Learning To Multiply

Learning To Multiply

By Vicki Smith - Director of Women's Ministries

If you attended the Summit, you heard on numerous occasions that we are one organization with a singular mission. We are one church. We must be clear and remain clear on who we are, how we act, and what we do. Women’s Ministries is one part of that church, with each ministry doing what they can do to equip the churches to fulfill the Great Commission.

The churches do not exist to support Women’s Ministries. We exist to support the local church and the women in those churches regarding missions and making disciples of women.

I began to evaluate what we were doing as an organization and if Women’s Ministries was doing all they could to inspire and equip. To be the most effective, the organization needed to multiply.

For the past two and a half years, I have had the opportunity to serve on the Restructure Task Force. The Council of Associations appointed this task force, and our assignment was to formulate a restructuring plan for the denomination. As we began to work through various models and began to think about our goal, we realized that, in essence, we needed to multiply and establish connections across the denomination, thus empowering churches to fulfill the Great Commission. From these conversations came the region director’s mistake model.

As a result of those conversations and that plan, it was precisely what Women’s Ministries needed to do. We needed to multiply to equip our women’s groups and churches to fulfill the Great Commission, pouring into the church or, in this case, the General Baptist movement.

On January 1 of this year, Women’s Ministries implemented a region plan. The plan is designed to complement the Restructure Task Force. It only made sense to pattern our plan after the RTF plan. Women and the churches would be familiar with the idea. It would be an easy transfer of organization, and it would be a good indicator of how successful the region plan would be for the denomination.

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Who Moved Our Lines?

Who Moved Our Lines?

by Patti Thornton – Executive Director of General Baptist Women’s Ministries

In preparation for a women’s conference in Southern California, I was deep in the study of the 16th chapter of Psalms. I don’t have a clear explanation of what led me to this brief song of David’s. I just know that the fifth and sixth verses in that passage jumped off the page of my study Bible and hit me like a stone flung from David’s childhood slingshot.

Lord, you alone are my portion and my cup; you make my lot secure. The boundary lines have fallen for me in pleasant places; surely, I have a delightful inheritance.

I write this article in the second week of January – just after our final 2017 Women’s Ministries financial reports hit my desk. Numbers don’t lie, and I am simply responding to the black and white spreadsheet laid out before me when I say that If there ever was a time for me to feel insecure in our lot, it is now.

While we have made strides in fundraising efforts outside of Love Gift, they have not proved sufficient. If you are new to Women’s Ministries, let me explain Love Gift. This fund consists of donations made to Women’s Ministries that are not designated to any specific project or mission field supported by the organization. Out of these funds come all operational expenses, unexpected project needs, etc. In former years, there was enough to give large gifts of the same wonderful, undesignated sort to our mission departments.

For several years, Love Gift funds have fallen while ministry opportunities and office expenses have risen. During its annual budget process, the board of directors plans responsibly and realistically. Each year the amount of funds needed to be raised in addition to donations has escalated dramatically. Simultaneously, every area of expense has been cut. This includes staff, salaries, communications, etc.

Out of curiosity, I embarked on a research project. I searched through years of financial reports, wondering when annual Love Gift receipts had last been as low as they are now. I made it back through the 80’s, and never saw a number lower than it is now. That. Is. Astounding. You can see the dilemma. More needs to be done to save the ministry with fewer resources than ever. And God’s decree to take light to a dark world has not lessened.

In this Psalm, David, although he is probably on the run, seems to say that God has blessed him with security. He recognizes that he has been placed within generous boundaries on earth as well as the boundaries of a prophetic inheritance.

So, who moved our boundaries? Are we choking ourselves off from the work God has purposed for us, or is He the one who is re-drawing, re-forming, and re-purposing? I think we must ask these questions as we move about in the territory we see as Women’s Ministries.

We have the inheritance reserved for princesses in the Kingdom of God, and it is He who draws the boundary lines of our work on earth as well as our place in His eternal kingdom. I believe He will unfold His boundary lines for us – women enthralled by Jesus, connected for strength, and COMPELLED outward.

