Author: Jayson Larson

B.H. Carroll ‘still speaks,’ Hawkins says on SWBTS Founder’s Day

Though now gone for more than 107 years, the founder of Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, B.H. Carroll, “still speaks” today to the issues that face Southern Baptists, O.S. Hawkins said in an address delivered March 10 as part of Founder’s Day, marking the 114th anniversary of the seminary.

“As Southwesterners, we have a rich heritage, but to find the real strength of this institution we must journey back to the roots, back to the life and legacy of our founder on this Founder’s Day,” said Hawkins, president emeritus of GuideStone Financial Resources and former pastor of First Baptist Church of Dallas, Texas. Carroll’s courage, conviction, consistency, and cooperation are applicable to modern-day Baptist debates on the Bible, confessions of faith, women in ministry, and denominational cooperation, Hawkins contended.

In his introduction of Hawkins, Adam W. Greenway, president of Southwestern Seminary and Texas Baptist College, said he is thankful for Hawkins’ “legacy of leadership” noting “there is nobody more fitting to deliver the 2022 Founder’s Day address here at Southwestern Seminary in the historic Truett pulpit in the historic Truett Auditorium than a successor to Truett in Dr. O.S. Hawkins.” The auditorium is named in honor of George W. Truett, who served as pastor of First Baptist Dallas, 1897-1944, and was a longtime trustee and board chair of the seminary.

Greenway also announced the release of The L.R. Scarborough Treasury, the third volume in the seminary’s Seminary Hill Press’ Legacy Series. The book is a collection of books and other previously published and unpublished works by Scarborough, the seminary’s second president and B.H. Carroll’s chosen successor. Scarborough was one of the first seminary faculty members and the original occupant of the Chair of Evangelism (“Chair of Fire”) established by Carroll – the first chair of evangelism in theological education, which is now named in his honor.

The gathering was the first seminary chapel service in more than a decade to be held in Truett Auditorium in the B.H. Carroll Memorial Building. Founder’s Day is a special chapel service held annually on the date closest to the anniversary of the seminary’s chartering, March 14, 1908.

Greenway, who welcomed officers of the seminary’s board and members of the President’s Club, also announced that the pulpit being used for the first time in Truett Auditorium is believed to be the same one from which Truett preached his first official sermon in 1890 at the First Baptist Church of Sherman, Texas. The pulpit was recently donated by the church to Southwestern Seminary and will normally be on display at the B.H. Carroll Center for Baptist Heritage and Mission.

Hawkins thanked Greenway for “the honor of standing in this sacred desk” and for the “privilege of delivering this Founder’s Day address.” He added, “It has never been more important not only to understand our founder’s vision but to continue to respect and implement it in preparing another generation for Gospel ministry.”

“B.H. Carroll was, hands down, the most influential Southern Baptist leader of his time,” Hawkins said. “Like all our presidents who would come after him, he possessed a pastor’s heart,” noting he pastored the First Baptist Church in Waco, Texas, while developing a course on the English Bible at Baylor University.

Carroll felt a burden while serving as a trustee of Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky, that “the great and growing Southwest needing their own seminary which would stand as a bulwark against error while being committed to theological orthodoxy, developing the highest standards in research and scholarship while, and at the same time, inspiring students to be actively engaged in evangelism and missions centered in and through the local church,” he said.

Hawkins also noted key dates between 1905 and 1910 when Carroll had the vision for a new seminary, the launching of the seminary, its chartering as a freestanding institution separate from Baylor, and relocation from Waco to Fort Worth.

Behind the scenes, though, Hawkins noted the “tremendous opposition” Carroll experienced by foes and friends. “Had it not been for his personal tenacity and focused faithfulness to the vision he was convinced he had received from God, we would not be seated here today, over one hundred years later on this holy hill,” he said.

Hawkins explained when Carroll sought to move Southwestern Seminary from Waco, Truett, an influential member of the seminary’s board of trustees, was tasked with finding a location to relocate the school. Truett, who did not want the new seminary to relocate away from his alma mater, Baylor, suggested two lots of land in the Oak Cliff neighborhood south of downtown Dallas.

Carroll, Hawkins explained, was angered by the suggestion. J. Frank Norris, then-owner/editor of the Baptist Standard newspaper, “genuinely loved and respected Dr. Carroll” and assisted Carroll with “plenty of space in the Standard” to promote the move of the seminary to Fort Worth.

Most historians, Hawkins added, have failed to credit Norris’ “primary and pivotal role” in the birth of Southwestern, as well as its relocation to Seminary Hill.

