Pastor Helen offers loving care to refugees

DALLAS—Six months is the allotted time for refugee assistance to those resettled in the United States from countries torn by conflict and oppression, said Helen Cingpi director of Texas Baptists’ Project: Start. 

That’s six months to begin to learn a new language, secure a job to support a family, learn how to navigate complex systems of support, settle into a new home with differing customs, religions, expectations, foods, often having had little access to formal education in countries of origin. 

Six months to become American. Six months is not enough. So, enter Pastor Helen. 

Cingpi has an office, but she spends her days in the community with the clients she serves in the Vickery Meadows neighborhood of Dallas.  

Helen Cingpi shares tea and business with Mohamed Tahir and his son. (Photo/Calli Keener)

Home visits

On this day, she visited the apartment of Mohamed Tahir. Tahir has four children, ranging in age from 4th grade to 4 weeks old, two girls and two boys, and a wife. 

Tahir welcomed Cingpi in—shoes left at the door, as is the custom in Myanmar where he and Cingpi are from. Tahir spread a mat on the floor and invited her to sit for tea.  

Cingpi was there to check on the family’s needs. But she said it was customary for all her clients to offer refreshments anytime she came by, so each visit takes some time. 

Everyone took turns entertaining and holding the baby to give mom a break, while Tahir prepared refreshments. Tahir’s wife spoke only Rohingya. So, Cingpi conversed solely with him in their shared language, Burmese.  

The Tahirs 2-year-old son played with a toy car and, wide-eyed but silent, kept a close watch on his visitors.

“He is growing up speaking three languages, Burmese, Rohingya and English with his older sister,” Tahir explained through Cingpi’s interpretation.  

But Tahir said he will not speak to anyone but his sister. 

Tahir served pizza along with the tea, followed by fried jackfruit Mrs. Tahir had made for Ramadan. And Pastor Helen set about on the mission she came to accomplish.  

Tahir pulled out a stack of official letters, written in English. He had applied for food assistance and Medicaid for the family, Cingpi explained. Medicaid was approved, but they were yet to have SNAP benefits reinstated. Cingpi made a call to Texas Health and Human Services to help facilitate reinstatement. 

She explained how sometimes the representative on the other end of the line would allow her to translate, but this time, they had to wait for an official interpreter to be called in.  

Permissions for the interpreter were required of Tahir in English, with the representative tersely stating only he was allowed to speak.  

After close to an hour on the phone, the representative’s tone softened, and she agreed to reopen the mistakenly closed application. 

Then Cingpi made another call to learn the steps the family will need to take to secure the second daughter’s registration in kindergarten next year.  

The Tahirs have been in Dallas six years. He works the night shift at a pharmaceutical company.  

“The job he does requires a lot of precision,” he said. “And many people have recently lost their jobs for making mistakes. 

“But it’s easy for me,” he said matter-of-factly.  

The job may be easy, but making the small salary stretch is difficult, Cingpi explained: “He has health problems requiring monthly medications at a cost of $300. On top of that, he has the rent on their one-bedroom apartment, the car.” 

While the family qualifies for Medicaid, Tahir personally does not, she explained.  

He had no formal education in Myanmar and speaks little English, so opportunities to make more money are limited, Cingpi said. 

Yet, Tahir said he feels welcome in the United States.  

“Back in Myanmar, even though we were a long time in the country, back further than grandparents, we were not accepted. The Rohingya were not accepted as citizens. But in America, they accept us as citizens of the country,” he said. 

They are happy and grateful to be here, Tahir said. “But at the same time, he is sad for Myanmar,” where all their extended family still lives.  

“They used to live in a village there, where they were born, but because of the war, the parents, their mothers, now have to live in a refugee camp in Rakhine state,” Cingpi translated. 

Before leaving, Tahir allowed prayer for he and his family to be successful in obtaining the assistance they need and for their daughter’s registration and transition into kindergarten to go smoothly. 

Cingpi said she tries to do home visits at least twice a week. Her work might also require helping with transportation to appointments. The women usually do not drive, and husbands often work during the day, she said. 

Sometimes she helps fill out forms or makes referrals to other agencies who are better qualified than she to help with immigration questions, always seeking opportunities to share Christ with the clients she serves, as they are open to hearing the gospel, she said. 

Culture and Community

Cingpi, Lorri Lambreth and Terri Heard discuss the Thingyan water festival dance, with other Burmese and Park Cities women in the background at Northwest Community Center. (Photo/Calli Keener)

From the Tahirs’ apartment, Pastor Helen went to the weekly women’s group she helps host with several women from Park Cities Baptist Church.

This group of around a dozen Burmese women and their preschool-age children convenes every Tuesday at the Northwest Community Center—a ministry of Northwest Bible Church which hosts a low-cost clinic, meeting spaces and other aid to the many refugees in Vickery Meadows. Most of the ladies who attend this group are Buddhist.  

It was heritage week, so Cinpgi changed into her celebratory longyi, a traditional cloth tied to make a long skirt, to recognize the Myanmar New Year water festival, Thingyan. The women brought traditional Thingyan dishes to share. Tea leaf salad, sticky rice, noodles, rainbow salad, a yellow bean puree, and a variety of desserts attested to the hospitality and culinary expertise of the Burmese culture.  

Terri Heard and Lorri Lambreth, from Park Cities, lead the group each week, and Cingpi translates. Once a month, they meet in Lambreth’s home for a cooking day.  

A group from Park Cities also purchased crockpots for all the ladies. Women from the church host five Spanish-language women’s groups, as well.  

Heard said she had been wanting to start a group for the Burmese, because she knew they were the second-biggest language group in the area, behind Spanish, and she knew of Pastor Helen.  

She reached out to Cingpi about starting the group, and they had been blessed to meet with the women since then, she said. 

“I wanted to be intentional about making connections,” Heard said. “Otherwise, our paths would never cross.” 

Cingpi came to the United States nine years ago to study Bible. She graduated from Christ for the Nations Institute in 2015.  

Cingpi has served as director of Project: Start for four years and as pastor of Full Gospel Assembly International Ministries Church since August 2016, when the prior pastor returned to Myanmar. She has two young daughters and could not do all that she does without her husband’s commitment to supporting her in ministry, she said.

Mark Heavener, director of international ministries for Texas Baptists, said, “The work of Project: Start happens on a one-on-one basis, in which the director of Project: Start works with clients till the need is met.” 

Averaging 300 clients per year, “the refugees always ask, ‘Why you are helping me?’ And Pastor Helen tells them, ‘Jesus,’” Heavener said. 

Spiritual questions and follow-up meetings with clients continue until the gospel is understood in that clients’ culture and context. 

