Archive for February, 2012

Shoemaker Named ‘Citizen of the Year’

Posted by Terry White on February 29, 2012  |  1 Comment

Don Shoemaker, pastor emeritus of the Grace Brethren church in Seal Beach, Calif.,  was honored as the Seal Beach Citizen of the Year at the 2012 Cypress College Foundation Americana Awards, on Saturday evening, February 25, 2012.

An accompanying release said, “The 2012 Citizens of the Year are also extraordinary examples of the best our community has to offer.  They share in common a heart for others, affirming attitude and an unselfish commitment to building a better future.  We are proud to recognize, honor and thank these remarkable men and women.”  Michael Cooper, Foundation President.

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Keep that Pioneer Spirit

Posted by Liz Cutler Gates on February 29, 2012  |  No Comments

In a flashback to national conference, which was held at Wooster, Ohio, last summer, Jim Brown, pastor of Grace Community Church, a Grace Brethren church in Goshen, Ind., encourages churches to keep their pioneer spirit.

This was featured in last week’s e-zine from Pastor Bob Fetterhoff, the moderator of the Fellowship of Grace Brethren Churches. To receive these video updates to your email inbox, click here to subscribe.

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Please Pray for Lyndan Edwards

Posted by Terry White on February 29, 2012  |  No Comments

Friday morning update from Oliver:

Not a tumour! Cavernoma, still requiring risky brain surgery. Waiting 2 weeks for the surgery now…. Coming home tomorrow.

Prayers will be appreciated for Lyndan Edwards, second-oldest son of Canadian church planters Oliver and Cheryl Edwards, who are planting a Grace Brethren church in Medicine Hat, Alberta, Canada.

Lyndan Edwards

On his blog, at http://oliverinthehat.ca/, Edwards says, “Life just got placed on hold. Was gearing up for my first message in 2 weeks and then an odd thing happens. Our second oldest, Lyndan starts having this funny thing happen to his eye. Then he starts getting really dizzy.

“We take him into emergency and 4 hours +  an MRI later,  and we are told he has a brain tumour. 8 hours later it still seems like it’s all made up.

“We still know little.  We don’t know if it is operable or not. We don’t know if it is cancerous or not. We only know we are driving to Calgary this morning to get him admitted to Alberta Children’s Hospital. We do know two things though.

“1. A lot of people are praying for us right now.  Like a lot. And that is comforting. I pray that God uses this nasty thing to reawaken some people’s faith and draws people closer to Him even as they think about us.

“2.  God is getting our attention. I hate that it takes awful circumstances to do that, but it is this kind of time that brings into sharp focus what we really believe. And I know with certainty that God is with us. ‘draw close to Him and He will draw close to you, ‘ James wrote. We need Him more than ever.”

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Grace Lancers Win MCC Championship With Electrifying Win

Posted by Terry White on February 29, 2012  |  No Comments

WINONA LAKE, Ind. – For the first time in the Orthopaedic Capital Center’s history, the nets have been cut down.

Grace punched its ticket to the NAIA Division II Basketball Championships in Branson, Mo., with a 79-75 thriller over Saint Francis on Wednesday night, taking home the 2012 MCC Tournament championship.

The Lancers (24-7) earned their first conference tournament title in program history and their sixth trip overall to the NAIA DII Championships – including four of the past five seasons.

Bruce Grimm Jr. proved unstoppable all night as he dazzled his way to 35 points, 5 rebounds and 5 assists.

The OCC crowd was at fever pitch from the tipoff and had little reason to drop its level of excitement in the title bout.

The Cougars (21-12) grabbed their largest lead of the game early with a 14-8 advantage after six minutes of play. The Lancers soon after leveled the score.

Grimm added six of his 16 first-half points in the final 2:10 of regulation, and his driving layup in the waning seconds gave Grace a 36-31 lead at the halftime break.

Saint Francis fired back to start the second half, however, and ended a 12-2 run with back-to-back 3-pointers to take a 43-40 lead.

