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June/July 2010 Issue
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Young Pastors
Affirming CP
by Karen Willoughby
Their fresh perspective confirms
a generations-old missions partnership among Southern Baptists.
Three under-40 pastors share their outlook toward the Cooperative
Program:
Jacob Atchley of The Church at Martinsburg, West Virginia,
says the partnership of 45,000 churches makes possible all that
Southern Baptists do.
Kris Barnett of East Pickens (South Carolina) Baptist Church,
says CP partnership makes it possible for the church he leads
to do so much more than just its own missions projects.
Brian Saxon of Second Baptist Church in Lancaster, South Carolina,
says while the church he leads has limits, the Cooperative Program
is limitless because of its partnership.
JACOB ATCHLEY
THE CHURCH AT MARTINSBURG
Younger pastors are positioned
to be the tip of the evangelical spear in penetrating the darkest
corners of the earth with the life-giving Gospel of Christ, said
Jacob Atchley, 29, pastor of The Church of Martinsburg, West Virginia.
Southern Baptists are "uniquely positioned because we
already have the cooperative piece [in place] to step out and
continue fulfilling the mission," Atchley said.
"The Southern Baptist Convention and its Cooperative Program
are great tools in the hands of people and churches," the
West Virginia pastor continued. CP is not "the end-all, be-all,
but it's a great gift Southern Baptists have to mobilize for the
call God has placed on all Christians."
"The Convention may not be perfect, but it's still releasing
God's people to partner in God's mission," Atchley said.
Atchley is both a giver to and recipient of the Cooperative
Program. From the first time an offering was received at The Church
at Martinsburg last spring, its members committed 10 percent to
reach people through CP, Southern Baptists' method of supporting
missions and ministries of state conventions and the SBC. Atchley
himself is a missionary with the North American Mission Board,
with support provided via CP and the Annie Armstrong Easter Offering
for North American Missions.
"Southern Baptists help equip and send missionaries, and
we're part of that and ... part of a church that will plant other
churches as a result of the generosity of Baptists," Atchley
said.
He and his wife Lindsey chose to start the church in Martinsburg
because of its location. It's the last stop for a commuter train
that goes into Washington, D.C., and it's within thirty miles
of the next four towns where they plan to start churches.
"The vision is that through prayer, time, resources, and
strategy, churches can be planted in those four cities and also
in the heart of the nation's capital over the next two decades,"
Atchley said. "The harvest is plentiful and the Lord is sending
people out."
The Church at Martinsburg started in May 2009; by December
it had grown to more than seventy.
The young pastor said he preaches in straightforward fashion:
"It is nothing more than opening the Bible and exposing people
to the Bible and the Bible to people. We're teaching for life
change and for mission. As the pastor, I see my job as the head
of a Gospel-sending agency. Each week I have the opportunity to
teach, train, and send out missionaries."
The church began three groups in August for spiritual development
and meaningful relationships to form, with about thirty-five people
participating four months later. Each group focuses on the message
taught the previous Sunday.
This method allows the church to move in a common direction,
Atchley said. "Functionally it fits right now and it's really
starting to bear fruit as people wrestle with and seek to apply
the same truth all across the entire church body, and everything
is based on what is preached on Sunday."
Each community group also engages in their choice of one mission
project a semester, such as a servant ministry or a mission trip
near or far.
"I want to release people to the mission; that for me
is the strength of it," Atchley said. "When God's people
are serious about God's mission, it's revolutionary to the world."
KRIS BARNETT
EAST PICKENS BAPTIST CHURCH
"The Cooperative Program expands
our horizons; it goes out into the entire world," said Kris
Barnett, 32, and pastor for the last year at East Pickens Baptist
Church in Pickens, South Carolina, where about 450 people worship
on Sunday mornings.
He's another young pastor who readily supports how Southern
Baptists pool their missions resources for maximum effectiveness
in state conventions and throughout the world.
"We need the Cooperative Program to make this whole missions
thing work," Barnett said. "God's not limited to South
Carolina. We have multiple people who have gone out from our church
who have support from the Cooperative Program Baptist schools
and seminary students as well as missionaries.
"CP adds to the awareness of what's going on in the world,"
the pastor said. "It adds to what we're able to do as a church."
What East Pickens does as a church is have each of its eighteen
cross-generational E-groups [for Experience] adopt a Southern
Baptist missionary in order to put a face to CP. Each E-group
also takes on a local mission project, such as writing letters
of encouragement to the local police department or painting a
recent widow's garage.
East Pickens sponsors a July Fourth celebration for its community
including fireworks which was attended by about
five thousand people last year. But the church is moving from
primarily event-based evangelism to "more personal evangelism,
getting people to recognize divine appointments within their sphere
of influence," Barnett said. "We're trying to utilize
more of the individuals and get them to recognize the mission
field around them every day.
"That's the model Jesus gave us," Barnett continued.
"It leads more directly to discipleship, which is where the
church in general is sorely lacking. If you interact with someone,
develop a relationship with them, and lead them to faith, you
have a greater sense of responsibility in discipling them"
than someone with no personal connection to the person he/she
is evangelizing.
East Pickens, which built a new worship center nearly six years
ago and recently celebrated its 101st anniversary, has refocused
to become more discipleship-oriented, as reflected in its new
mission statement: "We exist in order to develop disciples
of Christ by becoming the body of Christ."
"It's a process," Barnett explained. "As we
become the body of Christ, we engage the heart of Christ in worship,
encounter the mind of Christ in Bible study, experience the arms
of Christ through fellowship, and extend the hands of Christ through
missional living. And all of these overlap, interact, and intertwine."
East Pickens offers both traditional and contemporary services
on Sunday mornings; on Sunday nights, the church gathers in multi-generational
groups for discussion on living out the morning message.
