Sweet AlAbAMA HOMe
Transcription
Sweet AlAbAMA HOMe
Vine & Branches May 2008 $3.00 THE PEOPLE OF PRAISE • “CHRIST IN YOU, THE HOPE OF GLORY.” Sweet AlabAMA HOME The Gaudet House Gets Remade HOLY SPIRIT SIGHTINGS by Chris Meehan Trish Brewer South Bend branch soccer players Peter Gaffney, Sarah Heintzelman, Sheila Payne, Laura Ficker, Jonathan Finke. Soccer Healing 2 When Garth Rose (Corvallis) began coughing up blood, it took two lengthy visits to an urgent care facility to determine that he had an abscessed lung. He was hospitalized immediately. Then a biopsy accidentally spread bacteria all through his chest, putting his life in danger. He had emergency surgery, then spent nine days in the ICU tethered to a ventilator. “The surgeon gave me at most a 50% chance of survival,” Garth reports. “He said it was really ugly in there.” Through the grace of God and many prayers, Garth recovered rapidly. He avoided a prolonged stint in a rehabilitation home and was home within a week. A few weeks after that, he was back to work. With this life-threatening scare avoided, Garth faced another battle, this time with a hospital bill of more than $130,000, and thousands more for the anesthesiologist, the emergency room and the radiologists. Garth Rose Ed Brown Last fall a group of South Bend branch members gathered for their weekly soccer game at the Trinity School field. They brought some guests, and some of their guests brought guests, too, including a mother and her two boys. The boys had a fine time on the field, but during a water break Laura Ficker noticed their mother sitting on the sidelines. She had a plantar wart on her foot which made every step painful. Soccer was out of the question, she explained. A few more people gathered around and the whole group prayed with her for healing. They went back to the game, which ended before they could learn the mother’s name. Two months later, Dorothy Ranaghan gave a bemused sharing at a community meeting. Her daughter Susan works with this same mother of two and had heard her say that some people at the Trinity School field had prayed with her, and that her foot was healed. “I don’t know who the people who prayed are,” Dorothy announced at the meeting, “but you know who you are!” The mother’s name is Jeannie. “All those people prayed,” she says. “A week later I noticed it was gone. I had gone to the doctor and they wanted to do surgery. I had an appointment for a second opinion, but I called and cancelled my appointment. It was unnecessary.” Debt Cancelled “John Carey came with me to help me make my case to the hospital billing department,” he says. “After applying for financial assistance, my bill was cut in half, but it was still beyond what I could ever pay. The best deal the hospital was willing to offer me was a monthly payment that was bigger than my salary!” Francis Potts contacted some friends in the hospital’s administration, but to no avail, and Garth’s options appeared exhausted. The bills kept arriving, and he was in serious financial straits. “A few weeks later, I came home to find yet another letter from the hospital in my mailbox. What is it now?, I thought. Inside, I found a letter informing me my bill had been cut by 90%. I am now debt-free, praise God!” From companionship in emergency rooms (including one six-hour wait with Francis Johnson), to visits, cards and food from just about everyone in the branch, to help in negotiating his expenses, Garth says he felt the constant loving presence of the Lord. “I have people I know I can call in the middle of night, people who are praying for me daily, people who are committed to me. “It seems unlikely that the situation with the hospital bill would have come out nearly as positively without the help, support and prayers of my brothers and sisters.” Friends Lost and Found Last February Alana Busekrus (Oahu) paused to reminisce with her four daughters. “Remember the Heusted family that we used to spend so much time with?” Alana and Aleasha Heusted had been close friends, even cofounding a group for mothers of preschoolers. Then Aleasha and her husband Matthew left Oahu for Kentucky, so Matthew could attend a seminary. For eight straight years, Alana had sent them Christmas cards, but she had never heard anything back. Unknown to Alana, a few months earlier Thomas Duddy and Nick Holovaty had been in Louisville, KY, talking to strangers as part of a short reconnaissance trip. They met two men sitting outside a coffee shop, students at a local Baptist seminary, who insisted on introducing them to the coffee shop’s owner, Matthew Heusted. Matthew invited the missionaries to stay with them if they ever came back to town. The missionaries had no idea that they