Archive for September, 2007

Elk Creek Launches with 121 Present

Posted by Terry White on September 28, 2007  |  No Comments


Jim Snavely, Northeast Regional Career Missionary with Grace Brethren North American Missions, sends along the following report on the launch of the new Elk Creek church this past Sunday.

Here is an encouraging and exciting overview from church planter Mike Silliman. Pastor Mike and the Elk Creek Church launch team began public services on Sunday, September 23. This new ministry is located at West Grove, Chester County, PA. Gateway Grace Community Church (Pastor Dan O’Deens) is the sponsoring church.

“Whew…we did it! NO…actually God did it!!!

Here are the quick stats…121 people! 72 adults and 47 kids. There were many first time guests that said they would be back next week!

The best part of it all…four decisions for Christ!!!

Now the work begins with contacting each first-time guest, nailing down our small groups including a new believer class, and preparing for next week! Thanks for all of your prayer and support!”

Running fast, Mike Silliman-Pastor/Church Developer

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Ken Ham Gives Pastors Courage to Preach

Posted by Terry White on September 28, 2007  |  No Comments


Ken Ham of Answers in Genesis spoke last night to a full crowd at the Rodeheaver Auditorium in Winona Lake, Indiana. Ham has been on the campus of Grace College & Seminary the last few days speaking and interacting with students. Here is a comment from his blog on the event–to access his blog click on http://blogs.answersingenesis.org/aroundtheworld/2007/09/27/aig-helps-with-courage/

I received many great comments yesterday after speaking at Grace College in Indiana—at chapel in the morning and then a public meeting in a different auditorium at night.

One of the comments that stood out was from a pastor who said something like this, “I praise the Lord for you ministry—it has helped pastors like myself to have more courage in being bold in regards to how we preach.”

Actually, I have heard this comment many times before from Christian leaders who have told me they so appreciate our boldness and the authority with which we teach—and the information given through the ministry; observing how we teach at AiG has stimulated them to be more bold in standing on the authority of the Lord.

As the pastor yesterday said, “It makes us realize we are not a lone voice, and there are others standing solidly on God’s Word,” etc.

I have included four photographs of the meetings: two were taken in the auditorium at Grace College for the morning chapel. The other two were taken in the Rodeheaver Auditorium—one shows Grace professor Dr. Don DeYoung introducing me, the other is of me as I began speaking. Dr. DeYoung is a long time friend (going back 20 years) and a good friend of AiG.

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Father of Murdered Children Says Faith Helps Him Forgive

Posted by Terry White on September 27, 2007  |  No Comments


Angelica Alvarez was sentenced to life without parole for killing her four children. Gonzalo Lopez (right), the father of the eldest two children, walks outside the courthouse with his pastor, Brian Baughman (center). Baughman is pastor of Hispanic ministries at the Osceola (IN) Grace Brethren Church (Greg Serafino, pastor). (WSBT photo)

Story from WSBT-TV site: Angelica Alvarez pleaded guilty to killing her four children. Now, she’s been sentenced for the unthinkable crime.

A judge sentenced Alvarez to life without parole.

Alvarez admits she strangled her children, ranging in age from two to eight, last November in the basement of their Elkhart home.

Both fathers say they forgive Alvarez and agree with the sentence, but it doesn’t make the loss of their children any easier.

Angelica Alvarez cried as she told Judge Terry Schumacher she takes full responsibility for what she did.

“She’s a rather religious person, which again may seem quite contrary to what she did in this case, but she is,” said Juan Garcia, Alvarez’s defense attorney. “She’s made peace with God, and she’s quite repentant.”

The fathers of her children believe those feelings of remorse make it much easier for them to forgive her.

The father of the eldest children — Gonzalo Lopez — spoke in court.

He spoke to us through a translator — his pastor, Brian Baughman.

“We’re moving forward little by little and it’s a very hard road because it’s not easy,” Lopez told WSBT News. “It’s not easy for someone as a father to lose two children.”