Project: Start is an initiative to meet needs and build relationships, while sharing the love of Jesus, Heavener said.  

 




Longtime international missions leader Clyde Meador dies

RICHMOND (BP)—Longtime International Mission Board leader Clyde D. Meador died April 26. He was 79.

Clyde Meador 300
Clyde Meador

Meador worked closely with four IMB presidents as a top advisor and executive vice president, and as the mission organization’s interim president from August 2010 to March 2011 and again briefly in 2018 before the election of current President Paul Chitwood.

“I thank God for the life and friendship of Clyde Meador,” Chitwood said. “I first met Clyde when I began serving as an IMB trustee in 2002. Over the following years, I saw Clyde was a leader who had earned the trust of everyone—trustees, administrators and missionaries.”

When Chitwood was elected IMB president in November 2018, he asked trustees’ approval for Meador to remain in the president’s office as interim executive vice president during the transition.

In February 2019, at the election of Todd Lafferty as IMB’s executive vice president, Meador agreed to remain as an executive adviser. In the subsequent months, he filled several key interim roles as the organization’s new executive team was solidified.

“When I began serving in my current role, Clyde’s willingness to walk alongside me as I built out our leadership team was a wonderful blessing,” Chitwood said. “Humble, gifted servants like Clyde are evidence of God’s favor upon the IMB.”

Meador retired in May 2016 but returned in 2018 to serve as IMB’s interim president. When he retired a second time on June 12, 2020, after more than 45 years of service to Southern Baptists, John Brady, the IMB’s vice president for global engagement, called Meador “the glue” holding the IMB together.

“Clyde has inspired leaders at all levels across the IMB to abide in Christ as we face the burdens and challenges of leadership,” Brady said. “He kept our eyes focused on doing our part to complete the Great Commission with the wonderful end vision from Revelation 7:9.”

‘Step-by-step obedience in the same direction’

Meador was known—along with his wife, Elaine—among missionary teams and staff for steady, unflappable leadership. Yet, long years of service appear to testify to the Meadors’ simple steps of obedience even more than to their strategic insights and leadership.

Long walk of obedience to God characterizes Meadors’ missionary service
Clyde and Elaine Meador pause to pray with Indonesian believers in the late 1970s. (IMB PHOTO)

“When you look at Clyde’s and Elaine’s lives, it’s step-by-step obedience in the same direction towards the Father’s will for their lives,” Brady said.

The Meadors began their careers with IMB in 1974 when they were appointed as missionaries to Indonesia. For the next 14 years, the couple served in a range of roles, with Clyde starting as a church planter in Medan, then training pastors and lay leaders in Semarang and later Purwokerto. In 1987, he became the mission administrator in Jakarta.

After the couple had spent almost 14 years in Indonesia, the government began refusing visa renewals for missionaries who had served more than 10 years and kicked the Meadors out.

“We were grief-stricken,” Clyde Meador later recalled. “[Elaine] fell apart immediately when we left Indonesia. I fell apart about six months later … a delayed grief … until I realized what it was and took it to the Lord, and there was healing.”

There was also a new ministry. Later that year, Meador took on leadership of the Southern Asia and Pacific Itinerant Mission. Former IMB President Jerry Rankin, who served as the Meadors’ area director at the time, noted that he saw in Clyde Meador’s leadership of these teams that he “had sound theology and was a strategic thinker.”

More than a decade before mission strategists had introduced concepts like creative access, Rankin said, the Meadors were leading roving teams of missionaries who moved in and out of South Asian countries on training circuits for local pastors and lay leaders.

The couple moved in the early ’90s to leading missionary teams across the South Asia, Pacific and Oceania regions as an associate director and then an area director—and eventually moved to serving as a steady right hand to four presidents.

Honored commitments

Former IMB President Tom Elliff, who led the organization from 2011 to 2014, said there is an easy, trusting way about Clyde and Elaine Meador.

“It is the authentic nature of Clyde’s and Elaine’s hearts that stands out most clearly to me,” Elliff said. “You can trust they will do what they say they will do. If they say that they are going to pray for you, they will. … They remember their commitments. They don’t take these things lightly.”

Rankin, who worked with Clyde and Elaine Meador for much of their mission careers, said the couple’s success as leaders also resided in their willingness to follow.

“You cannot be an effective leader without being an effective follower,” noted Rankin, whose 17-year presidency ended with retirement in 2010. “Clyde … can enjoy fulfillment and joy in knowing that he is contributing to making things happen. He didn’t seek the credit. He doesn’t need that.”

In 1998, Rankin asked Meador to lead a massive new area which included all IMB missionary teams working in Central and Southern Asia. This followed Rankin’s decision in 1997 to rework the IMB’s structure and focus, an initiative called New Directions.

“New Directions launched a redeployment of our mission force to focus on engagement, to change our ethos to one of church planting, and to understand people groups,” Rankin said. “Clyde’s fingerprints are all over that.”

Meador later called it perhaps the most significant missiology change in modern IMB history.

‘Humble leadership … made it happen’

In 2001, Rankin asked the Meadors to move to Richmond and join the office of the president as part of Rankin’s leadership team.

“I had a vision for where I knew we needed to go,” he said. “But it was people like Clyde and Elaine, with their humble leadership, that helped make it happen.”

Elliff, who followed Rankin as president, also noted Meador’s humility: “Clyde was so good in working with me. He would humbly come along behind and say: ‘You have the plan. Let’s talk about how I can help implement that plan.’ Not everybody is willing to do that, but Clyde could always see the big picture because, for him, it’s about the kingdom.”

Meador was born in Arkadelphia, Ark., and considered Albuquerque, N.M., his hometown. He received a Bachelor of Arts from Grand Canyon College in Phoenix; a Master of Divinity from Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Kansas City, Mo.; and the Doctor of Ministry from Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Fort Worth.

Before his missionary appointment, Meador worked in the information technology field in New Mexico, Colorado and Arizona. He also was pastor of Tracy (Mo.) Baptist Chapel and First Baptist Church, Weston, Mo.

Meador is survived by his wife, Elaine; two grown children; and four grandchildren.




