Point-of-View
Give seminary-like experience to church members
By JOHN SULLIVAN
Executive Director-Treasurer,
Florida Baptist Convention
Published January 15, 2004
I believe that a church should provide a seminary-like
experience for lay members who want more intensive theological
study. I was able to put this concept in place in three of the
churches that God allowed me to serve as pastor. In one setting,
we even offered Hebrew and Greek classes for laypersons.
During the next weeks, I want to share with you a series of
doctrinal/theological studies written for the classes in my
earlier pastorates. I recently edited the doctrinal studies to
teach in Haiti. This month, the Florida Baptist Convention and
New Orleans Theological Seminary will begin providing theological
education classes for the pastors of the Baptist churches in
Haiti. We are excited about this new venture and working in
cooperation with the seminary.
Dr. Tommy Green, president of the Florida Baptist State
Convention and pastor of First Baptist Church of Brandon, is
teaching the first class this month, Introduction to the New
Testament. Please remember to pray Gods blessings on this
new avenue, especially for the persons who teach, translate and
study.
The Florida Baptist Convention now includes approximately 500
churches in Haiti which were started under our leadership and
oversight. Theological education for the pastors is a must for
the development of the churches. It is not only a new venture, it
is a faith venture. God has so many details to work out in our
hearts and planning. It is an exciting time to be a Florida
Baptist!
In the articles I will discuss:
- The Doctrine of God
- The Doctrine of Man
- The Doctrine of Sin
- The Doctrine of the Holy Spirit
- The Doctrine of Atonement
- The Doctrine of the Church
- The Doctrine of the Christian Life
My prayer is that the articles will be helpful to you and
perhaps a resource for future reference.
Any time I write, it is always impressed upon my mind to write
to Baptists, not for Baptists. These materials were first
initiated in my heart at Southwestern Baptist Theological
Seminary. It has been my joy through the years to add, subtract,
refine and condense. These are not full, systematic, theological
discussions. They are however, basic to all we believe and hold
as truth that would form the framework of systematic theological
discussions.
This is the first in an ongoing series on doctrinal/theological
studies written by John Sullivan, executive director-treasurer of
the Florida Baptist Convention.