The teams played about as evenly as possible for most of the second half. Over a 14-minute stretch in the half, the lead was never greater than three points in either team’s favor.

Freshman Karl Columbus and Grimm were instrumental in keeping Grace close. Columbus added eight points and four boards in his 13 second-half minutes.

Grimm finally began to swing momentum Grace’s direction when he pulled up for a three-pointer from the top of the key to put the Lancers ahead 63-61 with six minutes to play.

Greg Miller muscled his way to a pair of low-post buckets on Grace’s next two possessions as the frenzied OCC crowd erupted with the home team leading 67-61 and only 4:33 remaining.

After a basket from the Cougars, Columbus banked in a shot in the lane, and Grimm scored twice to establish a 10-point lead for the Lancers heading into the final minute.

Saint Francis scored from beyond the arc to cut the gap to seven points, but Jacob Peattie leaked free for a fastbreak two-handed jam on the inbounds pass out of a Saint Francis timeout.

The Cougars continued to foul over the last minute of play and managed to slice Grace’s lead to 78-75 after a contested three-pointer from Q Owens swished through with 10 seconds left.

But Elliot Smith hit 1-of-2 from the free throw line with 6.7 seconds on the clock, and Saint Francis misfired on a desperation shot in the final seconds as Grace

Lancer head coach Jim Kessler cuts the nets for the first time in the Orthopaedic Capital Center.

held on for the tournament championship.

Grimm’s 35 points tied a career high he set earlier this year in a double-overtime win against Bethel College. He finished 12-of-25 from the field and a perfect 10-for-10 from the free throw line while playing all 40 minutes of the game.

Miller and Columbus each tallied 13 points and five boards, and Duke Johnson added 6 points, 6 rebounds, 2 assists and 4 blocked shots.

The Lancers hit 55 percent from the field, including 16-of-25 in the second half (64 percent). Grace held a dominant 52-36 advantage in points in the paint and outrebounded Saint Francis by three (34-31).

The Cougars shot 43 percent for the night and were 47 percent from the three-point line. Owens led Saint Francis’ production with 24 points.

The 32-team field and the tournament bracket for the NAIA DII Championships will be revealed on Wednesday. Stay up-to-date with Grace’s draw in Branson on Grace’s official site www.grace.edu/athletics.

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Tuesday’s Championship Game to be Video Streamed Free

Posted by Terry White on February 27, 2012  |  No Comments

Tuesday’s MCC championship game will be video streamed for free — Tuesday 7 pm, Grace vs. University of Saint Francis!

Grace College Lancers will face University of St. Francis in the championship game at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the Orthopaedic Capital Center on the Grace campus in Winona Lake, Indiana.  The game will determine the championship of the Mid Central Conference.

www.livestream.com

Grace College Athletics on Livestream. The official broadcast channel of Grace College Athletics. – Watch live streaming Internet TV. Broadcast your own live streaming videos, like Grace College Athletics in Widescreen HD. Livestream, Be There.

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Grace Brethren, Wooster, Ohio, Celebrates 49 Baptisms

Posted by Liz Cutler Gates on February 27, 2012  |  No Comments

The Grace Brethren Church in Wooster, Ohio, celebrated 49 baptisms on Sunday. It must have been quite a morning, as reported on Twitter by Daron Butler, pastor of cross cultural ministries (@daronbutler ), Nick Cleveland, pastor of high school ministries (@nickcleveland), and Ivanildo Trindade,  associate pastor of outreach ministries (@Trintwit).

Click here to see a slide show of images taken during the baptismal services.

A video featuring the “cardboard testimonies” of some of those being baptized was feature during the morning. It may be viewed below.

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New Churches Result in Changed Lives, Communities

Posted by Liz Cutler Gates on February 24, 2012  |  No Comments

VisionOhio, the regional church planting network in Ohio, is committed to reaching people for Christ through the development of new congregations. Recently, church planter Nathan Wells met with the NorthCentral Ohio District ministerium and shared how Christ has been working in several apartment complexes in Ashland and Mansfield, Ohio.

