Thanks to our Executive Director, Clint Cook!

Thanks, Clint!

by Franklin Dumond, Director of Congregational Ministries

As we cope with the “New Normal” we are confronted with change and necessary adaptation to it. On the national level, we are now confronted by change with the recently announced resignation of Executive Director Clint Cook.

In our quasi-democratic congregationalism both on the local and national levels, we often undervalue leaders and undermine leadership. We too often fail to realize that “Committee of the Whole” and “One Man One Vote” cannot be located in our concordances since these terms are not included in the Scripture. In the Scripture, leaders are called by God and affirmed by His people. Leadership results from a communicated vision that motivates action and support from those being led.

At the conclusion of our June Leadership Team meeting, we were all surprised by Clint Cook’s resignation announcement. As we concluded this monthly meeting that day he firmly but politely told us “it’s time for this experiment to end.”

Over the last few weeks, we have been taking steps to conclude his tenure by updating documents and revising some schedules. The Personnel Team, the Budget Team, and the Executive Committee have all begun to function by taking steps toward transition. The Core Leadership Team remains focused on daily ministry to and for General Baptists with weekly informal conversations to stay abreast of current situations. The full Leadership Team meetings will still be held monthly on the first Tuesdays.

When Clint assumed the role of Interim Executive Director in 2012 that resulted in his confirmation as Executive Director in 2013, he joined the ranks of men who have served in that capacity with distinction across the years.

  • J. L. Mundy, 1960-1964
  • Kenneth R. Kennedy, 1965-1976
  • Glen O. Spence, 1977-1992
  • Dwight Chapman, 1993-1996
  • Ron Black, 1997-2010
  • James W. Murray, 2010-2012
  • Clint Cook, 2012-2020
Thanks Clint!
Thank you, Clint!

Very few people ever realized the personal price Clint paid in those early years of his service to the denomination. He remained as pastor of Real Life Church in Springfield, Illinois so his service both there and as executive director became “flex-time”. In addition to those two roles he retained his role in Next Level Coaching that he and I had initiated in 2009. In those years of coaching he often traveled a circuit across four states in two days every month. After he became Executive Director I often quipped “Clint used to work for me. Now I work for him.”

Some people mistakenly equated flex-time with part-time. When he explained his various ministry roles to some of his congregation Clint reported, “They were amazed at how much I got done in my free time.”

In his tenure as Executive Director Clint provided the impetus for innovation in departmental staffing and function. As positions opened due to retirement he suggested team approaches to ministry in the hope that this would take ministry back to the grassroots. The Barnabas Project was developed in 2014 to provide connections to pastors through regional representatives. Church planting was similarly entrusted to a team of church planters working through the Go! Project that eventually morphed into the Creative Church Planting Network.

As Executive Director he took steps to upgrade and extend the life of the ministries building in Poplar Bluff, Missouri. A substantially refurbished building was made possible by the sale of a small unused corner of the property so that reserve funds could remain intact.

The Summit continued to serve our people with dynamic worship, practical training, and up-close-and-personal missionary contact. Having served as the first moderator/host of the newly designed Mission & Ministry Summit in 2007, Clint continued to advocate for the Summit to become both a national and international gathering of General Baptist leaders.

Clint also connected to our mission work in The Philippines, India, Honduras, Mexico, and Jamaica by leading conferences and visiting local in-country ministries.

Throughout these enterprises, Pastor Clint continued to lead the Real Life Church in its growth and development culminating in a multi-million dollar building project to provide for the needs of the congregation.

Despite the personal and professional challenges he faced, Clint remained loyal to the missionary cause espoused by the core theology of a General Atonement that Jesus Christ by the grace of God tasted death for every man. The Real Life Church remained a leading contributor to denominational missions through Unified Giving as well as through some amazing, God-given special gifts to special causes.

I learned a few years ago that no one of us is perfect and that each of us can only do the best we can with what we’ve got. Looking back on his eight-year term I am sure Clint would agree that there were probably some things that could have been done differently. After all, there are always options and choices. But as I look back on those eight years I just want to say “Thanks for doing what you could do to advance the cause of Christ through General Baptists. Thanks, Clint!”

Transition - A way of life for the Yeomans

At This Point In Our Lives… Transitions – Part 3

by Nicole Yeomans, General Baptist Missionary to the Philippines and Niger

“A man’s heart plans his ways, but the Lord determines his steps.” – Proverbs 16:9

In all of our planning over the past several years, I never thought we would be here at this point in our lives. Most of us have said that at some point in our lives, I’m certain. I am saying that now. The first rule one becomes aware of in any type of mission work is to be flexible. Overall, I consider myself a flexible person. However, if you were to ask my husband, he would probably tell you that I often get upset if he asks me to alter the schedule that I lay out for myself each day, though I may not voice it. I am still a work in progress. I find myself looking more and more to Proverbs and other Scriptures that have a great deal to say about the plans we make for our lives and who is ultimately in control of our lives.

As you know, our family had planned to depart for Niger, West Africa at the end of July, just in time to get settled before the start of the new school year. The girls and I did just that, thinking Kris would be right behind us. We got settled in our house. We unpacked everything. We learned our way around to the school, the gas station, the grocery stores, and our favorite restaurant that serves the most amazing hummus.

