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Two Sections – Section A Volume 156 Number 23 The Bishop Getting our priorities straight BY BISHOP W. EARL BLEDSOE North Texas Conference Have you ever felt like washing your hands of the whole matter of trying to help people? As a former District Superintendent, I confess that I had many days in which Bishop Bledsoe I felt that way, but I didn’t wash my hands of the matter. Why? For the sake of the gospel we must get involved. Jesus calls us to not only get our feet wet but to get our hands dirty as well in helping others. A few months ago, Leslie and I visited the Dallas Bethlehem Center, located in South Dallas. It is one of the most depressed areas in the city of Dallas, serving families who live in the 75215 and 75210 zip codes. The greatest resource needed, other than money, is persons with gifts and talents to help develop curriculum and to share their time with others. The Center has a new Executive Director, Mrs. Petrella Booker, and she is working to meet the needs of the families in the area and to serve the community as well. But, she needs help, especially in securing sponsors for many of the children. The cost to sponsor a child at the Center amounts to just under $5800 per year. Several years ago, I read two passages in the scriptures that offered me a choice about how I respond to people in need. The first is found in Matthew 27:24, where Jesus is brought before Pilate to help resolve a matter of leadership. “When Pilate saw that he was getting nowhere and that a riot was See “The Bishop…” on Page 5A 072000 October 9, 2009 ‘Silent Sermon’ shares Gospel in seven languages BY DR. JOAN G. LABARR P Editor icture a silent sermon. If this appears to be a contradiction in terms, imagine that this sermon preached in seven languages, five in sign languages and two in spoken languages, all simultaneously. And the preacher never “said” a word. The scenario is real. On Aug. 5, Rev. Tom Hudspeth, an associate pastor and director of the Deaf Ministry at Lovers Lane UMC, Dallas, preached for the second World Methodist Mission Conference of the Deaf at Kwanglim Seminar House, Poncheon, South Korea. As Dr. Hudspeth signed in American Sign Language (ASL): “No eye has seen, no ear has heard, no person has imagined what God has prepared for those people who love him,” he asked the congregation to sign Paul’s words from I Corinthians 2:9 along with him. They did, responding in Korean, Japanese, Kenyan and Sri Lankan sign languages. Korean and English translators voiced the sermon in their languages. One of the sign language translators was Rev. Joo Kang, the first Deaf person ordained by the Korean Presbyterian Church, who was the Lovers Lane Silent Night Dinner speaker in 2007. Another was Hyeoung Kim, a Deaf Korean Methodist missionary from Sri Lanka, while a third translator was a Deaf pastor from the Wesleyan Deaf Church in Japan. Two translators from Sri Lanka and Japan watched Rev Kang on a television monitor, so they did not have to turn around to see Dr. Hudspeth’s signs. Off camera, a fourth sign language translator, Joseph Kimathi, from Kenya, a hearing person, translated into Kenyan sign language. He listened to a voice interpreter speaking in English, and sat facing the first row of chairs, interpreting for the Deaf pastor from Kenya, who is also his mother. A Korean woman listened to the English translator, then voiced in Korean. Toby WitteDix of Baltimore, MD, voiced Dr. Hudspeth’s ASL in English. “To God be the glory for this amazing conference put on by the gracious and generous Korean Deaf and hearing friends in Christ. They ask for your prayers for the peaceful Dr. Tom Hudspeth, left, preached in ASL, as tranlators interpreted in Korean, Sir Lankan and Japanese sign languages. A translator out of camera range signed in Korean. reuniting of their country,” Dr. Hudspeth said. Before they left Poncheon, which is about a two-hour drive from the South Korean capital, Seoul, and almost to the border with the North, the announcement came that the next World Methodist Missions Conference for the Deaf will be in August 2013 in Nairobi, Kenya. Dr. Hudspeth, who was elected to be the General Secretary and Treasurer for the World Federation of Deaf Methodists (WFDM), will be part of the planning process. Rev. Margaret Mukami, the first Deaf woman to be