had just discovered Alana’s long-lost friends. They returned to Louisville in February and spent the night with the Heusteds, right about the time Alana was wondering if she’d ever hear from Aleasha again. During a late-night conversation, someone told the Heusteds that the People of Praise had a branch in Oahu, and the connection was forged. Later Aleasha found Alana’s husband Donald’s e-mail address on the Internet and sent a message with a clear subject line: “Looking for Alana Busekrus.” “It was like old times—her easy laughter and quickness to verbalize her trust in God’s timing and provi- From 1998, Aleasha Heusted holding Emily and Lydia Heusted and Alana Busekrus holding Nikaela Busekrus. sion,” Alana says of the phone conversation that followed the e-mail. “She and Matthew have a missionary mindset, living among people in need in order to have more opportunities to serve.” Aleasha was just as happy to reconnect with Alana. She explained that her family had moved several times since living in Oahu, hence the missing Christmas cards. Alana sums up: “With God, there are no coincidences, just sweet, blessed occurrences.” n 3 Branch members have thrown baptism parties, like this one, open to neighbors and other guests. SuperNOVA Stellar Planning and Pentecost Seminars Bring Branch Growth by Sean Connolly reporting by Susan Holovaty I n the spring of 2005 Craig Lent announced an ambitious growth goal for the community, increasing our numbers to 200,000 people over the next 40 years. He told leaders assembled in South Bend for a conference that the target was attainable if we maintained a consistent annual growth rate of 13 percent across the community. Since the conference, branch members and leaders in northern Virginia have answered the call to mobilize, experimenting with ways to turn familiar linchpins of community life—from Sunday branch meetings to midweek meals at home—into outreach opportunities. Ultimately a culture shift percolated throughout their branch. “We’ve changed our fundamental posture towards growth,” explains Walt Seale, NOVA’s point man for growth initiatives. “Bringing guests to events is now a normal part of our life. After an event, it is very common to hear people ask, ‘How many guests?’ This question was far from the top of our minds three years ago.” The culture shift is mostly due to the work of a growth strategy team launched by branch coordinators a few weeks after Craig’s call. The team meets two ways: in person (less often now than at the beginning of the initiative) and in a conversation during the workweek using an email listserv. The e-mail list has become the nerve center for branch growth, linking 70 or so subscribers to a steady drumbeat of fresh ideas, friendly advice and evangelistic encouragement. Many of the team’s ruminations have turned into actions. In three years, the branch has held 15 Pentecost seminars, along with four Community Weekends and countless open area meetings, open branch meetings, open ice cream socials and picnics. Even baptism parties have been thrown open to neighbors. Branch members have become bolder, praying with strangers on the Metro train, in doctors’ offices and at the gym, and they’ve knocked on doors in their own neighborhoods. Right: Chris Dietz likes to pray with people on the Metro on his way into work. 4 Now, the results are in: 34 people have joined the community since the start of 2005, representing an increase of 22 percent for the branch (ignoring branch members who left NOVA for other branches). More than 110 people were baptized in the Holy Spirit at branch-sponsored Pentecost seminars. “More people have come to see the love we have, the service that goes on and our call to build God’s kingdom in the here and now,” notes Lek Kadeli. “It’s not only the Pentecost seminars, it’s the meals, the men’s and women’s prayer nights, etc. What we’re seeing is the synergistic effect of people plugging into all these various opportunities.” The northern Virginia growth initiative is working, but why? If you talk to the men and women who joined during the last three years, a consistent theme emerges. Person after person speaks of the natural, heartfelt affection and personal attention they experienced when they attended community events. They were impressed by the people and by the personalities they encountered, and sometimes by generous and spontaneous acts of service in times of need. For some, all this attention and concern stood in marked contrast to the frantic, impersonal and work-centered encounters that usually characterize life around the Capital Beltway. Matt Harris is a real estate developer who joined the branch with his wife Mary Beth and daughter, Claire, after attending branch activities for four months. “Normally,” Matt says, “when I meet a new person in Washington the first question asked is, ‘What do you do for a living?’ But Trudy Golt was looking for advice on caring for her mother with Alzheimer’s when she met Georgine Redmond, a nurse. Georgine invited Trudy to a Community Weekend, and later to a Pentecost seminar. “I was very impressed with how kind and loving people were,” Trudy says. “For me it felt like going home—that’s the best way of saying it.” Like Trudy, nearly half of the 34 who came underway attended one of the 15 Pentecost seminars the branch has put on. Frank Bassett helped train more than 80 branch members to give talks, lead discussion groups and serve as moderators for the seminars. Walt Seale consulted with Paul DeCelles to come up with a shortened version of the seminar that branch members could present at the drop of a hat. Often, though, Walt would simply put a seminar on the calendar a couple of months ahead, regardless of whether anyone had signed up or not, Kristin Elliott and Marie Schmitz (Servant Branch) in Allendale. Walt and Pam Seale “ We are more aware of our guests and show more hospitality toward those the Lord sends our way.”—Walt Seale at community events people were generally very interested in every aspect of our lives. If we met a couple once and we told them that our parents lived in the area, they would remember that. People were actually listening. Mary Beth and I were taken aback by that because it’s so rare here.” sending a flurry of reminder e-mails and encouragements as the date got closer. More than 140 guests have attended the seminars. A spontaneous act of kindness brought Don and Debbie Runyon closer to the branch. Debbie first heard about the community while in Jim Mysliwiec and college in the late 1980s, and Lek Kadeli had kept in touch with Katherine Brophy (Colorado Springs) over the years. In recent years, she and her husband had been attending open men’s and women’s prayer nights. “Some men in the branch took my husband Don to the hospital because he was having chest pains,” she says. “They drove us there, and other branch members took care of the kids while we were there. Fortunately there was nothing seriously wrong with Don, but the people were very loving and caring.” As an interdenominational couple, the Runyons also appreciated the community’s ecumenism. 5 Frank Bassett, Dennis Burke and Rick Ridenour rehang a door at an area service day. Barbette Brophy and Carmen Mullen at Carmen’s baby shower. Patty Whelpley and Heather Allen, both married mothers of small children, came to love the community in part because of help they got during their pregnancies. “Before we came underway, I was on bed rest with my fourth pregnancy,” Heather says. “Maria DeMicoli asked her women’s group to help me out. They came over and helped me clean the house and take care of the kids. That’s amazing!” Patty says, “During one of my deliveries I had an emergency situation, and was really thrown for a loop. One of the sisters in the branch set up meals for a month. That moved me to tears. We were really surprised at their service.” Patty and her husband, John, had been running into community members at sporting events and homeschooling activities for some time before that. “We kept meeting people and noticing that they had this special spark about them,” Patty says. “When we learned that each of these people was in the People of Praise, we started slapping our foreheads and thinking seriously about what was different about this community, that made its members stand out among our peers.” Tonya Rrapi hails from Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, but a couple of years ago she needed a place to stay in the D.C. area so she could intern with the FBI. Through a series of connections, Bill and Deb Sjoberg agreed to welcome her, though they didn’t know her. “For the rest of A Lord’s Day meal my life, I will be thankful to them,” Tonya says. After the internship ended, Bill and Deb stayed in touch with Tonya. When she couldn’t find a job in Michigan, they invited her to move back in and look for a job nearby. She got a job and joined the branch. “After community functions and meetings with community people, I always felt so happy,” she says. “It’s worth the Virginia traffic—getting lost and making wrong turns! I’ve learned a lot from the People of Praise about praise and worship, and I’m a lot more confident in my love for the Lord and his love for me.” I n addition to newcomers, about half of the 34 members who came underway are children of community members, high-schoolers who are part of the branch’s Action division. These younger brothers and sisters cite