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Articles

Solidarity in Voting and Beyond

December 3, 2020 by Cindy Angela

Photo by Mary Sanchez

As our country prepared to vote this year, the Mosaic Intercultural Team encouraged many people in our conference to vote as an act of solidarity: solidarity with black and brown people who are fighting for their lives, solidarity with the incarcerated and undocumented who can’t vote, and solidarity with those who are poor and vulnerable. In this way, we bear witness to the reality that God is just, compassionate, loving, and cares for the vulnerable. (To read more, click here.)

This year more than ever, it felt like voting as solidarity was important. In recent years, white supremacy has been allowed to thrive and it has damaged the lives of many people I care about; it feels like every day a new group of people has been attacked or oppressed. As I went to the polls on November 4, I used my vote to bear witness to the God of justice and truth, the God of the defenseless, the God whose love has no borders, the God of freedom and restoration, and the God of who loves all humanity. 

As followers of Jesus, the work remains the same—to fight white supremacy, protect the oppressed and marginalized, and preach the gospel of Jesus. The Mosaic Intercultural Team plans to press forward with that work.

The days after the election I saw many memes and tweets with comments about the results. There was one that caught my attention. The original post said, “You know what I’m going to do the day after Election Day if my candidate loses? Go to work. Be happy. Live my life. Love others. If he wins? Same.” 

Someone in the Twitter-verse decided to correct it. It now read, “Remember that politics are personal to the marginalized and oppressed. Be grateful for the privilege that allows you to be relatively unaffected by policy decisions and show compassion and continued allyship to those who are in pain because of an outcome which may change their life.”

To me, this corrected statement captured the idea of voting as solidarity. To some people, whether their candidate wins or loses, it doesn’t change their day to day life. But for others, who is president directly impacts their well-being, safety, and rights. 

When the election results were announced, some of the country breathed a collective sigh of relief. For my black and brown friends, Muslim friends, LGBTQ friends, and immigrant friends, it felt like the nightmare was finally over. 

With the president-elect and vice-president-elect, it feels to some people like there is hope for things to change. Yet even with the new administration, we know that white supremacy still has a strong hold on this country. Many thought the country reached post-racial status when Obama was elected. Trump’s presidency proved that to be wrong. But it would be equally wrong to think that with Biden and Harris in the White House, white supremacy is defeated in this country. 

As followers of Jesus, the work remains the same—to fight white supremacy, protect the oppressed and marginalized, and preach the gospel of Jesus. The Mosaic Intercultural Team plans to press forward with that work. 

Post-election, solidarity might look like visiting those in prison or advocating for prison reform, supporting a sanctuary church or visiting the border, serving at a homeless shelter or soup kitchen, checking on your black friend or donating to black community organizer groups, or just educating yourself about white supremacy and the ways it impacts society (click here for resources). 

As a conference, when we focus on our priorities of being formational, missional, and intercultural, we will bear witness to a God who is just, compassionate, and cares for the poor and the vulnerable.

Filed Under: Articles, Blog Tagged With: Danilo Sanchez

Conference Related Ministries (CRM) Profile: Material Resource Center (MRC)

December 1, 2020 by Conference Office

The Material Resource Center (MRC) of Harleysville (PA) works alongside Mennonite Central Committee (MCC) to share God’s love and message of peace with people suffering from poverty, oppression, natural disasters, and war. This Material Resource Center is a Conference Related Ministry (CRM) of Mosaic Conference. 

MRC Volunteers from Dock Mennonite Academy lend a hand at January 2020 Great Winter Warm-up comforter making event. (Photo by Ruth Ann Kulp)

Founded in 2003, the MRC moved to Souderton, PA in 2010. The center is located just off Schoolhouse Road, between Harleysville and Souderton. A three-day MCC meat canning event takes place here in the spring each year. 

Darning Egg Gifts is also located in the MRC building. Items such as hand-loomed rugs, comforters, aprons, items for babies, pillows, and home decorating items are handmade or repurposed. All items, donated by the creative artisans, are perfect gifts for many occasions. Sales from Darning Egg Gifts support the work of MRC.

