Archive for the National Organizations Category

Missionary Rosella Cochran With the Lord

Posted by Terry White on August 4, 2011  |  No Comments

Rosella Cochran

Rosella Cochran, who served with Grace Brethren International Missions in the Central African Republic as a missionary nurse from 1954-1990, has gone to be with the Lord. She was a member of the Winona Lake (IN) Grace Brethren Church and lived in retirement at Grace Village Retirement Community in Winona Lake, Ind. Further details will be posted as they become available.

Filed Under: National Organizations

Ribbon-Cutting for Ft. Wayne Weber School Set for August 5

Posted by Terry White on August 3, 2011  |  No Comments

Grace College and Theological Seminary has announced it is opening a location in Fort Wayne at the Ambassador Enterprises property formerly occupied by Fort Wayne Bible College, and classes will begin this fall. To commemorate the event, Grace will host a ribbon-cutting ceremony and press conference on Friday, August 5, 2001 at 11 AM at the location, which is housed in the English Library.

Speakers will include Dr. Ronald Manahan, president of Grace College, Mayor Tom Henry and Larry Rottmeyer of Ambassador Enterprises.

Grace College is moving forward to bring post-secondary education within reach of a larger population. Beginning August 2011, The Henry and Frances Weber School at Grace College will deliver a two-year associate of arts degree in general studies in two locations: Fort Wayne and Indianapolis. Tuition rates for the new program are $3900 per semester.

Dr. Ronald Manahan, president of Grace College, remarked, “To our knowledge this is the only such Christian two-year program available today. This school will offer a cost-effective associate degree to students in urban areas who want a Christian education, and we ultimately look forward to offering this program in a variety of cities.”

Each of the two years will be divided into fall, spring, and summer semesters, each with two eight-week sessions. The program is designed so that students completing the two-year associate degree can continue to the Winona Lake campus or transfer to another college to complete baccalaureate degrees.

Dr. John Teevan has been appointed Executive Director of The Weber School. Teevan came to Grace in 2006 to lead the Prison Extension, which grew to 350 students under his leadership. For more than thirty years before coming to Grace, he was a pastor in Grace Brethren Churches in Ashland, Ohio and Winona Lake, Ind.

“Henry and Frances Weber have served Grace College in a variety of capacities for nearly two decades,” said Teevan. “It’s an honor for our school to be able to give back to them when they have given so richly to us.”

Henry Weber noted that Christian higher education needed “to develop alumni who make their way in the world as successful Christian members of society, no matter what their vocation.” Through The Weber School, Grace plans to help fulfill this charge by lowering the upfront cost of the first two years of college and minimizing barriers to education that many people face.

Grace College is an evangelical Christian community of higher education which applies Biblical values in strengthening character, sharpening competence, and preparing for service. The academic, residential, athletic, and social aspects of the college are designed to encourage intellectual and spiritual growth in a supportive campus community. The 180-acre campus is located in the historic resort town of Winona Lake, near Warsaw, Ind. It has historically been among the top schools of its size and listed in U.S. News & World Report as one of America’s Best Colleges. The Princeton Review has regularly awarded it the title of a “Best Midwestern College.”

For more information on Grace College and The Henry and Frances Weber School, please visit www.grace.edu/weber.

Scanning for Brethren Digital Archives Begins

Posted by Liz Cutler Gates on July 18, 2011  |  No Comments

The 1954 edition of the Brethren Missionary Herald, along with others, are now available on the Internet.

Scanning for the Brethren Digital Archives has begun and among the first publications to be completed are issues of the Brethren Missionary Herald magazine and Grace Theological Journal. They may be accessed at http://www.archive.org/details/brethrendigitalarchives.

When complete, the Archives will include a digital copies of publications produced by the various Brethren groups that trace their spiritual heritage to Alexander Mack. Publications slated to be digitized include periodicals from the mid- to late-1800’s as well as theological journals, such as the Grace Seminary Journal, which was published from 1980-1991, and denominational magazines, such as the Brethren Missionary Herald, which was published from 1940 until the mid-1990’s.

They have partnered with Lyrasis, the nation’s largest regional membership organization for libraries and information professionals, to see the venture completed. It is hoped to scan 22 periodicals and 10 almanacs that are attributed to the Brethren movement as part of this first phase.

Filed Under: National Organizations

CE Recognizes Couples and Family for Service

Posted by Liz Cutler Gates on July 15, 2011  |  No Comments

Mike and Margie Brubaker

This week at Momentum, CE National has honored several couples and a family for their various ministries.

