Stories to inspire, challenge and educate.

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

El Paso/Juarez Jay Pritchard El Paso/Juarez Jay Pritchard

Renovated building provides temporary home for immigrants in Juarez

Thanks to your support, Fellowship Southwest is helping Iglesia Bautista Tierra De Oro get immigrants off the streets of Juarez, Mexico.

For several months, FSW has provided funds so that the El Paso church could rent what we thought was a single building across the Mexico-U.S. border in Juarez. Jorge Zapata, associate coordinator of CBF Texas and director of FSW’s Immigrant Relief Ministry, recently traveled to the region and toured IB Tierra De Oro’s immigrant shelters with Pastor Rosalio Sosa.

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Brownsville Jay Pritchard Brownsville Jay Pritchard

The world lands on Brownsville church’s doorstep

On Halloween, when princesses and goblins and super heroes rang doorbells across the United States, visitors from all across the world landed on Iglesia Bautista West Brownsville’s doorstep.

Twenty-six immigrants—from Bangladesh, Cameroon, China, several Central American countries, and Cuba—received a warm welcome on a frigid South Texas day, reported Pastor Carlos Navarro.

IB West Brownsville is one of three refugee respite centers in Brownsville, just across the Rio Grande from Matamoros, Mexico. For months, the church has provided gentle care and the message of Christ to immigrants seeking asylum in the United States. 

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Brownsville/Matamoros, El Paso/Juarez Jay Pritchard Brownsville/Matamoros, El Paso/Juarez Jay Pritchard

Warm wishes aren’t enough; we’re providing blankets

As winter’s frigid blast buffeted the U.S.-Mexico border this week, pastors pleaded for blankets to comfort immigrants seeking asylum in the United States. 

“Very cold today; 37 degrees,” Carlos Navarro, pastor of Iglesia Bautista West Brownsville wrote in a text on Tuesday. Later, in a phone call, he said churches that provide food and shelter for refugees are desperate to supply blankets, hoodies and other warm clothes. Rosalio Sosa, pastor of Iglesia Bautista Tierra De Oro in El Paso, and Rogelio Pérez, pastor of Iglesia Bautista Capernaum in Lomito, Texas, echoed those sentiments.

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Brownsville/Matamoros Jay Pritchard Brownsville/Matamoros Jay Pritchard

Immigrant needs multiply in Matamoros

A surge of refugees and falling temperatures have created a new set of needs for churches ministering on the border at Brownsville, Texas, and Matamoros, Mexico, reported Fellowship Southwest immigrant ministry volunteer Ray Furr.

Furr and his spouse, Jeni Cook Furr, coordinate volunteers for Fellowship Southwest’s Immigrant Relief Ministry. This week, he traveled to the border, where he met with two pastors who provide significant ministry to asylum seekers on the border—Carlos Navarro of Iglesia Bautista West Brownsville and Rogelio Pérez of Iglesia Bautista Capernaum. 

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Laredo/Nuevo Laredo Jay Pritchard Laredo/Nuevo Laredo Jay Pritchard

Fellowship Southwest supports Ortiz’s immigrant ministry in Nuevo Laredo

The level of dire human need—and opportunity for gospel ministry—has expanded in Nuevo Laredo, Mexico, just across the border from Laredo, Texas, reported Jorge Zapata, director of Fellowship Southwest’s Immigrant Relief Ministry.

In fact, the border itself—the bridge over the Rio Grande between Laredo and Nuevo Laredo—has become a focal point of need, explained Zapata, associate coordinator of CBF Texas.

That’s because so many asylum seekers have clustered in Nuevo Laredo, they have overwhelmed the local immigrant shelters, and they’re sleeping on the bridge, he said.

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Jay Pritchard Jay Pritchard

Fellowship Southwest Steering Committee reflects on resurrection

The Fellowship Southwest Steering Committee held its fall meeting this week at First United Methodist Church in Dallas. Two members (pictured below)—Andy Stoker, senior minister at the host church, and Victoria Robb Powers, senior associate pastor at University Park United Methodist Church in Dallas—offered devotional reflections to start each session.

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Jay Pritchard Jay Pritchard

Update on ministries at the border

Because of your help, here are some things happening on the border, and some ways you still can pitch in.

  • Iglesia Bautista West Brownsville was able to update and improve their outdoor showers. IB West Brownsville is one of Brownsville's best refugee shelters. Pastor Carlos Navarro specifically credits Fellowship Southwest for these improvements.

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Jay Pritchard Jay Pritchard

Fellowship Southwest distributes more than $10,000 for immigrant relief

Refugees all along the Mexico-U.S. border feel the love of Jesus, thanks to you. 

This week, Fellowship Southwest sent more than $10,000 in aid to six ministries serving immigrants from the Gulf of Mexico to the Pacific Ocean. FSW’s Immigrant Relief Ministry supports border congregations that provide food, shelter and gospel hope to refugees crowded on their doorsteps.

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Jay Pritchard Jay Pritchard

Shoes for refugees

This photo is from our trip to Piedras Negras, Mexico. A mother washed the shoes her children wore on their journey from Central America and hung them to dry so they can be worn again. We saw men wearing too-small women's flip flops. We saw women with blistered feet wearing shoes unfit for walking. And we saw many barefooted children.