Volunteers of all ages, and many faith backgrounds, contribute to the goal of supporting MCC’s work in the following ways:

  • checking and packing kits 
  • cutting and sewing patches for comforters 
  • cutting and sewing kit bags
  • quilting by hand and machine
  • knotting comforters
  • cutting and packing discarded T-shirts for sale as rags
  • sorting and baling excess items from Care and Share Thrift Shoppes 
  • baling cardboard for recycling
  • weaving rugs from strips cut from jeans and corduroy pants 
  • making unique gift items for Darning Egg Gifts
  • assisting with office work

Because of COVID-19, the need for hygiene supplies and other materials that MRC sends worldwide have been in high demand. MRC volunteers have adapted to new ways of working at the center, with temperature checks, mask wearing, and social distancing. 

Cardboard baling during Warehouse Work Weekend at MRC. (Photo by Sharon Swartzentruber)

Donations of items for school kits, relief kits, and hygiene kits are appreciated (see our website for lists of kit contents) as well as fabrics for making drawstring bags and comforters. Cardboard and T-shirts can also be dropped off for recycling. Cardboard is baled in the warehouse and sold to a paper company. T-shirts that are 100% cotton are cut into pieces and sold as rags.

Monetary donations are also greatly appreciated and can be sent by check or given securely on the website.

Visit us at:
MCC Material Resource Center, 737 Hagey Center Dr., Unit C, Souderton, PA 18964, phone 267-203-8074; mcc-harleysville.org; facebook.com/mccmrc

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: CRM, Material Resource Center, MCC Material Resource Center

A New Normal, With Thanks

November 25, 2020 by Cindy Angela

“Give thanks in all circumstances; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you.” (I Thes. 5:18, ESV)

During this 2020 Thanksgiving week, the Apostle Paul challenges us to, “Give thanks in all circumstances!” I confess that I have not always had a very thankful spirit or attitude this year. In fact, with the pandemic, heightened political tensions, and disagreements within the church as to how we can gather safely, my focus has often been far from thanksgiving. Instead, it has been side-tracked to focus on self-preservation, complaining, and trying desperately to hold on to what I once knew as normal.  Balancing church and faith, and life in general, have felt far from normal this year.

In past years, my ability to give thanks in all circumstances seemed to be easier than it is now. Indeed, my Thanksgiving Day celebration was simple. It was a once-a-year acknowledgment of God’s blessings, blessings that I fully expected to receive from God for me and my family for our faithfulness. 

The day of celebration included family as well as special foods, like oyster filling and pumpkin pie, and always started with a time for everyone around the table to share what they were thankful for. It was beautiful, it was simple, and it was predictable. Playing out the script of the day gave me the feeling that I was blessed. And it felt normal. 

But Thanksgiving is not about me feeling blessed. It is about being thankful to God, in all circumstances. In reflection, the normalcy of my Thanksgiving has always been changing. 

My parents and my sister who were always integral parts of the table celebration have gone home to be with the Lord. My siblings now have their own times of celebration with their families. My children have grown up and are not always able to be present at our gathering. Even those who once contributed the oyster filling and the pumpkin pies are no longer able to be with us. The table and the people around it has always been changing, and that is ok. I have realized that my perfect, scripted Thanksgiving has actually never been normal.

Although it has taken me many years to see this clearly, this realization is even more of a reason to give thanks. I now see that the portrait of the perfect Thanksgiving Day that I have painted in my mind is really a work in progress; it is never finished. 

I also see now that God has always been present and working in my life (and in the world around me) in spite of circumstances and changes, and that is something to really be thankful for. Although family and traditions help make Thanksgiving enjoyable, the importance of understanding that we are nothing and have nothing without God is what is central. Whatever the circumstances, God is with us and should be the center of our thanks.

Due to COVID-19, my family will not be together for Thanksgiving this year.  I know that this is true for many people. We call it a “new normal,” but perhaps it is just normal, like each one of the years before this one. What is the same is that we are all called to give thanks to God. 

