally displaced persons.
Cholera and heavy rains exacerbate the humanitarian crisis, according to international governmental agencies.
Jason Cox, Send Relief’s vice president of international ministry, said the war is not getting enough attention in the U.S., even as Send Relief continues to send aid.
“This war has created what is now the largest population of forcibly displaced people in the world. The humanitarian needs are overwhelming, and growing. But the opportunities are also great,” Cox told Baptist Press.
Famine has affected nearly 4 million refugees since 2023.
Learn how you can help at Send Relief.org.
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According to the 2022 Greatest Needs of Pastors study, more than 3 in 4 pastors (77%) say developing leaders and volunteers and fostering connections with unchurched people (76%) are ministry needs they face.
Scott McConnell, director of Lifeway Research, noted that “Motivating a congregation to function as one unit in sharing the love of Jesus with others” is the key.
According to Lifeway’s Ken Braddy, the frist way to connect with the unchurched is often through the weekly worship service. The second best way to help people share their faith is through groups.
Building relationships with unchurched people requires proximity to them. And when they receive an invitation to attend an ongoing Bible study group, smaller groups tend to be the best places for them to meet believers as they assimilate into the church, Braddy writes in Baptist Press.
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More than 2.3 billion people face food insecurity every day. Learn how you can help at IMB.org.
Alabama meteorologist James Spann has found his passion in life. The longtime TV weatherman in Birmingham says that since he was a young boy he wanted to do what he’s had the opportunity to do for decades.
Spann can be seen every weekday in the Birmingham area and heard on radio across the United States.
Though he’s thankful he’s able to work a job he loves, he says he’s had to learn that one’s career is not all there is to life. He says he’s dealt with a season of life when he thought he was his number one priority but God has taught him otherwise.
Accoring to the Alabama Baptist, he says serving in the children’s ministry of his local church was one tool God used to change his heart.
He also points to his ministry in a local hospital.
Spann’s 19-year role as chair of the board of Baptist Medical Center Montclair, which moved and eventually became known as Grandview Medical Center, was something he never planned to do, but he knows God led him there.
It started by being asked to serve on the board for a couple of months. Since one of his jobs in life is to “mitigate loss of life during tornadoes,” he decided he could use the time to learn about trauma from the emergency room doctors.
Spann says he spends several nights a week visiting hospital patients in between newscasts and, he says, he brings them better news than whether it’s going to rain tomorrow.
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The Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission is urging Congress to avoid the inclusion of funding for so called “gender transitions” in the 2025 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA).
The act establishes policies, restrictions and other administration matters relating to the DOD.
The ERLC is also asking the agency to ensure that selective service is not expanded to include women.
The ethics group is also requesting that tax-payer dollars not be used to pay for abortion-related travel.
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If you’re a medical professional, you can use your skills to do more than provide physical healing. Learn more at IMB.org.
Today is Labor Day. The Museum of the Bible writes, “Labor activists first put forward the concept of a federal holiday to celebrate “the strength and esprit de corps of the trade and labor organizations” in the late 1800s. Although times had changed and agriculture was giving way to a more industrial economy, there was still an imbalance of power. At the height of the Industrial Revolution in the US, the very poor and immigrants worked in the most unsafe conditions, with little sanitary facilities, fresh air, or even occasional breaks. The average American worked 12-hour days and 7-day weeks to survive. Despite restrictions in some states, children as young as five or six worked in mills, factories, and mines, and received lower wages than adults.”
According to the museum, “… by 1894, 23 states had adopted the holiday, just over half the states in the Union at that time. Early that year, Congress passed an act making Labor Day a legal holiday in the District of Columbia and the territories. A few months later, on June 28, President Grover Cleveland signed the holiday into law in the hope it might repair ties with American workers. All this happened because of the upheaval in the workplace.”
The Bible has much to say about labor.
Beginning in Genesis 1:26 where it says, “Then God said, “Let us make man in our image, according to our likeness. They will rule the fish of the sea, the birds of the sky, the livestock, the whole earth, and the creatures that crawl on the earth.”
And, in 2 Thessalonians 3: “In fact, when we were with you, this is what we commanded you: “If anyone isn’t willing to work, he should not eat.” 11 For we hear that there are some among you who are idle. They are not busy but busybodies. 12 Now we command and exhort such people by the Lord Jesus Christ to work quietly and provide for themselves. 13 But as for you, brothers and sisters, do not grow weary in doing good. -- 2 Thessalonians 3:10-13 (CSB)
And, Ephesians 6:6 calls on workers to avoid working “ only while being watched, as people-pleasers, but as slaves of Christ, doing God’s will from your heart. 7 Serve with a good attitude, as to the Lord.”
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Enjoy the day…whether you’re off of work or not and remember Colossians 3:10 Paul says that whatever we do should be done for the glory of God.
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More than 2 billion people face food insecurity everyday. Learn how you can help at IMB.org.