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April 30, 2007

Prayerful Encouragement

"Freddie Arnold was taken to the hospital in Baton Rouge Sunday night. Chest pains. They're running tests."

That early Monday morning call got my day started with a bang. With a prayer, actually, lifting Freddie up to the Father for His well-being. I called his room an hour or two later. Said he was feeling fine, and will be there at least a couple of days. We'll appreciate the prayers.

The Unlimited Partnership teams (7 seminary students, 7 pastors, Bill Taylor, Professor Joe Sherrer, and some out of town guests) were meeting all day today at the seminary's Leavell Center. I ran by for an hour, long enough to hear the reports from the 7 church teams. Everything is moving well. Wish I could have heard the guests.

At 11 am, I picked up Dr. Charles Wade and his colleagues, Charlie Singleton, who heads up the African-American work with the Baptist General Convention of Texas, and Rolando Rodriguez, who does the same for the Hispanic Churches. Checked them in at the hotel, then spent the better part of the day touring the city with them---meeting with Dick Randels at Lakeview Baptist Church, touring the seminary campus, circling Franklin Avenue Baptist Church, checking out the Baptist Crossroads/Habitat homes on Alvar Street and the Ninth Ward, then back to a late lunch in Kenner. I'll be picking them up at 6:15 as we head to FBC Luling for the Spring meeting of our association where Dr. Wade is speaking.

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April 29, 2007

What Leadership Looks Like

Doris Voitier is about to receive one of this country's premier awards, the JFK Profile in Courage Award, given to only one or two persons a year for showing courage in the face of overwhelming odds.

Doris Voitier is the superintendent of the St. Bernard School System, in the parish just below New Orleans.

A few weeks after Katrina, when everyone was saying St. Bernard Parish was destroyed and most leaders were still shaking their heads and wondering what to do, Doris Voitier decided if St. Bernard were to get on its feet, the schools would have to be operating. Problem is, they were all flooded and ruined, every last one of them. So, she had a little talk with the FEMA people, found out they weren't going to do anything, and took matters into her own hands.

She took out a loan for $17 million and ordered 22 portable classrooms and 107 travel trailers for school employees, all of whom had lost their homes. Then she announced that school would reopen only 11 weeks after Katrina. Incidentally, she spent $22,000 for each trailer in contrast with the $60,000 which FEMA would eventually pay, according to all accounts.

Doris Voitier traveled to Baton Rouge and spent a day with the banks consolidating the various accounts her schools had. "We could sort it out later," she said. "Right now, we needed cash." She made sure the premiums were being paid on the health insurance for employees, and covered the payroll, all of which came to $1 million a month.

Voitier told a FEMA representative that she needed hot meals for her students. She was told that despite earlier assurances, FEMA would not be able to cover that, and that she should consider cold sandwiches or military MREs. "No," said the superintendent, "The children will have hot meals."

She hired a Chalmette restaurant owner to cook the meals on a barge in the Mississippi River and sent FEMA the bill for $27,000. After seven months of haggling, FEMA paid the bill.

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April 28, 2007

The Next Two Weeks

Think of this as letting you peek over our shoulder at our calendar. For me personally, it may be the busiest two weeks in a while.

Monday night, April 30, 7 pm, Dr. Charles Wade of the Baptist General Convention of Texas is the guest preacher at our annual Spring meeting of the Baptist Association of Greater New Orleans. We'll meet at the FBC of Luling, which is in St. Charles Parish on the West Bank. Dr. Bill Taylor will also speak on the exciting "Unlimited Partnerships" project. You're invited.

Tuesday, May 1, I'm driving toward Nashville and spending the night with my parents at Nauvoo, Alabama. Wednesday afternoon, will be setting up for the three day biennial meeting of the National Association of Southern Baptist Secretaries meeting at the Lifeway Christian Resources building in Nashville. I've mentioned before that this gathering of perhaps 700 church office staffers is the best audience any speaker will ever find, the sharpest and sweetest bunch of ladies on the planet.

Among the massive slate of conferences the secretaries (call them administrative and ministry assistants) will be attending are six I'll be doing. How about this for relevant conference subjects:

"Keeping the Joy in Ministry." "Dealing with Crisis Situations." "How to Love the People Who Irritate You the Worst." "How do I Minister When I Need to be Ministered to?" (Four subjects, six conferences, with two being repeats.)