Perhaps with this attitude of thankfulness, we will also be able to see and appreciate that thanksgiving is not just a yearly occurrence, but an everyday experience. 

Photo provided by Mike Clemmer

Filed Under: Articles, Blog Tagged With: Mike Clemmer

25 Days of Advent Family Devotional

November 24, 2020 by Cindy Angela

This family faith formation activity divides the Christmas Narrative leading up to Jesus’ birth into 25 days. One card for every day in December leading up to Christmas, Jesus’ birthday! As Christmas day gets closer, the story of Jesus’ birth will also grow.

Available in 6 languages! Click on your language to download:

  • English
  • Cantonese
  • Spanish
  • Bahasa Indonesia
  • Creole
  • English with Karen Translation (Special thanks to Habecker Mennonite Church)

Instructions:

  • Cut out the verse cards and put them in an envelope. Keep them where your family will read them every day such as on the table to read before a meal. Consider lighting a candle or singing the same Christmas song before reading every day, and pray together after reading.
  • Begin on December 1st, read one new card each day. Be sure to reread the earlier date as well ending with the new card for that day. Doing so will grow the story over the weeks in anticipation of Christmas day. As the month goes on the verses become more and more familiar and family members may be able to recite the story from memory.
  • Use the cards year after year

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Youth Ministry

Psychiatrist Vernon Kratz, MD, Retires After 47 Years of Service

November 19, 2020 by Cindy Angela

On July 31, 2020, senior psychiatrist Vernon Kratz, MD, 84, retired after 47 years of service at Penn Foundation, a Conference Related Ministry (CRM) of Mosaic Conference. Dr. Kratz is the only person in the organization’s 65-year history to hold the roles of Medical Director, CEO, and Board Member. He is a member of Ambler (PA) Mennonite Church.

Dr. Kratz is a man of strong faith, incredible integrity, great kindness, and immense optimism. One of his most special gifts is his ability to relate to others. Penn Foundation will always be in awe of the amazing man, doctor, and friend he is. He modeled for all of us how to serve with acceptance, compassion, integrity, and respect.

“I believe that part of the care for a patient is listening and taking time and trying to put the story together and just being there. Remember, sometimes you are the medicine a person needs.” ~ Dr. Vernon Kratz

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Penn Foundation

Be Ye Kind One to Another

November 19, 2020 by Cindy Angela

Margaret Zook (second from the right), her siblings, and her mother. Photo provided by Margaret Zook.

From the front seat of the car, my mother would turn to face us.  The commotion from the children in the back seat was too loud for too long. Mother would smile and say, “Be Ye Kind One to Another.”  

From the backseat of our 50’s Chevy, my siblings and I would mutter loud enough for the grown-ups in the front seat to hear, “I’d be kind if (s)he is kind first!” The squabbling from the back seat fell several degrees softer, if only for a few miles. 

What did, “Be kind,” mean to us then? We knew that being kind often entailed sacrifice, putting others’ needs first, and recognizing that we’re all on this road trip together.          

The use of scripture to direct our lives was used frequently in our home. As children, we knew scripture meant what it said. These were timeless biblical teachings that directed our lives then.  And can be so today.   

What does “Be kind” mean today?     

Waiting in line at a roadside truck stop for that first cup of morning coffee seemed unbearable. My lack-of-caffeine headache had long ago set in and we still had miles to go.  Miraculously, a kind person turned, eyes smiling. Sensing my pain, she gestured, “Hey, you can go ahead of me.” With this simple act of kindness, the line at Starbucks, the road ahead, and perhaps life in general, became more bearable.   

“Be kind whenever possible. It is always possible.” -Dalai Lama

Maybe the future of humankind isn’t exclusively in the hands of politicians or leaders.  Maybe the future is, most of all, in our hands. We, who recognize ourselves as part of a much larger “us” on this path, all need each other.

“Kindness is the path of choice for the strongest, most courageous men and women.”  -Pope Francis 

How interesting to put kindness and courage together!  We don’t often pair these words, let alone ponder how they complement each other. Do we have the courage to be kind?  

