Tuesday, June 28, 2005

Newsline Special Report: Annual Conference Preview

PLEASE NOTE: This is a preview of only a few of the many special events planned for Annual Conference 2005 in Peoria, Ill., July 2-6. More information about Conference events, schedule, theme, scriptures, and logo is available at www.brethren.org/ac/. Reports and photographs from each day of the Conference will be posted on the Annual Conference web pages at www.brethren.org, beginning with pre-Conference events on Friday, July 1. The next regularly scheduled issue of Newsline on July 6 will include an overview report from the Conference.

  • Resolution on the Brethren Medical Plan may come to delegates.
  • Dominican Brethren leader to preach for Tuesday's worship.
  • Brethren organizations celebrate milestones.
  • Church of the Brethren Credit Union holds first annual meeting.
  • Nominations for the 2005 Ecumenical Citations are announced.
  • Brethren Press bookstore will feature new Brethren books.
  • Conference events offer continuing education credit.
  • Agencies sponsor joint events and exhibit space.
  • Brethren Witness/Washington Office offers coffee, recycling.
  • Conference bits: Walks, bike rides, and other opportunities.




    Resolution on the Brethren Medical Plan may come to delegates.

    The Brethren Benefit Trust (BBT) is bringing a resolution on the Brethren Medical Plan to the Standing Committee this year, and the resolution may come to the Conference's delegate body as well. The plan is for Church of the Brethren pastors and church employees, district employees, and employees of Annual Conference agencies, and affiliated agencies and institutions, and their families.

    The resolution gives biblical and historical background, lists the current status of medical insurance in the denomination, and asks the Conference to appoint a study committee to "evaluate the Brethren Medical Plan, and assess the continuing need for and feasibility of a denominational medical insurance plan for employees of congregations, districts, and church-related agencies." In addition the resolution calls on every eligible congregation, district, and church-related agency to participate in the plan from 2006 through at least the conclusion of the study.

    Events related to the Brethren Medical Plan include presentation of the resolution to Standing Committee at 3 p.m. on Friday, July 1; a listening session open to all Conference-goers at 9 p.m. on Saturday, July 2; an insight session for pastors only at 12:30 p.m. on Sunday, July 3; and an insight session open to all Conference-goers at 12:30 p.m. on Tuesday, July 5, titled "Should My Congregation Participate in the Brethren Medical Plan?"

    For informational resources on the Brethren Medical Plan including a video addressing questions about the plan, a power point presentation on the history of the plan, information about Health Savings Accounts, and information about all of the Brethren Insurance Plans, contact BBT at 800-746-1505. For the most recent reporting on the plan see "Brethren Benefit Trust Board Approves Health Savings Accounts" from the Newsline of May 11 and "New Resources Created in Effort to Save Brethren Medical Plan" from the Newsline of March 30.

    Source: 6/28/2005 Newsline
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    Dominican Brethren leader to preach for Tuesday's worship.

    Anastacia Bueno Beltre, a pastor and past moderator of the Church of the Brethren in the Dominican Republic, will give the message for the worship service beginning at 7:10 p.m. on Tuesday, July 5.

    Beltre will give the message in Spanish with English translation. She travels from the Dominican Republic to attend the Conference--last year she was unable to come to Annual Conference because she was denied a visa to enter the country.

    Jim Hardenbrook, Annual Conference moderator, will speak for the opening service of the Conference at 7:15 p.m. on Saturday, July 2. His theme will be "I Love to Tell the Story" and he will use the theme scripture, Hebrews 12:1-4.

    Also preaching for worship are Galen Hackman, senior pastor of Ephrata (Pa.) Church of the Brethren, speaking on "By Faith...Experiencing the Smile of God" for Sunday morning worship beginning at 10:20 a.m. July 3; Sandy Bosserman, executive minister of Missouri and Arkansas District, speaking on "Duties, Devils, and Distractions," at 7:20 p.m. on Monday, July 4; and Chris Douglas, director of the General Board's Youth and Young Adult Ministries, speaking for the service beginning at 10:15 a.m. Wednesday, July 6, on the theme "Abundant Life, Discipleship, Don't Lose Heart."

    Source: 6/28/2005 Newsline
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    Brethren organizations celebrate milestones.

    Bethany Theological Seminary celebrates its centennial at the Conference this year, the Mutual Aid Association celebrates 120 years, and the Brethren Journal Association celebrates 50 years.

    The 100th anniversary of the seminary will be celebrated with the debut of a centennial hymn sung by a choir of Bethany alumni, a large historical display at the Bethany exhibit, a centennial presentation during a business session, two new books related to the seminary and a display of books authored by Bethany faculty and alumni at the Brethren Press bookstore (see story below), a Bethany quilt, and a luncheon on the theme "Bethany as It Really Was: A Playful Behind-the-Scenes Look at Seminary Life" on Tuesday, July 5. The alumni choir is scheduled to perform the centennial hymn and anthem "Pilgrimage of Faith" by Steve Engle and Frank Ramirez at an Early Evening Concert at 5:30 p.m. and in worship at 7:15 p.m. on Saturday, July 2.

    Conference-goers also are invited to a Centennial Open House at the seminary's main campus in Richmond, Ind., on their way to and from Annual Conference. Stop in between 9 a.m.-5 p.m. eastern standard time on Friday, July 1, or on Thursday, July 7. The open houses will offer tours of the Bethany Center and refreshments. For more information call 800-287-8822.

    The 50th anniversary of the scholarly journal "Brethren Life and Thought" will be celebrated at the annual luncheon of the Brethren Journal Association on July 4. A musical revue by Steve Engle and Frank Ramirez, "Brethren, Lively and Thoughtful," will be presented by the "Not Ready for the Tercentennial Players." An insight session at 9 p.m. on July 4 will feature a panel discussion on "Brethren Living and Thinking." Later in 2005 a special issue of the journal will include articles selected from issues of the past 50 years. Edward K. Ziegler served as the journal's first editor, and Warren S. Kissenger, Christina Bucher, and David Eller also have served as editors of "Brethren Life and Thought." For more information contact the Brethren Journal Association, Managing Editor Carol Gardner, c/o Bethany Theological Seminary, 615 National Rd. W., Richmond IN 47374; 765-983-1815; gardnca@bethanyseminary.edu; www.bethanyseminary.edu/?page=blt.

    The Mutual Aid Association (MAA) invites Conference-goers to a "members meeting/birthday party" to celebrate its anniversary at 4:30-5:30 p.m. on Monday, July 4. "Come and enjoy refreshments and special gifts as our thank you for 120 years!" reads the invitation that went out to those registered for the Conference. Both MAA members and interested Brethren are welcome. For more information see www.maabrethren.com.

    Source: 6/28/2005 Newsline
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    Church of the Brethren Credit Union holds first annual meeting.

    The Church of the Brethren Credit Union, which became available to all members of the denomination in 2004, is holding its first annual members' meeting and dinner on Saturday, July 2. The event is open to credit union members as well as Conference-goers who are not members.

    The speaker for the event is Eric Kabler, a financial consultant for Kabler/Thomas Financial Group and a member of the Brethren Benefit Trust board. He also is a member of Westmont Church of the Brethren in Johnstown, Pa. Kabler will speak on "10 Personal Finance Tips for Brethren," giving tips for being good personal stewards of God's blessings and personal financial stewardship from a biblical perspective.

    The annual meeting will hear annual reports from the credit union board and staff and will elect board members. For more information call the credit union at 888-832-8313.

    Source: 6/28/2005 Newsline
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    Nominations for the 2005 Ecumenical Citations are announced.

    Nominees for the 2005 Ecumenical Citations have been announced by the Committee on Interchurch Relations. The citations will be awarded at the Ecumenical Luncheon on Tuesday, July 5. Four youth and young adults are nominated for peacemaking efforts. "Each in their own way have demonstrated a dedication to work at overcoming violence, and can serve as a model for others in creative challenges to the many forms of violence in our world," the committee said.

    Matt Boyer of La Verne (Calif.) Church of the Brethren, is nominated for his passion for social justice issues and Fair Trade. He refused to participate in a school fundraiser of chocolate that had been produced unjustly, did extensive research and advocacy of the Fair Trade movement, and led his church youth group in becoming a retailer of Fair Trade chocolates and coffee.

    Colleen Hamilton of Hope Church of the Brethren in Freeport, Mich., is nominated for multiple efforts for the environment and global concerns, including helping to begin a recycling program at her high school, bringing focus to the use and waste of styrofoam in the school cafeteria, working and worshiping ecumenically with another congregation in the area, and participating in a high school arts troupe "HEARTS: Helping Educate Abstinence, Responsible Teens." She also was nominated for a citation from the Isaac Walton League for her efforts.

    Marisa de Oliveira of Campo Limpo Preaching Point in Campo Limpo, Brazil, is nominated for her deep sense of justice and her call to share God's love with others through her work for hunger and women's and children's issues. She volunteers at a local soup kitchen, has begun a children's church and after-school tutoring program, and has developed and runs children's and women's programs in a poor and dangerous neighborhood of her city. The committee reported that de Oliveira moved to the neighborhood in order to establish rapport with the inhabitants. She teaches jewelry and craft-making to help generate income and self-esteem for neighborhood women, and plans a micro-finance project to help women buy materials and market their goods.

    Anna Christine Simons of Prince of Peace Church of the Brethren in South Bend, Ind., is nominated for community involvements including working at a school for disadvantaged children, volunteering with the Youth Services Bureau of South Bend, participating yearly in her community's youth conference on diversity, taking part in anti-racism efforts through community programs, and volunteering at a local food bank, soup kitchen, and rescue mission. She received the 2004 Peacemaker Award from the Clay City High School.

    For more information contact the Committee on Interchurch Relations, c/o the Office of the General Secretary, Church of the Brethren General Board, 1451 Dundee Ave., Elgin, IL 60120; 800-323-8039.

    Source: 6/28/2005 Newsline
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    Brethren Press bookstore will feature new Brethren books.

