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Articles

Community Soup in Mennonite-Anabaptist Churches in Latin America, an Opportunity in Venezuela in Crisis

December 23, 2020 by Cindy Angela

This article is translated to English by Andrés Castillo. Original article appears in Mosaic News En Español: Sopa Comunitaria en Iglesias Anabautistas-Menonitas en América Latina, Venezuela en la Crisis una Oportunidad por Javier Marquez


COVID-19 is perhaps the most specific way to describe our present situation. All of us have witnessed our lives reshaped in order to face the global epidemiological crisis. The world finds out about issues as quickly as they happen, and people, whether they like it or not, are intimately involved in the development of all of this.

In spite of this global panorama, anabaptists churches around the world continue finding  incentives to face the crisis in the Bible, remembering two fundamental values we understand from scripture and from our callings as the church: persisting in the community and helping one another.

This is a report about the cases of a few anabaptist churches in Latin America, with the purpose of finding out how and what our brothers and sisters are doing in this part of the continent, as well as accompanying the global community in prayer.

In Mexico, as we will see in each country, many churches have opted to continue meeting virtually. In the case of Iglesia Fraternidad Cristiana Vida Nueva (Christian New Life Brotherhood Church) in Mexico City, since the first Sunday of quarantine, members have been attempting to connect and share the service via Facebook and ZOOM. This change, according to pastor Marisol Arriaga, was due so that the congregation could continue to participate.

In every country where we ask, the same is reported: Mexico, Cuba, Colombia, Paraguay, Venezuela, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Puerto Rico, Honduras, and Guatemala. In Asunción, Paraguay, Karina Bogarín, youth of Maranata de los Hermanos Menonitas (Maranatha of the Mennonite Brothers), emphasizes how the elders of the church have had to migrate to contemporary technology and that they are, in a great sense, those who are bringing the most to prayer and communication among members.

Within the crisis, churches have found opportunities to explore and discover different methods to share. In Colombia, for example, Iglesia Menonita de Teusaquillo (Teusaquillo Mennonite Church) in Bogota have celebrated the Last Supper in a virtual service where everyone, from their homes, prepared the utensils necessary to share this symbol of unity in the body of Christ and the memory of what Jesus did on the cross.

One interesting story is of a young man, Santiago Manrique, conscientious objector and part of the community of Iglesia Menonita Ciudad Berna (Berna City Mennonite Church) in Bogota, who, during the time when regional measures began to be taken, found himself in Panama and, due to the closing of airports in his homeland, has had to stay there. Contact with his church family through WhatsApp and ZOOM has been fundamental for him to be able to live so far from home during this time. 

In Cuba, where the situation is particularly different to that of other Latin American countries due to the difficulties connecting to the internet, it has been much more of a luxury to bring meetings online. However, there has been a WhatsApp network in use where members are informing us of the situations families are going through, at least in Havana, according to what one Cuban anabaptist church youth leader, Moises Santana, tells us.

The virtual congregation is not only a living example of community spirit in our sister churches of Latin America. It is also a case of social responsibility, of understanding that the church finds itself in a social knot—it can be just as much of an actor in the betterment of society as in the harming of it, according to the correctness of its decisions.

Virtual meetings don’t have the sole objective of continuing ecclesiastic Sunday activities. They have been, above all, a method of mutual care and safety. COVID-19 is causing harm that goes beyond social health. Global attention to the crisis, with measures of preventative isolation and stagnation, are generating grave economic and psychological problems.

Pastors are insisting on the difficult task of maintaining social isolation. Although this can produce loneliness and stress in many church members, the value that they place on the virtual continuation and the exploration of methods that allow for more participation and contact among the congregation is something to highlight.

Churches in every country are trying to face the economic problem that quarantining generates with coordinated assistance to the people who need it most in their congregations. In Colombia, Iglesia Menonita de Teusaquillo is trying to give out groceries to families in need, among these Venezuelan immigrants. In Mexico, through Ministerio Sendas de Justicia (Paths of Justice Ministry), which came about two years ago when the caravan of immigrants traveled from Central America, groceries are being donated to those in need.