ordained in the Methodist Church of Kenya, and president of WFDM, will be host for the 2013 gathering. Back home, Dr. Hudspeth remains a tireless advocate for Deaf Ministry. He says that the number and variety of requests that come through phone calls, See “Silent sermon…” on Page 4A First UMC, Alvord New facilities open church to future ministry BY DR. JOAN G. LABARR S Editor eptember 2009 marked the fulfillment of a dream and the completion of a three-year project for First UMC, Alvord. The 125-year old church in rural north Wise County has finished a $325,000 capital project including a new multi-purpose building with Fellowship Hall and renovation of the rest of the facilities. On May 31, members and friends of the church gathered for a festive Consecration Sunday and 125th anniversary celebration as Wichita Falls District Superintendent Rev. John Rosen- UM cross and flame symbol and the proud name “Memorial Hall.” At the consecration service, Rev. Rosenburg reminded the church that they were not only noting 125 years The historic 1892 First UMC, Alvord, church of contribubell, signals a new day for the church with its tions to the remodeled 1960’s sanctuary building, left, and ministry of new multi-purpose “Memorial Hall.” Jesus Christ, burg led in the consecration of but they were also celebrating the new building. The structure an accomplishment that created now has outdoor signage with the tools for future ministry. Soon after the consecration, hard-working members began the daunting task of renovating the 1960s era building. Work continued throughout the summer. Walls came down, and once tiny rooms became open, bright and airy. A highlight is the new children’s wing, Journey Land, with three classrooms – arts and crafts, encampment and drama – decorated for rotational Sunday School. Two small restrooms were combined to create a children’s restroom area. Sunday School Superintendent Judy Nivens directed the Children’s Wing project. Artists Kandy Shelton and Donna Nivens painted the rooms with See “New facilities…” on Page 5A 4 A NTCcircuit Isasi-Diaz lecture, Oct.29 Dr. Ada María Isasi-Díaz, professor of Social Ethics and Theology at the Theological School of Drew University and visiting professor at Perkins School of Theology, will present “Reconciliation: The Face of Justice in the 21st Century” at 7:00 p.m. Oct. 29 in the Great Hall of Elizabeth Perkins Prothro Hall at Perkins School Dr. Isasi-Diaz of Theology. The lecture is made possible by a grant from the Henry Luce Foundation, and is sponsored by the SMU Center for the Study of Latino/a Christianity and Religions. Co-sponsors include the Religious Studies Department and the Women’s and Gender Studies Programs at SMU. The lecture is free and open to the public. Dr. Isasi-Díaz will be at Perkins from October 25 through November 3 in her capacity as visiting professor. Her visit comes under the auspices of the school’s Center for the Study of Latino/a Christianity and Religions, and is made possible through a grant from the Luce Foundation. During her visit Dr. Isasi-Díaz will conduct other lectures, hold consultations with faculty and students, and preach in community worship. Quilters top totebag goal five-fold Rev. Tom Waitschies, pastor of Wesley UMC, McKinney, consecrated quilts, toys, books and other gifts for “Project Night Night” during the church’s Sept. 20 worship service. The next day the bounty was delivered to Samaritan Inn, Collin County’s only homeless shelter. Some 33 children are among Samaritan Inn’s residents. “Project Night Night” is dedicated to improving the lives of these homeless children, one sweet dream at a time, with conviction that every child deserves to have his or her nighttime needs met. “Project Night Night” seeks to advance the emotional and cognitive well-being of each child by providing objects of reliable comfort (security blankets, age-appropriate books, and stuffed animals). Inspired by an e-mail by Suzie Campbell, daughter in law of quilter Yvonne Campbell, the “Piecemakers” quilting club picked up the challenge to produce 10 tote bags, and several members started mak- From left,are Yvonne Campbell, Suzie Campbell and Betty Bailey display completed totebags. ing small quilts or blankets for the project. Donated fabric in the quilting cabinets was used, along with some purchased by individuals. Other items