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- Description:
- Cecil Etheridge was the Associate of the Personnel Department at the Home Mission Board (now known as the North American Mission Board). The service begins with an announcement and a reading from 0:00-1:06. A prayer is offered from 1:08-5:31. An introduction to the speaker is given from 5:33-6:24. Music plays from 6:27-7:04. Dr. Etheridge preaches from 7:20-24:58. Etheridge shares the importance of taking care of delinquent teens and sharing the gospel. He states that America is a mission field in need of ministers to take care of people of all ages and problems.
- Subject:
- Missions
- Creator:
- Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary and Etheridge, Cecil
- Location:
- Wake Forest (N.C.)
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- October 18, 1966
- Resource type:
- Audio
- Identifier:
- SEBTS_Chapel_Cecil_Etheridge_1966-10-18
- Description:
- Walter H. Judd was a medical missionary to China and American politician. The service begins with the reading of scripture from 0:00-0:30. Music plays from 0:31-1:20. A responsive reading takes place from 1:27-3:34. A prayer is offered from 3:40-7:59. Special music plays from 8:12-11:18. An introduction to the speaker is from 11:27-15:00. Dr. Judd speaks from 15:03-59:08. Judd gives a testimony of his missionary efforts in China. Dr. Judd explains the nature of the communist movement. Closing music plays from 59:09-1:00:16.
- Subject:
- Communism and religion and Missions
- Creator:
- Judd, Walter H., 1898-1994, Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary, and Copeland, Edwin Luther
- Location:
- Wake Forest (N.C.)
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- September 28, 1966
- Resource type:
- Audio
- Identifier:
- SEBTS_Missionary_Day_Address_Walter_H_Judd_1966-09-28
- Description:
- There was no formal introduction for G. Avery Lee, but he was pastor of St. Charles Avenue Baptist Church in New Orleans, Louisiana, and focused his ministry on college/seminary campuses. He made dedicated commitments to bettering race relations and served as Chairman of the Christian Life Commission from 1961-62. He gives various introductory courtesies (00:00-02:56), and his sermon builds from his previous sermon on February 10, 1966, focusing on “The Acceptable Year of the Lord” taken from John 12:27 (02:57-03:20). Lee outlines key facets of making this year (1966) the acceptable year of the Lord. Firstly, we must take seriously the explosion in knowledge and its effects on our seminaries and economy (03:21-12:41). Secondly, we must have an acute sense of responsibility, which Lee thinks is our top weakness in our churches and as a society (12:42-20:12). Thirdly, our Christian development must give us a sense of concern as we seek to avoid both conformity and complacency. He focuses this point on global missions, encouraging his listeners that obedience, not results, is what God requires of us (20:13-34:32). He closes the service in prayer (34:33-36:17).
- Subject:
- Responsibility and Missions
- Creator:
- Lee, G. Avery and Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary
- Location:
- Wake Forest (N.C.)
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- February 11, 1966
- Resource type:
- Text and Audio
- Identifier:
- SEBTS_Chapel_G_Avery_Lee_1966-02-11
- Description:
- The service opens with a word from Dr. Binkley about the SEBTS relationship with Wake Forest Baptist Church and an introduction for its and his pastor, Mr. Sturch, who begins with prayer (00:00-04:11). Mr. Sturch introduces the speaker, G. Avery Lee, who was pastor of St. Charles Avenue Baptist Church in New Orleans, Louisiana, and focused his ministry on college/seminary campuses. He made dedicated commitments to bettering race relations and served as Chairman of the Christian Life Commission from 1961-62 (04:12-07:36). Lee begins his time with two stories expressing his thankfulness for being able to speak, (07:45-10:22) and his message is rooted in Luke 4:16-20. He speaks on the nature and ministry of the Church based upon the gospel of the carpenter’s son from Nazareth who claimed the Holy Spirit was upon Him (10:23-28:23). He then speaks of his experience around the world in seeing the presence and absence of churches in various places, and he gives statistics from the Foreign Mission Board (now the International Mission Board) on missionary outreach (28:24-33:52). He ends the service in prayer (33:53-35:36).
- Subject:
- Church and Missions
- Creator:
- Lee, G. Avery and Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary
- Location:
- Wake Forest (N.C.)
