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State
Missionary Rick Lance is executive director of the Alabama Baptist State
Board of Missions. |
Other Recent Blog Entries:
God always
has the last word!
Sunday, April 29, 2012
The storms have come in our lives in an unimaginably
destructive way. In the future, more storms, literal and figurative, will
intrude their mighty presence upon us, but we stand on the solid Rock of Christ!
God has the last word, and that word is hope.
A Time to
Remember
Friday, March 15, 2012
Those of us who witnessed the scenes of destruction in
the early hours after the incidents were moved to tears and almost speechless as
we viewed the indescribable debris and rubble caused by these tornadoes. Those
memories are deeply etched in our minds.
A Call
for Christian Stewardship during Scary Times
Friday, February 10, 2012
You have most likely heard and perhaps quoted those
figures. Twenty percent of the people give 80 percent of the budget, and the
other 80 percent give the remaining 20 percent.
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October 2010
A Culture of Cooperation
Submitted: Thursday, October 28, 2010; 9:46 a.m.
print this page
●
feedback
●
main ALSBOM site |
Almost six years ago, I wrote an article on this
blog titled “A Culture of Cooperation,” reprinted below. This
text reflects your State Board's ongoing passion for Great
Commission ministries, which began with a fresh recommitment in
1998 that persists to the present day.
As our denomination seeks a path forward amidst our nation's
Great Recession, the fact is that state conventions have been
sending higher percentages to the SBC in recent years. Until the
recession, the total dollars were increasing as well. The Great
Recession didn’t change percentages, but it has reduced the
amount of funds received and thus forwarded to the SBC.
Traditionally, state conventions and the SBC have been partners,
not adversaries. The way forward is partnership. The way to
conflict is to be adversarial. Partnering for the gospel was
Paul's way of doing missions. Others have chosen
conflict/adversarial relationships, and the Kingdom suffered!
Alabama Baptists are proud to be one of 42 state conventions
that support the SBC. We need to remember that only one state
convention supports our beloved family of Alabama Baptist
missions and ministries. Alabama Baptists are glad to be first
in total dollars given through the Cooperative Program for SBC
causes. Remarkably, we are also first in per-member CP giving to
SBC causes as well!
Thanks for considering these thoughts. Thanks even more for your
gifts through the Cooperative Program and for praying for your
state missionaries.
“Culture”
is a buzz word used in the vernacular of our day. It is a
general term that can be used in numerous ways. In the world of
business there is talk of “corporate culture.” Educators speak
of an “academic culture.” “Church culture” is a term applied to
denominations and local churches alike.
Since 1925 Southern Baptists and Alabama Baptists have been
champions of a “culture of cooperation” called the Cooperative
Program. Despite our differences of opinion on some issues, the
Cooperative Program has been the personification of this
“culture of cooperation.”
In writing to the church at Corinth in I Corinthians 1:10-17,
the Apostle Paul was appealing to that community of faith to
embody a “culture of cooperation.” Recently I reflected upon
these scriptural insights as a lens through which we as Alabama
Baptists and Southern Baptists can continue to be champions of
the Cooperative Program.
Corinth was a troubled church beset with an array of relational,
doctrinal and even moral concerns. The secular culture in which
they lived often permeated the church. This, of course, is not
unlike our day. The first century and the 21st centuries are
more alike than we would like to admit. Therefore, the counsel
of the Apostle Paul concerning the “culture of cooperation” is
applicable to us in a most meaningful way.
The “culture of cooperation” is built upon a concrete
foundation. Paul declares, “Now, dear brothers and sisters, I
appeal to you by the authority of the Lord Jesus…” (NLT). This
affirmation emphasizes the concrete foundation on which we have
built our sense of commitment to the cause of Christ as well as
our “culture of cooperation.” The Cooperative Program is a
unified means of building upon our cooperative mission efforts.
Our “culture of cooperation” is blessed with a clear focus. The
focus is upon the Great Commission. That is why your State Board
of Missions has sought to take the lead in being Great
Commission ministers as state missionaries. Empowering Kingdom
Growth through Great Commission Ministries is our clear focus.
Again, the Cooperative Program reflects that emphasis. Not
everything can be included in the budget of the Cooperative
Program, but it is an inclusive approach to funding mission
efforts in our state, in North America and internationally.
Our “culture of cooperation” is broadened by a compassionate
fellowship. Fellowship is one of those rich biblical terms that
means more than having “chips and dip” after church on Sunday
evening. It speaks of a shared experience and shared values. The
Cooperative Program exemplifies our shared values of reaching
the world for Christ with a sense of collaboration.
Our “culture of cooperation” is brightened by a common future.
As believers, we share a common future in Christ. Our challenge
is to “work till Jesus comes.” The Cooperative Program is an
active agent for God's Kingdom because the ministries we have in
common really never sleep. Every minute of the day the “culture
of cooperation” is at work through the Cooperative Program.
