28.12.2014 Views

Read Online Now - International Baptist Convention

Read Online Now - International Baptist Convention

Read Online Now - International Baptist Convention

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

Highlights<br />

Volume 46, Issue 3 Published by the <strong>International</strong> <strong>Baptist</strong> <strong>Convention</strong> December 2008<br />

Jimmy Martin<br />

Some Things<br />

Never Change<br />

Annual Meeting<br />

<strong>Convention</strong> Approves<br />

Summary of Basic Beliefs<br />

Missions Endowment Fund<br />

Bucharest Receives<br />

Grant


Some Things Never Change …<br />

Contents<br />

Highlights<br />

Volume 46, Issue 3<br />

<strong>Convention</strong> Continues<br />

Celebration of Jubilee ............ 8<br />

IBC Summary of Basic Beliefs .9<br />

IBC Bucharest Receives<br />

Missions Endowment Fund<br />

Grant .................................. 10<br />

First Global Missions Offering<br />

to be taken in December ..... 10<br />

From the Editor’s Pen .......... 11<br />

Virginia Team Provides<br />

Training in Bremen .............. 12<br />

News from the Churches ..... 12<br />

Highlights<br />

Published by the <strong>International</strong><br />

<strong>Baptist</strong> <strong>Convention</strong><br />

Am Dachsberg 98,<br />

60435 Frankfurt/Main,<br />

Germany, Phone: +49<br />

(0) 69 9540 8505, Email:<br />

admin@ibc-churches.org<br />

www.ibc-churches.org<br />

Jimmy Martin, General<br />

Secretary<br />

Judith Lynn Maxwell, Editor<br />

Cover photo by Judith Lynn<br />

Maxwell<br />

2 | Highlights 12/2008<br />

• The vision and mission of the IBC today<br />

are similar in many ways to the first days. The<br />

current Mission Statement of the <strong>International</strong><br />

<strong>Baptist</strong> <strong>Convention</strong> lists six major areas of focus<br />

for our cooperative work. They include:<br />

• Proclaim the Gospel of Jesus Christ<br />

• Plant new churches<br />

• Strengthen member churches<br />

• Enhance fellowship among member churches<br />

• Support other <strong>Baptist</strong> groups<br />

• Promote world-wide Christian missions<br />

During 2008, our 50 th year as a family of English-language<br />

churches, we have much to celebrate.<br />

Brian Kirby and the Summer Assembly<br />

Ministry Team and Dorothy Hayner and<br />

those working with her on the Jubilee Work<br />

Group helped us to celebrate our Jubilee year<br />

this summer in Interlaken, Switzerland. We<br />

looked at the “great cloud of witnesses” and<br />

remembered our past. We continued that celebration<br />

and remembrance from 27-30 October,<br />

in Wiesbaden, home of the first of two<br />

churches that started the Association of <strong>Baptist</strong><br />

Churches in Continental Europe (ABCE)<br />

which became the European <strong>Baptist</strong> <strong>Convention</strong><br />

(EBC), which is now the <strong>International</strong><br />

<strong>Baptist</strong> <strong>Convention</strong> (IBC).<br />

We also looked forward at these celebrations.<br />

God’s work of Yesterday has prepared<br />

us for his plans for Tomorrow. His faithfulness<br />

has been evident, and there is every reason to<br />

have hope for the future.<br />

In many ways the challenges and opportunities<br />

of 1958 are the same as 2008. After 50<br />

years, people still need to be reached. Churches<br />

still need to be planted. Disciples still need<br />

to be developed. Hurts still need to be healed.<br />

Fellowship still needs to be cultivated. The<br />

Gospel still needs to be shared. The Lord still<br />

desires to be worshiped.<br />

In other ways, our challenges today are<br />

quite different. The U.S. military presence in<br />

Europe is much less. Whereas the first English-language<br />

churches were all U.S. militarymajority,<br />

only about one in four IBC churches<br />

are military-majority. Likewise the makeup of<br />

churches then was 95+% U.S. citizens. <strong>Now</strong><br />

an increasing number of our churches have<br />

no or very few U.S. citizens in them. Our pastors<br />

then were almost exclusively from America,<br />

even Southern <strong>Baptist</strong>. Today, about onehalf<br />

of our pastors came from SBC churches.<br />

Others come from South Africa, Ghana, England,<br />

Wales, the Philippines, and Croatia. We<br />

celebrate our diversity.<br />

The path from Yesterday to Tomorrow travels<br />

through Today. It is profitable to see some<br />

of the ways we are seeking to meet today’s<br />

challenges by looking at the six focus areas<br />

of ministry.<br />

Proclaiming the Gospel<br />

Gospel preaching and teaching is done most<br />

effectively through our local churches. IBC<br />

churches display a variety of preaching styles<br />

and models of biblical preaching, reflecting<br />

the various needs and struggles inherent in<br />

our churches and the diverse backgrounds of<br />

our pastors.<br />

At the end of September, I visited IBC Lisbon,<br />

Portugal. In addition to serving as pastor<br />

of the church, Joseph Momoh from Ghana<br />

works a demanding full-time job in an environment<br />

where Africans are sometimes discriminated<br />

against and often taken advantage<br />

of. He has very little formal training for Christian<br />

ministry, having been asked to lead the<br />

church by the founding missionary. IBC Lisbon<br />

is made up mostly of Africans from Ghana<br />

and Nigeria.<br />

Joseph took his text from Mt. 10:16 – “I am<br />

sending you out like sheep among wolves …” He<br />

talked about our weaknesses in life and ministry<br />

in the face of the obstacles and opponents<br />

we face. What chance do sheep have against a<br />

pack of wolves Joseph cited biblical examples<br />

when God’s people faced seemingly hopeless<br />

situations and how God’s abilities more than<br />

compensated for their disabilities. His challenge<br />

– “Glory in weaknesses” because God is<br />

working on our behalf when we look to Him<br />

and do what He calls us to do. He preached<br />

with passion and compassion. He encouraged<br />

those who had no hope to find their hope in<br />

the Gospel and to trust Christ for their salvation.<br />

He challenged the group to be wise and<br />

harmless in their dealings with people. I left<br />

stirred.<br />

IBC Sofia, Bulgaria, is also an example of effective<br />

proclamation of the Gospel in an international<br />

context. The church has never been<br />

large, and statistics of the church would probably<br />

not impress many. Several years ago, an<br />

Iranian family came to Christ through the witness<br />

of the church. This father and two sons<br />

began seeking to reach other Iranians. The<br />

sermon each week was translated into Farsi.<br />

Over a year ago, this father and one of the<br />

sons moved to Athens, Greece, where many


Others Constantly Change<br />

Farsi-speaking people were relocating. They started a<br />

church there and are reaching Iranians, Afghanis, Iraqis,<br />

and others. Pastor Ray Smith, who is a young 70+ years<br />

in age, continues to encourage these IBCS missionaries<br />

while leading the Sofia congregation to be faithful in<br />

sharing the Good News.<br />

These two churches are examples of the effective<br />

work that many churches, large and small, are doing<br />

to share the Gospel. Whether it is focusing on reaching<br />

students in places like Prague or Kiev or Bielefeld,<br />

or military members and their families in Kaiserslautern<br />

or Heidelberg or Aviano or the Azores, or international<br />

business people in Leidschendam or Brussels or Düsseldorf<br />

or Zurich, or refugees in Rotterdam or Sofia or Lisbon,<br />

or nationals in Stuttgart or San Jose or Bremen – let<br />

us never lose sight of the importance of announcing the<br />

message of Good News by every means possible.<br />

I am thankful for all our pastors and members who<br />

are preaching and living the Gospel. I think we probably<br />

need to spend more time in spiritual and mental<br />

preparation week by week. I think we need to seek to<br />

“draw the net” more effectively and more clearly challenge<br />

our hearers to respond to God’s voice.<br />

The ratio of members to baptisms last year in IBC<br />

churches was about 13:1. If we see baptism as an important<br />

step of discipleship, this figure should challenge<br />

us. We serve in different kinds of churches with diverse<br />

challenges. Baptisms are not the only, or perhaps even<br />

the best, indicator of spiritual health. However, if our<br />

calling is to “make disciples of all nations,” a significant<br />

question for each church should be whether or not it is<br />

reaching the lost with the Gospel and teaching our people<br />

to obey all Christ commanded us to do.<br />

Let us be diligent to plant and water Gospel seeds<br />

regardless of the spiritual soils. I challenge IBC pastors<br />

and leaders to disciple our people to become passionate<br />

Christ-followers possessed by the goal of discipling<br />

the nations to Jesus Christ the Lord.<br />

Planting Churches<br />

The IBC, from its earliest days in the late 1950s as the<br />

Association of <strong>Baptist</strong>s in Continental Europe (ABCE),<br />

has always made planting new churches a priority. Although<br />

there has been a steady stream of new churches<br />

planted, there have been two periods of exceptional efforts<br />

during our history. The first two ABCE churches in<br />

Wiesbaden and Frankfurt were themselves new church<br />

starts. In the first six years, 1958-1964, the ABCE saw 32<br />

churches and missions established, mostly in Germany<br />

but also in France, Spain, and Luxembourg as increasing<br />

numbers of U.S. military members and their families<br />

started New Testament churches.<br />

Later, in the early 1990s, with the collapse of communism<br />

and the fall of the Berlin Wall, there was a resurgence<br />

of church planting in Central and Eastern Europe.<br />

More than 25 IBC churches were planted to reach English-speaking<br />

internationals, mostly in large cities. Most<br />

of the church planters at this time were missionaries appointed<br />

by the Southern <strong>Baptist</strong> <strong>Convention</strong>. Some of<br />

