WEEK OF PRAYER: Compassion ministry helps church planting family ‘go big’ in Puerto Rico

By Tony Hudson

RÍO GRANDE, Puerto Rico –– No one would’ve guessed that “Go big or go home” was an Ortiz family truism.

After all, when God called Oscar Ortiz and his wife, Wendy, to plant a church in Río Grande, they didn’t first launch a marketing campaign, send out glossy, full-color mailers, or pay for billboards, radio ads, and social media blasts.

Oscar and Wendy Ortiz left their home in Puerto Rico with no plans to return. But an irresistible dose of homesickness and an unshakeable burden for the lost brought them back. Now, they’re planting a church just down the street from where Oscar grew up. “God gave us a heavy heart for this place,” Wendy says. “There are so many people here who need to know Jesus.” (NAMB photo by Ben Rollins)

Instead, they moved their car off the driveway, set up some lawn chairs, and invited neighbors over to their house to hear the gospel. And then, when it rained on what turned out to be Iglesia Bautista Esperanza Eterna’s launch Sunday, Oscar and Wendy didn’t let it dampen their enthusiasm, because they had a different definition of what it means to “go big.”

“We had just six adults that first rainy Sunday, and lots of things didn’t go as planned,” Oscar says. “But that was okay because we weren’t planting with the intention of having a big congregation one day. We just wanted to plant a church that would plant more churches.”

Starting a church planting movement in the driveway of their Puerto Rico home was not always Oscar and Wendy Ortiz’s chief ambition. Born and raised on the island, they moved to Texas the day after their wedding so Oscar could attend seminary.

“We just went there to study, but ended up staying 14 years,” Oscar says. “We built a life, we had kids, and then eventually got to the point where we had no intention of ever going back to Puerto Rico.”

When Oscar and Wendy Ortiz planted a church in Río Grande, Puerto Rico, they didn’t ask God for a big congregation. They asked for a church that would plant more churches. “And He answered that prayer,” Wendy says. “God gave us a church plant that loves the Lord and wants to see other people come to love Him too.” (NAMB photo by Ben Rollins)

An irresistible dose of homesickness combined with a can’t-stop-thinking-about-it burden for lost people changed all that.

“God really just started to give us a heavy heart for Puerto Rico,” Wendy says. “This is called ‘The Enchanted Island’ for a reason. It’s a beautiful place with beautiful people, and it’s easy to think there are lots of Christians here because everybody says, ‘God bless you,’ when they pass you on the street.”

“But the truth is,” Oscar says, “there are very few believers in Puerto Rico, and the more we prayed about it, the more we knew it was time for us to come home.”

Five years ago, when the Ortiz family moved back to Puerto Rico, they brought with them what they’d learned in seminary.

“We’d planted a congregation in Texas, and learned how different churches connect with different people,” Oscar says. “So when we came to the area around Río Grande, where there’s 46,000 people and zero Southern Baptist churches, we told ourselves, ‘If this first plant never gets above 50 members, that’s alright as long as we’re constantly sending out teams who can plant more churches and reach more people.'”

Oscar and Wendy Ortiz planted a church in Río Grande, Puerto Rico, for one reason. “There are so many lost people here,” Oscar says, “and different churches connect with different people. We knew a new church plant would be the best way to begin spreading the gospel around this area.” (NAMB photo by Ben Rollins)

That’s why when Iglesia Bautista Esperanza Eterna started small, Oscar and Wendy could still dream big. “This church has been an answer to prayer,” Wendy says. “God’s made it into a family who love the Lord and want to see other people come to love Him too.”

Shortly after planting in Río Grande, Oscar and Wendy’s congregation turned their attention to another nearby town.

“Loíza is just down the road from here,” Oscar says. “It’s a low-income community with almost no gospel witness, and we started praying about starting a new work there. But we had a problem. We only had 27 members. So, what did we do? Did we wait until we had more people to move forward? No. We prayed for help. And God answered.”

Send Relief is the Southern Baptists’ compassion ministry arm, and when Send Relief began sending volunteer mission teams to Loíza to repair residents’ homes, that opened doors for Oscar, Wendy, and their church.

Volunteer mission teams from Send Relief, Southern Baptist’s compassion ministry arm, partner with church planting missionary Oscar Ortiz in Loíza, Puerto Rico. “Loíza is a community with a lot of darkness,” Oscar says, “and Send Relief is helping us lay the groundwork for what we hope will be a new church there.” (NAMB photo by Ben Rollins)

“We didn’t know anyone in Loíza,” Wendy says. “But the Send Relief teams coming in and telling people, ‘We’re connected with this church in Río Grande,’ really helped us build relationships there.”

Whenever Send Relief mission teams came to work on homes in Loíza, Oscar and people from his church plant in Río Grande would be there too.

“We talked with people in the homes and really got to know them,” Oscar says. “Then even after the teams left, we kept going back and connecting with the people there.”

As volunteer mission teams with Send Relief, Southern Baptist’s compassion ministry arm, repair homes in Loíza, Puerto Rico, they’re helping church plant missionaries Oscar and Wendy Ortiz take the first steps toward planting a church there one day. “We didn’t know anyone in Loíza,” Wendy says. “But Send Relief coming in has really helped us build relationships.” (NAMB photo by Ben Rollins)

That’s how Oscar and Wendy Ortiz were able to go big. Send Relief helped them and their tiny church plant in Río Grande lay the foundation for what will hopefully soon be another new church in an unchurched place.

“There are so many lost people in Puerto Rico,” Oscar says. “We have to start more churches, and it amazes me that even though our church plant in Río Grande is still small and new, we’re already able to be a part of that work.

“That’s big. It’s something only God can do.”

The church Oscar and Wendy Ortiz planted in Río Grande, Puerto Rico, is still small. But that hasn’t stopped them from dreaming big. “From the beginning, we wanted to be a church that plants churches,” Oscar says. “We are not going to wait until we have lots of people before we move forward.” (NAMB photo by Ben Rollins)

The Annie Armstrong Easter Offering® provides half of NAMB’s annual budget, and 100 percent of the proceeds go to the mission field in North America. The offering is used for training, support and care for missionaries, like Oscar and Wendy Ortiz, and for evangelism resources.


Published March 6, 2026

Tony Hudson

Tony Hudson writes for On Mission