Stories to inspire, challenge and educate.

To find stories related to FSW’s four priorities, click on the category below.

Elket Rodríguez Jay Pritchard Elket Rodríguez Jay Pritchard

A Puerto Rican's Perspective

The voice speaking through my phone carried me to the side of a brother in the faith. He is Cuban, black and seeking U.S. citizenship. He called to ask a sad question that reflects our times: “How can I protect myself from police intervention?”

His question provoked tears as I reflected on the curse of classifying people by the color of their skin. I was born in Puerto Rico where people’s skin tones reflect the palate of possibilities.

Growing up, I had three great friends—Juan Sostre, Daniel Vega and Nelson Túa. We loved wrestling, and that brought us together. Daniel looks Asian, Juan is black and Nelson is white with brown hair.

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FSW Jay Pritchard FSW Jay Pritchard

Southwest pastors talk about going back to church

Webinar hosted by Marv Knox, coordinator of Fellowship Southwest.

Contributors:

  • Mary Alice Birdwhistell, pastor of Calvary Baptist Church in Waco, Texas

  • Glen Foster, pastor of Pantano Baptist Church in Tucson, Arizona

  • Becky Jackson, pastor of Northwest Baptist Church in Ardmore, Oklahoma

  • Garrett Vickrey, pastor of Woodland Baptist Church in San Antonio, Texas

  • Jorge Zayasbazan, pastor of Baptist Temple in San Antonio

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Jay Pritchard Jay Pritchard

Cuban immigrants plan to build a future—1 block at a time

An ancient proverb states: “Give a man a fish, and you feed him for a day; teach a man to fish, and you feed him for a lifetime.”

Rosalio Sosa believes a paraphrase of that proverb: Give a man a concrete block, and maybe he can sit on it in the shade. Teach him to make blocks, and he can build a future for his family.

Sosa thinks he’s found a way for Cuban refugees to construct productive, dignified lives in northern Mexico—by building blocks.

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Border Overview Jay Pritchard Border Overview Jay Pritchard

Border pastors webinar on immigration ministry

Pastors who comprise Fellowship Southwest’s immigrant relief ministry network recently gathered in a webinar to talk about their work with refugees along the U.S.-Mexico border.

Six pastors talked with FSW Coordinator Marv Knox about how they express the love of Jesus to immigrants they have found, almost literally, on their doorsteps.

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Border Overview Jay Pritchard Border Overview Jay Pritchard

Peer learning group bolsters border pastors

Pastors along the U.S.-Mexico border are finding strength in numbers and comfort among partners equally committed to serving refugees in Jesus’ name.

Members of Fellowship Southwest’s Immigrant Relief Ministry—strung from the Gulf of Mexico to the Pacific Ocean—get together through video calls to share their lives, encourage each other and to pray for God’s blessings on their ministries and the immigrants they serve.

Fellowship Southwest’s Border Pastors Peer Learning Group began convening a few weeks ago. And while the concept is new on the border, its roots run deep within the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship. For years, CBF has promoted and sponsored peer learning groups—gatherings of ministers in similar situations, with similar jobs and usually at similar places in their careers—for encouragement, learning and prayer.

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Jay Pritchard Jay Pritchard

Navajo Nation sees rise in coronavirus infection

The dire situation in my opinion is environmental, of public health concern, economic and social and much of it also involves bureaucratic red tape - Federal, State (AZ, NM, UT, and CO), and local Navajo Nation, Hopi Tribe, and San Juan Southern Paiute (these are Native tribes actually exercising viable tribal sovereignty within the Navajo Reservation geographic boundaries). And then, you have to throw in additional tribal interests - those surrounding tribes which technically fall within an area termed "Navajo Area" but are technically located outside the Navajo Reservation geographic boundaries - the Pueblo tribes of New Mexico, Jicarilla Apache Nation, Southern Ute, Ute Mountain Ute, Kaibab Paiute, Havasupai, Hualapai, Yavapai, and the Western Apache - Tonto, White Mountain and San Carlos. Commensurate with all these are the exertions placed upon the Navajo Nation from all counties, communities, municipalities and metropolitan areas associated with the "Navajo Area" of the Four Corners region of the United States - and then, I cannot fail to mention corporate or business interests either! So I see both an advantageous and dysfunctional landscape, which I will label "Status Quo" confounding the situation along with the present reality simply facing every Navajo person; this present reality we call "Life." This is a most complex topography upon which Covid-19 has been thrown in!

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Elket Rodríguez Jay Pritchard Elket Rodríguez Jay Pritchard

Border pastors’ spouses provide the foundation of their immigrant ministries

The pastors on the front lines of Fellowship Southwest’s Immigrant Relief Ministry do not labor alone. Their strongest allies—their spouses—support, encourage and fortify them as they fight hunger, depravation, exploitation, injustice and vulnerability all along the U.S.-Mexico border.

These women’s tenacity, commitment and passion is unparalleled. They willingly sacrifice most of their time and effort for their ministries. Their success can only be measured by their loyalty to God.

For months, we have told you about their husbands. This week, the spouses speak.

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Elket Rodríguez Jay Pritchard Elket Rodríguez Jay Pritchard

“I don't care if you die”

“I don't care if you die.” The U.S. government repeats this message to immigrants every day, reinforcing it over and over. Policies flip, and explanations flop. But one message remains consistent. “I don’t care if you die.”

