Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Century ride

Conway man to cycle 100 miles for Baptist missionari­es

- BY TAMMY KEITH Senior Writer

John David Smith of Conway will ride his bicycle 100 miles on Wednesday to celebrate his 50th birthday and support hundreds of missionari­es at the same time.

Smith, executive director of the Baptist Missionary Associatio­n of America, is using the ride as a fundraiser for missionari­es around the world. He’s calling his ride the ChangeMake­r 100.

“I came up with this personal fitness challenge,” Smith said. “I like to ride my bike, so I always planned to do it for my birthday; I’m going to ride 100 miles.”

Smith said he will leave about 4 a.m. when it is cooler and ride U.S. Highway 64 to Russellvil­le and back to Conway.

His birthday is Aug. 12, but he had a prior commitment.

However, as Smith talked about his plan with co-workers at his office in downtown Conway, the idea developed into a fundraiser for the associatio­n’s approximat­ely 400 missionari­es.

“I decided, after a couple of conversati­ons, OK, I’m going to make my bike ride about them to increase awareness about the missionari­es — they’re there, let’s not forget them,’” Smith said.

These missionari­es, who are in Latin America, Africa, Asia, “really, the whole gamut,” are not American citizens, “but we do partner with them to do some amazing things.”

“We started calling them our changemake­r missionari­es. They have very specific things they do in the kingdom,” Smith said.

John Meriweathe­r, director of developmen­t for Baptist

Missionary Associatio­n of America, said Smith approached him about the fundraisin­g idea.

“We are obviously excited,” Meriweathe­r said. “It’s kind of interestin­g, because I’ve only been here with BMA of America about 2 1/2 years, but I’ve been in a BMA church most of my adult life. I realized how little I really knew about our missionary efforts, even as an active member,” he said.

Meriweathe­r said his goal is “closing the gap of what we’re really doing with their [members’] support and what they really know,” he said. “We want to take missions from the pulpit to the pew.

“When I thought of missions, I just thought of people in the U.S. going to other countries to share the gospel, right? We have hundreds and hundreds of missionari­es or church leaders in their own countries who are committed to planting churches” because of American missionari­es’ efforts, he said. “The fruit they produce are these changemake­r missionari­es. Really, they are the heartbeat of missions.”

Smith said the ChangeMake­r 100 has garnered a lot of support.

“Everybody has just gotten so excited about this idea. We rolled it out to our churches in an informal way just last week or the week before, and the response has just been kind of amazing,” he said. “It has just for some reason resonated with them.”

People can go online to bmamission­s.org to donate.

Although Smith didn’t set a fundraisin­g goal, he said he’s already raised about $10,000. He said creative co-workers shot and posted to Facebook video of him talking about the ride and showing him on his bicycle.

“The response is gaining momentum now,” he said. “I have a friend who has agreed to match every dollar I raise. Now that put a flame under me. People who want to give to a greater purpose, they can double their contributi­ons. It’s a high-capacity individual. If I raise $100,000 , he would match it; he would.”

Smith said the money will be used for grants that the missionari­es can apply for to help defray costs of projects.

“We truly partner with them, we always say — and this is a big deal for us — we partner to do things with them, not for them,” he said. “As Americans, we sometimes think we’ve got it all going on, ‘Let’s go help someone.’ We [Baptist Missionary Associatio­n] just want to come alongside it and be a partner.

“What we’ll do, as those changemake­r missionari­es have needs … ministries related to compassion stuff — to schools, orphanages, feeding programs, women’s ministries, dental clinics — every penny, every penny will go toward that. There’s no hidden agenda here, no administra­tive fees.”“They’ll write and say, ‘Hey, we have this we’re trying to accomplish; we will pay for half …. We don’t want to create dependence on us, but we do want to be a partner.”

Smith considers himself a novice cyclist. “That’s why this is an even bigger challenge,” he said. “I know there are a lot of avid cyclists that a century ride is like breathing for them; it’s not the case for me.”

A production crew will follow Smith, and he’ll stop along the way to talk about different missionari­es, he said.

A few days later, when he turns 50, he will have the satisfacti­on that he achieved both his goals.

 ?? SUBMITTED ?? John David Smith of Conway, director of the Baptist Missionary Associatio­n of America, challenged himself to ride 100 miles for his 50th birthday, but he decided to make it a fundraiser for the missionari­es across the world. He’s calling it the ChangeMake­r 100. He will start early Wednesday morning from the associatio­n headquarte­rs in downtown Conway and ride to Russellvil­le and back.
SUBMITTED John David Smith of Conway, director of the Baptist Missionary Associatio­n of America, challenged himself to ride 100 miles for his 50th birthday, but he decided to make it a fundraiser for the missionari­es across the world. He’s calling it the ChangeMake­r 100. He will start early Wednesday morning from the associatio­n headquarte­rs in downtown Conway and ride to Russellvil­le and back.

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