Yesterday, Mike and Margie Brubaker were inducted onto the CE Wall of Honor. Mike is currently on staff at Grace Community Church, a Grace Brethren church in Frederick, Md. (R. Dallas Greene, senior pastor). Margie is a licensed counselor in private practice. The two have attended Momentum for many years as the “shepherd of the shepherds,” providing a listening ear to those who are hurting or in difficult situations.

The CE Wall of Honor is located in the Russell Center at CE’s Winona Lake, Ind., headquarters. It is designed to recognize faithful servants in ministry.

To be considered for the Wall of Honor, an individual or couple, through their connection with CE National, should have had a significant influence upon others by their ministry, equipping others to serve, including a special emphasis in church ministries. Significant influence should include one or more of the following: providing ministry trainin, training others in evangelism,providing acts of service to the organization, involvement in encouragement, discipling others, and modeling a godly Christian life.

Last night, Jim and Laura Umpleby were recognized as the Youth Leaders of the Year. They work with Driven Student Ministries at the Osceola, Ind., Grace Brethren Church (Greg Serafino, pastor).

This morning during the regular staff meeting/breakfast, additional honorees were announced:

  • David and Del-Rae Rice, Grace Brethren Church, Lititz, Pa., received the Servanthood Award.
  • The Knepper Family of the Grace Brethren Church, York, Pa., were recognized with the Teamwork Award.
  • Dan and Gay O’Deens, founding pastor of Gateway Grace Community Church, a Grace Brethren church in Parkesburg, Pa., and founders of CPR-3, an organization that provides assistance in national disasters, were recognized for Mercy Ministries.

Additional awards will be presented during the national conference of the Fellowship of Grace Brethren Churches, which will be held July 23-27 in Wooster, Ohio.

The Momentum Youth Conference continues through Saturday night, July 17, on the campus of the University of Pittsburgh, Johnstown, Pa. For prayer requests and regular reports and photos of events, click here.

Filed Under: National Organizations

Briscoe Resigns as Athletic Director at Grace College

Posted by Terry White on June 17, 2011  |  No Comments

WINONA LAKE, Ind. – Chad Briscoe, who has been the athletic director at Grace College, Winona Lake, Ind., for the last four years, has accepted the athletic director position at Mooresville High School in Mooresville, Ind., beginning on July 18.

Briscoe accepted the job because of the professional opportunities in the Indianapolis area presents and the proximity to his extended family.

“It was a very difficult decision, but I felt like this was where God was calling me and my family,” Briscoe said. “I want to thank Dr. Manahan and Dr. Katip for this opportunity to serve these last four years.”

During his four years at Grace, Briscoe was the catalyst behind a number of major improvements in the athletic department. He brought the National Christian College Athletic Association Women’s Division 1 Basketball National Tournament to Grace’s Orthopaedic Capital Center three years in a row, arranged Grace’s first-ever Big 10 basketball game in an exhibition against Indiana University on Nov. 4, 2009 and established the Grace College Intercollegiate Athletic Hall of Fame in 2008.

“Chad has helped our athletic program make significant strides during his time at Grace,” said Grace College Provost Bill Katip. “He will be greatly missed. We wish him and his family all of the best.”

In 2010, Briscoe’s hard work earned him Mid-Central College Conference Athletic Director of the Year honors. He increased student-athlete aid by 25 percent, helped raise funds for a press box and scoreboard at the softball diamond, oversaw the construction of the volleyball program’s team room and initiated the remodeling of coaches’ offices at the Gordon Recreation Center.

Briscoe’s contagious attitude and enthusiasm challenged Grace’s athletic programs to a higher degree of excellence. The men’s basketball team made a national tournament appearance the last four years, the women’s team has done so the last three years, and the women’s soccer and women’s tennis programs have enjoyed their most successful seasons in their program history during his tenure.

“My family and I have been blessed to work at a wonderful institution,” Briscoe said. “The athletic department is in a great place, and I’ve been blessed to be a part of Grace College’s journey. The Lord has assembled wonderful coaches here at Grace, and it’s been great to be a part of that.”

Filed Under: National Organizations

News from Grace Brethren Chaplains

Posted by Liz Cutler Gates on June 1, 2011  |  No Comments

Larry Chamberlain, president and CEO of the Grace Brethren Investment Foundation, which sponsors the Eagle Commission, recently sent an update on the Grace Brethren military chaplains. Here are a few excerpts:

Endorsing Agent John and Martha Schumacher

Many thanks to those who sent a contribution designated toward the travel expenses of John Schumacher, endorsing agent, for his two-week ministry trip abroad, at the invitation of the Liberian government, for the purpose of training their military chaplains, including sessions on ethics and ethical decision making.  John completes his ministry this week and will write up a brief summary of his trip for the next letter to the Eagle Commission.  Prior to his departure, John notes in an email:  “Three shots today—Yellow Fever, Tetanus, and Typhoid Fever . . . all to prepare for Liberia.  I deserve a purple heart!” Martha Schumacher wrote in an email to me this week, “Prayer is needed concerning the Iceland volcano.  It could affect John’s transit through Brussels on the way home.  He leaves Liberia about 1:00 p.m. (Phoenix time) on Friday and will be in transit for 30 hours.” Hopefully, by the time you receive this newsletter, John will be safely home.  Again, your gifts in support of this ministry opportunity are gratefully acknowledged!  Additional funds are yet needed to cover the expenses, so feel free to consider a contribution, designated, “Schumacher – Liberia Trip” on your return envelope.  Thanks!