Quick word on each topic.

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Signs of Progress

"I understand Lakeview is gone," the caller told the Times-Picayune columnist. The writer was stunned. "Gone?" he said. "Yes," the caller said. "I lived there and lost my home. We're now in (some distant state) and a group of people want to come help the city rebuild. I know we can't work in Lakeview, so I was wondering where you think we should put our efforts."

The columnist assured the lady that Lakeview is most definitely not "gone," and that people are rebuilding everywhere throughout that area.

In Saturday morning's paper, another columnist told of a face-to-face conversation along similar lines. A man, perhaps a tourist, was riding a bike through her neighborhood. He saw her in the yard and commented on how sad everything looks and maybe these empty houses will sell in time. The columnist, food editor Judy Walker, had a ready answer for him.

"Sir, that house is already sold. Also that one, and this one over here." Furthermore, she pointed out, the people who bought them were young adults, people who will be bringing children and raising families, and they're already working on restoring the houses.

Judy Walker points out that what may look like a mess to a casual visitor is a sign of progress to residents. That pile of junk on the sidewalk in front of the house means someone has cleaned it out and is planning to restore it. That vacant lot means a damaged house has been demolished so a new home can be built. FEMA trailers being towed from the neighborhood indicates that people are moving back into their homes.

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April 27, 2007

Waylon's Honey

Martha Bailey is someone you ought to know. Now, unless you live on what is euphemistically called "New Orleans' Northshore," so you can drive to the First Baptist Church of Covington where her husband Waylon has been pastor for some 20 years or more, you may not have had the opportunity. Until now.

She's written a book. And I guarantee you that after reading it, you will feel that a) you know Martha Bailey and b) you like this lady.

Some will recall that in December of 2005, the FBC of Covington hosted all our ministers and spouses for our annual Christmas banquet. Now, they are not part of our association, being separated from us by 25 miles of Lake Pontchartrain, and they had taken massive damage from Hurricane Katrina themselves, but under the leadership of Waylon and Martha, the church did that banquet, did it first-class, and rolled out the red carpet for nearly 200 of our folks. Not only was it free, but they gave everyone gifts of money. Lots of money which was sorely needed by our hurting ministers.

I told you how Martha took it upon herself to fill up gift bags for each couple that night, gifts such as Wal-Mart cards and other nice things, including shelled pecans. She marched into the grocery store, found herself talking to the district manager of Winn-Dixie, and asked if he wouldn't like to donate pound bags of shelled pecans for the ministers of New Orleans, in fact, 75 or 100 pound bags. The local manager stuttered, "Uh, sir, do you know what these sell for?" The district manager did. He told Martha and his store manager that he lives in Diamondhead, Mississippi, and that when his family evacuated for Katrina, a Baptist church took them in and ministered to them, and he had been looking for a way to say thanks.

Anyway, that's Martha. Big visions, go anywhere, do anything, just move out of her way. You want a job done; she's your lady. Martha is most definitely worth knowing.

The book is called "Putting My Dress-Up Clothes Away," and subtitled "because big girls live in the real world." The publisher is Insight Press, P. O. Box 5077, Covington, LA 70434. I don't know what it sells for, but have already ordered 20 copies for some women in my life.

Here's the story behind the title.

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April 26, 2007

Preachery Things

Number One.

Since they're my only congregation now, I sometimes enjoy pointing out a sermon to our pastors, either something they might consider preaching or something that preaches to them. Case in point: our Sheriff of Jefferson Parish, the one and only Harry Lee.

How to describe him. He's Chinese, but thoroughly, completely, 100 percent American and pure Southern, used to weigh over 300 lbs but had stomach stapling surgery and now weighs considerably less, and has been our sheriff for 27 years. He's 75 years old, I believe. And he's up for re-election this fall. And he has leukemia. The really, really bad kind, we're told. The kind that will be aggressively treated with chemotherapy and who knows what else, treatments that will take a great toll on his strength. But he is adamantly declaring not only that he will run for re-election, and that he will win, but he will whip the backside of anyone who dares oppose him.