Subsequently, as Hawkins pointed out, “Norris’ campaign for the seminary gained huge momentum and won the hearts of Baptists all over Texas. Thus in 1909, at the annual state convention meeting held in Truett’s own First Baptist Church in Dallas, it was young Norris, not Truett, who stood before the convention to appeal on behalf of the seminary in Fort Worth.”

After the death of Carroll in 1914, however, Hawkins said that Norris broke with the seminary, becoming one of the institution’s fiercest adversaries, while Truett supported Carroll’s successor Scarborough, faithfully serving and championing the seminary for the next 30 years until his own death.

“Behind the conception and gestation of Carroll’s vision, it was Norris, not Truett, who was lending a hand and assisting Dr. Carroll in the delivery room when the seminary was actually born. But, sadly, Norris abandoned the school, and in its early growth days it was Truett who took the young school by the hand and helped to lead it into maturity,” he said.

Having explored the behind-the-scenes developments that led to the founding and move of the seminary, Hawkins turned his attention to how Carroll’s convictions on key issues speak to Southern Baptists today.

“Southwestern’s growth across these many decades can be reflected in its unique ability to stay faithful to its founder’s vision,” Hawkins observed. “We serve a complicated and complex Southern Baptist Convention today. In many ways it is fragmenting before our eyes, currently caught in the conflict of several significant issues.”

These “heightened markers of concern and debate in SBC life today,” involve the Bible, confessions of faith, women in ministry, and cooperation, Hawkins said. He noted that Carroll left “hundreds of pages of commentary and writings which speak specifically to these matters.”

Hawkins observed “like righteous Abel, ‘He being dead, still speaks,’” referencing Hebrews 11:4.

Regarding the trustworthiness of the Bible, Hawkins said Carroll “leaves no doubt of his courageous and unwavering stance.” Carroll believed and “this seminary has been built upon the fact that every word is inspired by God, not simply thoughts or ideas, but every word of every verse of every chapter of every book—verbal, plenary inspiration.”

Noting Carroll’s conviction, Hawkins said, “Carroll regularly and unapologetically employed” the New Hampshire Confession, which formed the basis of the first Baptist Faith and Message statement adopted in 1925, and he argued confessions were necessary for the sake of identity, unity, and doctrinal strength.

“The modern cry ‘less creed and more liberty’ is a degeneration from the vertebrate to the jelly fish and means less unity and less morality and it means more heresy. It is hurtful sin to magnify liberty at the expense of doctrine,” Carroll wrote, Hawkins noted.

“B. H. Carroll was also a man of consistency,” Hawkins observed. “He did not let cultural nuances and political correctness influence biblical interpretations and conviction,” explaining Carroll rejected the tendency on the part of some to view Scripture “through the lens of culture. … For Carroll biblical truth did not mean one thing to one generation and another to the next and still another to the next.”

Regarding present debates in the Southern Baptist Convention about women in ministry, Hawkins noted few men “had more respect for women in ministry than B.H. Carroll.” The founder established a study course for women shortly after the seminary relocated to Fort Worth, adding it was “one of the first of its kind anywhere. He had great appreciation and respect for the place of ministry by women in the local churches,” he said.

Nevertheless, Hawkins said Carroll spoke strongly against women pastors citing his comment, “The custom of some congregations of having a woman as pastor is flat contradiction to the apostolic teaching and is in open rebellion against Christ our King, and high treason against His sovereignty, under no circumstances is it justifiable.”

Carroll was a “denominational loyalist,” who valued cooperation, Hawkins said, noting his pivotal role in promotion of Texas Baptist and Southern Baptist missions efforts. Nevertheless, “Carroll did not believe in cooperation at any cost,” he said. Describing briefly the “firestorm” of the Whitsitt controversy at Southern Seminary as “the first big challenge to SBC unity,” Hawkins explained, “Carroll immersed himself in the leadership of this denominational controversy for one purpose, in his words, ‘to promote unity.’”

“He being dead still speaks today. Each of us who are ‘official Southwesterners’ should follow in his footsteps with courage, conviction, consistency, and cooperation. These are our roots here at Southwestern,” Hawkins concluded.

Hawkins earned two degrees from Southwestern, the Master of Divinity in 1974 and the Doctor of Philosophy in 2021.

The entire sermon can be viewed here.

Southern Baptists of Texas Foundation prepares to move into its own building

ARLINGTON—For the first time in its 17-year history, the Southern Baptists of Texas Foundation owns its own office space. The Foundation plans to move into its new north Arlington location in mid-March.

“When God opened the door for this building, it was an affirmation of the plan he gave me eight years ago for the development of the SBT Foundation,” SBTF Executive Director Bart McDonald said. “I probably looked at a half-dozen properties, and then God just dropped this one in our lap.”

