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Personalized Missions Drives First Baptist Woodstock

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  • Personalized Missions Drives First Baptist Woodstock

    PERSONALIZED MISSIONS DRIVES FIRST BAPTIST WOODSTOCK
    by Erin Roach

    BP News, TN
    Posted on Sep 17, 2007

    WOODSTOCK, Ga. (BP)--For Johnny Hunt, pastor of First Baptist Church
    in Woodstock, Ga., missions is not a sideshow, it's the main event.

    "It's not something we do 'in addition.' As a matter of fact, we
    don't even refer to it as missions, we call it 'the mission,'" Hunt
    said. "It's just singular in that this is what the church is all
    about -- the Great Commission is getting the Gospel to the nations."

    When Hunt became pastor of First Baptist Woodstock 21 years ago,
    the church was 150 years old, gave $30,000 to missions each year,
    and had no record of anyone ever going into missions through the
    church's ministry.

    "It's just where we were. But we were a five-star church. We had WMU,
    we had Brotherhood, we took Lottie Moon, we took Annie Armstrong,"
    he said. "But the thing is, if your church does that and nobody ever
    produces, you're out of business. I don't care what you give. There's
    nobody there that needs it."

    When Hunt traveled to Mombasa, Kenya, in 1989 and saw 5,000 people
    a day baptized as revival swept that heavily Muslim city, his heart
    was captured for missions and he wept as he reported to his church
    how God had moved. From that point, he said, his congregation caught
    the vision and became a church saturated in missions work.

    Woodstock supports SBC missions through the Cooperative Program,
    Southern Baptists' unified giving plan for national and international
    missions and ministries. In addition, the church has given millions
    of dollars in designated missions contributions to SBC causes.

    When asked what he would say to the pastor of a church of about
    300 people struggling to decide where to give their missions money,
    Hunt said, "I would say to that young pastor, 'Lead your church to
    be committed to the CP.'" He went on to indicate that if the pastor
    wished to further personalize missions, he would invite him to go
    with one of Woodstock's Sunday School classes on a vision trip.

    THE GLOBAL MISSION

    During the past two decades, the Atlanta-area church has seen more
    than 120 of its own families planted in positions around the world as
    career missionaries, mostly with the International Mission Board. In a
    good year, they'll send 900 laypeople on mission assignments of varying
    lengths to places where those individuals sense a personal call.

    "What I'm trying to say is, it's not something that every now and
    then you can come and catch it, but it's the DNA," Hunt said of
    missions. "It's the heartbeat."

    The church has ongoing partnerships through the IMB focusing on
    various unengaged people groups particularly in the 10/40 Window (the
    area extending from West Africa to East Asia, from 10 degrees north
    to 40 degrees north of the equator), and the World Impact Center at
    First Baptist Woodstock is a state of the art training facility for
    educating Southern Baptists about missions.

    Through these partnerships, the church has been able to establish
    vital relationships with indigenous churches and pastors in strategic
    areas of the world.

    "When we do these partnerships, we bring in the IMB person that
    represents that part of the world, and we sign contracts before the
    church," Hunt said. "So we really try to keep everything out before
    the people so they just know that they're as informed as they desire
    to be. You can come into our kiosks, type in a country, and it will
    tell you if we're there, who the contact person is, and when the next
    trip is going to be."

    When Jerry Rankin, president of the International Mission Board,
    wanted to involve more large churches, he called Hunt. Because of
    Hunt's network, he was able to gather up several megachurch pastors
    and take them overseas for a vision trip. Some of those pastors saw
    what was possible, and now their churches are heavily involved in
    spreading the Gospel and planting churches instead of simply writing
    checks with no actions attached.

    First Baptist Woodstock recently adopted the Kurds, the largest
    unreached people group without a homeland, and now about 15 Sunday
    School classes are taking mission trips to Iran, Iraq, Syria, Lebanon
    and Armenia specifically to reach the Kurdish people with the Gospel
    of Jesus Christ and help start indigenous churches, Hunt said.

    One Sunday School class has developed a special interest in the Kurds
    of Armenia, he said, so the class is financing the translation of
    the New Testament for the Kurdish people in that country.

    "Sometimes, in my Sunday School class, they'll pass the hat three
    times to underwrite missions work," Hunt said.

    THE NATIONAL MISSION

    First Baptist Woodstock is not merely looking to minister
    overseas. Church members also are working with Kurds who live in the
    Atlanta area.

    "We think it's a little hypocritical to be so engaged with the Turks
    or the Kurds in Turkey and you travel and raise all that money to go
    there and you don't even notice them when there are tens of thousands
    in your own country," he said.

    The church also has focused its attention on some of the major
    metropolitan areas of the United States.

    This year they're shepherding 24 church plants with an average combined
    weekly attendance of 2,100 from New York to Las Vegas.