    The Brethren Press bookstore at Annual Conference will sell four new publications from the press, and publications related to Bethany Theological Seminary's centennial, among many other books, music, CDs and videos, children's resources, Annual Conference theme items, and other resources. Several authors will sign their books.

    "Another Way of Believing: A Brethren Theology" by Dale W. Brown ($18.95) heads the offerings of new Brethren books. Brown is a professor emeritus of Bethany Theological Seminary and a noted Anabaptist church historian and theologian. The book provides a thought-provoking study of the ways Brethren "do theology" by their everyday living. Brown will sign his new book and his classic "Biblical Pacifism" at 12:45-1:45 p.m. on Monday, July 4. He will be the main speaker at the Brethren Press Breakfast the same day.

    "Kum Ba Yah: The Story of Brethren Camping" by Linda Logan ($9.95) tells the vision, the history, and the ministries of Brethren camping since outdoor ministries began some 80 years ago. The Outdoor Ministries Association collaborated in providing this history.

    Two new Covenant Bible Studies will be available: "Romans: Church at the Crossroads" by Virginia Wiles ($6.59) and "Side by Side: Interpreting Dual Stories in the Bible" by Frank Ramirez ($6.95). (A third new edition in the Covenant series is scheduled to come out this fall: "Voices in the Book of Job" by Robert W. Neff.) Ramirez will sign the Covenant study and his 2004 book "The Meanest Man in Patrick County" at 5:30-6:30 p.m. on Sunday, July 3.

    The four publications related to Bethany Seminary are "The Bethany Seminary Centennial History" ($19.95), "Hope Deferred: Heart-Healing Reflections on Reproductive Loss" by Bethany professor Dena Pence Frantz ($18), "The Something Else Lady" by Earle Fike Jr. about the life of Anna Mow ($12.95), and "Bethany Daze" anecdotes of life at the seminary by Fred Swartz ($7.95). Frantz, Fike, and Swartz will sign their books at 5:30-6:30 p.m. Tuesday, July 5.

    Other book signings will be held by:

    Tom Mullen, religion professor emeritus at Earlham School of Religion and the speaker at the Association of Brethren Caregivers dinner on Saturday, July 2, will sign his books including "Laughing Out Loud and Other Religious Experiences" ($10) and "Where Two or Three Are Gathered Someone Spills the Milk" ($10) at 12:45-1:45 p.m. on Sunday, July 3.

    Brian McClaren, speaker at the Congregational Life Ministries dinner and other events (see story below), will sign his books including "A New Kind of Christian" ($21.95) and "Generous Orthodoxy" ($19.99) at 1:30-2:30 p.m. on Tuesday, July 5.

    The new Brethren Press books may be ordered by calling 800-441-3712 at any time. Other publishers' books to be sold at the Conference bookstore will be available for order from Brethren Press until the end of July, or while supplies last. A shipping and handling fee will be added to each order.

    Source: 6/28/2005 Newsline
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    Conference events offer continuing education credit.

    Pastors and others have several opportunities to earn continuing education units (CEUs) in Peoria.

    The Ministers' Association is offering .8 CEUs for its pre-Conference event "Sustaining the Life and Ministry of God's Servants" with leadership by Wendy Miller, director of the Summer Institute for Spiritual Formation and assistant professor of Spiritual Formation at Eastern Mennonite University. The ministers will meet Friday afternoon and evening, July 1, and Saturday morning, July 2. Childcare is available. Cost is $75 at the door, plus extra fees for childcare.

    The General Board's Congregational Life Ministries is offering a series of seven sessions under the theme "Calling Disciples in a Changing World." The Brethren Academy for Ministerial Leadership will give .1 CEU for each session, cost is $10. Three of the events on Tuesday, July 5, feature Brian McLaren, senior pastor of Cedar Ridge Community Church in Spencerville, Md., and author of books on understanding and reaching out to postmodern people: an insight session on "Evangelism Through Community Building" at 12:30 p.m., the Congregational Life Ministries dinner on "Cultural Changes that Inform Our Evangelism Efforts" at 5 p.m., and an insight session on "Missional Christianity for the 21st Century" at 9 p.m.

    The four other events in the series are an insight session on "Engaging Our Community with Jesus" with speaker Jeff Glass of the Congregational Life Teams staff at 12:30 p.m. Sunday, July 3; "Evangelism in a Muslim Context: The Nigerian Experience" with Toma Ragnjiya, former president of Ekklesiyar Yan'uwa a Nigeria (EYN--the Church of the Brethren in Nigeria), and Merv Keeney, the General Board’s executive director of Global Mission Partnerships, at 9 p.m. on July 3; "Your Connection with Evangelism Connections" with Kathryn Arrington-Love, associate director for Evangelism of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, and Douglas Wilson, associate for Presbyterian Evangelism for the Presbyterian Church USA, at 9 p.m. Monday, July 4; and an insight session on "Another Way of Living: Financial Stewardship as Ministry" with Dick Towner of the "Good $ense" ministry, at 12:30 p.m. on Tuesday, July 5. For more information contact Stan Dueck at 717-335-3226 or sdueck_gb@brethren.org; or Steve Gregory at 509-662-3211 or sgregory_gb@brethren.org.

    Source: 6/28/2005 Newsline
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    Agencies sponsor joint events and exhibit space.

    For the first time, the Association of Brethren Caregivers (ABC) and On Earth Peace are sharing a large exhibit area at Annual Conference. The two agencies and Brethren Benefit Trust (BBT) also are joining in sponsoring several insight sessions.

    The exhibit is planned to provide the latest information on the Church of the Brethren's caring ministries and peace activism. One feature offered at the exhibit are massages--stop by early to sign up for one of the limited number of these brief, seated massage sessions.

    ABC and BBT are jointly sponsoring an insight session on "Caring for One's Self" at 12:30 p.m. on Monday, July 4. ABC and On Earth Peace are sponsoring insight sessions on "Listening Skills for Deacons" at 12:30 p.m. on Sunday, July 3; and "Helping Soldiers Heal from Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder" at 9 p.m. on Sunday, July 3, for congregations and others experiencing the return of soldiers who have been in active military conflict. "As a living peace church seeking to accompany all people traumatized by war, congregations can help these individuals re-integrate and begin to heal," said a flier from ABC.

    ABC, BBT, and On Earth Peace each are offering several other insight sessions and holding meal events. ABC is sponsoring a variety of mutual help groups as well. BBT is sponsoring its annual Fitness Challenge 5K walk and run. For more information see the links to these organizations at www.brethren.org.

    Source: 6/28/2005 Newsline
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    Brethren Witness/Washington Office offers coffee, recycling.

    The General Board's Brethren Witness/Washington Office booth will be an interactive environmental experience where Conference-goers will be able to sample fair-trade coffee and drop off recycling.

    Stop by the booth to drop off a variety of small electrical appliances for recycling, such as cell phones, batteries, electrical adaptors, battery chargers, or other electrical items that are disposable or no longer usable. Or sample Equal Exchange Coffee, a fair-trade product that is part of the office's Church of the Brethren Coffee Project. The coffee will be served at an insight session at 7:30 a.m. Monday, July 4, where participants will discuss how the church is helping to shape public policy over cups of Equal Exchange Coffee.

    Other special events sponsored by the Brethren Witness/Washington Office include a prayer vigil for peace calling attention to places of violence including Sudan, Iraq, and the Middle East, at 4:30 p.m. on Tuesday, July 5, outside the Fulton Street exit of the civic center; and the Un-Luncheon at 12 noon on July 5, with Bill Galvin of the Center on Conscience and War (CCW). The Un-Luncheon is sponsored with Brethren Volunteer Service; participants are invited to give the amount they would have spent on lunch to the CCW.

    For more information contact the Brethren Witness/Washington Office at 800-785-3246 or e-mail washington_office_gb@brethren.org.

    Source: 6/28/2005 Newsline
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    Conference bits: Walks, bike rides, and other opportunities.
    • A youth workcamp plans to accompany Don Vermilyea to Annual Conference on foot, arriving in Peoria on Saturday, July 2. Vermilyea is a Brethren Volunteer Service worker on a "Walk Across America," with the goal of walking to each Church of the Brethren congregation. The workcamp is sponsored by the General Board's Youth and Young Adult Ministries. A group of 12 youth and four adult advisors are walking with Vermilyea for a week, from June 26-July 2. The trip will take them to Camp Emmanuel in Astoria, Ill., and Canton (Ill.) Church of the Brethren along the way. Plans are for the group to be hosted as well by First Christian Church in Beardstown, First United Methodist Church in Havana, and Glasford United Methodist Church. The youth are raising money for the General Board's Global Food Crisis Fund and Emergency Disaster Fund. For more information about the Walk Across America see www.brethren.org/genbd/witness/Walk.html.

    • Another member of the church who is planning a walk in Peoria is Richard Propes, a child rights activist and a member of Northview Church of the Brethren in Indianapolis. Propes, who was born with spina bifida, has traveled over 3,000 miles by wheelchair raising education, awareness, and funds on behalf of children and children's organizations, according to a release he sent to news outlets about the event. His "Tenderness Tour" also raises awareness of child abuse. Propes is planning a one-mile walk starting at 3 p.m. on Saturday, July 2, at Peoria's City Hall, and invites all who are interested to join him. As is his custom in each city that he visits, he will "wheel" the mile in honor of children who have died as a result of violence in the area. For more information see www.tendernesstour.com. Propes' story will be part of the "Alive '05" multimedia report on the ministries of the church on Sunday afternoon July 3.

    • David Radcliff, of the New Community Project, plans to bicycle from Elgin, Ill., to Annual Conference on July 2 to call attention to environmental issues, alternatives to car travel, congressional debate on an energy bill, and proposals to drill in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. The ride is estimated at 150 miles. Radcliff has asked supporters to "sponsor" his ride, not with monetary gifts but by committing to take action related to energy conservation. For more information see www.newcommunityproject.org. In an unrelated event, a small group of staff of Annual Conference agencies plans to bicyle to Peoria from the Elgin area on June 29-30.

