Drew Boswell

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Big A Club 2013

Big A 2013 Presentation from Drew Boswell on Vimeo.

The Big A Club began over twenty years ago by the Women’s Missionary Union (WMU) at First Baptist Church Valdosta, GA. The women followed the Baptist curriculum (called Big A) and as time has gone by it has since ceased to be published, but the missions effort continues. It is a local outreach effort by the church, specifically toward children, for the purpose of sharing the gospel and seeking to minister to them.

Sherry Bennet, the Big A Club leader, has directed the outreach effort every year for over twenty years. FBCV is involved with missions around the world, and Bennet says, “this is an opportunity for us to do missions right here in our own backyard.” Their classic tie-dyed shirts have been done since the seventies and are cherished badges of honor by those who have helped over the years.

If you are interested in ministering to children “right here in your backyard,” then let us know at drew@fbcvaldosta.org or call the church office at 229-242-0484.

Our Life’s Journey With Our Children

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Joshua playing a game with the girls.

“I didn’t even want to come to Venezuela,” was how my six-year-old started a conversation after breakfast.  It was the third day of our mission trip to serve in a girl’s orphanage. His mother and I had already established a “no electronics” day, and were encouraging him to make friends with the girls in the home. After a stern conversation with him and his deteriorating attitude, he went on the say, “I want my red Angry Bird!” plush toy that he had left at home.  He was tired from an exhausting travel schedule, and was hungry from not eating the native Venezuela cuisine. He was experiencing some serious culture shock on his first missions trip.

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Before we left for the trip, Joshua and Caleb, our sons who were about to turn eleven, were complaining because they would not be able to have a traditional birthday party with cake, their friends, and especially presents. The birthday would fall on the second day of our arrival, and there was no real way to have a party before or after we returned. It seemed (to them) that they would not be having a party this year. Because of this assumption, the boy’s attitude was bad.

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On top of the financial concern of how the Boswell family would be able to afford to send our entire family to Venezuela, was the potential dangerous political climate. The previous year’s family trip was cancelled because it was simply too dangerous. This year’s trip was in great jeopardy because of the death of the president and an election that displeased many.

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So why would parents desire to potentially financially sacrifice, put themselves in a potential dangerous situation, potentially not have a birthday party for their children, and submerge them in a foreign culture? To say, “because we felt led by the Lord to do so,” seems contrite but when several people stated, “Why are you doing this? Are you crazy?” I really needed to know from the Lord that for me to take my family really was directed from the Lord. If something were to happen, then I would have to know that the Lord was directing us to do this. After a year delay because of the political condition of the country, I had over a year to pray and know for sure that He was directing us to take our family on a mission trip.

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Why Send Children On A Mission Trip? 

1)   To expose them to a completely different culture.

2)   To expose them to missions with the prayer that they may love missions and desire to serve the Lord at an earlier age.

3)   So they see a world without Christ – there is an entire lost world beyond their own county seat.

4)   To see how Christians worship and serve the Lord in other parts of the world – how “we” worship, minister, etc. is not the only way to do it in a way that pleases the world. For example, did you know that you don’t need a hymnal to sing praises to the Lord?

5)   So children (actually) see their parents submerged in a different cultural environment where they struggle with language, directions, and seeking to minister where they are stretched.

6)   To see how foreign people feel when they come to the United Stated. They can feel empathy toward those that may not speak the language, know their way around, be aware of cultural nuance, etc.

7) Children make friendship much easier than adults, and their hearts will be broken for these new friends. The night we were packing to head back to the USA Hannah-Grace cried for hours, even cried herself to sleep because we had to leave her new friends behind. She would have never had these emotions for other children around the world if she had not spent a week with them playing and having fun together.

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Caleb, Patricia, and Joshua celebrating their 11th birthday

I used the word “potentially” a lot above because the political climate calmed down, and now as I sit in our host’s home, there is nothing going on that has caused me to feel uncomfortable in any way. The Lord has worked out through fund raising and other means that we were not financially hindered as a family. Patricia, our host, threw a party for Joshua and Caleb were they both said, “this is the best birthday ever!” complete with cake and ice cream. Today we hiked to a waterfall where we swam and had a wonderful time. All of my children are making friends with the girls in the home, and with the other family that we are traveling with.