My prayer is that He guides us clearly to recognize those lines; and that like the Israelites who could not immediately see the pleasantness of their new territories, we will know where to fight, for what to fight, and with whom to fight to accomplish His will.

After all, we are compelled to bring as many people inside the lines as possible, right?

An Unexpected Direction

An Unexpected Direction

By Patti Thornton, Women’s Ministries Director

An Unexpected DirectionLast August, Wilbur and I took a trip to Colorado. We knew, I think, that it would be our last adventure together. Most things we did together, and some he cajoled me to do without him while he stayed back as a cheering and sleeping section.

One day, I decided to take on a short, but challenging hike to a waterfall – and if I held out – a beautiful lake basin. There were other people at different points on this well-known trail, but no one seemed to enter the trailhead the same time I was, so there was no one to follow. Wilbur was proud to see me heading off with the new hiking pole he had purchased for me in one of the mountain sporting goods shops.

I knew from reading about the trail that it would be a fairly steep incline, and I was not disappointed. But the air was crisp and clean, the pine needles smelled glorious, and I was happy to just “be” with Wilbur. I hiked for a while before coming to a narrow creek. At that point, the trail wasn’t obvious, and I could not tell which way looked most travelled. I can tell you that I chose the wrong one. From there on, the incline got almost impassable.

I found myself grabbing roots – anything – to get myself up a muddy hillside without sliding backward. The waterfall was rushing right beside me – gushing with force after several days of rain. It was beautiful – and tall. I realized, eventually, that my choice in paths was actually taking me straight up the waterfall itself!

This can’t be considered an intermediate hike, I thought. I wasn’t sure I was going to make it. It was all I could do to work out one foothold at a time, and my thighs were burning madly. I prayed for God to direct me to the right path, because I was sure the one I was climbing was not it. I prayed quite anxiously – and expectantly. Despite the temperatures that cooled even more with each increase in altitude, I had broken out in sweat. NERVOUS sweat.

Finally, I decided that an easy path was not in my immediate future, and I would have to trust, one step at a time, that I would conquer this hill. I thought about the battle my husband was fighting so valiantly without any assurance of the disease’s outcome. He bravely fought one skirmish after another, taking them as they came. I wanted that kind of bravery.

I did eventually make it to the top of the waterfall. I was wonder-struck at the view of God’s creative genius, and I was tired. I sat at the edge of the pooled waters, covered with dirt, sweat, and forest flora and downed a protein bar and some water. Eventually, an older couple came from the other side of the fall, carefully maneuvering across raised stones to cross over to my side. I noted with amazement that they were hardly mussed. She didn’t have a hair out-of-place and his hiking shirt was pristine.

I was intrigued and felt all the more mucky. “Do you mind if I follow you down,” I asked? After a quizzical pause, he answered. “Well, sure, I guess.” He poionted past me to my left and continued, “But my car is in the parking lot just a few hundred yards in that direction.”

I laughed hysterically and they both looked at me like I must have eaten one of the weird mushrooms in the forest. I explained my experience, and politely said that I should probably slither back down the mountain I had climbed. And that’s exactly what I did. By the time I was on the right trail, the back side of my khaki shorts was nothing close to khaki.

Why do I tell you this story? Because in this case, I expected an answer I didn’t get, and if I hadn’t trusted for each notch in the mud on my way up, I may have fallen, tail first, in Indiana Jones mudslide fashion. I had to be obedient to the path that was before me, trusting that the experience would be vital to my growth. It was. Oh – And I was in love with that hiking stick.

Even now my walk with Jesus is taking me places I never would have guessed, and without people I assumed would always be walking beside me. Believe me, the journey feels like an uphill climb most days. I have a visual of Jesus – and Wilbur close by – sitting on the smooth rock at the top of the waterfall reminding me that His wonder is worth a stump-gripping, derriere-dirtying, uphill trek. Even knowing He may answer my prayers with unexpected direction, I hope I will never stop expecting to hear from Him.