Another country with a peculiar situation due to its politics is Venezuela, where there are also anabaptist missions and churches. In Isla Margarita, pastors Euclides and Darnelis help the Bolivar Bay community by baking bread and distributing bags of coffee, as well as serving soup to the community. In Caracas, the congregation of pastor Erwin Mirábal is cooking beans and arepas to share with the people living in the streets.

In different Central American countries, the Caribbean, the Andean region, and the southern cone, it has been possible to observe the work of churches trying to help the neediest with what they can. They are collecting donations to give to the neediest; it is evident that the churches that previously had active social roles have found it easier to contact food banks or assistance entities. Pastor David Morales in Guatemala has explained how his community has been able to deliver key hygienic supplements such as disinfectant and masks thanks to a pharmacy owned by a member of the congregation.

For the moment, there are very few cases of contagion being reported from members of the Latin American congregations. However, we are conscious of the lamentable case of a family member of pastor José Manuel Guamán, who died due to the virus in the city of Guayaquil, Ecuador. This news has created a chain of prayer in different countries in the region.

Filed Under: Articles, Mosaic News En Español Tagged With: Mosaic News en Español

Lighting Candles

December 23, 2020 by Cindy Angela

As we walk through this time of Advent, I am particularly drawn to the idea of Advent as a journey of preparation. The turmoil of this year, with the coinciding stress and desire for the usual ways we celebrate, can distract from the WHO and WHY we celebrate. 

Dinnertime family devotions include burning the daily Advent candle and reading part of the Christmas Story. Photo by Brooke Martin.

As others have shared, this year I want to embrace the quieter season. In many ways that has been fulfilled as my family’s schedule does not hold the normal amount of holiday activities that both celebrate and distract from Jesus’ birthday. Yet in our worn state, disrupted traditions and routines will lead us to numbly drift through Advent without intentionally preparing and looking to Jesus.

This Advent, our family dinner is accompanied with Mosaic’s 25 Days of Advent Family Devotional. We light a candle marking the days until Christmas and read the verse cards which build each day, pointing to and celebrating Jesus’ birth narrative. It is simple. Yet a daily devotional practice instilling the narrative in my children’s hearts, also draws my daily focus back to the purpose and joy of Advent.

The makeshift advent wreath used on Sunday mornings this year. Photo by Brooke Martin.

On Sunday mornings, as my family gathers in our living room for virtual worship, we pull five assorted candles from a cupboard and set them in front of our screen on top of a cloth napkin to build our Advent wreath. It is makeshift, but there is a holiness in bringing what we have before God. I am acutely aware of the individual Advent candle’s call to center my soul and mind, in celebration of Christ’s incarnation. 

During the virtual service an invited household reads the Advent piece for the morning and we join them by lighting the candles in our home. I am struck this year by the call of each week’s candle: Hope. Peace. Joy. Love. Christ. 

As I miss family gatherings, I am appreciating anew Christmas cards and notes. One from my aunt and uncle contained this poem by Holley Gerth. It, too,  helped me pause and recenter:

Five simple candles tell the story of Christ’s birth
and the reasons God sent His only Son to the earth…

The candle of Hope reminds us of the prophets’ words
and the promises they shared with all those who heard.

The candle of Peace reminds us to prepare our hearts,
because it is within us that true worship starts.

The candle of Joy reminds us how the angels came
to announce God’s good news and glorify His name.

The candle of Love is our response to God’s Son
as we so humbly thank Him for all He has done. 

The final candle stands tall above all the rest, 
because it is for the One who is brightest and best…
the candle of Christ reminds us of the reason
we rejoice and celebrate in the Christmas season!

