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News
Stand
70 new missionaries
commissioned for church-planting ministries
By James Dotson
WOODSTOCK, Ga. (BP)--An Oct. 1 commissioning service gave North
American missionary Vance Pitman an opportunity to share with his
sponsoring congregation how God had called him to be lead a
church-planting team in Las Vegas.
In a service marked with celebratory worship, fervent prayer and
profound gratefulness to God, Pitman joined 69 other missionaries --
a total of 33 couples and four single missionaries -- being
commissioned as church planter interns by the North American Mission
Board at the Atlanta-area First Baptist Church of Woodstock.
Pitman told of how he had been humbled through a bad experience
at a previous church, and how one morning he felt the unmistakable
call that God was leading him and his wife, Kristie, to something
different. "And we said 'yes,'" he said.
It was a few weeks later that they received the call from Johnny
Hunt, pastor of the Woodstock church, asking him to consider being
pastor of the Las Vegas congregation. It was confirmation of God's
call.
"During that period ... I told Kristie, 'I think I need to
be under some godly men for a while to be healed," he said.
"And since I had such a strong pastor's heart, there were only
two men I would be willing to serve under -- and that 's my dad and
Johnny Hunt," he said.
His challenge for the congregation was for the same sort of
openness to God's call.
"Have you said yes? Has God called you to places? That
doesn't mean you have to pack up and go to Las Vegas, or Boston, or
Philadelphia, or Chicago. But have you said yes? I pray tonight that
if you haven't, you will."
The church plant in Las Vegas is part of the North American
Mission Board's Strategic Focus Cities evangelism and church
planting emphasis, which will focus on Boston and Las Vegas next
year and Seattle and Philadelphia in 2002.
For Alanna Davis, it was a similar shaping process by God that
brought her from success in network television to her current role
as a lay church planter among upscale professionals in Boston. After
accepting Christ she suffered a series of professional and personal
setbacks, including having her financial assets embezzled and being
robbed multiple times.
The experiences made her realize the needs even among the
affluent for a relationship with God.
"Underneath their disguises sociability and success ... they
too hurt and fear and are alone, and I know how they feel," she
said. "God has given me my heart's desire. ... What man
intended for evil, God intended for good."
Robert E. Reccord, president of the North American Mission Board,
shared with the congregation how God's call throughout the Bible was
just as personal. God called his servants by name, he said, from
Noah and Abram in the Old Testament to Zacchaeus and Saul in the New
Testament.
"He's calling every one of us by name. And he says, 'I have
a plan for you,'" Reccord said.
Reccord told how God's call on the lives of a string of leaders
called by God -- beginning with the Sunday school teacher who led
D.L. Moody to Christ -- resulted in the profession of faith and
subsequent ministry of evangelist Billy Graham.
He also told the story of another man's commitment to the call
God made on his life to tell the people of China about the good news
of Christ. William Borden, heir to the Borden dairy corporation, had
accepted Christ while on an around-the-world cruise with a friend.
The friend arranged for Borden to meet and hear stories from
missionaries at every port.
Borden gave up leadership of his family's company to obey God's
call, telling his parents, "The job isn't big enough. I've got
to see people come to Jesus as Savior. That's the job God is calling
me to."
And even when he became stricken with a fatal illness in Cairo
during language school, he remained faithful. A piece of paper found
near his body after his death contained his last six words, "No
reserve, no regret, no retreat."
"Tonight, can you say, 'No reserve, I'm not holding on to
anything except [God]; no retreat, I'm not sorry for what I gave up
for one minute; and definitely no retreat, wherever he leads I'll
go.'?" Reccord asked.
Several individuals and couples responded to that invitation with
a 'yes' to be available for God's call in their own lives, wherever
he leads.
Copyright 2004 North American Mission Board, SBC
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