these churches grew to become self-sustaining; others<br />

continue to struggle as mission churches; a few closed<br />

several years after starting.<br />

We cannot plant new churches at the expense of<br />

strengthening existing churches. We need to do both.<br />

God has called some to plant churches in places and<br />

ways we had not anticipated. Some of these church<br />

plants, like Kiev and Ramstein, have become strong;<br />

others have not made it. During this past year, we saw<br />

two very young church plants in Oslo, Norway, and<br />

Warsaw, Poland, close. In both cases, there was pain<br />

and frustration, but also a desire to learn from mistakes<br />

and recognition that they were not failures because<br />

people had been reached with the Gospel. We have<br />

learned a few lessons to guide us. We have also seen<br />

new church plants in Goettingen and Nuernberg go<br />

through challenges this year, but they remain committed<br />

to growing. Their sponsoring churches have helped<br />

to encourage them.<br />

Our partnership with the <strong>Baptist</strong> General Conference<br />

(Converge Worldwide) began with the intention of developing<br />

an effective church planting movement. We<br />

are making significant progress. We have determined<br />

to build a firm foundation by formulating good policies<br />

and procedures, and at the same time seek to start<br />

several pilot church plants that will have a high possibility<br />

for long-term, healthy sustainability. We are developing<br />

processes for selecting, assessing, mobilizing,<br />

and mentoring church planters and the churches<br />

they plant. We also want to help equip the sponsoring/<br />

mother churches.<br />

Our commitment comes with an increase in the IBC<br />

budget directed toward church planting. The budget<br />

for 2009 contains an increase in church planting.<br />

We are in the midst of taking our Jubilee Church Planting<br />

Offering, with a goal of E 50,000 by the end of the<br />

year. At Interlaken this summer we initiated the offering<br />

with E 12,000 given at the conference. I was encouraged<br />

that on IBC Day, 12 October, many of our churches<br />

participated in this offering. I happened to be at IBC<br />

Stuttgart on IBC Day and was encouraged at their eager<br />

response. I was given some envelopes that same night<br />

from ICF Oberursel with their contributions. At the Annual<br />

Meeting, our pastors and leaders gave toward<br />

church planting. I am thankful that many churches and<br />

individuals are joining in this church planting effort.<br />

In addition, our Global Missions Offering, which we<br />

will take in December, includes a percentage – to be<br />

increased each year for the next three years – to go toward<br />

IBC church planting.<br />

Copies are still Available!<br />

50 th Anniversary DVD<br />

With<br />

• IBC Church Histories & Pictures<br />

• Highlights (from beginning to now)<br />

• Interviews with the “Clouds of Witnesses” at Interlaken<br />

• 50 th Anniversary Song written by Babbie Mason & Scott Sontag<br />

Cost: E 10,– + postage<br />

Contact the IBC Office at celebrate50@ibc-churches.org<br />

3 | Highlights 12/2008


Another significant way the IBC has engaged in<br />

church planting is through the European <strong>Baptist</strong> Federation’s<br />

