January 30, 2015 Volume 1504 Senior Editor: Frank M. Moore Managing Editor: Chad E. Schnarr Associate Editor: Sarah A. Glass NCN News Top Stories for the week of January 30, 2015 Churches to stand united against human trafficking on Freedom Sunday Nazarene congregations around the world are invited to participate February 22 in Freedom Sunday, a day set aside for the church to stand united against modern slavery, also known as human trafficking. More people live in bondage today than at any other time in history — children, women, and men who have been forced into prostitution or labor through human trafficking. The U.S. Department of State estimates as many as 27 million individuals are victims of trafficking. It is a problem that reaches into communities in almost every country in the world. This is the second year that the Church of the Nazarene will join other denominations within the WesleyanHoliness Consortium in observation of Freedom Sunday. In 2014, the Church of the Nazarene's Board of General Superintendents endorsed the Wesleyan-Holiness Consortium's Declaration for Freedom, a document that Nazarene leaders helped draft. Freedom Sunday is a day to unite with thousands of other churches; participate through prayer, raise awareness, and give surrounding the problem of human trafficking; and celebrate what God is doing to set the captives free. The first Sunday of Lent was chosen to focus on the fast spoken of in Isaiah 58:6: "Is not this the kind of fasting I have chosen: to loose the chains of injustice and untie the cords of the yoke, to set the oppressed free and break every yoke?" (NRSV). Churches can sign up and download free resources, including a bulletin, at ncm.org/freedomsunday. The Church of the Nazarene is present in many countries where people are vulnerable to trafficking. The church, through Nazarene Compassionate Ministries, partners with local congregations in anti-trafficking efforts that range from prevention and education to protection and rehabilitation. On Freedom Sunday, the church is taking a Freedom Offering, which will support the NCM Global Anti-Trafficking Fund, scholarships for trafficking survivors, preventing trafficking of children, and church-based prevention programs. To learn more, visit ncm.org/freedomsunday. --Nazarene Compassionate Ministries MNU students help revive Missouri church Leaders from the Drexel, Missouri, Church of the Nazarene thought they might have to close due to low attendance and a slim budget, but they were not ready to give up. Now they are experiencing a resurgence, and the spirit of enthusiasm is palpable. The difference? Ministry students from MidAmerica Nazarene University in Olathe, Kansas, are re-energizing the church with their presence and passion. Every Sunday they travel to Drexel to sing, preach, and teach this small group of believers, and they love every minute of it. Jeren Rowell supervises Nazarene churches on the denomination's Kansas City District. In talks with the small church he learned they "weren't done." Rowell approached professors in the Department of Christian Ministry and Formation at MNU with an idea. What would they think about a partnership between students in the Introduction to Ministry course and the Drexel church? As Rowell and professors Don Dunn and Randy Cloud talked, they liked the idea of immersing students in what Rowell called a "live laboratory" — a real church that needed help provided by student ministers that needed experience. Rowell paved the way with the people of Drexel, who were open to the idea. 1 "They said 'Come practice on us,'" Dunn said of the congregants. "They know it is not going to be perfect and they are good with that. It's such good practice for our students, too." The students are able to practice all the skills needed to hold church services. They preach, lead worship, conduct communion, teach Sunday School, handle outreach, and communicate with the congregation. The professors say the opportunity is unique not only due to the breadth of the experience, but also because these students are freshmen and sophomores. "Our junior and senior ministry majors already have places of service that are required in their major, so these are first and second year students," Cloud said. "They are getting experience that can't be matched and is great preparation for the rest of their training." Freshmen ministry majors Div Tosingilo from Iowa City, Iowa, and Jillian Mariani from Cincinnati, Ohio, are the two point people on the Drexel team. Working together, they recruit students from their class to preach, lead worship, teach Sunday School, and handle all Sunday responsibilities. They take it seriously, understanding that the people of Drexel depend on them each week. They took care to schedule local student ministers during the university's Christmas break so the church experienced no lapse in services over the holidays. Eight to 10 students meet on MNU's Olathe campus every Sunday morning to carpool to Drexel. Sometimes they have a pianist, a guitarist, and a couple of vocalists to lead worship; other times two guitarists and a vocalist. There are always students who see this not only as a learning experience, but also as the opportunity to minister to others long before they complete their training. "It's awesome to get this experience; this has confirmed my calling to pastoral ministry," Mariani said. "I said, 'If there is fruit to my preaching, then I will know my calling is true.' People have come to me after I preached and told me they needed to hear what I said. That let me know [my calling is] real." Tosingilo echoes her thoughts. "Whatever I was going through that week when I preached, I had a lady pull me