    • The Brethren Revival Fellowship (BRF) is holding its annual "Prayer and Fasting Session" at Conference, on Sunday July 3 at 12 noon to 1:30 p.m. Other BRF events include a luncheon and a 9 p.m. insight session on Monday, July 4, and a dinner on Tuesday, July 5.

    • Voices for an Open Spirit (VOS) is sponsoring a Hospitality Center at the Prairie Building across the street from the Peoria Civic Center, where visitors will find fresh bread and apple butter and a play center for children. A birthday party for VOS' third anniversary will be held on Tuesday, July 5, at 10 p.m. This year VOS will have a booth in the exhibit hall for the first time.

    • The Brethren World Mission Breakfast at 7 a.m. on Tuesday, July 5, will focus on church planting in Brazil with speakers Greg and Karin Davidson Laszakovits, national representatives for the General Board in Brazil.
    Source: 6/28/2005 Newsline
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    Newsline is produced by Cheryl Brumbaugh-Cayford, director of news services for the Church of the Brethren General Board, on every other Wednesday with other editions as needed. Newsline stories may be reprinted if Newsline is cited as the source. Carol Gardner, Phil Jones, Jon Kobel, and Jewel McNary contributed to this report.
  • Friday, June 24, 2005

    Newsline Special Report: Sudan

    Sudan trip raises questions, brings unexpected hope.


    Jim Hardenbrook, Annual Conference moderator, and Phil Jones, director of the Brethren Witness/Washington Office of the General Board, were part of a small interfaith delegation that met with Sudan's President El-Bashir and many other officials and organizations during a visit to Sudan June 6-15. The group spent time in the capital city of Khartoum and in North Darfur State, and visited a refugee camp in Darfur.

    The trip was made to support the peace process between the northern government and rebels in the south of Sudan--the Comprehensive Peace Agreement scheduled to take effect July 9--and to offer support and encouragement to the people of Darfur. Atrocities such as killings, rapes, the burning of homes and villages, and the destruction of crops in Darfur, are blamed on militias supported by the government and in some cases are blamed on rebels, according the "Christian Science Monitor" in a recent report. The Monitor said that at as of June 10 at least 180,000 people have died in the violence in Darfur, and nearly two million are homeless.

    The delegation was sponsored by the National Black Leadership Roundtable and the Muslim American Society Freedom Foundation. Hardenbrook and Jones were Christian representatives on the delegation, which also included Muslim and Jewish members and was led by Roundtable president the Hon. Walter E. Fauntroy.

    In addition to the president, the delegation met with officials of the government in Khartoum and state officials in Darfur; nongovernmental organizations based in Khartoum; officials of the African Union, an organization of African nations with "peacekeeping" troops in Darfur; officials of the United Nations, which is responsible for several refugee camps in Darfur and is enforcing the north-south peace agreement; representatives of the Sudanese People's Liberation Movement (SPLM) from southern Sudan; and representatives of groups in Darfur considered outside the government. In most official meetings the group was accompanied by two representatives of the Sudan government. "It would be fair to characterize the trip as flavored by the government of Sudan perspective," said Hardenbrook.

    The visit to the El Fashir refugee camp in Darfur was "a very short and in some ways very unsatisfactory visit," Hardenbrook said. Some 70,000 people live in the camp. "This might be the government's show camp," Hardenbrook said, although the group visited the camp without government accompaniment. Hardenbrook said there was a sense of peace and security and the delegation saw that wells, schools, and food were available but there was no electricity.

    "It was exciting to greet a friend from the New Sudan Council of Churches in our meeting with the SPLM," said Jones. Awut Deng Acuil, who spoke at the 2001 Annual Conference, is now a member of the SPLM leadership team with special focus on women and children. "She reminded me of the close and important ties that the Church of the Brethren has with the south of Sudan," Jones said. "It seems most critical that the Church of the Brethren continue this strong relationship and give special focus and direction in support for the rebuilding of this great but war-torn nation."

    The trip was preceded by a briefing with Charles Snyder, US State Department undersecretary of state for Sudan. "One of the things that Snyder said that was reiterated by others is that we're looking at spiritual and moral issues, not at political and humanitarian issues" in Sudan, Hardenbrook said. "Sharing wealth and power is a moral and spiritual issue." The comment was confirmed by a member of the SPLM, who told the delegation that in the peace agreement, "all we have is ink on the paper." As an interfaith group, "we could speak to those moral and spiritual issues," Hardenbrook said. Because of its interfaith make up, "this may be the most important delegation from the US ever sent to Sudan," Snyder told the group.

    "I'd love to go back in a month with my list of questions," Hardenbrook said, "and to be more forceful in saying God's not happy with how his children are being treated" in Darfur. The trip raised more questions than it brought answers for Hardenbrook, who said he also has been disconcerted by the fact that he came away hopeful.

    The sense of hope came despite finding that the situation in Darfur "is awful, it really is," Hardenbrook said. "It is bad, people are dying.... But it might not be genocide. Underline the word `might,'" he added. "The UN is not using that term." The delegation's conversations led him to a new understanding of the roots of the conflict, in longterm ethnic and lifestyle tensions in the region.

    "Having made this important trip I am less comfortable using these terms today," said Jones referring to "genocide" and "racism." He has heard these terms used to characterize the violence in Darfur in numerous visits to the US State Department and congressional offices over two years of advocacy for US policies ensuring the end of the violence, he said. "Clearly the Sudan government has been heavily involved in the violence of war these past many months in the west, and many years in the south. Just as clear, though, is that movement has been made in recent months to pull back from this. International awareness and pressure have been key in this transition."

    The peace agreement with the south "has also moved the current government to a different place," Jones said. "President El-Bashir indicated the wear that war bears on a nation and its people in his comment that, `Peace with secession is better than unity with war.'" Jones said that the peace agreement gives the south the right of secession at the end of six years, if so determined by the people of the south. "Part of our reason for going on this trip was to clearly speak to those involved on both sides of the violence that a window of opportunity is here. Do not let it pass," Jones said.

    Whether the violence in Darfur is genocide is among many open questions, Hardenbrook said. "I think the first thing that I would like to do is repent of my willingness to believe the absolute worst of Sudan," he said, citing many ways in which the situation is very complicated. Policies of the government "have been the cause of the conflicts in the west and the south," he said, but the delegation learned that many southerners move to Khartoum because "it's better to live in a refugee camp near Khartoum than to live in the south in the conditions created" by the government and rebels. The group also heard that life in refugee camps in Darfur is better than ordinary life for many people in Darfur who are not directly affected by the violence.

    Another open question for Hardenbrook is whether a western style of justice is appropriate for Sudan, "because there is an African style of justice." The International Criminal Court, which this month launched an investigation into possible war crimes in Darfur, "may not be the answer here," he said. The delegation met with a group of four chiefs from Darfur who have been brought together through a Sudanese process of reconciliation. "I don't understand (the process) very well," Hardenbrook said, but it "could be very effective," he added.

    The meeting with President El-Bashir was a surprise for Jones, who last fall was arrested in front of the Sudan embassy in Washington, D.C., during a rally calling attention to the violence in Darfur. "I never envisioned that I would be given complete access to the president of Sudan in his Khartoum office," Jones said. "The message was the same there as here, the Church of the Brethren holds dear the sacred life of all people and implores nations and their leaders to seek peaceful means to the many things that divide us. The injustices of violence that lead to death and destruction must end."

    The delegation made a practice of asking to pray together at the end of each meeting, Hardenbrook said. President El-Bashir accepted the group's offer and they joined hands as Fauntroy prayed. "That was very powerful," Hardenbrook said.

    The delegation plans to hold a press conference at 1:30 p.m. eastern time on Monday, June 27, at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. The press conference may be televised nationally by C-SPAN. A full report of the delegation's trip is available; e-mail Phil Jones at pjones_gb@brethren.org or call the Brethren Witness/Washington Office at 800-785-3246.

    Source: 6/24/2005 Newsline
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    Credits

    Newsline is produced by Cheryl Brumbaugh-Cayford, director of news services for the Church of the Brethren General Board, on every other Wednesday with other editions as needed.

    Wednesday, June 22, 2005

    NEWSPERSONNELUPCOMING EVENTSRESOURCESFEATURE
    Association of Brethren Caregivers awards nursing scholarships.

    The Association of Brethren Caregivers will award $22,000 in scholarships this year to 15 Church of the Brethren members enrolled in nursing programs.

    Scholarship recipients pursuing LPN designations are Theresa De Mastus, Cedar Grove Church of the Brethren, Ruckersville, Va.; Josh Schnepp, Beaverton (Mich.) Church of the Brethren; and Rachel Roop, Schuylkill Big Dam Church of the Brethren, Pine Grove, Pa.

    Scholarship winners seeking an associate's degree are Alicia Barb, Linville Creek Church of the Brethren, Broadway, Va.; Amanda Blackwell, Spindale (N.C.) Church of the Brethren; Betsy Ducote, Highland Avenue Church of the Brethren, Elgin, Ill.; Tim Durnbaugh, Highland Avenue; Amy Greene, Melvin Hill Church of the Brethren, Columbus, N.C.; Melissa Hickman, Painesville (Ohio) Church of the Brethren; and Phyllis Hurley, Huntsdale Church of the Brethren, Carlisle, Pa.

    Award winners earning bachelor's degrees are Shenifa Baldwin, Pipe Creek Church of the Brethren, Union Bridge, Md.; Kara Fadley, Mountain Grove Church of the Brethren, Fulks Run, Va.; and Marita Imhoff, Mohican Church of the Brethren, West Salem, Ohio.

    Scholarships also will be awarded to Tamela Kiser of Briery Branch Church of the Brethren, Dayton, Va., and Melissa Rudd, Indiana (Pa.) Church of the Brethren, as they seek master's degrees.