included stuffed animals, books, and the tote bags. To say they exceeded the goal is an understatement. “Never underestimate what a quilter can and will do for a project for children especially the homeless,” said group member Campbell. Final tally saw the quilters delivering 56 tote bags, plus, twin sheets, pillows and other bedding. For more information, please call 972-542-2228, or visit website www.wumcmckinney.org. ‘Silent sermon’ shares gospel in seven languages… Continued from Page 1A e-mails, and sometimes people appearing at the church, amaze him. He said that one Sunday afternoon, his wife, Mary Kay, saw a woman signing in the hall. She indicated her father was deaf, and as they drove past Lovers Lane UMC, they saw the Deaf Ministry sign and came in. The woman’s father lived in California, and was coming to visit for a few weeks. She indicated that her church had an interpreter, but not many Deaf people attending. Lovers Lane’s willingness to take the next step and offer a fellowship for Deaf persons, an opportunity to socialize and bond as a group, struck her as vitally important. Dr. Hudspeth explained that Deaf ministry offers a progressive series of challenges. Interpreters are important, but limited, as this is a passive experience in which people come and see, but when the interpreter leaves, the Deaf people leave the church too. The next step in his view is full-fledged Deaf Ministry, an interactive experience where Deaf persons are being called on to exercise their gifts and grace for ministry. This is a full-fledged ministry with Sunday School, fellowship and mission opportunities. The final level is a Deaf Dr. Hudspeth and translators served communion to World Methodist Mission Conference of the Deaf participants. church, where worship is a Deaf-led experience, similar to the worship Dr. Hudspeth preached for in Korea. The Deaf United Methodist Church closest to the NTC is New Life Deaf Fellowship at Northern Hills UMC, San Antonio. Dr. Hudspeth observes that in some ways the Deaf are “oral” learners, just as the Bible was an oral experience when it was first communicated to illiterate people who listened to the stories. “The Deaf need to experience the Bible as narrative,” he said. This year he is doing a chronological Bible study using the Book of Acts, which offers the kind of material he calls; “wonderful” for OCTOBER 9, 2009 | NORTH TEXAS CONFERENCE NEWS this style of study. Young people are an important factor in a thriving Deaf Ministry, and the South Central Jurisdiction has recognized this by launching a new camp for all Deaf and hard of hearing children and youth June 24-27, 2010, at Cross Point Camp, Kingston, Ok. Ages six to 17 are eligible to participate. For more information on the SCJ EXTREME Children and Youth Camp for the Deaf, go to www.missionumc.com/ extremecamp.html. Cross Point Camp is not far from the NTC, on the north side of Lake Texoma. It is a project of Mission UMC in Ft. Smith, AR, and coordinated by Dee Mathes, whom Dr. Hudspeth worked with on a Deaf Ministry mission trip in the summer of 2009. The camp is a very special endeavor for Dr. Hudspeth, who said, “So many times Deaf kids are hidden away, not thought of and miss out on the important experiences of growing up in the church.” That is why Dr. Hudspeth continues to put energy and support into the Lovers Lane Academy for the Deaf, a small school that is offering individual attention and new hope for Deaf teens. For information about the school, contact Executive Director Peggy Key, 214-890-0881, or e-mail: peggy_key@deafacademy.com. On Oct. 3, Lovers Lane hosted the sixth annual “Silent Night” Dinner, benefiting the school and the church’s Deaf Ministries. Keynote speaker was Bishop Peggy Johnson, Eastern Pennsylvania Conference, a pastor who has served Deaf congregations and faced physical challenges in her own life. Dr. Hudspeth is always eager to share about Deaf Ministry and how churches can become involved. Contact him at 214-706-9522, voice phone, or 866-326-4765, video phone, or e-mail: thudspeth@llumc.org. Yam Jam 2009 - Oct. 17 in East Texas Helping Hands Gleaning Ministry will host the 2009 Yam Jam Oct. 17 in a field off Highway 69 in the Emory/Alba area of East Texas. Volunteers will gather at the field to pick up sweet potatoes left behind after harvest to donate to agencies that provide food