Missionaries to IMB President Paul Chitwood: ‘You’re one of us’

George Smith and Paul Chitwood

ARUA, Uganda (BP)—Missionary Jeremy Taliaferro remembers “mad-dash googling” on the internet to find out who is Paul Chitwood.

The International Mission Board’s presidential search committee announced their candidate last November. And Taliaferro admitted at first he was a little underwhelmed since the Chitwoods had not served as IMB missionaries.

“Paul Chitwood? I have no idea who this is,” the Southern Baptist missionary — who serves in Arua, Uganda, with his wife, Susan, and four children — recalled during the Chitwoods’ visit last week. “[I’m] trying to find a Facebook page and all that. And to be honest … our initial thought was we really wanted somebody from the field.”

Chitwood and Taliaferro

Missionary Jeremy Taliaferro introduces IMB’s president, Paul Chitwood, to local church leaders. (IMB Photo by Chris Carter)

But that was before Chitwood, his wife, Michelle, and 12-year-old daughter, Cai, traveled to Uganda to see the work of IMB missionaries like Taliaferro.

Taliaferro leads a team of missionaries who minister in one of the world’s largest refugee camps, located near the South Sudan border. The two men spent hours traveling together one day along bumpy terrain and chatting as Taliaferro drove and Chitwood rode shotgun. During the drive, they discovered that in addition to their shared passion for missions and helping equip missionaries to better serve God’s Kingdom, they both love being adoptive parents and both enjoy hunting and fishing.

“I was inspired and encouraged by that conversation that we had,” Taliaferro said. “I’m going to tell everybody, ‘You’re one of us.’”

Chitwood in Uganda

IMB President Paul Chitwood looks out over a village near one of the world’s largest refugee camps close to the South Sudan border. (IMB Photo by Chris Carter)

The Chitwoods’ journey to Arua was just one leg of a weeklong trip that included stops in the capital city of Kampala to meet with missionaries focused on urban ministry and in Jinja to visit the Uganda Baptist Seminary.

Kevin Rodgers, a cluster leader for East Africa in Sub-Saharan Africa, told Baptist Press Chitwood’s visit encouraged him and other missionaries.

“To have the IMB president come all the way to Uganda … and see what they’re doing and pat them on the back was huge,” he said. “Our personnel in East Africa probably feel more affirmed than they have felt in a long time.”

Paul Chitwood and Michelle Chitwood

IMB President Paul Chitwood and his wife, Michelle, receive affirmation from a language teacher who taught them some words in the local language, Luganda. (IMB Photo by Chris Carter)

Missionary Shawna Davis — whose kids refer to Rodgers as “Uncle Kevin” — and her husband, Daren, an IMB leader over mission work in Sub-Saharan Africa, also traveled with the Chitwoods. Shawna said the Chitwoods are part of the IMB family.

“We are a missionary family,” said Davis, who serves in Nairobi, Kenya. “That’s the way we are choosing to embrace the Chitwoods. We are welcoming them into our family.”

Michelle Chitwood noted her connection with the missionary wives she met. She saw the commitment they share with raising their children, while being actively engaged in the ministry and loving those in their community.

“I feel called, and I think our kids feel called, to be a part of the IMB family,” she said. “Not one missionary is called, but [the] whole family is called. I feel like our whole family is called.”

Michelle Chitwood and Cai Chitwood

Michelle Chitwood and her 12-year-old daughter, Cai, teach a class of young Uganda schoolchildren the ‘Baby Shark’ song. (IMB Photo by Chris Carter)

Paul Chitwood noted he saw the trip as his way of “washing the missionaries’ feet” and encouraging them.

“I’ve tried to communicate to our missionaries from day one on the job that Michelle and I come to this role with a goal of serving them,” he said.

Whether spending time with missionaries on the dusty roads or on the city streets, Chitwood said he was able to get a snapshot of the obstacles missionaries face every day.

George Smith and Chitwood

Missionary George Smith shares a laugh with IMB President Paul Chitwood in Uganda. (IMB Photo by Chris Carter)

“Every setting was a reminder to me of the unique challenges that our missionaries face and ways that we can help them,” he said.

“It’s so important for them to know that we love them enough to be here.”


Shawn Hendricks is editor of Baptist Press.

This story first appeared on Baptist Press.