Transitions are taken differently by different peopleAs for Kris joining us, a day turned into three days, then three days turned into 10 days, and then when he got the news that he needed a heart catheter, we knew then that we needed to return to the states to be with him. I have to brag on my kids for a brief moment. Eden looked downtrodden for a split second, but then decided she would be ok if she could get her ears pierced soon after landing. Emily, who has been to more schools now than blanks provided for previous schools attended on school forms, was upset about missing the first day of school at Sahel and yet another change in schools. After being upset for about 45 seconds, she came back in and said, “ok, let’s get to packing. We gotta do what we gotta do.” For a girl that never wanted to leave the house for the first 7 years of her life, I can’t tell you how thankful I am for her flexibility, how blessed I am to have her as a daughter, and to see how God is working in her life.

So, we packed everything back up, not knowing what this latest transition would look like or how long it would be before we returned, and 3 days later, boarded a plane back to the U.S. I was prepared (or at least ready for the challenge as best I could be) to be in a new culture, learning a new language and way of life. I was not prepared to be back in the states, enrolling my girls in the local school and helping Kris recover to full health while working his way thru new medicines and their side effects.

A lot of this transition is the same as it would have been in Niger. I’m learning to cook with fresh fruits and vegetables rather than canned/packaged items for a low sodium diet. I’m learning French. I’m watching my girls adjust to a new school (and love it!) and make new friends, praying the next stage of transition is not too hard on them. I don’t know why God has us here at this time, but I am continually learning that His timing is perfect, and to trust, even when I don’t understand why or for how long.

God has a way of placing us in situations that require a dependency on Him. This is where we grow. This is where we learn. This is where we find peace and learn to trust God completely, without reservations and without glimpses into His plan. I didn’t expect to be back in Greenville, KY, but here I am. I am learning. I am growing.

The Yeomans in Niger - transitionI must confess that this phase of the transition article took a lot longer for me to write than I expected. I have had to start, and start again while working my way thru an array of emotions. I have been angry. I have been confused. I have felt sorry for myself. I have felt sadness. I have felt joy. While I will never know all the details this side of heaven, I know that God had a purpose for this delay. I am thankful that my husband is alive and well and feeling more and more ready to go with every passing day. I truly believe that God saved his life by not allowing him to get on that plane.

I do not have the gift of discernment, and I have had to work my way thru what this delay means. Is it from God, similar to what Paul and Timothy faced in Acts 16:6-7 when the Holy Spirit prevented them from going into Asia to preach the Gospel? Or is it a test from God to test our faithfulness? Or is it spiritual warfare, an attack from the enemy? I wish I could read between the lines and know how Paul and Timothy felt, and how they arrived at their conclusion in Acts 16:10 when they concluded that God had called them to evangelize in Macedonia rather than their planned destination in Asia.

What I do know is that the Spirit of God has not released us from Niger. Our calling has not changed, and we are still committed to being obedient to that calling. We are hoping to depart (all of us this time) mid-October for the next phase of this transition. Please pray with us as we journey together in this walk of faith and obedience.

Vertical Church - A Story of God's Vision

The Vertical Church Vision – Faithfulness of God and His People

by Steve Akins – Lead Pastor of Vertical Church in Fort Branch, Indiana.

Vision  noun | vi•sion | \’vi-zhən :  the act or power of imagination; mode of seeing or conceiving

If you would have asked me what vision is in a church several years ago I probably would have quoted a leader like Andy Stanley or Rick Warren, but what I’ve come to learn is that vision is simply listening to what God says and doing exactly what He says to do. That is the story of the relocation of Vertical Church to its new campus.

Sixteen years ago I came to, at that time, the Fort Branch General Baptist Church. It was a congregation in decline. They had been without a pastor for close to two years and the once large congregation had dwindled down to around 100. AS we began the work we sensed that God was up to something. The area was changing and more and more people were moving into the area and the church began to grow. As with any change, difficulties arise. Long-time church members feel threated by the new people, the new worship style, the new attitude and so some began to leave but God was faithful and for everyone one person that left God would bring two and the church continued to grow.

In 2008 we continued to grow and we began to sense that we would need to build one day. We began to pray and talk about what that would look like and what that would entail. Should we stay at our current location or should we relocate? Our current location was landlocked and any idea we had to utilize the land and facilities just wouldn’t work. So relocation was our only option but we had one big problem; There was very little land for sale around Fort Branch in the size we needed. In fact, there was only one piece of property available. As we prayed we sensed that God wanted us to purchase 20 acres and we figured that it would cost us $10,000 an acre since land prices were at a premium. In 2011 we approached the landowner with an offer which they countered and we accepted. We were able to purchase 26.68 acres of land for $199,960. It was a definite God moment as we received 7 more acres more then we needed for less than we originally thought. Talking to the landowner at the closing they said the reason that they brought the price down so much is that we were a church and they wanted to see God’s church flourish. God was with us!

In 2013 We began to meet with Architects to flesh out what was needed for our ministry going forward. Our priority was to build a functional building. We were not looking to build something that would appear on the cover of Architectural Digest but to be a functional, multi-use space. I heard a long time ago that form follows function and so we designed the building spaces to fit the ministry that we would be doing. It was so important to us to get a designer and builder who listened to us and was interested in how we wanted to do ministry.

We broke ground in September 2017 and the building was completed August 1, 2018. On our first Sunday God blew our minds. We had 721 people show up which was 200 more than the previous week and through the first month, we continue to average over 200 people more than the previous month. Our Grand Opening celebration was Sunday, August 26 with 815 people in attendance.

In short, this story is not about me but about the faithfulness of God and the faith of His people.

To God be the Glory, great things He has done!

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