Stories to inspire, challenge and educate.
To find stories related to FSW’s four priorities, click on the category below.
Houston church provides timely Advent offering to Matamoros ministry
Shared understanding of weakness and vulnerability prompted a Houston church to support a ministry to refugees in Matamoros, Mexico—just across the border from Brownsville, Texas.
As Pastor Eleuterio González responded to the COVID-19 outbreak that forced him to close an immigrant shelter in Matamoros, Pastor David Deulofeu prepared to bless González’s ministry with winter provisions—warm clothes, blankets, towels and bed linens—as well as food and school supplies.
Gritty, grainy hope makes the rest of Advent possible
As 2020 recedes with each darkening day, families the world over might pretend (who could blame them?) their Advent candles represent the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse.
Imagine little Cindy Lou, reading the initial Advent meditation: “Every night this week, we will light the first purple Advent candle, Death. Next week, we will light the second purple candle, Famine, followed by the pink candle, War. And then, the week before Christmas, we will light the final purple candle, Conquest.”
Mining gratitude from chaos, calamity and confusion
Thinking about Thanksgiving from the sinkhole otherwise known as 2020 seems at once harder and easier than it has in years past.
Unless you got married or had a baby or backed into a positive life-transforming event, you’ll probably agree 2020 is the sorriest year in most of our lifetimes. But it also has revealed—in contrast—the simple pleasures and joys for which we can be thankful in any year.
IB West Brownsville dedicates immigrant respite center, a Christmas prayer answered
God always has a plan, Pastor Carlos Navarro and Iglesia Bautista West Brownsville believe. And the Nov. 15 dedication of the church’s brand-new immigrant respite shelter proves their point.
The shelter—funded almost exclusively by Fellowship Southwest—prepares IBWB to respond to refugee surges on the U.S.-Mexico border, Navarro said.
González ministers amidst Matamoros COVID escalation
The COVID-19 pandemic has stricken the heart of Pastor Eleuterio González’s ministry to immigrants in Matamoros, Mexico, just across the border from Brownsville, Texas.
Brothers in Christ, Navarro and Knox bond to serve immigrants
In the parable of the Good Samaritan, Jesus demonstrates the power of compassion to transcend ethnic and religious differences. Now, 2,000 years later, shared love for immigrants has bound the hearts of Christian brothers from different quadrants of the Baptist denomination.
Carlos Navarro is the Southern Baptist pastor of Iglesia Bautista West Brownsville in Brownsville, Texas, just a mile or so from the Mexican border. Marv Knox is the Cooperative Baptist coordinator of Fellowship Southwest, a network of churches whose territory includes the U.S.-Mexican borderland.
Breathe free, huddled masses; we’re sorry for how our nation treated you
The Statue of Liberty, Mother of Exiles, stands a little taller this week. Her fabled torch shines brighter. Once again, she beckons her welcome to “huddled masses yearning to breathe free.”
Our presidential election signals a change at our borders. Once again, they radiate promise, potential and possibility. Once again, “the homeless, tempest-tost” may dream of opportunity in the Land of the Free and the Home of the Brave.
Fellowship Southwest works among immigrants amassed along the United States’ 2,000-mile southern border. For the past several years, the refugees we have met placed greater faith in Americans than we placed in ourselves.
My Family’s Journey with Racism
I am so appreciative and moved by the contributions made by many clergy, especially younger clergy, regarding systemic racism within the church. These folks are shedding light on how white privilege manifests and maintains itself in religious circles. While I admire and respect the bravery these people show by attempting to address these problems, we cannot talk about white privilege without addressing white exceptionalism.
Take a heartbreaking, inspiring trip with FSW along the U.S.-Mexico border
Despite COVID-19’s grinding misery, pastors who form the backbone of Fellowship Southwest's ministry to immigrants are adapting to an ever-changing refugee flow and escalating needs of some of the world’s most vulnerable people.
María continues to recuperate before returning to Palomas
The heart and soul of Fellowship Southwest’s immigrant shelter in the north-central Mexican village of Palomas is nearing recovery.