At its founding, the SBTF shared offices in the SBTC’s building in Grapevine. As its staff grew, the foundation moved into rented space in Arlington. While those solutions served for a time, there are advantages to the new building. In addition to leaving room for growth (staff office space is full in their current building) and getting out of the business of leasing property from others, McDonald sees possibilities for expanded ministry in their new headquarters.

“When we work on delivering value to our churches,” he said, “this model of inviting pastors in for specialized events or training—we’ve doing that in the field—is enhanced if we have a place to bring them. Our new place has conference space, kitchen space, and room to cater meals in. I think we’ll be able to do a lot more onsite training events than we were doing formerly.”

The SBTF currently manages $147 million in assets. Its loan portfolio, as well as other services provided to churches and state conventions, has enabled it to contribute $250,000 to the Southern Baptists of Texas Convention general budget during 2022. Although this is an unusual action on the part of state foundations, it is one that makes sense to McDonald.

“We set financial and operational independence as a goal, a shift from being a consumer of convention resources to being a contributor to the work of the convention,” he said. “While it’s not unusual for a foundation to contribute to different ministries out of an endowment they received for that purpose, we’re giving it out of our surplus. The money we realize from our different services, after expenses, becomes surplus.”

McDonald speaks of the state convention as the “parent” entity for the foundation. He sees the two institutions working together to accomplish the mission statement of the convention.

“What we’re [the Foundation and the Convention] doing is what I call a unified strategy of how to deliver value to our churches,” he said. “The foundation must be subordinate to the convention’s ultimate calling. Our charter should be to support the Southern Baptists of Texas Convention through the delivery of everything we do.”

The foundation plans to dedicate its new building during the regularly scheduled meeting of its board in May.

Lifeway trustees elect first African American woman as trustee chair

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — For the first time in its 130-year history, Lifeway Christian Resources will have an African American woman as trustee chair. Missie Branch was elected Tuesday, March 8, by Lifeway trustees during a special-called meeting.

Branch is assistant dean of students to women and director of graduate life at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary. A member of Imago Dei Church in Raleigh, N.C., Branch began her service on the board in 2017.

Lifeway CEO Ben Mandrell shared his excitement about this historic moment and praised Branch’s leadership ability, character and love for the local church.

“Missie’s character, commitment to the local church, and investment in tomorrow’s ministry leaders give me confidence that she’s the person to lead our board,” Mandrell said. “I’m excited and thankful for her historic appointment as the first African American female to chair our board.

“Missie is a bright person with a tremendous amount of insight and an inner strength from the Lord. I believe she will be a strong, unifying leader. She is a great friend to Lifeway, and I look forward to our deepened partnership.”

Branch expressed her appreciation for the board and their trust in her to lead them well.

“I am humbled by the confidence of my fellow board members,” Branch said. “Leading alongside a group like ours is an honor. When asked to join the board a few years ago, I never anticipated an opportunity like this. I love serving an organization whose mission is directly linked to the ministry and mission of the local church. I’m determined to work with my fellow board members as we seek to honor the Lord and serve our convention.”

Branch was elected vice chair during the trustee meeting held Jan. 25. She will now fill the role vacated by Greg Kannady, who stepped down as chair due to a recent health issue. While Kannady plans to continue his service as a board member, he shared with trustees via email he felt it would be wise to replace him as board chair.

Mandrell offered his appreciation for Kannady’s continued commitment to Lifeway. “We’re all praying for Greg and his family as they face this health challenge together,” Mandrell said.

Trustees also elected Luther McDaniel, Chief Financial Officer at Empirical Capital Partners, to serve as vice chair. McDaniel has served on the board since 2016. He’s a member of First Baptist Church, Hendersonville, Tenn.

“Luther McDaniel’s financial and business expertise is invaluable as he steps into the vice chair role,” Mandrell said. “I’m grateful for his leadership and for the other men and women who faithfully serve on our board.”

Ben Posey, pastor of First Baptist Church in Leroy, Ala., will continue to serve as recording secretary. “I so appreciate Ben’s servant leadership and devotion to serving Christ and His church,” Mandrell said. “The church he pastors is similar to a large majority of Southern Baptist churches—churches that rely on the resources Lifeway provides. It’s indispensable to have pastors like Ben providing feedback and speaking into those resources.”

The next Lifeway trustee meeting is scheduled for August 29-30, 2022.

EMPOWER ’22: As conference wraps, a question lingers: ‘Will you tell them?’

Tony Mathews SBTC Empower

IRVING—Speakers and breakout leaders at the Southern Baptists of Texas Convention’s 2022 Empower evangelism conference, held February 28-March 1 at the Irving Convention Center, challenged in-person and online attendees to go “all in” for Jesus by sharing the gospel.