BY Holley Gerth

This Advent and Christmas season, may you find Christ’s Hope, Christ’s Peace, Christ’s Joy, Christ’s Love, and Christ. Amen

Filed Under: Articles, Blog Tagged With: Brooke Martin

A Mosaic Christmas Playlist

December 23, 2020 by Cindy Angela

Mosaic staff collaborated on creating a Spotify Christmas playlist. The end result was an interesting and diverse mix of holiday music in different languages and genres.

This playlist is made of the many facets of Christmas: 

It’s filled with happy memories and sad memories.
It’s filled with nostalgia and new discoveries.
It’s celebrated in multiple languages.
It exudes the warmth of culture and family traditions.
It reminds some of home, while others are reminded of a journey. 

Here is a sample of some of the songs, a mosaic of sorts, contributed by staff and the memories that accompany them. 

“Always” by Kirk Franklin 

“I made a Christmas production in my home church in Indonesia in 2015 and we used this as a theme song. It was just before we moved to the US. So this song reminds me of “home” and my church family. I also like Kirk Franklin’s style as a music composer and worship leader.” – Hendy Matahelemual, Associate Minister for Community Engagement

“Christmas at Boot’s Place” (Album) by Boots Randolph

“Boots Randolph was an artist that my dad listened to when I was a child, so I passed it on to my children.” – Randy Heacock, Leadership Minister

“Seorang Anak T’lah Lahir” by Robert & Lea Sutanto

“I love this song because it is one of the very few original Indonesian songs for Christmas. The lyrics of the song are based on Isaiah 9:6, so it’s very easy to learn, yet it holds a meaningful message. One of my favorite memories of this song is singing it as a duet with my husband, Andy, during Philadelphia Praise Center’s Christmas service a couple years ago.” – Cindy Angela, Digital Communication Associate

“He Shall Reign Forevermore” by Chris Tomlin

“I was introduced to this song just last year on Christmas Eve. Our church choir (West Swamp in Quakertown, PA) sang the song and it was amazing. The packed church erupted with applause. I leaned over to my husband, the pastor, who was immediately following the choir’s song with his Christmas Eve meditation, and whispered, ‘Now that’s a tough act to follow!’” – Sue Conrad Howes, Editor

“Friendly Beasts” by The Kingston Trio

“Friendly Beasts is a song I remember from my childhood, but is rarely heard these days, so I wanted to include it as a memory of my childhood.” – Conrad Martin, Director of Finance

“Vamos Pastores Vamos, Llegó la Navidad, Navidad en el Perú” by Coral Infantil Colegio Manuel Pardo Chiclayo

“These songs take me back to my childhood when all of my dad’s family would gather at my aunt’s house for Christmas. The Peruvian tradition is to stay up till midnight on Christmas Eve and then everyone opens all their gifts. All the cousins would play with their new toys and listen to these villancicos. The party would continue until 2 or 3am,  with everyone dancing to cumbia and salsa music. It was just a great time together as a family and these songs remind me of my family’s culture.” – Danilo Sanchez, Youth Formation Pastor

“Refugee King” by Liz Vice and Hannah Glavor

“Refugee King was entirely new to me this holiday season.  Meaningful, lovely and a bit conscience-stirring. The meaning and sound from Liz Vice are moving.” – Steve Kriss, Executive Minister

“Our Hope Endures” by Natalie Grant

“Our Hope Endures speaks to me every year because it’s an Advent song as much as a Christmas song. Its words talk about the difficulty that many of us face—pain, loss, grief—that sometimes makes the Christmas season bittersweet. It’s a reminder that Emmanuel, God with us, knows our human condition, and stands with us in our hope and longing for a day when God will wipe away the tears from every eye. It seems like a good fit for Christmas 2020!” – Emily Ralph Servant, Leadership Minister for Communication

Click here to listen now. Merry Christmas from the Mosaic Staff!

Filed Under: Articles

How a Problem’s Solution Became a Bike Shop

December 22, 2020 by Cindy Angela

It was a simple problem without a simple solution. How do we train students to work when businesses do not hire them? 

