new danville newsletter - New Danville Mennonite Church
Transcription
new danville newsletter - New Danville Mennonite Church
NEW DANVILLE NEWSLETTER New Danville Mennonite Church, Volume 27 - Issue 8, August 2013 5 C >fw Sewing Circle Lois Garber J~ Five women met on Wednesday, July 3 and completed seven comforters. We learned we are not too set in our ways to do something different. Mim Leaman suggested we knot comforters along the length rather than width as we have done all these years. Therefore we did not need to roll as often. We are not rolling on the floor but rolling the comforter!! Join us on the first Wednesday of the month and see the rolling procedure. We All Have A Story By Christa Mylin My first experience with the larger Mennonite Church was at the 2013 Mennonite Church USA (MC USA) convention in Phoenix, Arizona during the first week of July. Here are some highlights and insights from my time in Phoenix: 1. Worship - It was a beautiful experience to have musicians from all over the United States, of various musical preferences, ethnic backgrounds and church experiences. They sang an array of songs, leading us in a cappella hymns and acoustic choruses and bilingual rock songs. Thank God for the diversity of musical creativity and gifts. 2. Seminars — Though I did not get to attend many seminars because I was involved in delegate sessions several hours a day, I did especially enjoy a seminar on biblical storytelling. The presenters shared stories from the Bible from memory and then we discussed the texts. Instead of teaching us how to "memorize" the scripture, they focused on "internalizing" the text. Rote memorization of scripture will hold no meaning for our lives, but internalizing the text and making it part of our daily way of life will not only help us remember the scripture, but will also change our lives. Mealtimes - Though I am a decided introvert and prefer quiet times to myself for refreshment (which I had), I also enjoy meeting new people. Sitting at a table with a few strangers gave me a chance to make new friends, to share a little about myself and to hear stories of other people's lives and church situations. 4. BorderLinks Trip — This was an additional learning experience offered by MC USA. Since we were so close to the Arizona/Mexico border and we were focusing on immigration, the convention planners offered learning tours through a local organization known as BorderLinks. I had the opportunity to travel into Mexico and hear stories of how US policies affect the people in the border towns. We prayed together and sang together. I also met a retired Arizona couple who spends hours each week trying to clean up the desert and searching for dehydrated migrants so that they don't die in the desert. Other people in different groups spent time with deported migrant workers, many of whom came from countries further south in Central America. They talked with US lawyers, Border Patrol officers and many others. It was an eye-opening experience that helped me realize that all of us living in the United States have different stories. We all came to this country for different reasons, at different times and in different ways, but we all are or were immigrants at some point. Therefore, it is important to try to understand each other now and to remember that no matter our nationality, we are all citizens of God's kingdom. Thank you for allowing me to represent the New Danville Mennonite congregation at the 2013 MC USA convention. It was a pleasure to be able to learn so much from others and a privilege to share about our congregation with them. I made sure that your voice was heard, and I hope that, through me, you have heard the voices of those I met. Thank you. page 1 Bits and Pieces • Victoria Brody is the cover artist for this month's newsletter. • Larry and Janet Hess recently had a two-week trip to Alaska. • Ken and Mary Catherine Bowman, Janice Charles, Jay Garber, and Larry Hess were volunteers at Millersville International House to do corn for freezing. ^TH-p'&fr'ug^' /K?