for people in need. At the 2008 Yam Jam, 278 volunteers gleaned 56,500 pounds of sweet potatoes and donated them for distribution to food pantries and outreach centers throughout north Texas. This day’s work provided over 42,000 meals to families of four. Founded in 2001, Helping Hands Gleaning Ministry is a 501 C(3) hunger relief ministry whose mission is to utilize the services of dedicated volunteers to salvage food that otherwise would be wasted and give it to people in need of food. To volunteer or for more information, please contact Betty Cordell, phone: 469/337-2576 or email: hhgleaning@sbcglobal.net. New facilities open church to future ministry…NTC circuit 5 A Continued from Page 1A whimsical biblical scenes, complete with an occasional iconic cartoon character, and carpenter Terry Harris built the children a boat on wheels using 2x4 lumber from the 1894 church building and paneling from the 1960’s building. The new building, which is named “Memorial Hall” to remember all of those who built the church and served faithfully over Wichita Falls District Superintendent Rev. John Rosenburg, left, the years, honors their memory with a building that equips the and Lay Leader Charlie French help lead the May 31 consecrachurch to thrive in the 21st Cention service in the pre-remodeled sanctuary space. tury. The church also honored its to work. For French it has been space, open to a new patio area living saints, including Bill Spain an experience that brought the outside the entry. The clean and and Damon Pennington, the two congregation together and helped cheerful new nursery is convesurviving members of the 1961 build an understanding of the niently located near the gatherbuilding campaign still active in worth of each individual. As the ing space. the congregation. project progressed, there were General Contractor for the new In addition to the spacious volunteers with gifts of welding, building was PVP Building SysFellowship Hall, which can easpainting, sawing, working with tems and the interior contractor ily accommodate 250 people at glass and carpentry. was Barry Stone Custom Homes. tables, the 2,300 sq. ft. structure “Even if it is one lady who Building Committee Chairhouses a large kitchen, bathspent two hours scrubbing and person Kim French explains that rooms with showers, three adult polishing the cross, when it in the renovation phase, church Sunday School rooms, two ofcomes to working in a church, members themselves pitched in fices, and a storage room. There there is a point where everyone is additional space is doing what God calls him or on the second floor her to do. Each of us has a way to that can be finished serve,” she said. out in the future. Other members of the BuildThe newly ing Committee include Larry remodeled sanctuForeman, Terry Harris, David ary increased the Nivens, Jo Alexander-Watson and seating capacity Chandra Berry, ably supported by to 275. Chancel church secretary Amy Hiler. furniture lovingly The renovations and new built by Bill Spain building are opening up new was refinished, ways to serve, and showcasing as were the pews. some hidden talents. Ask 6 feet 5 The once tiny inch Charles Witmere, a football narthex has been player for Texas Tech. When the Complete with hard hat “helmet,” 6 feet 5 transformed into a new Rotation Sunday School inch Charles Witmere plays Goliath for the large and welneeded a Goliath, he stepped coming gathering children’s Sunday School. up to the challenge, even when the costume included a hard hat in lieu of a helmet. When he walked into the drama room bellowing, “I am Goliath,” some of Highland Park UMC, Dallas, the kids dove under the table. will offer an Intensive Journal In the three years the Alvord Workshop: “Depth Contact: project has been underway, two Symbolic Images and Meaning pastors have served the 100-memLife,” led by Rev. Wally Chapber congregation. When Rev. pell, Oct. 23-25. Carroll Caddell came to Alvord as This is the second half of the a retired pastor serving part-time, Intensive Journal workbook. The the congregation shared a 20-year “Life Context” section is a prereqold dream of a new building. He uisite. The study will invite particiagreed to help and the Building pants to explore “experiences of Committee and Capital Campaign connection” which had significant were launched. meaning, offering insights about After