Sometimes, as parents, we make our children go down a life path because we feel it is best for them. We pushed our children into this experience and as the week is drawing to a close I can see already many positive changes in my children. To God be the glory.

Here is Kimberly’s Facebook entry when we got back,”Almost exactly 1 week later, our family has returned home from our mission trip to Venezuela. As she climbed into her bed Hannah-Grace said, ‘Mom, I feel different.’ I said, ‘you are, YOU were a missionary this week to the girls at the home.’ She said, ‘I was? Cool.’. Mission accomplished”

For pictures of our adventure in Venezuela click here.

The Crucible of Praise

imagesLeroy Eims in his book, Be A Motivational Leader, while discussing praise says “But praise can have either good or a bad effect,” and then quoting Proverbs 27:21 “The crucible for silver and the furnace for gold, but man is tested by the praise he receives.”[1] His main idea is that leaders must guard their hearts when people praise them because it can lead to even more self-love and take away glory that should be the Lord’s.

Our character is tested by how we deal with praise from others.  The good is that praise can lead one to be encouraged to go on to do more for the Lord; the bad is that one becomes deluded with visions of grandeur (which has effected more than one young leader I know).

Having just finished a week of many hours of preparation for VBS and the actual week of VBS where we had many children, I know we should give all the praise and glory to God. He ultimately is the one who orchestrated everything for His glory. He chooses to use us in His plan and part of that is using our individual gifts, as the body of Christ. We work together to carry out The Lord’s will and purposes. But there is nothing wrong with saying thank you to those who were apart of the effort.

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Giving the Gift of Praise

1)   Don’t withhold praise from those that deserve it. Sometimes when we serve with someone who has done wrong, we withhold our praise because somehow on a psychological level we want to punish them.

But if you are the leader, you have a responsibility to encourage and develop those whom you lead. Part of this leadership process is to praise people for when they have done something right or above what was expected.

2)   Don’t feel insecure when those around you receive praise and you don’t. Saul was king when David led the men back from battle and the people said, “Saul has killed his thousands, and David his tens of thousands.”

Instead of feeling blessed that he had such a distinguished and talented general, he felt extreme jealously. This jealousy kept him from being the king he could have been. If you feel jealousy for someone when they are praised and you are not, this will keep you from being the leader you were intended to be. Instead of seeking to develop and build others up, you will seek to tear them down (which proved disastrous for Saul).

3)   Don’t withhold something that is free. Praise for others costs you nothing to give, but has immense profits. People will feel encouraged in their efforts, and will recognize that you appreciate them. Your goals will become theirs and in the end the Lord if glorified because your efforts are able to expand.


[1] Leroy Eims, Be A Motivational Leader (Colorado Springs, Colorado; David C Cook, 2012) 56.

Isaac Wants to Be a Scientist

Isaac’s Kindergarden teacher, Mrs. Swain put this presentation together for the parents. Isaac appears at 6:35.

What Hoarders Can Teach Us About Leadership

hoarding-buried-aliveOprah, A&E, TLC, and various web sites have caught America’s attention with the compulsive disorder of hoarding. Various sources try to attribute the condition as an inherited disease, damaged parts of the brain, emotional damage, etc. but the end result is the same – people collect so much stuff into their homes that they are literally buried alive.

Katherine Harmon of Scientific America said, “those with the disorder ‘are frequently characterized by poor insight about the severity of their condition, leading to resistance of attempts by others to intervene.’ And as the Mayo Clinic notes, even if hoarders’ collections are disassembled, they often begin acquiring more items right away because their underlying condition has not been addressed.” [1] 

Most people who are hoarders have what is called “clutter blindness.” This is where the brain communicates to the visual cortex so that it actually stops seeing individual pieces of trash, animals, excrement, etc., and instead sees the unit or pile as a whole. So they stop seeing individual editions of a newspaper and instead see the “newspaper section.”