He has sounded confident about every election in the past, but there is a strident tone to his pronouncements this time that sounds unhealthy.

The police chief of one of our suburbs, Chief Dale, has been a longtime friend of the sheriff's. But someone informed Sheriff Lee that Chief Dale plans to run against him this fall. That was all it took for Harry to uninvite the chief to his annual picnic, an affair attended by all the sheriff's longtime supporters. Not only did the chief get uninvited, but Harry lambasted him up one side and down the other, throwing in some juicy profanity. "It's a surprise to me," said the chief. "I'm not running against Harry. I'm his friend and a supporter."

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April 24, 2007

Souvenirs of Washington, D.C.

My "flying" trip to Reagan National Airport (up Saturday and back Monday evening) was a delight in every way. (I found out that many D.C. area folks grit their teeth when hearing that airport referred to as "Reagan" and still call it "National," somewhat like the residents of Mississippi or Alabama would feel if you named their airport "Hillary Clinton International," I suppose. Funny.)

What I did was this: stay with Don and Audrey Davidson (he's the pastor for nearly two years now of the FBC of Alexandria); spend the day Sunday with my hostess Sheri Link of the Northstar Network, the Northern Virginia counterpart to our "Baptist Association of Greater New Orleans," as we worshiped with the Bethlehem Baptist Church, lunched, visited Columbia BC of Falls Church, met with church leaders from around the area from 4 pm to nearly 6 o'clock, then worshiped with FBC Alexandria, and on Monday spoke at the annual luncheon of pastors and church office staffers at Parkwood BC in Annandale. Met tons of new friends, a number of old ones, and of course, sketched a lot of people (it's what I do) and drew a number of cartoons for churches and pastors. Arrived back in New Orleans at 8 pm Monday night. It's a wonderful life.

1) "I want you folks to know each other." The plan had been for Chet and Eva Lee Griffin to pick me up at the Davidsons' Saturday evening and we'd eat at a restaurant in Old Alexandria, a historic and delightful section of the city. When Don's plans changed so that the Davidsons were able to join us, I urged them to do so. The Griffins and the Davidsons needed to know each other. They are both so special to me and our family.

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April 20, 2007

Virginia Tech--and Us

Some 25 percent of locals are planning to leave this area, a new poll shows. Or, to turn that depressing statistic around, 75 percent who responded to a survey last month say they plan to stay in the area permanently. Of that number, 47 percent however admitted they are not hopeful about the future of the New Orleans region.

According to Thursday's Times-Picayune, that poll was conducted on behalf of the Council on Alcohol and Drug Abuse for Greater New Orleans. CADA takes an annual community survey of attitudes on matters related to underage drinking and substance abuse. A year ago, the organization added other questions in order to discover attitudes about life here since Katrina.

John King, executive director of CADA, said those who responded to the poll from St. Bernard Parish have a more negative view than other parishes. The telephone poll queried 608 people in the metro area between March 20 and April 3. Fully one third of St. Bernardians say they plan to leave. Once you move into Orleans and Jefferson parishes, the percentage drops to 16, or about one in eight.

Sixty percent of those interviewed said they feel the area is more dangerous now than before Katrina. Again, the numbers are higher in St. Bernard, with 78 percent saying so. But even in Orleans and Jefferson, more than one-half agree.

More to the point for CADA's purposes, the interviewees were asked if a family member is showing signs of emotional distress due to Katrina and its aftermath. In St. Bernard, 88 percent said yes. The percentage in Orleans is 48 and 46 in Jefferson. This stress is producing a higher rate of divorces, suicides, and incidents of domestic violence, King said. On television Wednesday night, John King pointed out that most of the city's psychiatrists and psychologists and other workers in the alcohol-and-drug-abuse field did not return to the city after Katrina but moved their practices away.

So the problems are more severe and the health workers scarcer. Anyone see a pattern developing here?

Not sure if this is good news or what, but the father of one of our ministers has won the lottery in Tennessee. He won it to the tune of $2 million, according to the report we received. No one asked, but I think we might want to pray for him, too.