Monday kicked off with the Classics luncheon featuring songwriter and humorist Mark Lowry and the Classics session with Matt Queen of Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary; Jim Richards, SBTC executive director emeritus; and Herb Reavis of Florida’s North Jacksonville Baptist Church. Music was provided by The Erwins gospel group.

Author Jen Wilkin and songwriter Laura Story headlined Monday afternoon’s Empower Ladies Session while breakouts led by 11 speakers on topics from Christian comedy to next-generation issues, new pastor orientation, and social justice and the gospel provided something for everyone. Breakouts continued Tuesday afternoon with 17 presenters offering hour-long sessions on such subjects as mobilizing teens, disaster relief, online worship, campus evangelism, discipleship, and LGBTQ issues in the church.

Main sessions featured worship led by Initiative Worship.

Monday: Going “all in” for Jesus

South Carolina evangelist Clayton King and his son Jacob, a college student, both from Clayton King Ministries, kicked off the main session Monday night.

“I’m assuming if you came here that you love the gospel. And you want to see people cross over from death to life,” the elder King told the crowd, adding that since mid-January, he had seen more than 1,200 people make first-time professions of faith. Today people seem more open to the gospel than before, he said. “We just have to share it.”

King said the “most effective tool of evangelism” for men and women in ministry involves family witness. Spiritual mothers, fathers, marriages, and children “can be a great testimony to the people around you that Jesus Christ is real,” King said.

Caleb Turner, co-pastor of Mesquite Friendship Baptist Church, followed the Kings, bringing a message from Matthew 21:18-22, Jesus’ cursing of the fig tree. The tree, filled with leaves, merely gave the “façade” of fruitfulness, a danger that churches must avoid. Turner cautioned against “warm pews and cold hearts” and urged pursuing the “faith of the fruitful” through prayer.

Jonathan (J.P.) Pokluda, pastor of Waco’s Harris Creek Baptist Church, rounded out Monday evening’s main session with a message from Luke 18, “the rich young ruler,” on reaching the next generation. Pokluda also guested at Late Night afterward.

“If you’re not reaching the future of your church, your church has no future,” Pokluda said, recalling his early days as a 21-year-old new Christian balancing faith and the world. Young people are “looking for that example of someone who says, ‘You know, I don’t need the world. I’m going to follow Jesus. I’m gonna go all in, for Jesus,’” he urged.

Tuesday: But God…

Tony Mathews, SBTC Missional Ministries senior strategist, opened Tuesday’s main session with a challenge: “No matter how bad your circumstance is, God can use you to advance the gospel. So trust him.” Mathews continued, “Trust him with joy,” reading and preaching on the apostle Paul’s experiences in Philippians 1:12-16.

Evangelist Greg Stier, founder of the Denver-based Dare 2 Share Ministries, which trains teens in evangelism, regaled the audience with tales of his own family and the power of the gospel.

“I don’t come from a typical religious, church-going, pew-sitting, hymn-singing family. I come from a family filled with body-building, tobacco-chewing, beer-drinking thugs,” Stier said. The Denver Mafia even nicknamed his uncles “The Crazy Brothers,” he added. All that changed when a “hillbilly preacher” nicknamed “Yankee” visited Stier’s Uncle Jack—a “dangerous man” often in and out of jail.

Jack, and eventually Stier’s whole family, were saved, all because Yankee went outside his comfort zone.

“The gospel changes everything,” he exclaimed, urging believers to “go outside the camp” and meet non-believers where they are.

A poignant moment occurred Tuesday morning onstage as Jeremy Freeman, pastor of Newcastle Baptist Church near Oklahoma City, and his son Caleb shared the story of Caleb’s miraculous survival after a horrendous rainy-night collision with an 18-wheeler on Interstate 35 on Dec. 19, 2017. Despite suffering a severe traumatic brain injury, with residual physical effects, Caleb has recovered remarkably, attends college, and shares his testimony often.

“In your life, people are going to say a lot of stuff to you,” Caleb said. “But God will always have the final say.” The pair presented a breakout session at Empower that afternoon.

On his first official day as the president of NAMB’s Send Network, Vance Pitman concluded Tuesday morning’s program, first describing his move from being pastor/planter of Hope Church in Las Vegas to his new position.

“I don’t think you can accomplish the Great Commission without planting new churches,” Pitman said. “When you engage cities with the gospel and disciples are made, then churches are born as a by-product.” He discussed the first “church plant in Jerusalem” from Acts, where 3,000 were saved. Within six months, Pitman said, there were 100,000 new followers of Jesus in Jerusalem.

Pitman called on Christians to be “a praying people … a united people … a witnessing people and … a generous people.”

