New England news & perspectives

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The New England Challenge:  Multicultural Cities and Multicultural Churches 
Elissa Wright Elissa Wright

The New England Challenge:  Multicultural Cities and Multicultural Churches 

Within the last few decades, ethnic churches have emerged across New England, dotting the ecclesiastical landscape of its major cities. In noticeable contrast with older established churches with growth profiles that have plateaued, ethnic churches have witnessed significant growth both nationally and throughout New England. This article seeks to rethink our approach and theology for the existence of ethnic churches.

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Committed to New England: Buying a home and a burial plot
Elissa Wright Elissa Wright

Committed to New England: Buying a home and a burial plot

In 1994 when Kay and I first moved to New England as missionaries, we served small churches in rural villages in Vermont. Having lived in various cities all of my life, it was quite the culture shock to adjust to ministry in such a different setting. To help me learn how to serve well, I used to meet monthly with Merwyn Borders. Though he was not a native New Englander, Rev. Borders had served in both Massachusetts and Vermont for decades. He loved New England and understood it as well as any “outsider” could.

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Be a New England Missionary
Elissa Wright Elissa Wright

Be a New England Missionary

I am a New Englander, through and through. Born and raised in Massachusetts, I love to travel, but there is nothing like coming home to the Atlantic Ocean, the colonial homes lining the streets, and the four seasons. New England is not only my home, but also a ripe mission field. Here are a few things to keep in mind about New England.

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Obedience as a navigational tool
Elissa Wright Elissa Wright

Obedience as a navigational tool

It all began with three pastors from Ridge Baptist Association in South Carolina coming to Vermont for a vision trip in February 2022 – yes, major snow season in Vermont. We had so much fun visiting pastors and churches during those few days. There was an emergency pulpit need that one of them covered and God showed His Favor upon this potential partnership in a mighty way during those few days.

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Bridging the gap: London ministry lessons for New England
Elissa Wright Elissa Wright

Bridging the gap: London ministry lessons for New England

If you find yourself on the London train, or the "Tube" as the locals call it, you'll see and hear the phrase "Mind the Gap" often. It is a warning from the conductor to watch your step as you board, because there is a space between the platform and the train. I think many of us have come to the conclusion through working in ministry in New England, that there is a similar "gap" when trying to reach those outside of the church.

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Make an eternal difference in New England
Elissa Wright Elissa Wright

Make an eternal difference in New England

For the past several months at the Baptist Churches of New England, we have emphasized the importance of ‘multiplying Christ followers’ through our weekly evangelism webinars. Without a doubt, our network of churches must constantly be vigilant and intentional in engaging lostness and making disciples in New England.

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Dr. and Mrs. James Wideman: A lifetime of service, prayer, and generosity
Elissa Wright Elissa Wright

Dr. and Mrs. James Wideman: A lifetime of service, prayer, and generosity

James (Jim) Wideman, a native of Texas, and his wife Sandy, a native of Florida, invested much of lives in New England, first moving to the region in 1970. After dating at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Ft. Worth, Texas, in the summer of 1970, they were assigned as short term missionaries to Screven Memorial Baptist Church (now called Seacoast Community Church) in Portsmouth, N.H. Jim later returned to Texas to finish his seminary studies but in 1979, a growing sense of call to New England led them back to Portsmouth where Jim became pastor of that church.

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What’s going on in America’s spiritual graveyard?
Elissa Wright Elissa Wright

What’s going on in America’s spiritual graveyard?

Each Sunday morning, when I stand behind the pulpit, my eyes are drawn to look out the east windows of our old Congregational Meeting House. As I do, I’m greeted by a sobering sight: an old church building, a relic from another time. But it’s not the building itself that affects me; it’s what it’s become. This structure, formerly a house of worship, is now divided into many luxury condominiums. And it’s not the only one. Several old churches, on our street alone, have closed in the last quarter-century. These buildings were at one time monuments of Christ, testimonies of faith in the Triune God. But now, they’re monuments of another kind, warning of the dangers of doctrinal downgrade while sounding the siren for help.

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2021 Summer Ministry: What did it look like?
Elissa Wright Elissa Wright

2021 Summer Ministry: What did it look like?

The summer of 2021 here in New England has been less than stellar but summer ministries around our region have exploded! It has been awesome to see the many, different ways that churches in all six states have approached their summer outreaches. There has been a renewed excitement to reach out to families and kids and get them reconnected and to get to know others in the community.

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BCNE, Georgia Baptists kick off partnership with initial mission trip
Communications Director Communications Director

BCNE, Georgia Baptists kick off partnership with initial mission trip

As part of a newly launched partnership, fourteen pastors and leaders from Northeast Georgia traveled to New England to meet with pastors and see the region first-hand. Many of these men expressed shock at seeing the difference in New Englanders’ religious perspectives and the relative isolation of New England pastors compared to ministry in the Southern culture.

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People movement, God movement
Communications Director Communications Director

People movement, God movement

One of the great aspects of living in New England is the opportunity to interact with peoples of all tongues, tribes and nations. The multicultural diversity in this area is not only fascinating but also poses tremendous opportunities to further the Kingdom with the potential of impacting the whole world. World leaders are being formed in our universities here, and God has shifted the mission field to our neighborhoods. This reality also comes with some daunting challenges. 

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Communications Director Communications Director

Our New England Baptist heritage

My 7th great-grandfather, Francis Marion Dorsett, was a Baptist pastor in England at a time when Baptists were not welcome. Baptists were considered countercultural and subversive to society in general because they did not conform to what the broader culture said was acceptable. Seeking the freedom to worship as the Lord was leading him, my forefather immigrated to America before the Revolutionary War. Though he landed in the Northeast, he quickly learned that religious freedom was not as prevalent in New England as he hoped. This led him to move to the mountains of North Carolina where he bought a farm and made a life for himself. He started a family while farming and serving as the bivocational pastor of a local Baptist church.

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Seven fast facts about New England for volunteer mission teams
Communications Director Communications Director

Seven fast facts about New England for volunteer mission teams

According to the 2017 Gallup Poll, New England is the least religious region in America. In fact, Gallup found that the four least religious states in American are all located in New England: Vermont is the least religious, then Maine, New Hampshire and Massachusetts. According to the Barna Group, the five most post-Christian cities in America are all located in New England: Springfield, Massachusetts; Portland, Maine; Providence, Rhode Island; Burlington, Vermont; and Boston, Massachusetts. There is no place in America in greater spiritual need than New England. That is why mission teams like yours are so important! Thank you for being mission partners with us in New England!

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What the Northeast needs from missionaries
Communications Director Communications Director

What the Northeast needs from missionaries

There is a constant call within the northeastern part of the United States for laborers to move to the area and join the battle to see the region re-awakened to the power of the Gospel. Church planting ministries regularly recruit and promote vision tours in an attempt to get more missionaries to the shores of the proverbial Babylon that is the New England states, plus New York and perhaps New Jersey.

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