VisionOhio has the opportunity to go into 208 apartment complexes in Ohio to plant churches. It’s a concept VisionOhio calls S.E.E.D. Net. In the video below, VO executive director Tony Webb explains the vision and the opportunity.

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FGBC Social Concerns Committee Issues Call for Prayer

Posted by Liz Cutler Gates on February 24, 2012  |  No Comments

From the Social Concerns Committee of the Fellowship of Grace Brethren Churches: Pray for Protestant pastor facing execution in Iran — A matter for our urgent prayer and for activist follow-up should this murder occur.

Don Shoemaker
Chair, FGBC Social Concerns Committee

Iranian pastor’s execution is imminent, sources say
A Protestant pastor in Iran faces imminent execution for refusing to renounce his Christian faith.

Orders for the execution of Rev. N have probably been issued, the American Center for Law and Justice reports—although the Iranian judicial system operates in secrecy. The human-rights group said that the Iranian pastor was alive as of February 21, but that he could be put to death at any moment.

Rev. N was sentenced to death in 2010 for apostasy after he embraced Christianity. Although he has testified that he was never a practicing Muslim, Islamic law prescribes the death penalty for anyone who leaves the faith. Rev. N has been ordered repeatedly to accept Islam or face death, and has always clung to his Christian faith.

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Rick Warren Acknowledges Anabaptist Influence

Posted by Terry White on February 22, 2012  |  No Comments

Rick Warren recently credited Anabaptism with shaping him and his books. Here is an excerpt–to read the entire article, click here.

Renowned evangelical pastor and author Rick Warren recently said Anabaptism has shaped him, his books and his 20,000-member church in Southern California.

Rick Warren speaks on the impact his study of Anabaptists has had on his approach to discipleship at Saddleback, his Southern California megachurch. — Photo by Adam Covington/SWBTS

“For 32 years, we have been building Saddleback Church on the lessons I’ve learned from the Anabaptists,” he said at a conference on “Anabaptism and Contemporary Baptists” Jan. 30-31 at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Fort Worth, Texas.

The seminary is affiliated with the 16-million-member Southern Baptist Convention, the world’s largest Baptist denomination and the largest Protestant body in the U.S.

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Frances Ashman Obituary

Posted by Terry White on February 22, 2012  |  No Comments

Frances M. Ashman of 1413 Avalon Court, Winona Lake, Indiana, lived her earthly life in a godly way and peacefully departed to be with the Lord whom she adored with all her heart on Tuesday, February 21, 2012, at 12:25 p.m. at Grace Village Healthcare, Winona Lake, Indiana at the age of 87.

She was born on March 21, 1924, in Long Beach, California, to Wilbur Leonard Bradley and Isabel (Chenot) Bradley. She was the middle daughter of “The Five Bradley Sisters.” They were known throughout the Grace Brethren churches of southern California for their unique and humorous singing ministry at summer camps and youth and children’s meetings.

Frances was a graduate of Poly High School and the Bible Institute of Los Angeles. She was always active in working with children in the churches in which she attended.

She met Charles H. Ashman, her husband to be, at youth rallies and summer church camp. They were married on July 12, 1946, in Compton, California. She worked hard outside the home to earn her special degree in PHT (Putting Hubby Through) as she helped him complete his college and seminary education. She was a wonderful pastor’s wife, and happily served in the work of the Lord through ministry to women and children in fulfilling her calling to be a central figure in the toddlers and nursery departments of all the churches that Charles pastored. Many knew her as an immaculate housekeeper, a great cook, and a most gracious hostess. Frances was a resident of Kosciusko County, Indiana, for the past 50 years, where she was a member of Winona Lake Grace Brethren Church.