Scott Roth, then director of the Upper Perk Community Life Center (UPCLC), mentored seniors from Upper Perkiomen High School in Pennsburg, PA. Roth would teach them how to swing a hammer, update a website, make phone calls, and order supplies from a vendor. Roth learned these “simple skills” while working in his family’s business early on. But most students wouldn’t have these experiences on their own. 

Bike & Sol Director, Scott Roth (left), works with 2 youth in the bike shop. Photo provided by Scott Roth.

Meanwhile, a $22 million YMCA was opening in the Upper Perkiomen school district. Roth began working as a consultant for the YMCA helping shape their youth programs while still working with UPCLC. Roth began to promote the idea of an “earn-A-bike program”: teach kids to work and they can earn a bike, fixed with their own hands. Roth just needed a bike mechanic, so he prayed and kept asking. 

An acquaintance of Roth’s, Dick Fox, felt called to be that mechanic and the program began. After a couple months in the garage of the UPCLC, with 15 kids in the program and more bicycles coming in for repairs, the demand for parts was exceeding the donated bicycles in need of repair. 

JBI, the largest bicycle parts distributor in the US, partnered with the program. However, the program needed to be in a traditional brick and mortar shop. Soon a banner was hung on the garage with the name, “Bike & Sol.” 

Director Scott Roth on the sales floor of Bike & Sol. Photo provided by Scott Roth.

Eventually, UPCLC programs diminished as YMCA programming increased. Bike & Sol became a student work program through the YMCA.  Weekly, ten students came to the shop to volunteer. When UPCLC closed, the entire building was now Bike & Sol. 

Five years later, Bike & Sol merged programs under the umbrella of ViaShalom, a ministry dedicated to creating missional experiments. Bike & Sol has serviced over 1500 bikes and touched many more lives. 

With the COVID pandemic, bicycling has become more popular than ever. This has forced Bike & Sol to become more than a student work program. Now it is a bicycle shop that happens to have a student program. More than ten adults regularly volunteer at the shop. Due to COVID, school programs are temporarily halted, however, there are still youth working to complete their court-required community service hours. 

Bike & Sol is now an intergenerational space for young and old to meet and share their love of life. Frequently tales are told of faith and encouragement. 

Youth volunteer and learn skills at Bike & Sol, earning a bike of their own as pay. Photo provided by Scott Roth.

Scott Roth often says, “Most people have learned to ride a bike. Most people smile as they ride and cry when they fall. The good news is that we get to be Jesus to most people since most people have a bike.” Jesus used fish and healing to bless others. Bike & Sol blesses and heals through bicycles. Helping people ride bicycles is one of the best things we can do for mental health and relationship building. 

Today Bike & Sol is a community non-profit bicycle shop that covers all biking needs, from a trash-picked bicycle to a high-end race bike. The volunteers, young and old, are continuing to improve their skills to keep people riding in all kinds of bikes.

The vision for 2021 is simple: Get the Kingdom of God out riding with others. Jesus interacted and loved people in all circumstances. Bike & Sol seeks to love all who come with their bikes. Bikes know no social structures, skin colors, or economic status. They just want a human to pedal them. 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Bike and Sol, Conference Related Ministries, Scott Roth

How Do You Wait?

December 17, 2020 by Cindy Angela

How do you wait when you are expecting something to happen and the wait seems endless?

Some of us withdraw and get depressed thinking about what we cannot do. Some of us disconnect and focus on doing things that give us pleasure like eating, watching sports or a movie, playing video games, shopping, or reading a book.  Some of us isolate and focus on spiritual practices like praying, journaling, or writing poetry. Some of us get impatient and do something active like exercising, composing music, creating a work of art, or organizing our closets. 

During the COVID pandemic, we are all growing weary of waiting, wearing masks, washing hands, socially distancing, and avoiding in-person meetings and events. 

How do you wait?

