Josh Buice: Difference between revisions

mNo edit summary
No edit summary
Line 3: Line 3:
| birth_name = Joshua S. Buice
| birth_name = Joshua S. Buice
| birth_date = June 14, 1977
| birth_date = June 14, 1977
| birth_place = Atlanta, Georgia
| birth_place = [[wikipedia:Atlanta, Georgia|Atlanta, Georgia]]
| residency = Douglasville, Georgia
| residency = [[wikipedia:Douglasville, Georgia|Douglasville, Georgia]]
| occupation = [[Pastor]], author
| occupation = [[Pastor]], author
| affiliations = [[Pray's Mill Baptist Church]], [[G3 Ministries]]
| affiliations = [[Pray's Mill Baptist Church]], [[G3 Ministries]]
Line 15: Line 15:


==Biography==
==Biography==
Buice has served as a pastor of Pray's Baptist Church in Douglasville, Georgia since August 2010. He has a [[Bachelors of Business Administration|B.S.B.A.]] from the University of West Georgia (2001) and has also earned [[Masters of Divinity|M.Div]] and [[Doctorate of Ministry|D.Min]] degrees from the [[Southern Baptist Theological Seminary]] in Louisville, Kentucky. As of April 2023, [[Grace Bible Theological Seminary|Grace Bible Theological Seminary (GPTS)]] announced that Buice will begin serving as an assistant professor of preaching at the seminary.
Buice has served as a pastor of Pray's Baptist Church in [[wikipedia:Douglasville, Georgia|Douglasville, Georgia]] since August 2010. He has a [[Bachelors of Business Administration|B.S.B.A.]] from the [[wikipedia:University of West Georgia]] (2001) and has also earned [[Masters of Divinity|M.Div]] and [[Doctorate of Ministry|D.Min]] degrees from the [[Southern Baptist Theological Seminary]] in [[wikipedia:Louisville, Kentucky|Louisville, Kentucky]]. As of April 2023, [[Grace Bible Theological Seminary|Grace Bible Theological Seminary (GPTS)]] announced that Buice will begin serving as an assistant professor of preaching at the seminary.


===G3 Ministries===
===G3 Ministries===
Buice is the Founder and currently serves as the President of [[G3 Ministries]]. G3 began with the first G3 Conference (Gospel – Grace – Glory) in 2013, which was held on the campus of Pray's Mill Baptist Church in Douglasville, Georgia where Josh Buice serves as Pastor. As the conference grew, a 501(c)(3) organization was formed in 2020 during the [[COVID-19 pandemic]] to become a ministry organization that hosts the [[G3 Conference]] biennially, along with other workshops and trainings, and to provide various theological multimedia resources for local churches.
Buice is the Founder and currently serves as the President of [[G3 Ministries]]. G3 began with the first G3 Conference (Gospel – Grace – Glory) in 2013, which was held on the campus of Pray's Mill Baptist Church in [[wikipedia:Douglasville, Georgia|Douglasville, Georgia]] where Buice serves as Pastor. As the conference grew, a 501(c)(3) organization was formed in 2020 during the [[wikipedia:COVID-19 pandemic|COVID-19 pandemic]] to become a ministry organization that hosts the [[G3 Conference]] biennially, along with other workshops and trainings, and to provide various theological multimedia resources for local churches.


===Statement on Social Justice and the Gospel===
===Statement on Social Justice and the Gospel===
In June 2018, Buice organized a meeting in Dallas, Texas with other conservative evangelicals to address the issue of a rising social justice movement among [[American evangelicalism|American Evangelicals]]. Buice and others claimed that those in that movement were mixing the Christian [[Gospel]] and the [[social gospel]], which led to the drafting of the [[Statement on Social Justice and the Gospel]] (which is also referred to as "The Dallas Statement").
In June 2018, Buice organized a meeting in Dallas, Texas with other conservative evangelicals to address the issue of a rising social justice movement among [[American evangelicalism|American Evangelicals]]. Buice and others claimed that those in that movement were mixing the Christian [[Gospel]] and the [[social gospel]], which led to the drafting of the [[Statement on Social Justice and the Gospel]] (which is also referred to as "[[The Dallas Statement]]").


[[Tom Ascol]] was given the responsibility to write the original draft, which upon revision was signed first by the original summit attendees also including [[James White]], [[John MacArthur]], [[Voddie Baucham]], and others. Over ten thousand churches or individuals have since added their signatures on the website that was for the statement.
[[Tom Ascol]] was given the responsibility to write the original draft, which upon revision was signed first by the original summit attendees also including [[James White]], [[John MacArthur]], [[Voddie Baucham]], and others. Over ten thousand churches or individuals have since added their signatures on the website that was for the statement.