Name connects Texas church with Middle Eastern Christians

Name connects Texas church with Middle Eastern Christians

For the members of First Baptist Church in Palestine, Texas, sharing names with a Middle Eastern territory has led to a connection with Christians on the West Bank.

It began a few years ago. Pastor Jay Abernathy said a BBC news team taking a Sunday detour from President Bush’s ranch in Crawford, Texas, gave him the idea to capitalize on the shared name.

“We invited [the BBC team] to our church that Sunday while they were out at the president’s ranch,” Abernathy said. The team asked him if the people in Palestine, Texas, ever associated themselves with Middle Eastern Palestinians. Abernathy said he had never really thought about the name connection.

“That was kind of a catalyst,” Breck Quarles, chairman of the church’s missions committee, said of the BBC visit.

In 2005, a church member alerted Abernathy and Quarles that a Palestinian minister was traveling in Texas and wanted to know if he could speak at their church. After a brief meeting, church leaders at First, Palestine, agreed.

Munir Kakish told the other Palestinians about needs among his ministries overseas. He lived eight years in an orphanage in Ramallah, located 10 miles north of Jerusalem on the West Bank, following his father’s death. After traveling to the United States for college in 1967, he returned to the Holy Land and began a ministry there with his wife, Sharon, in 1978.

Kakish now serves as pastor for two Palestinian churches — one in Ramallah, the other in Ramla — and as founder and director of Home of New Life, a boys’ home in Ramallah.

The Texas church showed Kakish overwhelming support. “We brought in that morning several thousand dollars to get kids enrolled in school. It was a confirmation from us that the church was behind what they were doing,” Quarles said.

Quarles and Abernathy visited the West Bank in May 2006. Upon their return, the Texas church confirmed a mutually supportive relationship with Christians in Palestine “in a number of different areas — with commitments to pray,” Quarles said.

Despite small numbers and a low budget, First, Palestine, consistently finds resources to support Palestinian Christian ministries through donations and regular visits.

“I’m kind of amazed at how much gets done with a church this size. We don’t really have any money. God gets it done,” Abernathy said. “We’re just kind of your average Baptist church in Texas.”

In May, Abernathy and church member Steve Jenkins traveled to the West Bank with a team from Buckner International — a Texas Baptist benevolent agency — to explore possibilities of working with at-risk children there. Representatives from First, Palestine, have returned overseas three times since the first visit in May 2006.

First, Palestine, member Linda Love said the experience changed her life. “It was such an incredible eye-opener,” she said.

Love ventured to the West Bank in 2007 with Quarles and fellow church member Cameron Cline. Interacting with Palestinian Christians gave her “a new perspective on life,” Love said. Instead of the often-negative stereotypes of Palestinians, Love said she encountered a people “so delightful and so generous.”

Increasing awareness and understanding among American evangelicals of the Palestinian Christian community motivates Abernathy to spread the word about ministry activity in the Middle East.

“A lot of folks just aren’t really aware of how many Arab evangelical Christians are out there,” Abernathy noted.
“We met a very vibrant group of evangelical Baptist Christians [in the Middle East], but they felt kind of forgotten.”

“They need our prayers. They need our support. We serve the same Lord; we serve the same Savior,” Quarles said.

As an unexpected result of their partnership with Christians in Palestine, First, Palestine, has attracted the attention of Arab exchange students in local Texas schools.

“There’s a number of exchange students — all of them Muslim — who feel totally comfortable coming to First, Palestine. They come because they’re either staying at a church member’s home, or they get invited at school,” Quarles said. “They’ll stay, and they feel at home. They sense something there.” (ABP)