Alvarez previously said she killed the two children by drugging them and strangling them. But Elkhart County Prosecutor Curtis Hill introduced evidence that may contradict that.

Toxicology reports showed the children didn’t have any drugs in their system at all.

Hill showed pictures of a ladder and utility cord tied like a noose. Both were found at the crime scene.

He also showed a picture of one of the children with cord marks around the neck.

“Given the circumstances that we found in this particular scene, given the injuries that we located, certainly that cord and that ladder played a part in what occurred with those children,” explained Hill.

That evidence made this already emotional day even more so.

“That certainly made us rewind the tape in our minds and just remember seeing their faces, and their smiles, their hugs, and the joy and the fullness of life that was really inside all four of those precious little kids,” Baughman said.

“I’m always going to have the children in my heart, and there’s no way to take that out of my heart or out of my mind,” Lopez said.

The fathers say faith has helped them get through this painful time in their lives, and it is that faith that also helps them to forgive, and hope Alvarez will find peace.

Alvarez will spend the rest of her life in state prison, without the possibility of parole.

She does have the right to appeal, but that is unlikely.

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Grace Grad Named President of DePuy, USA

Posted by Terry White on September 27, 2007  |  No Comments

David K. Floyd (pictured), a 1983 graduate of Grace College with a B.S. degree in communication, has been named the new president of Warsaw, Indiana-based DePuy Orthopaedics, one of the area’s earliest and leading orthopaedics firms. Floyd is also the son-in-law of Prof. Wayne Snider, who for many years was chair of the history department at Grace College.

A release from Inside Indiana Business says: WARSAW, IN – (SEPTEMBER 27, 2007) – DePuy Orthopaedics, Inc., a global leader in devices for joint replacement, has named David Floyd its new U.S. president, the company announced today.

Floyd will lead the company’s growing orthopaedic business. He will also serve on the DePuy Franchise Global Management Board.

“DePuy is a leader in orthopaedics, and I’m very pleased to join such a great company full of talented people,” said David Floyd. “I’m also excited to be coming home: both to the reconstructive business as well as Indiana.”

Floyd has more than 20 years of experience in orthopaedics, particularly in the reconstructive joint market. Prior to joining Abbott Spine, he was president and CEO of AxioMed Spine Corporation and U.S. president of Centerpulse Orthopedics. Before assuming his executive positions, Floyd held leadership positions in the reconstructive joint market and held several positions in sales and marketing.

“DePuy Orthopaedics is poised for growth in this dynamic marketplace and David has a tremendous track record of success,” said Mike Mahoney, Company Group Chairman, DePuy, Inc. “We’re confident he will lead the company to new heights and help surgeons continue to raise the standard of orthopaedic care for patients through a commitment to innovation, quality and service excellence.”

Floyd is a graduate of Grace College in Winona Lake, Indiana.

About DePuy Orthopaedics, Inc.

DePuy Orthopaedics, Inc., a Johnson & Johnson company, is advancing the standard of orthopaedic patient care, with a focused commitment to help surgeons achieve excellence in surgical practice. The company designs, manufactures and distributes orthopaedic devices and supplies including hip, knee, extremity, trauma, cement, orthobiologics, and operating room products. As a global leader in joint replacement products, DePuy Orthopaedics is committed to Restoring the Joy of Motion™ for patients whose mobility is restricted by severe osteoarthritis or other debilitating injury. For more information about DePuy Orthopaedics, Inc., visit the company’s Web site www.depuyorthopaedics.com.

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Goshen Church to Dedicate Land

Posted by Liz Cutler Gates on September 27, 2007  |  No Comments


On Sunday, September 30, Grace Community Church, a Grace Brethren church in Goshen, Ind., will dedicate the land on which their new building addition will be constructed. (See the architectural rendering at right.) The new facility will be a 28,000 square foot addition and will include an alternative live satellite venue for worship, a new children’s wing and theatre, and a tech-savvy teen center with an urban décor. In addition, a large new foyer with a bookstore and coffee shop will be added on the west side of the building.

