All posts by: Sarah Crow

Stormy Start

The fall round of meetings has begun, and the Lord has blessed already.  We began in New Bern, North Carolina.  Our meeting with Bro. Bill Wingard had to be cut short, however, due to hurricane Dorian, which came through during the week we were there.  After the last night of the meeting, which was Wednesday, we loaded up the trailer and headed north and west, toward our next meeting and away from the winds of the storm.  We did see the rain of the storm and a couple of gusts, but nothing remotely dangerous.

From NC, it was on to Alexandria, Virginia, where the Lord saved two young men in that meeting.  The Lighthouse Baptist Church brings out more unsaved than most of the churches in which we minister.  It was a blessing to see what the Lord did.

We are currently in Bellevue, Nebraska, just outside of Omaha, where were not scheduled to have a meeting, but the Lord gave us one anyway.  Yet another of His provisions.  By this time next week, we hope to be in Merrill, Oregon.  Please pray for safety as we head the rest of the way west.

With the long days of travel, the school schedule has been thrown into somewhat of a disarray.  It has been difficult to keep up with the studies when we spend as many as 10 hours on the road in a day.  After a weekend respite from travel, which included school for the children, we plan to hit the road tomorrow again, heading across Nebraska.

One of the additions to our ministry this fall has been children’s meetings led by our children.  Every night, the children 3 years old through third grade will be dismissed.  My daughter Abigail teaches the lesson, songs, and verses.  The rest of the family is present for crowd control.  The difference in the services has been noticeable, and I am happy to see my children develop in this important skill.

Josiah is adjusting well in his new life at college, and although we miss him, we know he is exactly where God wants him. We are thankful that he has been able to get a part-time job as well.  In the meantime, we are reworking all of our special music to adapt to this change.

Pray for safety as we travel, and pray for God’s blessing as we minister in churches.

Answered Prayer

We have several momentous things to relate this month.  The first is that our trailer is fixed!  After months of being out of our “home on wheels,” the Lord worked it out that we were able to get it repaired.  We took it to Indiana during the end of July, and the factory repaired it in two days (practically unheard of in the world of RV repairs).  The repairs that they did included straightening the twisted I-beam, reinforcing the beam with steel above and below, bracing, two new axles, and an upgraded suspension system.  Everything seems to be done well, and we hope that this latest repair will enable us to use the trailer for a long time to come.  We thank the Lord for answering prayer about this matter.  We are all looking forward to moving back into the trailer for our fall meetings and having a little more stability in our day-to-day routine.
Second, we dropped our son Josiah off at Ambassador Baptist College in Lattimore, NC, for his freshman year.  It has been a busy weekend for us, settling him in the dorm, attending various college events and sessions, as well as visiting area churches and catching up with friends.  He is excited about this new chapter in his life, and we are, too.  It does mean a significant change in our family and ministry dynamic, but we will manage.  The younger siblings are already dividing up his drawers and closet space in the trailer, and his bunk has been claimed, too.  They have to be reminded that he will be back for short visits between semesters.  When we were moving him into his dorm room, he was amazed at the amount of space that he was given to store his clothes and other necessary items.  “Four drawers!” he exclaimed.  I laughed at his disbelief.  It would seem that living in an RV all these years has accustomed him to about half of that.  After sharing an RV bedroom with three siblings, sharing a dorm room with two roommates is akin to living in the lap of luxury. 

We started our home school year last week, but took a short break in order to drive Josiah to North Carolina.  We are currently on our way back, and school will resume in the morning, much to everyone’s dismay.  Abigail is in tenth grade, Esther is in eighth grade, and Daniel is in sixth grade this year.  Home schooling on the road is a very difficult thing to do.  There are so many variables from day to day and week to week, that we must constantly adjust our schedules to accommodate travel as well as late nights, and different time zones.  It takes determination to stay on schedule and yet maintain flexibility.
In other news, Sarah’s arm is slowly doing better.  She has spent a lot of time at the chiropractor’s office, as well as several visits to a massage therapist, and we are happy to see improvement, albeit slow.  She still doesn’t have feeling in two fingers on her right hand, and the arm aches often.  We covet your prayers for continued healing, and hope that she will soon be able to resume her normal activities, including playing the piano for our meetings, as we head into the fall. 

Prayer requests:
Meetings for Fall 2019/Spring 2020
Souls saved and lives changed in our meetings
Safety in travel
A job for Josiah while he is at college
Healing for Sarah
Planning our next mission trip

Camp!