A PRAYER FOR THE VIRGINIA TECH COMMUNITY

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April 19, 2007

Choosing Your Disposition

We can always count on our Norco friends Rudy and Rose French for a thought-provoking contribution to the Wednesday pastors meeting. Since they have just returned from visiting family members living in Bangkok, Thailand, we invited them to report. The highlight for Rose was sitting "on the nose" of an elephant, which picked her up and deposited her on top just like you see in the movies. The down point, they reported, was discovering some family members are planning a divorce. That's always bad news. Rudy continued....

"I realized that I have been unhappy lately. For a lot of reasons that I thought were important. But in Thailand, everyone was so happy, even the poorest of people, some of whom had no legs or were blind. I was really struck by that. So I decided to make a list of the reasons for my unhappiness. I filled up a couple of pages, and then looked at it and thought, 'Everything here is stupid.' So I tore it up and threw it away. And I decided I would be happy. I certainly have plenty of reasons to rejoice."

Rudy continued, "I used to own an English bulldog. That was the most wonderful dog. As he got older, he developed cataracts on his eyes, and when he went in for surgery to have them removed, he had a heart attack and died. Ten years later, I still miss him. But I've thought, 'I'd like to have another English bulldog.' Now, they are expensive, so I told my family, 'Count this as my birthdays and Christmases for the next five years, but that's what I want.'"

Rudy now has his English bulldog puppy. "The cutest little thing you have ever seen," he said. "And now, I look around and count all the reasons I have to be happy: I have a wonderful wife and a terrific little puppy." Everyone laughed. Rudy admitted that people who own those bulldogs usually look just like them; we'll be keeping an eye on him.

Later, when Joe Williams was sharing about the "coping with life's challenges" conferences he holds for churches still coping with post-Katrina existence, he said, "I can do these with any size group--even down to one person." Two people called out, "Rudy!"

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April 18, 2007

The Latest Word from Our City

1) Tony Merida has resigned as pastor of the First Baptist Church of Kenner to become Dean of the Chapel and Professor of Preaching at New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary. This is the position last held by Tony's mentor, Dr. Jim Shaddix who now pastors Riverside Baptist Church in Denver. Everyone loves Tony and Kim and is saddened by their leaving the church, except--as was the case when we resigned 3 years ago--they're not actually leaving. At the moment, they plan to keep their membership in the church. My family is delighted for a lot of reasons, among them the fact that Kim teaches piano to my grandchildren. She also plays for the worship services and is as wonderful a singer as you'll ever hear. Also a good Bible teacher. Talk about a preacher out-marrying himself; that's our Tony.

When Tony stands in the pulpit and opens the Word, he's as good as they come. He'll be a wonderful role model and teacher for the next generation of preachers.

2) "Safe at Home" has been canceled. Or at least postponed for a year. This evangelistic outreach of the Scott Dawson Evangelistic Association seems to be a great idea which did not connect with our people at this particular time. The plan was to buy out all the tickets for the May 20 baseball game in which our Triple-A New Orleans Zephyrs would be playing, to print up thousands of vouchers and give to our church people to distribute to their friends, vouchers which would be redeemed for actual tickets (and thus a seat) at the stadium. After the game, the Dawson team would bring a platform onto the field and present a musical program, after which Scott himself would present the gospel.

In all the preliminary meetings with pastors trying to generate interest and participants and local leadership, it would appear that locals were polite and interested but not to the point of "taking the ball and running with it," as the expression goes.

A 45-minute conference call today, Tuesday, involved a number of local ministers and the Dawson team, and at the end it was decided to call off the event.

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April 15, 2007

The Best Invitation

Throughout Scripture, God's favorite invitation was always, "Come and see." Can any good thing come out of Nazareth? Come and see. Come see a man who told me everything I ever did. Come unto me.

Over a year ago, Dennis Weems was comfortably residing in California. He knew of the devastation Katrina had wrought on this part of the world and had thought of coming this way to help. One Sunday he was visiting Immanuel Baptist Church in Highland, CA, and heard of the church's plans to bring a construction crew to New Orleans. He joined them. And never left.

Pastor Jeff Box of Suburban Baptist Church said, "He came in April of 2006 and has been here ever since." His arms swept over the new sanctuary which was being dedicated this morning and he said, "Dennis Weems designed everything you see before you today."