Chaplain Jeff Mason

One of our Army Reserve Chaplains, Jeffrey Mason, currently serving with the 134th Field Artillery Regiment of the Ohio National Guard, is preparing to deploy with his unit to Afghanistan.  This will be Jeff’s second deployment, his first a couple of years ago to Iraq.  “We start our training at the end of July,” he writes.  “I have been informed that there will be a few hundred more Soldiers attached to my unit for the deployment.  That means I will probably have over 800 Soldiers to take care of and they will be spread throughout Afghanistan.  I will be doing a lot of traveling either by road or by air or both.  We will begin heading over to Afghanistan in the late fall.  Please pray for my Soldiers.  There are a lot of issues that they are facing.  There are a lot of very young Soldiers that are going over and I know many are scared or apprehensive about the deployment.  Pray that they will be open to the Gospel. Thank you all for the prayers and encouragements.” Jeff also mentions in that same communication that he may have to undergo treatments for a knee injury that occurred during his prior deployment, which may prevent him from deploying with his troops in the fall.  Jeff desires that we pray for complete healing of his knee because he desires greatly to serve with his Soldiers in Afghanistan.

Chaplain Richard and Star Hurst

Army Chaplain Richard Hurst, currently serving with his Soldiers from Fort Drum, NY in Jalalabad, eastern Afghanistan, recently wrote an article on prayer for The Revolver, the monthly newsletter for Fort Drum.  He writes, “As the Six Shooters’ Chaplain, I always end my counseling with prayer.  Prayer catapults us onto the frontier of the spiritual life.  Of all the spiritual disciplines, prayer is most central because it ushers us into perpetual communion with the Father.  Prayer is life-creating and life-changing.  To pray is to change.  The closer we come to the heartbeat of God, the more we see our need and the more we desire to be conformed to Christ.  I ask that you continue to present your prayers to God for all the Soldiers and civilians serving here in Afghanistan.  The Father continues to protect us, and I believe it is because of the power of the prayers that are continuously lifted up for us all.” Please pray for Chaplain Hurst as he ministers to the Soldiers entrusted to his care in eastern Afghanistan.  And pray for his wife, Star, as she ministers to the wives at Fort Drum.

For a number of months, John Schumacher has worked with the Alliance Defense Fund and other endorsing agents and concerned retired senior chaplains of the Armed Forces, expressing concerns and organizing efforts in response to the repeal of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” and, more recently, the failed attempt by the Navy to allow for same-sex marriages on Navy installations.  This week, a joint letter, signed by numerous endorsing agents from evangelical and like-minded faith groups, was sent to the Chiefs of Chaplains of the Army, Navy, and Air Force, with copies going to many U.S. Congressmen and Senators.  Some brief excerpts from that letter:  “We, the undersigned endorsing agents, represent faith groups that have tens of millions of members and who endorse over a thousand military chaplains to provide for the spiritual and moral needs of service members.  Chaplains have a tremendous moral responsibility to insure that when they preach, teach or counsel, they do so in accordance with their conscience and in harmony with the faith group by which they are endorsed.  No American, especially those serving in the armed forces, should be forced to abandon their religious beliefs or be marginalized for holding to those beliefs.  Service members should know that chaplains’ ministry and their own rights of conscience remain protected everywhere military necessity has placed them.  We hope that you will join us in urging DoD [Department of Defense] and Congress to adopt such specific and intentional conscience protections.” Pray for John Schumacher and his colleagues in the endorsing community as they provide needed direction on these issues at the highest levels.

Filed Under: National Organizations

Grace College Opens Two-Year Henry and Frances Weber School

Posted by Liz Cutler Gates on June 1, 2011  |  No Comments

Locations in Fort Wayne and Indianapolis

Grace College, Winona Lake, Ind., is moving forward to bring post-secondary education within reach of a larger population. Beginning August 2011, The Henry and Frances Weber School at Grace College will deliver a two-year associate of arts degree in general studies in two locations: Fort Wayne and Indianapolis. Tuition rates for the new program are $3900 per semester.