trips to Allendale, a hard-working and busy division life, and a desire to grow closer to God as reasons for their decisions. Many also echo the same theme as their recently underway counterparts: being inspired by the love and concern of older brothers and sisters. Trinity School at Meadow View junior John Mysliwiec says he was influenced by the example of Company members Jeremy Osterhouse and Ed Preuss, who spent a summer living and working in northern Virginia when he was a freshman. Ed prayed with John to be baptized in the Holy Spirit that summer. Newer NOVA branch members Mary Beth and Matt Harris 6 Kathryn Elliott Francisco deBrey Trudy Golt L to R, Sophia, Colin, Patty, Annette, John, Joseph and Bridget Whelpley Nadia Fraga (right) with a guest at a women’s night. Clockwise from left, Peter Cassell, Brad Elliott, Carole Boland and Mae Cheung prepare a cedar chest for refinishing at an area service project. Senior Kathryn Elliot says traveling to Allendale and sharing a room with longtime branch member Pat Pawlosky left a lasting impression on her. “Before that I never thought of Pat as anything other than my friend’s mother. Sharing a room in Allendale is not like sharing a room in a hotel, it’s sharing an intense, spiritual experience. I came to see her as a real person, an adult who could be my sister in Christ as well.” about our own experiences—with baptism in the Holy Spirit, for example. There have been many more ‘no’ responses than yeses. Growing our branch has taken persistence. It’s helped us to take courage from the fact that Jesus was despised and rejected.” Branch members didn’t go into these encounters unprepared. They met together to practice explaining the community without fumbling and to rehearse threeminute stories that could serve as snapshots of our life. Then they discussed their evangelistic experiences on the listserv. “I think our hearts are growing to really have a missionary, evangelistic, outward view,” Mary Frances Loughran concludes. Two years into the effort, Walt sent a letter to the brothers and sisters on the growth e-mail list. “In the past two years a lot has changed,” he wrote. “We are more aware of our guests and show more hospitality toward those the Lord sends our way. We have spoken our Father’s word boldly through many Pentecost seminars. We have entertained many more guests in the last year than ever before. We have worked many hours to help the branch grow.” Three cheers to these brothers and sisters for all the toil, an effort that lives up to our Lord’s words in John’s Gospel: “My Father goes on laboring, and so do I.” n More than 110 people were baptized in the Holy Spirit at branch-sponsored Pentecost seminars. B ehind all these winning natural and personal encounters are hundreds and hundreds of hours of planning events, seminars and meals. Brothers and sisters worked to contact old friends and neighbors and to issue bold invitations to perfect strangers. In a commute on the Metro, Chris Dietz prayed with a middle-aged woman in a wheelchair and a woman suffering from post traumatic stress syndrome. Terry Cassell met a 25-yearold man with M.S. in a doctor’s office and later went to his house to pray with him. They also experienced fear and rejection. “It takes a lot of nerve to invite someone to a community event,” Walt says. “We found that we couldn’t just invite people. We had to explain community life and tell lots of stories John Mysliwiec Tonya Rrapi Nadia Fraga Tony Fraga Claire and Brigette Mysliwiec Photos by Mae Cheung, Nadia Fraga, Larry Lamanna, Michael Loughran and Tracy Scriba. 7 SWEET ALABAMA HOME by Elizabeth Grams L ydia Gaudet is effusive. “You have a new home in Mobile!, ” she says. It’s her message for the whole People of Praise. Early in the morning on February 1, a camera crew and a crack team of home designers invaded Steve and Lydia Gaudet’s front yard—its grass well worn by six football-loving Gaudet sons. (Two more grown children, a son and a daughter, live elsewhere.) In a week, volunteers flattened their tired 1,500-square-foot, one-bathroom house and set up a spacious new one in its place. With three bathrooms, five bedrooms and 3,500 square feet, the house is now hopping with branch gatherings, men’s and women’s group meetings and family dinners. “The Lord built this house,” Steve says. “He wants to use this to further his kingdom.” The Gaudets were winners on ABC television network’s Extreme Makeover: Home Edition (EMHE), a prime-time reality show. In each episode, a home design team swoops in 8 on a family with a hurting house (and often with a history of community service) and ships them off on a vacation. While they’re away, the team works at a breakneck