The land dedication is part of a campaign to reach everyone, everyday, everywhere. The land dedication and festival will begin at 1 p.m. with a meal, kids’ games and music by 40 Miles North to follow the dedication.

Grace Community Church is located at 20076 CR 36 in Goshen.

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GBIF Loan Approved for Columbus, Ohio, Grace Brethren Church

Posted by Liz Cutler Gates on September 26, 2007  |  No Comments


The Grace Brethren Investment Foundation (GBIF) has recently approved new financing of $2.4 million towards the construction of a $5.1 million Early Childhood Center for the Grace Brethren Church of Columbus, Ohio, where Dave Plaster is the pastor. The new center (see photo at right) will consist of 23 classrooms, an indoor playroom space, administrative offices, a dining area, and relocation of an existing bookstore.

“We are privileged at GBIF to be part of helping to win the “little ones” to Christ,” says Ken Seyfert, executive director of operations at GBIF.

To see photos of the construction at Columbus, click here.

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Buena Vista to Host Prophecy Conference

Posted by Terry White on September 26, 2007  |  No Comments


Pastor Christian Becker (pictured) of the Grace Brethren church in Buena Vista, Virginia, says, “Beginning this Sunday, our church will be hosting a prophecy conference on ‘Understanding the Times’ with Rev. Mike Wingfield from Roanoke VA.

“I wrote this article to raise the issue and get people thinking about the times we live in.

“Please pray with us that God will use these meetings to help the church understand that time is short and the urgency that is needed to reach our world for Christ.

“If you live close enough to attend, I invite you to drop by and hear Mike.”

Understanding Our Times

It’s the best of times. It’s the worst of times.

Two terrible wars are going on in Afghanistan and Iraq. Terrorism is spreading around the globe. But, in spite of worldwide market fluctuations and the mortgage mess, people are still buying flat-screen televisions, new cars, iPods and iPhones like there’s no tomorrow.

Well, what if there was no tomorrow?

Frankly, I think there will be a tomorrow. But what if tomorrow brings a very different world than today? That’s a more likely scenario.

Now hold that thought for just a minute. Could the world be all that different tomorrow?

Absolutely.

We know from recent history that the world can change overnight. It happened several times in my lifetime. It’s just a matter of time before it happens again.

The day after President Kennedy was assassinated, our world was a different place. It changed forever the day after the Columbine School shootings. After 9-11-2001 people talked about a “New Normal.” And six years later we’re still learning to cope.

It seems like every day the newspaper or television reports a catastrophe somewhere: Earthquakes and hurricanes; terrorist attacks planned, thwarted or perpetrated. Every night the news from the Middle East is more disturbing than the day before.

Does anyone really understand the times we live in?

Someone does. More than 2,000 years ago, God told the prophets of Israel about what would happen in our times. They recorded this “future news” in the Bible for our benefit. Author Joel C. Rosenberg calls prophecy “Intelligence intercepts from the mind of God.”

God revealed to the Old Testament Prophet Ezekiel that in the last days Russia would enter an agreement with Iran. For more than 2,000 years there has not been a Russian-Iranian treaty–until now. God says that Babylon (in Iraq) will one day rise again to be a world power.

Jesus Christ spoke to His disciples about the end times. He described worldwide wars and earthquakes. He talked about the rise of false religions and cults. He said evil would increase and then there would come a time of great distress, unmatched in human history.

The Prophet Joel talked about all the nations turning against Israel and seeking to divide it. In the New Testament book of Revelation, one of the four horsemen of the Apocalypse brings a devastating worldwide food shortage, which leads to massive inflation.

These events sound as if they could be ripped from today and tomorrow’s headlines!

One of the purposes for the Bible is to help us understand the times in which we live and to enable us to see history from God’s perspective. It tells us that part of God’s plan is for Jesus Christ to return one day and fix the mess we’ve made of planet earth.