    The program was revised in 2004 to provide only scholarships, which are awarded once a year for disbursement in the fall. To apply for 2006 scholarships, nominees must be members of the Church of the Brethren and apply by April 1. See www.brethren-caregivers.org.

    Source: 6/22/2005 Newsline
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    Disaster relief continues work, fund issues grants.

    Recent grants from the Emergency Disaster Fund (EDF) of the General Board totaled $155,000 for disaster relief and rebuilding work in Indonesia, Sudan, Florida, and Nebraska.

    A grant of $75,000 supports Church World Service (CWS) work in the wake of a devastating earthquake on the island of Nias in Indonesia on March 28. Nearly 700 people were killed and 75,000 displaced. The funds will help provide food, water, shelter, sanitation, and medical supplies. This is a separate appeal from those for the tsunami disaster of last December, but the work is being coordinated with all the emergency response activities in Indonesia following the tsunami.

    An allocation of $50,000 has gone to CWS's appeal for those affected by violence in the Darfur region of Sudan. More than two million people have fled their homes to escape looting, house burning, crop destruction, and killings, reports staff of the General Board's Emergency Response and Service Ministries. The funds will assist in providing food, medicine, water, sanitation, agricultural help, and counseling to 500,000 people in refugee camps. In the past 18 months a total of $181,500 has been given from the EDF for relief work in Darfur and in southern Sudan, reports Emergency Response director Roy Winter.

    A grant of $25,000 supports a continuing hurricane recovery project in Florida, being carried out by Brethren Disaster Response. The project, which is expected to last three to five years, is currently doing rebuilding and repair work in Pensacola and neighboring Escambia and Santa Rosa Counties. It is considered a longterm project because of the magnitude of the hurricanes that hit the state in 2004, said Jane Yount, coordinator of Disaster Response. She added that Escambia County is the poorest in Florida and the 17th poorest in the nation.

    The amount of $15,000 continues support of a Disaster Response tornado recovery project in Hallam, Neb. The project is scheduled to close Aug. 6. "We'll need adequate numbers of volunteers to finish four homes that are in various stages of completion," reported Yount.

    For the next two months, Disaster Response will be running three rebuilding projects simultaneously, those in Nebraska and Florida and a newly opened project in Ohio. "Our challenge is to secure volunteer teams and project leadership through the summer and beyond," Yount said. "Persons skilled in drywall finishing and finish carpentry will be helpful." The project in Belmont County, Ohio, opened this month, doing repair and rebuilding following three severe floods between Sept. 2004 and Jan. 2005.

    The Disaster Response program also is looking for volunteers to join a Tool Coordinator Team to standardize tools in tool trailers used at disaster sites, and to test and replace tools as necessary. The work will be done at the Brethren Service Center in New Windsor, Md.

    To volunteer at a disaster site or on the Tool Coordinator Team contact your district disaster coordinator or the Disaster Response program at 800-451-4407.

    Source: 6/22/2005 Newsline
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    Brethren spiritual directors hold fourth annual retreat.

    The Church of the Brethren Spiritual Director's Network held its fourth annual retreat May 16-18 at Shepherd's Spring, the outdoor ministry center of Mid-Atlantic District. Carolynne Ervin, who teaches spiritual direction at Chestnut Hill College in Philadelphia, provided leadership on the topic, "Working with People's Faith Experiences in Spiritual Direction."

    Through a series of presentations and personal exercises, Ervin led the group in understanding "how a contemplative heart notices, evokes, discerns, and responds to religious experience." The 22 participants, all trained as spiritual directors, were encouraged "to attune themselves to God and those who come to them for direction. Directees are sharing the music of their lives. Help them be open to these religious experiences. Help them find God in all things," Ervin said.

    A highlight of the retreat was a 20-hour Sabbath time of shared silence. Believing that God works in both words and silence, participants were led to creative expression and a simple noticing of the Spirit's leading. A time of group spiritual direction helped each to find words to express God's interaction in his or her life through prayer.

    A new brochure on spiritual direction was introduced by the Advisory Committee. "About Spiritual Direction" has been developed to introduce Church of the Brethren members to this ancient prayer tradition. Written by Glenn Mitchell and Kathy Geisewite, the brochure answers such questions as: What is spiritual direction? Who seeks it? Who gives spiritual direction? How can I find a spiritual director? Copies are available from Chris Douglas of the General Board staff; e-mail cdouglas_gb@brethren.org or call 800-323-8039 ext. 297. Members of the Spiritual Director's Network are available to offer spiritual direction to clergy and laity in the Church of the Brethren.

    Source: 6/22/2005 Newsline
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    Brethren bits: Personnel, job openings, and more.
    • Beth Burnette will serve as promotions specialist for the General Board's "Messenger" magazine, beginning about Oct. 1. This is a part-time, temporary position funded for two years through special gifts to the "Messenger" anniversary fund. Burnette will work primarily from her home in St. Charles, Ill. A member of York Center Church of the Brethren in Lombard, Ill., Burnette is retiring as administrative assistant for Illinois and Wisconsin District and as York Center's Christian education director. She has experience in nonprofit and for-profit marketing and developing print materials for advertising in the Chicago area and in Maryland.

    • The Indianapolis Peace House seeks an associate director for the undergraduate study-away program, recruitment of students, finding and overseeing internship placements, and coordinating activities. The Peace House is a residential experience for students and includes coursework, internship, communal living, and participation in neighborhood activities. Indianapolis Peace House (www.indypeacehouse.org), a component of the Plowshares project (www.plowsharesproject.org), is a Lilly Endowment-funded collaborative of Manchester, Earlham, and Goshen colleges. Required qualifications include a bachelor's degree; organizational skills; record of experience in mediation, conflict resolution, or peace studies; experience with student recruitment; interpersonal and communication skills; willingness to travel. Desired qualifications include a master's degree in an appropriate field; experience with program administration in a college or university; ability to teach; familiarity with Indianapolis and its not-for-profits. Salary is commensurate with experience. The position is open immediately but should be filled no later than Aug. 1. Candidates should send a resume, with at least three references, to Erwin Boschmann, CEO, c/o DeeDee House, Indianapolis Peace House, 1201 N. Central Ave., Box 3, Indianapolis, IN 46202-2696; dhouse@indypeacehouse.org; 317-631-7322; fax 317-631-5969.

    • The Ecumenical Stewardship Center in Indianapolis seeks an executive director to supervise staff; provide oversight for corporate management, fiscal solvency, and member relations; cultivate and maintain relationships with member denominations, associate partners, and other faith-based stewardship organizations; and provide management, direction, promotion, and support for new and existing events, programs, and resources. A passion for Christian stewardship and commitment to the mission of the center is essential. Demonstrated skill in administration, organizational and financial management, written and verbal communication, and program development is required. Experience in ecumenical settings, contexts of diversity, and denominational ministry is expected. Academic training in theology or social sciences is preferred. A competitive salary and benefits are available. Send cover letter and resume by Aug. 15 to ESC Search Committee, 1100 W. 42nd St., Indianapolis, IN 46208. Visit www.stewardshipresources.org for more information.

    • The National Council of Churches (NCC) seeks young adult volunteers for its Stewards Program. Stewards will serve during the General Assembly of the NCC and Church World Service in Baltimore, Md., Nov. 8-10. This is the third year for the program, which gathers a small group of Christian young adults from across the country to assist in the work of the assembly and to observe ecumenism "up close" as some 250 delegates from 36 Protestant, Anglican, and Orthodox denominations gather for worship, business, and fellowship. Stewards assist with hospitality, registration, audio-visual technology, and other tasks. The experience includes a young adult spiritual development event. Stewards must be between the ages of 18 and 30 and have the recommendation of their denomination. Contact Chris Douglas at the General Board's Youth and Young Adult Ministries, cdouglas_gb@brethren.org or call 800-323-8039 ext. 297.

    • Youth pastors are invited to meet at Annual Conference in Peoria, Ill. Those who are serving as paid youth pastors in the Church of the Brethren are invited to a gathering of youth ministry professionals sponsored by the General Board's Youth and Young Adult Ministry Office on Monday, July 4, 1-2 p.m. in Room 201 of the Peoria Civic Center. This will be a time for networking, sharing, and learning to know others in the field of fulltime youth ministry.

    • The Central Maryland Chapter of the American Red Cross is closing its Carroll County, Howard County, and Harford County offices as part of a restructuring plan to centralize services at the chapter office in Baltimore. The Carroll County office at the Brethren Service Center in New Windsor, Md., will close July 1. Linda Vanderhoff, district director, extended her thanks for the generous support given to the Red Cross by Brethren Service Center agencies and staff.

    • Brethren Benefit Trust and the General Board are now providing wireless internet access at the General Offices in Elgin, Ill. This is a new service provided in cooperation between the agencies.

    • Dates and sites have been announced for the next two Cross-Cultural Consultations and Celebrations: May 4-7, 2006, in Lancaster, Pa.; and April 19-22, 2007, in New Windsor, Md. Plans are for the consultation to be held on the west coast in 2008. For more information contact Duane Grady at 800-505-1596 or e-mail
      dgrady_gb@brethren.org.

    • Brethren Volunteer Service is having a potluck on July 30 at 6:30 p.m. at Union Bridge (Md.) Church of the Brethren. Any former Brethren Volunteer Service workers and Civilian Public Service (CPS) workers are invited, and anyone who has a connection to either program. "We see this potluck as a wonderful opportunity for the `volunteers in training' from BVS Unit 265 to be able to connect with people that have done similar service," said Sam Bowman of the BVS office. "We hope to see you there." Bring a covered dish to share, or any other type of food for the potluck. There will be a short informal time of introduction and sharing.