Summer is camp season for many evangelists, and this year has been a great year for camps in our ministry.  Every year, we head west to Silver City, New Mexico, to minister at Gila Christian Ranch.  This year, the Lord blessed again with many souls saved and young people surrendering to the Lord’s will for the their lives.  Then, after a travel week to get home, Sarah and my girls got on a plane and headed for New York City.  The Bay Ridge Baptist Church of Brooklyn paid for them to fly to New York and then join them to head to camp at the Wilds of New England.  The Lord used their time there to work in their hearts as well as to encourage those of the youth in New York.

After years of serving as evangelist for Gila Christian Ranch, God has allowed me to serve on its board of directors.  Gila has had a unique ministry over the years of ministering to the youth of the Southwest.  The camp is currently in a project that will require some concrete work and a capable stone mason.  It will be a few months before these jobs are ready to be done, but we are praying for the Lord to provide us with the skilled laborers to complete this task before the next camp season.

July’s schedule has been a busy one, and August only provides a brief respite before we take Josiah to Ambassador Baptist College where he will be a freshman this coming fall.  By September, we hope to be on the road again in our trailer (see last month’s post) as we travel.

In the past month, a need has arisen about which we need much prayer.  In April of this year, Sarah began to have problems with serious muscle spasms.  The first one appeared in her back in the major muscle connecting the lower ribs to the pelvis.  When this spasm first occurred, she nearly fell to the ground in pain. 

In time, the spasms have moved to where they now are in her shoulder and down her right arm.  The muscles spasm and the nerves seem to be irritated as well.  The pain seems to be the worst at night, having robbed her of sleep every night for at least two weeks.  At this point, we have not been able to find the cause of these problems.  The pain is so intense that Sarah cannot even sit through a service, much less play the piano.  Obviously, this has quite an impact on our ministry and travel plans.

Would you please pray that God would intervene in Sarah’s body and heal her?  God is the great physician and He alone can solve this problem. 

As always, thank you for your prayers for our family and ministry.

Answered Prayer

As regular readers will remember, we have been mentioning our trailer and the issues that we have been facing regarding it for a long time.  There was a bent frame that caused a large number of issues throughout the last five months of 2018 with the final result that we traveled from December of 2018 to this present time completely without our trailer.  You will remember that extended warranty companies refused to honor their commitments, the manufacturer would not stand behind their work, and the insurance company was involved.  Up until recently, there seemed to be no way of getting back into our trailer until we could raise the money to get a costly repair completed.

In addition to the funding of the repair, there was also the issue of who would do the work.  Two different repair shops told us that the repair was so delicate that it must be taken to the manufacturer of the frame and have them do the work.  This means an extra trip to northern Indiana to where their shop is located.

Because of an incident a year ago today on I-10 just east of El Paso, Texas, I decided to approach the insurance company about possibly paying for the repair.  About a week and half ago, after what seemed an agonizingly long time of evaluation, they finally approved the repair.  They have even sent me a check to pay for the estimated amount.  The repair has been scheduled in northern Indiana for July 29.  The money is already in the bank to pay for the estimated amount.

There are a couple of prayer requests regarding the trailer still.  First of all, the estimate that I was given and that was in turn passed on to the insurance company, was based upon nothing more than photos provided to the manufacturer.  They have emphasized to me more than once that the cost of the repair could be more than their original estimate.  Please pray that everything goes smoothly in case they need more for the repair.  The second prayer request regards the timing of the repair.  Meetings get going again in late August and we have to take Josiah to college around the same time.  The trailer being completed in a timely manner is very important.

Right now, we are in camp season.  I am typing this from Gila Christian Ranch, a camp outside of Silver City, New Mexico.  My three younger children are with me, while Josiah and Sarah remain in Mississippi.  Josiah is working to earn money for college, being employed by a construction company whose owner is a member of our church.  Sarah is getting caught up on all kinds of things that she could not do very well with a house full of noise.

Thank you so much for all your prayers regarding our trailer and our ministry.  We are very grateful for all that God has done in our behalf, and we look forward to reporting on more victories in the near future.

