Brethren bits.
- The Ministry Office has shared new contact information
for Russell and Deborah Payne, who started as co-district executives in
Southeastern District on June 1: Southeastern District Church of the Brethren,
P.O. Box 8366, Gray, TN 37615; 423-753-3220; sedcob@centurylink.net.
- Webcasting from the Church of the Brethren’s National Young Adult
Conference (NYAC) begins Monday evening, June 18, at www.brethren.org/webcasts/nyac.html. The daily worship services and the morning Bible studies will be webcast. The
2012 NYAC is meeting on the theme "Humble Yet Bold: Being the Church" (Matthew
5:13-18).
- The Church of the Brethren’s advocacy and peace witness
office in Washington, D.C., has a new logo. The image is of a dove
superimposed on the Church of the Brethren cross. “Thank you to Kay Guyer for
the beautiful, inspiring design!” said a note on the “Brethren Advocacy”
Facebook page.
- The John Kline Homestead is holding an open house and birthday
party celebrating the 215th birthday of Civil War-era Brethren elder
John Kline. The event takes place at 2-4 p.m. on Sunday, June 17, at the
homestead in Broadway, Va. Festivities will include an open-house tour, a
presentation depicting the significance of the life of Elder Kline and his many
accomplishments, light refreshments including birthday cake and homemade ice
cream. A free-will 215th Birthday offering will benefit the John Kline
Homestead. For more information contact Linville Creek Church of the Brethren at
540-896-5001 or lccob@verizon.net.
- A date has been set for the next Powerhouse regional youth
conference to be hosted by Manchester University. The weekend of
worship, workshops, music, food, and fun is scheduled for Nov. 10-11 in North
Manchester, Ind., for senior high youth and adult advisors. For more go to www.manchester.edu/powerhouse or
call the Campus Ministry/Religious Life office at 260-982-5243.
- Virlina District is calling attention to the upcoming 75th
anniversary of the disappearance of three Church of the Brethren
missionaries in China. Dec. 2, 2012, marks 75 years since the three Brethren
disappeared from their post in Shou Yang, Shansi Province, China: Minneva Neher
from LaVerne, Calif.; Alva Harsh from Eglon, W.Va.; and Mary Hykes Harsh from
Cearfoss, Md. Virlina is encouraging its churches to commemorate the fateful
event on Sunday, Dec. 2. “Many Brethren entertain memories of the sad reports in
‘Messenger,’ two books, and other memorial reports,” the district newsletter
said. Virlina has several connections with the former Brethren mission in China.
A young Shou Yang native, Ruoxi Li, is a member of the district's Good Shepherd
congregation, and has authored a 96-page report about the current state of the
church in Shou Yang. Another district connection has been formed by a sibling of
Alva Harsh, Norman, a current resident of Friendship Retirement Community in
Roanoke, Va. The community has been asked to assist Friendship Hospital in Ping
Ding, a former Brethren mission post in China, and helped host a delegation of
three Chinese doctors in April this year.
- West Marva District held its Women’s Spring Rally on May
9 at Oak Park Church of the Brethren. Attendance was 89, with 23 churches
represented, according to the district newsletter. A Love Offering received
during the event is sending $2,472 to Church World Service to assist in
preparing clean-up buckets for areas affected by disasters. The group also sent
374 hygiene kits, 21 school kits, and 1 baby layette to the Brethren Service
Center in New Windsor, Md., for disaster relief, and collected $110 to purchase
blankets for those in need. Another $678 was donated for shipping expenses.
- Christian Peacemaker Teams (CPT) has issued an urgent prayer
request for the Palestinian village of Susiya, which received
demolition orders from the Israeli military on June 12. “The demolition, to be
completed by June 15, will destroy 18 tents and make 160 people homeless,” said
the prayer request. For more about CPT’s work in Israel and Palestine go to www.cpt.org.
- David and Joan Young, who lead the Springs of Living Water
initiative in church renewal, will present a seminar titled “Servant
Leadership and the Life Cycle of the Church, the Gift of Hope” at the 22nd
Annual International Conference on Servant Leadership in Indianapolis on June
20-21. The Greenleaf Center has just published an essay David wrote on the
communication pattern their family uses, which also is being taught in churches.