clip, relying on help from local contractors and volunteers to put up a new home in time for the family’s return—all captured by the cameras, of course. Around Thanksgiving, one of Lydia’s co-workers nominated the Gaudets to appear on the show. Though EMHE gets thousands of nominations each week, the Gaudets learned in December that they were one of five families under consideration for an early February makeover. Before the filming, the whole family had to crate up their valuables, pack their bags for a vacation and get time off school and work, just in case they won. Just in case they lost, branch member Phyllis Compretta was racking her brain, trying to come up with ways to comfort her friends. She never had the chance. On the pivotal morning, the Gaudets were praying and singing in their kitchen when a sudden noise sent them flying out the front door. “I jumped the hedge,” Lydia recalls. “My oldest three boys flattened the design team on the ground. They just tackled them!” After whirlwind press interviews and discussions with the designers, eight happy Gaudets traveled via limo to the airport for a trip to the Super Bowl and several days in Disneyland. They returned to much fanfare and a sparkling new home. Before stepping inside for the first time, the Gaudets paused on their lawn, bringing the whole TV production to a halt and keeping hundreds of onlookers in suspense, while they thanked the Lord for what he’d done. T he Gaudets sorely needed a new home. Seven to ten showers a day had taken a toll on their old house’s solitary bathroom. With almost every room a bedroom, basic needs like sleep and quiet time often suffered. The house had held Above: The old Gaudet home: before, during and after demolition. From left: Joseph, Patrick, Thomas, Stephen, Peter, Chris and Lydia Gaudet. 9 ROOMS AT A GLANCE Kitchen Peter’s bedroom Dining room Photos by Rebecca Saltee Living room 10 Media room Master bedroom Left: Manny Ganzarain, Tony Compretta, Walter Drey and Bill Denton watch a movie. Right: Lydia Gaudet, Julia Drey, Theresa Burgess and Phyllis Compretta gather for women’s group. the growing family for 18 years, surviving fire damage and, more recently, roof damage from Hurricane Katrina. The family’s energy was taxed by long work hours, busy school schedules and by their many volunteer commitments. Peter, the youngest Gaudet, has Down Syndrome. Well aware of the needs that mentally handicapped children and adults can have, the family has spent many hours volunteering to serve that Steve, Lydia and the kids didn’t ask the design crew for more than one more bathroom and extra space. But their new house more than doubled in size, has lots of common space, new top-of-the-line appliances and furniture, and three bathrooms. “It’s an answer to prayer,” Steve says. “I didn’t realize how much of a burden the old house had been. Not having to worry about any of that has opened up a whole wealth of possibilities.” the family cook and an aspiring chef, got to cook with Andrew Sutton, a famous chef. There was the time the Gaudets’ parish priest held a huge impromptu Ash Wednesday service on their front lawn for volunteers. The Mobile branch poured itself out on the construction site. Bill Denton hung and mudded sheetrock and spent hours collecting trash. Manny Ganzarain spent a day translating between the worksite foreman and the Spanish-speaking The Mobile branch poured itself out on the construction site. population, a fact that greatly impressed EMHE producers. “Branch members have done a lot to help out the Gaudets over the years,” says Tom Evans, the coordinator responsible for Mobile, who can remember a number of workdays there. “But of course we did not have ‘extreme’ resources!” So the Lord stepped in to provide something extravagant, sending professional builders, fast-drying concrete, huge space heaters for quicksetting sheetrock mud, a few cranes, TV cameras and 1,500 volunteers. His son Christopher adds, “If we want to be together as a family, we can do that. If we want our own space, we can do that, too. It’s nice to have that freedom.” T he Lord’s hand was everywhere during makeover week, Steve says. There was the weather, perfect all week, except for one day when it rained everywhere in the city . . . but not in the Gaudets’ subdivision. There was the time on vacation in California when 16-year-old Patrick, bricklayers. Donna Ganzarain took a 4:00 a.m. shift cleaning windows and clearing the lawn in preparation for sod. Phyllis Compretta arrived to help on the day after the big unveiling, when the whole block (which had been taken over) had to be cleaned up and the TV crew’s equipment packed away. Even the EMHE crew noticed something different. A producer