Obituary: John Marshall Edwards

John Marshall Edwards, longtime Texas Baptist pastor, died March 12 on his 85th birthday. He was born in Salisbury, N.C., on March 12, 1939. He responded to God’s call to enter full-time ministry while attending a revival with friends during his senior year at Newton County High School in Covington, Ga., where he graduated in 1957. At Baylor University, he was the president of the Freshman Baptist Student Union Council, president of the Ministerial Alliance, missions chair of the Baptist Student Union Executive Council and member of Student Congress. While a student at Baylor, he also served as pastor of Mountain Baptist Church in Gatesville. He met Doris Dillard in 1958. After their first date during a Latham Springs Baptist Encampment retreat, he told his cabinmates he had just dated the girl he planned to marry. They married Aug. 18, 1960. He graduated from Baylor University in 1961, earning his undergraduate degree with a major in religion and minors in English and history. He went on to earn a Bachelor of Divinity degree from Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in 1966. While he was in seminary, he was pastor of First Baptist Church in Troy and Meadow Oaks Baptist Church in Temple. After graduating from seminary, he was pastor of Windsor Park Baptist Church in Austin; Columbus Avenue Baptist Church in Waco; First Baptist Church in Columbia, S.C.; First Baptist Church in Conroe; St. Andrews Baptist Church in Columbia, S.C.; and First Baptist Church in Blowing Rock, N.C. During his time in Austin, he founded the Fellowship of Christian Athletes group at Reagan High School and served as chaplain of the school’s football and baseball teams. While serving in Waco, he founded and led the popular “Wholeness of Life” series, a lunchtime Bible study attended by about 400 members of the business and professional community. He continued leading the “Wholeness of Life” series with a weekly attendance of about 1,000 while in Columbia, S.C. He also served interim pastorates at First Baptist Church in San Marcos and First Baptist Church in Kingsland. In 2005, he was named pastor emeritus of First Baptist Church in Blowing Rock. He served as the speaker for the annual mission meetings in Taiwan, Hong Kong, Zimbabwe, Honduras, Guatemala, Indonesia and Kenya. He served on the board of trustees of Baylor University and was chair of the board of trustees at the University of Mary Hardin-Baylor. He was awarded an Honorary Doctor of Humanities degree by the Baptist College at Charleston, S.C., in 1982. He is survived by his wife of 63 years, Doris Dillard Edwards; son Scott and his wife, Mary K; daughter Cindy; five grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.




Survey reveals Gen Z attitudes about Israel and Hamas

Protests on U.S. college campuses opposing Israel’s continuing military campaign against Gaza reflect the views of a significant minority of Gen Z voters, a recent online survey revealed.

One-third of U.S. voters age 18 to 24 believe Israel does not have a right to exist as a nation in the Middle East, compared to only 10 percent of voters overall, according to a recent survey by RMG Research.

Summit Ministries, a conservative Christian organization committed to “equip and support rising generations to embrace God’s truth and champion a biblical worldview,” commissioned the RMG Research survey.

The comparative public opinion poll showed more than three-fourths (77 percent) of voters overall said Israel has a right to exist as a nation in the Middle East, while a little more than half (56 percent) of Gen Z voters agreed.

The RMG Research survey revealed Gen Z voters are significantly less likely than voters overall to view Hamas as a terrorist organization.

While 8 out of 10 (81 percent) of American voters overall agree with the United States classifying Hamas a terrorist group, the ratio drops to 6 out of 10 (61 percent) among voters ages 18 to 24.

A majority of American voters overall support Israel’s military campaign against Hamas, but that reflects a minority view among Gen Z voters.

The survey showed 58 percent of American voters believe Israel’s campaign against Hamas is just. Only 21 percent of voters overall said they believe Israel’s superior military strength and its wealth makes the war unjust.

In contrast, 42 percent of surveyed voters ages 18 to 24 said they consider Israel’s campaign again Hamas to be just. Almost half (47 percent) believe Israel’s greater wealth and military power makes the conflict unjust.

Campus protests spread

A state trooper yells for protesters to move back during a pro-Palestinian rally at the University of Texas Wednesday April 24, 2024 in Austin, Texas. Protests Wednesday on the campuses of at least two universities involved clashes with police, while another university shut down its campus for the rest of the week. (Mikala Compton/Austin American-Statesman via AP)

More than 500 students participated in an April 24 classroom walkout at the University of Texas in Austin organized by the Palestine Solidarity Committee. Students demanded the university divest from manufacturers that supply Israel with weapons used in strikes on Gaza. Authorities arrested at least 34 people after police unsuccessfully tried to disperse protesters.

The walkout at the University of Texas followed a series of pro-Palestinian protests at Ivy League universities including Columbia, Yale and Harvard.

RMG Research conducted its online survey of 1,002 registered voters March 20 and 21. The sample was lightly weighted by geography, gender, age, race, education, internet usage and political affiliation to reflect the population of registered voters more accurately. The overall margin of error is 3.1 percent. The margin of error for voters ages 18 to 24 is 4.4 percent.




Biden signs foreign aid package for Ukraine, Israel

WASHINGTON (BP)—President Joe Biden signed a $95 billion foreign aid package April 24 that drew bipartisan support for Israel, Ukraine and other allies, and pledged to begin sending weapons and military equipment to Ukraine within hours.

“It’s going to make America safer. It’s going to make the world safer. And it continues America’s leadership in the world,” Biden said after signing the bill.

The foreign aid package gives Ukraine $60.8 billion, Israel $26.4 billion and the Indo-Pacific region $8.1 billion. A portion of Israel’s allocation, $9 billion, will provide humanitarian aid to Gaza.

Brent Leatherwood, president of the Southern Baptist Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission, welcomed the foreign aid package secured with bipartisan support encouraged by House Speaker Mike Johnson. Southern Baptist leaders and some other evangelicals had been urging Johnson to push the measure through.

“Our nation has long supported those combating oppression and terrorism, and the horrors we have seen across the globe demand a response,” Leatherwood said.

“Whether responding to an active war in Europe, a terrorist event in Israel, or the threat of an invasion by China, American engagement is essential for protecting vulnerable lives, churches and communities threatened by tyrants. This nation still has the capacity to do tremendous good, and it did so this week.”

House Speaker Johnson commended

Leatherwood is among several evangelicals who have commended Johnson for his about-face in moving the aid package forward, despite blocking its progress months earlier as Republicans focused on border security and other national concerns.

Ultimately, Johnson promoted the aid as crucial to helping U.S. allies in pushing back communists and terrorists who threaten national and international security.

“This week a fellow Southern Baptist, House Speaker Mike Johnson, helped ensure America will not stand idly by and let the illegal and unjust invasion directed by Vladimir Putin go unchallenged,” Leatherwood said.

“I am confident our Baptist brothers and sisters in Ukraine, and their fellow Ukrainians, are deeply appreciative of his leadership and the bipartisan resolve shown in Washington that has met the challenge of this moment.

“For the last two years in Ukraine, Russian bombs have obliterated hundreds of Baptist churches, religious liberty has been extinguished in areas under Russian control and countless innocent lives have been lost at the hands of Russian invaders. These atrocities deserve our strongest condemnation, and thankfully, Southern Baptists have been at the forefront of calling attention to them.”