Now, I've been going to a lot of church dedications and rededications lately. But I have to say, this is the most beautiful rebuilding I've ever seen. In the courtyard, the walkways are large flat stones spaced appropriately and greenery is everywhere. "Who did this?" I asked Jeff. "Dennis Weems."

"So, how did this happen?" I asked Mr. Weems. He told how he had come down with the Highland group, planning to stay one week. "We were redoing a pastor's home. There was so much work to do, I decided to stay another week or two. Then Pastor Jeff asked me to look at Suburban Church with him."

They had walked around the hurricane damaged buildings, structures that Jeff had wept over and which he had privately decided would have to be torn down. When he met Dennis Weems and learned of his expertise in construction, he asked him to walk around the building with him. "What do you think?" Jeff asked. "Tear it down?"

Mr. Weems said, "Five or six contractors had turned Pastor Jeff down. They all thought it was a total loss."

One year later, Suburban Baptist Church is a miracle. A lighthouse in New Orleans East. A lovely oasis in the midst of a depressing stretch of highway.

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The Power of Words

Whoever said "Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words don't bother me" was not living in the real world. Words have incredible power to cut and hurt or bless and heal. It's not only the Word of the Lord which is a "two-edged sword," but everyone's words have the power to stab and to heal.

Take Don Imus. He's not doing anything now, so he's available if you want to take him.

The paper says this shock-radio talk-show host did so much good for children. When he "opened mouth and inserted foot" the other morning, he was in the middle of a fund-raising thing for children. He's built a ranch out west and brings inner-city children there to experience a different kind of life. But he brought all that good work to an abrupt halt the other morning when he off-handedly referred to the women of the Rutger's University basketball team as "nappy-headed hos."

I was never a big fan of Imus, even though we picked him up locally on the MSNBC channel and I tuned in occasionally. Some people must like him but I could never figure why. I will never forget a banquet he spoke before some 10 or 15 years before--seems like it was during the Clinton presidency--in which he was filthily crude and vulgar and offensive before the president, his family, his staff, congressional leaders, and the press. It was a disaster of the first magnitude. What I could never figure out was why anyone thought this guy was something special.

Forget Don Imus. The question that ought to be asked is what it says about this country that he was tolerated for all these years, with sponsors paying big bucks for him to do what he did.

Anyway. All of that was to lead up to the New Orleans situation.

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April 12, 2007

The Churches Are Getting Up

Our churches are getting stronger. Wednesday at our weekly pastors' meeting, several leaders gave reports of people coming to know Christ in Sunday's services and several told of baptizing last Sunday.

Our churches remind me of a boxer getting up off the mat after an eight-count. He was knocked down and almost out, but not quite. Maybe it took a splash of cold water in the face to clear his head, but he's back on his feet now, so to speak, and ready for action.

Oh sure, many of our churches are still meeting in someone else's church building or in their renovated fellowship hall, but they're meeting. Over ninety of them are meeting on Sunday in regular services. The gospel is being proclaimed. The lighthouses are shining forth.

Some of our newly renovated and recently rededicated churches are now focusing on having an open house for their communities. The idea is to get the neighbors to come celebrate with them the return of this vital force in the area. And to make some more friends in the neighborhood.

Before the hurricane landed its haymaker in late August of 2005, some of our churches were focused inwardly and doing little or nothing in the community. They would not have used these words, but the prevailing attitude seemed to be, "Well, they know we're here. If they want the Gospel, they will come." Which is of course the worst theology on the planet, and light years from what our Savior commanded.

Now, we're getting into the community.

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April 11, 2007

Read My Mail

David Vise of Idaho Falls, Idaho, sent a note. God is calling this student minister into the pastorate. He reminds me of the time I led him to Christ, and then the 1976 Adrian Rogers revival in our church (the FBC of Columbus, MS) when he was called into the ministry. He and Tammy finished seminary in Fort Worth and led the student ministry in several churches before landing in Idaho. And now, in his mid 40s, he will become a pastor. Some church is going to be so blessed.