She leaves behind, and will be lovingly remembered by her husband, Charles H. Ashman (Winona Lake, Indiana); two sons: Ken W. (wife Becky) Ashman (Gallatin, Tennessee); Karl W. (wife Patti) Ashman (Wildwood, Missouri); one daughter: Judy Kay (husband Rick) Fairman (Lititz, Pennsylvania); six grandchildren, nine great grandchildren; and two sisters: Helen Brown (Beattyville, Kentucky); Ruth Mosley (Orangevale, California). She was preceded in death by her parents and two sisters.

Her funeral service will be conducted on Saturday, February 25, 2012, at 1 p.m. at Winona Lake Grace Brethren Church, 1200 Kings Highway, Winona Lake, Indiana, officiated by Pastor Bruce Barlow.

There will be private visitation and graveside services. Burial will be at Oakwood Cemetery of Warsaw, Indiana.

Arrangements were entrusted to Redpath-Fruth Funeral Home, 225 Argonne Road, Warsaw, Indiana.

Memorial donations may be directed to Integrated Community Development International, PO Box 247, Winona Lake, Indiana 46590.

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Fight Club Ignites Fire in Goshen Men

Posted by Liz Cutler Gates on February 21, 2012  |  7 Comments

For the last 12 weeks, men at Grace Community Church, a Grace Brethren church in Goshen, Ind., have been participating in Fight Club, a program developed by the staff of the church that is designed to reach men where they are. “It is an incredible discipleship journey,” says Pastor Jim Brown. “It has all the components of discipleship plus all the stuff that makes men come alive.”

It was advertised as a brand new, life-changing ministry for men. If you wanted to be part of it, then come to an informational meeting at midnight on the specified Monday night.

“Yes, we met at midnight,” says Pastor Jim, “and 323 men came to that informational meeting, which had many elements to it.”

Every participant signed a creed that required them to not talk about Fight Club to people outside of the group. They were given weekly assignments that had to be accomplished. If they weren’t, strikes were accumulated.

“We finished with 145 men,” says Jim. There were 225 men who began the journey. “Men did these assignments with hopes that their actions made a difference.”

Between meetings, the men connected through a password-protected closed website.

“It lit a fire in men and turned our church upside down,” says Pastor Jim, who developed the program from scratch, often writing it as they went. “It lined up well with what I have been saying for 16 years at Grace Community, if you get the man, you get the family. You get the family, you the community. You get the community, you get the world.”

The 12 weeks culminated with an awards ceremony when the men received a shirt with the creed on it and a leather bracelet bearing the Fight Club logo. The videos on this page are from that ceremony.

Currently he and his staff is working on developing the program so that it may be used by other churches.

“I have never been more excited about anything in my entire life!” he adds, as he prepares for another 12 week program with a new group of men.

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Frances Ashman With the Lord

Posted by Terry White on February 21, 2012  |  8 Comments

Charles and Frances Ashman

Frances Ashman, 87, wife of longtime Grace Brethren pastor Charles Ashman, slipped into the Lord’s presence at 12:25 p.m. today, February 21, in the healthcare facility at Grace Village Retirement Community in Winona Lake, Indiana.  Frances’ health had deteriorated in recent weeks and a number of family members were with her at her passing.

Details, as they become available, will be posted here. Arrangements are through Redpath-Fruth Funeral Home in Warsaw, Indiana, and a public memorial service is tentatively scheduled for early Saturday afternoon, February 25, at Winona Lake (IN) Grace Brethren Church, where the Ashmans served from 1962 to 1989.

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Two Great Canadian Adventures Offered in 2012

Posted by Liz Cutler Gates on February 20, 2012  |  No Comments

Two Mission Teams – Two Churches

One Family of Jesus – Your Help Needed!

Bring a friend, bring your family, bring your church.

The team of GBC Canada, the Grace Brethren church-planting effort in Canada, has announced two opportunities for ministry teams to come alongside young congregations this summer. The first is July 8 to 14 in Medicine Hat, Alberta. The second is August 5 to 11 in Vancouver, British Columbia.

