By Tobin Perry
TWENTYNINE PALMS, Calif. (BP) — Jacob and Joi Rogers had already tried for four months to find a church home during their first stint in Twentynine Palms (or 29 Palms), Calif., a year earlier. As a newly married couple, the marine and his new bride had to travel an hour away from home to find a good church fit.
So when the Rogers returned to 29 Palms in the spring of 2018, Joi already dreaded the search for a new church.
“I wondered what in the world we were going to do,” she said. “I knew we definitely needed a church family. We needed the community. I was almost convinced we were going to have to start a home church.”
The congregation sings during a worship service at Pillar Church of 29 Palms, Calif., on May 19.
Photo courtesy of Pillar Church
But that’s when new friends told the couple about Pillar Church of 29 Palms, a new Southern Baptist church plant specifically reaching out to Marines in the city. From their very first visit, the church seemed like the fit they had been looking for.
Although Jacob and Joi had both grown up in Christian homes and had been Christians before coming to Pillar 29 Palms, Joi has seen herself grow much deeper in her Christian walk during the past year. Since about 80 percent of Pillar 29 Palm’s attendance comes from the nearby Marine base, the church has a deep understanding of the unique challenges of military life.
“I’ve known my whole life that my faith was the most important thing to me,” said Joi, who now coordinates the church’s women’s ministry.
“But that didn’t really translate to my everyday life,” she said. “Through Pillar, through the examples around me, it has transformed our vision of the future — from how we look at the Marine Corps to how we look at finances and how we make decisions. Everything is now measured by what God has for us and nothing that the world says is important anymore.”
Roy Garza started Pillar 29 Palms in January of 2018 in part to engage the area’s Marine Corps community. A former Marine himself, Garza had been stationed at the base in 29 Palms years earlier so he and his wife Cassandra already had a unique understanding of the needs of Marine Corps families within the community.
“Particularly in 29 Palms, the tempo here is so high,” Garza said. “The husbands are always gone. The mom is trying to wear both hats, mom and dad. We’ve had to learn how to adapt to that and had to learn to minister to families where the dad is gone a lot of the time. We’ve had to find unique ways to minister to the father while he’s here and keep in touch with him while he is deployed.”
Garza noted church attendance has grown from six families to an average of 120 people in attendance each week with little to no marketing. He believes part of the reason the church has grown so quickly is because of the deep need in the community for a church that understands the unique needs of military families.
Small groups have been one of the church’s most effective outreach tools. Garza noted that many new families come to the church through one of its small groups. The church has several small groups on base and others in town.
Pillar Church of Dumfries, Va., commissioned Roy and Cassandra Garza and two other couples to start Pillar 29 Palms as part of its Praetorian Project, a family of Southern Baptist churches planting churches in military communities around the world.
Clint Clifton, who started Pillar Church Dumfries in 2004, began the Praetorian Project after noting the unique potential (and pitfalls) of starting a church near Quantico, which is nicknamed the “Crossroads of the Marine Corps” because so many Marines spend some time in Quantico.
“Every year thousands of service members and their families cycle in and out of Quantico making it both an excellent and awful place to plant a church,” writes Clifton in a free ebook by the North American Mission Board’s (NAMB) Send Network entitled “Praetorian Project: Multiplying the Gospel Through Military Church Planting.”
“Excellent because everyone who comes to Quantico is leaving soon — so the potential for spreading the Gospel is unlimited. Awful because everyone who comes to Quantico is leaving soon — so the potential for never really getting established as a church is high.”
Today, the network has eight churches, including Pillar 29 Palms and a church in Okinawa City, Japan.
The NAMB has focused attention on planting churches near military bases in recent years. Retired Gen. Doug Carver, NAMB’s director of chaplaincy, noted that many military bases are near NAMB’s Send North America cities, particularly in the West, so planting churches to engage military communities was a natural fit.
Military families, he added, have unique needs, including the fact that they are constantly deploying. Church plants provide these families with opportunities to network and connect with other military families and engage in a community atmosphere.