For our God of truth, facts matter. And the government’s callous disregard for immigrant life is a matter of factual record. Last week, an immigrant named Carlos Ernesto Escobar Mejía died of COVID-19 in an Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention center. That is a fact.

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FSW Jay Pritchard FSW Jay Pritchard

Dallas Pastors: Back-to-Church Webinar

Webinar moderated by Marv Knox, coordinator of Fellowship Southwest.

Contributors:

  • Benjamin Dueholm, pastor of Christ Lutheran Church

  • Mike Gregg, pastor of Royal Lane Baptist Church

  • Victoria Robb Powers, senior associate pastor of University Park United Methodist Church

  • Kerry Smith, pastor of Greenland Hills United Methodist Church

  • Andy Stoker, pastor of First United Methodist Church

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FSW Jay Pritchard FSW Jay Pritchard

Fellowship Southwest sponsors back-to-church webinars

As governments loosen shelter-in-place restrictions and churches consider the next phase of ministry in light of COVID-19, Fellowship Southwest is producing webinars to help church leaders think about when to reconvene in person and how to go about it.

“These will be open-ended conversations about the spiritual, ethical and technical questions involved in ‘doing church’ face-to-face again,” FSW Coordinator Marv Knox explained. “We wouldn’t presume to tell congregations it’s time to go back to church. In fact, we advocate caution born of love for neighbor. But we know pastors and church leaders have to think about opening their doors again, and we believe these conversations will help.”

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Elket Rodríguez, Border Overview Jay Pritchard Elket Rodríguez, Border Overview Jay Pritchard

Fellowship SW immigrant ministries remain resilient in face of COVID-19

COVID-19 has transformed Fellowship Southwest’s immigrant relief ministries all along the U.S.-Mexico border. Among the pastors who guide the effort, some are reinventing their ministries, others have identified new service opportunities, and still others have suffered losses and obstacles that put their work at risk.

Yet they demonstrate resiliency only achieved through God’s grace and mercy. The pandemic has delivered more work, but more opportunities. It has created more challenges, but more paths for God to bless them and their ministries.

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El Paso/Juarez, Tijuana Jay Pritchard El Paso/Juarez, Tijuana Jay Pritchard

FSW relief ministry expands to include pastors imperiled by pandemic

Sometimes, caregivers need care, and Fellowship Southwest has expanded its Immigrant Relief Ministry to support them.

Two stalwarts in FSW’s ministry to asylum seekers on the U.S.-Mexico border—Juvenal González in Tijuana and Rosalio Sosa in Juarez—recently reported an alarming result of the COVID-19 pandemic: Pastors in their local networks don’t have enough money to feed their families.

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Jay Pritchard Jay Pritchard

Fellowship Southwest Steering Committee plans for future

The Fellowship Southwest Steering Committee looked toward the future even as members watched each other on computer screens during their spring meeting April 27.

The committee originally planned to meet at Woodland Baptist Church in San Antonio but opted to convene via videoconference in light of COVID-19.

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Jay Pritchard Jay Pritchard

An immigration “bottleneck,” Chiapas is home to misery

A crisis among global immigrants who hope—or who once hoped—to obtain asylum in the United States is playing out in desperation and hunger hundreds of miles from the U.S-Mexico border.

Chiapas, Mexico's southernmost state, is one of the world's most important migration corridors. Races, nationalities, hopes and frustrations clash in Chiapas. Northbound immigrants, hoping for a homeland in the United States, cross paths with southbound rejects, the formerly hopeful, who reached the U.S. border only to be defeated by government policy and/or cartels, now resigned to head home, wherever that is.

Now, compounding their misery, global pandemic has disrupted their access to food, shelter and health care.

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Elket Rodríguez Jay Pritchard Elket Rodríguez Jay Pritchard

Coronavirus compounds misery among “most vulnerable” South American refugees

Immigrants in South America are the "most vulnerable among the vulnerable" on the continent, especially in the wake of COVID-19, reported Loida Carriel, the Latin American and Caribbean regional advocacy advisor for Tearfund, a Christian nonprofit that focuses on ending poverty.

"Even with the stay-at-home orders, they are exposing themselves on the streets, trying to sell whatever they can to survive," Carriel said. "Without a home, without food and with physical strain, they are an easy grip for the effects of Covid-19."

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Jay Pritchard Jay Pritchard

Ecumenical group plans to extend Logsdon Seminary legacy

Partners committed to preserving the heritage of Logsdon Seminary are developing plans for extending and expanding the seminary’s legacy in light of its closure next year by Hardin-Simmons University.

Citing financial stress, the university in Abilene, Texas, announced in February it would close the seminary. HSU is offering final contracts to seminary faculty through May 2021 as part of a teach-out process. Previously, Logsdon had been singled out for criticism as too progressive by a few conservative West Texas pastors.

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Border Overview Jay Pritchard Border Overview Jay Pritchard

Border pastors rescue refugees from evil, protect from pandemic

“Let the unaccompanied children come to me,” Rosalio Sosa says—in deeds if not actual words—as he responds to immigrant children being returned to the Mexican desert by the U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

Sosa coordinates Red de Albergues Para Migrantes (Migrant Shelter Network), a ministry that serves 2,800 refugees in 14 immigrant shelters in the state of Chihuahua, Mexico. Most of the shelters are located in Ciudad Juarez, across the border from El Paso. But his network extends to Palomas, a village about 100 miles west into the desert.

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