Dixie Thornton spent more than 20 years as an Army wife, often remembering the encouragement of her Girls in Action (GA) leader to “look out the window and see the world.”
The words Thornton heard as a girl, coupled with opportunities and activities to learn about missionaries and other people and their cultures through GAs, helped her adjust wherever she lived during her husband’s various military assignments.
“As life unfolded, I wanted to be in a Baptist church that was involved in missions education,” said Thornton, who now is a Mission Friends leader at First Baptist Church, Maysville, Mo.
GAs is the missions organization for first- through sixth-grade girls that can play a vital role in nurturing a church’s heart for the Great Commission.
Mission Friends is the missions organization that focuses on preschoolers. Both are sponsored by national Woman’s Missionary Union (WMU).
Judy Phillips, children’s worship coordinator for First Baptist Church, Madison, Fla., who came from a broken home with a mother who had to work, began attending GAs in the fourth grade. While such circumstances are common now, back in 1959, Phillips felt alone and dejected. But each Monday after school, she walked to West Highland Baptist Church with girls her own age. There she was accepted despite her family background.
“Those leaders took me under their wings. I could feel good about myself,” Phillips said. Three years after becoming a GA, she asked Jesus into her life.
Through GA missions activities, Phillips began a life of service that continues more than 50 years later. Among many other things, she’s taught GAs and Royal Ambassadors (the missions organization for first- through sixth-grade boys) and served as a Missions Service Corps volunteer through the North American Mission Board (NAMB).
She said her ministry is the heart of what she learned in GAs — tell the good news.
Ann Cushing, a member of First Baptist Church, Montgomery, recalls that it was in GAs where she “learned that there are many lost people in the world, people who need Jesus.”
Cushing, a former member of NAMB’s board of trustees, credits GAs with helping her have a greater understanding of the work of NAMB as well as the International Mission Board.
Cushing said one of her most precious memories is when her daughter Charlotte came home one summer day from GA camp in Florida and greeted her by saying, “I’m going to be a missionary!”
And so she was. She and her husband, Tim Cearley, served in Africa for more than 25 years.
Carol Causey, director of WMU’s missions resource center, said GAs is “a fun environment for girls to be with other girls.”
“GA is also hands-on,” she continued. “In the classroom, girls engage in active learning through games, crafts, ministry projects and more. In their communities, they share the active compassion of Christ through missions action and witnessing.”
Steve Patton, pastor of Fairview Baptist Church, Greer, S.C., underscored the value of missions education, citing two main reasons it is important in the local church.
“First it (missions education) gives a biblical and theological underpinning the children really need to live a missional life,” he said. “Second missions education gives children practical insight in how missions is done both at home and abroad. They learn about missionaries, the people they serve and the many strategies they employ to get the good news out.
“Children will not learn these lessons elsewhere. Neither Sunday School nor any discipleship courses are intended to teach these lessons week in and week out.” (BP)




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