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May 2008 Issue
Crossover
Indianapolis
by Mickey Noah
Southern Baptist volunteers from
throughout North America will crisscross Indianapolis the first
week of June, when Crossover'08 comes to town in
advance of the Southern Baptist Convention's annual meeting at
the Indiana Convention Center on June 10-11.
Crossover'08, set for June 6-7 in Indianapolis,
will mark the twentieth anniversary of this annual evangelistic
event, designed to share the Gospel of Jesus Christ in the host
city the weekend before the SBC's annual meeting.
While it's difficult to predict how many Southern Baptists
will attend this year's convention in Indianapolis as messengers
representing many of SBC's 43,000 churches, last year's session
in San Antonio drew about 8,600 participants.
Crossover will be jointly sponsored by the SBC's North American
Mission Board (NAMB), the State Convention of Baptists in Indiana,
and the Crossroads Baptist Association in Indianapolis.
Eight new churches one Hispanic, one Chinese, one African-American,
and five Anglo will be planted as by-products of Crossover'08,
according to Jimmy Kinnaird, NAMB's Crossover coordinator in Alpharetta,
Georgia.
"Our goal is that when we leave Indianapolis, we will,
at the same time, ensure that the Gospel stays there and spreads,"
Kinnaird said. "We want Southern Baptist churches to be strengthened
and new churches started. We want Indianapolis to be a place where
Jesus is known even better after Crossover'08 and
the Convention."
John Rogers, missions and evangelism team leader for the State
Convention of Baptists in Indiana, said both the state convention
and NAMB are playing supportive roles while the local Crossroads
Baptist Association in Indianapolis drives this year's Crossover.
"It's their heart, their vision and their strategy,"
Rogers said. "When it's locally led and locals take ownership,
we think the results will be longer lasting. We see Crossover'08
as a process, not an event. We want Crossover to be felt
long after people have left Indianapolis."
Rogers said Crossover'08 follow-up will be more
extensive than in the past.
"We want to see baptisms as a result of Crossover,
which will help our churches grow. So we're putting a lot of resources
and personnel into follow-up."
During the week leading up to the SBC's annual meeting, volunteers
representing dozens of SBC churches in Indiana and around
the nation will take the Gospel to Indianapolis' inner-city
and metro areas.
Kinnaird said Crossover'08 strategic events will
include twenty-seven block parties, focusing on African-American,
Korean, Hispanic, and Anglo neighborhoods; door-to-door evangelism
spearheaded by eight local churches; projects to rehab ten houses
in the Indianapolis area under NAMB's World Changers ministry;
repair and renovation of a school playground or local park by
NAMB's Baptist Builders ministry; and roving ICE (Intentional
Community Evangelism) teams, who will blanket the city's core-city
area, witnessing to those they meet on the streets during the
week leading up to Crossover weekend.
Five Indianapolis churches will anchor the ICE campaign: Cornerstone
Christian Fellowship, Living Word Baptist Church, Eastside Community
Baptist Church, Gabriel Baptist Church, and Warren Baptist Church.
Leading the Crossover/ICE effort for the seventh consecutive
year is Victor Benavides, urban center evangelism coordinator
for NAMB. He said a minimum of forty ICE volunteers from across
the country will come to Indianapolis to share the Gospel on the
city's streets.
"We look for high foot-traffic areas to witness in,"
Benavides said, "like busy intersections and bus stops, shopping
centers, apartment complexes, and even outside liquor stores."
Echoing Rogers and Kinnaird, Benavides said he wants to see
Crossover'08's evangelism efforts bear lasting results.
"We want to impact the areas of prayer, outreach, visitation,
building relationships, the assimilation of people into local
churches, and starting new churches long after the ICE teams are
gone," he said. "We want to help make churches healthy
in all these facets."
Benavides said another goal is to promote Crossover
to other churches throughout the SBC as an opportunity for mission
trips to future SBC annual meeting cities Louisville, Kentucky
(2009), Orlando (2010) Phoenix (2011), and New Orleans (2012).
Since Crossover originated during the SBC annual meeting
in Las Vegas in 1989, almost forty thousand persons have prayed
to receive Christ as result of the annual evangelistic effort.
Thousands have participated as Crossover volunteers, and
dozens of new Southern Baptist churches have been planted under
the twenty-year program.
Indianapolis is the thirteenth largest city in the U.S. with
a population of about 780,000, with 2 million in the metro area.
Indiana has 417 Southern Baptist churches with more than 96,000
members.
For additional information about Crossover'08
in Indianapolis, to register as a volunteer or to participate
in ICE, go to www.crossover08.com.
Mickey Noah is a member of First Redeemer
Church in Cummings, Georgia, and a staff writer with the SBC North
American Mission Board.
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Copyright
© 2008 Southern Baptist Convention Executive Committee
SBC Life is published by the
Executive Committee of the Southern Baptist Convention
901 Commerce Street,
Nashville, Tennessee 37203
Tel. 615.244.2355
Email us: jrevell@sbc.net
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