Advertisement

Southern Baptists Try Different Ways To 'Reconcile Baltimore To God's Kingdom'

July 13, 2009|By Matthew Hay Brown , matthew.brown@baltsun.com

The Baltimore Baptist Association invited the North American Mission Board to set up Embrace Baltimore in 2007. The move brought experienced managers to the city to help bolster the 72 mostly small Southern Baptist Convention churches already in the area and the new ones to come.

Here, as in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago and other cities on which the denomination has concentrated its efforts, the focus has been less on political activism than on community service.

"We didn't want to be known strictly for what we were against, but we wanted to be known for helping people in need," said Rich Carney, a strategy coordinator for the mission board. "It's one of those situations where, as followers of Christ, we need to put hands and feet on what we say."

Advertisement

So New Hope Community Church has given away furniture and sent volunteers to a local soup kitchen. Infinity Church, which is due to hold its first Sunday service on Sept. 13 in Northeast Baltimore, has held sports camps for local youth.

"It's just kind of getting out to meet the neighbors, casting vision, sharing with them what we're trying to do, loving on the community," Infinity pastor Aaron Pankey said.

In May, members of the Garden Community walked what they called the Trail of Tears, visiting the sites of the five most recent murders in the neighborhood and stopping at each to lay a rose and pray for peace in the city. The church, which bills itself as a "creative community of Jesus followers," is gearing up to paint a local elementary school, mentor students and help their parents complete high school diplomas.

At the meeting in the brownstone, Kurz opened the New Testament to the Letter of St. Paul to the Romans and spoke of the sacrifices made by the early Christians living in a hostile empire.

"We live in an empire as well," he said. "It's an empire of consumerism and I would say it's an empire of individualism. And the thing is that we end up giving in to the lie of the empire without even realizing it.

"Money, cash, becomes our god. Climbing the corporate ladder becomes our ministry. Wal-Mart is our worship center. It's OK to try to get all that we can for ourselves and walk over those who don't have anything and not reach out to help."

He asked attendees to stick with the church, to worship with it and join in its community service. "We are asking you to sacrifice what you like, sacrifice things that you like, in order to discover a life that you'll love."

Baltimore Sun Articles
|