- Tammy Chudy has been promoted to assistant
director of Employee Benefits at Brethren Benefit Trust (BBT). She has a
combined tenure with BBT of more than 11 years, having worked with
accounts payable in her earlier tenure. Since August 2006, she worked
with insurance services in various roles. “Her commitment and leadership
to BBT are reflected in this promotion,” said an announcement. In
Chudy’s new role she will continue to provide oversight for insurance
services operations, will permanently assume the role of oversight for
pension operations, will assist the director of employee benefits as
needed, and will continue to have three member service representatives
reporting to her. For more information about the services provided by
BBT go to www.brethrenbenefittrust.org .
- Roseanne Segovia finishes her assignment as
editorial assistant of the Gather ’Round curriculum project today, Oct.
11. Her position is coming to a close as planned, as the production side
of the project winds down. She began her employment with Gather ’Round,
a joint Christian education curriculum of Brethren Press and
MennoMedia, on May 18, 2011. Segovia’s responsibilities have included
website maintenance, proofreading, copyright permissions, customer
service, and newsletter production, with extra emphasis recently on copy
editing and coordination of illustrations. She also has provided
general office support for the Gather ’Round team, through tasks such as
writing minutes, coordinating meetings, and producing reports.
Gather
’Round concludes next summer, and congregations will transition to the
new Shine curriculum in the fall, which also is a joint project of
Brethren Press and MennoMedia. Segovia will begin a new position as
managing editor of “West Suburban Living” magazine.
- The Church of the Brethren seeks a temporary full-time box car helper
to work in the Material Resources department at the Brethren Service
Center in New Windsor, Md. This position is responsible for loading and
unloading boxes from train cars and trailers, with some warehouse duties
included. The preferred candidate will have experience assisting with
loading and unloading train cars and trailers, must be able to lift a
limit of 50 pounds, must work well with a team, and be reliable and
flexible. Applications will be received and reviewed until the position
is filled. Request the application packet and complete job description
by contacting the Office of Human Resources, Church of the Brethren,
1451 Dundee Ave., Elgin, IL 60120; 800-323-8039 ext. 367; humanresources@brethren.org . The Church of the Brethren is an Equal Opportunity Employer.
- Nov. 2 is the deadline for youth worker applications
for National Youth Conference, scheduled for July 19-24, 2014, at
Colorado State University in Fort Collins. Youth workers, who serve on a
volunteer basis, should be available on the CSU campus beginning
Friday, July 18, the day prior to NYC, through Thursday evening, July
24. More information can be found at www.brethren.org/nyc .
- Nov. 1 is the date of the next campus visit day at Bethany Theological Seminary
in Richmond, Ind. “Have you been considering visiting Bethany? Do you
know someone who might like to experience what Bethany has to offer?
ENGAGE is a day of options designed for you to explore the Bethany
experience with other people interested in theological education,” said
an announcement. The day will offer prospective seminary students the
opportunity to worship together with the Bethany Seminary community and
partner seminary Earlham School of Religion (ESR), hear a student panel,
experience a class session, lunch with faculty, discuss financial aid
and the admissions process, and take a campus tour. Register at www.bethanyseminary.edu/visit/engage or contact director of admissions Tracy Primozich at 765-983-1832 or primotr@bethanyseminary.edu .
- Brethren young adults are invited to participate
in the World Council of Churches Virtual Conference for Youth tomorrow,
Saturday, Oct. 12. “What are you doing on Saturday? Would you like to
hear thoughts from some amazing folks, including Archbishop Desmond
Tutu, for free? The WCC Youth Virtual Conference on October 12 promises
to be a direct encounter among young Christians living in many different
countries. The conference will center on the following topics:
eco-justice, migration, and peace-building.” said the invitation from
Becky Ullom Naugle, director of Youth and Young Adult Ministry for the
Church of the Brethren. She noted that in ecumenical circles, "youth"
often means age 45 and under. Go to http://ecumenicalyouth.org .
