• Contact Us
  • Classifieds
  • About
  • Home

Pathway

Baptist & Christian News

  • Missouri
    • MBC
    • Churches
    • Institutions & Agencies
    • Policy
    • Disaster Relief
  • National
    • SBC Annual Meeting
    • NAMB
    • SBC
    • Churches
    • Policy
    • Society & Culture
  • Global
    • Missions
    • Multicultural
  • Columnists
    • John Yeats
    • Don Hinkle
    • Pat Lamb
    • Rhonda Rhea
    • Rob Phillips
  • Ethics
    • Life
    • Liberty
    • Family
  • Faith
    • Apologetics
    • Religions
    • Evangelism
    • Missions
    • Bible Study & Devotion

More results...

Reginald and Claudia Pressley, over 45 years of ministry, “never had much money to put away for retirement,” as he described it, “though the churches helped where they could.” The Pressleys are among 1,800 individuals aided by Mission:Dignity, the retiree benevolence ministry of GuideStone Financial Resources. BP Photo.

Mission:Dignity aids ‘folks like us’

June 1, 2016 By Baptist Press

EDITOR’S NOTE: Mission:Dignity Sunday is June 26 in the Southern Baptist Convention in support of GuideStone Financial Resources’ benevolence ministry for retired pastors or their widows.

TOCCOA, Ga. (BP) — After 45 years of ministry, Reginald and Claudia Pressley retired much the way they began — serving small churches in the Southeast. They were there for births, baptisms, weddings and funerals as they marked the milestones and the passage of time in the lives of their members.

And they wouldn’t take anything for the memories.

The couple met in their teens at Toccoa Falls Institute (now Toccoa Falls College), a faith-based school in the mountains of north Georgia. He was attending on the advice of a pastor where he lived in Talladega, Ala., after surrendering to the ministry; she was the daughter of an instructor.

His memory is that it was “love at first sight” for Claudia.

Her story differs.

“He chased me all over the place.”

Regardless, they struck up an acquaintance before he returned to Alabama for his senior year of high school. Then he was drafted by Uncle Sam; entering the Marines, he shipped off for the Korean Peninsula.

The relationship continued halfway around the world, and when he returned home he went to Toccoa to visit Claudia. Soon they were married and, after his discharge, settled back in Toccoa. He took Bible classes at the school and then moved the family to Florida where he studied at the Baptist Bible Institute (now the Baptist College of Florida).

“Times were tough being newly married, having a son and wife, and trying to support them; money was scarce,” Reginald said.

His first pastorate, at Bellwood Baptist Church in Geneva, Ala., taught him and Claudia a lot about human nature, such as the squabble that was just being solved when they moved to town.

“The church had a very heated question over whether to add air conditioning,” Claudia recounted. “Most folks didn’t have it back then, and couldn’t afford it, so they could not see taking on the expense of higher electric bills just for an hour or two on Sunday morning.

“Well, the church was split on the vote, so they went ahead and air conditioned the sanctuary, and that created a very unique worship experience,” Claudia said. “The half in favor of air conditioning sat on one side with the cool air blowing, and those who opposed it sat on the other side with the windows open.”

That was just the first of a lifetime of experiences that Reginald and Claudia look back on with lightheartedness.

Throughout the next several decades, the couple moved around the Southeast, always serving small churches and living in parsonages.

Reginald’s favorite part of the ministry was preaching.

“The Lord just seemed to speak through me and give me what the people needed to hear at the time,” he reflected.

Reginald also credits his ministry with good discipleship and a strong missions education program through Woman’s Missionary Union and the Brotherhood, which he described as the backbone of the church that kept it focused on missions.

Now retired, the Pressleys are not far from where they first met. They live in Toccoa and are members of Old Liberty Baptist Church, just 15 miles across the state line in Westminster, S.C. It was the last church he served and where he retired at age 70 in 2001. Claudia plays the organ each Sunday.

One of the blessings Reginald and Claudia have in retirement is Mission:Dignity, the benevolence ministry of GuideStone Financial Resources by which Southern Baptists’ gifts supplement the couple’s limited income to help them make ends meet.

“We never had much money to put away for retirement, though the churches helped where they could,” Reginald said. “I think many of them put about $35 a month away toward our retirement, which is what the Annuity Board [now GuideStone] recommended as a minimum.

“Of course we didn’t have anything to contribute because I rarely made more than $300 a month in my early days, and not much more than that later.”

Claudia seconded that thought.

“I sometimes wonder how in the world we got by in those days without health insurance, but we couldn’t afford it,” she said. “Thank goodness the Annuity Board eventually offered a program and it was a real lifesaver. The Annuity Board was a real blessing when we needed it.

“It was hard to raise four children on a country pastor’s salary, but the Lord always met our needs.”

Mission:Dignity assists more than 1,800 recipients each month, providing a measure of security and dignity in their retirement years. The neediest couples with at least 25 years of paid Southern Baptist ministerial service can receive $600 each month from Mission:Dignity. Thanks to an endowment that pays for administrative costs, 100 percent of money given to Mission:Dignity benefits a retired pastor, worker or his widow in need. For some recipients, it means being able to stay in the familiar surroundings of their own home. For others, it covers the cost of groceries, utilities, prescriptions and other necessities. But for each of them, it’s an expression of the love and care from their Southern Baptist family.

“As you get old the medical bills come a lot more frequently and seem to never end,” Claudia said. “Mission:Dignity is helping us to meet those bills while still having funds available to cover other day-to-day expenses.

“We don’t know what we would do without the check we receive from Baptists all over the nation who contribute to folks like us.”

For more information about Mission:Dignity or to share a gift, visit MissionDignity.org.

Comments

Trending

  • Third season of ‘The Chosen’ series: entertaining, but controversy grows
  • Honor God by Honoring the Man of God
  • Four examples of where the New World Translation gets it wrong
  • 10 key biblical doctrines denied by Jehovah’s Witnesses
  • Missouri DR assists Glenallen community after double disaster

Ethics

Iowa parents win temporary relief from transgender school policy

Diana Chandler

Iowa parents have temporarily blocked a public school policy requiring their children to use the preferred pronouns of their transgender classmates and share bathrooms with them or face expulsion.

Senior adults suffer greatest increase as U.S. suicides near 50,000

Diana Chandler

More Ethics Stories

Missouri

Mo. Baptists to celebrate CP month in October

Staff

When you give to your church, you provide foster homes for children, rescue women from human trafficking, support survivors of disasters, start new churches, advance Christian education, offer compassionate care to the elderly, keep roughly 9,000 full-time missionaries on the field, train the next generation of Southern Baptist leaders … and that’s just for starters.

Copyright © 2023 · The Pathway