Crosspointe
ARMS
Our mission is to support all active duty, reservists, veterans
and their families. We work as a ministry of Crosspointe Baptist
Church and are a member of the Cabarrus Baptist Association,
Military Family Support Team. Counselors are available to meet the needs of all military
servicemen and women and their families.
Members of Crosspointe ARMS and the Military Family Support Team
are available for presentations whenever needed.
| Contact: |
AECS Richard E. Bossardet
United States Navy Retired |
| Phone: |
704-784-8116 |
| Cell: |
704-467-2638 |
| E-mail: |
rbossardet@carolina.rr.com |
Proudly supporting
Military Ministry
We provide assistance with the following:
- Tricare Health Insurance
- SGLI/VGLI Life Insurance
- SBP Survivors Benefit Plan
- Personal affairs planning
- Relief organizations
- Report of retiree death
- Military forms
- Counseling and just plain talk
- Veterans benefits
- PTSD
Our goal in Christian life is to become as much like Jesus as we
can. Jesus says in John 15:9-13, As the Father has loved me, so
have I loved you. Now remain in my love. If you obey my
commands, you will remain in my love, just as I have obeyed my
Fathers commands and remain in his love. I have told you this so
that my joy may be in you and that your joy may be complete. My
command is this: Love each other as I have loved you. Greater
love has no one than this, that he lay down his life for his
friends.
Keep our veterans in your prayers.
Click here to view a tribute to our veterans.
"The soldier above all others is required to perform the highest
act of religious teaching -- Sacrifice"
-
General Douglas McArthur, July 14, 1935, Washington, D.C.
"War is like a cancer in all of us. It quickly eats us up after
a while. We can only stuff our past experiences inside us for so
long before they begin to eat their way to the surface. I’d like
to talk to someone about these things, but I don't think there’s
anyone interested in talking about hell. For us the war never
ended, but no one else can see that. To me that is the biggest
letdown of all. We struggled hard to survive, and then we found
out that nobody wanted to hear about the war and our problems,
or where we had been. Coming home was hell."
-
A Vietnam Veteran
“WE UNDERSTAND”
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