Johnson risked the support of a handful of Republican members of Congress opposed to foreign aid who called for his ouster, but most Republicans supported the measures.

The Senate passed the four-bill package April 23 after the House’s approval late last week, but Congress struggled for months to find a bipartisan solution to support allies in the military crises that Southern Baptists have said threaten religious freedom and democracy beyond Europe and the Middle East.

Ukraine’s allotment includes $13.8 billion for weapons, $9 billion worth of economic assistance as forgivable loans, and other monies to replenish U.S. weapons stockpiles.

Ukrainian president thanks U.S.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky thanked the United States for the aid in a post on X, formerly Twitter.

“I am grateful to President Biden, Congress, and all Americans who recognize that we must cut the ground under Putin’s feet rather than obeying him, as this is the only way to truly reduce threats to freedom,” Zelensky wrote April 24. “Together, we can ensure this.

“Regardless of what anyone says, we are gaining the support we need to continue protecting lives from Russian attacks.”

Israel’s allocation includes $4 billion for the Iron Dome and David’s Sling missile defense systems in the Israel-Hamas War. Israel, the only U.S. ally in the Middle East, launched war against Hamas after the terrorist group killed 1,200 civilians in an unprecedented attack on Israel Oct. 7, and is also pushing back attacks from Iran and Hezbollah.

The allocation to the Indo-Pacific region would help U.S. allies in combatting Chinese aggression, including $3.3 billion for submarine infrastructure and development, and $1.9 billion to replenish U.S. weapons provided to Taiwan and other regional allies.

China’s religious persecution includes beating and imprisoning religious leaders and others on fabricated charges, attempting to ban entire religious groups, and limiting public preaching, proselytizing, conversions, religious literature and broadcasting.

China relentlessly has persecuted Christians in its war on Ukraine, banning religious groups, shuttering houses of worship, and abducting, detaining, imprisoning and torturing religious leaders.

Included in the package is a ban on TikTok in U.S. app stores unless the platform’s Chinese owners divest of their shares within a year. China’s strong communist arm jeopardizes the personal data of some 170 million Americans who use the platform, including teenagers and business owners, supporters of the ban assert.




Baylor’s Disability & Church conversation emphasizes belonging

Example of a visual schedule, helpful for accessibility. (Photo/Calli Keener)

WACO— Erik Carter challenged participants at a Baylor University conference to be catalysts for change—so all really do belong in faith communities.

Carter is executive director of the Baylor Center for Developmental Disabilities, host of “Disability and Church: A Conversation” on April 17. 

“How might we be communities of all the peoples—where members with and without disabilities live, learn, work and worship?” Carter asked. “And serve and support one another. … Where all families can flourish together in faith and life.”

Carted began with his personal testimony. Growing up in a time when disabled people generally were segregated in schools or clubs, he had limited opportunity to know and befriend people with disabilities. 

“It was as if our schools, workplaces, and even our churches were perfectly designed in ways that kept us apart,” Carter explained.

In this environment, Carter had come to believe his value lay in accomplishments and abilities—until he went to a summer camp his freshman year in college where he “stumbled into new friendships with several young men and women with intellectual disability at a mountain camping program.”

‘Glad abandon’ speaks

Wayne, Margaret and John Ray loved him without any concern for his accomplishments, and he felt belonging, Carter said. Beyond belonging, Carter observed the “glad abandon” with which they worshiped and their deep love for Jesus. 

“John Ray could not speak, and Wayne often struggled with words,” Carter said. “They trusted wholeheartedly. They knew for sure they belonged to God. And how much I longed to have that same assurance! … And so, I followed their lead and gave my life to Christ.” 

Carter said this story should not be surprising. 

“Indeed, it is an ordinary story of how God’s grace flows through God’s people to transform lives. All of God’s people. No asterisks. No exceptions,” he continued.

Offering insights from two decades of research focused on “what it means to create communities in which believing and belonging abound together,” Carter described five prevailing portraits for community, which have generally progressed through history “from exclusion toward embrace.”

Erik Carter describes prevailing portraits of community. (Photo/Calli Keener)

Portraits of community

Providing a visual model of each, Carter explained exclusion was the prevailing model of the 1970s, where individuals with disabilities still were excluded from much of community life—especially those with intellectual or developmental disabilities. There were holes in this model. 

“Communities were incomplete,” Carter said.

In the 1970s and ’80s, separation was the prevailing model—where programs were created for children and adults with developmental disabilities, but “usually, apart from anyone else without the same label. In most communities, everyday life was still lived away from people with disabilities,” Carter said.

In the 1990s and 2000s there was a shift toward integration, “but many of the opportunities that emerged still involved a certain separation,” he said. People with disabilities were placed “near, but not really among, their peers without disabilities. There is a huge difference between near and among,” Carter said.

The present-day model is one of inclusion, Carter said—“where a growing national focus is on the full inclusion of people with disabilities in the same classrooms, clubs, colleges, church activities and community groups as anyone else. Inclusion. From being apart to among and with one another.” 

Josh Baker reads Psalm 67:1-5. (Courtesy Photo/Gena Baker)

But, Carter said, there is still one more model churches should be striving toward—beyond integration or inclusion—belonging. In this model, Christians learn to see each other in fundamentally different ways, “as a diverse community in which each person has equal and immeasurable value … knitted together—woven into relationship.”

None of these models is actually just historical—it is “living history; our present landscape….you will find each of these varied portraits—[exclusion, segregation, integration, inclusion and belonging]—across the more than 26,000 churches and scores of Christian schools throughout Texas,” Carter said.

But the research has identified elements of belonging, Carter said, “from the lived experiences of hundreds of young people with intellectual and developmental disabilities and their families who have been part of our various studies over the years. 

 “It is a question we have posed directly to them. How do you know you belong in your faith community?”

Elements of belonging

“Belonging is experienced when they are present, invited, welcomed, known, accepted, supported, cared for, befriended, needed and loved,” Carter said their responses showed.

Carter recalled his own testimony of being welcomed, befriended and loved by Wayne, Margaret and John Ray as a teen and how they shared their faith with others—people with disabilities doing ministry.

 “Three people who might have been overlooked by society—and by the church—as a promising avenue through which Jesus might call others to him. And yet the opposite is certainly true,” Carter said, explaining that their gifts were real, attractive and a conduit for God’s life-changing grace.

Carter opened table talks, observed by Baylor Center for Developmental Disabilities representatives for the purpose of study. Participants reflected on and discussed ways the churches represented were doing well or could do better or differently in each of the ten areas identified as necessary for experiencing belonging.

