Regular Contributors

Andrew Hebert

Andrew is a disciple, husband, father, preacher, and chief of staff at Criswell College in Dallas, Texas. Previously, he was the lead pastor for two churches. He, his wife Amy, and his two kids live in Dallas, TX. God rescued him from darkness when he was twelve.


Winston Hottman

Winston currently serves as Assistant to the President at Criswell College. He has a passion to see individuals, churches and cultures transformed by the gospel of Jesus Christ. Some of his favorite things include time with family and friends, reading, espresso coffee, armchair politics and the Houston Astros.

 

Daisy Reynolds

Daisy serves as Administrative Assistant to the VP of Academic Affairs at Criswell College where she is working on a Master of Arts in Biblical and Theological Studies. She also produces a radio show called For Christ and Culture. She was redeemed by Christ at a young age, took Prodigal Way for a few years and has returned home by Repentance Rd. She praises God for his capacity to renew and smiles more than any normal person should.

6 thoughts on “Regular Contributors

  1. Hello All,
    My wife, 2yr old daughter, 9wk old son, and I have just moved to Dallas as of 8/27. Our background…. I was pulled by God at a very early age and acknowledged him as Lord. My dad was a Deacon at 22 so I was raised in church all my life. I worked at our church camp for 5 or so summers, was the house parent for our churches boys home, ran the sound board for several yrs and was at church if not at home, all of the time. My wife meet Jesus in high school due to our churches teen dept being very open and outgoing about Jesus. When our church (Fellowship Baptist Nederland) built the new buildings Rebekah started the 2 yr old classroom and taught for some time before we decided to leave the church. Long story. We shopped for two yrs before falling in love with FBC Nederland and remained there till our move here. So… We are now starting to “shop” again and could really use a starting point from local leaders. We want to be more involved, and a place for our 2 yr old to be really involved also. We are temp in Lancaster. Any suggestions would be great or if there is a place that has a list ofgreat churches to start from. With love, thank you. Joshua

    • Hello Josh,

      Did anyone ever get back to you on this? I don’t think many have seen it since it’s on our contributor page. I be happy to help though, if you haven’t found anything yet. Just let me know.

  2. Thank you for your reply. I did talk with Andrew but he didn’t have any knowledge about our area. We have decided to permanently reside around the Red Oak area. We are still visiting places and have not been led to a specific Church. The only info we have on a Church is what is on their web page and missional statement so there are a lot of places to visit and we like to go several times to get a good feel. Here is where we stand: we both grew up in independent Baptist and Southern Baptist. We both reside more on the “reformist” “Calvin” “Luther” side of teachings. The only other major aspects are strong kids programs and strong bible groups. If we are to picky according to the Word please share your opinions on that as well. Thank you for your help.

  3. I whole heartedly agree with the article about voting with regards to pro-life issues. This is the one issue that I had to confront my Christian parents with regarding the unwavering support for the Democratic party. As we worked through this issue they eventually quit voting for Democratic candidates or any candidate who supported a pro-choice position.

    The only thing I would suggest is that the numbers related to the 4500 killed in the Iraq should be reviewed and changed. There were probably more American service men killed then this and there were probably 100s of thousands killed in Iraq both by Americans and by Iraqis and surrogates of other countries operating in Iraq.

    But as pointed out the numbers game is not the issue. It is the kind of merciless killing of innocent life in the womb that differentiates the issue from any conflict of war or death of criminals convicted of capital murder. Besides criminals are given far more chances to survive and live another day than any of the babies slaughtered in the womb.

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