Dr. Ronald Manahan, president of Grace College, remarked, “To our knowledge this is the only such Christian two-year program available today. This school will offer a cost-effective associate degree to students in urban areas who want a Christian education, and we ultimately look forward to offering this program in a variety of cities.”

Each of the two years will be divided into fall, spring, and summer semesters, each with two eight-week sessions. The program is designed so that students completing the two-year associate degree can continue to the Winona Lake campus or transfer to another college to complete baccalaureate degrees.

Dr. John Teevan has been appointed Executive Director of The Weber School. Teevan came to Grace in 2006 to lead the Prison Extension, which grew to 350 students under his leadership. For more than thirty years before coming to Grace, he was a pastor in Grace Brethren churches in Ashland, Ohio and Winona Lake, Ind.

“Henry and Frances Weber have served Grace College in a variety of capacities for nearly two decades,” said Teevan. “It’s an honor for our school to be able to give back to them when they have given so richly to us.”

Henry Weber noted that Christian higher education needed “to develop alumni who make their way in the world as successful Christian members of society, no matter what their vocation.” Through The Weber School, Grace plans to help fulfill this charge by lowering the upfront cost of the first two years of college and minimizing barriers to education that many people face.

Grace College is an evangelical Christian community of higher education which applies Biblical values in strengthening character, sharpening competence, and preparing for service. The academic, residential, athletic, and social aspects of the college are designed to encourage intellectual and spiritual growth in a supportive campus community. The 180-acre campus is located in the historic resort town of Winona Lake, near Warsaw, Ind. It has historically been among the top schools of its size and listed in U.S. News & World Report as one of America’s Best Colleges. The Princeton Review has regularly awarded it the title of a “Best Midwestern College.”

For more information on Grace College and The Henry and Frances Weber School, please visit www.grace.edu/weber.

Filed Under: National Organizations

Vision 2020 Conference Schedule Finalized

Posted by Liz Cutler Gates on May 26, 2011  |  No Comments

New features have been added to the schedule of the Vision2020 Leadership Conference, the annual conference of the Fellowship of Grace Brethren Churches. The conference will be held at the Grace Brethren Church in Wooster, Ohio, July 23-27, with special pre-conference workshops on July 21, 22, and 23. For more information, see vision2020now.com.

  • In Concert on Saturday evening: Phil Wickham. Free ticket included with every full conference registration.
  • Special offer: if you register for Vision2020 you will qualify for a free registration to the Your Secret Name conference. Email Kary Obberbrunner for more information.
  • Our speaker list is now complete!
    • Stephen Joyce, A Vision for the City
    • Bob Fetterhoff, Our Vision for the Future
    • Brad Powell, Vision, From Personal to Practical
    • Dan Allan, Vision and the Glory of God
    • Jim Brown, Vision and the Church God Uses
    • Jim Custer, Vision and Prophecy
    • Jeff Bogue, Vision and Leadership

Register by June 1 and save!

Promotional materials to use in Grace Brethren churches are available at www.vision2020now.com/conference/media

  • A 3 minute promo video
  • A 1 minute promo video
  • Poster
  • Bulletin Inserts
  • Graphics

For more information, see vision2020now.com.

Filed Under: National Organizations

Northern Indiana Lakes Festival First Water Waddle Planned

Posted by Liz Cutler Gates on May 24, 2011  |  No Comments

Kosciusko Lakes and Streams, a research and education center at Grace College, Winona Lake, Ind., and the Kosciusko Community YMCA, Warsaw, Ind., have teamed to provide the first Water Waddle as part of the Northern Indiana Lakes Festival this summer.  The Water Waddle is a one mile fun run for kids ages toddler to 14 year-olds.  Toddlers are welcome to walk with an adult.  The event will take place at Center Lake Park which has a paved sidewalk around the perimeter of the park measuring a quarter of a mile.  Youth will complete four laps around the course all within the sight of the adult who brought them to minimize any safety concerns.

The Northern Indiana Lakes Festival takes place from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday, June 25 and is being held at Center Lake Park, 225 E. Fort Wayne Street, Warsaw.  The Water Waddle will begin at 2 p.m. with registration and check-ins starting an hour before race time.  There is no entry fee for the race, and the first 100 youths to pre-register by June 10 will receive a free festival t-shirt.  Participants will also receive participation medals, and trophies will be awarded to top three runners in boy and girl divisions.  More information and the registration form are available at www.lakesfestival.org. Registration forms can also be picked up at the Kosciusko Community YMCA in Warsaw. Completed registration forms need to be mailed or dropped off to the YMCA as well.