Indigenous Missionary Project. Daniel Trusiewicz,<br />

IMP coordinator, presented this church planting dream<br />

to us in 2004 in Aviano, Italy, and challenged us to get<br />

involved at some level. We committed to begin sponsoring<br />

two missionary church planters in Moldova. In<br />

addition, Sam Owens, pastor in Aviano, pledged to lead<br />

his church to sponsor several missionaries.<br />

From this start, the current number of missionary<br />

church planters sponsored through the IBC and its<br />

churches is 12. In addition to the two missionaries supported<br />

through our convention’s Home Missions account,<br />

several IBC churches sponsor church planters<br />

in Georgia, Hungary, Moldova, Romania, Iraq, and Belarus.<br />

Sponsoring churches are Kaiserslautern, Aviano,<br />

Frankfurt, and Stukeley.<br />

I challenge IBC churches to look beyond their local<br />

needs and see what an investment in church planting<br />

can mean to the Kingdom. Some of our churches can<br />

sponsor one or more IMP church planters. I challenge<br />

our CDMT to move ahead with a clear vision and strategy<br />

for church planting in significant places where God<br />

is opening doors and to communicate that to our IBC<br />

family so we can pray and plan with you. We need to<br />

commit to support in every way the churches that have<br />

already started. I challenge our regions to look at possible<br />

ways they can support existing and new church<br />

planting efforts. It is always a temptation to make the<br />

decision between planting and strengthening, but one<br />

of the best ways to strengthen our churches is to look<br />

beyond ourselves to fields that are “ripe unto harvest.”<br />

Strengthening Churches<br />

Healthy churches are growing churches. Healthy churches<br />

are strong churches. The IBC may be unique among<br />

organizations that relate to international churches in its<br />

commitment to strengthening churches. Given the diversity<br />

of our churches and leaders, our constant turnover,<br />

our geographical separation, and the nature of<br />

our cooperation together as autonomous churches, I<br />

find this to be one of our greatest challenges. We can<br />

and should do better, but I trust that we are making<br />

progress and improving in our ability to support and<br />

strengthen. I have always believed that the real strength<br />

of the IBC is the local church. In military terms, the local<br />

church is the “tip of the spear” when it comes to<br />

advancing the Gospel.<br />

Among the most pressing local church needs currently<br />

are effective leadership, training for ministry, and help<br />

in times of crisis and transition. Sometimes the greatest<br />

need is for financial help in a time of crisis, but usually<br />

there are other needs to be addressed beyond financial<br />

ones.<br />

A church that loses its pastor is in a critical situation<br />

during the interim time. More than in the “normal”<br />

church, this time of transition often creates tremendous<br />

turmoil that can threaten an international church’s future.<br />

I spend a lot of time every week working with pastoral<br />

search committees on one end and with potential<br />

pastoral candidates on the other. Interim pastors and<br />

intentional interim pastors have been a help this past<br />

year in bridging the gap and keeping churches focused<br />

on moving ahead.<br />

It is never easy for a church to find the leader that<br />

best fits their church, but it is rewarding when it happens.<br />

I am thankful for our new pastors who have come<br />

on board this year and for the interims who have served<br />

for varying lengths of time.<br />

At our convention-wide meetings, we try to provide<br />

encouragement and training that will assist pastors and<br />

other leaders in their ministries. At this year’s Annual<br />

<strong>Convention</strong> Meeting, we focused some attention on<br />

preaching. I am hopeful that forums like this will provide<br />

assistance in our ministries. Our Interlaken seminars<br />

always provide training and encouragement not<br />

only for the pastor but for all who minister in the local<br />

church. Our Women’s, Men’s, Singles’ and Youth Ministry<br />

Teams planned conferences this year that sought to<br />

provide some training for those involved in leading local<br />

church ministries as well as inspiration for people in<br />

our churches. The Education Ministry Team is currently<br />

seeking to find out the greatest areas of need in our<br />

churches and provide resources to meet those needs.<br />

We hope in the next months to expand our website<br />

so that it becomes a more effective tool in providing<br />

resources to help churches with their ministries. We<br />

also want to provide avenues of sharing resources between<br />

churches.<br />

Our partnership with the <strong>Baptist</strong> General Association<br />

of Virginia began last year with the focus of strengthening<br />

churches in mind. We hope to set up local and<br />

regional training to assist churches and their leaders in<br />

their ministries this coming year. Whether it be deacon<br />

training, age-level training for teachers, help with small<br />

groups, conflict resolution, lay counseling, strategic<br />

planning, or other areas of need, we hope to be able to<br />

provide help to strengthen churches. We have already<br />

seen some of this, and we need to increase it.<br />

Sometimes strengthening churches means going to<br />

churches in times of conflict or uncertainty. This past<br />

year I have met with a number of churches wanting to<br />

move ahead but operating in crisis mode. Several situations<br />

involved severe conflict between the pastor and<br />

other leaders, loss of vision by the church as a result of<br />

a focus on urgent needs but failing to focus on essential<br />

mission, legal issues related to calling a pastor longterm,<br />

and uncertainty after the loss of a pastor. In a few<br />

cases, doctrinal issues were involved. In most, personality<br />

issues drove the conflict. Some of these churches<br />

are now thriving; others still struggle.<br />

Through our cooperative efforts financially we<br />

strengthen one another. It is through the giving of IBC<br />

churches that we are able to assist churches in need<br />

and to implement strategies that help churches to grow<br />

strong. I am thankful for churches who have given faithfully<br />

for many years. Some of them, because of changes<br />

in their situations, have recently needed and received<br />

help. This mutual support is a beautiful illustration of<br />

what Paul encouraged in 2 Corinthians 8:14: “At the<br />

present time your plenty will supply what they need so that<br />

in turn their plenty will supply what you need. Then there<br />

will be equality…” I am grateful for every church, large<br />

and small, that faithfully gives to support the work of<br />

the IBC. It is a privilege for us to support one another<br />

in times of need.<br />

For as long as I can remember, the IBC has always<br />

had approximately 20 churches in a given year who<br />

gave nothing to the convention’s cooperative budget,<br />

which hinders the work we do and violates the covenant<br />

agreement we make as members. Every church<br />

can make an equal sacrifice if not equal gifts. I encourage<br />

each pastor to look seriously at his commitment to<br />

4 | Highlights 12/2008


Officers and Ministry Team Coordinators for 2008-2009.<br />

the work of the IBC. Just as in your local<br />

church membership involves mutual<br />

commitment to the Lord and to<br />

His people, so membership in the<br />

IBC calls us to mutual commitment<br />

to the Lord and to other member<br />

churches as we work together.<br />

I am thankful for the <strong>International</strong><br />

<strong>Baptist</strong> Church Ministries, a non-profit<br />

organization that enables Americans<br />

who wish to give to IBC churches<br />

and IBC causes to receive tax credit<br />

for their contributions. Rudy Oswald,<br />

former IBC member and continuing<br />

IBC supporter, serves as the current<br />

president of this organization. Every<br />

year the IBCM makes available several<br />

thousand US$ in grants for specific<br />

needs of churches or pastors in<br />

the IBC. They have also helped to encourage<br />

the work Tom Hill began in<br />

Central and South America, which<br />

has become the Fellowship of <strong>International</strong><br />

Churches of Latin America<br />

(FICLA). Several FICLA churches<br />

have now joined the IBC, including<br />

IBC Brasilia, Brazil, this year. Find out<br />

more about the IBCM at www.ibcmworld.org.<br />

This year we celebrated IBC Day<br />

on 12 October. We tried to highlight<br />

some of the ways we support one another.<br />

The day also gave us an opportunity<br />

to share specific prayer needs<br />

and to increase future prayer support.<br />

I hope we can make this annual<br />

day a time of celebration for what<br />

the Lord is doing among us. It will<br />

also help to meet the continual need<br />

to inform IBC church members about<br />

our work together.<br />

I challenge the Church Development<br />

Ministry Team to review our<br />

guidelines for providing assistance<br />

to churches in times of crises so that<br />

we deal more effectively with the<br />

underlying causes of crises. Help us<br />

deal with these challenges in a proactive<br />

way.<br />

I challenge the Education Ministry<br />

Team to facilitate regional and<br />

church seminars and training times<br />

in the next year that deal with the<br />

challenges of IBC churches. Our Virginia<br />

partners stand ready to assist,<br />

as do other partners in ministry.<br />

I challenge the Executive Council<br />

and Sub-Council to talk about<br />

and recommend actions that can<br />

strengthen our churches. I also challenge<br />

the Education Ministry Team to<br />

provide within the next year online<br />

training materials and small group<br />

and other resources that are relevant<br />

for our churches.<br />

I challenge the Nominations Ministry<br />

Team to help us identify and recruit<br />

people who have expertise in<br />

these areas to serve. I challenge our<br />

pastors to consider seriously your financial<br />

commitment to the work of<br />

the IBC. Also, find at least one area<br />

where you can make a difference beyond<br />

your local church and contribute<br />

in some way.<br />

Enhancing Fellowship among<br />

Churches<br />

I grieve when I hear about a church<br />

or pastor that feels isolated and without<br />

anyone who understands their<br />

struggles or cares about their needs. I<br />

rejoice when I hear of churches working<br />

together and encouraging one<br />

another in some way. The biblical<br />

view of the New Testament church<br />

is not independence but rather interdependence.<br />

Autonomy says we are<br />

self-governing, but we are not selfsufficient.<br />

We need one another. And<br />

we belong to one another. As GS, I<br />

struggle with trying to implement<br />

this lofty sense of fellowship, which I<br />

see as crucial to the survival of some<br />

Photo by Judith Lynn Maxwell<br />

of our churches and the effectiveness<br />

of all of our churches. We are trying<br />

to build healthy fellowship among<br />

our pastors and leaders and between<br />

our churches. It takes a commitment<br />

on the part of all.<br />

As a community of churches seeking<br />

to share with a lost world the reconciling<br />

message of the Gospel, we<br />

must seek to maintain our unity in a<br />

spirit of love. It is simply not an option<br />

for us to refuse to seek reconciliation<br />

by every means possible when<br />

that is needed between pastors or<br />

between churches. We need to commit<br />

to one another and to the Lord<br />

to hold each other accountable for<br />

striving to live together in unity.<br />

Our Regions – now 10 including<br />

the newly established Latin American<br />

Region – were formed for fellowship<br />

and mutual support. Some<br />

of our regions this past year have<br />

joined in prayer times, training seminars,<br />

pulpit exchanges, joint mission<br />

and church planting projects,<br />

and overnight pastor sharing times. I<br />

am grateful to Regional Coordinators<br />

like Richmond Ofori, who has made<br />

it a priority to keep in touch with the<br />

churches of his region and to serve as<br />

an advisor, mentor, even reconciler<br />

this past year. In northern Germany,<br />

Nathaniel Thomas initiated a weekly<br />

Skype prayer time for pastors in his<br />

region. Paul Dreessen, in the newest<br />

region, has communicated with<br />

other churches in the Latin American<br />

countries to seek to be of help,<br />

even though several of these are not<br />

yet members. He is representing one<br />

of the churches making a request for<br />

membership this year. Our regions<br />

hold a lot of promise for building fellowship<br />

among our churches.<br />

Our times together at the Ministry<br />

Leadership Conference, Interlaken<br />

Assembly, and Annual Meeting<br />

are opportunities for relationshipbuilding.<br />

Our President Dan Marshall<br />

is right in his assessment that<br />

the benefit of these times together<br />

is, as much as anything, the opportunity<br />

to sit together, share together,<br />

pray together, and encourage<br />

one another. This is one reason we<br />

need to strive to make it possible<br />

for every pastor and wife to be able<br />

to attend these meetings, if possible.<br />

An evangelist from the U.S.,<br />

Phil Waldrep, has helped to provide<br />

scholarships the last two years<br />

to help bring the cost down for our<br />

pastors and leaders to attend the<br />

MLC. Pastor Aaron Johnson, from<br />

Atlanta, Georgia, has also helped<br />

with this. Several anonymous donors<br />

have also helped. It is an in-<br />

5 | Highlights 12/2008


vestment that can make the difference<br />

in whether or not a pastor and<br />

wife stay on the field. We need to<br />

build on the investments of money,<br />

time, and energy if we are to maintain<br />

healthy fellowship and unity in<br />

our convention.<br />

This year we have tried to keep<br />

our churches better informed of<br />

prayer needs from sister churches on<br />

a weekly basis through CareNet. One<br />

of the most important ways we can<br />

build genuine fellowship is to pray<br />

for one another.<br />

Our Highlights Editor Judith Lynn<br />

Maxwell continues to provide helpful,<br />

informative, inspirational, highquality<br />

information through the IBC’s<br />

Newsmagazine. Highlights reaches<br />

into each IBC church and beyond to<br />

friends, former members, and partners<br />

around the globe.<br />

Our diverse experiences cause us<br />

to have different expectations with<br />

regard to fellowship. For some, who<br />

have never been a part of a caring<br />

family of churches, it is a new experience.<br />

I challenge you to invest time<br />

in getting to know other pastors and<br />

leaders. For others, who come from<br />

large conventions that were able to<br />

provide full services in many areas,<br />

realize that the IBC depends on each<br />

pastor and church to take an active<br />

part so that we can support one another.<br />

For some who come from fractured<br />

fellowships where strife and<br />

disunity and theological tensions are<br />

common, join us as we respect the<br />

diversity of backgrounds and perspectives<br />

within the bounds of evangelical<br />

theology. The intent of the<br />

recently approved Summary of Basic<br />

Beliefs is to bring us together on<br />

the essentials while respecting each<br />

Ministry<br />

Leadership Conference<br />

For pastors, church staff, key leaders and<br />

spouses<br />

Friday-Tuesday, 13-17 March 2009<br />