Students of Bible prophecy and signs of the times tell us that recent history and current events seem to line up with many of the Bible’s predictions. Our world could change overnight.

What should we do? How should we live in such a time as this?

The Bible gives us the answer. Peter, the disciple of Jesus, wrote that since “the day of the Lord will come like a thief,” that is unexpectedly, “you ought to live holy and godly lives.”

I don’t know where you are in your relationship with God. Maybe it’s been a while since you were in church. But consider this: Now just may be the right time for you to seek the Lord.

Listen to the Bible; it’s great for your soul!

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Calvert Hosts International Children’s Choir

Posted by Terry White on September 26, 2007  |  No Comments


The Grace Brethren Church of Calvert County, Maryland (Robert Wagner, pastor), this past Sunday presented the “Children of the World” choir.

This choir is comprised of orphaned and disadvantaged children from several different countries. Their high-energy and inspiring program featured several songs, in both English and native dialects, as well as stirring personal testimonies.

The children have performed in such venues as Focus on the Family, Brooklyn Tabernacle, Crystal Cathedral and Disney World.

Visit www.worldhelp.net for more information on the choir.

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Grace to Sponsor Bible Symposium October 9

Posted by Terry White on September 25, 2007  |  No Comments


The Department of Religious Studies of Grace College, Winona Lake, Indiana, announces a Symposium on Tuesday, October 9, on the topic, “Exploring the Mystery: The Divine and Human Authorship of the Bible.”

Dr. David Dockery (pictured), Grace Theological Seminary graduate and president of Union University (Jackson, TN), will speak at 4:00 pm. Dr. Gregory Sterling, pastor of Warsaw Church of Christ and professor of New Testament and Christian Origins at the University of Notre Dame will speak at 4:45 pm. Both speakers have published numerous books and articles and are internationally recognized scholars.

Following dinner a panel discussion at 7:00 pm will interact with their remarks. Joining Dr. Dockery and Dr. Sterling on the panel will be Dr. Matt Harmon of Grace Seminary and Dr. Larry McCall of Christ’s Covenant Church, Winona Lake.

The Symposium will be held on the Grace campus in McClain Hall Auditorium, Tuesday, October 9, beginning at 4:00 pm. Dr. Dockery will also be speaking at 10:00 am on Tuesday and Wednesday, October 9 and 10, in the Orthopaedic Capital Center on the Grace campus. His topic will be, “The Gospel and Globalization.” The public is invited to all these events.

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Digitalization of Brethren Periodicals Is A Possibility

Posted by Liz Cutler Gates on September 25, 2007  |  No Comments


Representatives of various groups that trace their heritage to 1708 and Alexander Mack met on Monday, September 24 to discuss the digitalization of Brethren publications.

Meeting at the Brethren Heritage Center in Brookville, Ohio, the group discussed the options for preserving the content of the various publications and talked with several venders who could assist with the project. There are more than 30 periodicals on the list, including the Brethren Missionary Herald magazine, FGBC World, Grace Magazine, and Grace Theological Journal.

Representing the Grace Brethren at Monday’s meeting were Eric Bradley, archivist at Grace College’s Morgan Library; Todd Scoles, president of the Brethren Missionary Herald board; and Liz Cutler Gates, editorial director at the Brethren Missionary Herald. In addition, participants included representatives from the Church of the Brethren, The Brethren Church, Dunkard Brethren, Old German Baptist Brethren, and Old Brethren, as well as archivists and librarians from Manchester College, Bethany Seminary/Earlham Libraries, United Theological Seminary, Ashland University, and the Brethren Historical Library and Archives.

The group is continuing to assess the scope of the project and will be be meeting in early 2008 to determine costs and involvement by the various groups.

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Todd Scoles Teaches on Brethren Historical Roots

Posted by Terry White on September 25, 2007  |  No Comments


Dr. Todd Scoles (right), associate pastor at Marysville, Ohio, Grace Brethren Church (Clancy Cruise, pastor), this morning recorded the latest in a series of “Fireside Dialogues” being created for distribution by CE National.