Tuesday afternoon concluded with a message from Ed Newton, pastor of Community Bible Church in San Antonio. “I believe God wants to do a new thing” in this post-pandemic world, Newton said, describing the “up-in-out” lifestyle of imitating Christ.

Galvan and Simmons honored

In other highlights, the W. A. Criswell Award for Pastoral Evangelism was presented to David Galvan, a SBC and SBTC leader who recently retired from his long tenure as pastor of Primera Iglesia Bautista Nueva Vida in Dallas.  Joe Simmons, crusade evangelism veteran and SBTC evangelism consultant for 12 years, received the Roy Fish Lifetime Achievement Award for Vocational Evangelism.

Empower 2022 registrations numbered 1,964 in-person and online.

Empower 2023 is scheduled for Feb. 27-28 at the Irving Convention Center.

SBTC DR volunteer heads to Europe to minister to Ukrainian refugees

KRAKOW, Poland—Rockwall resident Glenda Mitchell*, a Southern Baptists of Texas Convention Disaster Relief chaplain and assessor, leaves March 4 to join a Disaster Assistance Response Team (DART) from Send Relief en route to Poland to assist with the influx of Ukrainian refugees following Russian’s invasion.

Send Relief is the compassion ministry arm of the Southern Baptist Convention. The DART group will help Polish Baptists develop strategies for serving the refugees.

“They observe, lend a hand, and make suggestions regarding response plans,” SBTC DR Director Scottie Stice said, adding that SBTC DR will participate in future teams expected to be sent to minister in Europe during the crisis.

In addition to Mitchell, the initial DART crew includes one SBDR volunteer from Ohio and four from North Carolina, Stice confirmed. The team is expected to spend much of its time in the Krakow area.

“I am very excited about how God is going to use our team to help the people of Ukraine and to help Baptists in Poland minister to them,” Mitchell said. “It’s a privilege.”

The DART group’s arrival in Poland occurs in the wake of IMB President Paul Chitwood’s recent visit to Eastern Europe. In a video recorded along the Polish-Ukrainian border, Chitwood invited Southern Baptists to be part of the ministry there, Baptist Press reported on March 2.

“We’re here to minister to them in any way we can,” Chitwood said in the video. “We’re grateful for the prayers and the financial support of Southern Baptists to make possible us sharing help and hope in the name of Christ with those who are now displaced and refugees from their own homes.”

Baptist Press also reported that many IMB workers in Eastern Europe have been relocated out of the danger zone, but ministry continues. As of early March, the Polish Baptist Union has plans to house 1,000 refugees in designated centers.

The United Nations puts the current number of Ukrainian refugees in the hundreds of thousands, but that number could rise to as many as 4 million.

As the conflict escalates, Send Relief and its partners are preparing for further ministry, including food relief, shelter, and transportation.

Stice requested prayer for the DART group: “Please pray for this team as they seek to encourage and plan with Polish Baptists in their ministry to Ukrainian refugees.”

Donations can be made through the SBTC to relief efforts on behalf of Ukrainian refugees. A downloadable prayer guide is also available.

This article also contains reporting from Baptist Press.

* Name changed for security purposes.

 

 

 

Dilbeck officially takes the reins at GuideStone as Hawkins named president emeritus

PLANO—GuideStone trustees met in regular session February 28-March 1 in what was the final trustee meeting for president O.S. Hawkins as he concludes 25 years leading the Southern Baptist Convention’s financial resources entity.

The meeting also marked the official transition of D. Hance Dilbeck, Jr. as president. Dilbeck joined the ministry in July 2021 and has served as president-elect.

Hawkins and his wife, Susie, were honored at a dinner February 28.

Outgoing trustee chair Renée Trewick praised the Hawkins family for their service and commitment to GuideStone participants.

“One of the greatest privileges of serving in this position has been the opportunity to get to know O.S. and Susie both personally and professionally,” Trewick said. “Thank you both for all you have done—we love you and will miss you.”

Trustees announced a donation to further fund the O.S. Hawkins Outstanding Pastoral Ministry Graduate Award at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary.

The evening featured comments from trustee Steve Dighton, who led the search committee that selected Dilbeck; Jack Graham, a lifelong friend of the family and pastor of Prestonwood Baptist Church in Plano; Bob Sorrell, a longtime former trustee; and John R. Jones, who served as chief operating officer of GuideStone throughout Hawkins’ tenure.

“I can give witness, as so many of you can, on how God has had his hand on O.S. Hawkins,” Jones said, detailing much of the growth of the ministry over the last 25 years. “Everything starts with O.S.’s relationship with the Lord.”

In his final remarks to trustees, Hawkins indicated he has been captured by a verse, Job 12:9, which reads, “Who among all these does not know that the hand of the Lord has done this?” Hawkins told trustees it has indeed been God’s hand at work over the last 25 years.