the project was securely Rev. Chappell ultimate concerns and exploration underway, Rev. Caddell chose to of major themes in life. Advanced payment of the $155 fee is Oct. 21. “retire” again, and present pastor meditation techniques offer an For more information, or to register, Rev. Ed Cherryholmes, another avenue for greater reflection. either call 214-523-2296, 214-523retiree, was appointed. “One of The experience will begin 2331, e-mail: carterj@hpumc. the things we like about him is with a 5:45 p.m. dinner on Oct. org, or beaglesL@hpumc.org. that he always believes in us,” 23. The workshop is from 6:30 to Make checks payable to Highsaid one of the Alvord members. 9:00 p.m. land Park UMC, and mail to: The The church also applauds the Saturday’s session will be 9:00 Academy, 3300 Mockingbird support they received from the a.m.to 1:00 p.m., and Sunday will Lane, Dallas, TX 75205, or regTexas Methodist Foundation be 2:00 to 6:00 p.m. ister online at www.hpumc.org/ (TMF) consultant for the CapiDeadline for registration and pages/09_class_registration. tal Campaign and lender for the Highland Park UMC to host Intensive Journal Workshop Following the summer of hard work, the newly remodeled sanctuary features an open, well-lighted chancel with historic furnishings lovingly refinished. project. The total cost for the new building and remodeling was $375,000. The church ended up financing $200,000 through TMF. Now that First UMC, Alvord, is living into its new space, leaders are heeding the word of the superintendent at the consecration and using the new facilities as tools for new ministries and revitalizing existing ones. The UMW group was re-started in 2008, and the congregation is seeking new ways to evangelize and reach out to the community and surrounding area. The church is also planning a Lord’s Acre festival on Oct. 24 in conjunction with its Oct. 25 Charge Conference. Though the Lord’s Acre is not new, the opportunity to hold it in the spacious new facilities opens new possibilities. The Bishop… Continued from Page 1A imminent, he took a basin of water and washed his hands in full sight of the crowd, saying, ‘I’m washing my hands of responsibility for this man’s death. From now on, it’s in your hands. You’re judge and jury.”* The second passage is found in John 13:3-6, where Jesus is in fellowship with his disciples right after supper and demonstrates in a prophetic way what servant leadership is all about. “Jesus knew that the Father had put him in complete charge of everything, that he came from God and was on his way back to God. So, he got up from the sup- First UMC, Alvord ‘Lord’s Acre’ Oct. 24 First UMC, Alvord, will celebrate its 2009 Lord’s Acre from 9:00 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Oct. 24 in the church’s new Fellowship Hall and remodeled sanctuary. There will be items for sale in the “Country Shop” and “Just Like New Shop” and a silent auction. A turkey and dressing meal will be on sale for $7 from 11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m., with no cost to children four and under. For more information, contact Judy Nivens, jnivens@wisewb.com. per table, set aside his robe, and put on an apron. Then he poured water into a basin and began to wash the feet of the disciples, drying them with his apron.”* In life we are presented with two basins of water from which to wash. One enables us to wash our hands of the matter and let nature take its course. The other involves getting up from our tables of plenty, setting aside our pride and dignity and learning to wash the feet of those in need. Needless to say, often I am prone to wash my hands of the matter, but then I cannot get out of my mind the image of our Lord and Savior when presented with an issue, doing just the opposite. Which basin do you wash from? * Eugene H. Peterson, The Message. North Texas Conference United Methodist Reporter Joan Gray LaBarr editor Lee Zastovnik prod. assistant Jo Ann Hayes circulation hayes@ntcumc.org 972-526-5006 P.O. Box 866128 Plano, Texas 75086-6128 972-526-5000 800-969-8201 www.ntcumc.org NORTH TEXAS CONFERENCE NEWS | OCTOBER 9, 2009 8 A NTCcircuit Lovers Lane UMC to combine lectures Columnist shares reflections on topic ‘The Shack’ Editor’s Note: Parts of the following article appeared in the “United Methodist Reporter” column, “Wesleyan Wisdom” by Dr. Donald W. Haynes. W