Other highlights of the lakes festival include a ski show, canoeing and kayaking, a boat show, musical performances, exhibits and booths featuring local businesses and nonprofits, and demonstrations and hands-on activities for children.  Guests can purchase food from local vendors and register to win great door prizes.  Aluminum water bottles will be given away as well.  Join us as we celebrate our lakes!

The Northern Indiana Lakes Festival is being organized by Kosciusko Lakes and Streams, a research and education center at Grace College.  The event is made possible by several local sponsors, including Biomet, K21 Health Foundation, Lake City Radio, and Zimmer as top-level sponsors.

Filed Under: National Organizations

Grace College Students Participate in Cross-Cultural Trips

Posted by Liz Cutler Gates on May 24, 2011  |  No Comments

Grace College students in Fiji.

Thirty-nine Grace College and Seminary students and faculty are traveling this summer on three international cross-cultural education trips.

Students are visiting Fiji, Turkey and Italy. Each trip includes an educational component, such as visiting the Haga Sophia and Blue Mosque in Turkey, and a cultural discovery component, such as staying in the homes with Indo-Fijian families in Fiji.

The Fiji team has 14 participants and is working on community projects for part of the trip. The rest of the time they will be working with women who have come out of difficult home situations through an organization called Homes of Hope. This team will be led by Dr. Tammy Schultz, chair of Graduate Department of Counseling and Interpersonal Relations, and Dr. Nate Bosch, Assistant Professor of Environmental Science.

The Turkey team has eight participants and is traveling to Istanbul, Ankara, and Izmir. They will be visiting the Blue Mosque, Hagia Sophia, Topkapi palace, Cappadocia, Laodicea, and many more sites that date back to historical and Biblical times. They will also be attending the National Youth Day activities at a Turkish school. This team will be lead by Carlos Tellez, Cultural Liaison, and Dr. Jared Burkholder, Assistant Professor of American and World History.

The Italy team is an exploration of the art history of Italy. There are 17 who are traveling to Italy including leaders Kim Reiff, chair of the Art Department, and JD Woods, associate professor of Art. Reiff says, “Art, architecture, and art history will come alive as Grace students journey through the vast legacies of Italy.”

Upon arriving back home, student artwork created from the Italy cross-cultural experience will be featured in the Mount Memorial Art Gallery in the Fall 2011 exhibition entitled Italy: A Student’s Perspective. The exhibit will run November 14-December 16, 2011.

Grace’s Global Perspectives class requires that each student fulfill a one-week minimum cross-cultural experience, designed to broaden students’ knowledge about the world and provide them with unique opportunities to learn in a different context than their own. Global Perspectives is part of the “Grace Core,” a set of foundational, general-education classes required for every student, regardless of major area of study.

“About 50 percent of our students come from the Midwest, and many of the students going on these trips have never been out of the country, or even on an airplane before,” said Carlos Tellez. “Our students get the opportunity to be involved in different service and educational experiences,” he said.

Interested individuals may follow the groups via blog posts on the Grace College news site.

Filed Under: National Organizations

GBIF Approves Loan for New Facility at Marysville, Ohio

Posted by Liz Cutler Gates on May 23, 2011  |  No Comments

The Grace Brethren Investment Foundation has recently approved financing to assist the Marysville, Ohio, Grace Brethren Church, in constructing a new worship facility. The 16,000 sq. ft. building will be situated on 20 acres of land (owned free and clear by the church) at 17240 Amrine Wood Road in Marysville and will include a sanctuary/gymnasium, children’s ministry classrooms, a youth room, rooms for toddlers and infants, a gathering space, office space, kitchen, restrooms, mechanical rooms, and room for storage.

“The church has grown each year (since her start in June of 2002),” says Clancy Cruise, senior pastor. “We are averaging 700 this year with bumps up to 800 and 900 on holidays. Giving is strong, as indicated by the fact that we have reached our campaign goal of pledges totaling $1,226,500 over three years,” he adds.

“Out of 270 families in the church, we have had 226 make a three-year commitment,” Cruise continues. “Over the years by God’s grace, dozens have responded to the Gospel and been baptized. We have witnessed over 200 first-time decisions and 300 baptisms since we started the church. Through the years we have prayed hard, served faithfully, grown well and grieved deeply. Through it all we are wiser, and more united than ever. With that wisdom and unity, it is time to build a church home and make room for more to come to know Jesus!”

“I have counted it a privilege these past years to have worked with the Marysville leaders on a new project that will impact their community and beyond for Christ in spectacular ways,” emphasizes Ken Seyfert, of the Grace Brethren Investment Foundation. “It has been quite encouraging to see how step-by-step the process unfolded, as the unified church waited patiently and prayed intently to the Lord. Significant, too, will be the outreach to young families in the area, as there is a heavy emphasis on children’s and youth ministries as part of the project.”