At the conference, the Youngs have been invited to tell their story of a
lifetime involvement in servant leadership that has impacted their family, and
the spiritually oriented Springs Initiative in church renewal in the Church of
the Brethren and beyond. For more information contact davidyoung@churchrenewalservant.org.
- A new name and a new Leadership Board have been announced
by the former Feast of Love. The movement--led in large part by young adults and
introduced at the Progressive Brethren Gathering last fall--has chosen the new
name Open Table Cooperative. The new Leadership Board includes Kathy Fry-Miller
of North Manchester, Ind.; Josih Hostettler of La Verne, Calif.; Aaron Ross of
Bethel, Pa.; Katy Rother of Alexandria, Va.; Ken Kline Smeltzer of Boalsburg,
Pa.; and Elizabeth Ullery of Olympia, Wash. One position still remains to be
filled on the seven-member board. The new website address for Open Table
Cooperative is www.opentablecoop.org.
- McPherson (Kan.) College is offering an “adventure in
Greece” travel experience on Jan. 15-23, 2013. “It will be a feast for
the palate, the eyes, and the spirit,” said an announcement. “In one of the most
gorgeous countries on earth, we will travel to the land where the Apostle Paul
spread the good news. As we travel we will enjoy the intriguing stories,
rituals, and mythologies of the Greco-Roman world, which set the stage for the
coming of Christianity.” If interested in joining this McPherson College tour
with students, alumni, and friends, contact Herb Smith at smithh@mcpherson.edu or at the following
address: 26 Mt. Lebanon Dr., Lebanon, PA; 717-273-1089.
- Pinecrest Community, a Church of the Brethren retirement
community in Mount Morris, Ill., has announced the achievement of a “Five-Star”
ranking by its nursing home, Pinecrest Manor. The achievement was made known in
ratings released in May by Medicare. It is a tribute to the dedicated nursing
staff of Pinecrest Manor, and its diligence on health inspections and quality
measures, said CEO Ferol Labash in a release. “Jolene LeClere, administrator of
health services, and our team of administrative staff, lead the way in providing
quality, compassionate care.” A five-star rating is the highest rating a nursing
home can be given by Medicare, the release said, adding that this star rating is
for overall staffing hours, which includes registered nurses, licensed practical
nurses, licensed vocational nurses, and certified nursing assistants. Pinecrest
Community recommends that those considering nursing homes for their loved ones
consult the information made available at the www.medicare.gov website.
- The New Community Project has announced grants and
assistance to partner organizations in South Sudan in support of
education for girls. A grant of $12,000 has been given to the Girlchild
Education and Development Association in Nimule, South Sudan, following on an
$18,000 grant made earlier this year for school tuition and materials for girls.
The project also plans another grant later this year to support education for
girls in Narus, South Sudan. “Ongoing support for our efforts to educate girls
in South Sudan comes through the Amanda O'Donnell fund--a fund set up to honor a
young woman whose life was cut tragically short,” the release said. More
information is at www.newcommunityproject.org.
- A webinar from the National Council of Churches’ Eco-Justice
Program will address the theme “All God’s Children are Sacred” on June
19 at 1 p.m. (eastern). Pediatric physician Jerry Paulson will discuss why
children are vulnerable to environmental health triggers, and Hester Paul from
the Children’s Environmental Health Network's Eco-Healthy Child Care Program
will offer tips to make homes and churches safer. Sign up at http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/1845/p/salsa/event/common/public/?event_KEY=74105.
- Korean churches are developing plans for a “peace train”
that would travel from Berlin through Moscow and Beijing to Busan, South Korea,
in time for the World Council of Churches’ (WCC) global assembly in Oct. 2013.
“The plan is to draw attention to the need for peace and reunification in the
Korean peninsula,” a release said, “and North Korea also would be on the route
of the train, which would carry church and civil society representatives.” Peace
Together 2013, a committee of the National Council of Churches of Korea, is
working with the governments on the plan. The council also is in early phases of
discussion about how to work with the governments of North and South Korea to
prepare a peace treaty to be signed in 2013 that marks the 60th anniversary of
the ceasefire treaty that ended the Korean War.
Source:6/14/2012 Newsline
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