“What a privilege it’s been for Susie and me over this quarter of a century,” Hawkins said. “This whole journey has just been absolutely amazing.”

At Dilbeck’s request, Hawkins will continue to serve GuideStone until an official retirement on July 31. Hawkins will continue to write and speak on behalf of Mission:Dignity while also providing assistance to Dilbeck. The trustees bestowed on Hawkins the honorary title of president emeritus to recognize his continued efforts on behalf of Mission:Dignity even after his official retirement.

“He understands the kingdom of God is about relationships,” Dilbeck said. “He cares for people, especially the pastor at the crossroads. O.S. has a pastor’s heart.”

Reflecting on the ministry’s many accomplishments during his tenure—registering GuideStone’s investment options in 2001, the name change in 2004 from the Annuity Board to GuideStone, Southern Baptists’ approval to make GuideStone’s retirement, investment and life and health products to like-minded ministries and churches, and to make those investments available to those in the pew—Hawkins noted that it was the continued faithful support of Mission:Dignity for which he was most grateful.

Following a Hawkins custom, Dilbeck established a theme to guide the ministry’s work for 2022, calling it the “Year to Set a Stone.”

The imagery comes from 1 Samuel 7:12, which reads, “Then Samuel took a stone and set it between Mizpah and Shen, and named it Ebenezer, saying, ‘Thus far the Lord has helped us.’”

Dilbeck noted that the passage connotes both a backward look, remembering the past and celebrating what the Lord has done, and a forward look, confident that the Lord will continue to be with us. Dilbeck said, like the Israelites, GuideStone is called to look backward, look upward, look inward, and look forward.

Part of the next year will involve the executive team working together with trustees to develop a new strategic plan for the ministry, following a cycle Hawkins established with the formation of the GuideStone 100 long-range plan that guided the ministry for more than a decade. Dilbeck said, though, that strategic plans can fail without the Lord’s hand.

“He has helped us, He will help us, and indeed He must help us, or our strategy is vanity,” Dilbeck said.

Looking back on 25 years, Hawkins concluded his final remarks, committing to Dilbeck and trustees that he would be Dilbeck’s greatest asset and his biggest supporter.

“We are looking backward with hearts so full of thanksgiving for 25 wonderful years, looking forward to passing the baton to Hance and Julie,” Hawkins said. “I look forward to great days ahead.”

Then echoing his own charge received from Ray Taylor, who led the trustee search committee that called Hawkins to GuideStone in 1997, Hawkins gave his charge to Dilbeck.

“You take something great and make it greater,” Hawkins said. “I’ll be your biggest fan and supporter.”

EMPOWER ’22: La oración y el ministerio práctico ayuda a marcar la sesión en español de Apoderados

ARLINGTON—La Convención de los Bautistas del Sur de Texas organizó Apoderados, la sesión en español de la Conferencia Empower, en Fielder Church del 25 al 26 de febrero.

La reunión reunió a pastores y líderes hispanos de todo Texas. Hubo profesiones de fe, poderosos momentos de oración y tremendos momentos de alabanza y adoración dirigidos por Los Hermanos González, un equipo de alabanza compuesto por los tres hermanos originarios de México que ahora viven en Kansas City, Kansas.

Dr. Jorge Enrique Díaz, ex director de Editorial Mundo Hispano (también conocido como Casa Bautista), profesor, autor y mentor de muchos pastores y líderes de Texas recibió un premio en honor al difunto gran evangelista Rudy Hernández. El premio fue otorgado en reconocimiento a su servicio evangelístico en la comunidad hispana. Miryam Picott recibió el premio por su padre, que no pudo asistir por problemas de salud.

Picott está siguiendo los pasos de su padre, evangelizando y animando a las mujeres a caminar con Dios. Es autora y conferencista de mujeres, y también impartió un taller durante la conferencia.

El Dr. César Vidal fue el orador principal la noche del viernes. Vidal, originario de España, es un abogado, historiador y autor de más de 200 libros de renombre mundial. Su programa de radio, La Voz, tiene millones de oyentes diarios a ambos lados del Atlántico. Animó a más de 50 pastores y sus esposas a comprender que ser pastor es una inversión valiosa de sus vidas.

“Ser pastor deriva directamente de Dios a través de la sangre de Cristo y es guiado por el Espíritu Santo”, dijo Vidal. “Ser pastor es un don de Dios, es una profesión noble, sublime. Viene con el privilegio de administrar la casa de Dios con orgullo y dignidad piadosos, y también tiene sus recompensas en el cielo”.