"We have a great opportunity to learn from the adults
who have gone before," Barnett said. "And our younger
generation can teach the older generation new approaches to missions,
ministries, and outreach into the community. I think the interaction
between these two generations will kindle excitement in both groups."
Making disciples, the pastor said, is "evangelism from
a different perspective. We have to do effective discipleship
or we're not doing effective evangelism. It's essential we do
effective discipleship, or we don't train them to do what Jesus
commanded us to do in the Great Commission. Partial obedience
is always disobedience."
East Pickens undergirds its missions focus by putting love
in action through supporting the Cooperative Program with a tithe
of its undesignated tithes and offerings, along with providing
support to the Twelve Miles Baptist Association. The church gathers
mission dollars for short-term mission trips throughout the year,
in a Kingdom Mission Fund (KMF), so it's available when needed.
The KMF also sponsors local ministries; a new work in Bluffton,
South Carolina, led by former pastor Carl Martin, who left with
the church's blessing and support for the initiative; and Mission
Service Corps missionaries Ann and Steve Corbin in New Orleans.
Internationally, East Pickens members go to Romania every summer,
where they help with an orphanage the church helped start in 2000.
"We're beginning a new phase of that partnership,"
Barnett said. "The church we've been working with is doing
quite well. The pastor there has deacons going out to plant churches
in the villages. He wants us to adopt one of those villages. Our
hope is we would send several smaller teams medical missions,
construction and over the course of those trips, create
a buzz that will give us an opportunity to share the Gospel."
In addition to Romania, East Pickens also sends teams to Peru
and Nova Scotia. The partnership with Nova Scotia was birthed
out of a local ministry called Real Champions that East Pickens
started as an outreach to outdoorsmen. The men from Real Champions
traveled to Nova Scotia for missions and hunting and have now
seen the Canadian church grow by adopting similar strategies for
reaching men.
"Missions is in the DNA of this church," Barnett
said. "It starts with the Cooperative Program. That comes
right out of the general fund of the church."
BRIAN SAXON
SECOND BAPTIST CHURCH, LANCASTER
Undergirding the missions and ministry
of Second Baptist Church in Lancaster, South Carolina, is a foundational
commitment to the Cooperative Program.
"I still believe the Cooperative Program is the best method
of cooperation for our churches," said Brian Saxon, 37 and
pastor of the church since the summer of 2006. "I grew up
in a small rural Baptist church and I have heard about the CP
all my life. Our church gives 10 percent of our budgeted receipts
because we want to partner with other churches to build God's
Kingdom."
Even with one thousand people in worship on Sundays, there
are limits as to what Second Baptist can do on its own, Saxon
said. It has a finite amount of people, of money, and ideas. But
the Cooperative Program is virtually limitless.
"I believe CP has been, and still is, a vision for our
Convention to join together in a work that would be literally
impossible to accomplish as individual churches," Saxon said.
"CP builds a spirit of cooperation among our churches and
allows us to invest in eternity."
In addition, the pastor said, he wouldn't have been able to
go to seminary if it hadn't been for the Cooperative Program.
He earned an M.Div. and a D.Min., thanks in part to CP gifts,
and several members of the church have received the same educational
benefit at college and seminary. Other members are living in nearby
Southern Baptist retirement communities funded in part by South
Carolina Cooperative Program dollars.
"Also, the partnerships we are able to form with the state
convention, NAMB, and IMB have aided us in carrying out the Great
Commission," Saxon said.
Second Baptist historically has been a mission-minded church,
the pastor said. "We just hired a staff person to be over
missions mobilization. We have started a new strategy where we
are going to partner with five people groups/regions across the
world," he said of the initiative in conjunction with the
South Carolina Baptist Convention and IMB.
Locally the church has developed "The Way" as an
entrée to local missions involvement. The Way helps direct
volunteers from the church to the pregnancy care center, boys
and girls home, local food pantry, and other entities that serve
the Lord while serving others. The church also has a handyman
ministry and a class in English as a Second Language.
Event evangelism is another facet of Second Baptist's ministry,
such as its involvement in a Salt & Light Men's Ministry Conference
on February 5-6 at White Oak Conference Center in partnership
with the South Carolina convention and North American Mission
Board.
Across the nation, Second Baptist partners with a church in
Kentucky and, next summer, will partner with a church in Prospect,
Ohio.
"I believe that partnerships at the local, home, and international
levels is the 'how' we are going to impact our world with the
message of Christ," Saxon said, explaining that partners
are just people coming together for a common cause.
"It's true; every believer is called to reach out into
the world to give a cup of cold water, meet real needs in the
community, and share the love of Christ," Saxon said.
One of the problems with being a Christian in the 21st century
is that there are so many options, leaving people overly busy
and struggling to get their priorities in order, Saxon said. "Not
that the things our families are doing are wrong, but they seem
to be competing with God's call on their lives."
One way Second Baptist addresses this is with "Deeper
Pursuits," short-term small group studies to help learners
"go deeper in your pursuit of the living God. Build close
relationships with other people. Experience growth in your spiritual
life," according to the church's website.
"We also see a battle for the family," Saxon continued.
"We make it a priority to stress the importance of making
our homes Christ-centered.
"Our thrust is to enable our people to live the life of
a missionary," Saxon said. "Many of our ministries have
been born out of a vision that God has given an individual or
individuals. As a church, we provide many opportunities to get
involved with missions, but there are many ministry opportunities
that happen every day because our members have the attitude of
Christ. Missions and ministry is more than a program. It is a
lifestyle."
Karen Willoughby is a member of Kingsville
Baptist Church in Pineville, Louisiana, and is managing editor
of the Baptist Message, newsjournal of the Louisiana Baptist Convention.
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