aside afterwards and say, 'you really impacted my life.' That's what really matters to me," he said. Cloud related a story about one Drexel young person who reached out to a MNU ministry student during the week. "Our student recognized this person's need and was texting back and forth, following up with them," Cloud says. "They thought enough of the student to contact him when they needed help. That says our students are really taking over the pastoral responsibilities, not just the Sunday morning service." Everyone involved agrees that it takes all parties to make this unusual partnership work. Cloud and the students agree that the Drexel congregation is just as enthusiastic as the students are. At Thanksgiving season, the congregation held the first potluck the church has had in years. There just weren't enough people to have a potluck before. "You should have seen the food," Tosingilo said. Cloud added that the potluck made the people feel like things were back to "normal." "They want to do a potluck for us every month," Dunn said. Rowell is pleased with the partnership as a solution to the Drexel church's difficult situation. "The church was in a different season, trying to determine what ministry should look like for them," he said about the time before MNU students started ministry there. "It is tremendous how this is working given the willingness and ability of Dr. Cloud and Dr. Dunn to mentor the students in this setting. That's what is making it work." He also credits the church people themselves. 2 "They are extremely positive and excited about the energy there now," he said. Drexel laymen are interested in taking the partnership with MNU further by utilizing the student ministers to have youth events and start a calling program. Dunn has taken the idea a step further, creating a new program with MNU Church Relations Director Kevin Borger. Apostolos, which is Greek for apostle or one who is sent with a message, will provide ministry students for churches that need to fill a pulpit for one Sunday or longer. Students must complete the Introduction to Preaching course to be eligible. Then they will be trained by Church Relations staff to be placed in a temporary position. MNU offers four majors in the Department of Christian Ministry and Formation. Students can major in Bible and Theology, Ministry, Intercultural Studies, and Youth & Family Ministry. For more information, visit mnu.edu. --MidAmerica Nazarene University M-Power initiative to mobilize regional missionaries Several years ago, a couple who attended a Church of the Nazarene in the Netherlands sensed God calling them into cross-cultural mission work, so they approached the denomination's Eurasia Regional Office to inquire about how they could become missionaries. At the time, there was not an established structure or method for the region to deploy missionary volunteers from within the region, and the couple met with a closed door. The couple researched other mission organizations and the Nazarene church lost an opportunity. The Eurasia Region is now opening that door to Nazarenes across the region who sense God leading them into cross-cultural ministry. M-Power, which stands for "mission power" and is a play on the English word "empower," is a new regional initiative to identify people whom God is calling into short-term missions and match them with sites in other cities or countries where the church is ready to receive them as co-laborers in the ministry. Missionary volunteers make up 50 percent of the 100 missionaries on the Eurasia Region, but only 10 percent of those missionaries originate from within Eurasia. The rest are from North America, where there is an established structure designed to identify, train, and deploy missionary volunteers around the world. Arthur Snijders, the regional director, and his wife, Annemarie, a church planter in the Netherlands, came up with the idea for M-Power after they had their own volunteer cross-cultural experience more than two years ago. At the time she was pastoring and Arthur was the district superintendent for the Netherlands. They spent their two month sabbatical teaching and training in Bangladesh and also spent time with pastors in India. "That experience was very positive because we longed to see with our own eyes a country where the Lord would be at work in a much more powerful way than in our own country," Annemarie said. "We felt like we were spiritually dry and we needed to experience a fresh touch of the Lord. We visited Bangladesh and that was a life-transforming experience in the sense that we experienced what it was to be in another culture that was so different from our own and sense the presence of the Holy Spirit. For the people of Bangladesh, the solution to nearly every problem was prayer. As a group of leaders, they would go to the person in need to pray about the situation, and the situation would change. We felt both ashamed, but also the wonder of what it is to encounter the bride of Christ in other people and places." Arthur decided to make missionary deployment one of the region's four priorities when he took over as director in late 2013. Annemarie became the Mobilization coordinator. "Fortunately there is a team of people to help out because this is so big that we could never do it on our own," she said. "It is really something in which we have to work together." A new regional website, eurasiaregion.org/volunteers, was designed to receive applications from interested people on the region and match them with possible ministry locations. 