« o^T — SLAVERY: FOR OR AGAINST? Something intrinsically unique about the Bible is its ability to lay out the ideals that God wants for his world and yet at the same time show how to live despite the fact that the ideal is not a current reality. Case in point, read the following passage from First Timothy chapter six: All who are under the yoke of slavery should consider their masters worthy of full respect, so that God's name and our teaching may not be slandered. Those who have believing masters should not show them disrespect just because they are fellow believers. Instead, they should serve them even better because their masters are dear to them as fellow believers and are devoted to the welfare of their slaves. At first glance you may get the impression that the Bible condones slavery. This is far from the truth. The Bible clearly values people as equal: Prayer Quotes Martha Thomas "PRAYER isn't a time to give orders, but to report for duty." (Daily Bread) "PRAY without ceasing. If we seek God in the minutes, we shall find Him in the hours." (Daily Bread) PRAYER is not accomplishment but relationship, one of intimacy, and trust between the Creator and the children of the earth." (S.S. lesson) There is neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, male nor female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus. Galatians 3:28 What Paul does in his letter to Timothy is give instructions to Christians on how to live regardless of the situation that they are experiencing. What good would it be to give advice for living in a Utopian world that does not exist? Rather Paul gives us instructions on how to conduct ourselves to be like Christ in the midst of an imperfect world. This is what makes the Bible so valuable for daily living. Its truths can be applied to any situation or circumstance because while God has promised us a Utopia in the future (heaven), what he is looking for on this earth is a changed heart, not necessarily a changed circumstance. This present world will never be perfect. The Bible is clear on that. What will change is the hearts of those who discover their Creator through Christ, and rise, not always above their circumstances, but through them, growing character in line with their savior. Your situation may not be perfect, but your attitude can be. Get in touch with your God and live in a way that is not reliant on circumstances. When you do this, you'll truly understand what faith is all about. -Pastor Robert Brody page 2 A Day with Carl Hess 6:00 am. The alarm goes off, awakening me to a new day. Today is Wednesday so I get ready for work right away as I go in to work at the Lancaster Mennonite Conference office early. I pick up the morning newspaper from the driveway (yep, it is still warm and muggy outside) and flip through the headlines as I eat breakfast. Nancy does not have to go in to work 'till 8 so I say good-bye to her as a wakeup alarm. 7:00 am. No one else is at work yet, but that is the plan. Although my official title is Financial Administrator, I also take care of the office computer network and other office machines. I check the computer server for new security updates and reboot it. Since this process takes everyone offline it goes better when no one else is in. Most weeks everything is back up in fifteen minutes. Occasionally though, it can take an hour or more, but that usually is only once every couple of months when every company decides to provide updates at the same time. Last week when I opened my office door I was greeted with a beeping sound from the server. That always means trouble. A quick check showed that a hard drive had chosen this time to die. Ten years ago that would have meant several days of return to paper and pen as the hard drive was replaced and the programs all reinstalled. Now it was barely a hiccup as the second drive (an exact image of the dead one) automatically took over and kept everything going. Some advances in technology are truly useful. 8:00 am. The office lights up as the other staff arrive for work. This week the other staff are Laura Livengood and Brinton Rutherford. Keith Weaver, Joanne Dietzel and Jon Heinly are at the MC USA Convention. James Martin is on vacation. The office Xerox printers need a monthly report sent in to Xerox on the 4th. That is a holiday so I give a quick check on the print totals. I decide to do it one day early rather than one day late. With so many out of the office this week it is a good time to do updates to their desk workstation computers 11:00 am. Five computers are now updated. Mine was one of those so now I get to other work as the other work computers will have to be done when their user is not in the office. I received the minutes from the secretary of the Conference Finance Committee and review them before sending them out to the committee members. Closing out the finances for June and completing and distributing the monthly financial reports uses up the rest of the morning. 12:45 pm. Lunch time. I have a packed lunch and read some of the day's newspaper as I eat. When it is not so hot I usually finish the hour with a walk outside. On hot days like this the newspaper gets a more thorough reading. 