    • Peoria (Ill.) Church of the Brethren is holding a Biker Weekend June 25-26, with the local chapter of the Christian Motorcyclist Association (CMA). The chapter has met monthly in the church fellowship hall for the past two years, reports the congregation's newsletter. Weekend events will include motorcycle games in the parking lot, a barbecue, rides, a concert by the southern gospel group "The Chasteens," Sunday morning worship with testimonies from the biker community, and a traditional CMA blessing of the bikes during the Sunday school hour. "The main objective of this event is to reach out to and witness to the biker community in a way and in a setting that they find comfortable and welcoming," the newsletter said. "The CMA is doing much of the heavy lifting for this event and we are grateful to them for their heartfelt desire to reach out in the name of Christ."

    • Imperial Heights Community Church of the Brethren in Los Angeles, Calif., is starting a community orchestra. "We have acquired an instructor who has caught the vision and has the passion of working with individuals who have the desire to play a musical instrument," reported pastor Thomas Dowdy in an open invitation to Pacific Southwest District saying, "I believe you will be blessed in what God is doing in this multicultural community.... We have extended this wonderful opportunity to the community free of charge, asking anyone who wants to play a musical instrument with or without experience to come join this orchestra." The church is offering classes for the orchestra and the opportunity for individual instruction. The debut performance will be Sunday, Aug. 21, during the weekend of the Pacific Southwest District board meeting at Imperial Heights. For more information call 323-754-3998.

    • Pastor Ruth A. Yoder and Union Center Church of the Brethren in Nappanee were among those receiving grants from the 2005 Clergy Renewal Program for Indiana Congregations, funded by Lilly Endowment Inc. The grants were awarded to 36 ministers statewide, to allow them to take an extended time away from the daily demands of church leadership to spend time studying, reflecting, reconnecting with their families, traveling, and writing.

    • Painesville (Ohio) Church of the Brethren is celebrating its 50th anniversary with a worship service held 50 years to the day from its first worship service on June 26, 1955. Worship will be held at 10:30 a.m. this June 26, followed by a luncheon. The celebration will include opening a time capsule buried in 1985, on the 30th anniversary. RSVP for the luncheon at 440-352-3974.

    • The Church of the Brethren was represented at the 10th annual Religion Fair in Harrisburg, Pa., in May. The Brethren joined others including Catholics, Quakers, Mormons, Muslims, Buddhists, Bahai, Jews, and Unitarian-Universalists at the fair, according to "The Patriot-News." The event was sponsored by the Interreligious Forum of Greater Harrisburg.

    • The Brethren Home Community of Southern Pennsylvania District will celebrate its 100th anniversary in 2008. Founded in 1908, the home was located in Cumberland County on Pine Road near Huntsdale, Pa., until a fire destroyed the home on Jan. 27, 1951. A new home was established with the purchase of the Cross Keys Hotel one mile east of New Oxford, Pa. The home is now a continuing care retirement community with over 900 residents in independent living, assisted living, and a health care center. A Centennial Committee has been organized to plan for special events, publish a book, and prepare a display of significant events. Centennial events will begin at the Festival of Lights in Dec. 2007 and continue through the anniversary year. More information can be found at www.brethrenhome.org.

    • Unity in Community, an organization founded with help from Manassas (Va.) Church of the Brethren, celebrated its 10th anniversary on May 14, according to the "Potomac News." The Manassas church hosted the interfaith supper celebration titled "Taste of Unity." Unity in Community serves Prince William County and the cities of Manassas and Manassas Park, working on problems of intolerance and racism and supporting diversity. The first Unity in Community meeting of local clergy was held in 1995 at the invitation of Illana Naylor and the Manassas church. Accomplishments include "hate-free" and "bigot-free" zones, education on hate crimes, work with schools and youth, and action countering leafletting by the KKK.

    • Waynesboro (Pa.) Church of the Brethren hosted the 54th annual Clothesline Art Exhibit of the Waynesboro Studio Club on the second weekend in June. The event showed the work of local artists and students from Waynesboro Area Senior High School. The church hosts monthly meetings of the club.

    • The 16th annual World Hunger Bike Ride in Virlina District took place June 18 starting at Antioch Church of the Brethren in Rocky Mount, Va. The event offered a choice of rides of 10 miles, 25 miles, and 50 miles.

    • The Sonfest festival of contemporary Christian music in Smithsburg, Md., on June 11 featured recordings of songs by the late Dean Mouk, pastor of Welty Church of the Brethren in Smithsburg until his death nearly a year ago. The annual festival is sponsored by Trinity Lutheran Church. Mouk was a fixture from the first Sonfest eight years ago, reported the "Herald-Mail."

    • Samuel Dante Dali, a leader in Ekklesiyar Yan'uwa a Nigeria (EYN--the Church of the Brethren in Nigeria), has been awarded a Ph.D. at the University of Birmingham, England, in the area of church history. His dissertation is titled, "The Contemporary Search for Visible-Practical Unity in the Fellowship of the Churches of Christ in Nigeria: In the Light of the Ecumenical Policies and Work of the Sudan United Mission (1904-1960)." Dali returns this month to his teaching position at the Theological College of Northern Nigeria. His study was sponsored through the Global Mission Partnerships office of the General Board as a part of longterm leadership development in EYN.

    • The National Council of Churches is holding a "Money for Mission: Greening Initiatives That Make Cents" workshop on June 29, 8:30-11:30 a.m., at the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America headquarters in Chicago. The workshop is intended for faith leaders--including camp and conference center staff, clergy, lay leaders of congregations, and denominational staff--to learn how to "green" religious congregations and institutions. Organizers hope to empower and enable participants to incorporate environmentally sustainable practices and increase environmental stewardship while reducing financial burdens. Registration of $10 includes breakfast. To register e-mail cassandra@toad.net or visit www.nccecojustice.org.

    • The Valley Brethren-Mennonite Heritage Center in Harrisonburg, Va., will host a "Tears and Ashes" bus tour in the Dayton (Va.) area on July 16, beginning and ending at Garbers Church of the Brethren. Norman Wenger and David Rodes, researchers and compilers of "Unionists and the Civil War Experience in the Shenandoah Valley," will lead the tour. Sites will include Meigs Lane, Silver Lake Mill, "Doc" Gabe and Margaret Swank Heatwole's house that hid Unionists fleeing the war, and Pleasant View Old Order Mennonite Church. The $50 fee includes a Mennonite-German meal at Bank Mennonite Church. Checks written to CrossRoads (or VBMHC) and received by July 8 will reserve a seat. Send to P.O. Box 1563, Harrisonburg, VA 22803. The center also is holding Sunday evening vesper services in July and August at the CrossRoads Ampitheater. Area Brethren leaders will take part in many of the services, which will conclude Aug. 28 with a service led by Mountain View Church of the Brethren. For more information see www.vbmhc.org.
    Source: 6/22/2005 Newsline
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    Susanna Farahat joins the staff of On Earth Peace.

    On Earth Peace has announced that Susanna Farahat will join the staff in August as the new coordinator of Peacemaker Formation. She will oversee an extensive peace education program that serves all ages, with an emphasis on youth and young adults.

    Farahat is a member of York Center Church of the Brethren in Lombard, Ill., and a recent graduate of Bryn Mawr College. She brings teaching experience and a strong sense of the educational process, along with a wide variety of community service experiences to the position. Farahat will be based at the New Windsor (Md.) office of On Earth Peace.

    Kim Stuckey Hissong, the current coordinator of Peacemaker Formation, will begin graduate studies in social work this fall.

    Source: 6/22/2005 Newsline
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    Exploring Your Call event for youth will be held at Bethany Seminary.

    Exploring Your Call, an event for high school sophomores, juniors, and seniors, will be held at Bethany Theological Seminary in Richmond, Ind., on Aug. 4-9. The event is an opportunity for youth to consider issues of faith and vocation.

    Remaining funds from a $2 million grant from Lilly Endowment Inc.'s Theological Vocational Exploration Program Initiative, received by Manchester College on behalf of eight Brethren institutions, allow Bethany to offer the event for an additional year. Activities include classes taught by seminary professors, shadowing area pastors, planning and leading worship services, participating in hands-on ministry and service activities, and group-building recreational activities. Russell Haitch, assistant professor of Christian Education and director of the Institute for Ministry with Youth and Young Adults, will oversee the event.

    Participants' only cost is travel expense to and from Richmond. Registration is limited to 20 participants. Begin the sign-up and registration process via e-mail by sending the following information to EYC@bethanyseminary.edu: name, address, telephone and alternate telephone, e-mail address, birthdate and age, home congregation, pastor, church telephone, person to notify in case of emergency and that person's relationship to the youth and their telephone and address. For more information e-mail EYC@bethanyseminary.edu or call 800-287-8822 ext. 1821.

    Source: 6/22/2005 Newsline
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    Dunkertown Workshop tells Brethren stories.

    A new project by two Middle Pennsylvania Brethren writers is designed to help preserve the Brethren story. Dunkertown Workshop is the brainchild of Steve Engle of Alexandria, and Frank Ramirez of Everett, who hope through recordings, theatrical productions, and writing to tell some lesser known Brethren stories and to revive stories that may have been forgotten.

    The first Dunkertown collaborative Ramirez-Engle venture was the musical "Angels Everywhere" about Catharine Hummer, a Brethren teenager in 1762 who said she saw angels. With a cast from several Middle Pennsylvania District churches, the musical has been performed at six different venues in middle and eastern Pennsylvania, with more performances scheduled for the fall. A CD recording also is in production.

    A four-disc audio recording of "The Meanest Man in Patrick County and Other Unlikely Brethren Heroes" by Frank Ramirez (Brethren Press, 2004) is the first Dunkertown CD to be released. Stories are read by the author with Jennie Ramirez, Steve Engle, and Joan Engle. The CD also features an original ballad, "The Meanest Man in Patrick County," penned by Engle and Ramirez and sung by Andy Murray. (Order the CD for $18 plus shipping and handling, or the book for $10.95 plus shipping and handling, from Brethren Press at 800-441-3712.)