- Two ecumenical programs formerly housed in the National Council of Churches
(NCC) have gone independent in recent weeks. After 30 years, the
Eco-Justice Program has spun off to form its own organization Creation
Justice Ministries, according to an announcement. “Though we now have a
new name, we remain dedicated to the same goal of protecting God’s earth
and God’s people,” it said. “With continued support from our member
denominations and communions, we will continue to provide education and
public witness through our annual Earth Day resources, webinars, and
other Creation care activities for congregations.” The new web address
for the program is www.creationjustice.org or contact info@creationjustice.org
. Also newly independent is the Poverty Initiative launched by the NCC
in 2009, now known as the Ecumenical Poverty Initiative. “As the council
goes through organizational transitions and moves away from
programmatic activities, this vibrant ecumenical ministry will be
continuing its important work from its new home: the Disciples Center
for Public Witness,” said an announcement. “The initiative will remain
ecumenical in focus and scope, continuing to work with current partners
from NCC communions and reaching out to new partners, including our
friends and allies in the Roman Catholic community.” Providing
leadership as active advisors will be former Poverty Initiative
directors Michael Livingston and Shantha Alonso Ready, and the former
director of the NCC's Washington Office, Cassandra Carmichael. Find out
more at www.faithendpoverty.org .
- White Rock Church of the Brethren in Carthage,
Va., holds a 125th anniversary celebration and annual homecoming on
Sunday, Oct. 13. Morning worship will begin at 10:30 a.m. with pastor
Michael Pugh speaking. Special music will be provided by Angie West and
the church choir. A potluck meal begins at 11:30 with the church
providing meat, drinks, and tableware. The afternoon service begins at
1:30 p.m. and will include special singing by the Pleasant Valley Church
Choir, Angie West, and the White Rock Choir, and speakers David Shumate
and Emma Jean Woodard from the Virlina District. The day will close
with a reception at 3 p.m.
- Eel River Community Church of the Brethren in
Silver Lake, Ind., recently celebrated its 175th anniversary. The South
Central Indiana District newsletter marked the occasion with photos from
the celebration, including a picture of Lewis Bolinger standing beside
an original, restored 1868 eastern covered wagon, and Jerry Bolinger
demonstrating how logs were hewn to build the traditional log cabins
that dotted the landscape of the area when the Eel River Church was
built.
- Antioch Church of the Brethren in Woodstock, Va.,
will dedicate its new sanctuary and renovated construction while also
celebrating its 145th anniversary with a homecoming at 10 a.m. on
Sunday, Oct. 13. “All are invited to attend this special celebration and
meal following at noon,” said the Shenandoah District newsletter.
- Northern Plains District is hosting a “Circuit Ride Through Iowa” by Dennis Webb,
pastor of Naperville (Ill.) Church of the Brethren. The district “is
delighted to host the dynamic speaker Dennis Webb for four stops on his
‘circuit ride’ through southern Iowa,” said the district newsletter.
“His trip is inspired by the circuit riding preachers of 150 years ago.”
Webb will make the following stops: Sunday, Oct. 13, he will preach at
English River Church of the Brethren on the topic, "The Business of
Jesus Putting up with Us Is Serious Business"; on Oct. 14, he will speak
at Ottumwa Church of the Brethren on "Maserati Reality: Where Do You
Park?"; on Oct. 15 his sermon at Fairview Church of the Brethren is
titled "God Still Uses Folks with Flaws"; and on Oct. 16 Prairie City
Church of the Brethren will host Webb for a service focused on "When We
Slip." All meetings start with carry-in dinner at 6 p.m., with worship
and the message to follow at 7 p.m.
- The Brethren Home Community Auxiliary at Cross
Keys Village-the Brethren Home Community in New Oxford, Pa., is
sponsoring an Apple Butter Festival complete with a car show and bake
sale on Saturday, Oct. 12, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. The day of family fun includes
apple boiling, entertainment, food, hayrides, a car show, displays of
antique engines, and pull tractors. “There is something for all,” said
an announcement.
- Southern Ohio District is offering a Deacon Training
led by Donna Kline, director of the Church of the Brethren Deacon
Ministry. The training is at Happy Corner Church of the Brethren on
Sunday, Oct. 13, after a carry in meal following worship. The meal
starts at 12:30 p.m. There is no fee to attend, although a free will
offering will be received. Contact 937-439-9717 for more information and
to make reservations.
- The World Hunger Auction planning committee in
Virlina District has announced the funding to be distributed from 2013
events: Heifer Project (Guatemala) $27,375; Heifer Project (N.C. and
Tenn.) $5,475; Roanoke Area Ministries $13,687; Church of the Brethren
Global Food Crisis Fund $5,475; Heavenly Manna $2,737. “Having completed
30 years of work, the total gifts generated by the auction and its
related activities now exceed $1,150,000,” reported the Virlina District
newsletter. “Praise be to God for the blessings that flow to His
people.”
