Stories to inspire, challenge and educate.

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

RGV Cameron Vickrey RGV Cameron Vickrey

Migrant kids receive letters of encouragement

College students from North Carolina wrote and mailed letters of encouragement to migrant children and their families. The Latinx Student Association from Mars Hill University wanted to do something for the children at the border, since they are unable to travel there due to COVID-19 restrictions.

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Cameron Vickrey Cameron Vickrey

Our magical, disastrous world of bubbles

Bubbles are a big hit at my house. With 6-, 4-, and 2-year-olds, we keep a bottle of bubbles close at hand. We have all sorts of bubble wands, a bubble gun and a battery-operated handheld bubble machine that can churn out bubbles by the hundreds.

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spanish Cameron Vickrey spanish Cameron Vickrey

En la frontera, un Día de la Madre lleno de quebranto y dolor

¿Te imaginas pasar el Día de la Madre perseguida, huyendo y escondiéndote en un refugio abarrotado?

Así pasarán este Día de las Madres cientos de madres migrantes en la frontera entre Estados Unidos y México. Muchas de ellas han encontrado protección en los albergues del Buen Samaritano Migrante, dirigido por el pastor Lorenzo Ortiz, el cual es respaldado por el ministerio de ayuda a inmigrantes de Fellowship Southwest.

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Laredo/Nuevo Laredo Cameron Vickrey Laredo/Nuevo Laredo Cameron Vickrey

On the border, a Mother’s Day filled with heartache and sorrow

Can you imagine spending Mother’s Day fleeing persecution and hiding in a crowded shelter?

That’s how refugee mothers on the U.S.-Mexico border will spend this Mother’s Day. Many of them have found protection from Fellowship Southwest’s immigrant relief ministry partner El Buen Samaritano Migrante, led by Pastor Lorenzo Ortiz. It operates four refugee shelters—three of them in Nuevo Laredo, Mexico, just across the border from Laredo, Texas, and arguably the most dangerous city in North America.

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Social Justice Cameron Vickrey Social Justice Cameron Vickrey

Voting rights and the ninth commandment

It shouldn’t feel so hard to write about voting rights in a way that will not offend partisan sensibilities. It didn’t used to be this way. In 2006, Congress reauthorized the 1965 Voting Rights Act with a unanimous vote in the Senate, 98-0. It was promptly signed into law by President George W. Bush, who did so in honor of Fanny Lou Hamer, Rosa Parks and Coretta Scott King, with Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton in attendance.

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Cameron Vickrey Cameron Vickrey

Are you an Evangelical?

A few years ago, I noticed many students in my Baptist history class would get perplexed or defensive when I said Baptists were greatly influenced by the Evangelical revivals that swept across the English-speaking world during the 18th and 19th centuries.

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Matamoros Cameron Vickrey Matamoros Cameron Vickrey

Stranded in Mexico: Persecuted by Cuba, abandoned by America

Two years after fleeing Cuba, Erika Meléndez,* Roberto Ortiz and their daughter, Yolanda, still live in hiding in Matamoros, Mexico—across the border from Brownsville, Texas. Back in Cuba, they endured persecution for crimes they did not commit, so they fled their homeland as potential “enemies of the state.”

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Laredo/Nuevo Laredo Cameron Vickrey Laredo/Nuevo Laredo Cameron Vickrey

Migrant flow increases need for shelters; here is how you can help

The escalating flow of refugees to the U.S.-Mexico border has expanded the demands on shelters operated by El Buen Samaritano Migrante, Fellowship Southwest’s partner in northeastern Mexico.

El Buen Samaritano Migrante recently opened a third refugee shelter in Nuevo Laredo, immediately across the border from Laredo, Texas. That brings the ministry’s shelter total to four—three in Nuevo Laredo and another in Saltillo, about 185 miles south.

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Social Justice Cameron Vickrey Social Justice Cameron Vickrey

Statement on Chauvin's Conviction

The leaders of Fellowship Southwest commend the jury in Derek Chauvin’s murder trial for their commitment to truth, fairness and decency. We’re grateful they “believed their eyes,” refused to look away and confirmed what the world witnessed when we watched the video of this murder.

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Elket Rodríguez, Policy Cameron Vickrey Elket Rodríguez, Policy Cameron Vickrey

Let’s set the record straight about what’s happening at our southern border

Irony accompanies migratory birds as they fly past my window near the U.S.-Mexico border. They come and go as they please. No drama in their lives. No spectacle on their journey.

Yet down here on the ground, reports about unaccompanied migrant children arriving at that border and migrant families being released into the United States have become a daily trend. The humanitarian tragedy that compels migrants to journey hundreds of miles to our border has been exploited for political benefits. Here in the Rio Grande Valley, we are accustomed to this.

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Cameron Vickrey Cameron Vickrey

New life & new light

Last weekend we celebrated resurrection, the defeat of death, light breaking into the darkness and hope from despair. Easter was a long time coming. Scripture teaches that Jesus rose on the third day, but it feels as though we’ve endured darkness much longer.

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Piedras Negras, Brownsville Cameron Vickrey Piedras Negras, Brownsville Cameron Vickrey

The border changes, but pastors’ love remains constant

Despite ever-changing conditions, disappointments and even setbacks, pastors Carlos Navarro and Israel Rodríguez offer unchanging Christian love to refugees along their sections of the U.S.-Mexico border.

Navarro leads Iglesia Bautista West Brownsville near the southern tip of Texas, just across the Rio Grande from Matamoros, Mexico. Rodríguez pastors Primera Iglesia Bautista in Piedras Negras, across the river 320 miles northwest, on the Mexican side of the border.

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Border Overview Cameron Vickrey Border Overview Cameron Vickrey

Faces of immigrant children mirror the face of the immigrant Jesus

Immigrant children dominate my memory.

Fellowship Southwest’s immigrant relief ministry operates shelters and feeding programs along the U.S.-Mexico border. I’ve met hundreds of refugees—mostly from Central America, but also from South America, the Caribbean and even Africa—in Mexican cities from the Pacific Ocean to the Gulf of Mexico.

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