CE National is bringing to the Russell Center on its Winona Lake, Indiana, campus experts in areas of doctrine and important issues that affect believers. Six Fireside Dialogues are currently available on audio CD.

The cost is $5.99 for 1 CD. $4.99 for two or more (plus shipping). Order by contacting Peggy at resources@cenational.org or 574.267.6622.

Dialogues are also available in digital format at www.cenational.org/cedigital.

In addition to Scoles’ teaching on the theological and historical roots that led to the founding of the Brethren movement in 1708, other presenters and topics available include Dr. Mark Soto discussing Pre-trib Rapture and Issues With the Emergent Church; Dr. Ken Bickel discussing Divorce and Remarriage; Pastor Scott Distler speaking on “Are Tongues for Today? and Biblical Love”; and Dr. Matt Harmon on Interpreting the Scriptures.

Scoles, who is developing his doctoral dissertation on Brethren history and ordinances into a book to be published by BMH books, is also chairman of the board of the Brethren Missionary Herald Co.

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Goldendale Crash Victim’s Family Helped

Posted by Terry White on September 25, 2007  |  No Comments

A Klickitat County (Washington) sheriff’s sergeant who was killed in an off-duty traffic crash in July, and was from the Goldendale, Washington, Grace Brethren Church (Dr. Greg Howell, pastor), will be remembered and his family helped in an event this Saturday. Here is an excerpt — to read the entire article click on http://www.thedalleschronicle.com:80/news/2007/09/news09-24-07-01.shtml
See the entry on this blog of July 20, 2007, for details of the accident.

A new gridiron rivalry takes shape at Pig Bowl 2007, as Oregon and Washington law enforcement go head to head to help the family of a fallen brother.

Law officers will be battling across the line of scrimmage to benefit the family of the late Patrol Sergeant Peter Garland.

The event takes place Saturday, Sept. 29, at 7 p.m. at Wahtonka Football Field. Admission is $10 per family, $3 per individual. . .

. . . All event proceeds benefit Garland’s family. He was killed July 18 in a head-on traffic crash with an out-of-control 20-year-old, who typified the youth that Garland had tried to get back on track in his three years the Klickitat County Sheriff’s Department DARE officer, Holloran said.

His death leaves behind his wife of 17 years, Rocky, and two foster sons, Chris, 18, and Seth, 16. The Garlands had taken in many troubled youth over the years. The Garlands worked to change their lives from anger, turmoil, drugs and alcohol, to a life of faith and lawfulness.

Garland also worked as a camp counselor with the Grace Brethren Church’s Camp Clear Lake for the last three years. Shortly prior to his death, he had been appointed as the church’s youngest overseer.

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Red Onion — Whaaaat??

Posted by Terry White on September 24, 2007  |  No Comments


From the Milton, Ontario, Champion regarding a creative outreach by the new Grace Brethren church there:

Red onion is here.

For people who have been wondering what the heck red onion is as flyers have been delivered and signs posted around town, the mystery has been revealed.

Red Onion: Peeling Back Layers of Doubt is the title of a sermon series that’ll start Sunday at the Village Community Church, which meets at Galaxy Cinemas, at 10 a.m.

“As I looked around, I saw doubt everywhere — in the Bible, in God, in people’s abilities,” said lead pastor Rob Stanley, explaining how he decided on the topic.

The series, which will be spread out over four Sundays, is designed to be an honest exploration of doubt. It’ll feature movie clips, contemporary music and a separate program for children.

“Part of our dream is to be a down-to-earth and relevant church,” Stanley said, adding the theatre atmosphere creates a “neutral environment” that appeals to people who ordinarily wouldn’t be comfortable in a traditional church building.

For the past month, members of the church have been working on creating a buzz and piquing Miltonians’ curiosity by using some promotional methods that are rather unorthodox for a church.

But then, The Village has never been particularly traditional.

