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"Experiencing God" transformed TBM over last two decades

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When TBM began applying those principles, the missions organization changed dramatically, said Bob Dixon, who led TBM nearly three decades as executive director.

“When we began looking at where God was working and responding to his invitations, we didn’t have to drum up things to do,” Dixon said. “The Father kept giving us assignments. And when we were faithful, he would give us another one.”

When a cholera epidemic hit Peru, TBM worked with Texas Baptist hospitals to provide more than $4 million in financial help and medical supplies, with the first round of emergency aid delivered to the country by military transport planes.

After the Pentagon discovered the capability of TBM to respond to disaster, a representative from the Office of Humanitarian Assistance in the U.S. Department of Defense called to ask, “How are you Baptists at getting blankets together?”

He explained Kurdish refugees from Iraq had fled to the mountains of western Turkey and eastern Iran, and by some estimates, 1,000 a day were dying of exposure. Through a Texas Baptist River Ministry contact, Dixon learned about a manufacturer who could provide blankets at cost. He had in stock enough blankets to fill four 18-wheelers, and TBM could have the 14,400 blankets for $48,000.

Soon after Dixon assembled his staff to pray about the matter, a $4,800 check arrived in the mail with a notation: “For wherever God wills today.” It was signed by a deacon at a church where Dixon recently had led an Experiencing God weekend. Dixon was convinced if God could provide 10 percent of the needed funds immediately, he would supply the rest, and TBM committed to the project.

TBM not only ended up providing blankets, but also worked with mission partners to provide medical teams and field kitchens in areas normally closed to Americans. Churches that worked with TBM also began ministries to Kurds who resettled in the United States.

That international experience led to future global initiatives as TBM responded to “invitations to join God in his activity”—lay renewal in South Africa, famine relief and agricultural development in North Korea, refugee relief in Africa, building projects in the Middle East, disaster relief training for Christians in Cuba and water purification projects in more than 50 countries.

Stateside, TBM also applied the principles of Experiencing God to its varied ministries such as volunteer construction projects, church renewal and restorative justice ministry.

Restorative Justice Ministry took on new life because of Experiencing God,” said Don Gibson, TBM church renewal consultant. The workbook became the key curriculum for Inmate Discipleship Fellowship, a related program that grew out of TBM and focused on ongoing discipleship efforts behind bars.

Ten years ago, application of the “seven realities of Experiencing God” also led to the birth of Victim Relief Ministries, an interdenominational organization that grew out of TBM’s restorative justice ministry initiatives, Gibson noted.

TBM moved from lay renewal weekends to weekends designed to introduce churches to an overview of the Experiencing God principles. Pastor Jim Shamburger credits one of those weekends with sparking a transformation at First Baptist Church in Victoria.

“Experiencing God revolutionized my church. We had been doing church with an emphasis on buildings, budgets and long-range planning—not asking God where he was inviting us to go,” Shamburger said.

In recent years, the church has begun new ministries in its community and beyond as God has opened doors, he noted.

“Our approach to sharing the gospel has become more about taking it to people where they are rather than trying to bring them to us,” he said.

TBM also has sent teams outside Texas to lead Experiencing God weekends in churches. Last September, TBM volunteers worked with leaders of Central Baptist Association to lead simultaneous Experiencing God weekends in five churches in South Central Wisconsin.

“I had never been around revival or spiritual awakening before,” said Mark Millman, associational director of missions. “God did it. It wasn’t anything that could be manufactured or manipulated.”

The event proved so life-changing for participants, one congregation in suburban Madison even changed its name, from Prairie Springs Baptist Church to Transformation Church, Millman said.

TBM leaders insist as the organization looks to the future, whatever ministries it may develop will grow out of a keen awareness of the principles of Experiencing God—a love relationship with God, sensitivity to his activity and obedience to his invitation.

“God is still inviting us to join him,” Smith said. “We’re always going to operate this way. It’s who we are now.”

Henry Blackaby and Claude King, authors of Experiencing God: Knowing and Doing the Will of God, will be keynote speakers at Texas Baptist Men’s annual Cedars spiritual awakening conference, Aug. 27-29 at Lakeview Conference Center near Waxahachie.