As we wait for an accessible and effective vaccine to slow down the spread of this costly and deadly virus, we are also celebrating Advent, a season of waiting. Advent is more than waiting to celebrate the birth of Jesus more than 2000 years ago. It is a reminder of the time when Jesus will come again to bring to fulfillment his eternal kingdom. 

God’s people throughout the ages have been waiting for God to free them from oppressive government treatment and policies, personal or communal sin, and disease or hardship in hopes of a better future. The scriptures repeatedly name God’s vision and accompanying promises to restore humanity and all of creation. Scriptures also name the lament, confession, longing, and hopes of God’s people.

Psalms 130 is a poem of waiting for divine liberation. How does the poet wait? From the depths of his being, he cries out to the Lord to listen and hear his voice. He cries out his prayer requests, confession of sins, and hopes from God’s word. Then he becomes silent, to wait for the Lord. His waiting reminds him of God’s steadfast love, power to forgive his sins and the sins of the nation, and promise to liberate.

Many of the gospel texts suggest that this time of waiting is not to be one of withdrawing, disconnecting, isolating, or filling our time with activities. While we remember the past events of Jesus’ birth, life, death and resurrection and anticipate Jesus’ second coming, the gospel writers remind us of Jesus’ teaching to be actively engaged in God’s mission now. Advent is now.

How do you wait? What are ways to wait with hope while staying engaged in God’s mission? During this season when there is increased need, I am inspired to be generous by many individuals, congregations, and organizations in our conference and beyond who are meeting the basic needs of many people. 

Here are a few ideas:

  • Donating money or time to package food items, Christmas gifts, or Mennonite Central Committee kits to ease the burden of those suffering so many losses. 
  • Memorizing a scripture (like Psalm 130) can ease despair and offer hope. 
  • Planning meaningful, family activities that deepen relationships. 
  • Scheduling virtual times with family and friends to keep us connected. 
  • Viewing inspirational concerts, events, and programs online to remind us of God’s creativity, joy, and delight. 
  • Creating a work of art for a family member, friend, or donation to an organization nudges us to serve with joy. (See the photo of my quilt project for my grandson.) 
Mary Nitzsche’s quilt project, a gift for her grandson. Photo provided by Mary Nitzsche.

During this advent season I challenge all of us to wait with hope. May we discover ways to stay engaged in God’s mission to liberate all of creation, for God’s kingdom to be on earth as it already is in heaven. How are you waiting?

Filed Under: Articles, Blog Tagged With: Mary Nitzsche

Advent in the Worst and Best of Times

December 17, 2020 by Cindy Angela

It was the best of times. It was the worst of times.”

Charles Dickens

And it was Advent.  And it was the first snow-bringing Nor’easter of the pandemic.  Well, not in Florida or California, where it was barely cool enough for a hoodie, but in the northeast.  Nonetheless, it was still Advent in a pandemic.

We are well into the predicted second wave of heightened COVID-19 infections and deaths. We are responding in varied ways with courage, distress, and resignation.  

Many of us are well acquainted with our living rooms and Zoom.  Others of us continue to don protective gear for essential work in hospitals, stores, schools, and offices.  Some of us are anxiously awaiting the vaccination due to our work in healthcare.

Some of us have been sick. Or we’ve been quarantined.  We’ve masked up mostly.  Our continuing care facilities are on heightened alert to keep the virus at bay as much as possible from vulnerable populations.  Some of our churches haven’t met together face-to-face for months. There are risks all around us.  

We do what we can to mitigate and to serve the Lord with our whole hearts and with a clear conscience.  We trust in the One who walks with us through even this time of shadows in what is often a season of goodness and light. 

Still, there are needs all around us.  Our churches and conference-related ministries continue to meet needs. However, we are seeing needs increase while resources remain stressed.  As a result, the conference board executive team discerned these needs and our conference’s budget. Typically, there is a year-end appeal for the conference budget communicated at this time. However, the executive board decided that this atypical year needed an atypical appeal. 