2:00 pm. Brinton brings a problem with Conference Facebook page not displaying the news feed properly on our website. I spent some time searching Facebook and Google to see if this was a new unannounced change by Facebook that we needed to adapt to. I did not find anything to correct the problem but set it aside to come back to after the 4thof July. 3:00 pm. The rest of the day 1 spend entering data into the new access program to make it easier for the staff contacting churches to have up-to-date information they could easily access. 5:00 pm. I head home and after a quick change mow the yard. With lots of rain the grass grows very well even in !hot! weather. A cool shower feels good before supper. 6:30 pm. I eat supper with Nancy followed by a three-mile walk along the Mill Creek in the relative cool of the evening. We get to watch the sunset as we near home again. 10:30 pm. Lights out. page 3 FRASER VALLEY GLEANERS-Saving Throw-Aways to Feed the Hungry Submitted by Lowell and Lois Shank Gerber What an opportunity we had! We were invited by our friend John Schmid (remember his singing at NDMC?) to join him on a Sail and Sing cruise to Alaska where he was one of the singers. As we planned our trip, we asked ourselves if there would be a SOOP experience for us while we are already in the Northwest. SOOP, Service Opportunities for Older Persons, is a program under Mennonite Mission Network, of Mennonite Church USA. We checked online for something in British Columbia since Lowell had pastored there about 25 years ago. We found Fraser Valley Gleaners, Abbotsford, British Columbia. As we learned more about it, we were so impressed with the work of the gleaners. Forty percent of food is sent to the landfill because of spots, irregularities or sometimes just excess produce! And we could save this good food to process into nutritious soup for the hungry. What was better than that?! So after our Alaska trip, we went to B.C. to Fraser Valley Gleaners (FVG). We spent mornings for two weeks in June cutting out bad spots from large quantities of peppers, tomatoes, potatoes, etc., visiting with coworkers as we worked. Forty to eighty volunteers showed up to work daily, retired people and families, as well as youth groups. One 80 year-old comes five days a week to volunteer. Many people come one day each week to help. Once a week we helped assemble the dried soup, so we participated in the entire process from fresh veggies to the final soup mix. It felt like such a worthwhile project! We wish there would be many more such places to use food that otherwise would be thrown away, to help feed the hungry. In June FVG sent 1,000,000 meals to North Korea with MCC assisting in the contacts. In 2012, FVG sent 12 million soup meals to feed the hungry around the world. Fraser Valley Gleaners Society -was established in 1999 in BC, and was initiated in the Fraser Valley by a small group of Christian believers who understood the incredible potential for locally-available produce to produce food for the hungry of the world. The Gleaners take vegetables that would have normally been wasted and turn them into soup mixes. May of 2001, a partnership with Mennonite Central Committee of BC was created to help fulfill the mission of The Gleaners. As a registered Canadian charity, FVG is both volunteer-run and donor-driven. On a daily basis, volunteers from many walks of life give of their time and energy to slice, dice, scrape, and mix the product. Fresh and frozen vegetable produce and apples are donated by a committed and growing set of produce partners. FVG operating costs are completely covered by the generous donation of financial partners made up of individuals, foundations, and corporate sponsors. Volunteers are always welcome to come and help for a day, a week, or a month. FVG Soup Mix and FVG Apple Snacks are distributed throughout the developing world. In recent years their product has made its way to over 40 countries. In order to ensure that each bag of soup mix is distributed into the hands of those in greatest need, they work with a variety of distribution networks including reputable relief and development agencies, individual missionaries, and short-term outreach teams. Regardless of the distribution partnership, the process begins with a completed application form received and approved by FVG. (from Fraser Valley Gleaners' website) page 4 August 2013 Sunday 4 $£ Monday Tuesday Wednesday Friday Thursday 1 Saturday 3 2 i Elvin Harnish 5 6 7 8 10 9 : 10:00-12:00 Toy Library 6:00 Young adult Bible study meal 11 12 13 7:00 Ministry team meeting 14 Nancy Hess 15 18 19 20 17 16 7:00 Young adult Bible study Christa Mylin Carl Hess 21 22 23 24 7:00 Young adult Bible study 7:00 Prayer Meeting Trent Hess Magdalena Hess Daniel Brody 26 25 27 28 7:00 Young adult Bible study Ashley Warfel Jeremiah McCutcheon 29 30 31