    Dunkertown Workshop has re-released "Ted Studebaker in Vietnam: Life Is Good, Yea!" on CD (available from Brethren Press for $15 plus shipping and handling). For decades, the album has been out of print. Studebaker was murdered by the Vietcong in 1971 while in alternative service. Gary and Sue Studebaker, with help from Engle, put together an album of cassette recordings Studebaker sent home. The album includes songs, audio letters, and an interview about his work. The CD also features "Brave Man From Ohio" by Andy and Terry Murray, and a national ABC News report aired at the time of Studebaker's memorial service.

    A future Dunkertown project is the "Andy and Terry Murray Songbook." Engle plans to work with the Murrays in transcribing their music, most of which exists only as recordings or lyrics.

    The website www.dunkertownworkshop.com offers other CDs by Engle, books by Ramirez, releases from the Murrays, the opportunity to hear songs, and purchasing information. Engle and Ramirez invite Brethren artists who have their own websites to join them in this collaboration, so that links can lead Brethren to their work.

    Source: 6/22/2005 Newsline
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    Watching a new church plant do everything right.

    By Nancy Sollenberger Heishman

    A new preaching point in the Dominican Republic named Arco Iris, which means "rainbow," held its first regular Sunday evening worship service Easter night in the capital of Santo Domingo. From start to finish, it seemed as if they had carefully studied the finest church growth literature available in order to plan an event that would be welcoming and open to the Spirit, and that displayed the following qualities essential to offering a new worship service:

    Excellent leadership. The leadership team consists of many gifted people. Daniel and Oris De'Oleo's outstanding gifts in motivation, preaching, teaching, and organization are filled with a dynamic enthusiasm that is contagious. Minerva Mateo's gifts of compassion, gentle love, a heart for neighborhood children, and fervent prayer are an encouragement to others. Clearly these are empowering leaders who model the way.

    Quality musicians. The mother church, Peniel, and its pastor, Eduardo Montero, sent its entire worship team accompanied by the church's sound system, drum set, pulpit, plastic chairs, generator, fan, microphones, overhead projector, and song transparencies.

    Success at getting the word out. About an hour and a half before the service, members of the mother church canvassed the neighborhood passing out fliers and inviting everyone within sight to the service, and sharing the love and blessing of Christ in their conversations.

    Creative worship. A gifted and creative teenager shared a series of three dramas, accompanied by music and narrative, that illustrated the difference Jesus Christ makes in a person's life. During the singing that preceded them, musicians displayed the words of songs using transparencies so that new people could participate. The singing was invitational and focused on giving God glory, honor, and praise.

    Quality preaching. Brother Daniel shared an inspiring message focusing on Jesus' promise in John 3. An invitation followed for persons to accept life in Christ and to leave behind a life of sin and brokenness.

    Effective follow through. As the service was beginning, Sister Minerva moved through the crowd warmly greeting visitors and collecting information to make follow-up personal visits.

    Care for the whole person. Not only was an invitation given for people to commit their lives to Christ, but genuine love and concern were shown through a willingness to pray for needs expressed. One visitor asked for prayer for her father who is ill. She was invited to come up front where prayer was promptly offered. Worship leader Selvia Gonzalez expressed the church's concern and commitment to pray for her father's physical and spiritual health, caring for both his body and soul.

    A welcoming space. God has graciously provided a open and accessible space for this new preaching point, a community building strategically situated right in the middle of a community that only has two other churches. People are already familiar with the building and comfortable entering it. It is available free in exchange for cleaning up the trash around it, a blessing the community will quickly appreciate.

    Modeling loving relationships. Greeters were positioned on the sidewalk in order to continually invite people in throughout the service. Others positioned themselves just inside the door to offer a warm welcome. Refreshments were offered after worship to give a thoughtful send off as people returned home.

    Participating in this new effort was a tremendously inspiring experience. Please keep this new church plant in your prayers. Pray that God will bring much spiritual fruit as the leaders eagerly reach out to their neighborhood with the news that God's love is faithful, as the brilliant colors of the rainbow remind us.

    --Nancy Sollenberger Heishman is one of the General Board's mission co-coordinator in the Dominican Republic.

    Source: 6/22/2005 Newsline
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    Credits

    Newsline is produced by Cheryl Brumbaugh-Cayford, director of news services for the Church of the Brethren General Board, on every other Wednesday with other editions as needed. Newsline stories may be reprinted if Newsline is cited as the source. Sam Bowman, Kathleen Campanella, Mary Dulabaum, Larry Gibble, Merv Keeney, Ed Poling, Frank Ramirez, and Marcia Shetler contributed to this report

    Wednesday, June 08, 2005

    NEWS
  • 'Hunger No More' brings more than 1,500 to Washington National Cathedral.
  • Denomination is lead sponsor for Guatemalan food security program.
  • Older adult unit completes Brethren Volunteer Service orientation.
  • Brethren Witness/Washington Office director joins in meeting with Palestinian president.
  • Fellowship of Brethren Homes meets for annual forum.
  • Cross-cultural music tour receives warm welcome.
  • Harrisburg First works with other churches against drug, gang violence.
  • Children's book about Anna Mow wins award of excellence.
  • Brethren bits: Corrections, remembrance, personnel, and more.

    FEATURE
  • World mission conference discusses healing and reconciliation.
  • 'Hunger No More' brings more than 1,500 to Washington National Cathedral.

    Some 1,500 people filled the National Cathedral in Washington, D.C., on June 6, on the eve of National Hunger Awareness Day. "It was an historic event gathering people of many traditions and faiths together with the unifying desire to overcome hunger in our lifetime," said Stan Noffinger, general secretary of the General Board, following the worship convocation titled "Hunger No More." The event surpassed all expectations of the planners, he said.

    With sponsorship from the Alliance to End Hunger, Bread for the World, America's Second Harvest, the National Food Bank, Call to Renewal, and the Interfaith Anti-Hunger Coordinators, the convocation brought more than 40 religious leaders of various faith traditions together in a moving service of worship, Noffsinger said. The Church of the Brethren General Board, and the Brethren Witness/Washington Office, were endorsers of the event. At least six Brethren were in attendance, including Noffsinger and co-executive director of On Earth Peace Barbara Sayler.

    "Participants set aside the differences that tend to divide the faith traditions to address the increasing incidence of hunger in the US," Noffsinger said. Different faith traditions shared leadership of the worship. The keynote speaker was Anglican archbishop Njongonkulu W.H. Ndungane of Cape Town, South Africa, whose life story includes imprisonment as a political prisoner under apartheid law. "I know hunger firsthand," he said, reminding worshipers that in the US, the richest country in the world, hunger is increasing. He called on people of faith to speak loudly and clearly to end hunger, with the goal of food for everyone being a human right. "The promise of heaven is no more hunger," he said. "But...the plight of the hungry must not be left for heaven."

    In the last four years, decades of progress in shrinking the numbers of the hungry in the US have been reversed, Noffsinger said. Bread for the World said in its annual hunger report for 2004 that 853 million people worldwide are hungry, he reported. Of that number, 36 million in the US are "food insecure," meaning that they do not always know if they will have access to safe and nutritious food at their next meal, he said.

    Just prior to the convocation, faith leaders met in an "upper room" of the cathedral--stories above the streets of Washington--to discuss the issues. A new coalition was formed, Noffsinger said, to bring the plight of the hungry into the awareness of each denomination and faith group represented. The group signed a common letter to the President of the United States, which was delivered by a small delegation which met with White House staff on June 7. The letter encouraged the President to provide strong leadership in "protecting the national nutrition programs from funding cuts and damaging structural changes. We also ask you to use this year's G8 Summit to increase development assistance and debt relief and to forge trade policies that will help to reduce hunger, poverty, and disease in Africa and other poor parts of the world." Participants at the convocation gathered for training June 7 to prepare for a major lobbying effort on hunger issues later that day.

    Paul Wolfowitz, the new president of the World Bank, unexpectedly joined the convocation worship service, Noffsinger said, adding that Wolfowitz received "a warm welcome" from the religious leaders and convocation attendees.

    For more information and links to the webcast of the convocation, see www.bread.org/nationalgathering/2005/convocation.htm.

    Source: 06/08/2005 Newsline
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    Denomination is lead sponsor for Guatemalan food security program.

    Guatemala is the setting of a new interchurch project in which the Church of the Brethren is the lead sponsor. Located in Totonicapan in western Guatemala, the three-year project is aimed at developing food security for 570 Mayan families in 20 rural communities.

    Components of the project include diversifying food production, introducing greenhouse and patio garden techniques, training in soil and water management, protecting watersheds and the environment, developing local markets, and strengthening indigenous women's organizations. "Given the small parcels of land and lack of alternatives for compensated work, the Totonicapan project strives not only to introduce sustainable agricultural practices but to strengthen the voice of local peasant groups," said Howard Royer, manager of the General Board's Global Food Crisis Fund.

    A coalition formed by Foods Resource Bank and Church World Service has enlisted several Guatemalan partner agencies, principally the Conference of Evangelical Churches of Guatemala and the National Coordination of Widows of Guatemala. The latter is a grassroots movement of indigenous women widowed during the country's internal armed conflict.

    Funding for the first-year grant of $103,500 includes $10,000 from the Brethren account in the Foods Resource Bank, from the proceeds of growing projects. Other partners are Christian Reformed World Relief Committee, Evangelical Covenant Church World Relief, Lutheran World Relief, Mennonite Central Committee, United Church of Christ Wider Church Ministries, United Methodist Committee on Relief, and the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ). The $51,800 contributed by the churches is matched by a grant from US AID.

    The work in Totonicapan is the first Foods Resource Bank program for which the Church of the Brethren is a lead sponsor. Through the Global Food Crisis Fund, the General Board became an implementing member of the Foods Resource Bank in 2004. The board has placed volunteers and advocated for peace and human rights in Guatemala for three decades. For information about the Global Food Crisis Fund see www.brethren.org/genbd/global_mission/gfcf.htm.

    Source: 06/08/2005 Newsline
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    Older adult unit completes Brethren Volunteer Service orientation.