The missions trips this summer are all about supporting the two recent church plants in Canada. Grasslands could use help in keeping the momentum going from their launch last fall.  Community of Hope needs assistance to refresh and reinstate the presence of Jesus in their community.

Grasslands Church

DATE: July 8- 14, 2012

TIME: Sunday night – Friday Night

LOCATION: Medicine Hat, Alberta

GO TO: www.canadianadventure.org

Contact: herb8_44805@yahoo.com

Community of Hope

DATE: August 5- 11, 2012

TIME: Sunday night – Friday Night

LOCATION: Vancouver, British Columbia

GO TO:www.canadianadventure.org

Contact: herb8_44805@yahoo.com

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Asia’s Hope Provides Essential, Lifesaving Help

Posted by Liz Cutler Gates on February 20, 2012  |  No Comments

The McCollum Family

One of the cooperating organizations in the Fellowship of Grace Brethren Churches is Asia’s Hope, an organization that provides family-based residential care for children at high risk of sexual and economic exploitation in Cambodia, Thailand, and India. From its beginnings in 2001, it now operates 23 homes, providing comprehensive care for about 600 kids and work with about 150 indigenous staff – moms and dads, teachers, nurses, cooks and administrators. A number of the homes are sponsored by Grace Brethren congregations.

Recently, Marla Taviano, a blogger from Columbus, Ohio, interviewed Asia’s Hope executive director John McCollum (and co-founder of the organization) about the ministry and how it came to be. She’s also leading a discussion about orphan care — the pros and the cons. It’s a multi-day post, so feel free to follow along. We’ve only included a portion of the interview here.

meet the mccollum family

…(the youth pastor at the church we were attending)  told me about a pastor from a church in our denomination about an hour away from Columbus. “He does something in Cambodia. Not sure what it is – you should call him.” I called the pastor, and basically invited myself along on his next trip. He graciously allowed me to come along on what was pretty much a run-of-the-mill short term missions trip. But while we were there, God gave us a vision to move beyond a once-a-year visit evangelism and teaching gig. We met so many amazing Christians in Cambodia – they had everything they needed for successful ministry – the organization, the passion, the gifting, the spiritual authority – everything but money. And we as American Christians had the converse – money, and a willingness to help, but very little else to bring to the table.Read the rest of the post here.

what about orphanages? (part 1)

This provides some of the background to the conversation between blogger Marla Taviano and John McCollum, executive director of Asia’s Hope.

…I talked to John McCollum, Executive Director of Asia’s Hope, and asked him if he’d be willing to answer some questions and address some concerns about orphanages and if they’re really in the best interest of kiddos in Cambodia. He said absolutely. He also pointed me to another site that warns people of the dangers of Orphanage Tourism…

Read the complete post here.

what about orphanages? (part 2)

This begins the conversation between blogger Marla Taviano and John McCollum, executive director of Asia’s Hope, about orphan care around the world.

Question: “Three out of four children living in orphanages are not orphans – they still have at least one parent alive.” (I got this quote from the article I linked to in the first post.) Is this true of Asia’s Hope orphanages?

First of all, I think that we have to clarify what we mean when we say “orphan.” Colloquially, most people think of an orphan as a child whose mother and father have both died. For our purposes at Asia’s Hope, however, we define an orphan as any child who has no parents who can or will care for them. So, while we do prioritize for admission kids whose parents have both died, we also provide care for kids who may have, for instance, a mother who has died and a father who is in prison or who has abandoned them.

Just yesterday we admitted a sibling group – two boys and a little girl – whose father had committed suicide, and whose mother had abandoned them. The kids had no food, no access to healthcare, no shelter and no education. Neither the villagers nor their extended family could or would take them in. Do these kids fit the popular definition of orphans? Maybe not. But they fit ours. So, offhand, I can’t quote you stats on how many of the 600 kids in our care have one parent living, but I can say that we only admit children for whom no other credible options exist.