Grace College Grounds Keeper an “Unsung Hero”

Posted by Liz Cutler Gates on May 19, 2011  |  No Comments

Jeff Buriff is grounds supervisor at Grace College in Winona Lake.

Thursday’s Fort Wayne, Ind., Journal Gazette, featured a number of unsung heroes, the people behind the scenes who make things work. Among those included in the feature is Jeff Buriff, grounds supervisor at Grace College, Winona Lake, Ind. A portion of that story is below. Read the complete story here.

He keeps Grace beautiful

Rebecca S. Green | The Journal Gazette

Puddles fill the potholes in the gravel parking lot outside the maintenance building at Miller Field, Grace College’s sports complex.

But the grass on those fields is a deep emerald green, lush and in need of a mow on yet another rainy April day in Winona Lake.

Those beautiful fields are Jeff Buriff’s domain, and he is rightfully proud of them.

If it is outside the buildings on the campus of the small evangelical Christian liberal arts college, affiliated with the Fellowship of Grace Brethren Churches, it is Buriff’s responsibility: The concrete, the yards, the trees and those athletic fields that take up so much of his time.

A Grace graduate, Buriff, 41, returned to the college about five years ago after running a landscape design company for almost a decade.

The landscaping company, which he owned with his wife, had been doing work for Grace College for year,s and the school offered him the job full time.

Read the rest of the story here.

Read about the unsung heroes, including Jeff Buriff, here.

Filed Under: National Organizations

Northwest Focus Retreat Concludes

Posted by Liz Cutler Gates on May 18, 2011  |  No Comments

Oliver Shane Edwards, church planter in Medicine Hat, Alberta, Canada, rows to the center of Clear Lake for time with God on Tuesday morning.

The Northwest Focus Retreat for Grace Brethren pastors and ministry leaders concluded Wednesday morning (May 18) as participants reviewed the hours since they arrived on Monday evening. They had enjoyed meals together, been challenged to consider their core identity, spent time alone with God, and explored the great outdoors. More than 20 leaders from the Pacific Northwest participated at the event, which was held at Camp Clear Lake, near White’s Pass, Washington.

See the FGBC World on Facebook for photos of the event.

Filed Under: National Organizations

Grace Inks Partnership to Provide Engineering Classes on Campus

Posted by Liz Cutler Gates on April 18, 2011  |  No Comments

Dr. Ron Manahan, president of Grace College, welcomes guests to the luncheon marking an historic signing of a partnership with Grace and Trine University that provides Grace students the opporunity to enroll in engineering programs at Trine.

Thanks to an agreement to be signed today (April 18, 2011) between Grace College and Trine University, beginning in Fall 2011, Trine will offer several engineering degrees on the Grace campus. This will allow students the opportunity to reap the benefits of both a Grace education according to its mission and values, as well as specialized, on-campus training in engineering through Trine.

Grace College President, Dr. Ron Manahan, and Trine University President, Dr. Earl D. Brooks II, inked the agreement following lunch today on the Grace College campus.

The agreement allows students at Grace to graduate with a degree from Trine University. Trine will be offering a Bachelor of Science in Engineering with a concentration in mechanical engineering, a Bachelor of Science in Engineering Technology, a Master of Science in Leadership, and an online Master’s degree in Engineering.

“This is an opportunity for people who have considered coming to Grace if we had had engineering,” said Dr. Manahan. “They can come to Grace, live here on-campus for all four years and get the Grace experience with the Trine degree in engineering. Through this agreement, we are able to expand our offerings,” he said.

Both schools are independent colleges, and while Grace has traditionally held a more liberal arts focus, Trine has a long history in engineering.

“On Trine’s side, it extends the reach of their campus by using the very thing they specialize in, while Grace is now able to offer students additional programs,” said Manahan.

Trine University, an internationally recognized, private, independent, co-educational institution, offers associate, baccalaureate, and master degrees in programs to students in engineering, mathematics, science, computer science, business, teacher education, communication, criminal justice, golf management, social sciences, and various other fields of study. Trine is a member of the Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association and offers 21 varsity sports. Its golf program includes a university-owned 18-hole championship golf course. Founded in 1884 and accredited by the Higher Learning Commission of the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools, Trine, formerly known as Tri-State University, operates a 400-acre main campus in Angola, Ind. with off-campus centers in Angola, Fort Wayne, Merrillville, and South Bend/Mishawaka, Ind.

Grace College is an evangelical Christian community of higher education which applies biblical values in strengthening character, sharpening competence, and preparing for service. The academic, residential, athletic, and social aspects of the college are designed to encourage intellectual and spiritual growth in a supportive campus community. The 180-acre campus is located in the historic resort town of Winona Lake, near Warsaw, Ind. It has historically been among the top schools of its size and listed in U.S. News & World Report as one of America’s Best Colleges. The Princeton Review has regularly awarded it the title of a “Best Midwestern College.”