    Brethren Volunteer Service (BVS) Unit 264, an older adult unit, completed orientation April 17-29 in New Windsor, Md.

    Unit members and their placements are: Kay Billhimer of Monitor Community Church of the Brethren in Conway, Kan., volunteering at Hopewell Inn in Mesopotamia, Ohio; Pauline and Don Hess of Mountain View, McGaheysville (Va.) Fellowship Church of the Brethren, volunteering at the World Friendship Center in Hiroshima, Japan; Linda and Steve Hollinger of Manassas (Va.) Church of the Brethren, volunteering at the General Board's New Windsor (Md.) Conference Center; Sharon Poff from Lewisburg, Pa., volunteering at the Community Mediation Center in Harrisonburg, Va.; and Sue Wilkinson from Dallas, Texas, volunteering at Su Casa Catholic Worker in Chicago, Ill.

    Source: 06/08/2005 Newsline
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    Brethren Witness/Washington Office director joins in meeting with Palestinian president.

    Phil Jones, director of the General Board's Brethren Witness/Washington Office, joined other church leaders in meeting with the president of the Palestinian Authority Mahmoud Abbas on May 26 in Washington, D.C. The meeting with Abbas followed meetings that been held with a variety of Jewish and Muslim leaders earlier in the day, and meetings with President Bush that afternoon.

    Opening remarks at the meeting were given by a variety of Christian leaders including Bob Edgar, general secretary of the National Council of Churches, and Corinne Whitlatch, executive director of Churches for Middle East Peace. Whitlatch facilitated the meeting. Other church leaders represented Anglican, Episcopal, Catholic, Lutheran, Mennonite, Methodist, Orthodox, and Presbyterian denominations and faith groups.

    As a follow up to his meeting with President Bush, a written document was presented to President Abbas by the group, to underscore the following position: "We stand with you as you encourage President Bush to advocate for both Palestinians and Israelis and to take actions that support his expressed commitment to the establishment of a Palestinian state that is viable, contiguous, sovereign, independent, and at peace with its neighbor Israel."

    "With this in mind," the letter continued, "we support Palestinian leadership in calling for an end to suicide bombings against Israeli citizens, and we applaud Israeli disengagement from Gaza, as first steps toward such a resolution."

    Source: 06/08/2005 Newsline
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    Fellowship of Brethren Homes meets for annual forum.

    Representatives from 11 Church of the Brethren retirement centers attended the Fellowship of Brethren Homes Annual Forum, a meeting for CEOs and administrative staff to exchange ideas and discuss the challenges of operating a nonprofit continuing care retirement community. The Fellowship of Brethren Homes is a ministry of the Association of Brethren Caregivers.

    In the forum's opening keynote address, Parker Marden, retiring president of Manchester College, spoke about the quality of care provided by Brethren homes. He commented that potential collaboration between the colleges and homes could exist through curricular programs at the schools to train and staff the homes.

    Rick Stiffney, CEO of Mennonite Health Services, led a series of discussions ranging from church and board relations, to charitable mission, to attracting and maintaining quality employees. "If you can come up with one or two ‘take aways' from these sessions, then it will have been a successful endeavor," said Stiffney. Several of the CEOs later commented that they had indeed gotten a few "take aways" and plan to implement them in their own organizations.

    Don Fecher, director of the Fellowship of Brethren Homes, spoke about the "Brethren connection" and the future of the fellowship. "The quality of care provided by Church of the Brethren Homes far exceeds the standards that are required by law," he noted. "The type of care provided in a Brethren home is living the words, 'What would Jesus do?'"

    The meeting was held at Timbercrest Church of the Brethren Home in North Manchester, Ind. Tours of the host facility were an important part of the forum, commented Fecher. He also noted that the gathering's relaxed atmosphere helped attendees to exchange ideas and learn from one another.

    For more information about the ministries of the Association of Brethren Caregivers see www.brethren.org/abc/.

    Source: 06/08/2005 Newsline
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    Cross-cultural music tour receives warm welcome.

    Eight concerts, a Sunday morning special music appearance, and the gift of music for residents and day guests at the Roanoke (Va.) Rescue Mission filled the schedule for a cross-cultural Brethren music group May 14-21. The group visited churches in Virginia, North Carolina, and Tennessee. Scott Duffey, Gilbert Romero, and James Washington Sr.--all Brethren pastors--and Carol Yeazell, Congregational Life Team staff for the General Board, took part in the tour.

    The tour began in Roanoke at Oak Grove Church of the Brethren where Asha Solanky, chair of the Annual Conference Intercultural Study Committee, gave a presentation on the current status of the work being done by the committee. Everyone was encouraged to take and complete a questionnaire that the committee hopes will assist in carrying out its assignment.

    Sunday morning the group provided special music at Summerdean Church of the Brethren in Roanoke. That afternoon a concert was held at Bethlehem Church of the Brethren in Boones Mill, Va., and later that day the group was at Topeco Church of the Brethren in Floyd, Va.

    On May 17 the group toured the Roanoke Rescue Mission and then performed during an extended lunch hour with various seatings of guests. "This was seen as a stewardship of time gift, as it was an offering for others not directly connected to the Church of the Brethren," said Yeazell. That evening a concert was held at Pleasant Valley Church of the Brethren in Weyers Cave, Va. The following day the group traveled to Hendersonville, N.C., to sing at a new church plant, HIS Way/Jesucristo El Camino.

    Other churches that welcomed the tour were Friendship Church in North Wilkesboro, N.C., Spindale (N.C.) Church of the Brethren, and Trinity Church of the Brethren in Blountville, Tenn., where the final concert of the tour was held.

    "The two comments that the group heard after each worship time were, 'We wish more people had come,' and, 'When are you coming back?'" Yeazell said. The concerts were arranged and sponsored by Congregational Life Team staff to help congregations gain a broader understanding of what it means to be a cross-cultural church. Musicians offered their talent as a free gift, with only their expenses covered by the board, Yeazell said. For more about cross-cultural ministry in the Church of the Brethren, see photographs and coverage of the recent Cross-Cultural Consultation and Celebration at www.brethren.org/pjournal/2005/CrossCultural.html.

    Source: 06/08/2005 Newsline
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    Harrisburg First works with other churches against drug, gang violence.

    Pastors at First Church of the Brethren in Harrisburg, Pa., recently received "a touching letter" from a young man who used to attend the Hispanic congregation at the church, located in the South Allison Hill neighborhood. The letter was written from prison. Repentant for his involvement in gangs and drugs after he read news reports of prayer vigils for peace by pastors of the South Allison Hill churches, the young man expressed gratitude for efforts of those taking a stand. The vigils were begun after shooting deaths on a nearby street corner.

    Knowing that people are praying for peace in the neighborhood where his infant daughter lives with her grandmother touched the writer's life to the point that he wants to become a counselor for those still involved in gangs, said Belita Mitchell, First church pastor.

    That change in one young man is emblematic of the kind of transformation she is seeing in the neighborhood because of the combined prayers for peace, she said. "It's just another way in which the vigils have touched the community."

    The area has seen an increase in police activity and at least three drug busts since the vigils began five months ago. "The Patriot News" reported that the busts broke the grip of the gang that reportedly has had control of South Allison Hill since the mid- to late-1990s. Members of the gang that were involved in the drug busts were as young as 10 or 11, the newspaper said.

    In addition, police officers have asked if they can surveil an alley adjacent to the church, where drug deals have been frequent, said Mitchell. She said she is receiving the news of more police activity "as an answer to prayer, giving God praise and glory."

    Because of the changes that are beginning to be seen in the neighborhood, the weekly prayer vigils are being held monthly at different church locations in the community. The first monthly vigil was hosted May 3 by First Harrisburg in its parking lot. The second was held June 7 at the Peace Garden at the Capitol City Church. "Moving to different locations in the community is increasing the awareness among residents and widening the circle of influence," Mitchell said. "I anticipate continued strong support and increased evidence of God's faithfulness."

    The neighborhood churches also plan ecumenical outdoor rallies for the summer that will combine evangelism with the continued work for peace on the streets, and neighborhood prayer walking by church leaders. Mitchell said the events will "let the community know...we are praying on their behalf."

    Source: 06/08/2005 Newsline
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    Children's book about Anna Mow wins award of excellence.

    "The Something Else Lady," a children's book about Anna Mow, has received Best in Print Award of Excellence from the Printing Industries of Virginia. The book was written by Earle Fike Jr. of Bridgewater, Va., and illustrated by Yolanda Wegner, Mow's great-granddaughter. It was published as part of Bethany Theological Seminary's centennial celebration.

    Mow was a professor at Bethany, a missionary to India, and a well-known pastor, author, and speaker in the Church of the Brethren. Harriet Beahm Kaylor, Mow's niece, comments, "The infectious laugh of Anna Beahm Mow as well as her generous and spiritual outlook on life are told perfectly in 'The Something Else Lady.'"

    The book includes a CD with the song "Sister Anna, Beauty Queen," written for Mow by Andy and Terry Murray. The book/CD combo is available from Brethren Press for $12.95 plus shipping and handling. Call 800-441-3712.

    Source: 06/08/2005 Newsline
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    Brethren bits: Corrections, remembrance, personnel, and more.
    • Corrections to the Newsline of May 25: In "Emergency Response director sees tsunami response in India," Church World Service has helped build a temporary facility for water treatment in Meulaboh, Indonesia. In "Committee seeks information on barriers to intercultural ministries," the committee's recorder Nadine L. Monn was not identified in full. In the May 11 issue, "ABC announces Caregiver Awards," the Woodbury Church of the Brethren is located in Woodbury, Pa.