We wholeheartedly support the organizations out there that provide different kinds of care – village-level education, preventative and emergency health services for poor families, well-baby care, advocacy for safe and humane working conditions for destitute laborers – these are all essential! But for a small percentage of poor children – those who have no one else to care for them, especially those who are at high risk for sexual and economic exploitation – we provide essential, lifesaving help.

Read the complete post here.

Learn more about the beginning days of Asia’s Hope, see Asia’s Hope Makes a Difference, published in the January/February 2008 FGBC World.

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Native Church Announces Revival Service

Posted by Liz Cutler Gates on February 17, 2012  |  No Comments

Arnold Betoney, pastor of Native New Life Church, a Grace Brethren congregation in Albuquerque, N.M., has announced the schedule for its 2012 New Year’s Revival. Services will be held at 7 p.m nightly, February 20 to 25 at the church, located at 8624 Zuni SE (corner of Zuni and Virginia).

Speakers include:
Monday — Pastor Arnold Betoney
Tuesday — Ray Perry, All Nation’s Indian Baptist Church
Wednesday — Ben Yazzie, iEquip
Thursday –  Jeremy Seaton
Friday — Pastor Julian Gunn, Nazarene Indian Church
Saturday — Three Fold Communion Service

Prayer, testimonies, singing, and enjoy the fellowship, you’re all invited.

More info call Pastor Arnold (505) 220-1188.

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Live This Week Like It’s Valentine’s Day

Posted by Liz Cutler Gates on February 15, 2012  |  No Comments


When we shared yesterday’s story about how Grace Fellowship, a Grace Brethren congregation in Pickerington, Ohio, spread a little sweet love in their community, we were drawn to a video on the church’s web site. It’s from Sunday’s services at the central Ohio church and worthy of a second glance. Pastor Keith Minier and his wife, Kelly, remind viewers of the importance of spending time together. He then encourages the congregation to protect their marriages and prays not only for married couples in the audience, but for the single individuals, that they might live lives of purity.

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Larry Poland to Return to Grace as Chapel Speaker

Posted by Terry White on February 15, 2012  |  No Comments

WINONA LAKE, IND. – After thirty-two years consulting with power brokers in the entertainment industry in Hollywood and New York, Dr. Larry Poland, Chairman and CEO of Mastermedia International, will be sharing his insights in two chapel programs at Grace College, Thursday and Friday of this week, February 16 and 17. “Is there any hope of Hollywood?” is Dr. Poland’s Thursday topic and “Media’s Destructive Impact” will be the focus on Friday.

Poland grew up in Winona Lake, attended Warsaw High School in the class of 1957, was student body president, a foreign exchange student, and brought Warsaw High a championship in the National Forensic League national student congress competition. He received his undergraduate education at Wheaton College in Illinois and received graduate degrees at Grace Seminary and Purdue University

After beginning his career as an administrator at Grace College, Poland became the nation’s youngest college president in 1967 when he took the helm of Miami Christian College. He moved away from higher education in 1973 and headed an international volunteer service agency placing 800 volunteers in 35 nations in eight and one half years. He was listed in Harvest House Publishers 365 Most Influential People in the World based on his relationships with global media leaders. He is returning to the campus of his alma mater, Grace Theological Seminary, where he was Alumnus of the Year.

It was 1979 when Poland began a quiet, one-on-one strategy to build relationships with those who control power in global media. His aim was to help media decision makers understand the 100 million evangelicals in America and to present the message of the Christian faith.

Dr. Poland lives in Redlands, California, has six children and nine grandchildren, and will celebrate his fiftieth anniversary to his wife, Donna Lynn, this year.

Chapel programs at Grace College are held at the Orthopaedic Capital Center on Wooster Road in Winona Lake at 10:30 a.m. and are open to the public.

