Stories to inspire, challenge and educate.
To find stories related to FSW’s four priorities, click on the category below.
El Huracán Hanna añade miseria a los efectos del COVID-19 en el Valle del Río Grande
El huracán Hanna dejó una estela de devastación al pasar el pasado 25 de julio por el Valle del Río Grande de Texas. Hanna arrojó más de 15 pulgadas de lluvia en la región cercana al Golfo de México, inundando severamente las zonas rurales y las colonias.
Los impetuosos vientos de Hanna causaron estragos en la zona, volcando casas rodantes y arrancando los techos de muchas residencias.
"El huracán causó mucho daño a las colonias (nombre otorgado a las villas no incorporadas que abundan en la frontera)", informó Jorge Zapata, coordinador asociado del Compañerismo Bautista Cooperativo (CBF por sus siglas en inglés) de Texas. "A muchas familias les voló el techo de sus casas".
From a loaf of bread, to COVID support, to the Bread of Life
A fresh loaf of bread in Missouri gave rise to a relief program in northeastern Arizona, serving people pummeled by COVID-19.
CBF West has launched a ministry on the Navajo Nation, guided by Pastor Greg Long of Flagstaff and CBF West Coordinator Glen Foster of Tucson. But the idea began with that bread back in Missouri.
“The Navajo Nation continues to be a hotspot for COVID-19,” Foster reported. Indeed, the Navajo Times reported almost 9,000 coronavirus cases among Navajos across the high-desert region as of Wednesday. Given the area’s sparse population, those infections have propelled the Navajo Nation to be one of the most acutely affected groups in the United States.
Hurricane Hanna, COVID-19 compound misery across the Rio Grande Valley
Hurricane Hanna left a trail of devastation as it tore through Texas’ Rio Grande Valley near the Gulf of Mexico July 25. Hanna dumped more than 15 inches of rain on the region, severely flooding rural areas and colonias.
Hanna's impetuous winds also wreaked havoc, overturning trailer homes and ripping roofs off others.
“The hurricane did a lot of damage to the colonias,” the unincorporated villages that dot the border, reported Jorge Zapata, associate coordinator of the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship of Texas. “Many families had their rooftops blown off their homes.”
Sosa dispenses hope to unaccompanied minors and immigrant smugglers
God rescues people who seem beyond hope, Rosalío Sosa believes. He knows God redeems even the darkest circumstances, because he’s seen it happen.
Every day, he wakes up on the U.S.-Mexico border, a region dominated by drug cartels. Lately, he’s experienced victories in the battle against the forces of exploitation. He has seized young men from the grip of the organized crime.
Pastor Ortiz adapts to changing immigrant needs
Shifting circumstances never hinder Lorenzo Ortiz from helping hurting people.
Ortiz’s ministry to refugees blossomed in 2018, when they flooded his church in Laredo, Texas. Back then, immigrants seeking asylum in the United States could cross into the country, complete their application and wait out the process.
But the 2018 immigrant surge overwhelmed the U.S. asylum system, and destitute refugees far from home waited on the streets. Ortiz took immigrants in Laredo into the church where he was pastor, and Fellowship Southwest started providing funds to buy groceries and pay escalating utilities.
Pray for Maria, a refugee/nurse in FSW’s Palomas shelter
One of the most important people in Fellowship Southwest’s network of ministry to immigrants on the U.S.-Mexico border needs your prayers.
Maria, a refugee from Cuba who lives in the shelter in Palomas, Chihuahua, is facing surgery, reported Rosalio Sosa, director of Red de Albergues Para Migrantes (Migrant Shelter Network) and pastor of Iglesia Bautista Tierra de Oro in El Paso.
Morrow and refugees adapt to COVID-19 pandemic
Imagine arriving as a refugee in a new country amidst a pandemic: Government offices are closed or working remotely. Documents needed to work and support your family are very difficult to acquire or are delayed months. Those who would normally welcome you and help you navigate life are social distancing. Isolation can be overwhelming and seem hopeless.
While social distancing, I’ve struggled with how to minister effectively in the midst of a pandemic. Instead of focusing on all the things I can no longer do, I’ve tried to focus on what God is still doing in spite of what I may see or feel. I’ve seen God show up in incredible ways.
CBF’S 25 Young Leaders to Know include 6 from Southwest
The Cooperative Baptist Fellowship introduced its 25 Young Leaders to Know during the CBF General Assembly this summer. Six of them hail from and/or are preparing for ministry in the Southwest. They include…
Speak up to protect refugees’ right to seek asylum
Who can forget the Holocaust? In just five years, about 6 million Jews died at the hands of the Nazis and their supporting governments.
We also must remember the Third Reich planted the seeds of genocide long before it carried out the Holocaust.
