Stories to inspire, challenge and educate.

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

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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Cameron Vickrey Cameron Vickrey

The Ides of March, 2021—even better than expected

“Beware the Ides of March,” Julius Cesar is warned in Shakespeare’s famous play.

But March 15, 2021, was a day I had been looking forward to for weeks—and one for which I had hoped and prayed for even longer. This was the day I would start as executive director of Fellowship Southwest. Even though I’d start by sitting down at my desk in my home office just as I had for a full year thanks to the pandemic, this first day was still exciting. It did not go as planned.

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El Paso/Juarez Cameron Vickrey El Paso/Juarez Cameron Vickrey

FSW’s partner Sosa constantly adapts to changing migrant conditions

Overcrowded shelters and constant movement of migrants from other sections of the U.S.-Mexico border are testing the limits of El Paso, Texas, and Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua, reported Pastor Rosalío Sosa, a key member of Fellowship Southwest’s immigrant relief ministry.

Relief organizations, such as Sosa’s Red de Albergues para Migrantes (Migrant Shelter Network) also are feeling the strain, noted Sosa, pastor of Iglesia Bautista Tierra de Oro in El Paso.

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Cameron Vickrey Cameron Vickrey

Churches must pave the way for women pastors

“Not for Ourselves Alone” focuses on the women’s suffrage movement and two of its primary leaders, Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton.

Anthony and Cady began working as a team in 1848, and the movement consumed the rest of their lives. When both died, the right to vote for women had not yet been accomplished. Yet their work was not in vain, and women did eventually obtain that right to vote.

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Harlingen Cameron Vickrey Harlingen Cameron Vickrey

Love follows need: Migrants receive care in the Harlingen airport

A simple question launched a ministry that touched more than 100 refugees in a single week and promises to serve thousands of lonely, vulnerable people in the months to come.

An immigrant named Carina approached Eddie Bernal, a worker helping travelers at a gate at Valley International Airport in Harlingen, at the southern tip of Texas, just miles from Mexico.

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Border Overview Cameron Vickrey Border Overview Cameron Vickrey

Fellowship Southwest’s pastor-partners adapt as “Remain in Mexico” shifts

Pastors who form the backbone Fellowship Southwest’s immigrant relief ministry are adapting to meet the needs of asylum seekers as immigration policy rapidly changes.

The U.S. government is cooperating with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees to implement Phase One of a program to roll back the Migrant Protection Protocols—better known as the "Remain in Mexico" policy—designed to begin processing migrants on the U.S.-Mexico border.

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Cameron Vickrey Cameron Vickrey

Learning to live into hope: lessons from the African American church

February is a month for us to remember the contributions that African Americans have made to the our society, which are many. I would like to take a narrower focus and examine the wonderful contributions that African American churches have made for the wider Christian community. Certainly, we could go to the major contributions that African American churches have made in civil rights, homiletics, education, and music. However, the thing that most impresses me with African American churches is how they live into hope.

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Cameron Vickrey Cameron Vickrey

Immigration webinar details impact of policy changes, advocacy opportunities

The U.S. government has taken a humane turn in its immigration policy this year, but the situation for refugees seeking asylum in the United States remains dire, participants in a webinar about immigration reported.

“Take Action for Immigrant Justice in 2021,” sponsored by the Interfaith Immigration Coalition, outlines changes in U.S. immigration policy either implemented or promised by the Biden-Harris administration.

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