A few weeks ago, Stanley and his team sent out flyers to homes stating ‘Red Onion is Coming!’ They gave no more information than that and the address of a website that simply pictured an onion and gave a countdown to Sunday.

In efforts to create further interest, Stanley and his team then delivered red pearl onions to about 12,000 homes. Attached to the onions were cards with the same teasing message as the flyers.

The response was what they’d hoped, Stanley said, with more than 500 hits on the website. This week, 20,000 flyers were once again delivered to homes, this time fully explaining the series and its purpose.

“In the last flyer, we say ‘Please consider yourself invited, doubts and all.’ And we mean it,” Stanley said.

For more information, visit www.red-onion.ca.

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Looking for Good Car-Buying Advice?

Posted by Terry White on September 24, 2007  |  No Comments


Wheelin’ and dealin’ or How Not to Buy a Car is the topic Grace College’s Jim Shipley (pictured) will address Monday, October 1,from 4-5 p.m. in Westminster Hall’s Conference Room A on the Grace campus in Winona Lake, Indiana.

Shipley, who has had many years of experience in car sales, will draw from his experience and share the ins and outs of finding a good deal on a good car, what to look for, what to avoid, how much to pay, and more. There will also be a Q&A time.

No fee–all are welcome.

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Peninsula Hosts Ministries Convention

Posted by Terry White on September 24, 2007  |  No Comments


Posted by Chuck Thornton on the Arctic District Ministerium’s blog. To read more, click on http://arcticdistrictministerium.blogspot.com/

The Alaska Christian Ministries Convention is being by Peninsula Grace on Monday and Tuesday (September 24-25). Featured tracks and leaders are: Worship (Richard Allen Farmer (pictured at right) – gifted musician, worship leader and preacher), Youth Issues (Tom Hansen – State Director of Young Life), Kid’s Ministries (Art Braendel – Royal Rangers State Director, and Chuck Thornton – Associate Pastor at PGBC), Church Governance (Kent Redfearn – Pastor of Community Assembly in Anchorage), and Adult Challenges (Keith Hamilton – President of Alaska Christian College, and Allen Humphries – Pastor of Soldotne Church of God).

Richard Allen Farmer presented a piano and vocal concert at the Soldotna Bible Chapel on Sunday night, as a “prelude” to the Convention.

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Jews for Jesus Founder to Speak at LaLoma

Posted by Terry White on September 24, 2007  |  No Comments


Moishe Rosen (right), founder of Jews for Jesus, will speak in the 10:30 a.m. service next Sunday, September 30, at the La Loma Grace Brethren Church, 1315 La Loma Ave., Modesto, California (Joel Richards, pastor).

In the late 1960s a moving of the Holy Spirit brought thousands of cause-oriented young people to faith in Jesus, many of whom were Jewish. Moishe Rosen officially founded Jews for Jesus in September of 1973.

Rosen, a veteran missionary to the Jewish people, was the executive director of the mission for 23 years. He revolutionized evangelistic methods and materials with his creative approach to communicating the gospel, and still is considered one of the foremost strategists and tacticians in the field of Jewish evangelism.

Rosen still works with Jews for Jesus full-time and serves on the organization’s board of directors.

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Lititz Attender to Run for State Senate

Posted by Terry White on September 23, 2007  |  No Comments


Steve McDonald (shown at right, with his family), who attends the Grace Brethren church in Lititz, PA (Scott Distler, pastor), has announced a run for the state Senate. Here is a short excerpt from an article in today’s Lancaster Online. To read the enitre article, click on http://local.lancasteronline.com/4/209873

LANCASTER COUNTY, Pa – Steve McDonald bought the grand champion market hog at the Solanco Fair Friday night.

“I figured we’d better keep the pork down on the farm and not let it go to Harrisburg,” he told more than 80 supporters Saturday.

But McDonald himself wants to go to Harrisburg.

He’s aiming to replace veteran state Sen. Gib E. Armstrong there.