Panel discussion moderated by Grace Casper, program coordinator for the BCDD (center). Madi Snow-Gould (left) and Aaron Jones (right) share experiences with disability in church. (Photo/Calli Keener)

Table discussions allowed families of disabled people and disabled attendees, themselves, to discuss their experiences with church and disability.  

One participant, whose adult son is autistic, shared a positive story of inclusion at their church where they have been members for years.

She said everyone at church knows her son by name and that “she’s really only known as his mom.” They both feel known and loved there, she said. 

But she said she would like to worship in a space where she feels less concerned about how an unexpected behavior from her son might impact other worshippers. 

She has a vision for beginning a disability-inclusive service, much like other churches might have non-English speaking language services. And one of her pastors and two other church members who want to help support and participate in this ministry vision becoming reality joined her for the talk.

Others at the table shared how their experiences at church had not always been welcoming. Kirk and Gena Baker shared of times they’d been asked to remove autistic children from worship, who were not being excessively disruptive.

They’ve forgiven these offenses, they said. But they expressed how crushing it was to be treated this way by brothers and sisters in Christ. 

Yet they rejoiced in God’s answer to 27 years of prayer, when they moved to Waco less than two years ago and learned about the Baylor Collaborative for Developmental Disabilities beginning.

Thriving congregations initiative

This talk was part of an interdisciplinary project funded by a grant from the Lilly Endowment’s Thriving Congregations Initiative. The project is led by Baylor’s Truett Theological Seminary, Baylor Center for Developmental Disabilities and the Center for Church and Community Impact in the Diana R. Garland School of Social Work. 

 “The project focuses on helping congregations embrace young people with disabilities, mental health challenges and chronic illnesses,” said Angela Reed, Truett Seminary’s associate dean for academic affairs and principal investigator of this project, in an earlier interview.

“We’re going to need congregations that are very interested in young people and supporting young people,” she continued.

“Early this summer, we will be announcing how interested churches can apply to join our first learning cohort,” Carter said.

Jason La Shana, director of the Baylor Collaborative on Faith & Disability, explained the selected cohort of churches will enter into a “multi-year mutual learning process around disability and mental health in the church,” in a follow-up email.

 




Kachin Baptist leader detained after brief release

A Kachin Baptist leader in Myanmar who briefly was released from prison last week after 16 months behind bars was taken into custody again by authorities and continued to be detained a week later.

Hkalam Samson, former president and general secretary of the Kachin Baptist Convention in Myanmar, was released from Myitkyina Prison in Burma’s Kachin State on April 17 one year after receiving a six-year prison sentence. A few hours later, he was taken back into custody (CSW Photo)

Hkalam Samson, former president of the Kachin Baptist Convention, was released from Myitkyina Prison on April 17 as part of an amnesty marking the end of the Thingyan New Year festival in Myanmar, also known as Burma.

Hours later, authorities arrived at Samson’s home to take him into custody.

“It was a Gethsemane moment for many of us,” said Roy Medley, executive director of the Burma Advocacy Group and general secretary emeritus of the American Baptist Churches USA.

Samson’s wife, Zung Nyaw, initially was allowed to accompany him, and a member of the Kachin Peace-Talk Creation Group also was taken into custody at the same time.

As of April 24, Samson—chairman of the Kachin National Consultative Assembly and critic of human rights abuses by the ruling Burmese military—still was detained for questioning at a house on the grounds of Myitkyina Prison.

Ah Le Lakang, general secretary of the Kachin Baptist Convention USA, reported April 18 Zung Nyaw was allowed to leave the prison grounds. At least at that point, she and other family members were permitted to visit Samson.

Initially, Ah Le Lakang said, Samson’s wife said police told them he was being taken into custody for his own security. Later, they said he was being detained for questioning.

Samson first was arrested on Dec. 5, 2022, at the Mandalay International Airport while attempting to travel to Bangkok for a medical procedure.

He was sentenced last year to six years in prison on charges of unlawful association, defaming the state and terrorism.

At the time, Baptist World Alliance General Secretary Elijah Brown called Samson’s sentence “a grave injustice” and called on churches to pray for an end to his “unjust imprisonment.”

Samson was president of the Kachin Baptist Convention in Myanmar from 2018 to 2022, and he previously served two terms as the convention’s general secretary, from 2010 to 2018.

‘Arbitrary disregard for human rights’

Medley called Samson “a courageous spokesman for religious liberty” who continued to minister to others even during his 16-month imprisonment.

On behalf of the Burma Advocacy Group, Medley contacted Rashad Hussain, U.S. Ambassador-at-Large for International Religious Freedom; Tom Andrews, U.N. Special Rapporteur for Burma; Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky.; and Sen. Todd Young, R-Ind., a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

In addition to advocating with government officials for Samson’s release, Medley also requested prayer.

“Let us remember in our prayers his wife and family, for this is yet another tragic experience of arbitrary disregard for human rights and the rule of law,” he wrote in an email.

“We must not lose heart, but instead, we must redouble our prayers and efforts for his release and for the release of all in Burma from the shackles of tyranny.”

EDITOR’S NOTE: In an email to the Baptist Standard received late evening on April 24, Ah Le Lakang reported Hkalam Samson continues to be detained in a guest house at the prison compound. He wrote: “His family members can visit and have meals together. His relatives are allowed to speak with him on the prison grounds. His attorney can speak with him but has yet to be in person. He is still being held for questioning. The spokesperson, Zaw Min Thun, the Burmese Military, told BBC Burmese that Dr. Samson was called back for the peace-building process.  PCG leader Lamai Gum Ja is still with Dr. Samson. He can go home and come stay with Dr. Samson anytime.”




On the Move: Pierce

Will Pierce to First Baptist Church in Edmonson as pastor. He previously was pastor of youth and young families at Port Caddo Baptist Church in Marshall.




Russell Moore lauds Baptist emphasis on the personal

DALLAS—Baptists’ emphasis on “the personal” may be the greatest gift they offer in the 21st century, ethicist Russell Moore, editor-in-chief of Christianity Today, told a group at Dallas Baptist University.

Baptists’ historic emphasis on religious liberty for all grows out of a healthy respect for individual personhood and the voluntary response of each person to the gospel, Russell Moore told a gathering at Dallas Baptist University. (Photo / Calli Keener)

Moore—a lifelong Baptist who now worships in a nondenominational church—delivered the April 22 Baptist Distinctives Lecture, sponsored by DBU’s Center for Baptist History and Heritage.