Tivoli Carvoeiro Hotel, Algarve, Portugal<br />

Carvoeiro is approx. 50 km from the Faro airport.<br />

If you cannot get a flight to Faro, it is possible<br />

to get a train from Lisbon.<br />

Reservations should be made with the IBC Office<br />

by 15 December.<br />

church’s need to express locally the<br />

“faith that was once for all entrusted<br />

to the saints” (Jude 3).<br />

I challenge our IBC leadership,<br />

pastors, and other leaders to recommit<br />

to strengthening the spirit of unity<br />

we enjoy. Christ intends that we<br />

live together in love, overcoming obstacles<br />

that could divide us. I am<br />

thankful that there are no significant<br />

rifts that threaten our fellowship. I<br />

believe, however, that a deeper fellowship<br />

is needed for our “partnership<br />

in the Gospel.” Our local ministries<br />

will be more effective when we<br />

take the time and effort to work together<br />

as churches. In our fractured<br />

world, such a commitment to pursue<br />

Christ’s vision for unity will make<br />

a deep impact. It will also please<br />

Christ.<br />

I call on the Church Development<br />

Ministry Team to take a look<br />

at our process for receiving new IBC<br />

churches into the convention to assure<br />

that we are communicating effectively<br />

both the expectations and<br />

benefits of being a part of the IBC.<br />

We also need to review our expectations<br />

of current member churches<br />

and seek to challenge every pastor to<br />

lead his church to take its membership<br />

commitment seriously so that<br />

genuine fellowship can flourish. Perhaps<br />

the Executive Council needs to<br />

address the issue of inactive members<br />

in the IBC.<br />

I call on our Regional Coordinators<br />

in the coming year to prioritize<br />

genuine fellowship among the<br />

churches in their region. Each region<br />

can do something that will enhance<br />

its churches’ effectiveness in ministry<br />

and mission.<br />

Supporting <strong>Baptist</strong> Groups<br />

When Herman Stout and family<br />

came to Wiesbaden in 1957 to begin<br />

an English-language church, he<br />

immediately made contact with the<br />

local German <strong>Baptist</strong> pastor Gideon<br />

Dreisbach. Together they formulated<br />

plans for the establishment of<br />

an English-speaking <strong>Baptist</strong> work. A<br />

year later, when twin brother Herbert<br />

Stout and his family arrived in<br />

Germany to begin “Bethel <strong>Baptist</strong><br />

Church,” German Christians participated<br />

in the first service as a sign<br />

of their partnership. This pattern of<br />

cooperation has been followed for<br />

many of our churches. As was true<br />

for the first two “IBC” churches, it is<br />

common still for many of our churches<br />

to share facilities with local national<br />

<strong>Baptist</strong> churches and to work together<br />

in various ways.<br />

English-speaking international<br />

churches have a unique mission. We<br />

reach and minister to some people<br />

who would not be reached by national<br />

churches. This unique ministry<br />

should complement the work of the<br />

unions and churches where we serve.<br />

A spirit of competition and independence<br />

among ministries is foreign to<br />

the calling of Christ. I have seen in recent<br />

years the benefits and blessings<br />

of getting to know national leaders in<br />

our work as <strong>Baptist</strong>s. Most are interested<br />

and eager to help when asked.<br />

National churches have a lot to teach<br />

us about the communities where we<br />

serve. There are many reasons to cooperate,<br />

and none to compete.<br />

It is often advisable for IBC churches<br />

to affiliate directly with the national<br />

<strong>Baptist</strong> unions. It is always<br />

advisable for us to seek strong relationships<br />

with local churches and national<br />

<strong>Baptist</strong> unions where we serve.<br />

In many cases, they can help with legal<br />

and tax issues that can hinder our<br />

churches from getting pastors. They<br />

can also provide mutual encouragement.<br />

Several times this past year, it<br />

proved beneficial to enlist the advice<br />

and assistance of leaders of national<br />

unions and pastors in local national<br />

churches.<br />

We continue to enjoy a good relationship<br />

with the Bund Evangelisch-Freikirchlicher<br />

Gemeinden in<br />

Deutschland, or German <strong>Baptist</strong><br />

Union. Because the IBC offices are in<br />

Germany, we depend on the GBU for<br />

legal and charitable status through a<br />

trustee agreement. Our bank in Europe<br />

as a convention is owned by<br />

the GBU. At our request, a member<br />

of the Executive Board of the Sparund<br />

Kreditbank, Bernd Primke, serves<br />

6 | Highlights 12/2008


as one of our IBC trustees. We were happy to have<br />

Regina Claas, General Secretary of the GBU, with us<br />

for this year’s Annual Meeting. We are thankful for<br />

this partnership.<br />

The IBC is a member of the European <strong>Baptist</strong> Federation,<br />

a family of more than 50 <strong>Baptist</strong> unions,<br />

representing 13,000 churches and 800,000 members<br />

from nearly every country in Europe and Central<br />

Asia including five unions in the Middle East. Although<br />

our most prominent involvement in the EBF<br />

is through the Indigenous Missionary Project, we<br />

also help to support all efforts of the EBF – mission<br />

and evangelism, human rights and religious freedom,<br />

theological education, and humanitarian aid.<br />

We were happy to have Tony Peck, EBF General Secretary<br />

and a prince of a man, to speak for our Annual<br />

Meeting. For more information about the EBF, go<br />

to www.ebf.org.<br />

We are also members of the <strong>Baptist</strong> World Alliance.<br />

The BWA is a fellowship of 214 <strong>Baptist</strong> conventions<br />

and unions comprising a membership of 36 million<br />

baptized believers and a community of 105 million.<br />

Learn more about the BWA by looking at their website,<br />

www.bwanet.org.<br />

I challenge IBC churches to celebrate the partnership<br />

with other <strong>Baptist</strong> churches around the world.<br />

Locally, every pastor should seek to establish healthy<br />

relationships with other pastors and churches. Certainly<br />

you should pray for them and with them regularly.<br />

Work together on projects where your visions<br />

intersect.<br />

Nationally get to know those who serve as leaders<br />

of the union where you serve. Certainly there are<br />

ways you can bless their work, and let them know<br />

about yours. See how you might work together. <strong>International</strong><br />

churches can offer a vital spark of Gospel<br />

fervor if they will engage meaningfully, particularly in<br />

spiritual environments often described as post-Christian.<br />

There is an excitement about our ministry that<br />

can encourage and stimulate others.<br />

I challenge our military churches to make every effort<br />

to work with chaplains and others who minister<br />

to military members. If they see you as a friend and<br />

a person willing to help, and not just someone who<br />

wants to use them for access, they will usually embrace<br />

you. If you consider them a threat, you will almost<br />

certainly cripple your own ministry.<br />

Let’s support in appropriate ways the work of other<br />

<strong>Baptist</strong> groups around the world. Former BWA<br />

President Denton Lotz used to say often, “We belong<br />

to each other because we belong to Christ.”<br />

Engaging in World-Wide Missions<br />

The heartbeat of our convention since its inception<br />

has always been missions, whether locally or globally.<br />

Most pastors come to IBC churches out of a compelling<br />

sense of global awareness and mission commitment.<br />

Most live outside their countries of birth.<br />

This is also true for most IBC church members. Bringing<br />

the Gospel to the whole world seems like a natural<br />

result of our Christian commitment and global<br />

representation. With churches in more than 25<br />

countries, members from over 125 countries in our<br />

churches, and many churches with up to 50 nations<br />

represented in one church, we have the world not<br />

only at our doorsteps but also within our walls.<br />

One of our cooperative mission efforts as a family<br />

of churches is through the European <strong>Baptist</strong> Mission.<br />

In recent years the EBM has gone through a transformation<br />

to involve in leadership people from its traditional<br />

mission sending countries and mission receiving<br />

countries to serve together more effectively in<br />

Europe, Africa, Latin America, and India. Hans Guderian,<br />

who has led the EBM for many years, will be<br />

leaving at the end of this year to serve as a pastor in<br />

Berlin. We are grateful to Hans for the good way in<br />

which he has worked with the IBC in our support of<br />

the EBM missionaries.<br />

I am still looking for the day when an IBC church<br />

member will serve the EBM as a long-term or shortterm<br />

missionary. There are current needs including<br />

a finance manager and two medical doctors to serve<br />

in Cameroon, and an experienced missionary couple<br />

to start and lead an HIV-AIDS children’s home in Mozambique.<br />

Perhaps God will call someone from an<br />

IBC church to serve. Until that day, we can continue<br />

to pray and give toward the good work of the EBM.<br />

More information can be found on their website at<br />

www.ebm-masa.org/index_eng.html.<br />

Every IBC church is involved in direct missions of<br />

some kind. The Gospel of a gracious God who sent<br />

His Son to hurting and needy people is our motivation<br />

for sending and going to the entire world with<br />

Gospel. It is natural that every church be involved<br />

in strategic ways as the Lord leads them. In addition,<br />

the EBF’s Indigenous Missionary Project offers<br />

us good opportunities for personal mission involvement.<br />

We are planning for 2009 a joint mission trip<br />

with our partners in Virginia. I hope members from<br />

several IBC churches will be able to join other IBCers<br />

and Virginia volunteers to work with some of the Indigenous<br />

Missionary church planters. The Missions<br />

Ministry Team is working with Virginia’s Partnership<br />

Coordinator Craig Waddell to plan this trip which<br />

will probably involve working in several locations in<br />

Moldova. There could be an additional trip or two<br />

planned, perhaps to Romania, if there is interest.<br />

Last year, we approved a new plan for our cooperative<br />

mission giving. The IBC Global Missions Offering<br />

will be emphasized during the month of December<br />

and combines a number of special mission<br />

offerings that previously were taken throughout the<br />

year. In 2008, the distribution of the offering will be<br />

as follows:<br />

<strong>International</strong> Mission Board, SBC: .........22.5%<br />

European <strong>Baptist</strong> Mission: ...............22.5%<br />

Indigenous Missionary Project: .............5%<br />

IBC Church Planting: ....................5%<br />

Together We Build: .....................20%<br />

IBC Home Missions (previously May Missions):.20%<br />

Emergency Projects: .....................5%<br />

The Missions Ministry Team took the decision to recommend<br />

combining all IBC Special Offerings as a result<br />

of requests from churches to reduce the number<br />

of appeals during the year. We hope this once-a-year<br />

special emphasis will help our churches to promote<br />

effectively and give generously. As with other emphases,<br />

the key will be pastoral leadership. If the pastor<br />

leads, the church will follow.<br />

I challenge our pastors to make it a priority in their<br />

churches to promote the IBC Global Missions Offering<br />

this year. If you will promote it, your people will<br />

gladly give. I challenge our churches to make mis-<br />

7 | Highlights 12/2008


sions not one part of the church’s many programs,<br />

but who we are and what we do as <strong>Baptist</strong> Christians.<br />

175 years ago the Father of the <strong>Baptist</strong> movement in<br />

Europe, Gerhard Oncken, coined the phrase, “Every<br />

<strong>Baptist</strong> a Missionary.” We need a revival of that spirit<br />

in our churches.<br />

We stand on the shoulders of hundreds of thousands<br />

who have marched in the IBC parade before us. For<br />

50 years, countless believers have labored to grow the<br />

churches that now make up our family, the IBC. Many<br />

of those saints have now joined the “great cloud of witnesses”<br />

who cheer us on. Many churches have come<br />

and gone, each leaving its mark for eternity.<br />

God calls us to be faithful to the tasks He has given<br />

us to do today, while it is still day. We do not know<br />

what the next 50 years will hold. It is doubtful that any<br />

of us will be around to see. The question is, “What will<br />

we leave for those who follow us” Will they find that<br />

we were faithful More importantly, will the Faithful<br />

One find us faithful The answer depends on us and<br />

how we use the opportunities God is giving us today.<br />

Let’s commit together to be Christ-followers worth<br />

the Name.<br />

As we look at our past, and toward our future, may<br />

these words from Scripture guide us:<br />

Sing to the LORD a new song;<br />

sing to the LORD, all the earth.<br />

Sing to the LORD, praise his name;<br />

proclaim his salvation day after day.<br />

Declare his glory among the nations,<br />

his marvelous deeds among all peoples.<br />

For great is the LORD and most worthy of praise;<br />

he is to be feared above all gods.<br />

For all the gods of the nations are idols,<br />

but the LORD made the heavens.<br />

Say among the nations, “The LORD reigns”.<br />

The world is firmly established,<br />

it cannot be moved;<br />

he will judge the peoples with equity.<br />

Psalm 96:1-5, 10<br />

•<br />

Jimmy Martin<br />

General Secretary<br />

<strong>Convention</strong> Continues Celebration of Jubilee<br />

• The 45 th Annual Meeting of the <strong>International</strong><br />

<strong>Baptist</strong> <strong>Convention</strong> was held<br />

27-30 October, hosted by the Immanuel<br />

<strong>Baptist</strong> Church of Wiesbaden, Germany,<br />

one of the founding churches of the<br />

convention. The meeting continued the<br />

year-long 50 th Anniversary celebration of<br />

the convention.<br />

The Association of <strong>Baptist</strong> in Continental<br />

Europe was founded in 1958 and while<br />

annual meetings were held during that<br />

time, the numbering began when the<br />

convention changed its name to the European<br />

<strong>Baptist</strong> <strong>Convention</strong> in 1963.<br />

The convention meeting opened with a<br />

celebration dinner on Monday night. The<br />

opening session featured a question-andanswer<br />

time with current IBC General Secretary<br />

Jimmy Martin and former General<br />

Secretary James Heflin and his wife Wilma.<br />

Heflin served as general secretary from<br />

1996-2001. The evening concluded with<br />

all enjoying the 50 th Anniversary cake.<br />

In its business sessions, the convention<br />

messengers welcomed three new churches<br />

into membership in the convention –<br />

extending the reach of the convention<br />

Photos by Judith Lynn Maxwell<br />

8 | Highlights 12/2008


IBC Summary of Basic Beliefs<br />

We do not view our Summary of Basic Beliefs as a creed or a statement<br />

to which our staff, volunteers, or churches are forced to subscribe,<br />

but rather it is a basic summary of beliefs and emphases generally<br />

held by <strong>Baptist</strong>s. It is what “we believe” when we serve God together<br />