They stop seeing how the trash begins to decompose, or the smell from dead animals or excrement has increased in the home, or how they are slowly losing whole parts of their homes to piles of stuff (kitchens, bedrooms, bathrooms etc).— when asked to make a decision regarding one piece of the pile it becomes stressful and they become anxious.

Eventually family members, adult children, landlords, or someone will draw attention to the unsanitary and unsafe living conditions of the home and they are forced to do something about their situation.

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So what does this have to do with leadership? Well, do you have an issue that you have not dealt with? The issue keeps coming back again and again? Issues with the sound system, lack of signage, lack of adequate parking, rude people in your organization, etc. Instead of fixing the problem you instead keep putting it off. You may have even tried to resolve the issue to no avail, and now you have simply quit trying. In your mind you have resolved that it will never change and there is nothing that you can do about. So on the pile the issues go, one upon another. Until, before you know it, you have hoarded “issues.”

Leaders don’t have “clutter blindness” but they do develop “issue blindness.” This is where issues that need to be dealt with go ignored and their brains stop trying to deal with it. Here are some suggestions to consider about your “issue blindness.”

1. Invite a Friend Into Your Home.

Hoarders hate for people to come into their home. They are embarrassed about other people seeing it. All of those piles they have stopped seeing and dealing with get brought to the surface. If the person you ask to come over for a visit is honest then they will be able to tell you what areas of your organizations need to be “cleaned up.”

But honestly, you probably already know what needs to be done, and you have simply stopped trying to fix it. Knowing that your friend is coming will energize you to finally fix it after all.

images2. Organize Room by Room.

Hoarders feel overwhelmed with the mountain of work and often are paralyzed with anxiety of not knowing where to start. So, the professional organizers start with a room, empty it out completely into the yard, organizes the stuff (things to keep, things to throw away, and things to sell), and then they organize and plan the room as it should be.

So pick an area that needs to organized, break it down to its simplest parts, and rebuild it as it should be. Don’t try to fix everything all at one time. This will stress you and the people who are helping you. Instead pick the most glaring problem and deal with it. Most issues that have been put off cannot be dealt with in one meeting or in a week. So put in on a dry erase board in your office, schedule a follow up meeting, or ask someone to hold you accountable on the issue — Just keep it in front of you until it is dealt with. Don’t allow it to go back onto the pile of other issues you haven’t dealt with yet.

3.  Be Smart About Your Emotions.

With most hoarders there is an emotional trigger. It could be the death of a loved on, the loss of a job, abuse of some kind, or depression, but usually something happened to trigger the hoarding behavior.

What happened in your leadership that may have caused you to stop trying to deal with certain issues? Go back and deal with the emotional issue, then go on to fix the existing issue. Did someone push back when you tried something new? Is there someone who embarrassed you in a staff meeting or church business meeting or someone made you feel that you were of little value to the organization, then you unconsciously decided just to quit trying. Whatever it may be, we are called to do our best for the Lord. We are not just to get by with mediocre quality in our organizations. There is a reason why you stopped working on specific issues.  Make sure that you are not mad at someone, have given up out of frustration, or simply quit caring.

4. Understand the Consequences of Not Cleaning Up.

What drives many hoarders to clean up their homes is the fact that if they don’t they will lose their homes, apartments because of the unsanitary condition. While this is tragic, in church life if we ignore certain issues (especially if they are easily fixable) then people will not return after an initial visit. If the nursery is not painted, greeters are rude (or even worse no one speaks to them at all), they get lost on your campus, or something along these lines then there is an opportunity lost to share the gospel and influence their family for Christ.

For a hoarder to stop trying is to lose one’s home. For the Christian leader to stop trying is to lose one’s purpose. To lose one’s purpose is to lose passion — which is devastating. Start your clean up today.

Romans 8:37-39 “No, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us. For I am sure that neither death nor life, nor angels nor rulers, nor things present nor things to come, nor powers, nor height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord.”

[1] Katherine Harmon of Scientific America.

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