A new book by Myralyn Allgood, professor emerita of Spanish at Samford University in Birmingham, celebrates the long-term role of students from an Alabama Baptist school in Texas Baptists’ ministry along the Rio Grande.
Nearly 40 years ago Allgood journeyed from Alabama to Texas to learn how Samford students could participate in a summer missions program along the Texas-Mexico border.
Allgood, who served 24 years as chair of the world languages and cultures department at Samford, met with Elmin Howell, founding director of Texas Baptists’ River Ministry. Out of that contact grew a missions partnership that continued nearly three decades.
The missions experiences of students along the Rio Grande continued to inspire them long after they left the river, she noted — a theme that emerges throughout “Summer Missions on the Rio Grande.” She called the book “a collective memoir” of Samford students who served with River Ministry between 1975 and 2003.
“From time to time, from here and there — a student’s journal entry, a casual word between friends, encounters with River Ministry alumni over the years — there has been an ongoing echo of the same theme: ‘Señora, when are we going to write a book about all this?’” Allgood wrote in the book’s preface.
That question led Allgood to a three-year exploration of the materials and memories that became the book.
“I think we all sensed from the outset that God’s hand was on this project, and watching Him move in the lives of those involved was a remarkable thing to behold — and to recount,” she said.
However, Allgood was quick to point out the collaborative project never would have developed had it not been for Howell’s directorship.
“It was Elmin who opened the door for us to join hands with Texas Baptists in this ministry and whose creative thinking produced a series of life-changing projects for us,” Allgood said.
In the book’s foreword, Howell likewise praised Allgood and the students she enlisted to serve as summer workers alongside missionaries and border-area pastors, working 10 weeks during summers with only room and board provided.
“Sometimes the room and board was lacking, but the summer missionaries did not complain,” Howell noted. “The people they were there to help had much less, and the less fortunate did not complain either. Samford University could not have sent out more effective ambassadors.”
The book primarily focuses on alumni reflections, newsletters, correspondence, candid photos and news clippings, most reproduced in their original forms to create the appearance of a scrapbook.
Students who participated in the ministry and have read the book praised Allgood’s effort in recording the history of the summer missions project.
Linda Ables observed, “It is absolutely amazing and a tribute … to all those who were blessed to have this life-changing experience.” She and her husband, Ed, were career missionaries in Ecuador and Argentina. After they retired she taught Spanish and led missions projects at Samford.
Larry Sharp, pastor of First Baptist Church, New Tazewell, Tenn., spent the summers of 1976 and 1977 working with River Ministry. His wife, Susan, worked with River Ministry as a nurse in villages near Big Bend in 1977.
“So many opportunities and memories. … I have been truly blessed,” he acknowledged after reviewing Allgood’s book. (BNG)
‘Summer Missions on the Rio Grande’ can be ordered online or by calling 205-726-2834. River Ministry summer missions alumni receive a discount. Samford’s Howard College of Arts and Sciences also has made the book available as a free downloadable PDF file.
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