Life Changes

May has been a different kind of schedule for the Crow family.  Our last meeting of the spring round of revivals was late in April, after which headed home to prepare for our first home school graduation.  The preparation left us more frayed and frazzled than any of the scheduled revival meetings that we have ever been a part of.  Both sets of grandparents came in from out of town and stayed for at least a week.
Josiah’s graduation ceremony itself was a simple one held in a church two blocks from our home in Olive Branch, Mississippi.  He gave a brief address to those who attended, and Paul gave the charge to the graduate.  Special music filled out the rest of the schedule, along with a brief reminisce about home schooling on the road.  The entire service lasted about 30 minutes.
Josiah plans to attend Ambassador Baptist College in the fall to pursue the Lord’s leading in his life.  He is working for a construction worker in our church this summer to earn money for college.  Please pray for him and for the family as we continue to undergo some great times of transition.
In 2017, a contractor that Paul had hired to put a roof on our house assured us that he could install siding as well.  Because of his testimony of salvation and his good standing in a church in our area, Paul hired him, but was unable to check on his work because of our travel schedule.  He finished the roof—albeit not properly—began the siding, and then walked away without finishing.  After calling around, I discovered another man who claimed he knew how to do vinyl siding.  His crew did some more work incorrectly and then walked off without finishing as well.
Since that time, Paul has wanted to fix things himself but was missing one important tool: a metal brake.  This device enables a person to neatly bend aluminum to trim the windows of the house prior to installing the siding.  Since both contractors failed to do the trim properly, water was soaking the wood trim around the windows.  When Paul’s parents came from Indiana for the graduation, they brought their metal brake with them and left it in Mississippi so that the job could be completed.  In this time without meetings, Paul has been working every day taking siding off the house, trimming the windows properly, and then replacing the siding.  The progress is slow, but things are moving along.
Many have continued to wonder about our trailer.  After being denied by the warranty company and the manufacturer, we have begun to probe the possibility of turning the issue over to the insurance company.  You may remember that we had a bearing fail in West Texas last year.  It is possible that damage was done at that time when we had to drive 20 miles on three wheels.  The manufacturer of the failed I-beam can repair the beam at a cost of nearly $6,000.  My prayer is that the insurance company will take care of the problem.  We need the Lord’s will, obviously.  Would you pray with us about this matter?  If the insurance company takes care of the repair, we could be back in our trailer by the time the meetings begin again in the fall.
Speaking of fall, there are still a good many openings in the fall.  We would request prayer for that as well.
So much has changed so far this year.  Doubtless, more changes are on the horizon.  In this world of change, we are confident that our unchanging God will continue to stand beside as He has always done.  As always, thank you for your prayers.

Faint, Yet Pursuing

This past month has been a busy month of meetings.  Since our last update, we have had a meeting every week.  Our travels have taken us up the East coast and out to Michigan where I sit now.  God has done some great things in churches in South Carolina, Illinois, New York, Pennsylvania, and Michigan.

In Pennsylvania, I was preaching about a man in the Bible who did right even when his parents did not.  The night after I preached to the adults about his remarkable story, a girl was saved in the children’s meeting with just such a story.  It was a blessing to hear those who regularly worked with the children tell the story of her background and how she had come to understand the Gospel and trust Christ as Savior.

This week, in Michigan, we are involved in the first meeting of a new church merger between two other independent Baptist churches.  One church just left the American Baptist Convention not long ago to become independent while the other church lost their pastor to illness.  Their first Sunday as Victory Baptist Church was the week before Easter, and on Easter Sunday, they began their first ever revival meeting.  It was great to see God working yesterday, and we look forward to what He will do in the future.

Many continue to ask about our trailer situation.  There is nothing new to report regarding the situation.  Part of the reason is that we have been so busy in meetings that I have not been able to do much regarding it.  The trailer sits in Mississippi while we are all over the country.  Taking pictures, studying documents, measuring parts–all are impossible while we are on the road.  When we return, I plan to do some work to try to get things done on it.

Josiah is graduating from high school in a couple of weeks.  All of his course work is done, and we are just waiting to get home so that we can put together a ceremony for him.  He is planning to attend Ambassador Baptist College in the fall to study for the ministry.  Please pray for him as he seeks the Lord’s leading in his life.  Pray also for his mother who will be losing her firstborn to college.

After a couple of weeks at home, we will start the round of camps in different places.  Camps alone will take the family from New Mexico to New Hampshire this year.

Finally, please pray for the family to get some rest in the next few weeks that we are home.  Jesus told His disciples at one point to come apart into a desert place and rest awhile.  That is the greatest need that our family has right now.  Some have nagging illnesses that have plagued them for as many as five weeks while we have been on the road.  All are weary and in need of a break.  Please pray that, as God has used the times of ministry to affect the lives of people, so He will use the time of rest to refresh us and renew us so that we can hit the road once again in the fall.

Change

Since last month’s writing, we have changed ends, of the country, that is.  We are now on the east coast, having driven the distance to get here.  The little 5×8 cargo trailer that keeps our luggage out of the elements has been from California to the Carolinas, and God has seen to our safety the entire way.