within the structures and Ministry Teams of the IBC. It does not take<br />

the place of the Bible, which is our standard for faith and practice,<br />

but emerges out of it.<br />

even more. Voted as full members were<br />

the Belleville <strong>Baptist</strong> Church in Cape<br />

Town, South Africa, and the <strong>International</strong><br />

<strong>Baptist</strong> Church of Brasilia, Brazil. The<br />

<strong>International</strong> Mission <strong>Baptist</strong> Church in<br />

Freiburg, Germany, was voted as an associate<br />

member.<br />

The convention also adopted a Summary<br />

of Basic Beliefs replacing the Statement<br />

of Faith in the IBC Constitution (see<br />

sidebar for the complete text). A committee<br />

has been working with the Plans and<br />

Policies Ministry Team for three years to<br />

formulate this new statement of beliefs.<br />

Also changed was the way the president<br />

and vice-president will serve. Beginning<br />

with the election in 2009, the vicepresident<br />

will serve also serve as president<br />

elect. He or she will succeed to the presidency<br />

the following year and then serve<br />

a third year as past-president.<br />

Elections for this year’s officers (under<br />

the existing guidelines) were also held.<br />

Dan Marshall, pastor of the Emirates <strong>Baptist</strong><br />

Church <strong>International</strong>, Dubai, UAE, was<br />

re-elected president. Brian Kirby, pastor<br />

of Emmanuel <strong>International</strong> Church, Paris,<br />

France, was elected as vice-president.<br />

Lorraine Stringer, IBC administrative assistant,<br />

was re-elected as clerk. Alistair<br />

McCallum, an elder at the <strong>International</strong><br />

Christian Fellowship, Oberursel, Germany,<br />

was also re-elected as treasurer.<br />

The convention also approved a budget<br />

of E 439,541.07, a 1.82% decrease<br />

from the 2008 budget.<br />

The meeting also featured messages<br />

by Heflin; Tony Peck, General Secretary<br />

of the European <strong>Baptist</strong> Federation; and<br />

Bob Marsh, well-known IBC speaker and<br />

interim pastor. The convention also heard<br />

reports from Martin; Regina Claas, the<br />

German <strong>Baptist</strong> Union’s General Secretary;<br />

Daniel Trusiewicz of the EBF’s Indigenous<br />

Missionary Project; and Bill<br />

Laughlin and Darryl Evetts from the IBC’s<br />

Church Development Ministry Team. Heflin’s,<br />

Peck’s, and Marsh’s messages may<br />

be downloaded from the IBC website:<br />

www.ibc-churches.org. Amy and Patrick<br />

Fata, musicians from Carmel, Indiana, led<br />

the times of worship each morning and<br />

evening.<br />

•<br />

<strong>International</strong> <strong>Baptist</strong> <strong>Convention</strong> – Summary of Basic Beliefs<br />

(2008)<br />

We believe …<br />

• in one God: Father, Son, and Holy<br />

Spirit – co-eternal, co-existent, co-equal<br />

and co-operative, as affirmed in Scripture<br />

and as summarized in the ancient<br />

Christian confessions of faith. 1<br />

• that the Bible is inspired by God and is<br />

the standard against which all Christian<br />

belief and behavior is measured.<br />

• that human beings are incapable of<br />

saving themselves and stand in need<br />

of God’s gracious love and that Jesus<br />

Christ, who is fully God and fully human,<br />

has, through His death and resurrection,<br />

done everything necessary<br />

for us to have a personal one-to-one<br />

relationship with God; we begin to experience<br />

the benefits of this when we<br />

repent from and confess our sin, and<br />

commit our lives under the Lordship of<br />

Jesus Christ, our only Savior.<br />

• that each local church is an autonomous<br />

assembly of believing disciples responsible<br />

to discern the mind of Christ<br />

for that body of Christ – in the light<br />

of Scripture, with the leading of the<br />

Holy Spirit, and under the Lordship of<br />

Christ.<br />

• that Christ has, according to the Scriptures,<br />

instituted two church ordinances<br />

for believers:<br />

• believer’s baptism as an act of obedience<br />

and an expression of a personal<br />

commitment to Christian discipleship.<br />

The baptism of the believer into<br />

and under water “in the name of the<br />

Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit”<br />

is symbolic of the death, burial, and<br />

resurrection of Christ; the end of an<br />

old way of life; and the beginning of<br />

a new life in Christ. It affirms the Holy<br />

Spirit’s work that is already experienced<br />

by the believer and this public<br />

baptism is an outward visible sign of<br />

the ongoing and life-long sanctifying<br />

work of the Holy Spirit; and<br />

• the communion of the Lord’s Table as<br />

a repeated and frequent reminder of<br />

our communal life in Christ, whose<br />

death we remember, whose resurrection<br />

we celebrate, and whose return<br />

we eagerly await.<br />

• that church membership is only for<br />

those who can testify personally of<br />

God’s saving grace.<br />

• that each local church is to model a<br />

better way of life according to the principles<br />

of the Kingdom of God. Because<br />

a Christian disciple’s first and highest<br />

loyalty is to God, so also each church,<br />

while respecting those secular laws not<br />

in conflict with the commands of God,<br />

should be free from state control.<br />

• that in every country all people should<br />

be entitled to the freedom of religious<br />

expression, while respecting the laws of<br />

that country and the beliefs of others.<br />

• that we, in response to the Great<br />

Commission, 2 have been sent out 3 and<br />

given the task of making disciples – disciplined<br />

followers of Jesus Christ – from<br />

among all ethnic groups (nations).<br />

• that just as the Trinity is the model<br />

of eternal co-operation so we as IBC<br />

churches are to co-operate together<br />

in mission with God, with each other,<br />

and with other like-minded Christian<br />

churches and organizations: locally, nationally,<br />

and internationally – so that the<br />

world may believe. 4<br />

As the <strong>International</strong> <strong>Baptist</strong> <strong>Convention</strong><br />

we celebrate and affirm our unity in diversity<br />

as part of the worldwide body of<br />

Christ. We seek no uniformity in worship<br />

or service but are “many faces,<br />

many places, one message” not restricted<br />

by national or cultural bounds. We<br />

live and serve together here on earth<br />

in anticipation of our future celebration<br />

and service of God in Glory with<br />

the redeemed of every nation and generation.<br />

5<br />

Footnotes<br />

1 This refers to the Trinitarian formulae of the<br />

Apostles’ Creed and the Nicene Creed.<br />

2 Matthew 28: 18-20<br />

3 John 20: 21-22<br />

4 ibid & John 17: 21<br />

5 Revelation 7: 7-12<br />

9 | Highlights 12/2008


IBC Bucharest Receives<br />

Missions Endowment Fund Grant<br />

• At the Annual Meeting of the <strong>International</strong><br />

<strong>Baptist</strong> <strong>Convention</strong>, messengers voted to award this<br />

year’s grant from the Missions Endowment Fund to<br />

the <strong>International</strong> Church of Bucharest, Romania. Bucharest<br />

will receive $40,000 which will help them finish<br />

the construction of their new worship center and<br />

pastor’s apartment.<br />

The new building will be used for worship, fellowship,<br />

Bible studies, training institute, mission activities,<br />

community activities, church office, bookstore,<br />

an apartment for the pastor, and possibly a preschool.<br />

Some additional space to assist with a preschool<br />

could be completed in the future. Most of the<br />

building is already paid for. The grant will allow the<br />

completion of the building without the church going<br />

into debt.<br />

The church had been given the property but were<br />

unable to build on it for lack of funds. A Romanian<br />

land developer approached them wanting to buy<br />

the property. The church said no. The developer returned<br />

with a proposal. If he could build an apartment<br />

building, the church would have one floor as<br />

a worship center (completely finished) and a second<br />

floor for an apartment for the pastor. The church<br />

agreed and construction began. The church will<br />

move in in January.<br />

•<br />

photos by Bill Tully<br />

The property in May 2008 and the nearly completed building in October 2008.<br />

First Global Missions Offering<br />

to be taken in December<br />

• The first <strong>International</strong> <strong>Baptist</strong> <strong>Convention</strong> Global<br />

Missions Offering will be taken on 7 December, the<br />

first Sunday in December, in churches across the convention.<br />

The Global Missions Offering combines all of<br />

the former missions offerings into one offering.<br />

This year’s offering will be divided as follows:<br />

Year IMB EBM IMP IBC/CP TWB MAY M EP Total<br />

2008 22.5 % 22.5 % 5 % 5 % 20 % 20 % 5 % 100 %<br />

IMB: <strong>International</strong> Mission Board (Southern <strong>Baptist</strong><br />