Much earlier, the German government implemented multiple policies to compel Jewish people to flee. These policies, known as judenrein (“cleansed of Jews”), sought to make the Jews so miserable they would emigrate to more hospitable countries.
CBF West provides support for Navajo Nation
Members of the Navajo Nation—among the hardest-hit victims of COVID-19—will receive tangible aid and a clear expression of God’s love, thanks to CBF West.
“The Navajo Nation infection rates per capita have become the highest in the country when compared with any individual state,” noted CBF West Coordinator Glen Foster.
Multiple factors enabled the pandemic to spread across vast region, covering northeastern Arizona and northwestern New Mexico, added Greg Long, executive director of Selah Navajo Ministries and a longtime leader in CBF West.
5 Ways to Improve Policing
There have been growing demands for reforms of police departments across the nation. I was part of a group of denominational leaders who worked with a professor who was a former policeman and now teaches criminal justice at the university level.
We met with him for several hours asking him all sorts of questions about what research has shown to be most productive things that police departments can do to improve. Most of our questions were directed toward larger police departments. However, we were reminded by the professor that many police departments are quite small and not all of these recommendations would be applicable. Also, these are recommendations related to taking a long-term approach to improving police behavior.
In Matamoros, González provides hope—and shoes—to fleeing immigrants
Thirty-five desperate children from Colombia, Venezuela and Nicaragua limped into Pastor Eleuterio González’s refugee shelter in Matamoros, Mexico, last Saturday.
"The children arrived dehydrated and with callouses on their feet, because—like their parents—the coyotes forced them to hand over their sneakers and shoes if they had nothing to pay with," said González, pastor of Iglesia Valle de Beraca in Matamoros and the main contact between the immigrants and the Tamaulipas state government.
Webinar with Pastors on Racism
Is 2020 a pivot point in U.S history? Will the momentum for changing how Americans see race—and repair the damage of 401 years of racism—become a movement? Five Southwest pastors examine this moment and the church’s role in it.
Pray for Dreamers, work for immigration reform, Convención webinar urges
Although the Supreme Court’s recent ruling on DACA—Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals—provided temporary relief for young immigrants, their future remains uncertain, and the United States desperately needs immigration reform, participants in a bilingual webinar insisted.
Convención Bautista Hispana de Texas, or the Hispanic Baptist Convention of Texas, sponsored a two-part webinar, first in Spanish and then in English—“DACA & Dreamers: What’s Next?”—June 23 in the shadow of the high court’s DACA decision.
Preying on fear, pandemics spark hatred, violence and injustice
Across the ages, pandemics have packed punitive punches:
From 1347 to 1351, the black death swept across Europe. Mobs scapegoated Jews, murdering thousands.
In the early 20th century, the Spanish flu spread throughout the world, and millions died. In the United States, the pandemic spawned racial and social unrest, prompting the deaths of many African Americans in what has been called the Red Summer of 1919.
El Dios que ve
Servir y satisfacer las necesidades de los refugiados puede ser un poco más problemático en estos días, ya que las iglesias y los negocios están cerrados y se nos pide que seamos socialmente distantes. Los refugiados son muy hospitalarios y quieren que te sientes y tomes una taza de té con ellos, pero ahora llevo una máscara y guantes y dejo las cosas en la puerta y salgo rápido.
Refugee pastor: Migrant Protection Protocols do not protect, but harm
A pastor who fled Central America because of religious persecution now feels like a pawn in U.S. politics.
Because of the U.S. government’s Migrant Protection Protocols—also known as MPP and “remain in Mexico”—he languishes just south of the U.S.-Mexico border. Based on the persecution he and his family endured for their Christian faith, he hopes they will be granted asylum in the United States. But because of MPP, they must wait out the process in Mexico.
“Sheriff” Sosa protects immigrants from virus
Refugees in Palomas, Mexico, are assured of getting care for possible COVID-19 infections, thanks to the attention and faithfulness of Rosalío Sosa.
Sosa is pastor of Iglesia Bautista Tierra de Oro in El Paso and director of Red de Albergues para Migrante, a network of 14 immigrant shelters in the north central Mexican state of Chihuahua.
Mexican cartel hunts coyotes; encounters shepherd
Mexican drug cartel enforcers went hunting “coyotes” in the desert but found a shepherd instead.
Lorenzo Ortiz, director of El Buen Samaritano Migrante Ministry, cares for refugee asylum seekers in the states of Coahuila and Tamaulipas in northeastern Mexico. Fellowship Southwest supports Ortiz and El Buen Samaritano, providing monthly funds for food and other necessary items, as well as operational funds for the shelters and the ministry.
Maybe it's not so personal
I am a white-presenting Puerto Rican woman. I will soon marry a black man. My college roommates are black. My ancestors are black. My future children will be black. Due to this, the recent events with David McAtee, Tony McDade, George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and Ahmaud Arbery have had a certain sting.