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My good friend Doug Baker, executive editor of the Baptist Messenger of Oklahoma, just wrote a piece on the Cooperative Program: Its Genius and Risks.

The Cooperative Program is basically our big Southern Baptist missions structure that helps fund our six seminaries, two missions agencies and other evangelistic programs.

I’ve personally benefited from the CP (was a student and employee at Midwestern Baptist Seminary), am a member of one of the biggest SBC churches in Oklahoma who contributes to it,  and love and support the unified missions giving structure it provides. But like any system it can become ineffective through man.

Here’s some quotes I liked from the article:

Today, the CP stands in danger of destruction through the sheer abandonment of many who see it not like a trellis to a vine, but like a welfare system in a non-productive economy. To be sure, the Cooperative Program has many visible cracks, resulting in a withering vine. Yet, is the answer to repair or replace the trellis? The answer depends on your perspective.

The Cooperative Program was not designed and must not remain (as it is for some) a way of avoiding the danger, risk and inconvenience of active, personal ministry in and through a local church. Too often, the offering in the envelope becomes the means to assuage a guilty conscience.

It [CP] has descended into the depths of political partisanship and childlike bickering to such a degree that ministry partnerships across the SBC are obviously viewed more like political structures with special interests vying for their share of control.

I think reform is in order.

In my humble opinion, the Cooperative Program structure itself is a beautiful system — unified missions giving to assist Christians called to use their life taking the Gospel to the ends of the earth.

But we – man – have made it a bureacratic and ineffective mess in many places.

I still hold high hope it can be made effective and useful again. But I fear that sacrifices – like some in leadership reforming their methods and actions (or even, stepping down or aside) – will need to be made. I’m not as optimistic about that count though.

Categories : Missions Work, Seminary
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Biblical Training just announced that they have Dr. Craig Blomberg’s Introduction to New Testament (Gospels through Acts) online in MP3 format.

Dr. Blomberg is Distinguished Professor of New Testament at Denver Seminary.

Class registration is free as is the entire ministry, of which I’ve benefited from greatly. Obviously, they accept donations and gifts.

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My friend and seminary professor Dr. Mark DeVine has an excellent article which will soon be published in the Midwestern Journal of Theology on the emerging church.

Download the full article here (PDF).
See the post here.

From my conversations outside the seminary context, most people don’t have a clue about what or who the emerging church is. And often those who think they do, lump ALL “emerging” churches into one category … liberal. That’s not accurate. It’s a terrible generalization that throws out the good in the hard-to-define “movement.”

The Good Doc is seeking to help clarify all this in his article … and trust me, he’s a conversative, one of the funniest people I’ve ever met, and someone I’m fond of and help whenever I can (blogging).

(If you didn’t get this, I’ll say it in real simple terms so you don’t miss it: He’s love Jesus, affirms every jot and tittle of the Word, and does it all with a Southern drawwwwwwwwlllll.)

Rock on Doc!

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