3 The M-Power team is currently setting up sites that will be ready to receive missionary volunteers from the region. "There are several criteria for ministry sites," said Nancy Firestone, Eurasia Region personnel coordinator. "1) We want people to go into thriving ministry atmospheres where they can have a local person to coach them and also someone who will mentor them as they develop spiritually and in their service. 2) We want to be sure the ministry has been well developed and in place long enough to be a help and support. "In the future we hope we can begin to use M-Power missionaries as church planters and start new work, but that's a long-term goal and we know it will take a little bit to get there." Anyone on the region can fill out an application and start the exploration process of becoming a missionary volunteer. The application is in English, but might be translated in one of the region's major languages, Bangla, Arabic, Russian, and Hindi. Positions will be available from three months to more than a year. Those whose applications are approved by the M-Power team will be required to participate in one of the region's to-be-scheduled cross-cultural orientation training events that will take place in different places on the region each year. The first training event is 15-18 May in Büsingen, Switzerland. Once a person's application is approved and he or she has successfully completed the training and passed evaluation, he or she will be matched with a ministry location, as well as a coach and a mentor to guide through the ministry experience and provide emotional and spiritual support. The candidate will be required to raise all funds necessary to get to and from the location and to live there during their contracted service. The region will work with each economic situation, attempting to match people to areas where it is believed they can reasonably raise the funds from their local church, district, or field to go. There are already two approved sites for short-term missionaries on the Italy District — Catania and Florence or Rome. District Superintendent Daniel Fink is eager to see missionary volunteers come to work with his district. "We need people that can encourage us with their presence and prayers and with whatever capacities they have that can help in our district," Fink said. "I hope and I pray that not only someone will come from outside and minister in our district, but that our young people and whosoever is willing to become a volunteer will accept the challenge (to go elsewhere)." The two other approved sites are in Armenia and Portugal. "We want to get the message out that we believe every country that is part of the Church of the Nazarene has people God is calling to cross-cultural ministry," Firestone said. "We know they're being called and we want them to be our missionaries." --Church of the Nazarene Eurasia Region Papua New Guinea nurse honored for lifetime service Cathy Mia was born on April 12, 1956, in Waramis, a remote village deep in the western highlands of Papua New Guinea. From an early age, Mia attended a Church of the Nazarene under the ministry of pioneer missionary William Bromley. She did not attend school because at that time there were no schools in the area. In 1973, Dr. Glenn Irwin invited Mia to the Kudjip Mission Station, where she assisted in the care of the Irwins' son, Walter. While on the mission station, missionaries Ruth Irwin and Mona White worked with Mia, teaching her how to read and write. One day Dr. Irwin asked Mia if she was interested in nursing. He invited her to the hospital and introduced her to one of the nurses. As time progressed, Mia began to sense a call to nursing. The Irwins paid Mia's school fee and she began the nurses training program. Mia continued to study English with Ruth Irwin while pursuing her nurses training. In 1975, through God's 4 strength and provision, Mia completed her training and followed her calling as a nurse, serving with Nazarene Health Ministries. This was also the year that she was baptized. "Several years ago we did a staff appreciation," said Dr. Scott Dooley, hospital administrator. "We gave a bronze medal for those serving 10 years, a silver for those serving 15 years, and gold for those serving 20 years or more. Of course, these weren't real gold, just a way to honor our staff and say thank you for their service. The day after the celebration, Cathy came to my office in tears. She said, 'I never expected a gold reward this side of heaven.' In the same way, her retirement party the end of 2014 was a real testimony to a life of faithful service. She shared about the impact of those early missionaries when she was young, asking her to join the Community Health Worker Program when she didn't even know how to read. But they believed in her and helped her believe in what God wanted to do in and through her." Mia has honored that initial investment with a lifetime of service with Nazarene Health Ministries. While she may be retiring from nursing, she assures local leaders that this is just a transition, as she plans on continuing to minister to her family and local church in the Banz Jiwaka Province. --Church of the Nazarene Asia-Pacific Region BGS appoints interim superintendent for Northern California General Superintendent David A. Busic announced the appointment of Gary W. Moore as interim superintendent of the Northern California District. Moore follows John Calhoun, who resigned to take a position at Point Loma Nazarene University. Moore begins his assignment February 1 and will serve until a new district superintendent is appointed and in place. A member of the Sacramento District Advisory Board, Moore previously pastored churches in Nebraska, Missouri, Kansas, Idaho, California, and Oregon. In addition, he served as a missionary in South Africa, Kenya, Democratic Republic of the