A BAPTIST PIONEER: Freeman Smalley, the first Texas Baptist preacher
by Bill Jones

(originally published 8/9/2012 on Texas Baptists Committed blog)

(Adapted from the TBC Baptist Briefs video series, Texas Baptists Who Made a Difference) Freeman Smalley, according to the Texas State Historical Association, was born in 1790 in Pennsylvania and grew up in Ohio. He was already a Baptist by the time he enlisted in the army and fought in the War of 1812. After the Read more . . .

Mike Williams: What do these stones mean? (Joshua 4:17-24)
by Mike Williams

(originally published 7/26/2012 on Texas Baptists Committed blog)

(Presented by Mike Williams, professor of history, Dallas Baptist University, June 8, during the annual meeting of the Baptist History & Heritage Society in Raleigh, North Carolina. I’ve published it here with his permission.) 17So Joshua commanded the priests, saying, “Come up from the Jordan.” 18It came about when the priests who carried the ark Read more . . .

Milestones: Whether baseball or Glorieta, they’re really about people
by Bill Jones

(originally published 7/19/2012 on Texas Baptists Committed blog)

Fifty years ago this week, Daddy took me to my first major league baseball game. It seems a little strange, I must admit, to write the words “fifty years ago.” A half-century! It doesn’t seem so long ago that the phrase “fifty years ago” would bring to my mind an image akin to the phrase “back Read more . . .

How Baptists helped to secure religious liberty in America
by Bill Jones

(originally published 7/5/2012 on Texas Baptists Committed blog)

(Adapted from the TBC Baptist Briefs video series, First Baptists in America: 17th Century; and Baptists Fight for Religious Liberty in the New United States) In his classic history The Baptist Heritage, Leon McBeth writes that it was in 1639 that Roger Williams founded the first organized Baptist church in America in Providence, Rhode Island. However, Read more . . .

Daniel Vestal: Laying the foundation for CBF, then building on it
by Bill Jones

(originally published 6/18/2012 on Texas Baptists Committed blog)

This Friday evening, June 22, at the closing session of this year’s General Assembly in Fort Worth, Daniel Vestal will preach his final sermon as executive coordinator of the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship. This month, Daniel brings to a close his service as CBF’s longest-tenured executive coordinator. Patrick Anderson, editor of Christian Ethics Today and a Read more . . .

From Raleigh to Richmond: the Baptist History & Heritage Annual Conference
by Bill Jones

(originally published 6/13/2012 on Texas Baptists Committed blog)

When the Baptist church in Raleigh was organized in 1812 on the second floor of the original state Capitol building, there were 23 charter members—9 white and 14 black. In 1868,  there was a peaceful separation of the two groups when the newly emancipated members established their own congregation. Thus begins the History page of Read more . . .

Wayne Allen stood tall
by Bill Jones

(originally published 6/6/2012 on Texas Baptists Committed blog)

I read this morning that Dr. Wayne Allen, retired senior pastor of First Baptist Church, Carrollton, had passed away at the age of 82. I never had the privilege of meeting Dr. Allen, but his passing nevertheless moved me. His obituary gives a broader picture of his life, but the opening passage of an article Read more . . .

Lee Porter, Wayne Ward, and a generation of Baptists caught up in the “Controversy”
by Bill Jones

(originally published 5/31/2012 on Texas Baptists Committed blog)

This month has seen the death of two faithful Baptist leaders. On May 17, Lee Porter, a retired editor at LifeWay Christian Resources who served as recording secretary of the Southern Baptist Convention for 25 years, died at 83. On May 23, Wayne Ward, theology professor at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville for over Read more . . .

Traveling through Israel for 10 unforgettable days
by Bill Jones

(originally published 5/17/2012 on Texas Baptists Committed blog)

My wife has two birthdays. In the Gregorian calendar as commonly observed, her birthday is February 12. However, Joanna is Chinese and was born and raised in Hong Kong. Her Chinese birthday, according to the Chinese calendar, always falls on the day before the Chinese New Year – in other words, Chinese New Year’s Eve. When Read more . . .

Common sense lacking in Vanderbilt’s new “all-comers” policy
by Bill Jones

(originally published 5/9/2012 on Texas Baptists Committed blog)

I’m the last one to cry that Christians are being treated unfairly or that we are the victims of a “culture war” being waged against the Christian community. On the whole, Christians in America do not suffer persecution for their faith. Disagreement is not persecution! So, regardless of this week’s news out of Nashville (no, for once, Read more . . .