The conference board executive team discerned to focus our annual year-end appeal toward the Shalom Fund.  We’re setting a goal to raise at least an additional $40,000 in the next few months to meet tangible needs in our communities and ministries toward an overall goal of $200,000 for the Shalom Fund. I am so grateful for all who have met needs in mutuality with time and resources.

If you have not donated to the Shalom Fund, we invite you to give during this time of generosity and goodwill. If you have already given, we thank you, and invite you to give again. To donate, click here.

The Shalom Fund is actively distributing your gifts at a somewhat accelerated pace.  Together, we’ve touched thousands of lives through congregations reaching their neighborhoods in Philadelphia, North Jersey, Souderton, PA, Allentown, PA, Sarasota, FL and San Gabriel, CA.   Through our conference-related ministries, our Shalom Fund has also reached globally, to India and Honduras.  

It’s easy to see this as the worst of times.  Most of us haven’t lived through a pandemic nor were prepared to do so.  

It has also been the best of times. Together, we have shared our resources and met real needs together.  Together we trusted in God who takes what we give in faith, hope, and love and multiplies it beyond our expectations. 

This holy season will be like no other in our lifetimes.  We are Mosaic Conference, our name given to us by God in the midst of pandemic and sociopolitical unrest.  And I believe that history will tell us: it was the worst of times, but it was also the best of times to bear witness as a community of Christ’s peace toward justice, healing and hope.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Steve Kriss

Conference Related Ministries (CRM) Profile: Frederick Living

December 15, 2020 by Cindy Angela

Frederick Living was founded in 1896 by Rev. N.B. Grubb in Frederick, PA, located in western Montgomery County. It is the oldest Mennonite retirement community in North America.   Initially called “The Mennonite Home for the Aged and Infirmed,” the “home” was a ministry of Eastern District Conference of the Mennonite Church General Conference, who provided oversight and responsibility.  Early administrators were members of the clergy. Over time, professional administrators took the reins.  

From its earliest days, this “home” was led by Mennonite leaders and maintained Mennonite values. It was welcoming of residents of non-Mennonite faith traditions as well.  There have been many changes and expansions over the years. Next year Frederick Living, as it is now known, will be celebrating its 125th anniversary of ministry.  

Still rooted in its Mennonite heritage, their focus is on living well in every aspect of our lives…body, mind and spirit.  Their mission is, “In the spirit of Christian love, Frederick Living cares for and enriches the lives of older adults, while valuing the staff, volunteers and community that serve them.”  

Frederick Living resident, Hannah Carlson, 106 years old, moved to a Frederick Living cottage in 1986. Photo credit courtesy of Frederick Living.

The current Chief Executive Officer, John Hendrickson, who has served at Frederick Living since 2005, will be retiring in February 2021.  The board of directors has initiated a search committee assisted by Mennonite Health Services to ensure the continuity of leadership.  Warren Tyson, former Conference Minister for Eastern District Conference, is the chair of the Frederick Living board of directors.   

A continuing care retirement community, Frederick Living offers a full spectrum of services.  They have maintenance-free villas, cottages, and apartment living for those who want to live active, independent lives while taking advantage of all of the community’s amenities.  The Magnolia House personal care center serves those who need assistance with activities of daily living.  Magnolia House also provides temporary respite care.   

For those who need round-the-clock licensed nursing care, Cedarwood Health Center provides both short-term rehabilitation therapy and long-term care.  Cedarwood has consistently maintained a 5-star rating from Medicare.  

Finally, the Aspen Village memory support center serves those struggling with Alzheimer’s disease or other diseases that impair memory.  Frederick Living has the  Alzheimer’s Foundation of America Accreditation for Excellence in Care and is a Dementia Care Program of Distinction.

Laurie Maher, RN serves in Frederick Living’s Cedarwood isolation unit. Photo credit courtesy of Frederick Living.

The global pandemic has made 2020 a very challenging year.  At the beginning of the pandemic, through many protective measures, continuous vigilance, and God’s help, no residents and very few staff members tested positive with the virus for many months.  They remain committed to protecting the residents, staff, vendors, and guests.  