The truck had to have some routine 200,000-mile maintenance done to it while we were in Georgia, but the mechanic that did the work for me charged me less than half of what another shop was going to charge me.  He replaced the upper and lower ball joints on both sides of the front end.  The truck is running very well now, much to my relief.

Our meetings have been the highlight of the last month.  Night after night, week after week, we are able to see God work in hearts as a result of the preaching.  Below is an excerpt from a note that I received in the past month:

“This week has been life-changing.  All of your messages have been exactly what I needed…Over the 16 years of being saved there have been only a few camp meetings/revivals that have had a similar effect as this week has.  July 2010, called to preach, October 2012 called to ministry/pastorate, and March 2019 sell out to God.  Give Him all.”

In the same meeting, another lady who had been struggling with assurance was able to get help from the Word of God after she and her husband met with me privately after one of the services.  What a joy to be able to serve God!

These kinds of things make everything worth while as the fatigue begins to mount from being in a service night after night.  I am thankful for the working of God in hearts and hungry to see more of it in the days to come.

Our trailer situation has not changed.  It still sits at home while we are on the road, and I still wonder to myself what to do about it.  There is a possibility of getting it fixed by a man in our church who has worked on vehicles of all kinds for many years.  At this point, I don’t even know what I want regarding the trailer.  It would be wonderful to be in it again, but I have given to whole thing over to the Lord.  He knows what it best, and I am trusting Him to guide my steps in this regard.

Please pray for the family.  The weeks of being in different beds in different places and being in services every night has begun to wear on us physically.  Sarah, in particular, has been ill for a long time.  A lingering cough and fever plagued her this week.  So acute was the cough that she had to leave Sunday school this morning and go to the store and get something for it.  The children are so weary that my teenagers have begun taking Sunday afternoon naps!

We are also in need of wisdom as we move forward regarding a missions trip this year.  A door to return to the Philippines has opened again, but there are issues with Josiah’s graduation and the timing of our leaving for Asia.  Other details are important as well, such as Josiah getting a job to pay for his coming college bill.

In short, this is a time of great change in our lives as we have known them over the past years.  How grateful we are, not only that God knows the future, but also that we have many who regularly pray for us as we serve Him.

End of the Trailer

Ever since 2003, my family and I have lived in a fifth wheel travel trailer as we have ministered in evangelism.  Although we have owned a house for over eight years, home was usually wherever we parked our trailer.  Through those years, we have had three different trailers that we owned and another that we borrowed.  Our most recent trailer was purchased in 2015.

As many of you know, we had problems with the unit throughout 2018.  At the end of the year, we were advised to trade the unit in.  The root of the problem was a i-beam that was bent, lost its camber, in technical terms.  Beginning in December, we began the process of trying to get warranty companies and the original manufacturers to stand behind their product.  Yesterday, I received my final answer.  No one will stand behind the defective i-beam.  That means that we now have a trailer that would make a great trailer to live in, but will not stand up to the travel that we do.

We will continue to travel in evangelism, just no longer in a trailer.  Wherever churches put us is where we will stay.  In the mean time, we need to sell our trailer to someone who can use it for its intended purpose: a home that only occasionally needs to be mobile.  We are not completely opposed to another RV, but we will be very picky about getting one that we believe will meet our needs.

While staying in Texas a few weeks ago, I (Paul) passed out and fell in the restroom.  Sarah and our hosts decided to call the paramedics because they could not find a pulse when they came to check me.  (The sound of my head hitting the door created a very disturbing noise, the more so because it happened at night.)  By the time the paramedics arrived, I had stabilized enough to speak to people, but they had a difficult time doing a blood sugar test because no blood would come out of my finger.  After three times of being pricked, they were finally able to get enough blood to test my blood sugar.

Although I declined to go the emergency room at the time, I did go for some tests the following day.  Everything came back normal, and I was told that it is a routine thing for healthy adults to pass out, fall, hit their head, lose blood pressure, and temporarily go into shock.  Who knew? 

Our meetings in California were abundantly blessed of the Lord, and we look forward to seeing what God will do in the days to come.  Our schedule is full throughout the rest of this month, March, and into April.  Please continue to pray that God will use us as we preach in different churches.  The open-ended nature of our trailer situation has the potential to distract us from what is most important thing: the ministry of the Gospel.

Thank you again for your prayers.  We are trusting the Lord for great things as we head east for many meetings.  We look forward to giving a report of more people saved, and strengthened as a result of our ministry.