Congo, and on the Eurasia Region as field strategy coordinator of Western Mediterranean and Northern Europe. He was also superintendent of the France District. Moore received a Bachelor of Arts from Pasadena City College and a Master of Divinity from Nazarene Theological Seminary. Gary and his wife, LaVonna, reside in Yuba City, California. Caribbean Nazarene College inaugurates 11th president Caribbean Nazarene College inaugurated Anthony Manswell as its 11th president in November during a service in the CNC Chapel. The college is the primary educational institution for the Church of the Nazarene in the English-speaking Caribbean. Manswell was elected by the CNC Board of Trustees May 24 with an overwhelming majority vote. He assumed the role June 1. The inauguration service confirmed the support and encouragement of the constituents and the international church. Manswell's immediate family was in attendance, including his wife, Barbara, and children, Kenrick, Kavanah, Jayedon, and Jerrick. Several brothers and their families were present and additional relatives watched online via live stream. In his inaugural speech, Anthony mentioned the tremendous impact that his father has had on his spiritual, character, emotional, and physical development. Unfortunately, he was not able to attend as he is currently in the USA. English Field Strategy Coordinator Alphonso Porter chaired the service and prayed for peace, power, and the presence of the Holy Spirit and for Manswell to fulfill all that God was leading him to do at CNC. Mesoamerica Regional Education Coordinator Ruben Fernandez and Church of the Nazarene Education Commissioner Dan Copp gave words of greeting, encouragement, and challenge. Former CNC President Scoffield Eversley and his wife, Margaret, were also there to pray, support, congratulate, and pass on the Presidential Medallion. 5 Manswell outlined four aspects of his vision for the college: educational personal convictions, progressive educational perspective, viable educational provider, and sustained educational prospective. He also highlighted the college's spiritual development. "We must not remove the ancient landmarks," Manswell said. "We are not a secular institution. We offer holistic education. And we do that in a Christian environment, unashamedly. Note our steeple up at the main building; it stands for everything Christian!" His vision for CNC to become Caribbean Nazarene University was met with immediate, thunderous applause. Manswell's speech challenged all those in attendance to support, contribute, and continue to pray that God would accomplish His purpose for CNC. "CNC must engage its students and graduates and faculty and staff in being lifelong learners," he said. "CNC's graduates must be world leaders and world changers. I have never known Nazarenes and Christians to settle for mediocrity in service, ministry, and educational pursuits. Our people must continue to have a place where quality education in various disciplines is taught with truth. These disciplines must be seen as having capacity to meet service demands within the church and society." --Caribbean Nazarene College Missionaries from Extreme Nazarene arrive in Ecuador for training The first members of the 40/40 church planting team for Córdoba, Argentina, arrived in Quito, Ecuador. The missionaries will help Extreme Nazarene in its effort to plant churches in South America's large metropolitan cities. One missionary from the U.S. and four missionaries from Argentina arrived January 8 in Quito, Ecuador, where they will be trained over the next several months. Rachel Gilmore, Romina Celeste Calderón, Juan Ricapito, Ana Garcia, and Damaris Obando make up half of the 40/40 missionary team being deployed to Córdoba, Argentina. The rest of the 40/40 missionaries will arrive in the next eight weeks. The five missionaries joined their cluster support family, Aric and Kimberly Bidwell and their three boys, who arrived in Ecuador in July to learn Spanish. During their time in Ecuador, the North Americans will learn Spanish at the Nazarene International Language Institute, and the Argentines will be taking classes at the Nazarene Theological Seminary-South American. After training in Ecuador and Colombia, the team will move to Córdoba on May 21 to begin planting a church in the second largest city in Argentina. This is the 83rd church plant with Extreme Nazarene Missions. For more information about the project or to recommend an applicant, visit extremenazarene.org or contact Cailyn Wheatley at [email protected]. --Church of the Nazarene South America Region Related: "Extreme Nazarene starts new Chile church, seeks volunteers" Southern Florida youth serve through service projects, food drive More than 150 high school and college students from across the Southern Florida District converged on Lehigh Acres the weekend of January 23 for a Youth Mission Encounter. Co-sponsored by the district Nazarene Missions International and Nazarene Youth International, the students worked at a farm, fed the hungry, and participated in a community outreach event. Pastor Eric Skelton of the Lehigh Acres Church of the Nazarene and the district Encounter coordinator arranged for students to perform a multitude of tasks at the nearby Healthy Harvest Community Farms. Youth harvested crops, planted new ones, prepared new planting areas, built a bamboo grow hut, made mulch, and installed new irrigation lines. Healthy Harvest CEO Joe Pearson said the Nazarene youth completed what his regular volunteers would 6 normally accomplish in six months. The food generated from the farm is donated to local food banks for distribution to the needy and hungry. Later in the afternoon, many