For more information contact info@mastermediaintl.org or www.larrypoland.com

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Showering a Community with Sweet Love

Posted by Liz Cutler Gates on February 14, 2012  |  No Comments

Bags containing a dozen cookies each await distribution to teachers, police officers, and fire officials in Pickerington, Ohio.

Grace Fellowship of Pickerington, Ohio, a Grace Brethren congregation pastored by Keith Minier, showered their community with love this Valentine’s Week. They distributed close to 400 dozen cookies to schools and fire and police stations in their area.

“This was a really exciting event that our church really stepped up and owned,” reports Nicole Waggoner, leader of the Impact Team. “We had originally planned on getting 300 dozen cookies but we got closer to 400 dozen.  In each bag was one dozen cookies.  We sent them to four different local schools and we had enough to take to the fire and police station.”

The team selected schools where the teaching staff includes individuals who are part of the congregation, to provide them with a platform to talk to people and invite them to the church.

Members of Grace Fellowship Church in Pickerington, Ohio, baked nearly 400 dozen cookies to give to teachers, fire officials, and police officers.

“The point of this event was to let teachers know that we appreciate them and all of their hard work,” stressed Nicole. ” Our hope is that if they are ’seeking’ that they would come visit us and we know they will be exposed to the truth of Jesus in our services.”

“People brought the cookies to church this weekend and we packaged them up and delivered them yesterday (February 13),” says Nicole. “We’ve already heard some great reports about how appreciative people were.”

Nicole goes on to explain that the Impact Team creates events for the church to have a large scale presence in the community, which is located on the eastern edge of metropolitan Columbus. “Our hope is to provide a platform of credibility in the community as a church that loves them,” she says. “We hope that if a person finds them self wondering about God, that they will remember the church that gave them the cookies, the free wrapping paper, and provided them with an awesome Easter Egg event with a helicopter and that they will come to a service and hear about Jesus.”

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Vision Indiana Gives Impetus to Hoosier Church Planting

Posted by Terry White on February 12, 2012  |  No Comments

About a dozen pastors, church planters, and church leaders met in Winona Lake, Indiana, today to build fraternity and to talk, dream, and pray about God starting a church-planting movement in Indiana.

Tony Webb and Ron Boehm of Vision Ohio were the facilitators, and Aaron Scantlen and Bruce Barlow of the Winona Lake (IN) Grace Brethren church staff were the hosts.  The meeting was held in the newly-remodeled HUB, or youth and community building on the WLGBC campus.

The day began with some relationship-building through bowling together, and moved on to some scriptural and practical comments by Tony Webb on his study of church planting and experience with church planters. Ron Boehm also presented some research material on the history and effectiveness of church planting in Indiana since the 1930s, as well as leading discussion on practical issues and next steps.

Representatives at the meeting were from South Bend, Leesburg, Columbia City, and Winona Lake. A next meeting has been set for April 28, and specific next-step assignments were made with reports due at that meeting. (Ron Boehm photo)

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Lexington Church’s ESL Program Gives ‘Glimpse of Heaven’

Posted by Terry White on February 11, 2012  |  No Comments

Pastor Jason Carmean of the Lexington, Ohio, Grace Brethren Church is a guest columnist this week in the Mansfield newspaper. Here is an excerpt from his column on the ESL program his church conducts. To read the entire article, click here.

I remember growing up in church as a little child, we would sing a song that went, “Red and yellow, black and white, they are precious in His sight. Jesus loves the children of the world.”

I believe that is absolutely true, but I also look around and see that world around me in and around Mansfield. If you take a drive through the area, you see Mexican restaurants, Chinese restaurants, Japanese restaurants and for a while I remember seeing a Vietnamese restaurant. You see people with different colors of skin and different-shaped features on their faces. The nations of the world are in little old Mansfield, Ohio.

Because of this, our church has started a program to teach English to those who have come from other countries and places around the world to make a better life for themselves. I think we should celebrate that and welcome people who do not look like we do, who have different customs and eat different foods than we do. I think we can learn from them

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