told the builders, “This project is like being on vacation, everyone is being so cooperative!” Another producer wrote “favorite family” on the binder 11 6 types of flooring 40 paint colors 81 cubic yards of concrete 200 light bulbs 250 sheets of drywall 21,000 bricks he used for the EMHE episode about the Gaudets. As icing on the cake, the makeover even helped Steve get a new job. Just when the Gaudets’ EMHE adventure began in December, he got laid off. His newfound availability was a key to getting the detailed EMHE application finished in time. Then, just after they received their new home, he and Lydia attended a press conference at which CVS Pharmacy offered money to help pay some of Peter’s medical bills. The local CVS manager mentioned to Steve that they were hiring. Steve applied, got the job, and started work as an assistant store manager. “It’s a miracle, actually,” he says. “No one deserves this! It’s a gift from God.” A huge blessing has arrived for the Mobile branch. “It’s already making a big difference,” Phyllis reports. The Gaudets are now free to host branch gatherings. They can even seat 40 for a meal, and they hope the space will be a tool for branch growth. “We’re all rejoicing in it,” says Bill Denton. “This is a real sign from God that he loves us.” “We want you to come and see the house,” says Lydia, smiling. n Photos courtesy of Lydia Gaudet You can watch a video tour of the house at http://abc.go.com/primetime/xtremehome/index?pn=index 8 5 Jo Geissler Steadfast by Tom Noe O ur sister Jo Geissler was a woman of rock-hard faith, radiant with warmth and concern for others. She was born Josephine Hirsch March 15, 1922, in Warsaw, MO. She met Gene Geissler in 1941 at a National Catholic Rural Life Conference. That was October 6. By October 8, Gene knew he wanted to ask Jo to marry him. Because of Pearl Harbor, the marriage was moved up to May 2, 1942, just before Gene was drafted. After the war, he started teaching at Notre Dame and they moved to South Bend. Beginning in the early 1940s, some graduate students and faculty at Notre Dame had been talking about starting a Christian community of families in the neighboring countryside, knit together by a common rural life, faith and liturgical celebrations. In 1946, the Geisslers went in with several other families to purchase a farm with 80 acres. They helped one another build houses. They drilled wells. They bought a cow or two. Gene says, “Those times were very good. Jo was both a city girl and a farm girl, so all her skills and knowledge were constantly being called upon. We were young and happy . . . and ambitious. Later we found out how big a challenge it was.” The Geisslers lived in the basement level of their unfinished house for the first few years of construction, which took a total of 10 years. Gene needed to adjust the design regularly as the family grew, eventually to 16 children, 15 of whom survived. He lives in the same house today, but the community has dispersed over the years. When Gene attended an early charismatic prayer meeting, Jo was definitely not interested, but gradually she changed her mind. They came underway in September, 1976, and made the covenant September 30, 1979. Jo’s women’s group liked to meet at the LaSalle Restaurant for lunch, and Jo would often bring along some of Gene’s homemade wine. Sipping discreetly from coffee cups, they would share life stories and laugh, laugh, laugh. Jo treasured these friendships as one of her greatest blessings from the Lord. Jo possessed the gift of motherhood in abundance, in Jo and Gene Geissler addition to toughness, perseverance, generosity and a fervent Irish Catholic faith. She canned mountains of garden produce, made butter and yogurt and ice cream, patched clothing and recycled old woolen coats into braided rugs. She started reading early and never stopped. Jo was intelligent, a walking Cliff’s Notes for the kids’ papers. She could converse with many types of people, on many topics, on many levels. Her home was a welcoming place where people gathered often: for meals (always huge), picnics, singalongs, bonfires, hayrides and conversations. Jo’s uncanny ability to listen with her whole heart and soul was striking, even to people who met her only once. Immensely strong of character, she passed that strength along to those who told her their stories. Her grandson Jesse Barrett (South Bend) recalls, “Growing up I spent a lot of time at their house. She entered into your life whenever she talked to you.” Not only did she make you feel special; she told you so. Jo had strong, well thought-out positions on most moral and political issues. Money, authority and position didn’t impress her. Simplicity and directness