“I am convinced that the Baptist distinctives that endure and that are most resilient are also the ones that are most needed right now,” said Moore, former president of the Southern Baptist Convention’s Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission.

Various denominations have contributed particular emphases to the broader body of Christ, and Baptists’ greatest contribution may be their commitment to “the nature of the personal,” he said.

Baptists’ emphasis on voluntary faith, believers’ baptism, religious liberty for all people and other distinctives “boil down to the central concern that God does not bring people into the kingdom nation by nation, family by family, village by village or tribe by tribe, but one by one.”

In an individualistic culture, the tendency often is to “over-correct into a kind of collectivism,” Moore observed.

‘My name is Legion’

“In reality, the Baptist emphasis on the personal is a corrective to individualism and is actually necessary for genuine community,” he said.

Moore pointed to Jesus’ encounter with a demoniac among the tombs, as recorded in Mark 5.  Jesus asked, “What is your name?”

The demoniac responded, “My name is Legion, for we are many.”

That reply was “similar to the response of the entire world right now,” Moore observed. While isolated in many respects, people feel crowded and deprived of individual personhood.

He cited a tech specialist who has noted social media drives people into a “hive” mindset all the time. Users constantly are seeking to identify their online “tribe” and attempting to identify what they need to say to remain a part of the tribe.

“Ironically, all that connection all of the time leads to disconnection and loneliness,” Moore said.

He recalled a conversation with pastors who were speculating about why so many left the ministry in 2021 and even those who remained felt “broken” in many ways.

One of the ministers observed many people persevered through 2020, thinking things would return to “normal” after the COVID-19 pandemic ended and the election cycle was over, only to discover the old “normal” was gone.

‘Ripe for authoritarian movements’

In what passes for “normal” now, many people are trapped in a “middle-school” mentality of feeling unsure about their identity while being hyper-sensitive to what others think about them, Moore observed.

“The world is like that right now, and that means we are ripe for disintegration, for authoritarian movements, for personality cults, for every kind of attempt to fill that void,” he said.

To offer deliverance to an unclean and untouchable demoniac, Jesus had to “break with the community,” Moore said.

“Community is an important aspect of what it means to be human, and an important aspect of what it is God has put together in the church,” he said. “Community on its own, though, ultimately breaks down.”

Baptists’ emphasis on the “personal calling by name” as part of the gospel invitation helps create a healthier community, Moore observed. He lamented the loss of public altar calls.

“There was something about the altar call that spoke to every person in the congregation, even if no one responded, that said: ‘Remember you are a sinner. Remember that you—not just we, but you—are redeemed. And remember that all of your neighbors—no matter how hostile you believe them to be, no matter how far gone you believe them to be—could, in an instant, be your brother and sister in Christ. You do not give up on them,’” he said.

“It was a way of merging the individual and the community together.”

Religious liberty respects personhood

Baptists’ historic emphasis on religious liberty for all grows out of a healthy respect for individual personhood and the voluntary response of each person to the gospel, he observed.

“Religious liberty is not simply an ancillary and self-protecting idea for Baptists,” Moore said. “Religious liberty comes out of that emphasis upon the personal—upon the word Jesus has given to us, ‘You must be born again.’”

The gospel depends on an individual response to God’s call, and Christian identity is not dependent on national identity, he noted.

“The gospel cannot be applied to people like a state-issued driver’s license,” Moore said. “The state cannot regenerate a person. The state cannot make a person a Christian. The state can only make a person a pretend Christian.”

He pointed to the threat of Christian nationalism in a variety of contexts, including Vladimir Putin’s use of the Russian Orthodox Church, as well as Christian nationalist movements emerging throughout Europe and in the United States.

Christian nationalism is “not Christian orthodoxy taken to an extreme,” he asserted. “It’s instead what Christians at one time would have called ‘modernism.’ It is the idea that one can make a Christian simply by changing external circumstances, rather than having that person approach God through the mediation of the shed blood of Jesus Christ.”

Authoritarian leaders “have realized that the best way to coopt the power of personal authority is to say, ‘If you don’t obey me, you’re disobeying God,’” Moore said.

“Once you have taken a Christian understanding of reality and hollow it out, you end up with something that can be tossed aside altogether.”

‘Community needs the personal’

At their best, Baptists understand the gospel comes “conscience-to-conscience” and demands a response at the personal level, he insisted.

“Community needs the personal. You cannot refuse to see the trees for the forest,” Moore said.

Real community—where every person is viewed as a valuable contributor who is given genuine responsibility—breaks down tribalism, he asserted.

Baptists have an important message “for a 21st century that is plagued by a sense of belonging to everyone and thus belonging to no one,” he said.

“The Baptist movement has a great deal to contribute if we can remember who we are,” Moore said.




Around the State: B.H. Carroll marks 20th anniversary

B.H. Carroll Theological Seminary marked its 20th anniversary at a gala in Frisco April 21, recounting God’s promise and provision for the seminary. First conceived a decade before its founding as a way to reach bivocational pastors and those who could not afford to uproot and attend an in-residence seminary program, the seminary officially launched in 2004 with the aim of being affordable, accessible and achievable. Carroll founder and its first president, Bruce Corley, recalled preparing a paper in 1993 about changes in seminary education. “Among the things I talked about were the kinds of students attending seminary,” Corley said. “There were 40,000 bivocational ministers in Baptist life, scattered all over the United States, and very few of them ever attended seminary. They were in small churches. So that is at the heart of the genesis for Carroll—to make seminary education, like the one I enjoyed, available to many, many students.” B.H. Carroll President Gene Wilkes said Carroll’s continued success is intertwined with the success of East Texas Baptist University. The university and seminary announced their intent to merge in February 2023 after nearly a year of conversations. The merger will be completed in 2025. Founders Jim Spivey, Budd Smith and Stan Moore also participated in the video presentation. 

From left to right are Stephanie Tarigan ’16, Hannah Richard, Allie Barnett, Braelyn Askew, Scott Eddy, Zachary Blizel and Deaven Connelly. (HPU Photo)

Students and a faculty member from Howard Payne University attended the Texas Section meeting of the Mathematical Association of America in March. The meeting, held at Texas State University in San Marcos, featured more than 70 presentations by plenary speakers, undergraduate students, graduate students and faculty. Scott Eddy, instructor of mathematics, sponsored the group. Hannah Richard, senior mathematics major, presented her research on mathematical spirals at the meeting. “This is the first time we’ve had an undergraduate presenting in the 10 years I’ve been at Howard Payne,” Eddy said.