Los niños en la conferencia recibieron un desafío evangélico de “Chagy the Messenger”, un payaso interpretado por el evangelista y pastor Eugenio Adorno Espinell. Ha estado compartiendo el evangelio con personas de todo el mundo como Chagy durante los últimos 30 años.

También se ofrecieron varios talleres de evangelización en Apoderados, dirigido por líderes y pastores hispanos de SBTC. Entre ellos, el consejero cristiano y pastor Eric Puentes, quien enseñó a los participantes cómo discipular y evangelizar a los niños; Chuy Avila, plantador de iglesias de SBTC y asociado principal de En Español, quien habló sobre las lecciones aprendidas del ministerio durante la pandemia del coronavirus; Sobre Ochoa, quien animó a todos a vivir una vida libre en Cristo y compartir el evangelio; y Miguel Faúndez, quien capacitó a los asistentes sobre el discipulado virtual. Rafael Rondón, nativo de Puerto Rico y pastor hispano de dos de los tres campus de Fielder, fue el anfitrión del evento junto con el personal de Fielder y 11 voluntarios. Rondón y su esposa, Marilyn, tienen tres hijos propios y son muy activos en el ministerio de crianza temporal/adopción. Por el momento, son padres de crianza temporal de dos niños pequeños.

Además, el Dr. Bruno Molina, asociado de evangelismo interreligioso y lenguaje de SBTC que ayudó a coordinar la conferencia, dirigió un panel de discusión estimulante sobre el evangelismo en el contexto hispano que incluyó al Dr. Vidal y los líderes del taller.

La Iglesia Fielder también acogerá la conferencia de Apoderados del próximo año, programada para febrero de 2023.

EMPOWER ’22: Cooperation fuels the mission, pastors testify at luncheon

Empower, CP luncheon

IRVING—Southern Baptists of Texas Convention President Todd Kaunitz had a clear message for the 400 or so people who gathered for lunch in the Grand Ballroom of the Irving Convention Center Tuesday during SBTC’s Empower conference.

“God is doing a great work in our state,” he said at the luncheon, which annually aims to highlight the value of Cooperative Program giving among SBTC and SBC churches. “We are advancing the mission like no other group of churches. Cooperative giving is what fuels the mission.”

The Cooperative Program refers to the Southern Baptist practice of churches partnering with one another to steward God-given resources to advance the gospel and mission of Jesus Christ. These resources are commonly used in ministry areas including evangelism, disaster relief, and church planting.

Powerful giving testimonies were offered at the luncheon, including from Ryan Napier—a church planter and pastor of Freedom Hill Church in San Antonio. He said he and his church—which ranked among the top 5 CP-giving church plants among SBTC churches in 2021—are “probably the most excited new Southern Baptists that you will ever meet in your life.”

He told the story of a neighbor who accepted Christ after more than two years of witnessing and prayer. Within 27 days of his salvation, the neighbor died of COVID. Napier preached the man’s funeral on Saturday and baptized the neighbor’s family the next day.

“On behalf of church planters across the state, thank you for your giving. And please don’t give up on giving,” Napier said. “We can always do more.”

Bart Barber, pastor of First Baptist Church of Farmersville, said the funds his church gives annually to CP could pay the salaries of three additional staff members. He noted, however, that all his staff had received training at CP-supported institutions. “Giving to the Cooperative Program is investing in staff,” he said.

Because of CP funding supporting the International Mission Board, FBC Farmersville has also been connected to an unreached, unengaged people group in Senegal, Barber added. “We didn’t know that people group existed until CP-funded missionaries told us that they did. We didn’t know there was no missionary presence there until the International Mission Board did the research. … Because we give to the Cooperative Program, everything we do to be engaged directly in national and international mission work is well-trained, well-planned, and fits into an overall worldwide strategy for impacting the world with the gospel of Jesus Christ.

“Together we can accomplish great things,” Barber added, confirming that his church has been made stronger through its CP commitment. “We keep writing that check, and I don’t shed a tear.”

Other SBTC pastors gave similar testimonies, either in person or via recorded video. Richard Rogers, pastor of University Heights Baptist in Huntsville—home to Sam Houston State University and its 21,000 college students—said CP giving has enabled his church to do ministry at a higher level through its support of collegiate outreach and collegiate church planters. J.C. Rico, pastor of Immanuel Baptist (SBTC’s westernmost Texas church), said CP giving enabled his church to minister to the victims and families of the August 2019 shooting at an El Paso Walmart through feeding, counseling, and a church-sponsored prayer event.

Said Kaunitz, who pastors New Beginnings Baptist Church in Longview: “We can’t do it alone. We are better together.”