Filed Under: National Organizations

Grace College Students Present Academic Papers

Posted by Liz Cutler Gates on April 18, 2011  |  No Comments

Grace College students presented at the Alpha Chi honor society’s national convention in San Diego, Calif., in late March. Pictured, from left to right are, (front row) Alysha Mroczka, Emily Metcalf, Julene Holladay, Jennifer Benner, and Katherine Aardsma; (back row) Margaret Gullman, Abigail Dutcher, Melissa Witwer, and Sarah Rice.

Nine Grace College students and one professor traveled to San Diego, Calif., at the end of March to participate in the Alpha Chi honor society’s national convention, where each of the students presented academic papers in his or her field of study.

Professor Joseph Lehmann, faculty sponsor for Alpha Chi at Grace, said Grace was recognized as a star chapter for the third consecutive year. Among the 276 students who participated at the convention, two Grace students won first place recognition in their respective categories – senior Jennifer Benner in English Literature and junior Emily Metcalf in Original Visual Art.

“I enjoyed meeting students from other schools around the country and listening to their presentations,” said Metcalf, who added that winning the Original Visual Art category felt both “gratifying and surreal.” Metcalf said she enjoyed the trip very much and that she would “definitely go again.”

Those who participated included:

  • Katherine Aardsma, “Anorexia Nervosa: The Psychological Lie Impacting Our Society,” Psychology.
  • Jennifer Benner, “It’s Just Eating Babies: A Text World Theory Approach to Understanding the Effectuality of Swift’s ‘A Modest Proposal’” English Literature.
  • Abigail Dutcher, “The Integration of iPods into Pedagogy,” Education.
  • Margaret Gullman, “The Biology of a Self-Sustaining Aquarium,” Ecological Biology.
  • Julene Holladay, “Self-Directed Learning,” Education.
  • Emily Metcalf, “The Convergence of Cultures (and Colors): An Artistic Exploration,” Original Visual Art.
  • Alysha Mroczka, “Prairies: A Contrast Between Miller Field and Koinonia Environmental Center,” Ecological Biology.
  • Sarah Rice, “Heart of the Highlands: Clearances, Famine, and Culture,” World History.
  • Melissa Witwer, “Improving Patient Adherence to Diabetes Care Through Integrated Care and Psychological Interventions,” Health Science.

Alpha Chi was founded in 1922 as a coeducational society whose purpose is to promote academic excellence and exemplary character among college and university students and to honor those achieving such distinction. Its name derives from the initial letters of the Greek words alethia and character, meaning respectively truth and character. The motto of Alpha Chi is, “You shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free” (John 8:32).

Grace College is an evangelical Christian community of higher education which applies biblical values in strengthening character, sharpening competence, and preparing for service. The academic, residential, athletic, and social aspects of the college are designed to encourage intellectual and spiritual growth in a supportive campus community. The 180-acre campus is located in the historic resort town of Winona Lake, near Warsaw, Ind. It has historically been among the top schools of its size and listed in U.S. News & World Report as one of America’s Best Colleges. The Princeton Review has regularly awarded it the title of a “Best Midwestern College.”

Filed Under: National Organizations

Grace College Juried Art Exhibit to Open

Posted by Terry White on April 11, 2011  |  No Comments

WINONA LAKE, IN. – The 37th Annual Grace College Juried Student Art Exhibit opens Tuesday, April 26, at the Mount Memorial Art Gallery located in historic Mount Memorial Hall on the Grace College campus. The public is invited to attend. The awards ceremony announcing the best of exhibit will begin at 4 p.m.

This student art exhibit features more than 50 works. Categories include drawing, painting, graphic arts, and open. The exhibit will run through Friday, May 13. Gallery hours are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays; admission is free.

Filed Under: National Organizations

Game Raises $1,200 for Injured Student

Posted by Terry White on April 9, 2011  |  No Comments

Grace Sets Record For Knockout Basketball In Fundraiser For Injured Student
Grace College raised money for senior Jeremy Mohr through knockout basketball Friday night. Photo provided.
Grace College raised money for senior Jeremy Mohr through knockout basketball Friday night. Photo provided.

More than 400 people lined up behind the free throw line at Grace College’s Orthopaedic Capital Center Friday night to participate in a Guinness World Record-breaking game of knockout basketball.

The game was organized as a fundraiser for Grace senior Jeremy Mohr, who was paralyzed in an accident last fall.

The idea originated among five Grace College students as a part of a sport management class. Their goal, which was to bring in more than 360 participants to beat the world record previously held by Iowa State University, came to fruition when more than 400 students, faculty, staff, alumni and community members lined up to participate and give Grace College the record.