m. Paul Young’s book, “The Shack,” continues to be a run-away best seller. Young is now touring the country with a series of lectures and will be hosted by Lovers Lane United Methodist Church Foundation in May 2010. The Lovers Lane United Methodist Church Foundation is honored to combine the annual Tom Shipp Lectures, typically held each October, with the James C. and Barbara McCormick Distinguished Speaker Forum and bring to the greater Dallas community Mr. Young on May 2 and May 3 in 2010. Why does this book and the author’s real life story continue to resonate so deeply with millions of people? Too often we have reduced what it means to be a Christian to the hereafter. Len Sweet has written so tellingly that being a Christian is more than our eternal destination. It is that, but Paul calls us, during the journey, to “have the mind in us that was in Christ Jesus.” Many of us, who feel comfortable with dying into the hands of God whose name is love, have a hard time living in relationship to human beings who sin against us. The petition of the Lord’s Prayer which God has the hardest time meeting is Jesus’ insistence that we forgive those who trespass against us. No miracle is more astounding than the grace to forgive those who have hurt us deeply, almost to the point of destroying our mental, spiritual, and physical well being. The difficulty to forgive is known to each of us. The hardest “sin against us” to forgive probably is forgiving someone who murdered one of our children. This plumbs the depths of grace. Maybe this reality is the reason William Young’s novel, “The Shack,” continues on the best seller list of secular bookstores. Almost on every page we can identify with Mack as he deals with his grief, his anger, his bitterness, his loneliness, and his loss of desire to be in church. Hanging like an everpresent cloud over every page is “The Great Sadness.” Perhaps Dr. Haynes this within itself is what draws us to these power-packed pages because every one of us has had some form of “a great sadness.” Our response to our own “great sadness” varies. Perhaps it was an accident and we blame ourselves for its happening. Perhaps it is a broken relationship, and again, we blame ourselves for the divorce, the child who is estranged, or friendship that we lost. Perhaps it was a relationship that was highly damaging and we stayed in too long. We have a zillion ways to feel as Mack felt in The Shack; our relationship with God is impaired and our relationship with the church is negative. The novel condenses Mack’s encounter with each person of the Holy Trinity into one weekend. By attending one of his lectures at Lovers Lane United Methodist Church, you will hear the life story behind the novel. Young is not only an engaging writer; he is a moving speaker. Audiences everywhere have reported being “on the edge of our seats” as Young re-casts the book’s plot into the chronology of his own spiritual journey. Being forgiven is being healed from our brokenness, being relieved of the price we pay for protracted bitterness. “The Shack” is almost without parallel in leading us “through the valley of the shadow of death” and emerging with a restored soul, an anointed spirit, and a cup that runneth over. In “The Shack,” Mack learns for the first time since his father’s abusiveness what it means to experience “goodness and mercy that follows me all the days of my life.” Our best word for God’s power is “sovereignty.” God is sovereign and can express that sovereignty any way He chooses; God chooses love over power, human freedom over coercion. We do that with our children; we love them enough to set them free and hope they OCTOBER 9, 2009 | NORTH TEXAS CONFERENCE NEWS will remember who they are and live in a love relationship with us as parents. However, we run the risk of their not loving us reciprocally; so does God. Love is vulnerable. Grace is resistible. Choice is not a farce; it is a freedom. We often retreat into a victimization syndrome of believing that our lives are determined, even pre-determined, by circumstances. Life as Jesus revealed it is determined by choices and following our choices are circumstances that might improve or worsen. We often cannot control what happens to us; but by God’s grace, we can have a major role in how we respond to that which happens! God (“Papa” in “The Shack”) says, “You try to