María Elena Lao Rodríguez underwent high-risk surgery that spared her life in mid-August. But María, who experienced severe abdominal pain and bleeding while serving other migrants in Palomas, is expected to return to normal by the end of the month.
On the border, Sosa witnesses abuse doled out by U.S. agents
Rosalío Sosa knows how to deal with obstacles organized crime throws at his ministry to refugees on the U.S.-Mexico border. He has helped redeem many cartel members and has rescued young men from their grips.
But Sosa’s ministry—operating 14 immigrant shelters in the state of Chihuahua, Mexico—has been encountering another hurdle, this time placed by the United States government.
Greens give a “mental hug” of farewell after 10 years in Houston
Note: This month marks a transition for longtime Cooperative Baptist Fellowship field personnel Butch and Nell Green. They are moving from Houston, where they have served the past decade, to South Carolina to be near family. This is their farewell letter:
Position Posting for Fellowship Southwest
Fellowship Southwest is seeking applicants and nominations for its next coordinator. FSW is a collaborative ecumenical network organized around shared compassion for people in the U.S. Southwest and Northern Mexico. The coordinator facilitates endeavors that meet human need, provide spiritual comfort, and strengthen congregations and other faith-based partners. The new coordinator will succeed FSW’s founding coordinator and will overlap as coordinator and coordinator-elect for up to one year. The time of overlap will provide opportunity for a seamless transition into the diverse body of ministry and broad constituency that FSW includes.
Through COVID-19, CBF West continues to bless Navajo Nation
COVID-19 continues to pour out its wrath across the Navajo Nation in northeastern Arizona, but CBF West continues to counter with tangible expressions of love and mercy.
Two new vans for ministries on the border
Two pastors on the U.S.-Mexico border have more reliable transportation to serve immigrants, thanks to the generosity of Fellowship Southwest churches.
Pastor Lorenzo Ortiz in Laredo drives across the border every day to serve refugees he shelters in Nuevo Laredo and Saltillo. In order to protect them from the cartels, Ortiz keeps them off the streets by shuttling them in a 15-passenger van. He often shuttles immigrants to and from Nuevo Laredo, Saltillo and Monterrey, a three-hour drive one-way, several days a week.
Pastor Rogelio Pérez pivoted from soccer to a greater goal
Professional soccer beckoned to Rogelio Pérez. Soccer loved his speed, strength and energy. It respected his great mentor and father, Jaime Humberto Pérez Castillo.
But at age 16, Pérez trotted off the soccer field and onto a much different life journey.
Protect immigrants; oppose invasive screening, particularly of minors
How would you feel if the federal government compelled you and your 10-year-old child to submit to an invasive screening that includes DNA testing, iris and face scans, and voice and palm prints in order to obtain a benefit offered freely to others? How would you feel if you had to go through this process after you and your child suffered domestic abuse?
Lower the harps that hang in the willows
Jeremiah 29: 1-14 is written for exiles, for those in captivity. The vast majority of the Jews were uprooted from their birthplace, a land they dominated for centuries until 587 B.C. They were forced to travel roughly 700 miles through the Middle East desert. On their journey, these Jews left behind the provisions that sustained them.
The Babylonian customs were foreign to them. Their language was incomprehensible. The scenery was dull. The weather, the routines and the culture were different. These changes shocked them.
Ode to the rice and the beans
In 1954, Pablo Neruda, one of the most influential Latin American poets, published "Ode to the Onion." The Chilean praised the onion—the cheapest vegetable, and therefore most accessible in the homes of the poor. In doing so, Neruda uncovered Latin America’s soul and identity defined by simplicity, observable in sharing plain food.
Today, in the midst of the pandemic, hurricanes, financial crises, economic and political declines, and the collapse of the health systems of our Latin American siblings, I find wish to honor our many Latino cultures with an ode to the rice and the beans.
CBF Advocacy provides online biblical resources for immigration
What does the Bible say about immigration? And what resources are available to study immigration from a biblical perspective?
The Cooperative Baptist Fellowship’s Advocacy Team for Immigrants and Refugees has curated an array of resources to illustrate what the Bible says about immigration. The team compiled “Biblical Resources on Immigration” to help people of faith think and act biblically.