LMCO gifts currently $5 million ahead of last year

Southern Baptists’ contributions to support international missions through the Lottie Moon Christmas Offering® are 3.75 percent ahead of the May 2017 offering totals, according to a report by Rodney Freeman, IMB treasurer and vice president of Support Services.  

At the end of May 2018, IMB had received $142,683,654 so far for the 2017-18 campaign, which began Oct. 1, 2017, and ends Sept. 30, 2018. This total is $5,161,874 (3.75%) ahead of last year’s LMCO receipts. The total represents money received by the International Mission Board or postmarked by the close of the last business day of May 2018 and includes receipts from the SBC Executive Committee, state conventions, churches and individuals.  

Freeman also reported that at the end of May, IMB had received $66,840,768 in Cooperative Program (CP) funding for the 2017-18 fiscal year, which started Oct. 1. This total is $1,014,337 (1.54%) ahead of last year. 

A vision for the nations

Gifts from churches such as Houston’s First support Southern Baptist missionaries around the world who work to take the gospel to those who have never heard it. Houston’s First contributed $1.2 million toward the 2017-18 Lottie Moon Christmas Offering. Their gift cooperates with the gifts of other churches to make it possible for missionaries like Texans Shane and Lindsay Mikeska who serve in London.  

Lindsay Mikeska

Southern Baptists’ gifts through the Lottie Moon Christmas Offering make it possible for missionaries, such as Texan Lindsay Mikeska (center), to live and work in megacities like London — where millions need to hear the gospel. (IMB Photo)

“I’m very grateful for the generosity of First Baptist Houston and the vision and leadership of pastor Gregg Matte, and the ministry of their mission pastor William Taylor,” said Edgar Aponte, IMB’s vice president of Mobilization. “It’s encouraging to see their commitment to engage the nations, not only through prayer and giving, but also by raising missionaries like Lindsay Mikeska.”  

Contributions from church members across the Southern Baptist Convention also make it possible for Texans Todd and Anne Beel to serve in Mexico City. The Beels are part of a 12-member team who often contemplate how they even start to reach a city of more than 28 million with the gospel.  

“This is a massive city,” Beel, the team leader, said. “There are unreached people and places within it, and we want to take the gospel to those places.” 

Mexico City's 20 million

Men play chess in the historic district of Mexico City. IMB missionaries serving in the city are investing their lives to reach the more than 20 million people who live there, as well as the businesspeople who come and go every day from other parts of the world. (IMB Photo)

The team is seeing it start to happen already, and they’re seeing new believers catch a vision for reaching the nations. That’s exactly what they pray for. “Because this is a world-class city, it has connections around the world and people are coming and going every day, so this city has a reach worldwide,” Beel said. 

Each time one lands, the vast city opens its arms to a little more diversity, and each time the task of reaching them for Christ gets a little bigger. But that’s exactly why the team is compelled to be there. 

“Those are people coming and going all day long for business, work, sports and study,” Beel said. “It’s kind of like, ‘Who has the Lord brought to this city today who needs to be reached with the gospel?’ Many of them are coming from unreached people groups around the world.” 

And as those planes leave again, they could be taking the gospel back with them, he said. That’s the hope of the team, a dozen people working together to equip new believers to take the gospel to unreached pockets of Mexico City and the world.  

Carlos Llambes

Men study the Bible during an adult education class led by IMB missionary Carlos Llambes. He and his wife, Lily, spend many of their Sundays partnering with local churches in Mexico City, such as this one in the Barros Sierra neighborhood. (IMB Photo)

Above and beyond

Houston’s First also gave $162,000 to fully fund several additional specific opportunities above-and-beyond their regular LMCO gift. Those included a program for children living with their mothers in a women’s prison, as well as a Syrian refugee response program, both in Central Asia; and a girls’ shelter in South Asia. 

The gift related to the women’s prison will allow Southern Baptist workers to open and support a kindergarten inside the prison, allowing mothers to take skills and education classes while their children receive care. The gift focused on refugees allows field personnel to continue to operate a community center in a major urban city. The ministry of the community center helps Syrian refugees rebuild their lives as field personnel meet physical needs and share the gospel. 

Mexico City - The Truth

With a predominantly Catholic influence, many who live in Mexico City are involved in syncretistic worship. Candles often illuminate shrines. Southern Baptists’ gifts through the Lottie Moon Christmas Offering make it possible for IMB missionaries to introduce people in Mexico City to the true Light of the world. (IMB Photo)

The church’s gift for South Asia will allow a girls’ shelter to continue its ministry to beggar girls and their families for several more years. The center provides an education for girls who were raised to be street beggars. Their skills training allows them to break the cycle of begging and poverty. 

“Our desire is to see the lives of [people here] wholly transformed as they encounter followers of Jesus loving them and treating them with dignity while pointing them toward the hope that surpasses their immediate physical well-being,” one worker wrote in response to the Lottie Moon gifts. “Your gracious gift further enables us to minister in Word and deed, and for that we are grateful.” 

Still time to give

The LMCO campaign year historically ran from June 1 to May 31 each year, but that campaign year did not align with IMB’s fiscal year, which runs January 1 to December 31. To help alleviate confusion, IMB finance leaders, in conjunction with the board of trustees, proposed to align the fiscal year and the LMCO campaign to October 1 through September 30. Messengers voted to approve the fiscal year change during the 2017 SBC annual meeting in Phoenix. Therefore, gifts contributed from Oct. 1, 2017, to Sept. 30, 2018, will apply to the 2017-18 Lottie Moon Christmas Offering.  

Learn more about your Mexico City team and your London team, including Lindsay Mikeska — and the ways your gifts impact the advance of the gospel in these megacities.  

Give now to support the Southern Baptists in Mexico City, London and other hard-to-reach places who are taking the gospel to people who have never heard it.  

Read Texans Help Mexico City Team Strive for Global Impact by Erin Roach, published online here by the Southern Baptist Texan in May 2018.  


The Lottie Moon Christmas Offering® is a registered trademark of Woman’s Missionary Union. 

Julie McGowan is public relations manager for IMB.