make sense of the world in which you live based on a very small and incomplete picture of reality. You dictate the terms and judge my actions by your matrix and find me guilty because I allow human freedom of choice.” An awful lot of what is done in my name has nothing to do with me, and is often, even if unintentional, very contrary to my purposes.” Mack quoted Jesus’ words from the cross, “My God, My God why has thou forsaken me?” He screams to God the Father, “You abandoned him just like you abandoned me.” And Papa responds, “McKenzie, I never left him and I have never left you.” Mack retorted, “That makes no sense.” The Father answers, “I know it doesn’t, at least not yet.” Papa tells Mack that God is not in the business of justifying the bad things that happen to good people, but redeeming them. From that point the story line intensifies. “McKenzie, you don’t think I’m good. If you knew I was good and that everything is covered by my goodness, then you might not always understand but you would trust me; but you don’t.” Mack responded, “I don’t?” Sarayu, the Holy Spirit, answers, “Trust is the fruit of a relationship in which you know you are loved. Until you know I love you, you cannot trust me.” In his surreal conversation Jesus says, “I came to give you life, real life, my life…but we will never force that union on you. If you want to do your own things, have at it; to force my will on you is exactly what love does not do. Submission to each other is not about obedience, or authority; it is all about relationships of love and respect.” To the degree that fear rules what you do and say and feel, “You neither believe I am good nor know deep in your heart that I love you. You sing about it in church and you talk about it in Sunday School but you don’t know it. Living unloved is like clipping a bird’s wings and removing its ability to fly. Not something I want for you.” It is lines like this in “The Shack” that make me want everyone to read it! Most of the millions who have read “The Shack” are limited to the printed pages. Some, however, check William Young’s webpage and discover that he is lecturing in a town near you. Those within commuting distance of Lovers Lane United Methodist Church in Dallas can be with the affable Mr. Young on Sunday and Monday, May 2 & 3, 2010. Tom Shipp was the founding pastor of Lovers Lane; his mission was to reach out to alcoholics in a redemptive, radical outreach of saving-grace. Young comes to Dallas as one of the great speakers of the annual Tom Shipp Lecture Series and the James C. and Barbara McCormick Distinguished Speaker Forum. To gain the most from Wm. Paul Young’s lecture, one needs to read “The Shack” and get into a small group to “ tap the deep wells” on nearly every page of this riveting storyline that carries incredible Christian truth. For more information about the combined Shipp Lectures and the McCormick Speaker Forum in May 2010, please call the Foundation Office at Lovers Lane United Methodist Church, 214-706-9561. Following up on the Aug. 21st Vacation Bible School issue of the NT United Methodist Reporter, two Sherman-McKinney District churches report exciting, learning-filled weeks. Wesley UMC, McKinney, offered Group’s Power Lab curriculum, drawing more than 100 children. The participants were divided into multi-age crews, enjoying a variety of games and crafts and a daily Bible story drama presentation. They participated in two mission projects, bringing canned fruit for the McKinney Food Pantry (local) and collecting soccer balls for an orphanage in Mexico. The children signed, decorated and prayed over the soccer balls as part of the experience. Lakeway UMC, Pottsboro, celebrated Vacation Bible School at Camp E.D.G.E. Director Lisa Kusch and more than 40 volun- teers taught, inspired, fed and played with children and youth. The mission project provided a friendly competition, boys vs. girls, and the children raised more than $540 to provide camp scholarships for 2010. Sunny D donated cases of juice, and Roma’s Italian Restaurant in Pottsboro donated pizza for the last night. Churches share more VBS successes Wesley UMC, McKinney, children prayed over soccer balls before they were sent to an orphanage in Mexico. The Lakeway, Pottsboro, VBS participants enjoyed a week at Camp E.D.G.E. and raised scholarships for Camp 2010 as their mission project.