3/22/12 — Big CP Supporter Finds New Ways to do ‘More for Christ’

Big CP Supporter Finds New Ways to do ‘More for Christ’

Ladies making dolls at Mexico Baptist Church

Members of Mexico Baptist Church work together to create witnessing dolls for future missions endeavors. The Crittenden County church gives 25 percent of its undesignated receipts to the Cooperative Program and has decided to increase that percentage as a way to do More for Christ. (Photo courtesy of Mexico Baptist Church)

MARION –Even though Mexico Baptist Church was already giving 25 percent of its undesignated receipts through the Cooperative Program, the rural Crittenden County congregation wanted to do more for Christ.

Led by Pastor Tim Burdon, the congregation set a goal of giving more dollars to CP than ever before by asking each member to increase his or her weekly gift to the church by $3.

Because it gives to CP on a percentage basis, the congregation knew that increased offerings would mean more dollars for local ministry as well as for Southern Baptists’ unified program of missions and ministry around the world.

So far Mexico Baptist is on pace to break its previous CP giving record of approximately $102,000 in a year.

“It’s real easy to look at our current situation and just say, ‘We’re already giving more than everybody else. What more can you expect?’” Burdon said. “But what I encouraged the church to do, and myself as well, is to look at it individually. We shouldn’t compare ourselves to what other people are doing. We’re just asking ourselves as individuals, ‘What more can I do for Christ?’”

The church’s renewed focus on CP came in response to the Kentucky Baptist Convention’s More for Christ initiative, a call to repentance and spiritual renewal that messengers to the 2010 KBC Annual Meeting formalized as a three-year focus.

When former KBC president Floyd Paris “challenged the convention to do more for Christ,” Burdon said, “that’s really where this started.”

It was Paris who came up with the “Three More for Christ” challenge to Kentucky Baptists to increase their weekly church offerings by $3.

Along with increasing CP giving and individual giving, members of Mexico Baptist adopted five other More for Christ goals that they hope to accomplish over the next three to five years:

  • Increase involvement in GROW, the church’s outreach ministry, which involves contacting prospects by phone, writing them letters and visiting them.
  • Offer additional evangelism training opportunities.
  • Individually, spend more time with God in private devotionals.
  • Achieve an average Sunday school attendance of 200, up from 174 in 2010.
  • Increase hands-on involvement in mission work, particularly through the Kentucky-St. Louis Partnership launched this year. (St. Louis is less than four hours from Crittenden County.)

After the adoption of these goals in December, Burdon preached a series of sermons related to them. Then in January, Mexico Baptist held an official goal kickoff with Billy Compton, KBC executive associate for Cooperative Program and resources, as the guest preacher.

According to Compton, the church was packed that day with people eager to reach their community, their state, their nation and the world for Christ.

“Our overall goal as a Convention to do more for Christ wasn’t just for big churches,” Compton said. “Here’s a (smaller) church that’s having a tremendous impact. I pray that God will multiply the Mexico Baptist Churches of the world.”

For longtime member Denny Mott, giving to CP sacrificially is an important way to work to fulfill the Great Commission—a concept that he said always seems to catch on with new members.

“Even though we’ve got lots of new people in the last two years, it seems like as they come in, they sort of jump on the bandwagon too,” he said of CP giving. “That’s just something the Lord has laid on the people here, and I think we enjoy it.”

Mott credits Burdon with casting the More for Christ vision, but “the people have really embraced it,” he said, adding that the new goals can help the church bolster its spiritual health.

Already Mexico Baptist is making progress, according to Burdon. Giving has increased, new people have joined the outreach ministry and Sunday school attendance is up slightly, he said.

To advance the missions goal, the church Woman’s Missionary Union group has made more than 100 witnessing dolls that serve as visual aids for Gospel presentations.

Still, the pastor knows that enthusiasm could wane over time. So he has planned special events and emphases “through these three to five years that will … remind us and challenge us to continue to work toward that end means of our goals,” he said.

KBC Executive Director Paul Chitwood praised Mexico Baptist’s example and held it up as a model for churches around the state.

“Pastor Tim Burdon and the church family of Mexico Baptist are among our best examples of a Kentucky Baptist Convention church committed to being a part of something bigger than themselves,” he said. “While they faithfully share Christ in their community, they have not lost sight of our Lord’s command in Acts 1:8.

“Through their sacrificial support of Cooperative Program missions, they provide a witness for Christ throughout Kentucky, North America and to the very ends of the earth,” Chitwood continued. “I pray more KBC churches will follow the lead of Mexico Baptist and embrace the vision of cooperative mission work to advance the Gospel.”

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