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<title>Staff Blog</title>
<link>http://www.opendoorlife.com/staff-blog/</link>
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<lastBuildDate>Mon, 21 Feb 2011 18:08:26 GMT</lastBuildDate>
<language>en-us</language>
<copyright>Copyright 2011 Open Door Baptist Church, Raleigh, NC</copyright>
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  <title>Hope for NAMB</title>
  <link>http://www.opendoorlife.com/staff-blog/hope-for-namb/</link>
  <guid>http://www.opendoorlife.com/staff-blog/hope-for-namb/</guid>
  <pubDate>Wed, 16 Feb 2011 18:08:26 GMT</pubDate>
  <description><![CDATA[<p>I recently had the privilege of spending several hours with Keven Ezell, the new president of our North American Mission Board.</p>
<p>In sum, our time together was everything I had hoped for and more. As a pastor who is infatuated with the local church and loves church planting almost as much, I immediately connected with Dr. Ezell.&nbsp;Upon entering the NAMB building, I began to recall&nbsp;the many stories (some I assume were&nbsp;rumored)&nbsp;of NAMB's mis-management of our cooperative dollars, fudging on numbers of actual church plants, and the evident misdirection of agency priorities away from church planting; Forgive me, but I've been&nbsp;a little skeptical.</p>
<p>&nbsp;Add to the fact that I tend to be&nbsp;"anti-political" in denominational affairs and have not had much success in building relationships with local associations and&nbsp;state conventions. Much of this is my fault for not seeing much value in "playing ball" with organizations that seem to take more than they offer to give. Still, my&nbsp;dissapointment is minor compared to&nbsp;friends who have been faithful servants&nbsp;of our denomination&nbsp;and who have labored&nbsp;to see&nbsp;Southern Baptist agencies and state conventions&nbsp;do the right things and do them in the right ways.</p>
<p>&nbsp;I found Kevin Ezell&nbsp;to be a&nbsp;strikingly different leader. Immediately after assuming office, he began to do the right things the right way. Being&nbsp;directed by&nbsp; our recent convention to promote the GCR (the Great Commission Resurgence), president Ezell has begun his work&nbsp;as a "man under authority." With a broken heart, he told us how he has had&nbsp;to make deep cuts into NAMB's staff&nbsp;in order to reduce their budget.&nbsp;It takes integrity to clean up your own house before you ask someone to clean up theirs. Ezell&nbsp;is setting an example for other Baptist agencies and state conventions. I pray they will follow suit.</p>
<p>&nbsp;One of the most striking statements made at our meeting came when Dr. Ezell said, "a pastor would never be allowed to do what has been&nbsp;allowed to take place here at NAMB;" As a&nbsp;local church pastor that struggles to stretch every dollar given,&nbsp;I really connected with&nbsp;this comment and felt glad that we now have a&nbsp;leader who&nbsp;serves with a pastor's heart.</p>
<p>&nbsp;After asking Dr. Ezell what he wants the "New NAMB" to&nbsp;look like, I was excited to hear his desire to see millions of dollars diverted to&nbsp;church planting.&nbsp;He also wants to&nbsp;partner with key churches&nbsp;to plant churches&nbsp;in critical areas of North America.&nbsp;I asked how a local church that has been planting churches&nbsp;apart from the traditional path might&nbsp;get&nbsp;involved and he said that what we are doing&nbsp;at Open Door through&nbsp;our North American Chruch Planting Foundation&nbsp;will&nbsp;serve&nbsp;as a model for church planting within the coopertive program.&nbsp;This comment really encouraged me, not just because it came from our NAMB president, but for the first time I felt that our approach to planting churches via a network rather than&nbsp;directly through&nbsp;a local association and state convention was acceptable. I left feeling hopeful and a more committed Southern Baptist.</p>
<p>&nbsp;I've heard&nbsp;the mantra, "We exist to serve you,"&nbsp;from agency officials more times than I care to remember without seeing much application.&nbsp;At the new NAMB, they are really trying to live this out. Change is difficult, espeically when bureaucracy has set it and the word is&nbsp;still out if NAMB will be able to reinvent itself. After meeting&nbsp;with Kevin Ezell,&nbsp;NAMB has at least one more&nbsp;pastor's support, encouragement&nbsp;and prayers.</p>]]></description>
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  <title>Children's Catechism</title>
  <link>http://www.opendoorlife.com/staff-blog/childrens-catechism/</link>
  <guid>http://www.opendoorlife.com/staff-blog/childrens-catechism/</guid>
  <pubDate>Thu, 09 Sep 2010 15:17:19 GMT</pubDate>
  <description><![CDATA[<p>We have recently completed a children&rsquo;s catechism that we are giving away to our families. It has been such a joy to hear the testimonies of parents who are using this in their family worship time. Glory be to God.</p>