of the students transitioned back to the church where the Harry Chapin Mobile Food Bank set up a food distribution unit. The students did the set-up work and provided assistance to 167 needy families who were given fresh vegetables, bread, rice, beans, and meat. "Our Encounter provides teens with an opportunity to serve others and to be a Christian witness no matter the circumstances," Skelton said. "In today's world, it is imperative that our youth be true mission-minded leaders for our church now and in the future." The families were invited to a community service later in the day under a large tent on the church property. Good360 Program donated new coffee makers, bed linens, beverage machines, and other merchandise for attendees. District Superintendent Brian Wilson was the speaker for the event. More than 300 were present for the evangelistic service, which included 120 new families from the community. "This Encounter was such a moving experience," said Christina Saint Louis, a high school senior from Indiantown Evangelical Church of the Nazarene. "We were able to see the power of prayer as we asked for and then experienced a great evangelistic movement. It was so cool to be involved and interact with the people from the community." --Church of the Nazarene Southern Florida District via NCN News submissions NTS sends newest 365M cohort Nazarene Theological Seminary held its annual sending service January 27 for students preparing to serve through the seminary's 365M Program. Roger Hahn, NTS dean of the Faculty, shared a message of challenge and encouragement and General Superintendent Eugénio R. Duarte prayed for the students and their families. 365M is a yearlong global mission experience that couples graduate-level intercultural studies with hands-on experience in cross-cultural settings around the world. In 365 days, through intensive module classes, online coursework, and on-the-ground training and mentoring, students earn a 24-credit graduate Diploma in CrossCultural Ministry, while embarking on an experience of a lifetime. 365M Program Director David Wesley opened the sending service. "The mission nature of God is woven into the DNA of NTS," he said. "This is evident in our curriculum, our community events, and even in our structure. Today's chapel is one of the ways that we explicitly focus our attention on the nature of God, who sends. 365M is a robust, contextual learning program in which NTS students learn within the context of global missions. Today, the NTS community comes together to pray for the 2015 cohort of 365M students that will be leaving in just a few days. We acknowledge those who are sent through 365M; we acknowledge those who have been sent through 365M in the past; and we acknowledge our seminary community as a sent community." This year's cohort of students is the largest in the program's history. Abigail and John Carr with sons Hosea and Moses; Larne, Northern Ireland Bailey Daniels; Belfast, Northern Ireland Kaitlyn Dexter; Wicklow, Republic of Ireland Sarah Dutra; Brisbane, Australia Weston Jordan; Brisbane, Australia April Kerbyson; Wicklow, Republic of Ireland Daniel Manning; Perth, Scotland Brianna Thompson; Ardrossan, Scotland Aisling and Grant Zweigle with sons Graiden and Abram; Manila, Philippines 7 To learn more about 365M, visit the NTS website at nts.edu/365M or contact Lynne Bollinger in the 365M Office at [email protected]. --Nazarene Theological Seminary In Memoriam The following is a weekly listing of Nazarene ministers and leaders who recently went home to be with the Lord. Notices were received January 26-30, 2015. Beverly (Mangum) Allen, 81, of Louisville, Kentucky, passed away January 25. She served more than 30 years as Kentucky District Nazarene Missions International secretary, in addition to several leadership roles in her local churches. Most recently a member of the Southern Hills Church of the Nazarene, she is survived by her husband, Dr. Robert Allen. The Allens' personal ministry included hosting hundreds of missionaries, pastors, evangelists, and college students in their home over the years. Rubye Blythe, 91, of Fanning Springs, Florida, passed away January 26. She was the widow of retired minister and evangelist Ellis Blythe Sr., who served in Florida and Ohio. Ellis Blythe Sr. passed away in 2004. Eunice (Kendall) Bryant, 96, of Anderson, Missouri, passed away January 27. She was a retired educator and missionary, serving in Texas, Massachusetts, Missouri, Oklahoma, Costa Rica, Guatemala, El Salvador, and Peru. She was preceded in death by her husband, Larry Bryant, in 2009. (story) Audie Mattingly, 94, of Rising Fawn, Georgia, passed away January 26. She was the widow of retired minister Ralph Mattingly, who served in Georgia, North Carolina, and Tennessee. Ralph Mattingly passed away in 2010. Johnny Price, 71, of Bamberg, South Carolina, passed away January 26. He was pastor of the Bamberg, South Carolina, Church of the Nazarene. He was preceded in death by his wife, M. Carolyn (Jackson) Price, in 2013. Priscilla (Nichols) Wheeler, 73, of Shinnston, West Virginia, passed away January 21. She was the wife of retired minister Bartlett Wheeler, who served in Rhode Island, New York, Ohio, Maryland, West Virginia, and Pennsylvania. For previous editions of In Memoriam, see the "Passings" section on ncnnews.com by clicking here. Note: Please join with us in prayer for the families who have lost loved ones. Click on names for full stories, funeral information, local online obituaries, and/or guest books (if available). To submit an entry of a minister or church leader, send to [email protected]. --Compiled by NCN News 8
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