did. Molly Barrett says that her parents’ life reflected Dorothy Day’s Catholic Worker ideals of simplicity and solidarity with the poor. “My mom was very moved by the oppression that people experienced because of discrimination, war and poverty. She understood suffering through the eyes of faith. I think she could enter deeply into the plight of others because of her strong foundation in God.” Since home was the site of her mightiest efforts, Jo didn’t get out much. She volunteered in the parish clothing center and was a member of the Blessed Martin De Porres Society. Believing fervently in the sanctity of human life, she volunteered at Birthright for several years, Years ago in the branch, when Jo’s friend Nancy Zwerneman died, Jo said in tribute: “Her feet were so firmly planted, and her spirit soared.” Those words easily describe Jo herself. She died at home on December 9, surrounded by Gene, whom she always called her “friend husband,” and by their many children. n 13 O Mary Martha Solomon Big-hearted 14 by Susan Weilbacher n January 30, I was studying Mary Martha Solomon’s soft radiant face and sparkling blue eyes, the way portrait artists must do, as she spoke about God’s providence during her two-year battle with rare adrenal cancer. My dear friend was tired, yet she had never looked so beautiful. Yes, I thought, her family would enjoy a portrait to honor her. She was a petite powerhouse of love for the Lord, with a giant, zealous, caring heart. Just days later, on February 16, surrounded by her husband Michael and her family, with community brothers and sisters in the Tampa branch slipping in to pray or bring a meal, Mary Martha gently entered God’s eternal kingdom. Tributes rang out at the wake and the funeral, in a church completely filled with those who knew her, including the Roman Catholic bishop and 27 other clergy. Jackie Brophy shared, “We were in the same women’s group for years, but I didn’t realize how far-reaching Mary Martha’s touch was. She never let on that she cared for and helped so many!” During their 24 years in the People of Praise, the Solomons had made fast friendships across branches. Many community members came from out of state to support the family. Two of Mary Martha’s unique gifts surfaced repeatedly in the sharings: her uncanny ability to link one person’s need with another’s abundance, and her pleasant way of convincing anyone to serve or take on a ministry (whether the person desired to or not!) She would look at her targets with full confidence, and a “yes” would pop out before they knew what hit them. She was lovingly relentless in getting needs met, especially for the poor, infirm and elderly. Many people told Michael, “Your wife jump-started my ministry.” She was born in Kansas City, MO, June 10, 1940, and grew up in a loving Catholic family. Michael met her when she was a college senior; his heart was quickly won. “I saw her beautiful smile, her vigor for life, her dedication to her faith. She traveled as a flight attendant for TWA, and she’d never miss Sunday mass. Pretty exceptional in that kind of job!” They were married May 25, 1963. When Patrick, Susan, Missy and Katie came along, Mary Martha turned her efforts to full-time parenting. She was a fun mom, with high expectations and consistency, weaving Christian values seamlessly into homemaking. She also used her talents for sewing, decorating and designing. In 1977 the Solomons were baptized in the Spirit at a Catholic charismatic prayer meeting. Michael remembers, “I saw big changes. She had been playing tennis and sailing, but her priorities shifted toward serving the poor and sick with great enthusiasm.” When Michael, Don Kieffer and my husband Kevin returned from a Steubenville Christian businessmen’s conference, they decided that our families would meet weekly for a meal. Mary Martha eagerly facilitated those meals, not letting us miss one! Five years later, the Tampa branch was born in the Solomons’ living room. She thrived on the People of Praise life-style, and her prayer flourished. Their home became known for hospitality, as she invited in visiting community members, the Grenada missionaries and even a group of international charismatic leaders, among many others. Linda Scrofani loved Mary Martha’s habit of squeezing in extra table guests: “She seemed able to multiply the food. I witnessed this often! She made you feel so welcome.” After volunteering for 20 years, Mary Martha was employed as her church’s director of volunteers for nine years. She and Michael, a deacon, also established Faith Travels, leading tours to the Holy Land and other holy sites. A passionate traveler, she also wanted the trips to nourish their clients’ faith. Jackie