“It’s exciting to see the spiritual hunger among these young families,” said Carver, who served as the US Army’s chief of chaplains before his 2011 retirement. “They’re hungry for community. They’re hungry for a relationship. But most importantly, they’re hungry for truth, spiritual truth, and hearing the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Many times, they’re hearing it for the first time. These military church plants are shedding the light of the Gospel within the context of some of these communities where there’s not a lot of religious activity or even churches in some remote locations, especially Southern Baptist churches.”
NAMB encourages these church planters to reach out to chaplains on base and partner with them as they minister to military families, Carver said.
Garza asked that Southern Baptists pray for the families of Pillar 29 Palms as they transition in and out of deployments. He also noted that the church’s growth is leading them to look for a new building. He asked Southern Baptists to pray they’d find an effective location for ministry.
For more information on Pillar Church 29 Palms, visit pillar29palms.com.
For more information on the Praetorian Project, visit praetorianproject.org.
For more information on NAMB’s Send Network, visit namb.net/church-planting.
Tobin Perry is a freelance writer in Evansville, Ind. This story first appeared in SBC LIFE (sbclife.net).
MASHALLTOWN, Iowa (BP) — Southern Baptist Disaster Relief teams have begun cleanup work in Marshalltown, Iowa, following a devastating tornado July 19.
A Missouri Baptist Disaster Relief team arrived Tuesday to set up incident command at Iglesia Karios in Marshalltown. Chainsaw teams from Iowa have dispersed throughout the city to clear debris. An SBDR feeding team has prepared meals for recovery workers in the area.
Additional SBDR volunteers from Kansas-Nebraska and Florida already are on the ground in Marshalltown. Carlson, co-director of Iowa Baptist Disaster Relief, expects volunteers from other nearby states to arrive later this week and early next week. Teams from other states interested in providing assistance should contact their state disaster relief director.
“It looks like a war zone to tell you the truth,” Carlson said. “When you go downtown, you’ll see a lot of glass and brick everywhere.
“On the east part of town, there are about 10 blocks that are very heavily hit. There’s really not many trees standing. A lot of those homes aren’t livable,” Carlson said.
The EF-3 tornado injured at least 235 people in the town of 27,000 located 50 miles northeast of Des Moines. Carlson estimates that at least 100 homes were destroyed. Many more homes will take substantial work before people can return to live in them. Carlson believes it will take months, if not years, for Marshalltown to rebuild.
Some of the worst damage in Marshalltown came to the town’s courthouse and the brick buildings in the town square. In recent years officials and property owners had slowly worked to revamp the buildings, many of which are now destroyed. Jenny Etter, executive director of the Marshalltown Central Business District, estimates that the city had spent $50 million in building renovations since 2002.
A dozen or more tornadoes hit central Iowa last Thursday, according to the National Weather Service. The two biggest tornadoes, both rated EF-3, hit Marshalltown and Pella, with peak winds of 144 mph.
SBDR chaplains are also in Marshalltown to provide support and counsel to residents impacted by the tornado. Sam Porter, the North American Mission Board’s executive director of Southern Baptist Disaster Relief, prays the SBDR response will provide volunteers opportunities to share the Gospel.
“[The] number one goal with disaster relief is to earn the right to share the Gospel,” Porter said. “We work with those impacted. We treat them with respect. We pray with them. When they ask the question, ‘What makes you do this for no charge?’ that’s when you’ve earned the right to share the Gospel.”
The Marshalltown tornado comes on the heels of the SBDR response to flooding in Des Moines, Iowa, where teams wrapped up work last week. Eight people came to faith last week during SBDR efforts in the capital city, Carlson said.
Porter and Carlson urge Southern Baptists to pray for Marshalltown and the rest of Central Iowa.
“Pray for all the people who live here,” Carlson said. “A lot of them lost their homes. They lost their cars. They lost their job. There is a lot of a need here.”
Tobin Perry is a writer for the North American Mission Board.,
Published August 1, 2019