Word came from that same Mississippi church of the death of Scott Neaves. This young man fought muscular dystrophy for many, many years and has left an incredible testimony for Christ. I talked with his parents in Columbus tonight (Tuesday) and said, "Mississippi State has lost a great fan." Robert (his dad) said, "He'd already bought his tickets for the upcoming season." I told Dee (his mom) of a lasting memory I will carry to my grave. When I started telling it, she said, "I know. I will never forget that."

Bryan Harris was our youth minister--there was never a better one; he now pastors in Vallejo, California--and the youth were going to present a drama in the evening church service. They had turned the lights out in the sanctuary as the kids slipped into their places. Because of Scott's infirmity and the cumbersomeness of his wheel chair, some of the youth would carry him into the room and slip him into his chair. So, the lights are out, we hear the youth softly walking in, and then, someone hit the spotlight too soon. It stayed on for perhaps a full second, then was shut off. But while it was on, we saw something we will never forget: the young person playing Jesus was standing in front center holding Scott Neaves in his arms, just exactly as we expect the wonderful Lord is doing at this very moment.

My buddy Harry pastors an English-speaking international church in the Far East. Some of the Lord's workers in that part of the work prefer that their last names and locations not be given out, so you'll understand that I'm using only his first name. He emails a weekly news update to his friends and supporters in the States, and I'm constantly being amazed at the cultural differences he's now having to deal with. The weather forecasters are a big concern, for example.

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April 09, 2007

When You're In Your Nineties

Pastor Mickey Crane told the Easter worshipers about my Dad's 95th birthday coming up this Friday, the 13th of April. "That's a big thing," he said. "But don't worry," he smiled, "most of you are not going to live that long."

Actually, living this long has been a surprise to both my parents. Mom turns 91 in July and so far holds the longevity record in her large family, of whom she has only two siblings left. "We never thought about it," she says. And with Dad's taking retirement on disability back in 1961, I assure you he never thought about living this long either. No one would have given him a chance.

I spent the Easter weekend with Mom and Dad, driving up Friday and back to New Orleans Sunday evening after filling the pulpit at the family church (New Oak Grove Free Will Baptist at Nauvoo, Alabama) Sunday morning. On the way home, I began reflecting on what life is like for them now that they're in their nineties. Their circumstance is probably the same story for a lot of others in their age group.

Each day is pretty much the same. You don't feel like going anywhere, and even the occasional trip to the doctor is a big deal. So you stay at home. It's the only place you want to be.

You know all your doctors, nurses, and druggists as intimately as you do family members. In their case, the home health nurse arrives on a published schedule and Mom usually has lunch waiting on her. With the excellent health insurance they carry through Dad's lifelong involvement with the United Mine Workers of America, their co-pay at the druggist is a whopping 10 cents. Whatever frustrations they have in their lives, my parents have no complaint about their medical insurance, and we're blessed by that.

The arrival of the newspaper and the morning mail are the high points of your day. And on those days when the mail carrier zooms past without stopping, you feel a little cheated. "Did she forget us?"

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The Preacher Came to Work Late Today

I wonder if I'm the only one with this problem.

Take Thursday morning, for example. I was wide awake at 5:15, got dressed and studied several chapters of the Old Testament book of Esther. I'm slowly working my way through the entire Bible, rethinking these wonderful scriptures I first met in the late 1940s, and writing in the margins for the grandchild who will eventually inherit this copy. (With eight grandchildren, I study and preach from eight Bibles; eventually, each will own Grandpa's Bible.)

Then, I turned on the television and with the sound muted, watched the weather forecast while doing 15 minutes of a stretching-and-weights routine I put together years ago. It was cold outside, so I bundled up and grabbed my water bottle and headed out the door for the river levee where I walked three miles and talked to the Lord. It was 7 o'clock when I returned. I turned on the coffee, took my bath, and got dressed. My wife awakened, I brought her a cup of coffee and we chatted. I had breakfast and read the paper, then a phone call occupied 15 or 20 minutes. I thought of a message to put on my website; a pleasant chore which I can never do in less than half an hour.

The time now was 9 am and I was just leaving the house.

The drive to my office across New Orleans' morning traffic takes 45 minutes. All the way, I kept thinking, "I'm late to the office. What will people think?"