described how her women’s group rallied around Mary Martha: “We were very flexible, meeting when Mary Martha wanted us to, sitting with her one at a time while she had chemo, bringing a meal, cleaning house, whatever we could do. She was always hopeful, confident in the Lord.” “Never complaining,” Michael and all the family said. We may never know how huge her heart was. At the funeral, the pastor overwhelmed us by announcing that the new parish center would be named, in her honor, the Mary Martha House Parish Center. She would have been glad! And I will paint a portrait, so that all can see her there. n Lifenotes The “LifeNotes” page in V&B is the place to spread the word about key events and milestones, new babies, adoptions, college graduations, awards (academic or work-related), major promotions, accomplishments (sports, professional, hobby), retirement or job changes. Send items to Tom Noe at veritas@trinityschools.org. When in doubt, send it in! n Congratulations to Paul Stutzman and Margaret Nauth (Servant Branch), who were married November 17 at St. Elizabeth Catholic Church. The new couple are living in Eagan, MN. n Tracy Scriba (Falls Church, VA) has received the Federal Highway Administration’s first annual Leadership in Operations Award for her role in leading a three-year national initiative to help states improve traffic management for road construction. Tracy was nominated for the award by her peers and colleagues in the agency. Congratulations! n Pat and Becca Kottkamp (South Bend) are spreading the good news of a recent blessing, the birth of Abigail Elizabeth on March 7. n Jerome and Heather Allen (Fairfax, VA) opened their hearts to God’s gift of their fifth child, Samuel James Edward, on April 25. Servant Branch: Julie Willenbring was released from the covenant of the People of Praise on April 7, 2008. n Jon and Jennifer Balsbaugh (St. Paul, MN) are praising God for the gift of Charis Rhiannon on March 5. The following transfers and changes in assignment went into effect April 9, 2008: n Alan and Anne Nicklaus (Burnsville, MN) are rejoicing over the happy arrival of Joseph Daniel on January 19. Lisa Brickweg, from campus division to an area in Servant Branch. n Joe and Martha Adamson (Falls Church, VA) happily welcomed Nathanael Joseph, born April 28. From the Executive Office Biloxi: Bobby and Liz Palermo were released from the covenant of the People of Praise on March 20, 2008. Colorado Springs: Harry Huebner was released from the covenant of the People of Praise on March 13, 2008. Corvallis: Steve and Dorothy Lindvall were released from the covenant of the People of Praise on March 20, 2008. People of Praise Vine & Branches is published monthly by the People of Praise community for its members. Reprint permission must be obtained before use. Please contact Sean Connolly, 107 S. Greenlawn, South Bend, IN 46617; e-mail thevine@peopleofpraise.org or phone 574-234-5088 or fax 574-236-6633. For subscription information or to purchase additional copies, please contact Patricia Brewer at pbrewer@peopleofpraise.org. All contents © 2008 People of Praise. Editor: Sean Connolly Copy Editor: Tom Noe Business Manager: Patricia Brewer Design & Layout: Jennifer Kenning, Gretchen Rolland Lead Reporter: Chris Meehan Reporting Staff: Catherine Bulger, Bill Crimmins, Claire Holovaty, Susan Holovaty, Debbie Mixell, Gene Stowe Front cover photo: Rebecca Saltee Back cover photo: Brian Couch, Jr. Chi-Kin (Charles) Chow, from South Bend Mission division to Indianapolis new start. Ruth Christor, from South Bend Action division to Allendale. Jon Gapp, from South Bend Mission division to Servant Branch campus division. Barbara (Shelley) Gilliam, from South Bend Mission division to Indianapolis new start. Mary Grams, from Colorado Springs branch to Servant Branch campus division. J-T Kelly, from South Bend Action division to Mission division. DeAnna Leftwich, from South Bend Mission division to Indianapolis new start. Ricky Nichols, from South Bend Mission division to Indianapolis new start. T.J. Ryan, from campus division to an area in Servant Branch. Kedrick Stacey, from South Bend Action division to Allendale. Ruth Ann Sullivan, from South Bend Mission division to Indianapolis new start. Correction: The address for Trinity School at River Ridge is 601 River Ridge Parkway, Suite 200. The address for the Servant Branch offices at River Ridge is 601 River Ridge Parkway, Suite 100. Both are in Eagan, MN 55121. 15 “ The kingdom of heaven is like treasure hidden in a field. When a man found it, he hid it again, and then in his joy went and sold all he had and bought that field” (Mt. 13:44). The People of Praise, Inc. 107 South Greenlawn South Bend, IN 46617