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Jay Pritchard Jay Pritchard

Ministering to “four types of refugees”

Lorenzo Ortiz, pastor of Iglesia Bautista Buen Samaritano in Laredo, Texas, is one of Fellowship Southwest’s close partners in ministry to refugees on the border. 

Pastor Lorenzo lost his previous church when the congregation he pastored grew weary of serving immigrants in their community. But he and his wife, Oralia, felt called by God to continue. So, they fed more than 6,000 refugees out of their Laredo home across three months. Fellowship Southwest, which already was working with them, continued its support. And Samaritan’s Purse also came alongside to keep the ministry going.

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Jay Pritchard Jay Pritchard

Te presento a quienes conocí en la frontera

Saludos desde la frontera entre Estados Unidos y México, donde un equipo de Fellowship Southwest ha cruzado de lado a lado esta semana conociendo tanto a los refugiados como a quienes les sirven. Hemos escuchado sus historias; reflexionado, soñado y orado juntos sobre la mejor manera de apoyarles. 

Nuestros corazones están llenos de dolor, gloria y gratitud mientras procesamos todo lo que hemos visto y oído. Nos apenamos por los refugiados, por la violencia y el sufrimiento que los llevó a huir de sus países de origen. Nos hemos deleitado en la gloria de verdaderos santos que se sacrifican para ministrarles en el nombre de Jesús, día tras día, semana tras semana, mes tras mes. Y estamos agradecidos por cómo Dios está trabajando incluso a través de esta horrible crisis para acercar a gente a experimentar la fe y el amor de Jesús.

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Jay Pritchard Jay Pritchard

Meet the people we met on the border

Greetings from the U.S.-Mexico border, where a Fellowship Southwest team has spent part of this week crossing back and forth—meeting the people, both the refugees and those who serve them; listening to their stories; and thinking and dreaming and praying about how we can help them. 

Our hearts are full of grief, glory and gratitude as we process all we have seen and heard. We grieve for the refugees—for the violence and suffering that prompted them to flee their homelands. We have basked in the glory of saints who sacrifice to minister to them in Jesus’ name, day after week after month. And we are grateful for how God is working even through this horrible crisis to bring people to faith by experiencing the love of Jesus.

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Jay Pritchard Jay Pritchard

Anchored Love Ministries shares Christ with refugees on the Mexico-U.S. border

The love of Jesus anchored a weekend mission project that served immigrant refugees on the Mexico-U.S. border Aug. 9-10. Anchored Love Ministries, founded in 2003 to reach and minister to women and their families, particularly Hispanics, sponsored the event. Last weekend marked Anchored Love Ministries' third project in the Rio Grande Valley, noted Executive Director Sandra Dubon Cisneros. Previous trips took the group to Guatemala, Peru, Spain, Mexico, North Carolina, elsewhere in Texas, and other parts of the United States.

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Jay Pritchard Jay Pritchard

Rio Grande Valley coalition organizes to show hospitality to “angels”

An ecumenical Protestant/evangelical coalition has organized to “feed the hungry and welcome the stranger” along the U.S.-Mexico border in the Rio Grande Valley on the southern tip of Texas. The Hebrews 13:2 Coalition of the RGV held two organizing meetings—one primarily involving Baptists and the other more broadly ecumenical—in McAllen, Texas, Aug. 5. Hebrews 13:2 says, “Do not forget to show hospitality to strangers, for by so doing, some people have shown hospitality to angels without knowing it.”

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Jay Pritchard Jay Pritchard

God’s love blesses Navajo Nation through CBF West missions project in Arizona

The love of God permeated a portion of the Navajo reservation in Arizona the first weekend in August. It looked like children smiling through painted faces, bales of hay stacked in pickup trucks and backpacks stuffed with school supplies. It sounded like laughter, plus sermons, hymns and prayers offered in at least three languages. It smelled like frybread and desert vegetation. And it felt like summer sunshine, tempered by breezes flowing down the mountains.

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Jay Pritchard Jay Pritchard

El Paso church ministers to refugees; suffers loss in mass shooting

An El Paso congregation continues to experience the joy of serving others in Jesus’ name, even as it suffers the grief of incalculable loss. First, thanks to your generosity, Iglesia Bautista Tierra de Oro can maximize how it serves refugees and immigrants in Juarez, Mexico, and in El Paso, as well.

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Jay Pritchard Jay Pritchard

A Lament for El Paso and for Mexico

Gunshots that slaughtered at least 22 people in El Paso, Texas, last Saturday echoed around the world. They particularly reverberated in the hearts of residents of the American Southwest.

The murderer (Let’s refuse to placate the perversion of mass murderers by repeating their names.) drove from the Dallas-Fort Worth area to El Paso specifically to kill people from Mexico. A manifesto he apparently posted on an online forum claimed he wanted to stop a “Hispanic invasion.”

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Jay Pritchard Jay Pritchard

Flooded churches receive flood-recovery funds

Do you remember when we told you about the churches in Harlingen, Texas, which sustained damage when a 15-inch rain deluged the city in four hours—and then when other congregations showed up to help them? 

In the past few days, a couple of those churches have felt tangible love from the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship. Jorge Zapata, associate coordinator of CBF Texas, delivered checks for $5,000 each to the worst-damaged congregations—Iglesia Bautista Avondale and Iglesia Bautista Emanuel.

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