ÚNASE A NOSOTROS EL 20 Y 21 DE MAYO PARA LA CONFERENCIA DE RESTORE

María
De Muth

escocés
McKnight

Screenshot 2023-01-13 at 1.50.18 PM

Naghmeh
panahi

Reportando la Verdad.
Restauración de la Iglesia.

La iglesia del área de Memphis dona $1K cada semana a organizaciones locales sin fines de lucro

Por Diana Chandler
memphis tn church
Pastor Bartholomew Orr of Brown Missionary Baptist Church in Southaven, Mississippi, appears on local Memphis-area CBS affiliate WREG to announce the church's involvement in the "Community Changers" program. (Video screengrab) 

A Baptist church in Southaven, Mississippi, has been anonymously giving weekly $1,000 gifts to area nonprofits for two years. The church, Brown Missionary Baptist near Memphis, Tennessee, just recently went public about the initiative, which it says has morphed into a partnership to train nonprofits for maximum impact and to promote cooperation between churches and their communities.

The initiative began in November 2020 with the church anonymously giving $1,000 to every nonprofit honored as a Community Changer in an outreach the church negotiated with local CBS affiliate WREG.

Brown Missionary Baptist Church gave more than $100,000 in the outreach before revealing its identity as the donor in November 2022, WREG reportado. The church is continuing to give $1,000 to each group WREG recognizes in the weekly feature, Orr said.

“We didn’t want it to be about Brown, but just all of these other great organizations in the community,” Senior Pastor Bartholomew Orr told Baptist Press. “Sometimes if we’re not careful, it becomes about the organization rather than about the greater good.”

At the church that received $12.5 million in undesignated giving in 2022, according to the Annual Church Profile, Orr said the identity of the Community Changers donor was unknown even to Brown’s membership.

Your tax-deductible gift helps our journalists report the truth and hold Christian leaders and organizations accountable. Give a gift of $30 or more to The Roys Report this month, and you will receive a copy of “Hurt and Healed by the Church” by Ryan George. To donate, haga clic aquí.

brown missionary baptist memphis
Brown Missionary Baptist Church in Southaven, Mississippi. (Video screengrab)

“Our own members didn’t know that we were the ones behind it, as part of our overall outreach that we were doing,” Orr said. But he revealed the church’s identity to the congregation to show members their “giving has been impactful over the last couple of years in this (COVID -19) pandemic, and (to tell members) we couldn’t have done what we’ve done without you.

“And then reveal it so that we can go to the next level as well.”

The next level is to work with Mission Increase, a national group headquartered in Portland, Ore., offering free training to help nonprofits operate effectively and to help churches and other nonprofits and parachurches work together to meet broader goals.

“We’re working now to actually bring Mission Increase to the area,” Orr said in January. “We’re doing this now so that all of the nonprofits in our area can benefit from a company that focuses in on how do you make nonprofits more evangelistic, as well as more equipped in building their donor base, and so forth.”

Scott Harris, a Brentwood (Tenn.) Baptist Church member and Mission Increase’s vice president of church and global engagement, is working with Orr to establish a Mission Increase chapter in west Tennessee. Mission Increase will station a coach in Memphis, Harris said, to train nonprofits in subjects including board governance, strategic planning and fundraising.

Instead of charging the nonprofits for the service, Mission Increase covers its costs through local funders including individuals, churches and foundations. Healthy community nonprofits are a benefit to Gospel outreach, Harris believes.

“Faith-based nonprofits are a wonderful platform for God’s people to use their gifts in service to their community,” Harris told Baptist Press. “Whatever problem the nonprofit is trying to solve, they provide access – a connecting point – between God’s people and lost people who are in need.”

Mission Increase has 23 chapters in the U.S. serving 3,500 nonprofits, Harris said, including a Mission Increase chapter Brentwood Baptist Church in Brentwood helped organize in middle Tennessee seven years ago. Four of the six churches supporting the work in middle Tennessee are Southern Baptist, he said.

“We are now a faith-based biblical learning community of 247 faith-based nonprofits in middle Tennessee,” Harris said, “that gather regularly for teaching, equipping and coaching, all at no cost.”

Harris, former missions pastor at Brentwood Baptist, met Orr through joint mission work between Brentwood and Brown Baptist, a suburban Memphis church in Southaven, Miss.

memphis TN church
Brown Missionary Baptist Church in Southaven, Mississippi (Photo via Facebook)

Orr sees Mission Increase and Brown Baptist’s support of nonprofits as important to the holistic community outreach the church promotes.

“Memphis is going through so many different challenges,” Orr said, “and yet, we can be on the forefront to not only see successful change, but kind of set the example for the rest of the country on how things ought to happen.

“We’re praying and hoping that God will use all of this, ultimately, to bring about a spiritual revival and awakening in Memphis and throughout our country,” Orr said. “Just looking holistically at the pieces, they all fit.”

Harris sees the work as not only beneficial to nonprofits, but also to the local church, providing healthy parachurch ministries for church members to work within. He encourages churches and nonprofits to visit Mission Increase’s sitio web to connect with local Mission Increase coaches or launch a local chapter.

“There is the beauty when they work together and they value each other,” Harris said, “it can grow a local church.”

Orr encourages others to support church-community group engagement as a win-win.

“As we continue this great endeavor with Channel 3, I pray that we take it to a whole next level and that is cooperation and collaboration,” Orr said in revealing the church as the donor on WREG. “We need more churches. We need more organizations coming together, banding together, and solving the problem, doing something specifically in our community to make a difference.”

Este artículo fue publicado originalmente por prensa bautista.

Diana Chandler es escritora sénior de Baptist Press. 

COMPARTIR ESTE:

¡OBTÉN ACTUALIZACIONES POR CORREO ELECTRÓNICO!

¡Manténgase en contacto con Julie y reciba actualizaciones en su bandeja de entrada!

No te preocupes, no te enviaremos spam.

Más para explorar
discusión

Una respuesta

  1. My Blessings To You for You’re Amazing Work/Mission!????????????❤️‍????❤???????? ????????????????????????????????????????????????????????

Deja una respuesta

El Informe Roys busca fomentar el diálogo reflexivo y respetuoso. Con ese fin, el sitio requiere que las personas se registren antes de comenzar a comentar. Esto significa que no se permitirán comentarios anónimos. Además, se eliminarán todos los comentarios con blasfemias, insultos y/o un tono desagradable.
 
Artículos MÁS RECIENTES
Artículos MÁS populares
es_MXSpanish

Donar

Hola. Vemos que este es el tercer artículo de este mes que ha encontrado que vale la pena leer. ¡Estupendo! ¿Consideraría hacer una donación deducible de impuestos para ayudar a nuestros periodistas a continuar informando la verdad y restaurar la iglesia?

Your tax-deductible gift helps our journalists report the truth and hold Christian leaders and organizations accountable. Give a gift of $30 or more to The Roys Report this month, and you will receive a copy of “Hurt and Healed by the Church” by Ryan George.