- “Ministering to Spiritual Hunger” is the theme of a retreat
on Oct. 19, 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m., at Camp Bethel, led by pastor Paul Roth
of Linville Church of the Brethren in Broadway, Va. The event is
sponsored by Virlina District’s Spiritual Retreat Development Committee.
Roth is certified to provide spiritual direction and will lead a
retreat that promises to be biblically based and spiritually
enlightening with opportunities for individual and group reflection.
Cost is $20.
- Two “Equipping the Saints 2013" workshops are
scheduled in West Marva District, both hosted by Oak Park Church of the
Brethren on Oct. 19 from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. In session one, Amy Williams of
Bunker Hill (W.Va.) Elementary School Library, will lead “Teaching
Children (and Adults)… Is it a JOB or a JOY?” In the concurrent session
two, district executive minister Kendal Elmore will moderate a forum led
by three pastors who have experienced the dynamic impact of the Holy
Spirit working in various settings and circumstances to bring health and
vitality to congregations. Continuing education units are available for
credentialed ministers. For more information call the district office
at 301-334-9270.
- At its 2013 district conference, West Marva District
recognized the Hanging Rock Project as a Church of the Brethren
fellowship. Also approved, among other business, was a new Plan of
Organization for the district including a constitution and by-laws. The
district recognized Brenda Harvey for 20 years of service as
administrative assistant in the district office. The following were
recognized for significant years of service as ordained ministers: 45
years: Don Matthews; 25 years: Randall Ours, John Walker; 15 years: Burl
Charlton, Danny Combs, Elmer Cosner, Steve Sauder, Otis Weatherholt; 10
years: Robert Hughes, Carroll Junkins, Lynn Ryder; 5 years: Diane May.
- South Central Indiana District included a brief report
from its recent district conference in its district newsletter, and a
“thank you” to all who helped out. The “few fun facts” reported included
statistics: about 40 people walked at least 17 miles for peace; 32
participated in the continuing education opportunity; and baskets from
21 churches netted $1,197 for ministry training. “In this season of
gathering in and collecting the harvest, I am deeply grateful to the
folks of this district and the ways we seek to follow Jesus peacefully,
simply, together,” wrote district executive minister Beth Sollenberger.
- Southern Ohio District holds its 159th District Conference
this weekend, Oct. 11-12, at Trotwood (Ohio) Church of the Brethren led
by moderator Julie Hostetter. "For All of You Are One in Christ Jesus"
(Galatians 3:23-28) is the theme. On the schedule are a pre-conference
meeting for pastors and office assistants, and a Saturday youth event.
District executive minister David Shetler has issued a special call for
prayer for this conference, writing in an e-mail sent Oct. 10, “It is my
prayer than we indeed will be one in Jesus as we come together and as
we scatter back across the district. We are facing several difficult and
potentially divisive issues with the District Conference. As your
District Executive Minister, I am asking that all of us coming to this
gathering will come with a sensitivity to the leading of God’s Spirit
and with a genuine and deep love for one another.” His e-mail
highlighted a question being brought by the Eaton congregation
concerning a district response to “actions by various denominational
agencies, departments, committees, and educational institutions of the
Church of the Brethren that are in conflict with the 1983 Annual
Conference paper on Human Sexuality”; and proposals from the Brookville
congregation having to do with the district’s outdoor ministries program
and Camp Woodland Altars. More information is at the district website www.sodcob.org .
- The Atlantic Southeast District Conference is
Oct. 11-12 at Camp Ithiel, Gotha, Fla. It will be the 89th conference
held by Atlantic Southeast District. Included in the agenda is a
continuing education opportunity for ministers, a Seminar of Church
Finances and Investments. Youth activities also are offered concurrently
with the conference.
- Mid-Atlantic District holds its 47th District Conference
Oct. 11-12 at Frederick (Md.) Church of the Brethren on the themes,
“One in the Spirit” (John 17:20-23) and “Filled with Laughter and Joy”
(Psalms 126:1-3). On the evening of Oct. 12, the National Christian
Choir gives a concert in the Frederick sanctuary starting at 7 p.m.
(doors open at 6 p.m.). A freewill offering will support the choir. For
more go to the Mid-Atlantic District website at www.maddcob.com .