<strong>Convention</strong>-related missions)<br />

EBM: European <strong>Baptist</strong> Mission (work in Africa, Middle<br />

East, and South America)<br />

IMP: Indigenous Missionary Project (European <strong>Baptist</strong><br />

Federation-sponsored support of indigenous<br />

church plants)<br />

IBC/CP: IBC Church Planting (assists church planters<br />

working within the IBC)<br />

TWB: Together We Build Offering (helps local IBC<br />

churches with small construction or renovation projects)<br />

May M: IBC Home Missions Offering (special designated<br />

projects, normally in countries where the<br />

IBC has churches, for example, Chernobyl Project<br />

2007)<br />

EP: Emergency Projects (Projects which arise such<br />

as disaster relief, hunger aid, etc. which the Missions<br />

Ministry Team identifies and responds to). •<br />

10 | Highlights 12/2008


From the Editor’s Pen<br />

• In the final edition of Highlights<br />

during our Jubilee year, I<br />

thought it was appropriate to<br />

take a look at the history of<br />

Highlights. Although Highlights<br />

is not quite 50, it did celebrate<br />

its 45 th birthday in February of<br />

this year.<br />

The first edition was published<br />

in February 1963 and<br />

was nameless. The first editor<br />

Lewis Krause offered a few<br />

suggested names (including<br />

The Overseas <strong>Baptist</strong> and the<br />

ABCE Informer) but the name<br />

selected was Highlights. The<br />

first two editors, Lewis Krause<br />

(1963-1965) and Don Rose<br />

(1965-1968), were also<br />

the associational missionary<br />

(the fore-runner to the<br />

general secretary). The third<br />

editor William Guess (1968-<br />

1971) later was named the<br />

executive secretary-treasurer<br />

for the convention. My guess<br />

is that our current general secretary<br />

is glad this tradition has<br />

changed.<br />

The first two years were single<br />

page editions, typed and<br />

copied on colored paper. In<br />

February 1965, the paper increased<br />

to four pages, and in<br />

May 1965, the first pictures<br />

were included. When Don Rose<br />

took over as editor in November<br />

1965, he introduced a more traditional<br />

newspaper look to the<br />

paper. This format remained for<br />

the next 13 years. The masthead<br />

(the heading that says Highlights)<br />

changed in 1978 when a graphic<br />

of the world was added. This was<br />

changed to the IBC logo in 1980.<br />

Sometime in the 1980s, single color<br />

was added to the paper. The<br />

most striking change happened<br />

in 2002 when the newsmagazine<br />

grew to 16 pages in full color.<br />

Through the years, for the<br />

most part, the editor of Highlights<br />

has been a volunteer. They<br />

have served as editor while also<br />

serving as pastor’s wife, pastor,<br />

homemaker, personnel specialist<br />

in the military, and software<br />

production coordinator. They<br />

have struggled with no news<br />

from the churches, communicating<br />

with a German printer,<br />

and changing technology. I<br />

want to say thank you to those who have served in<br />

the past (and I hope I haven’t missed someone):<br />

Top: Highlights 1963, middle: Highlights<br />

1985, lower: Highlights 2002<br />

things never change.”<br />

Helen Ruchti, 1971-1974<br />

Larry Yoder, 1974-1975<br />

Art & Faye Palmer, 1975-1976<br />

Velma Merritt, 1976-1978<br />

Bea Guthrie, 1978-1980<br />

Julie Tanner, 1980<br />

Richard Walker, 1980-1982<br />

Robert Catudio, 1982-1985<br />

Neal Schooley, 1985<br />

Elizabeth Merritt, 1985-1986<br />

Glenn Dyer, 1986-1987<br />

Dorothy Baker, 1987-1989<br />

Deane Langdon, 1989-1990<br />

Debbie Baird Buie, 1990-1991<br />

Becky Walter, 1991-1992<br />

Jack Walls, 1992-1995, 1999<br />

Deonne Beshear, 1999-2001<br />

I served as editor from 1995-1998<br />

and began my second “tour of duty”<br />

in 2002.<br />

I recently heard from former editor<br />

Deane Langdon, and so I asked her<br />

for some of her favorite memories<br />

from her days as editor. She wrote:<br />

“One of the special things about editing<br />

Highlights was the opportunity<br />

to meet many of the pastors and<br />

their families as well as lay people in<br />

the churches. We still visit with one<br />

family who now lives in Tennessee.<br />

Seeing ways the people cared about<br />

and helped one another cope with<br />

being so far away from their larger<br />

family was a special joy. Learning<br />

to work with a German printer<br />

who had difficulty deciding that I<br />

really did mean ‘and’ so it was not<br />

necessary to change that word to<br />

‘und’ was an interesting experience.<br />

He was so understanding<br />

when I asked him to go back to<br />

my original. My year of editing<br />

the newsjournal was a great experience<br />

for me. After 30 years<br />

of writing for [the <strong>Baptist</strong> Sunday<br />

School Board] I was able to<br />

continue writing but from a different<br />

perspective.” I’m sure others<br />

who have served share her<br />

feelings.<br />

During the past year, all of the<br />

Highlights have been scanned and<br />

saved in a digital format. These are<br />

part of the 50 th Anniversary DVD,<br />

available from the IBC Office (see<br />

page 3).<br />

In 1963, the name Highlights was<br />

selected because its purpose was<br />

to share the highlights from the<br />

work and ministry of the churches<br />

and the convention itself. As Jimmy<br />

Martin said in his article, “Some<br />

•<br />

Judith Lynn Maxwell<br />

11 | Highlights 12/2008


Virginia Team Provides Training in Bremen<br />

by Diane Smith<br />

Children’s Ministry Strategist<br />

Virginia <strong>Baptist</strong> Mission Board<br />

Richmond, Virginia<br />

Smith<br />

Bradley<br />

• September 25, 2008, we<br />

stepped off the train in Bremen,<br />

Germany. And we wonder, “How<br />

will we know Alina Surely, she<br />

will have a sign to indicate who<br />

she is.”<br />

We clear immigration and notice<br />

two dark-haired, smiling ladies<br />

with sign “IBC”! Well, that<br />

must be our hosts! Hugs and<br />

smiles for everyone! Everyone talking<br />

at same time.<br />

Gayle Bradley and I are in Bremen<br />

at the invitation of the IBC<br />

to minister with three churches in<br />

the area of Children’s Ministry. Alina<br />

and Paul Prodan, who serve the<br />

<strong>International</strong> <strong>Baptist</strong> Church, Bremen<br />

as Children’s Ministry Coordinators,<br />

much desired a time of<br />

encouragement, motivation, and<br />

equipping of the children’s leaders<br />

at Bremen. They contacted the<br />

IBC Office and learned of a partnership<br />

between the IBC and Virginia<br />

<strong>Baptist</strong> Mission Board. They<br />

logged the request with the IBC<br />

and Craig Waddell, partnership<br />

coordinator with Virginia <strong>Baptist</strong><br />

Mission Board.<br />

Gayle and I responded to the<br />

request for seminar leaders for<br />

teachers of children, ages 2-13.<br />

On Saturday, September 27,<br />

42 children’s leaders from three<br />

churches (Bremen, Hanover, and<br />

Celle) gathered in Bremen for a<br />

day of laughter, conversation,<br />

singing [“I have a new friend; Joan<br />

is her name”, appropriate for a<br />

3-year old], and participation in<br />

new ways to help children learn<br />

about God and God’s great love<br />

for them.<br />

Children’s leaders ‘ran into<br />

walls’ as they portrayed the Bible<br />

study of Jesus healing a blind<br />

man. Children’s leaders learned<br />

about the thinking skills and abilities<br />

of 3’s-6’s.<br />

Children’s leaders said “I wish<br />

more information.” “When can<br />

we do this again”<br />

Blessings gathered from the<br />

seminar: children’s leaders were<br />

affirmed in their calling to teach<br />

children about God; children’s<br />

leaders met other children’s leaders;<br />

children’s leaders had fun<br />

while learning (and children do also!);<br />

children’s leaders prayed together<br />

for God to move to touch<br />

the heart and lives of the children<br />

and families in their churches.<br />

Would I go again to Germany<br />

Oh, yes! We met wonderful<br />

people, wonderful children’s leaders,<br />

wonderful Christians! We have<br />

a bond now. I can see the faces<br />

of Alina and Paul; Susan, Walter<br />

and daughter Lauren; Joan and<br />

her mom Peggy; Lydia; Ole and<br />

Nunia. And I pray for them, for<br />

their ministry in Bremen as they<br />

pray for Gayle and me and our<br />

ministry in Virginia.<br />

Thank you, thank you, thank<br />

you IBC, Bremen (and the IBC) for<br />

a marvelous blessing! •<br />

News from the Churches<br />

Kaiserslautern, Germany<br />

• On Sunday, 5 October, Faith <strong>Baptist</strong><br />

Church in Kaiserslautern, Germany, celebrated<br />

the 10-year ministry of Jan Horak.<br />

Recognition Sunday offered the church<br />

family the opportunity to express appreciation<br />

to both Jan and Ginger Horak for<br />

their ministry at Faith <strong>Baptist</strong> Church.<br />

Jan, who currently serves as youth pastor,<br />

first came to Faith <strong>Baptist</strong> in 1987 as a<br />

high school student when his parents, Ralf<br />

and Gisela Horak, moved into the Kaiserslautern<br />

community. Jan initially started as<br />

an active participant in the youth group,<br />

subsequently served in various youth ministry<br />

positions, and, in 1998, was hired by<br />

then Pastor Jimmy Martin as a full-time<br />

minister. In 2000, Jan was married to Ginger<br />

Perry whom he first met when Ginger<br />

and her family attended Faith <strong>Baptist</strong><br />

while her father was stationed in Germany<br />

with the U.S. military. Their courtship<br />

The Horak family<br />

spanned several years, two continents,<br />

and two military assignments to Germany.<br />

To this day, Jan and Ginger believe that<br />

email was invented just for them.<br />

During the Sunday morning service,<br />

presentations were made to both Jan and<br />

Ginger. A well-attended reception also followed<br />

the evening service during which<br />

time gifts were presented. Letters of congratulations<br />

and words of appreciation<br />

were received from many current and former<br />

coworkers, parents, and students. IBC<br />

General Secretary Jimmy Martin wrote “I<br />

know the love Jan has for the Lord, for<br />

youth, and for the church. Jan is a bridgebuilder<br />

to the military community and an<br />

asset to the German community also.” Altus<br />

Newell, current pastor of Faith <strong>Baptist</strong><br />

Church, commented on Jan’s willingness<br />

to minister in any way that will help<br />

the church. “He does so many things often<br />

behind the scenes to help all our ministries.”<br />

Jan and Ginger currently have three<br />

children, Nehemiah, Naomi, and Gideon,<br />

who also participated in the church-wide<br />

celebration.<br />

•<br />

Stan Garn<br />

12 | Highlights 12/2008


News from the Churches<br />

Lagos, Portugal<br />

• 2008 has been a year of change for<br />

the <strong>International</strong> Community Church, Lagos,<br />

Portugal. We have continued to see<br />

new faces with us, but sadly some have<br />

moved on.<br />

Kym from the U.K. was with us for six<br />

months, enabling us to do Kidz Klub and<br />

many more things with the teens. We miss<br />

her. The work with the local orphanage continues<br />

to grow with approximately 8-10 attending<br />

church each week. We also take the<br />

same number out on Saturday afternoons.<br />

The Sunday School has just finished working<br />

through Pilgrim’s Progress. Four of our<br />

teens went to Newday in the U.K. during<br />

the summer, meeting up with 7000 other<br />

teens; they came back very different.<br />

The outreach to the homeless continues<br />

to grow; we feed them twice a week<br />

in the town and once every two weeks<br />

they come up to the church building for a<br />

hot meal. Pray we may see fruit from these<br />

lovely people as they struggle with many<br />

addictions.<br />

Keep praying for the work here in Lagos<br />

as we seek to be a genuine local church,<br />

loving each other as Christ commanded.<br />