<p>Here is the intro from the catechism, along with the catechism attached. Feel free to use this and if you do, send feedback so that we can edit it for future use.</p>
<p>Throughout church history, churches and denominations have expressed their biblical beliefs on important doctrines by way of creeds and confessions. A creed (from the Latin credo, &ldquo;I believe&rdquo;) represents a statement of beliefs, while a catechism (also a Latin word, meaning &ldquo;to teach&rdquo;) is an instructional tool often in the form of questions and answers to help people (in this case, children) systematically to understand major Bible doctrines.</p>
<p>&nbsp;Confessions, creeds, and catechisms are not meant to replace Scripture, but to help understand it. Baptists throughout their history have acknowledged the supremacy of Scripture over confessions and creeds, but have used them to provide biblical instruction. Many church leaders, like John Bunyan, Benjamin Keach, John Gill, and Charles Spurgeon wrote and circulated confessions of faith for their local churches or denominations. The use of a catechism is still a powerful tool to help people&mdash;including children&mdash;to understand the higher things of God.</p>
<p>&nbsp;This catechism has been designed to help children learn and memorize Bible doctrine. Much of it comes from former Baptist catechisms, but the language has been edited and enhanced for children of our generation. The question and answer format allows a parent or teacher to work directly with a child in a systematic way.</p>
<p>&nbsp;&ldquo;All Scripture is inspired by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correciton, for training in righteousness, so that the man of God may be adequate, equipped for every good work&rdquo; (2 Timothy 3:16&ndash;17; NASB).</p>
<p><a title="opendoor catechism" href="http://www.opendoorlife.com/mediafiles/opendoor-catechism.pdf">Download the catechism here.</a></p>]]></description>
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  <title>Help from Augustine #3</title>
  <link>http://www.opendoorlife.com/staff-blog/help-from-augustine-3/</link>
  <guid>http://www.opendoorlife.com/staff-blog/help-from-augustine-3/</guid>
  <pubDate>Mon, 06 Sep 2010 20:00:02 GMT</pubDate>
  <description><![CDATA[<p>Augustine likes to separate everyone on earth into one of two cities, the city of God and the city of man. Those who are citizens of the earthly city try to find their happiness only on earth. Although he admitted there were things on earth that should provide us pleasure, he said, "Temporal blessings can be profitable provided that they do not lure the heart away from the higher calling of eternal blessings. . .&nbsp;Use the world: let not the world hold thee captive." Those who belong to the city of God find their joy and fulfillment in God first and foremost-- as it should be. Thanks again&nbsp;to the bishop of Hippo.</p>]]></description>
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  <title>Help from Augustine #2</title>
  <link>http://www.opendoorlife.com/staff-blog/help-from-augustine-2/</link>
  <guid>http://www.opendoorlife.com/staff-blog/help-from-augustine-2/</guid>
  <pubDate>Mon, 06 Sep 2010 19:58:22 GMT</pubDate>
  <description><![CDATA[<p>Here is another quote from Augustine on the foolishness of trying to find lasting joy from the things on earth. He believed that human life cannot be made happy and secure by what is on earth but only by the hope of heaven. He said, "It is because the philosophers will not believe in this beatitude which they cannot see that they go on trying to fabricate here below an utterly fraudulent felicity built on virtue filled with pride and bound to fail them in the end."&nbsp;He believed that all people seek peace and pleasure, but it is only when we seek and find these in God do we find them in their truest sense. Earthly happiness does not compare to the joy of knowing and desiring God.</p>]]></description>
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  <title>Help from Augustine #1</title>
  <link>http://www.opendoorlife.com/staff-blog/help-from-augustine-1/</link>
  <guid>http://www.opendoorlife.com/staff-blog/help-from-augustine-1/</guid>
  <pubDate>Fri, 03 Sep 2010 19:56:25 GMT</pubDate>
  <description><![CDATA[<p>Reading from Augustine (one of our most important church fathers) really serves my soul. His insight into sin and sanctification are a great asset to us all, especially as we study the book of Romans together as a church. Augustine said that the soul sins, "when it has abandoned the higher things and prefers to enjoy lower things." Through personal testimony he shares, "There is a world of difference between the joy of hope that comes from faith and the shallow happiness that I was looking for. . . . I was greedy to enjoy what the world had to offer, though it only eluded me and wasted my strength."&nbsp;Let's not waste our time and strength in placing our affections on the things that God made, rather than God himself.</p>]]></description>
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