Gerald Ford Understood What Being A Baptist Meant

President Ford spoke to the Southern Baptist Convention in 1976.  Here’s an excerpt of his speech:

An early champion of religious freedom–which the great Baptist minister, George Truett, once called “the supreme contribution of the New World to the Old”–was Roger Williams, founder of Providence, forerunner of Jefferson, and giant among Baptists. The principle of democracy itself was rooted deeply in the Baptist Church long before there was a United States of America. Thomas Jefferson so admired the Baptist form of church government that he called it “the purest democracy in the world.”

These rich contributions of religious liberty, democratic principles, social equality, evangelistic fervor, and moral strength have reserved for your people an honored place in American society. You have always jealously guarded the separation of church and state, but you have always believed that private morality and public service can and must go hand in hand.

Ford understood what being a Baptist meant. Baptists have historically stood for the separation of Church and State and liberty of conscience. As the 400th Anniversary of Baptists approaches in 2009, we will have ample opportunity to look back at our roots. And we should, lest we forget who we are.

Posted in News. 2 Comments »

This Week’s Bulletin: December 31, 2006

Tuesday at 2 we will join together to discuss “What Does It Mean To be A Church Member?”

Sunday is our Food Drive, but there will be NO Monthly Fellowship Meal that night.
 
January 7th- Family Sunday in Sunday School!  Bring the entire family along with you to Sunday School and worship on the first Sunday of 2007, and start a family tradition worth keeping!

Big Emory News

Upcoming events in the Big Emory Association include

January 3 - Minister’s Conference, 10:30 a.m. at Riverside Baptist Church
January 8 - Executive Board Meeting, 10:30 a.m. at South Harriman Baptist Church

Also, the following Churches in the Association are without Pastors- so please do pray for them as they search for the right person:  Clymersville, Coal Hill, Daysville, Dyllis, Kellytown, Mossy Grove, New Height’s Mission, Pine Ridge, Pleasant Grove, Riggs Chapel, Walnut Hill.

Small Churches Are the Norm, Not The Exception

The Texas Baptist Standard has an interesting essay today which rightly points out that anthropological studies that show the largest naturally occurring human community is 150, whether it is a village in Africa or a church in America. Larger groupings actually are groups of communities.  In other words, small churches are what’s considered normal and large churches are simply collectives of small gatherings.

The report continues by noting something I agree with completely:  Although pastors of smaller churches may feel their church needs to grow before it can accomplish something significant, testimonies during the conference showed how God used small congregations to plant churches, reach people groups and transform communities.

God can use any Church as long as its members are willing to follow the leadership of the Holy Spirit.

Posted in News. No Comments »

Thought of the Day

So popular and effective was Campbell Morgan’s ministry that he was given all kinds of offers from many different places and people. John Wannamaker, the great merchant of Philadelphia, offered to build Morgan a million dollar church if he would become its pastor. Morgan turned him down, something the wealthy Wanamaker was not accustomed to in his dealings with people. “I am God’s man,” said Morgan. “If I did that I would become John Wanamaker’s man.” 

Welcome to the New Home of Petros Baptist Church

We’ve moved over to this new web address because it offers us more features and more flexibility.  Update your web links and visit often as this page will be updated regularly with Baptist News, Church announcements, prayer requests, and photographs.