Archive for May, 2010
Reaching Out to a World in Need….World Gospel Outreach
The frightened boy waited silently in the cardboard box. Abandoned on the streets of Tegucigalpa, he waited. His four-year-old malnourished body was in dire need of food. His undernourished soul was in greater need of stability and love.
Today, two years after coming to Rancho Ebenezer, this boy is no longer chased by the fear of inadequate nourishment – either physically or emotionally. Security, the hope of a bright future, house parents who nurture him, and most of all, being taught that there is a God who intimately knows and loves him – these are the identifying marks on the beautiful countenance of a very real, six-year-old Honduran boy.
Why do we share this story with you? This child is one of the many reasons for the recent celebration of World Gospel Outreach’s 25th Anniversary. FBC’s own Mike Robinson (Chairman of WGO’s board) and Tim Lundy were on hand in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, this April to share in the festivities. This celebration included a dedication of WGO’s new facility and proclaiming God’s faithfulness for 25 years of ministry at World Gospel Outreach.
For 15 of the last 25 years, you, as the FBC Body, have partnered in the 3-fold ministry of World Gospel Outreach. You have given your financial support, your resources and expertise, your time and prayers, and in many instances, invested your lives full-time. Just look at Mike and Lyn Ferguson. Mike is now the President of WGO. 10 years ago, Mike and Lyn were contentedly pursuing God in the Little Rock area when their daughter went on a summer FSM trip to Honduras. This was the beginning of God dramatically calling the Fergusons into full-time service with WGO. There are many others from our Body who have similar stories: Al and Terry Runnells, Robert and Jennifer Butts, and previously, Pat and Helen DuBose. Other highly involved couples such as Newton and Linda Little and Richard and Linda Goff have given of their resources and expertise to become part of what God is doing to change lives through WGO. Steve Freeman and Dr. Steve Schexnayder of FBC serve on the WGO Board. Dr. Schexnayder has led FBC medical brigade trips for 13 years.
In case you are unfamiliar with WGO, their ministry consists of three components: first, the brigade ministry; second is Rancho Ebenezer; and third, the North American ministry component.
The brigade ministry involves taking medical teams into the most impoverished areas of Honduras and setting up clinics inside local churches. This highly effective ministry serves 30 – 40,000 people each year! Around 35 teams from North America will be mobilized this year and these individuals make sure that each Honduran whose medical needs are served hear a clear presentation of the gospel message. Last year, 2000 decisions for Christ resulted from the brigade ministry. This powerfully illustrates that people can help heal bodies, but only Jesus can heal hearts.
The second component of WGO’s ministry is Rancho Ebenezer. RE is a 90-acre, residential children’s facility where house parents live with and care for children of all ages. RE includes a K-12 school, a coffee plantation, individual “homes” in which the house parents live and care for several children. After each young person graduates, he or she has the option to move to the Bridge House, an interim facility which literally functions as a “bridge into society” for that young adult. Around 40-50 children and/or young adults are housed at Rancho Ebenezer and Bridge House.
Thirdly, the last part of WGO’s ministry is to the local body in North America. By mobilizing teams to come and serve, lives are changed on both sides. Over 1,000 American Christians come to WGO projects to work each year. Mike Robinson describes it this:
“Seeing the opportunity that American church people have to experience the Holy
Spirit and use their lifeskills to be a blessing to others, that excites me the most.
World Gospel Outreach is an outstanding place to have a successful ministry
experience doing meaningful work. It is good because of what it does to change us.”
If you would like to be a part of upcoming ministry opportunities with WGO in Honduras, you can go to their website, www.wgoreach.org. You can also go to FBC’s website, www.FellowshipOnline.com and click on Fellowship Unleashed for short-term opportunities. James 1:27 states the mandate of World Gospel Outreach, “…to care for the poor and especially the widows and orphans.”
Thank you, Fellowship, for believing that mandate is ours.
Leadership Residency Program Celebration
by Linda L. Scisson
On Sunday morning, May 2, 2010, Fellowship Bible Church celebrated the 10-year anniversary of a leadership residency program for future pastors: an ongoing work of Fellowship Associates.
The residency program is a church planting movement (or ministry outreach) that follows our church’s mission statement: “To equip and unleash Christ followers to change the world through lives of irresistible influence.”
Bill Wellons, Director of Church Planting at Fellowship Associates and one of the founding pastors at Fellowship Bible Church, describes the nine-month program on the FA website: It “gives church planters an opportunity to move from theoretical information to practical application;” it covers “leadership principles related to a wide range of topics.”
