Send Network women bring gospel hope to military families

SNEADS FERRY, North Carolina – Brittany Brown will never forget the evening of November 19, 2005. But her memories of that night, the night she gave birth to her second child, are anything but typical.

“Being a military wife, you deal with things other women don’t deal with,” she says. “Here I was with a one-year old, about to have another baby and my husband was in a combat zone in Iraq. And I think the hardest part was I couldn’t just pick up the phone and say, ‘Hey, we’re about to have a baby.’ That’s why community is so important in a military town. I ended up having six women in the delivery room with me. And it was amazing.”

Fast-forward to today, Brittany and Joshua Brown are planting a Send Network church in Sneads Ferry, North Carolina—Pillar Church of Topsail. As church planting missionaries, they launched the church several years ago to reach military families stationed at nearby Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune.

“This little town we’re in is pretty much all military,” says Joshua. “And the people who come to Camp Lejeune, they’re 18 to 26 years old, they’re away from mom and dad maybe for the very first time, and they don’t have a support system. They need community desperately, and so it’s a great opportunity to share the gospel with them.”

Twenty years of being married to an active-duty Marine taught Brittany important lessons she now uses to share the gospel with military wives.

“When we first started the church, I knew I wanted to be reaching women,” she says, “because I don’t think people understand the emotional stress that there is on a military spouse. The deployments, the constant transition and moving from place to place—it really is a different way of life and I get it. So, it’s not a shocker when I meet someone whose husband is leaving for nine months or when I hear, ‘Hey, I’m going to have a baby and I need someone to take my two kids and someone to be in the delivery room with me.’”

Andrea Manias understands perfectly what Brittany is talking about. Andrea and her husband, Adam, have five children, ages one to ten—“I’m no superhero,” Andrea insists—and because of his career field in the Marines, he’s frequently gone for months at a time.

“Sometimes, I don’t know where he is,” Andrea says. “And other times I kind of wish I didn’t know where he was.”

When Andrea gave birth to their fifth child, Adam was preparing for a deployment.

“Our son came a month early and he ended up having to be in the NICU,” Andrea says. “We don’t have family that lives nearby and we had four other children at home we couldn’t just abandon. And the people at Pillar Church dropped everything to help. They took care of our kids; they took care of our house; they did everything. And Adam and I, all we could say was, ‘Wow.’ We’d never seen the hands and feet of Jesus in that capacity before.”

This is what the work of church planting looks like in a military community.

“We help women like Andrea whose husbands are gone,” Brittany says. “We watch their kids; we mow their lawns; if something breaks, we help fix it. We even have chainsaws and pressure washers and weed whackers that we help them use, because when you’re moving from one base to another, you don’t own those things. I know that all might sound weird, but that’s what day-to-day ministry looks like for us. That’s how we create opportunities to share the gospel.”

Meeting needs, sharing Christ, and building an extended family for military wives who might otherwise be on their own—that turned out to be Brittany’s role in the mission God called her and her husband to.

“I know when people think of church planting, they think of the pastor who plants, but maybe not the wife,” Brittany says. “But this is not just Joshua’s job. For both of us, this is a way of life.  We’re doing everything we can for the cause of Christ in this area to reach not just members of the military but their families too.”

Now, even though all is not perfect or easy on the Manias’s home front, life is as it should be.

“We don’t have it all together and we probably never will,” Andrea says. “A lot is asked not just of the military personnel but their family as well. That’s why it’s so important to have a church that understands military life. I’ve thought about that a lot, about how hard it’d be to not have someone who understands this lifestyle. Like, just our normal day-to-day stuff, how do you do it without a church community and not go crazy? Being surrounded by this great cloud of witnesses, people you can link arms with and who will hold you up and love you like Jesus does—that’s huge.”

Each year, thousands of churches give to the Annie Armstrong Easter Offering to support church planting in North America. As the financial engine behind Send Network, 100% of every gift goes directly to the field—providing training, care, and resources for church planting families like Joshua and Brittany Brown. 

Lead your church to fuel church planting.


Published March 13, 2025

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