Friday, January 16, 2026

From the Sanctuary to the Mountains: A Church That Sent Healers

BT Team in 2004. Megan is second from the right.
 

Megan Pieniazak Dove came to Baptist Temple as a child, joining the congregation with her family while she was in the fourth grade. From the beginning, the church became a formative space for her spiritual and personal development. She was immersed in the rhythms of congregational life—Sunday school, choir, GAs, and especially Acteens, a ministry she later described as central to her growth in faith. Looking back on those years, Dove recalled feeling so “bubble wrapped with love and assurance that she could dream big,” an environment that nurtured both confidence and calling.

With the encouragement of Pastor Mark Newton, she enrolled at Baylor University, where was active in the Baptist Student Ministry and deepened her sense of vocation. It was also at Baylor that she met her future husband, Stephen.

Dove’s time at Baylor included two semesters in Mexico, undertaken to strengthen her Spanish language skills. Experiences that would later prove essential. 

After completing her education, she returned to Baptist Temple in 2002, at just twenty years old, to serve as minister of children and youth, later just focusing on children.

In 2003, Megan and Stephen responded to a call to missions, relocating to Chiapas, Mexico for a year, to serve at Clínica Peña de Horeb, an eye clinic established by Good News Friends to bring medical care to some of southern Mexico’s most impoverished and geographically isolated communities. Dove’s earlier language training enabled her to work effectively with patients. She and Stephen assumed responsibility for the clinic’s administrative operations, coordinating medical teams, staffing, and daily logistics. 

The clinic’s work unfolded through three primary avenues: periodic medical campaigns during which U.S. physicians provided free ophthalmological surgeries; year-round eye exams and distribution of donated glasses; and regular outreach trips to remote villages scattered across the mountains. “Stephen and I would go on at least one or two remote trips a month to deliver glasses,” said Dove.

BT sent several mission teams to the clinic beginning in the late nineties. In 2002, BT prepared 5000 pairs of donated glasses to take to the clinic. 

Kirby Follis, BT Music and Missions at the time, recalled one trip to the clinic when the mission team combined medical care with pastoral presence. Physicians, nurses, and specialists treated many types of eye conditions, while others offered what Follis, described as “spiritual triage”—praying with patients, listening to their stories, and offering encouragement alongside physical care. “The need was immense” said Follis, “People walked for miles—sometimes for days—descending from remote mountain villages to wait in long lines, hoping for the chance to see a doctor.”

Melissa Baxter contributed to this article.


 

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