    • Mary Dadisman, a former mission nurse and teacher for the General Board, died June 5 at Brethren Hillcrest Homes in La Verne, Calif. She was 92. She received nursing training at Bethany Brethren Hospital in Chicago; was a graduate of Juniata College in Huntingdon, Pa.; and studied midwifery at the Frontier Nursing School in Kentucky. A May 2004 "Messenger" story about her reported that she was inspired to serve in Africa by her good friend Grayce Brumbaugh, a fellow nurse. Dadisman was a nurse with the Brethren mission in Nigeria 1941-79, although one of her first jobs was to establish a school for mission children--Hillcrest School in Jos--now a joint venture with several Christian mission groups. In 1947 she became nursing superintendent at Garkida General Hospital. Over the years she also taught village health workers in the Lafiya program, directed a scholarship program for medical workers, was an acting principal at Waka Schools, was active in women's work, and did relief work during the Biafra civil war. She also delivered many of the babies born to Brethren missionaries during her tenure. "To a host of Nigerians, she is the beloved 'Sister,' the traditional British term for the head nurse of a hospital. To her fellow American missionaries, she is known affectionately as 'Mary D,'" wrote Raymond R. Stayer in the "Juniata College Bulletin" in 1974. Following retirement, Dadisman continued to promote the church's mission efforts and served on the board of quality assurance for Woods Hospital at Brethren Hillcrest Homes. A memorial service is tentatively planned to take place at Brethren Hillcrest Homes on July 9.

    • The board of directors of the Brethren Retirement Community in Greenville, Ohio, announces the appointment of Tim Hissong as president and chief executive officer. Hissong brings a strong financial background and expertise in management to the position, having served for the past 13 years as vice president of Finance and treasurer of the Brethren Retirement Community. He holds an MBA in management from Wright State University and is a registered housing professional, as well as a licensed nursing home administrator. He is chair of the board of the Southern Ohio District of the Church of the Brethren and also sits on the boards of A Learning Place; Happy Corner Church of the Brethren in Clayton, Ohio; Woodland Altars, the camp of Southern Ohio District; and the Business Technologies Division of Sinclair Community College, where he is an adjunct instructor.

    • Camp Swatara is accepting applications and resumes for the position of program coordinator. The camp is located in Bethel, Pa. A job description may be requested by contacting the camp office at 717-933-8510. Questions about the position should be addressed to camp administrator Marlin Houff. The deadline for applications is July 15; the camp hopes to fill the position by Sept. 1. The position has been vacated by Michele Gibbel, who served for 12 summers on the camp staff, the last five as fulltime program coordinator. She has resigned the position to return to graduate school. For more information about the camp, see www.campswatara.org.

    • The Annual Conference Anniversary Committee has extended the deadline to Aug. 31 for composers to submit hymns, anthems, folk songs, praise songs, children's songs, or other musical compositions that interpret the 2008 tricentennial theme, "Surrendered to God, Transformed in Christ, Empowered by the Spirit." The committee also seeks submissions of drama and worship resources related to the theme, both with a deadline of Dec. 31. All submissions become the property of the Anniversary Committee for use in tricentennial activities. The name, address, and phone number of the writer or composer should not appear on submissions but should be included on a separate page. Music, drama, and worship resources should be sent to the Annual Conference Office, 1451 Dundee Ave., Elgin, IL 60120.

    • The Stewardship of Property Committee met last week in listening sessions with General Board employees and Annual Conference agencies and ecumenical partners (the Mid-Atlantic District Office, the Association of Brethren Caregivers, Brethren Benefit Trust, On Earth Peace, Interchurch Medical Assistance, and A Greater Gift/SERRV) that are located on or participate in programs located at the board's properties in New Windsor, Md., and Elgin, Ill. "The interviews were productive, meaningful, and most helpful to the task the committee has to accomplish," said Stan Noffsinger, general secretary of the General Board. The committee will seek additional responses during interviews of General Board deployed staff on Friday evening July 1, before Annual Conference begins in Peoria, Ill., as well as through an insight session planned for Sunday evening July 3 at 9 p.m. at the Conference. In addition to these face-to-face sessions, a questionnaire will be included in delegate packets at Annual Conference, and can be found at the General Board display at the Conference for any attendee to participate in the process. The questionnaire also will be available online at www.brethren.org following Annual Conference. The next meeting of the Stewardship of Property Committee will be Sept. 8-9 at the Brethren Service Center in New Windsor. Evaluation of the gathered data and preparation for the committee's time with the General Board in October will be on the agenda.

    • Interchurch Medical Assistance (IMA) and the General Board's Emergency Response/Service Ministries hosted a visit by Sushant Agrawal, executive director of Church's Auxiliary for Social Action in India. The May 18 visit was coordinated by Lutheran World Relief and provided an opportunity to tour the distribution center at the Brethren Service Center in New Windsor, Md., and meet with Emergency Response director Roy Winter and IMA vice president for International Program Development Daniel Aukerman. Much of the church-sponsored material resources shipped to India for tsunami relief was packed by Service Ministries staff at the center.

    • Forty-five Christian educators from across the denomination's Area 1 in the northeast, attended a seminar May 21 at Carlisle (Pa.) Church of the Brethren to examine a teaching and learning approach based on hospitality at the table. The event was a collaborative effort of the General Board's Congregational Life Team for Area 1, Atlantic Northeast District, Mid-Atlantic District, Middle Pennsylvania District, Southern Pennsylvania District, and the Susquehanna Valley Ministry Center of Bethany Theological Seminary. Cheryl Magrini, minister of Christian education at First United Methodist Church at the Chicago (Ill.) Temple, led participants through a teaching process based on the biblical story of the five loaves and two fish. Magrini teaches that fellowship at the table and "meal stories" have special significance in her teaching and learning approach with children in the Christian setting. A copy of the outline of the event is available from Jan Glass King, coordinator for Area 1; e-mail jking_gb@brethren.org. Find more specific information on the hospitable teaching and learning approach in the fall 2005 issue of "The Seed Packet" Christian education newsletter published by Brethren Press. The newsletter will be sent in the Source packet to all Church of the Brethren congregations, and may be ordered from Brethren Press at 800-441-3712.

    • Brethren Volunteer Service is having a potluck supper on Saturday, July 30, at 6:30 p.m. at Union Bridge (Md.) Church of the Brethren. BVS invites any former Brethren Volunteer Service workers and Civilian Public Service workers, and anyone who has a connection to either program. "We see this potluck as a wonderful opportunity for the 'volunteers in training' from BVS Unit 265 to be able to connect with people that have done similar service," said Sam Bowman of the BVS office. "We hope to see you there." Bring a covered dish to share, or other food for the potluck. There will be a short informal time of introduction and sharing.

    • On Earth Peace is holding a conference call on counter-recruitment strategies for this fall, to take place at 6-7:30 p.m. Eastern time tomorrow June 9. Participants will hear from each other about plans for next steps in countering military recruitment, and brainstorm about how to move forward. The call will feature Chuck Fager of Quaker House in Fayetteville, N.C., as a resource person. For more information call Matt Guynn at 765-962-6234 or e-mail mattguynn@earthlink.net.

    • Naperville (Ill.) Church of the Brethren is marking its 150th anniversary on the fourth of July weekend. The church invites those going to and from Annual Conference to stop in to help celebrate, beginning on Friday evening July 1 through Sunday morning July 3. For more information call the church at 630-355-7171.
    Source: 06/08/2005 Newsline
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    World mission conference discusses healing and reconciliation.

    By Carol Spicher Waggy

    "Come, Holy Spirit, heal and reconcile." This prayer of invitation was the theme for the World Council of Churches (WCC) Conference on World Mission and Evangelism held near Athens, Greece, in May. As the Church of the Brethren representative, I was excited to participate in this international gathering of Christians to discuss mission in relation to healing and reconciliation, and to worship with ecumenical brothers and sisters.

    The conference was hosted by the Orthodox Church of Greece, and the influence of orthodoxy was evidenced in the many flowing black robes, the liturgy and songs, and, sadly, the inability for participants to share together in the bread and cup. In addition to the WCC member church representatives, there were invited delegates from Pentecostal churches and from the Roman Catholic Church.

    I delighted in the rainbow of human diversity--skin color, languages, cultures. Every day was scheduled full of worship, plenary sessions, workshops, and "home group" meetings. I led my home group in the morning lectio divina exercise. The scripture was read slowly three different times by different people, and followed each time by silence. After the first reading we shared words or phrases from the text that stood out for us. After the second reading we shared how the text related to us personally. Following the third reading, we shared a prayer or reflection.

    My home group included a Romanian Orthodox priest, a theologian from Norway, a Swedish theological professor, a retired nurse from the Lesotho Evangelical Church, a Greek Orthodox layman, a Syrian Orthodox female physician from India, a Disciples of Christ seminary dean from St. Louis, and a Romanian orthodox seminary student. The relationships in this group became very important to each of us. One shared, "I thought I would become homesick, but I did not because I came back to my home group every evening."

    Unlike previous conferences on world mission and evangelism, this conference did not spend much of its time hammering out the wording of an official statement. We did try to agree on a message to the churches, but there was insufficient time to come to consensus on exact wording so the message was sent to a WCC commission for final wording on behalf of the delegates. Delegates were each able to make their suggestions in writing to the commission.

    This year is the halfway point of the Decade to Overcome Violence (DOV), and the youth delegates assisted with a short drama to introduce the DOV report. DOV is a commitment, a choice, and an invitation to all Christian churches to refuse violence as a way of life. We were encouraged to go beyond naming, analyzing, and unintentional promotion of violence, to overcoming it. The unhelpful confusion of violence and conflict, often by the media, was noted. As one who works in conflict resolution I had to agree. Whereas violence in all its forms is not good, conflict is a given and can be used profitably to move a group or relationship forward.

    I am grateful to the Church of the Brethren for offering me this experience. I return with a renewed vision for the ecumenical church and for the need for healing, reconciliation, and peacemaking to be part of our work of carrying out God's mission in the world.

    --Carol Spicher Waggy is an ordained minister in the Church of the Brethren, and served on the steering committee for the Church of the Brethren mission conference, Mission Alive 2005.

    Source: 06/08/2005 Newsline
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