Paul

No Excuses

As I write this, the Monday evening service at the Big Valley Bible Baptist Church in Lodi, California, is in the books.  It was an interesting service for two reasons.  First of all, there have been a good number of visitors in this meeting from all over this area (not far from Sacramento and Stockton).  Second, there is a very godly woman in the church who is a tremendous example of faithfulness.

Betty is 93 years old and never misses a service, except for the time when she fell and broke four ribs.  Other than that, she is in her place every time the doors are open.  When others less than half her age come to pastor and make excuse after excuse for why they can’t be faithful, she is serious about serving God, even at her age.

This evening, the message on faith really spoke to her heart and she felt led of the Lord to respond in the invitation.  Being legally blind and somewhat unsteady on her feet, she called for help from my son Josiah so that she could respond at the altar call.  She told me afterwards that the Lord had really used the message to speak to her heart.

I could not help being amazed by her dedication.  Here she was in her nineties recovering from a fall in which she broke four ribs, yet she wanted everyone to be sure which side she was on.  In personal conversation after the service, she relayed to me that she has a life’s goal to be an old woman of joy.  Too many, she said, were crabby and cranky.  She wanted to be known for being full of joy.  It was impossible to hear her speak without thinking of the fruit of the Spirit and how God produces joy in the life of a surrendered Christian.

There can be no doubt that she was a blessing and a challenge to me.  If God gives me that many years to serve Him, I want to be like Betty in two ways: first of all, in faithfulness, and second of all, in joy.

As always, thank you for your prayers.  Keep faithful and keep joyful.

Paul

Homeless

The spring round of meetings has begun for the Crow family!  Traveling, singing, preaching, ministering every night to churches and individuals in and out of the services is now in full swing.  The biggest news from our family is that we are now traveling without our fifth wheel travel trailer, our home on wheels.  It all happened something like this.
It was a dark and stormy night… No, seriously, we had a lot of problems with the trailer last year.  Broken leaf springs, broken slide out mechanisms, a failed axle—all these were issues that we had to deal with in 2018.  In an attempt to fix these issues, I took the trailer in to a place called Custom Spring in Memphis, Tennessee, in December.  After repairing and strengthening the springs, the shop manager strongly recommended to me that I trade the trailer in.  From that shop, the trailer went to the RV repair shop to get the slide out problem repaired.  After looking at the issues there, the RV shop manager strongly recommended to me that we trade the trailer in.
Wondering what God’s will might be for us in this matter, I began looking at different RV options for us.  I found no suitable floor plans that I felt that we could use, at least none under $125,000.  Accordingly, we pursued a plan of repairing the existing trailer and moving on from there.
The problem is that one of our I-beams (not the latest Apple product, but a large piece of steel on which the trailer sits) has lost its camber, twisted, in layman’s terms.  This twist has caused a lot of problems: the slide out issues, the broken leaf springs, the government shutdown, climate change, illegal immigration, hair loss—you get the picture.
Three companies are involved in the repair of this problem.  First of all, there is a company that provided an extended (5 year) warranty for the trailer.  They are claiming, of course, that they do not need to pay because of a technicality in the original contract.  The dealership is looking for the original right now so that we can prove our point to the warranty company.
The second company involved is the trailer manufacturer.  They are claiming that if there is a problem with the I-beam, that it is not their fault but that of the beam manufacturer (the third company).  In order for them to turn in the claim to the manufacturer, someone must take very precise measurements of the beam so that they begin the process.
All of this sounds very tedious and time consuming to me.  We would love to be in our trailer once again to be at home while we travel, but that is not possible at this time.  Instead, our home church has loaned us a 5 x 8 cargo trailer into which we have packed our belongings and are currently staying wherever we can find a place.  The difficulty is in finding available prophet’s chambers along our southern route to California.  It is missions conference time for many of the churches that we know and that means that their prophet’s chambers are booked.  For 15 years, I never thought about booking prophet’s chambers.  Now I know that it is usually best to call 6 months in advance.
I am excited to hear of churches in their preparation efforts for upcoming meetings.  Cottage prayer meetings, church prayer meetings, 40 days of prayer and fasting—these kinds of things excite an evangelist as he goes into a meeting, knowing that the prayer preparation will lead to miracles from God.  In the final analysis, our trailer troubles fit into the category of “light affliction,” according to the Apostle Paul; and like his woes under that same heading, these things work for us.
Our trailer problems will be resolved in God’s way and in His time.  In the meantime, please pray for souls to be saved, for Christians to surrender to God, and for churches to be revived.