Shanna Akers (UMHB Photo)

The University of Mary Hardin-Baylor selected Shanna Akers as dean of the Scott & White School of Nursing. She will begin her role at UMHB on June 1. Akers spent 13 years at Liberty University as a professor, chair, associate dean and administrative dean and five years as dean. Akers has been engaged in accreditation efforts across various disciplines, including nursing, health care simulation, respiratory therapy, forensic science and social work, and she has contributed to accreditation and reaffirmation processes. With nearly 30 years of experience as a registered nurse, Akers has served in prominent roles within both public service and professional organizations. She was a gubernatorial appointee to the Virginia Health Workforce Development Authority Board and commissioner on nursing education for the Virginia Nurses Association. 

Elisabeth R. Kincaid (Baylor Photo)

Baylor University appointed Elisabeth R. Kincaid as director of the Institute for Faith and Learning, effective Aug. 1. She also will serve as associate professor of ethics, faith and culture in Baylor’s Truett Theological Seminary and affiliate faculty member in the department of management in the Hankamer School of Business. A native Texan, Kincaid is a theologian, lawyer and business ethics scholar, with experience in finance and campus ministry. She currently holds the Legendre-Soule Chair in Ethics at the College of Business in Loyola University New Orleans, where she also serves as the inaugural director of the Center for Ethics and Economic Justice. As director of the Institute for Faith and Learning, Kincaid will oversee the annual Baylor Symposium on Faith and Culture and the Crane Scholars Program, guide the institute’s current programming of faculty formation experiences and contribute to the development of new initiatives for faculty spiritual well-being. “The IFL’s integration of faith across academic disciplines has inspired much of my own administrative vision and especially my own interdisciplinary research,” Kincaid said. “I’m thrilled and honored to serve as a leader in the next phase of the IFL’s service across the Baylor campus.” Kincaid has held faculty positions in Christian ethics at the Aquinas Institute of Theology and Nashotah House Theological Seminary, where she also served as acting academic dean. She is married to S. Thomas Kincaid III. They have two children.

Dallas Baptist University recognized two doctoral graduates with an Outstanding Dissertation Award during the April 18-19 Christian Leadership Summit. Kalie Lowrie of Brownwood received the award for an outstanding Ed.D. dissertation. Lowrie, assistant vice president for alumni relations at Howard Payne University, wrote “Spiritual Leadership Behaviors Among Leaders at Faith-Based Nonprofit Organizations.” Brian Bayani of Navasota was recognized with the award for an outstanding Ph.D. dissertation. Bayani, a licensed paramedic and master peace officer, wrote “Exploring the Relationship Between Moral Inquiry, Supervisor Leadership Style, and Suicidal Behavior in Texas Paramedics.”

NATS Choral Competition. (HCU Photo)

Houston Christianity University students excelled at the annual Vocal Competition for Greater Houston Chapter of the National Association of Teachers of Singing, held April 6 on the HCU campus. Around 250 singers from Greater Houston area universities, colleges and high schools competed in classical and musical theatre categories. Led by David Kirkwood, chair of HCU’s music department, students performed in the competition and dominated in the classical categories, which were divided by grade level and gender. HCU had six first place winners, including Joshua Yeates, Jonathan Lee, Nicholas Pappas—under the direction of Kirkwood—and William Carr, Kynadi Law and CeliaKate Mellett—under the direction of Rachel Elizabeth De Trejo. In addition to prize money and certificates, HCU’s first place winners have been invited to sing at the NATS Winners’ Recital on May 19, on the HCU campus.

Louis Markos, Robert H. Ray Chair in Humanities and author of Atheism on Trial: Refuting the Modern Arguments Against God, sits surrounded by his other publications. (HCU Photo)

Houston Christian University students, faculty and staff gathered for the sixth annual Author Celebration. This celebration, organized by HCU’s First Lady Sue Sloan, recognizes faculty members with scholarly publications and creative endeavors released in the past year. More than 13 authors displayed work representing fiction, theology, education, psychology, history and literature. “HCU is really good at combining the truth of the gospel with cultural engagement. All the authors here today have connected the truth of Christianity to real world problems that it can help solve,” said Austin Freeman, assistant professor of apologetics and author of Tolkien Dogmatics: Theology through Mythology with the Maker of Middle-Earth. The Author Celebration included winners of the “Piece of the Past” student essay contest, which encourages students to engage with artifacts from one of three on-campus museums. Undergraduate student contest winner Claire Wilkerson commented on the event: “I appreciate the opportunity the university gives to celebrate the work of authors on campus. The example of faculty and staff who have created so many influential works encourages me to reflect more deeply and communicate this more creatively.”




Faith leaders praise House approval of foreign aid

WASHINGTON (RNS)—Conservative religious leaders who had been imploring Speaker Mike Johnson to back assistance for Ukraine and Israel celebrated the House of Representatives’ passage of foreign aid packages April 20, clearing the way for the measures to go to the Senate.

Brent Leatherwood, president of the Southern Baptist Convention’s Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission, was among those lobbying Johnson—himself a Southern Baptist—on behalf of Baptists in Ukraine and the United States concerned about the plight of Ukrainian Christians.

“That is why we asked Speaker Johnson and congressional leaders to come together to meet the challenges of this moment,” Leatherwood said in a statement to Religion News Service. 

“In the House passage of bills relating to Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan, the Speaker sent a strong message to autocrats and terrorists alike that our nation will take a stand to support vulnerable lives and oppose the tyrants who threaten them.”

The push on Ukraine included an April 17 meeting between Johnson, Pavlo Unguryan—an evangelical and political leader from Ukraine—and a Ukrainian citizen whose wife and child were killed in a March attack on Odesa.

Praise for Johnson’s efforts

Gary Marx, president of the new coalition Defenders of Faith and Religious Freedom in Ukraine and former executive director of the Faith and Freedom Coalition, praised the House leader’s “courage and his willingness to listen to the cries of Ukraine’s faithful.” 

In the same statement posted on social media, he added, “As we celebrate this victory, we recognize that there is still more work to be done.”

On April 18, Marx had written to Johnson on behalf of the coalition seeking congressional support for Ukrainian Christians. The letter also was signed by Rick Santorum, a former Republican senator and chairman of Patriot Voices, and Adam Hamilton, a prominent United Methodist pastor in Kansas, among more than a dozen other faith leaders.

“We are pained and shocked by the widespread, vicious persecution of our brothers and sisters in Ukraine by Russian forces,” reads the letter. “Russia is waging a war against Evangelical and Protestant Christians at a scale likened to ‘cultural genocide.’ These Christians are being persecuted, harassed, intimidated, imprisoned, tortured, mutilated, and killed—simply for worshipping God as they see fit.”