We long to see genuine commitment as<br />

we grow together in Him. The Algarve can<br />

be a “me first” part of the world; may we<br />

see us become a “Christ-first” people. •<br />

David and Linda Chester<br />

ICC works with a local orphanage<br />

each week.<br />

Kiev, Ukraine<br />

• God continues blessing Kiev <strong>International</strong><br />

Bible Church in Kiev with continued<br />

outreach, sending people in ministry,<br />

and seeing people come to Christ. Even<br />

though 2008 continues to be a transition<br />

year for the church with numerous families<br />

leaving, God’s faithfulness and blessings<br />

continue unabated. Currently former<br />

KIBC people are serving in more than 20<br />

cities in nine countries including Sweden,<br />

U.S., China, Norway, Germany, Afghanistan,<br />

and Thailand.<br />

Recently KIBC commissioned Maxim<br />

Sidorchuk as an English-teaching missionary<br />

to Bangkok, Thailand, where he<br />

is working with an American missionary<br />

and also an international church. American<br />

Doug Clark has recently been added<br />

to the Pastoral Leadership Team. In addition,<br />

the PLT added another member to its<br />

team as it continues providing leadership<br />

to the church.<br />

The Persian ministry continues to expand<br />

both locally and in other cities. The<br />

leadership core now consists of approximately<br />

eight young men, four of whom<br />

serve as a leadership team. They had their<br />

first formal Sunday worship service on 19<br />

October, and continue their week-night<br />

Bible study group. The leaders are also<br />

meeting periodically with another group<br />

in Kharkiv, and recently they made contact<br />

with a group of approximately eight<br />

young men and women in Poltova who<br />

are wanting someone to come and help<br />

them study the Bible.<br />

After just over three years serving as<br />

founding senior pastor at KIBC, Bob and<br />

Jo Ann Tolliver are concluding the transition<br />

time of their ministry and will completely<br />

phase their work out in early December.<br />

They will return to the U.S. on 11<br />

December and will headquarter in Missouri<br />

from where they will continue international<br />

ministry as well as doing stateside<br />

conferences. They are available for<br />

interim pastorates and other related ministries.<br />

•<br />

Hamburg, Germany<br />

• On 1-2 November, the <strong>International</strong><br />

<strong>Baptist</strong> Church of Hamburg, Germany,<br />

celebrated 20 years of existence. What<br />

started small – four women – has grown<br />

to a multi-cultural congregation of more<br />

than 250. Jimmy Martin and his wife Laurie<br />

came to celebrate with us, and in his<br />

welcome he urged us that even though<br />

IBC-HH is in a time of transition, not to<br />

give up and not to give in, like those before<br />

us did not do. Hamburg is an amazing<br />

place, and, for those who do not know it,<br />

next year German baptized Christians will<br />

celebrate 175 years in existence which all<br />

started right here in the Elbe River.<br />

Every pastor that has come into our<br />

church has left his mark. First was James<br />

Foster in 1988, and his motto was “Staying<br />

together.” J.R. Duncan followed him<br />

in 1994, and they stayed with us for six<br />

years. His motto was the “American way<br />

of loving God.” In 2000 IBC-HH installed<br />

its first Pastor Search Committee and in<br />

2001 called Craig Rees and his family. His<br />

motto was “We connect and move to the<br />

center.” <strong>Now</strong> led in the interim by Francis<br />

Ofori and assisted by Christian Bach, we<br />

wait on what the Lord has in store for us.<br />

The festivities over the weekend included<br />

a variety concert put on by some<br />

of our very talented members. This included<br />

dances, songs, poems, and skits,<br />

and we also heard about how it all began.<br />

We then, in true IBC-HH style, had<br />

a wonderful dinner and then enjoyed an<br />

amazing worship concert. On Sunday, we<br />

had a really special service where Jimmy<br />

Martin preached on “The Importance of<br />

the Cross.” After which we all enjoyed an<br />

amazing buffet with dishes from all over<br />

the world.<br />

•<br />

IBC General Secretary Jimmy Martin cuts<br />

IBC-HH’s birthday cake.<br />

13 | Highlights 12/2008


News from the Churches<br />

Bremen, Germany<br />

Vacation Bible School:<br />

Blast Off to Cosmic City<br />

The first day was one of the best because<br />

I learned how God had created the<br />

earth. In the Lab (it was called Wonder U),<br />

I had much fun every day. When I grow<br />

up, I want to become a scientist. The<br />

Theater of the Galaxies, which we visited<br />

every day was very good. On Thursday<br />

one of the actresses told us her testimony<br />

– how God saved her and her husband<br />

when a burglar broke into their house. I<br />

can understand it much better if I know<br />

the person who God has helped. That has<br />

strengthened my faith.<br />

In Supernova (arts and crafts) I made a<br />

comet out of balloons and peas. Asteroid<br />

alley was our game time. I liked especially<br />

the game with the wet sponges. My favorite<br />

song was “Blast off to Cosmic City.” We<br />

sang it every day. Only one thing was not<br />

so good. My best friend was away on vacation;<br />

together with him, it would have<br />

been even more fun.<br />

Michael, 8 years old<br />

Church Retreat<br />

Die Wattwanderung, worship, and water<br />

were all key features of the recent church<br />

retreat enjoyed by more than 50 people<br />

from the <strong>International</strong> <strong>Baptist</strong> Church,<br />

Bremen, Germany. The retreat was held<br />

in the lovely seaside town of Norden, at<br />

Gästehaus To Huus. Families, couples, singles,<br />

young and old all joined together for<br />

a weekend of fellowship, teaching, worship,<br />

and fun. The first night was Thursday<br />

and after a traditional meal of Wurst<br />

and potato salad everyone settled down<br />

to watch the inspirational film, ‘Facing<br />

the Giants.’ Popcorn was plentiful, and<br />

the evening got off to a good start with<br />

everyone taking turns with making drinks,<br />

snacks, and sweeping up.<br />

Friday morning devotions set the tone<br />

for the day as the early risers came together<br />

for prayer and worship. House group<br />

leaders headed teams who took responsibility<br />

for preparing two meals each over<br />

the weekend and doing the clearing up<br />

in the industrial-size kitchen. This was actually<br />

one of the unexpected highlights<br />

of the weekend as teams worked together<br />

to produce some very delicious meals<br />

for everyone. Much laughter and a real<br />

sense of family was apparent in the kitchen!<br />

Each day, time was set aside for a variety<br />

of leisure activities and many people<br />

set off on the Wattwanderung mud. Yes,<br />

that was expected, but add to that a tropical<br />

downpour, and you have some very<br />

wet, bedraggled people for lunch. However<br />

this all added to the sense of adventure<br />

with everyone having a different story<br />

to tell-certainly it seemed with each telling<br />

each person had been a little bit wetter<br />

than the one before!<br />

Friday evening started with a time of<br />

worship led by members of the IBC worship<br />

team. Prayer and praise prepared our<br />

hearts and minds for the first workshop<br />

‘Who is the Holy Spirit’ led by our pastor<br />

Neville Johannie. This was an introductory<br />

session and reminded us that the Holy<br />

Spirit is a wonderful person, with wonderful<br />

power and holding wonderful potential<br />

for us. We were challenged to “point<br />

our hearts in the right direction” and to<br />

“ask God to increase our capacity and to<br />

pour into our life.” This was followed by<br />

a short time of silent prayer and reflection<br />

as we each focused on what we felt God<br />

was saying to us. Many felt a real sense of<br />

God’s presence in our midst and this deepened<br />

as the weekend continued.<br />

Later in the evening a game of “Saintly<br />

Who wants to be a Millionaire” was great<br />

fun, with our pastor acting as ‘Phone a<br />

friend’ for all teams – no pressure! There<br />

were some tricky questions but two teams<br />

successfully won a million – blessings rather<br />

than euros, I think. For details of the<br />

game you need to contact our fantastic<br />

Retreat Organization team.<br />

Saturday was sunny, and there was an<br />

air of excitement and anticipation as the<br />

baptism of Heike Herzog in the North Sea<br />

had been carefully planned for later in the<br />

day. The second workshop took place in<br />

the morning, and we heard our pastor answer<br />

the question, “What does the Holy<br />

Spirit do” As he shared some of his own<br />

personal experience of the work of the<br />

Holy Spirit in his church in South Africa,<br />

we were all aware of the mighty power of<br />

the Holy Spirit, not just in New Testament<br />

times but in our world today.<br />

After an afternoon of horse riding, visiting<br />

the Sea Lion Centre, or enjoying the<br />

beach, we all came together at the harbor<br />

to share in the wonderful baptismal<br />

service. We sang and praised our Lord Jesus,<br />

drawing the attention of the people<br />

around who watched and listened to the<br />

words of Pastor Neville. Heike’s testimony<br />

conveyed how she had come to this moment<br />

of complete commitment and desire<br />

for renewal and as she stood in the<br />

sea, the sun streamed through the clouds<br />

and God smiled, sending His love shining<br />

down and blessing us all, filling us anew<br />

with wonder and delight at His gracious<br />

gifts to us. This was a very special moment<br />

and one of great testimony.<br />

That evening a time to share talents was<br />

planned and despite the fact that everyone<br />

was tired, no one wanted to go to bed<br />

and an evening of worship and praise continued<br />

until very late. Volunteers played<br />

the flute and guitar and sang songs and<br />

even the smallest children joined in with<br />

some great acrobatics. The Worship team<br />

led the singing and dancing as we were revitalised<br />

by the Holy Spirit’s amazing presence.<br />

Eventually after a time of prayer and<br />

thanksgiving the house settled down for<br />

the last night together.<br />

After breakfast on Sunday, the final<br />

workshop, “How should I respond to the<br />

Holy Spirit” was led by Pastor Neville,<br />

and we were directed to “begin our journey<br />

by being immersed, to continue with<br />

constant fillings, and to keep trusting God<br />

to release His Spirit.” We recognized that<br />

we need to be hungry, to be available, and<br />

to be “ready to be surprised.” After sharing<br />

the Lord’s Supper together and spending<br />

time in prayer, we were open to hear<br />

what the Holy Spirit was saying to us, and<br />

we left with a sense of great joy and anticipation<br />

knowing there was more to come<br />

on our return.<br />

We were grateful to the team of workers<br />

from IBC Hamburg who came and looked<br />

after our children so that everyone could<br />

take part in the workshop sessions. The<br />

children had a great time and not only<br />

played games but produced some great<br />

artwork too.<br />

After a final meal together everyone<br />

slowly departed to prepare for the week<br />

ahead. It was a great blessing for all of us<br />

there – a special time of fellowship when<br />

we could really get to know each other<br />

and to enjoy being part of a rich church<br />

family. It was special, and the only thing<br />

that was wrong – it was too short!!<br />

Susan Turner<br />

14 | Highlights 12/2008


News from the Churches<br />

Spiritual Gifts Workshop<br />

Following our church retreat in Norden<br />

in August where Pastor Neville Johannie<br />

shared in three sessions about the ministry<br />

of the Holy Spirit, a need was felt to further<br />

explore our spiritual gifts and how we can<br />

use these to build up the Body of Christ at<br />

the <strong>International</strong> <strong>Baptist</strong> Church, Bremen.<br />

