HONOLULU (ABP) — The festive and colorful native dress featured by many of the attendants at the Baptist World Alliance Women's Leadership Conference just prior to the recent Baptist World Congress in Honolulu contrasted with the harsh reality they discussed — the state of
women in the world today.
As the women participated in ministry presentations, Bible studies, worship and fellowship, they learned about the 27 million women who will be trafficked into the sex trade in their lifetime and the other 1.5 billion who will be abused.
Meeting July 24-27, many of the approximately 750 attendees left motivated to take the gospel and rehabilitation to prostitutes, abused women and the impoverished caught captive in every corner of the world.
Patsy Davis, executive director of the BWA Women’s Department, said the goal of the gathering was to celebrate the steps these Baptist women have already taken to restore lives of the abused and impoverished but also to rally them for more work.
“Our theme of poverty and abuse really hit home with these women,” Davis said. “There were many who were ready to go do something about this. Some came up to me and said, ‘We live in some of these places where this really happens and we had no idea.’ They left with a passion to do something about poverty and abuse. And I think we will see a huge difference in the world because of that.”
The conference focused on combating abuse and poverty to coincide with the United Nations millennial goals focusing on ending poverty by 2015, Davis said.
“This year, the UN was focusing on stopping violence against women and we wanted to do our part,” she said.
During the general sessions, participants from each of the BWA's regional groupings painted a picture of women in their region of the world while sharing ways they are bringing hope to the abused and poor.
Ameila Gavidi, president of the Fiji Baptist Women’s Fellowship, presented a monologue about a woman she encountered who was rejected by her family. She turned to a life of crime, hurt and imprisonment because of the lack of love in her life.
Through the efforts of ministries affiliated with the Fiji fellowship, the woman gained hope through a relationship with Christ. This happened through Lydia’s Sewing Project, a rehabilitation effort started by the fellowship to teach released prisoners a trade like sewing but also to show them the love of Christ.
“We go not only to help the women, but the main thing we do is share the love of Jesus with them,” Gavidi said. “Most of these women have never experienced love. They come from a low place. [They are]squatters in a low-level lifestyle where their mothers and fathers don’t even care for them. And none of them know Christ. The word is that no one cares for me so they get involved in wrong areas. And instead of getting them involved in a better place, they get involved in a worse place. As Christians, what are we going to do about it?”
The lives they have seen changed have come through Fiji's Baptist women stepping out and having obedient faith, Gavidi said.
“I believe that the Lord does not want us just to talk,” Gavidi said. “We have to step out and physically do what God is telling us. That is faith. If I just know the Word of God and I just sit there, that is not faith. We as born-again believers should do it in faith. Whatever we do, we need to do in faith.”
Time for renewal
Though much of the conference was about rallying women to combat evils, it was also a time for participants to experience a time of spiritual renewal by worshiping with, studying with and sharing fellowship with their peers from around the world.
“I’m a teacher. I’m preaching, but here at this conference, I can sit and hear from others,” said Ponzi Anne Nzuzi, the president of the Baptist Women’s Fellowship in the Democratic Republic of Congo. “This is a good time for me so I become like a baby and I am taking enough food for my life. I believe that when I am back at my home, I will be strong again.”
Though Nzuzi noted she lives in a country where poverty and political conflict touch many in her congregation, she said she must follow the Spirit and continue to serve the abused and needy.
“Suffering is there,” she said. “Poverty is there, but we cannot block our hand and never do something. We have to do something.”
In addition to the focus on abuse and poverty, the women elected new leadership to direct the BWA Women’s Department for the next five years. Raquel Contreras, president of the Baptist Union of Chile, was elected president. Donna Groover, director of human resources and finance at Columbia Baptist Church in Falls Church, Va., was re-elected as secretary-treasurer for a second term. Both women were honored at a celebratory tea held at the closing of the conference.
“Oh, am I excited,” Davis said of the new president. “I’ve known Raquel a long time, and she knows the organization. She knows the women, and she’ll be an amazing leader. And Donna is a very special, gifted lady. We are excited to have her for a second term. Even though we don’t have much money, somehow she always makes it work.”
Before the end of the conference, each regional group was paired with another to serve as prayer partners for the next five years. This partner union, as well as the conference theme of walking in the Spirit, will become an emphasis during the annual Baptist Women’s World Day of Prayer held Nov. 1. This day is a way for women around the world to gather and jointly pray for issues in the world today and take an offering to support the ministry of the BWA Women’s Department and their continental unions.
An offering was collected to support BWA ministries and for some scholarships to attend the meeting. A total of $14,759 was given by the women, many of whom gave sacrificially from the little that they have.
The Women’s Department also commissioned two books. Coming Together is a history of the Women’s Department of the BWA. The second, I’m a Woman … Created in the Image of God is an English translation of a Spanish book written in the 1960s.
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Kaitlin Chapman is a news writer for Texas Baptist Communications.