In I Corinthians 1:10 Paul appealed to the Corinthians to
experience and exemplify “real harmony.” That sounds like a
“culture of cooperation” to me. In 1925 our spiritual ancestors
developed a “culture of cooperation” that birthed the
Cooperative Program. The Kingdom of God is the bigger and the
better for it. In every generation Alabama Baptists and Southern
Baptists must reemphasize the “culture of cooperation.” Now is
our time to do just that! I invite you and your church to touch
the world and to make a kingdom difference by systematically
supporting missions through the Cooperative Program.
October 2010
A Culture of Cooperation
Submitted: Thursday, October 28, 2010; 9:46 a.m.
print this page
●
feedback
●
main ALSBOM site |
Almost six years ago, I wrote an article on this
blog titled “A Culture of Cooperation,” reprinted below. This
text reflects your State Board's ongoing passion for Great
Commission ministries, which began with a fresh recommitment in
1998 that persists to the present day.
As our denomination seeks a path forward amidst our nation's
Great Recession, the fact is that state conventions have been
sending higher percentages to the SBC in recent years. Until the
recession, the total dollars were increasing as well. The Great
Recession didn’t change percentages, but it has reduced the
amount of funds received and thus forwarded to the SBC.
Traditionally, state conventions and the SBC have been partners,
not adversaries. The way forward is partnership. The way to
conflict is to be adversarial. Partnering for the gospel was
Paul's way of doing missions. Others have chosen
conflict/adversarial relationships, and the Kingdom suffered!
Alabama Baptists are proud to be one of 42 state conventions
that support the SBC. We need to remember that only one state
convention supports our beloved family of Alabama Baptist
missions and ministries. Alabama Baptists are glad to be first
in total dollars given through the Cooperative Program for SBC
causes. Remarkably, we are also first in per-member CP giving to
SBC causes as well!
Thanks for considering these thoughts. Thanks even more for your
gifts through the Cooperative Program and for praying for your
state missionaries.
“Culture”
is a buzz word used in the vernacular of our day. It is a
general term that can be used in numerous ways. In the world of
business there is talk of “corporate culture.” Educators speak
of an “academic culture.” “Church culture” is a term applied to
denominations and local churches alike.
Since 1925 Southern Baptists and Alabama Baptists have been
champions of a “culture of cooperation” called the Cooperative
Program. Despite our differences of opinion on some issues, the
Cooperative Program has been the personification of this
“culture of cooperation.”
In writing to the church at Corinth in I Corinthians 1:10-17,
the Apostle Paul was appealing to that community of faith to
embody a “culture of cooperation.” Recently I reflected upon
these scriptural insights as a lens through which we as Alabama
Baptists and Southern Baptists can continue to be champions of
the Cooperative Program.
Corinth was a troubled church beset with an array of relational,
doctrinal and even moral concerns. The secular culture in which
they lived often permeated the church. This, of course, is not
unlike our day. The first century and the 21st centuries are
more alike than we would like to admit. Therefore, the counsel
of the Apostle Paul concerning the “culture of cooperation” is
applicable to us in a most meaningful way.
The “culture of cooperation” is built upon a concrete
foundation. Paul declares, “Now, dear brothers and sisters, I
appeal to you by the authority of the Lord Jesus…” (NLT). This
affirmation emphasizes the concrete foundation on which we have
built our sense of commitment to the cause of Christ as well as
our “culture of cooperation.” The Cooperative Program is a
unified means of building upon our cooperative mission efforts.
Our “culture of cooperation” is blessed with a clear focus. The
focus is upon the Great Commission. That is why your State Board
of Missions has sought to take the lead in being Great
Commission ministers as state missionaries. Empowering Kingdom
Growth through Great Commission Ministries is our clear focus.
Again, the Cooperative Program reflects that emphasis. Not
everything can be included in the budget of the Cooperative
Program, but it is an inclusive approach to funding mission
efforts in our state, in North America and internationally.
Our “culture of cooperation” is broadened by a compassionate
fellowship. Fellowship is one of those rich biblical terms that
means more than having “chips and dip” after church on Sunday
evening. It speaks of a shared experience and shared values. The
Cooperative Program exemplifies our shared values of reaching
the world for Christ with a sense of collaboration.
Our “culture of cooperation” is brightened by a common future.
As believers, we share a common future in Christ. Our challenge
is to “work till Jesus comes.” The Cooperative Program is an
active agent for God's Kingdom because the ministries we have in
common really never sleep. Every minute of the day the “culture
of cooperation” is at work through the Cooperative Program.
In I Corinthians 1:10 Paul appealed to the Corinthians to
experience and exemplify “real harmony.” That sounds like a
“culture of cooperation” to me. In 1925 our spiritual ancestors
developed a “culture of cooperation” that birthed the
Cooperative Program. The Kingdom of God is the bigger and the
better for it. In every generation Alabama Baptists and Southern
Baptists must reemphasize the “culture of cooperation.” Now is
our time to do just that! I invite you and your church to touch
the world and to make a kingdom difference by systematically
supporting missions through the Cooperative Program.
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