It was decided to hold spiritual gifts<br />

workshops over two weekends to enable<br />

as many people as possible to participate<br />

in the workshops. The first of these were<br />

held on Friday night and Saturday, 10-11<br />

October, with 23 enthusiastic (and very<br />

blessed) participants!<br />

We commenced with an assessment of<br />

how much we as a group knew about the<br />

whole subject, then studied Scripture and<br />

looked at definitions of the various gifts,<br />

in order to lay a Biblical foundation for all<br />

that followed.<br />

On Saturday morning, we scored our<br />

(previously completed) questionnaires to<br />

determine what our spiritual giftings are.<br />

It was exciting and so encouraging to get<br />

together in small groups and affirm these<br />

gifts as seen in our lives by others. More<br />

teaching followed with an assessment of<br />

our ‘motivational gifts,’ using a further<br />

questionnaire.<br />

We had an opportunity to see how our<br />

major gifts tie in with those that motivate<br />

us and ended with a meaningful time of<br />

prayer together in our small groups.<br />

The second workshop was held on the<br />

last weekend of October with a possibility<br />

of two more to follow.<br />

One Sunday in October was a very special<br />

time at the close of our worship service<br />

as many in the congregation were prayed<br />

for by others whom the Lord prompted.<br />

We sense the Lord is already doing ‘new<br />

things’ at IBC Bremen through his Body as<br />

we minister in the power of the Holy Spirit.<br />

•<br />

Dorothy Johannie<br />

Pastor Neville Johannie leads IBC Bremen<br />

in a spiritual gifts workshop.<br />

San Jose, Costa Rica<br />

• These are exciting days at the <strong>International</strong><br />

<strong>Baptist</strong> Church, Costa Rica! During<br />

the months of October and November<br />

we took the 30-day challenge based<br />

on the book One Month to Live. More than<br />

200 of our people committed to reading<br />

the book. Many of those reading the<br />

book also participated in a small group<br />

based around the same topic. Essentially<br />

we were all asking the question, “What<br />

would you do if you had only one month<br />

to live” and the follow-up question of<br />

“Why not make those changes now”<br />

We continue to try and keep up with all<br />

the new people God is bringing our way.<br />

In the last year we have counted 68 nations<br />

represented by people who have attended<br />

our church.<br />

In the month of November we will have<br />

a MissionsFest which recognizes all the<br />

various ministries we support. We will also<br />

host a student luncheon for the many<br />

students who attend our church from several<br />

universities. In December we look forward<br />

to our annual Christmas presentation.<br />

This is one of our major outreach<br />

events, and last year more than 600 people<br />

attended.<br />

We would covet everyone’s prayers as<br />

we seek to reach the international community<br />

living in Costa Rica.<br />

•<br />

IBC Costa Rica in worship.<br />

Prague, Czech Republic<br />

• A baptism is always a time for celebration<br />

as individuals publicly affirm their<br />

commitment to Jesus Christ. The baptism<br />

at the <strong>International</strong> <strong>Baptist</strong> Church of<br />

Prague on 28 September was even more<br />

meaningful as a time of reconciliation in<br />

the families of Tom and Emma who were<br />

baptized. They shared their wonderful testimonies<br />

but just as wonderful was the<br />

way the Lord used their baptisms to move<br />

in their family situations.<br />

Both Tom (Czech) and Emma (English)<br />

have parents who divorced more than 30<br />

years ago. In Tom’s case, his parents had<br />

not spoken since. In Emma’s, her parents<br />

John, Tom, Emma, and Pastor Gareth Morris<br />

on baptism day.<br />

had met since their divorce, but there<br />

remained much tension and discomfort<br />

in their relationship. The baptism service<br />

(and Emma’s wedding) brought both sets<br />

of parents together and resulted in them<br />

talking (and even laughing) together.<br />

This was indeed a case of the truth<br />

of Paul’s words in 2 Corinthians 5:17-21<br />

(abridged): “…God was reconciling the<br />

world to himself in Christ… And he has<br />

committed to us the message of reconciliation.<br />

We are therefore Christ’s ambassadors,<br />

as though God was making his appeal<br />

through. We implore you on Christ’s<br />

behalf: Be reconciled to God.” Our prayer<br />

is that the process of reconciliation that<br />

began at the baptism would result ultimately<br />

in reconciliation with God. •<br />

Gareth Morris<br />

15 | Highlights 12/2008


News from the Churches<br />

Sofia, Bulgaria<br />

• The <strong>International</strong> <strong>Baptist</strong> Church, Sofia,<br />

Bulgaria, is an English-speaking church<br />

in a Cyrillic-alphabet nation. During the<br />

past year, people from 33 nations came to<br />

worship with us. Our congregation consists<br />

of everyone from street dwellers to<br />

ambassadors. In the Spirit of the Lord, we<br />

sing and worship together as one blessed<br />

family.<br />

Enjoying fellowship with people from<br />

such diverse backgrounds is an educating<br />

and eye-opening experience. When some<br />

of the very poor pray, their prayers reveal<br />

an amazing kinship with God. Many of<br />

us pray for “our daily bread,” but we relax<br />

and trust in our well-stocked pantry<br />

or regular income. When these folks pray,<br />

their only possible hope is in God and His<br />

goodness. They have nothing else. When<br />

our only hope is in God, our prayers take<br />

on an entirely vibrant significance.<br />

“Listen my dear brothers: Has not God<br />

chosen those who are poor in the eyes of<br />

the world to be rich in faith and to inherit<br />

the kingdom He pomised those who<br />

love Him” (James 2:5). Hence, by worshiping<br />

and serving together, everyone<br />

in our church is an invaluable member of<br />

the body of Christ. We learn that being last<br />

may actually be better than first place, just<br />

as the Lord told us.<br />

•<br />

Ray Smith<br />

Madrid, Spain<br />

• Greetings from Immanuel <strong>Baptist</strong><br />

Church in Madrid. We have had a challenging<br />

fall as we have begun a second<br />

Sunday morning worship service. This has<br />

entailed involving more people in serving,<br />

as we now have two worship teams,<br />

two greeter and usher teams, two hospitality<br />

teams, and two children’s Bible<br />

class teams. Pastor David Dixon and Associate<br />

Pastor Tim Melton alternate Sundays<br />

preaching, giving the same sermon<br />

in both services. The same worship team<br />

leads in both services, alternating Sundays<br />

between the two teams. The results<br />

have been positive, with increased attendance<br />

and involvement, though it is a<br />

challenge.<br />

Our congregation is always changing,<br />

so we are trying to help newcomers get<br />

Immanuel, Madrid youth enjoy a bonfire.<br />

involved quickly. We have begun several<br />

new home groups this fall, including a<br />

group in Spanish and a group for study<br />

abroad university students, most of whom<br />

are American this year.<br />

Our middle school and high school<br />

youth have just returned from their fall<br />

retreat where our own Madrid-based university<br />

student group took on some new<br />

roles, such as leading worship and creative<br />

workshops and sharing devotionals. The<br />

35 kids from 14 different countries were<br />

challenged by Pastor Tim to find joy in<br />

leading a life of obedience and discipline<br />

now, for the greater joy that comes later.<br />

Sharing and singing around a bonfire was<br />

a significant experience for all. •<br />

David and Susie Dixon<br />

Cologne, Germany<br />

• The Glory of God is upon us – we are<br />

a blessed church and precious to our Creator.<br />

From week to week we find ourselves<br />

celebrating the goodness of God unto us.<br />

Months back, we were worried and longed<br />

for moments of celebrating Jesus in truth<br />

and honesty. With heavy hearts, it’s hard<br />

to do no matter how long one tries. Those<br />

times of hurt are gone away, far away.<br />

We bless the Lord for our pastor Lorin<br />

Cranford to whom God spoke, concerning<br />

the “apple of His eye” – our church<br />

here in Cologne. God uses ordinary people<br />

for extra-ordinary things. Thanks to Pastor<br />

Cranford’s efforts, love, and patience to the<br />

sheep in IBC Cologne, we managed to land<br />

and stand on our feet and give structure<br />

back to the church. We are grateful for what<br />

God has in store for us, as we continue our<br />

journey in the Lord together in 2009.<br />

By God’s grace, our pastor managed<br />

to get in touch with our founding pastor<br />

Calvin Hogue in California. Pastor Hogue<br />

left IBC Cologne in 1997, and after a period<br />

of time, we unfortunately lost contact.<br />

For the church’s 10th anniversary in 2001,<br />

Pastor Hogue’s attendance was wished,<br />

and everyone tried to get in touch with<br />

him, but even the IBC Office couldn’t help<br />

us in this matter. Many were sad about this<br />

but couldn’t do anything about it. So naturally,<br />

it was a miracle that Pastor Cranford<br />

managed to get hold of him in just<br />

one month. This left even the IBC General<br />

Secretary marveling …<br />

Pastor Hogue’s interim time with us is<br />

simply God’s sent blessing, which we do<br />

not at times fully understand. Calvin and<br />

Betty Hogue are giving their time to the<br />

people and are dedicated to see the house<br />

of God full again. People are coming back;<br />

the joy of the Lord will not leave anyone<br />

behind. There is worshiping and singing in<br />

the house of the Lord at IBC Cologne.<br />

All nations are gathering together at<br />

the Lord’s Table and sharing as brothers<br />

and sisters. So being called an “<strong>International</strong><br />

<strong>Baptist</strong> Church” is not just part of<br />

our name any longer but is our main attribute.<br />

Love and peace are back with us,<br />

for God never left us. Today we are dedicating<br />

children, celebrating anniversaries<br />

and weddings, and above all baptizing in<br />

the name of our Lord Jesus Christ. Kick-off<br />

to our “World Worship Day” will be 7 December,<br />

and we ask for prayers that we<br />

may be able to reach out to the 191 nations<br />

in Cologne and worship the Lord in<br />

all tongues.<br />

•<br />

Linda Akinyi Okundaye<br />

16 | Highlights 12/2008

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!