Wonder if I'm the only one with this problem.

In a real sense, I had been on duty since 5:15. Reading the Bible and praying, exercising and walking, eating a good breakfast and reading the morning paper, and then counseling by phone and writing by computer--all these are as much my responsibility as a minister of the gospel as any task that will come up in the course of what we think of as "working hours."

"Be on guard for yourself," the Apostle Paul instructed the pastors of Ephesus in Acts 20:28, and then "for all the flock among whom the Holy Spirit has made you overseers." First, take care of yourself. Fail to do that and you'll not be caring for anyone. Then and only then, take care of the flock.

Pastors generally do not have a taskmaster breathing down their necks, timing their arrival and departure from the office, checking off their chores, making sure they get their work done. In my work with the hundred or so Southern Baptist churches of metro New Orleans, I most certainly do not have one, for which I am grateful. However.

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April 05, 2007

An Easter Text for the Logical Mind

One of my favorite verses on the death/burial/resurrection of Jesus is Acts 26:26. Easy to remember that way--26:26. Paul is on trial yet again, this time before King Agrippa and Governor Festus. He gives his testimony, telling why he's living the very life he once fought against, and then transitions into the message which he now preaches. Good strategy. Like a modern candidate who gets asked one question but quickly moves into the message he wants people to hear.

Paul says, "I started preaching this message to those at Damascus, then to Jerusalem and Judea, and then to anyone who would listen, even the Gentiles. I told them they should repent and turn to God. That's been my message. So why am I on trial? Good question. I'm being tried for preaching nothing but the very things which Moses and the prophets predicted. And what was that? That the Messiah (Christ) would suffer and rise from the dead, and that He would be the first to proclaim light to Jews and Gentiles."

At this point, Festus interrupted. "Paul, you are completely insane. You have overtaxed your brain with all that learning"--no one ever accused the Apostle Paul of being ignorant, although many of his later defenders qualify in that regard--"and you have completely lost it."

Paul answered, "I am most definitely not out of my mind, most excellent Festus. I'm simply preaching the truth. King Agrippa knows. He has been observing these things all along. Nothing has escaped his notice. Because...."

And here it comes.

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Coping With Life's Challenges

"I wish our leaders would speak out more on social and moral issues," one of our pastors said today. "The newspaper calls the Catholics. Why don't we Baptists have a voice?"

The speaker was quick to admit that he lives out of the area and is not up on the day-to-day events in the city. I told him that one of our leading pastors, David Crosby of the First Baptist Church of New Orleans, is a frequent writer for the op-ed page of the Times-Picayune. His article against gambling ran last week and I forwarded it to the Baptist Press which is running it today on www.bpnews.net. David is an excellent writer and speaks clearly and forcefully on these matters.

I told how I was invited to write for the same page but found it harder to do than I thought and was not able to pull it off. Then the editorial writer called and said she had taken part of one of our blogs and whittled it down to proper size. It ran several weeks ago. The point being, we're trying.

In presenting Pastor Greg Hand to the Wednesday pastors' group, I began: "How would you like to pastor in the French Quarter? Everywhere you look, there's a need. Nothing normal, no residential area as such, no vast green lawns, no children at play. Narrow streets clogged with traffic day and night. And yet that is where Greg and Wren Hand have chosen to live out the Lord's call upon their lives."

"Pray for us," Greg began. "It's hard." Vieux Carre' Baptist Church has been a lighthouse in that dark area for over 40 years, he said. Located one block over from Bourbon Street on Dauphine, the church is equipped to house church teams that come down to minister and witness in the Quarter. "We're doing outreach to the homeless on Monday and Thursday nights," Greg said, "and a Bible study Wednesday night. And something new for us--we have a Friday night outreach to the homosexual community. Led by a former member of that group whose life was transformed by Christ."

"My wife and I are having a tough time," said Pastor Kenneth Foy. "For one thing, we're both unemployed." They've just been back in the city a couple of weeks and he's trying to re-establish his counseling ministry. "African-Americans don't normally run to psychiatrists for counsel," he said. "For one thing, there's the stigma. And the other, is the cost. Instead, they go to the church." So Kenneth is hoping our pastors will get the word out that he is here and available to help.

