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REACHING TENNESSEE … AND WELL BEYOND

May 16, 2025

By Morgan Owen
Collegiate ministry specialist, TBMB

BCM students from Tennessee spend spring break on mission field

COOKEVILLE — “All God needs from me is obedience and a willingness to serve,” said Hayden Giuttari, a Baptist Collegiate Ministry student from Tennessee Tech University.

Guittari joined other TTU BCM students to assist with disaster relief in East Tennessee during their spring break.

Across Tennessee, BCM Collegiate ministry specialists mobilized over 100 students to follow Jesus’ call to reach “Judea, Samaria, and the ends of the earth.” Students from Austin Peay State University, Belmont University, Cleveland State Community College, Lee University, Middle Tennessee State University, Tennessee Tech University, and University of Tennessee Chattanooga were sent out to serve on BCM spring break mission trips to East Tennessee, Missouri, Ohio, Argentina, England, and Puerto Rico.

  • BCM students from the University of Tennessee Chattanooga, Lee University and Cleveland State went to Buenos Aires, Argentina, to support missionaries and local churches through encouragement, service, and evangelism. In the photo above, Grace Johnson, far right, collegiate ministry specialist associate for the BCM-Cleveland, is joined by, from left, Sofia Rodriguez (Cleveland State Community College), Tom White (Lee University), Seth Weaver (UTC), Kate Brown (Lee University), Hannah Plumlee (UTC) and Kaylee Potter (UTC).
  • Pictured are Tennessee Tech University BCM students who assisted with Arise and Build disaster relief projects in East Tennessee for their spring break mission trip.
  • Pictured are Tennessee Tech University BCM students who assisted with Arise and Build disaster relief projects in East Tennessee for their spring break mission trip.
  • Twelve Middle Tennessee State University BCM students went on a mission trip to London where they worked with IMB missionaries and engaged international university students with the gospel.
  • Austin Peay BCM students had the opportunity to prayer walk and have gospel conversations with many students on the University of Cincinnati campus.

The trips were a example of the gospel-sharing focus of the BCM, which is celebrating its 100-year anniversary in 2025.

“One of the things we are passionate about is introducing college students to missions,” said Steven Johnston, collegiate ministry specialist at UTC. “This year, Baptist Collegiate Ministries of the Chattanooga region had the opportunity to offer four mission trips of various levels, costs, and types of work.”

Johnston’s approach creates valuable experiences for students to serve and to explore their potential call to missions.

The various mission projects “allowed students the opportunity to jump in at their own comfort zone,” Johnston added.

Reaching Judea: East Tennessee

Ben Maddox, collegiate ministry specialist at TTU, led one team to BeachReach in Panama City, Fla., while sending 23 students to assist with the Arise and Build disaster relief projects in East Tennessee.

“BCM students took their fifth trip during their spring break to help with rebuild efforts in northeast Tennessee. They helped families with insulation installation, installing steps to homes, and other rebuild efforts,” said Maddox.

Jacob Rambo, a TTU Agricultural Engineering major, was impacted from this experience. “It was hard to leave the disaster relief work to return home with so much more work to be done. I really saw God move on the trip after we finished a lady’s insulation and crawl space,” he said.

“Seeing how God was working through so many generous full-time volunteers showed me how doing things of eternal significance should be our goal,” said Callie Roper, a TTU Agribusiness major.

The BCMs from UTC and Cleveland State Community College partnered to mobilize more students for missions and prepare a team to serve with disaster relief in Elizabethton.

Elizabeth Head, a UTC Communications major, shared, “We were able to help at many more locations than we had planned, and we got to complete more assignments than we had expected.

“Our team built lifelong connections with one another and learned ways we can help lead each other towards Christ,” Head added.

Reaching Samaria: Missouri, Ohio

BCM leaders and students from Austin Peay and Belmont felt a great need to organize mission trips to cities not far from Tennessee.

APSU BCM partnered with First Baptist Church of Mt. Healthy near Cincinnati, Ohio, while Belmont BCM traveled to Ferguson, Mo., to aid a Send Relief “drop-in center” for the homeless.

“We built relationships with the homeless community through the drop-in center,” said Cole Rogers, collegiate ministry specialist associate at Belmont. “We helped process them so they could shower, wash clothes, and relax.”

They worked at the Missouri Baptist Children’s Home, Salvation Army, and various sites throughout Ferguson. Additionally, Rogers add they encouraged the missionaries that serve with Send Relief by giving them gift baskets and notes of encouragement.

APSU BCM’s work in Cincinnati also included reaching University of Cincinnati students.

“It was a blessing to connect with pastor Ken Dillard, who was also the Baptist campus minister at the University of Cincinnati for more than 30 years,” said Stacy Murphree, collegiate ministry specialist at APSU BCM. “We served with the church as they are working hard to be a gospel presence in the community.”

They provided block parties at local elementary schools, served in ministries offering meals and clothing, and prayer walked the University of Cincinnati campus, connecting students with a local SBC ministry called H2O.

Maddie Holt, a sophomore Communication Sciences and Disorders major, said, “Cincinnati was a special time as the Lord truly taught me the importance of doing all things with the love that comes from Him.

“I learned to lean on the Holy Spirit and allow Him to lead the conversations. Even if the conversation didn’t go how I planned, it went how God wanted it to — which is the best way,” she said.

Every mission trip provides opportunities to grow.

Matthew Rollings, a junior Business Management major, shared, “I spoke with pastor Dillard about how we are all simply called to make ourselves available to God. By evangelizing in the community, working at food banks, and doing service projects around the church, the team was able to live out this call to availability.”

Reaching the Ends of the Earth: Argentina, London, Puerto Rico

Grace Johnson, collegiate ministry specialist associate at Cleveland State Community College, led a team of seven to Buenos Aires, Argentina, to support missionaries and local churches through encouragement, service, and evangelism.

The team focused on visiting churches, ministering to local believers, prayer walking, and conducting spiritual surveys while utilizing various ways to share Jesus with others.

“One of my favorite parts of the trip was watching my students use every opportunity to point others to Jesus, whether in an Uber ride or walking through a souvenir shop,” Johnson added.

Despite language and cultural barriers, Kate Brown, a junior elementary education major at Lee University and a campus missionary at BCM Cleveland, saw God’s work in Buenos Aires. “It was powerful to witness people from diverse nations and backgrounds united in proclaiming God’s greatness and advancing His kingdom,” she said.

Shelby Hall, collegiate ministry specialist associate at Middle Tennessee State University, took 12 BCM students to London, England, where they worked with IMB missionaries Scott and Dana Belmore engaging university students. This was the first international trip MTSU BCM had taken since January 2020.

“Our students engaged in conversations with many international students attending university, many of whom had never heard of Jesus or the gospel,” Hall explained. The team also prayer walked campuses the missionaries hadn’t yet reached.

“The students were challenged in new ways with the diversity in religious views present, but they met these challenges with a resilient attitude of completing the mission without discouragement,” Hall explained.

College provides an ideal time for mission opportunities. Students often come home with motivation to see their own campus as their mission field.

“I love when students return from a mission trip excited to put into practice what they learned while serving on the mission field,” said Johnston. B&R

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