Other leaders of political groups that largely represent evangelical Christians pressured Johnson to shepherd support for Israel through a Congress with contingents on the right and left opposing the aid package. Twenty-one Republicans joined 37 Democrats in voting against the Israel aid bill.

In a virtual press conference organized by Johnson’s staff as the House prepared to vote, Sandra Hagee Parker, chair of the Christians United for Israel Action Fund, lauded the speaker, praising his “fortitude” in pushing for the “vital issue” of Israel aid.

“The enemies of America are watching and waiting to see what America does, and we should do everything in our power to have Israel’s back,” Parker said. 

She echoed Johnson’s remark that Russia, China and Iran constitute a new “axis of evil,” hearkening back to former President George W. Bush’s State of the Union address in which he called out Iran, Iraq and North Korea.

Anyone who doubts that the three states are mounting a “united front against the enemies of the West is simply sticking their head in the sand,” Parker said.

Ralph Reed, founder of the Faith and Freedom Coalition, said at the press conference the United States must “rush” to Israel’s defense.

Reed suggested Johnson, despite threats from some GOP members to challenge his speakership, ultimately will be celebrated by conservative Christians if the bills are passed.

“We must never waver, and once this bill passes and it gets to the president’s desk and it’s signed, Speaker Mike Johnson will get a lot of credit for moving through a minefield to get this done,” Reed said.

A more diverse group of a dozen religious leaders who had been seeking support for the people of Gaza sent Johnson a note of thanks for his efforts, coupled with concern about final passage of the aid they sought.

But please ensure humanitarian aid

“We, as a group of diverse faith leaders, thank you for including in the legislation you have brought before Congress life-saving humanitarian aid for civilians in Gaza as well as humanitarian and refugee assistance for other areas facing wars and famine,” wrote the leaders of Christian, Jewish and Muslim organizations in an April 19 letter. “Please ensure that humanitarian aid is included in the bill that is passed.”

Signers of the letter included Walter Kim, president of the National Association of Evangelicals; Bishop Vashti McKenzie, president and general secretary of the National Council of Churches; Mary Novak, director of NETWORK Lobby for Catholic Social Justice; Rabbi Jonah Pesner, director of the Religious Action Center for Reform Judaism; and Barbara Williams-Skinner, co-convener of the National African American Clergy Network.




Baylor conveys land to BGCT for Baptist Student Ministry

Baylor University conveyed to the Baptist General Convention of Texas the deed for a parcel of land set to house the new 12,000-square-foot Baptist Student Ministry building in an April 18 ceremony in Waco.

The property, more than an acre in size, is located at the intersection of Daughtrey Avenue and 4th Street, adjacent to the university campus.

During the ceremony, hosted in the university’s Hurd Welcome Center, Baylor President Linda Livingstone and BGCT Executive Director Julio Guarneri signed and exchanged documents to finalize the transfer of the future Baylor BSM site.

“What a significant milestone we reached,” Guarneri said. “This action demonstrates the administration’s and the university’s commitment to fostering the spiritual life of students on the Baylor campus and to a continued strong partnership between our two entities.

“We are very grateful for this gift and believe it is an investment in the kingdom of God and in eternity. We are committed to being good stewards of this trust.”

Initial $3 million goal met

In accordance with a 2023 agreement between the related institutions, Baylor agreed to convey the land to Texas Baptists once an initial fundraising threshold of $3 million was met.

Jerry Carlisle (left), president of Texas Baptists’ Missions Foundation, visits with Baylor University President Linda Livingstone and BGCT Executive Director Julio Guarneri. (Texas Baptists Photo)

Jerry Carlisle, president of Texas Baptists’ Missions Foundation, notified President Livingstone in March the campaign milestone had been achieved. Upon notification, officials worked to finalize the transfer, which culminated in handshakes and smiles at the signing.

 “Today begins an exciting chapter in the long relationship between Baylor University and the Baptist General Convention of Texas as Baylor officially conveys a parcel of land to the BGCT for construction of a new Baptist Student Ministries Building,” Livingstone said.

 “The BSM center will provide another sacred space on our campus for Baylor students to grow spiritually, know God and make him known globally. It is an honor to join Dr. Julio Guarneri for this special ceremony that upholds Baylor’s Christian mission and distinct place in higher education and further strengthens Baylor’s historic ties to Texas Baptists.”

God moving on the Baylor campus

Mark Jones, director of the Center for Collegiate Ministry with Texas Baptists, attended the signing and spoke of the Baylor BSM’s emergence and the movement of God taking place on the university campus.

Baptist General Convention of Texas Executive Director Julio Guarneri and Baylor University President Linda Livingstone shake hands after the university conveyed to Texas Baptists the deed to a parcel of land where the new Baylor Baptist Student Ministry facility will be built. (Texas Baptists Photo)

“Five years ago, Baylor and Texas Baptists reaffirmed the place of Baptist Student Ministry as having priority status as a student organization at Baylor,” Jones said. “BSM leadership, working with Baylor leaders as well as numerous pastors and volunteers from local churches, has seen a historic movement of God among Baylor students.”

Jones pointed to initiatives like FM72, a four-day prayer and worship experience on campus, and Pathway, a freshman-focused discipleship initiative, as examples of God’s movement.

“The momentum of this movement of God is having an immediate impact on the experience these students have at Baylor as well as a generational impact that will be seen for years to come,” he said.

“A new building for the Baptist Student Ministry will be a vital place for training, worship and leadership collaboration.”

Seeking to raise additional $6 million

Conceptual drawing of the new Baptist Student Ministry center on the Baylor University campus

The Missions Foundation, the group tasked with coordinating the fundraising effort for the expanding campus ministry, set the total cost of the capital campaign at $7 million. An additional $2 million also is being sought to provide an operating and maintenance endowment for the expanding campus ministry.

Carlisle attended the signing, along with TBMF vice presidents Steve Massey and Eric Wyatt. He expressed appreciation to Livingstone, Baylor University and the donors who helped realize the deed conveyance.

“The Missions Foundation is profoundly grateful for the generous donors who want to see a permanent platform for Texas Baptists to share the gospel on Baylor’s campus,” Carlisle said.

“We look forward to gathering the remaining $4 million in gifts for the construction of the building, as well as $2 million to endow the operation of the building.”

Will Bowden, director of the Baylor BSM, was also present for the ceremonial transfer. In January, Bowden gathered students and leaders to pray over the property and share the vision for the new facility.

The Baylor BSM is one of 137 campus ministries coordinated by Texas Baptists.

Additional information about the Baylor BSM, including renderings of the new facility, is available here. To make a gift to support the campaign, contact Texas Baptists’ Missions Foundation at missionsfoundation@txb.org or (214) 828-5343.