McDonald, the county recorder of deeds, got a head start on 2008 by announcing Saturday that he’s seeking the Republican nomination for the 13th Senatorial District next year. . .

. . . With cows lowing a few feet from the white tent set up in a farm field, McDonald said he’s running “to inspire my Republican colleagues to a greater cause — the cause not of self-interest but of public service.” . . .

. . . McDonald ran for the 96th state House seat in 1994 and for county commissioner in 2003. He is serving his third term in the recorder’s office, and McDonald pointed out that he is not taking a county pension either. . .

. . . He and his wife Lisa and their children, Donovan and Mackenzie, live in Neffsville and attend Grace Brethren Church in Lititz.

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Rex Humbard Dies at 88

Posted by Terry White on September 22, 2007  |  No Comments


Television preacher Rex Humbard died Friday at age 88.

His Sunday services were televised by 1953. He began with a renovated theater and eventually built the $4 million domed, 5,000-seat nondenominational Cathedral of Tomorrow in Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio. The cathedral included velvet drapes, a hydraulic stage and a cross covered with thousands of red, white and blue light bulbs.

His ministry eventually expanded to include a Mackinac Island, Michigan, campus used for religious education and a 23-story Akron office tower.

The broadcast, also called “Cathedral of Tomorrow,” developed into a mixture of preaching and music, with Humbard’s wife, Maude Aimee, an accomplished gospel singer, and the Cathedral Quartet as regular performers.

To read entire story, click on http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/09/22/humbard.ap/index.html

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Vancouver Church Launches with 220 Present

Posted by Terry White on September 21, 2007  |  No Comments

Community of Hope, the new Grace Brethren church in Vancouver, British Columbia, launched last week with 220 present. Here is an excerpt from church-planting pastor Philip Bryant. Access the church’s website at www.gethope.ca.

What a Sunday! Praise the Lord for all that He does! It was amazing to see how God worked out all those details. We had a few bumps along the way, but I am so delighted in how each of the team refused to let Satan have a foothold and they didn’t get rattled.

In the midst of the children’s computer not working right and the sound system in the main theatre acting up and the lights being difficult to set up and then the circuit breaker going in the middle of the first song – Wow! Great perseverance and God so protected us as by the time the first service was over we were totally ready for the 10:00 and our guests to be welcomed.

It was amazing to see people coming in at 9:30 to see what was going on and there was the entrance area looking very inviting and hot coffee and special baked goods welcoming our guests.

We had the iWorship DVD playing in all the lobby TVs and the music filling the hallways. Lots of people helped to welcome our new guests and the children’s area was ready to help people register their children.

People were filling up the theatre and the band was creating a great environment for worship. We interviewed pastor Jason during the announcements and by this time we had over 100 adult guest in the theatre and some 40 guest kids. In all we had over 220 people there on our first Sunday.

How many will come back? That is a great question, and how many new people will we continue to see? We are praying for more people who don’t know Jesus to come discover Hope – hope in Him.

In all, we think there were about 30 pre-Christians who came and we are praying that they will stay and that God would use us to bring them to become fully committed followers of Jesus.

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New Sierra Leone President is Wesleyan

Posted by admin on September 21, 2007  |  No Comments


FREETOWN, SIERRA LEONE (ANS) — Ernest Bai Koroma, elected President of trouble-torn Sierra Leone, West Africa, on September 17, 2007, is a third generation member of The Wesleyan Church, an evangelical, Protestant denomination.

A former insurance executive and minority leader in parliament, he has been called the “Hope of the Future” by his countrymen. A graduate of Fourah Bay College, University of Sierra Leone, he taught in a secondary school in Makeni before entering the insurance business.

President Koroma and his wife, Sia, are parents of two children, Alice and Dankay.

The Wesleyan Church, whose world headquarters is in Fishers, Indiana, has its roots in John Wesley’s Methodism. The denomination has nearly 400,000 constituents in 5,000 churches and missions in 80 countries.

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