Frederick Living has been adhering to the recommended control measures and guidelines of the Department of Health, the Center for Disease Control, and Centers for Medicaid & Medicare Services. With the recent uptick of COVID-19 positivity rates in Montgomery county, they immediately updated their control measures and are continually addressing protocols as any new information becomes available.  

Please visit their website, www.frederickliving.org, to get the most up-to-date and accurate information on positive COVID-19 cases and current policies and practices.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Conference Related Ministries, Frederick Living

Those who sow will reap

December 10, 2020 by Cindy Angela

“Whoever sows will reap,” says Pastor Buddy Hannanto, when he talks about the joys and sorrows of serving God. Hannanto especially knows this from the way God miraculously inspired his personal life, his family, and his ministry to grow.

Pastor Buddy Hannanto and his wife, Susy, of International Worship Church. Photo provided by Buddy Hannanto

Buddy Hannanto was born and raised in the city of Jakarta in Indonesia. He began working in  ministry and was active in youth ministry since high school. Through Indonesian Charismatic Pentecostal Church (GPKDI), he ministered in schools. During college, Pastor Buddy began his pulpit ministry at the GPKDI church branches spread throughout the cities of Jakarta and Tangerang.

In 1992, Hannanto’s parents received visas to the US through the green card lottery in Indonesia, allowing them to live in the United States. Hannanto and his parents moved to California that year.

Upon arrival in California, Pastor Buddy returned to ministry. He met Virgo Handojo and together, they served at JKI Anugerah Church in Sierra Madre, CA. Because of his ministerial experiences in Indonesia, Pastor Buddy was often assigned to fill the pulpit in other churches.

In 1995, Pastor Buddy was asked to start a fellowship in Alhambra, CA with Haryono Margono. This fellowship later developed into Indonesian Mennonite Church. Eventually, the name was changed to Indonesian Worship Church. In 1996, Haryono Margono resigned as pastor and Pastor Buddy was appointed the church’s pastor. 

Under Pastor Buddy’s leadership, Indonesian Worship Church grew from a church of only Indonesians to a church that serves non-Indonesians as well. As a result, in 2016 the church changed its name to International Worship Church.  In 2019, Buddy was ordained by Franconia Mennonite Conference and is now a credentialed pastor in Mosaic Mennonite Conference.

“Service is a gift and opportunity which builds a crown in heaven,” says Pastor Buddy. Since 2004, he has been working full-time for the church. As pastor, he leads services on Sundays and cell-groups and Bible studies on weekdays. Throughout the week he offers support and help to the congregation, such as accompanying them to the immigration office or doctor. 

“The call of God’s servant to the ethnic church has demands to serve the congregation outside of just preaching in the pulpit,” says Pastor Buddy. “The congregation considers us family.” Frequently, Pastor Buddy is called upon for assistance from other church pastors and congregations. 

The Hannanto Family: Pastor Buddy (sitting), (left to right) Rachel, Jason, and Susy. Photo provided by Buddy Hannanto.

“If we are truly serving, the people we serve will love us,” reflects Pastor Buddy.  “Service is carried out with a sincere heart and with joy. The results can be seen through the fruits that can be enjoyed today, both through the growth and the sincerity of the congregation one serves.”

“We must be like Christ and become Christians who have spiritual fruits and not only spiritual gifts,” Pastor Buddy shares.  “A gift without spiritual fruit is temporary, but if we pursue the fruit of the spirit, the results will remain.”

Now Pastor Buddy is studying to get a Doctor of Ministry degree, which has been his dream since he arrived in the US. “God gave me the opportunity to go to school,” he says. “I don’t want to back down. I want to go ahead and take the opportunity.”

Pastor Buddy lives in Alhambra, California with his wife, Susy, and their two children, Jason and Rachel. When he has time with his busy schedule, Pastor Buddy enjoys running to keep in shape.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Buddy Hananto, Hendy Matahelemual

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