    "If we ever reach America, we will have to first of all reach our
    major cities. You can't do it rural," Hunt said. "The majority of
    Southern Baptist churches are rural, but the majority of our people
    live in urban and suburban areas."

    Hunt noted that the church plants have strong personal connections
    to First Baptist Woodstock.

    "Several of these pastors were saved in this church, baptized in this
    church, raised in this church, sent out to be educated by this church,
    and now they're one of our church planters," he said.

    When Hurricane Katrina hit the Gulf Coast, Hunt said church members
    wore the staff out by calling to ask, "What are we going to do?" They
    badly wanted to help the victims, and they were eager for guidance,
    Hunt said. So the following Sunday, he wrote a check and urged members
    to join him in giving money for relief efforts.

    "I said, 'We don't know what all we're going to do yet, but we
    know that there are more needs than we're going to be able to deal
    with.' We gave around $250,000 in cash, unannounced, for an offering,"
    Hunt recounted.

    At Thanksgiving that year, Hunt's family decided to give their holiday
    week to helping those who were suffering after the hurricane. When
    church members heard about their plans, 250 laypeople joined them on
    a trip to Biloxi, Miss., where they gave out 20,000 turkeys.

    THE REGIONAL MISSION

    First Baptist Woodstock also is focusing heavy resources on reaching
    its own Jerusalem and Judea.

    Georgia's population, for instance, is just under 9 million people,
    but 5 million are in the Atlanta metroplex. According to the church's
    literature, Woodstock is sponsoring or partnering with seven mission
    churches in its own state of Georgia.

    "You can't reach the state without reaching Atlanta," Hunt said. "In
    a 35-mile radius of our church, there are more people in our mission
    churches than there are on this campus on Sunday morning."

    Each Thursday, more than 40 volunteers from the church lead what they
    call "Church on the Street," where as many as 600 people struggling
    with poverty are given blankets, a warm meal and a Gospel presentation.

    First Baptist Woodstock has the largest food and clothing ministry
    around, and the majority of people who visit the church for assistance
    are Hispanic, Hunt said. The church has hired people from Argentina,
    Costa Rica and Ecuador to work in that ministry, reaching out to
    their own ethnic groups.

    Hunt indicated that the people who come for assistance are required
    to make an appointment.

    "So instead of us being a social service where we go out and feel
    good about it, they come in 30 minutes early and they sit down,
    and we tell them why we do it and we give them the Gospel," Hunt said.

    A Spanish church on campus averages 250 in attendance each week,
    and about the same number of people participates in an ESL program,
    representing more than 20 countries at any given meeting.

    Another popular ministry of the church is the Upward Basketball
    program in Clarkston, Ga., a community with a large population of
    refugees from other countries including Sudan, Somalia and Afghanistan.

    "If we blindfolded you and took you there today, you would think you
    were in Iraq," Hunt said, based on the ethnic stores, food from other
    cultures, the abundance of mosques and people in traditional dress.

    For seven years, First Baptist Woodstock has taught basketball to
    about 300 refugee children a year, all the time modeling the love of
    Christ and presenting the Gospel message.

    THE PASTORAL MISSION

    Not only has Johnny Hunt led First Baptist Woodstock to reach the
    lost locally, nationally and internationally, he has led the church
    to offer special assistance to those in ministry.

    The City of Refuge is a restoration ministry at the church, and it
    entails giving pastors and other ministers a safe haven to recuperate
    after a significant setback.

    "Say a pastor gets dismissed, or while he's in ministry he starts
    having trouble with his children, he has a moral failure, financial
    impropriety, just gets beat up and it hurts his marriage and all,"
    Hunt said. "We bring them in. We give them a place to live and pay
    their bills and put them in professional counseling."

    In about eight years since starting the program, about 300 families
    have been ministered to in the City of Refuge, Hunt said.

    Through the Timothy Barnabas Ministry, Hunt has trained thousands
    of pastors in the United States and other countries. One of the most
    exciting aspects of the program is that most of the other nations are
    third world countries where people are eager to learn how to minister.

    FULL CIRCLE

    These ministry emphases have empowered First Baptist Woodstock to
    complete the mission cycle, helping members to see and reach beyond
    their own geographical and cultural boundaries.

    "We'll have our first Hispanic team that we've been training for many
    years launch out into the 10/40 Window to Central Asia next year," Hunt
    said. "If all goes well, we may have an Argentine engaging the Kurds."

    And with that kind of enthusiasm for accomplishing the Great Commission
    using all types of people and methods, First Baptist Woodstock hopes
    to inspire others toward finishing the task.

    --30-- Erin Roach is a staff writer for Baptist Press. This
    article first appeared in SBC Life, journal of the Southern Baptist
    Convention's Executive Committee.
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