Steve Snider, President of Fellowship Associates and Fellowship Bible Church Elder, began the celebration by saying:
“God took a dream, a little over ten years ago, a big dream, a dream of finding and bringing leaders from all over the country and even the world to Little Rock, Arkansas, so that we could teach and coach, encourage and equip them to go out and plant churches all over the world — to take Jesus Christ to the world. And, man, has God blessed that dream!”
Many of the Leadership Residency graduates were present for the celebration on the first Sunday in May. The names of 39 graduates from the first nine years of the program appeared in the church bulletin. A bulletin insert added five 2009-2010 graduates, who were ordained (“set apart for a special task or purpose”) at the end of the celebration.
During the celebration, six graduates comprised a panel discussion facilitated by John Bryson, a pastor at Fellowship Memphis (Memphis, TN), a 2002-2003 graduate of the residency program, and a partner with Fellowship Associates in Little Rock.
Three common themes surfaced from the conversations: (1) God’s grace in doing good things at these new churches, (2) the pastors’ commitment and passion to the Kingdom of God, and (3) the men’s appreciation for their training at Fellowship Associates.
Here are a few comments we heard:
“The Lord has been up to a whole bunch of grandiose stuff that’s beyond what we could have ever dreamed about or thought about.” Eric Mason (Epiphany Fellowship / Philadelphia, PA)
“We started a food bank that gives out almost five tons of food each week. We’re going to serve about 20,000 hot meals this year.” Thien Doan (City Lights Church / Long Beach, CA)
“We basically saw a neighborhood that had tons of opportunity, tons of people that were longing for a Gospel community . . . .” Kevin Cawley (Redeemer Fellowship / Kansas City, MO)
We “want to help people in Denver to see the Gospel and understand who Jesus is.” Hunter Beaumont (Fellowship Bible Church / Denver, CO)
In one church, planted 15 weeks ago, the pastor shared that he and other leaders are committed to the urban context, as they want “to revitalize the city and take back some of the areas that have been abandoned.” Dhati Lewis (Blueprint Church / Atlanta, Georgia)
Insofar as evidence of God’s grace, one pastor said he was “most excited about those who have heard about Jesus for the first time ever in their lives.” Dave Furman (Redeemer Church of Dubai / Dubai, UAE)
Here’s a sample of the wisdom these alumni received from Fellowship Associates’ Leadership Residency Program:
“. . . a definition of leadership . . . a deeply biblical definition: taking the initiative for the benefit of others.” Eric Mason (Epiphany Fellowship / Philadelphia, PA)
“The measure of a church is not how many people you have in your building, but the difference that you’re making in your city — if you’re transforming the city.” Thien Doan (City Lights Church / Long Beach, CA)
“A dual faithfulness: To the Gospel . . . and then also to our city and the people we are called to reached.” Hunter Beaumont (Fellowship Bible Church / Denver, CO)
“. . . when you are controlled by a passion for God and His Kingdom, it empowers and just compels you to give it away.” Kevin Cawley (Redeemer Fellowship / Kansas City, MO)
“. . . seeing all the different people [at FA and FBC] use their unique giftedness to pour out, to put all those resources into us.” Dhati Lewis (Blueprint Church / Atlanta, Georgia)
“. . . to really set us up to win. I’m already thinking . . .: How can we give away what God has given us? How can we start our own residency-type program? We’re training the next generation of leaders.” Dave Furman (Redeemer Church of Dubai / Dubai, UAE)
When asked about their dreams or passions . . . :
“My passion is to see lives transformed and the city transformed through the city understanding that their only hope can be found in the Gospel, not in their career or in whatever else they’re trying to build . . . .” Kevin Cawley (Redeemer Fellowship / Kansas City, MO)
“. . . classes on family values, classes on parenting, classes on basic employability.”
Thien Doan (City Lights Church / Long Beach, CA)
“We’re asking God, ‘How do You want us to be more intentional and strategic about training up young, very young, leaders and releasing them for impacting Your Kingdom?’” Hunter Beaumont (Fellowship Bible Church / Denver, CO)
“. . . how can we position ourselves to have leadership development for these men to go back into their homes to be good fathers and husbands and employees . . . .” Dhati Lewis (Blueprint Church / Atlanta, Georgia)
We, the congregation, were privileged to see these pioneers of our faith on May 2, 2010. While these influential men (all young enough to be my sons) were dressed casually (no ties in sight), each wore — as I looked upon them with the eyes of faith — a royal robe of righteousness: thanks, in part, to the training these residents received at Fellowship Associates and Fellowship Bible Church; and thanks, in greater part, to Jesus Christ, the One they serve.
As one 60-year old visitor said to the pastor at the church planted in Dubai: “This Christ that you preach: He is so beautiful!”