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- February 8, 1966
- Resource type:
- Text and Audio
- Identifier:
- SEBTS_Chapel_G_Avery_Lee_1966-02-08
- Description:
- CDI-01-0405: "Here Pastor Lloyd Conners of the First Baptist Church in Marfa, Texas witnesses to two of the adult men in a remote village in Mexico. Brother Conner's church sponsors a mission and has helped to build a church building in Porvenir, Mexico.";
CDI-01-0407: St. Louis Southern Baptist Convention;
CDI-01-0408: St. Louis Southern Baptist Convention;
CDI-01-0409: St. Louis Southern Baptist Convention;
CDI-01-0410: St. Louis Southern Baptist Convention;
CDI-01-0412: Campus Scene;
CDI-01-0413: Ogbomosho. Baptist Hospital; "Dr. Billy Graham, left, and Mr. Royal of the Associated Press (left, behind Dr. Graham) on tour in the hospital with missionaries, left to right: L.C. Smith, M.D.; J.C. Pool; Keith Edwards, M.D.; and Mrs. William M. Gilliland, M.D.";
CDI-01-0414: "Reverend Herbert Dawkins and Herbert Jr. who attended summer school. They came on their sail boat." Missionary pictures, Brady, Bahamas
- Subject:
- Missions, Gateway Arch (Saint Louis, Mo.), Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary, Missionaries, Short-term missions, and Evangelistic work
- Creator:
- Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- 1951 to 1980
- Resource type:
- Graphic Materials
- Identifier:
- CDI-01-0405/0416
- Description:
- The service begins with music and transitions into the first of two addresses, entitled “Trouble-Shooters For God.” In the first address, Eva Marie Kennard first outlines the purpose of the natural beauty of the created world as being designed to lead us to marvel at God, and she focuses next on being trouble-shooters for God. These people are those who find mechanical breakdowns and repair them to their original working order (00:00-11:39). In the second address entitled “The Trouble With the World,” Ross Coggins outlines this trouble with sin, displaying its effects in major world issues such as a hardening of the categories we have created (slavery and obesity), emotional disturbances (suicide and the need to go to war to prove strength), and metaphysical myopia (not knowing where God is or what He is doing). Coggins closes his message by speaking to a condition of the heart which he calls “passion fatigue” (11:40-44:51), and he ends his address in prayer (44:52-45:46). The service closes with music which gets louder toward 46:02.
- Subject:
- Missions
- Creator:
- Coggins, Ross, 1927-, Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary, and Kennard, Eva Marie
- Location:
- Wake Forest (N.C.)
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- February 18, 1967
- Resource type:
- Text and Audio
- Identifier:
- SEBTS_Student_Missions_Conference_1967-02-18-AM
- Description:
- An unnamed female speaker begins the address entitled “Faith Dispersed” by telling a story about two creatures and taming. She transitions into how Jesus has tamed human hearts and how our evangelistic process must be a sort of taming (waiting some time while patiently pursuing someone’s trust) as we build bridges in love and understand their struggles in empathy (00:00-11:00). Next, James Y. Green follows up the initial address with an extension of the same title, “Faith Dispersed,” in which he calls his listeners to “jump in” to the world of God’s global mission (11:01-17:34). He mentions pre-requisites, essential presuppositions, and an understanding of suffering that we must have before we can “go out” on mission (17:35-19:13). We must understand not only who we are as Christians but also the social structures we are going into; we must know the presupposition that God is working actively in the world outside of the walls of a church building (19:14-24:59). Also, we must know the value of what we are sharing, not only in personal morality but also in concern for the world (25:00-35:21). We must go out in dispersion in response to the powerful sending God, even the Lord Jesus Christ; our dispersion must be done in relationship with the living God and in relationship with the community of the saints (35:22-40:46). Two reasons for dispersal are an assurance of the significance of being sons of God along with the concern for the world having been (and being) the objects of God’s concern (40:47-44:50). He ends his time in prayer (44:51-45:38), and the service ends with music (45:39-48:38).
- Subject:
- Missions
- Creator:
- Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary and Green, James Y.
- Location:
- Wake Forest (N.C.)
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- February 19, 1967
- Resource type:
- Text and Audio
- Identifier:
- SEBTS_Student_Missions_Conference_1967-02-19