In order to raise funds for Mohr’s care, event organizers Zane Gard and Hannah Lengel asked for a $1 participation fee from all players. By the end of the night, they had raised more than $1,200.

Gard said because of the donations they received from various Grace College departments, they were able to host the game without outside expense — meaning Mohr would receive the full amount raised.

Lengel, a sport management and business major, said she was incredibly encouraged to see the campus and community support Mohr in such an unexpected way.

“Our original goal was just to raise funds from admissions — $361,” she said. “To know that it’s all going to Jeremy and it’s going to make a difference is great. When we started planning this, the record was 137. Then a few weeks later it jumped up to 200 people, and a week after that the record was 360 from Iowa State. When it got to that point, I was a little skeptical and a little worried, but we knew even if we didn’t break the record, at least we’d be raising money for Jeremy.”

The game lasted for more than two hours, and the final 20 contestants received free T-shirts from the Grace College department of admissions. Reneker’s Sport of Warsaw donated a trophy for the winner of the knockout game.

Filed Under: National Organizations

Grace Students Protest National Debt

Posted by Terry White on March 29, 2011  |  1 Comment

From today’s Fort Wayne (IN) Journal Gazette:
Grace students join national debt protest
 
Brian Francisco | Washington editor

Students at Grace College in Winona Lake have put up a “national debt clock.” But they acknowledge it’s already running slow.

Their “clock” consists of permanent markings on seven yard signs reminding passers-by of the $14 trillion national debt. Updating the 14 numerals to the dollar “would be wonderful to do, but it is physically impossible,” student Ryan Paradis said.

That’s because the national debt grows by tens of thousands of dollars every second, he said.

“In the five days the sign will be up, $20 billion will be added to the national debt,” Paradis said. The sign will be stationed near the library through Friday.

Paradis, a senior business administration major from Lebanon, Ohio, is president of the Grace chapter of Young Americans for Liberty. The group’s sign is part of the nationwide organization’s “Visualize the Debt” project on 75 campuses.

“It’s to raise awareness of the issue, and we’re getting signatures to let Congressman Stutzman know we support his position,” Paradis said.

Freshman Rep. Marlin Stutzman, R-3rd, has been among congressman calling for sharp reductions in the federal budget deficit and the national debt.

Young Americans for Liberty sprang from Students for Ron Paul, an organization that supported the 2008 presidential bid of Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas.

“I appreciate Ron Paul and what he does,” Paradis said. “I’m not a die-hard fan. Young Americans for Liberty does not endorse any political candidates.”

Paradis said about two-dozen students belong to the Young Americans for Liberty chapter at Grace, an evangelical Christian college with an enrollment of 1,200.

Filed Under: National Organizations

GBIF To Assist Winona Lake Grace Brethren Church In Completing the “Hub”

Posted by Liz Cutler Gates on March 28, 2011  |  No Comments

Work continues on the Hub at the Winona Lake, Ind., Grace Brethren Church.

The Grace Brethren Investment Foundation (GBIF) is providing the financing necessary for the Winona Lake, Ind., Grace Brethren Church to complete a new building project called the “Hub.” The church’s strategic plan is to retrofit, remodel, and expand an existing building known as the Youth Center to a multi-functional facility to be called the “The Hub.”  The facility will serve as a multi-use hub for training and development for students, for college-age young adults, and for community groups. The expansion will include new bathrooms, a classroom-capable gathering area, and a multi-use courtyard/lobby.  The retrofit will ensure that people of all ages, both from the church and from the community, can benefit from this multi-use facility.

The church has received faith commitment promises from the congregation of around $1 million over three years and in excess of $300,000 has already been contributed.  The total project cost is approximately $1.3 million.  The goal is to wind-up with a low long-term mortgage amount.

“Once again the GBIF is honored to assist  Winona Lake in their latest step of faith.  The “Hub” will most certainly be a tremendous new gathering area not only for youth, but for people of all ages and the community at large.  We are excited to see how God will use the new facility.” said Ken Seyfert, executive director of operations for GBIF.

Spring FGBC World Now Available

Posted by Liz Cutler Gates on March 25, 2011  |  No Comments

Information about church planting, topics of scholarship by Grace Brethren pastors, and a look at the news of the Fellowship of Grace Brethren Churches is all found in the new Spring 2011 issue of FGBC World, the quarterly magazine for the people and congregations of the Fellowship of Grace Brethren Churches.

The magazine is currently in the mail to individual subscribers and will be delivered in bulk to Grace Brethren Churches. If you’d like a sneak peak at the content, check out the FGBC World website, fgbcworld.com.

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