- The New Community Project has received a request
from its partner in Nimule, South Sudan, to raise $10,000 to build a
first-ever girls' boarding school in the community. Project director
David Radcliff reported that according to Agnes Amileto of the Girlchild
Education and Development Association, the school will bring several
important benefits, will allow young women to remain at school rather
than return to their homes each evening where often there is no time for
school work, will keep boys and girls separate during school hours, and
will make school more feasible for girls coming from a distance and for
girls with disabilities. The New Community Project is calling the
initiative “If We Built It...” and is taking responsibility for raising
funds for construction of facilities which will include dormitories and
classrooms; the community and government will provide teachers and
administration. Individuals are invited to join a Feb. 4-17, 2014,
Learning Tour to South Sudan to see the completed school, said the
release. Learn more at www.newcommunityproject.org .
- Juniata College has announced events for president Jim Troha's Inauguration Week.
James A. Troha will be formally inaugurated as the 12th president of
Juniata College in Huntingdon, Pa., in an "investiture ceremony" at 4
p.m. Oct. 18 in Rosenberger Auditorium in the Halbritter Center for the
Performing Arts. The 900-seat auditorium is expected to be filled to
capacity, with plans for overflow seating, said a release from the
college. Attending the ceremony will be a mix of Juniata students,
faculty, administrators, alumni, and delegates from the Church of the
Brethren and representatives from almost 100 colleges and universities.
"The singular thing that drew me to Juniata during my interview and
periodic visits was the college's sense of community,” says Troha. "We
wanted to honor Juniata's traditions by emphasizing events and
activities that would bring the college, our alumni, and Huntingdon
together as a community." Following the inauguration, there will be a
reception on the campus quad and a 7 p.m. invitation-only inaugural gala
in the Intramural Gym in Kennedy Sports and Recreation Center.
Celebrations continue through Homecoming Weekend, Oct. 24-26, including a
5K, German Club Octoberfest, a production of the musical "Dirty Rotten
Scoundrels,” a community-focused lunch hosted by Troha and his wife
Jennifer, a presentation by "eco-entrepreneur" Majora Carter on
"Home(town) Security," a concert to benefit Alex's Lemonade Stand, an
Alumni Advocates Panel, Homecoming football, and a concert by the
Asphalt Orchestra. In addition, members of the Juniata community will
be asked to give an hour or more of community service culminating in
National Make-A-Difference Day on Oct. 26.
- In more news from Juniata College, the school’s Department of World Languages
has received a $65,000 grant from the US Department of Education's
Fulbright-Hays Group Projects Abroad program. The grant will fund a
multiweek trip to Morocco next summer for intensive language instruction
and cultural educational opportunities in history, diversity, and
contemporary issues, said a release. "The grant will provide an exciting
opportunity to foster collaboration between Juniata College,
international alumni, and regional educators to develop curricular
resources for understanding the complex cultural crossroads that inform
one of the most dynamic countries of the Arab world," says Michael
Henderson, associate professor of French and one of the co-authors of
the grant. In partnership with the Ibn Ghazi Arabic Institute, in Fez,
Morocco, Juniata will send 10 local educators to Morocco to develop new
curriculum for K-12 and baccalaureate education in order understand the
background information of Morocco and to integrate the cultural history
of North Africa into social science and humanities courses in central
Pennsylvania K-12 schools. Juniata will send four professors, and local
school districts will send four high school teachers and a curriculum
coordinator. The Ibn Ghazi Arabic Institute offers summer language and
culture courses to students and professionals from all over the world.
The institute's director, Fouad Touzani, is a 2006 graduate of Juniata
College.
- McPherson (Kan.) College Young Alumni Award recipients
this year include Jenny Williams, director of communications and
alumni/ae relations at Bethany Theological Seminary. The annual award
honors McPherson College alumni who have graduated within approximately
the last 30 years. The recipients for 2013 also include Ryan Wenzel of
Melrose, Mass., co-founder of CovalX, a company that develops and
produces a detector system for machines called “mass spectrometers”; and
Dallas Blacklock of Houston, Texas, director of high school relations
at the University of Houston, where he’s a liaison for the football
program to area high school teams for recruiting, and also associate
pastor at Mt. Carmel Baptist Church. The three were honored on Oct. 4 at
a ceremony during McPherson College’s Homecoming Weekend.
- In more news from McPherson College, enrollment has been holding steady
at 40-year highs for the last four years, according to the official
fall enrollment numbers compiled Sept. 20. A release said that in total,
656 students are enrolled at McPherson College for fall 2013. A boost
to enrollment has come from the new master of education degree. After
accreditation by the Higher Learning Commission in spring 2013, the
number of students in graduate-level classes at McPherson increased by
58 percent. A large incoming class also helped keep enrollment
consistently high, the release said, this year bringing 261 incoming
freshmen and transfer students. “The automotive restoration program had
its best year ever for incoming students as they opened more spots in
the department for interested students. The program’s 60 incoming
freshman and transfer students this year more than doubles last year’s
incoming enrollment.”