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April 04, 2007

Saint Bernard Parish Today

Tuesday afternoon, I drove from our Lakeshore offices out Interstate 10 east toward St. Bernard Parish. It's been weeks since I've been out this way and the changes are noticeable. What used to be Lake Forest Mall is now a pile of rubble. Apartment complexes damaged by Katrina are now vacant lots. A store is operating here, a tire dealership or automobile agency there, but mostly the place is deserted and shopping centers are defunct.

Interstate 510 South to Paris Road leading into St. Bernard, the report is mixed. Some places out of business for nearly two years, a law office in a trailer, the prows of boats still poking out of the canal where Katrina left them, some places doing great business. Some of the fast food restaurants look brand new and were filled at 1:30. Construction trucks speeding up and down a busy St. Bernard Highway.

Workers have torn down the educational building beside the sanctuary of the First Baptist Church of Chalmette. Builders for Christ is mobilizing hundreds of volunteers to erect a new, modern sanctuary over the remains of the old one. Right now, it appears they have their work cut out for them.

Downriver, a newly restored mansion sits beside one the hurricane gutted out and which has not been touched since. People are rebuilding their homes up against the levees on the other side of which flows the mighty Mississippi. Either they have great confidence in the Corps of Engineers or the Lord or something. Scary.

Poydras Baptist Church looks good. Last I heard, they're still meeting in their fellowship hall until the sanctuary is rebuilt. Half their membership still displaced.

Boogie Melerine was the object of this trip. He promised to give me a tour of the Creedmore Presbyterian Church a few miles south of Poydras, the church that the Presbytery of South Louisiana is donating to Boogie's Delacroix-Hope congregation for their new site.

"I want to see your upholstery shop," I told Boogie. "How can you put 70 people in there on Sunday?" He said, "We've had as high as 90." Walk through his garage and you enter what functions as the fellowship hall of his congregation. Tables and chairs remain set up for Sunday. "We eat here after church every Sunday. About half stay."

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April 01, 2007

Honor the Church, You Honor The Lord

"He who touches you, touches the apple of His eye." (Zechariah 2:8)

Whether you honor the church or dishonor her, the Lord takes it personally. He is so bound up with the welfare of this group that in Scripture He calls the church "the Body of Christ". When the Lord caught the church-assassinator Saul of Tarsus headed for Damascus to arrest more Christians, He said to him, "Why do you persecute me?" Saul blinked into that blinding light trying to make out that voice. "Who are you, Lord?" he muttered. "I am Jesus whom you are persecuting," the Voice said. And Saul said, "Well, I've been planning to quit and now seems like a good time."

I just made that last line up. But he must have thought it.

Pastor Jerry Smith published a long list of friends from all over the country who have aided Pontchartrain Baptist Church in its slow hard climb from the despair of Katrina. As I read over the list, the thought occurred that Jesus Christ has these folks on His list, too. They honor Him when they honor His church.

Pastor Thomas Winn and Grace Baptist Church of Jackson, MS. First Baptist Church of Clinton, LA. Calvary Baptist Church of Mt. Airy, NC. The Baptist campus ministry of Delta State University. Truett-McConnell College of Cleveland, GA. Colony Park Baptist Church of Madison, MS. Muller Paint Co. Sterling Electric. Donnie's Plumbing. Terry's All-Around Construction. Kayla Lyles. John Dambold. Bob and Linda Jackson and the NOBTS MissionLab. Mike Brady's Red Beans and Rice. J & R Equipment Rental. Garden Specialities. Jeffery Raymond. Platts Supermarket of Creola, AL. Lynda Murrah. Des Allemands Baptist Church.

"In June of 2005, I resigned from this church," Pastor Jerry Smith said today at the rededication of the Pontchartrain Church. "My health had gotten so bad, I couldn't stand in the pulpit. I told them I'd stay on until they found someone. I'm still here."

"When Katrina came, my wife and I had a disagreement. She wanted to stay and I wanted to leave. I had never left before. We went to Jackson, Mississippi, to be with our children. We watched the tragedy of this city on television. The hurricane came and went, then they said the levees broke. I'm hard of hearing. I asked my wife, 'The levees did what?'"

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