 

EMPOWER ’22: Simmons ‘humbled’ to be given Roy Fish Award

Simmons Fish Empower

IRVING—Joe Simmons, who served as an evangelism consultant for the Southern Baptists of Texas Convention for 12 years, was given the Roy Fish Lifetime Achievement Award for Vocational Evangelism during the Tuesday afternoon session of the convention’s 2022 Empower Conference.

The Fish award was inaugurated in 2006 and is named for the late Roy Fish, a well-known and influential evangelism professor at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary for nearly 50 years.

“I’m unworthy of this,” Simmons said. “I’m just a guy who worked on the crusades. I’m very humbled about this. I’m grateful to God for this.”

Simmons was a layman at Sagemont Church in Houston, a former coach working for the power company, when Sagemont’s pastor, John Morgan, introduced him to evangelist James Robison in the 1970s. They become friends and he went on to work with Robison directing crusades all over the country for about 20 years.

“Our ministry started off really small. And then it got really big,” Simmons said. “We saw more people saved than through any other ministry, besides Billy Graham. We were doing 12 citywide crusades a year and 50 one-night rallies. Five or six-thousand people at a time would respond to the gospel invitation during these citywide crusades. We’d come into a county and then that county would lead the state in baptisms for the year.”

He also worked with Bailey Smith and his Real Evangelism organization before being asked to help SBTC with event evangelism.

“Joe Simmons has been a great example of a lay person who serves the Lord faithfully,” said SBTC Executive Director Nathan Lorick, who worked with Simmons when Lorick was evangelism director for the convention. “God has used him in incredible ways to advance the kingdom. His heart and passion for evangelism is contagious.  We are honored to recognize Joe for his lifelong pursuit of seeing people come to Christ.”

At 81 years old, Simmons is still passionate about evangelism and grieves to see churches neglecting this essential work. “I don’t understand how you can be a pastor, a student of the Bible, and not know that your major responsibility is to win the lost to Christ,” he said. He sees vocational evangelists as “God’s gift to the churches” for the God-given mandate to reach the lost.

Simmons and his wife, Linda, have been married for 60 years and have three sons and three grandchildren.

 

EMPOWER ’22: Hispanic pastor, leader Galvan honored with Criswell award

Galvan Empower

IRVING—David Galvan, longtime pastor of Primera Iglesia Bautista Nueva Vida in Dallas, was awarded the W.A. Criswell Award for Pastoral Evangelism during the Tuesday afternoon session of the Southern Baptists of Texas Convention’s 2022 Empower evangelism conference.

The award was instituted during the SBTC’s first evangelism conference in 1999. That conference was hosted by First Baptist Church of Dallas. The inaugural award honored its namesake—noted FBCD pastor W.A. Criswell, considered by many to be the pastoral mind behind the Southern Baptist Conservative Resurgence between 1979 and 1995.

“First, I feel so humbled that someone would recommend me. Especially with the impact Dr. Criswell had on my ministry,” Galvan said. “If I became an expository preacher, it’s because of his influence. If I separated my mornings [for study and prayer] it’s because of Dr. Criswell.”

Galvan marked his 40th anniversary at Nueva Vida in November 2021. He has served as a church planter, pastor, and denominational leader since 1979. He received a bachelor’s degree from Pan American University and a master’s degree from Criswell College.

He has served Southern Baptists in many ways during his ministry: as second vice president for the Southern Baptist Convention; first vice president for the SBTC; and as a trustee and board chairman for both Criswell College and Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary.

He stepped down as senior pastor at the end of 2021 but has no plans to end his ministry. “I’m very available for interims, supply preaching, whatever God opens up for me,” he said.

He remembers deliberating on James 1:5 (“Now if any of you lacks wisdom, he should ask God…”) and recommends younger pastors seeking to build an evangelistic church do the same. “I tried everything—door-to-door, discipleship, visiting like a madman, nothing was working,” he recalled.

Through prayer walking in his community, he discerned several ideas he believed to be God’s answer. The first idea was an Easter pageant that continued for more than 20 years, and then later a Christmas pageant. Thousands have come to Christ through those events. That led to a conviction about other opportunities in ministry.

“Every single sermon needs to end with an evangelistic invitation,” he said. “Take every opportunity, including weddings, funerals, and, for my church, quinceañeras. I ask, ‘Do your friends know Jesus?’ Use those events to share the gospel.”

“Pastor David is one of God’s choice servants,” SBTC Executive Director Nathan Lorick said. “His steady pastoral leadership and a life that exemplifies evangelism is a great example for all of us. Throughout his ministry, he has modeled what it means to walk with integrity and vision. We are so grateful to honor Pastor David for his excellent life and ministry.”

Galvan has been married to his wife, Elvia, since 1972; they have four children and 17 grandchildren.