- Bridgwater (Va.) College is hosting an annual CROP dinner
this fall to raise money to overcome hunger locally and globally, in
conjunction with the annual area CROP Walk. The dinner is from 4:45-7
p.m. on Oct. 24; the walk begins at 2 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 27, at the
Bridgewater Municipal Building.
- Also at Bridgewater College, the school has earned a Bronze rating
from the Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher
Education (AASHE). A release notes the rating was given for completing a
rigorous 20-month, in-depth study of several areas in sustainability:
education, research, operation, planning, administration, engagement and
innovation. The study was conducted through the Sustainability
Tracking, Assessment, and Rating System (STARS), a framework for
colleges and universities to measure sustainability performance.
Bridgewater is one of only eight colleges and universities in Virginia
to have completed STARS reporting, the release said. "Bridgewater
College takes seriously its responsibilities to the environment, society
and future generations," said president David W. Bushman. "The college
has gained valuable insight from STARS and its report and will use this
experience to expand sustainability programs and advance environmental
stewardship in the future." To learn more about Bridgewater’s
sustainability efforts, visit www.bridgewater.edu/about-us/center-for-sustainability .
- Bridgewater College is hosting "Why a Peace Church?" on Nov. 23,
an event sponsored by Shenandoah District Pastors for Peace. The
speaker will be Jeff Bach of Elizabethtown College’s Young Center for
Anabaptist and Pietist Studies. The event is billed as “a biblical,
theological, and historical conversation on why Christ's people should
stay in the peace business.” It will be held 9 a.m.-3:15 p.m. in the
Boitnott Room in Moomaw Hall. Cost is $25 for ministers earning
continuing education units, $20 for other interested adults, $10 for
students. Registration is due by Nov. 15. Find a registration flier at http://library.constantcontact.com/download/get/file/1110837621104-160/2013WhyAPeaceChurch.pdf .
- The Elizabethtown (Pa.) College Alumni Peace Fellowship
is giving students the opportunity to enter the 2013 Paul M. Grubb Jr.
Student Peace Award competition. This competition allows students to
submit a proposal for a research project focused on spreading peace and
justice in a local or international community, a release said. Student
projects will take place between October 2013 and October 2014, and the
winning proposal will be given $1,000 to make the project a reality.
Past project winner David Bresnahan won the award in 2008, spending six
weeks in Guatemala focusing on the mistreatment of the indigenous Mayan
people. Nikki Koyste was the recipient of the award in 2011. Her project
proposal sent her to Vietnam, where she volunteered in an orphanage.
- In more news from Elizabethtown College, rising juniors and seniors
interested in spending next summer interning abroad with an
intergovernmental or nongovernmental organization may be eligible to
receive financial support said a release. Oya Ozkanca, associate
professor of political science, is chair of a new program sponsored by
the college’s Center for Global Understanding and Peacemaking and made
possible by an international studies and foreign language grant from the
US Department of Education. The IGO/NGO Summer Internship Financial
Support Program will provide three students with round-trip airfare and
an hourly wage for an otherwise unpaid internship. The fund will cover
internships lasting about six to 10 weeks. In addition to being a rising
junior or senior, to apply students must already have secured a
position for the summer. An IGO/NGO conference featured a career and
internship fair as an opportunity to find organizations for internships.
- The University of La Verne is the second institution of higher education in California
to join the Billion Dollar Green Challenge, through which it will
establish a fund to facilitate “green” energy-saving measures on campus
said a release from ULV. The university joins the California Institute
of Technology as the only California schools so far to sign on with the
program launched by the Sustainable Endowments Institute based in
Cambridge, Mass. The institute is encouraging colleges, universities,
and other nonprofit institutions to invest a combined total of $1
billion in self-managed funds to finance energy efficiency improvements.
Thirty-nine other schools nationwide are also making such a commitment
to sustainability the release said. Each institution committed to the
challenge must establish a fund, separate from other capital projects,
which will be used only to fund green initiatives on its campus. The
University of La Verne is to build a fund of $400,000 during the next
six years. “A significant element of the University of La Verne’s
mission is to affirm a values system that supports the health of the
planet and all inhabitants,” said president Devorah Lieberman. “We are
consistently seeking to promote sustainability and to emphasize its
importance to our students, faculty, and staff.”
Source: 10/11/2013 Newsline
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