Together, let’s choose kindness.  

God, please help us speak the language of Kindness to those both near and far. Remind us that kindness isn’t weak, but requires great courage. Being kind to others may be one of the strongest and bravest things we can do each day. Amen.

Filed Under: Articles, Blog Tagged With: Margaret Zook

Conference Related Ministries (CRM) Profile: Community at Rockhill

November 16, 2020 by Conference Office

From Hospitality to Radical Mercy and Generosity

The Community at Rockhill offers carefree active living to adults 62 and older on a beautiful 44-acre campus in Sellersville, PA. 

The Community at Rockhill campus in Sellersville, PA.

Rockhill’s nonprofit mission of serving older adults dates back to our founding in 1935 when Katie Alderfer first extended hospitality to an elderly woman who had nowhere to live. While caring for their own five children, Katie and her husband Wilmer began welcoming a growing number of elderly persons, demonstrating a radical mercy and generosity that Rockhill strives to follow today. 

As a nonprofit continuing care community, the needs of our residents and their families are always our first priority. Our Benevolent Care Fund ensures our residents will continue to call Rockhill home if they outlive their resources through no fault of their own.

Our residents and team members come from many faith backgrounds, enriching the fabric of our community. We encourage all residents to live spirited, fulfilling lives. As a community rooted in Mennonite values, there is a sense of belonging, trust and security that produces a generosity of spirit and nurtures lives of meaningful growth. Building on our Mennonite background and principles, we commit ourselves to lead through service and are a vibrant community providing purpose, dignity and compassion for all residents.

Some resident volunteers (before COVID) pack meals for the local RamPack lunch project, serving local children in food insecure households.

A key way our community celebrates our servant’s heart is through our robust Volunteer Program. While our residents reach out to the greater community through a variety of programs and services, they also volunteer to serve each other and invite the public to join them as well. 

There are many ways to get involved with our community and care for residents including pet therapy, participating in intergenerational programs, chapel transportation, craft assistance, reading to residents or simply visiting with a smiling face. As many of our volunteer opportunities are with our most vulnerable residents in personal care or health care, COVID-19 has temporarily reduced our volunteer opportunities, however, we continue to welcome new inquiries to ensure we have a robust list of volunteers when our full program is available.

Celebrating our 85th anniversary in 2020, we currently offer gracious studio, one- and two-bedroom apartment living along with continuing care options, allowing all residents to enjoy their independent life with the security of future care if needed.

We are deeply gratified to accept your prayers for both the Community at Rockhill and the greater community. We ask that you:

  • Pray for the safety of both residents and staff. Pray that care for others will compel us to wear masks and observe social distancing.  
  • Pray for civil discourse and genuine compassion as we live in a contentious, divided time.  

Filed Under: Articles

First Mosaic Assembly, Live on Zoom and from Orlando

November 12, 2020 by Cindy Angela

The first annual assembly of Mosaic Mennonite Conference on November 7-8, 2020 was not what any of us had imagined last fall or even earlier this year.  Nearly 200 persons met together on Saturday by Zoom from their homes, offices, and vehicles and on location at Iglesia Menonita Luz y Vida in Orlando, Florida, for a condensed business session.

Moderator Ken Burkholder led the delegate business session on Saturday. Photo by Emily Ralph Servant.

While it was the first time for the reconciled Eastern District and Franconia conferences to meet under the banner of Mosaic, one of the most significant parts of business included the affirmation of eight new member congregations that were formerly part of Southeast Mennonite Conference.  These congregations had been working toward membership with Franconia Conference previous to the reconciliation with Eastern District.  In many ways, the Mosaic name was imagined anticipating this day of welcome to the Floridian communities.

Also in follow up to the Conference reconciliation documents from 2019, the conference board presented a vision and mission statement for conversation among delegates.  The proposed vision statement, “Embody the reconciling love of Jesus in our broken and beautiful world,” along with a mission statement highlighting the Conference’s working missional, intercultural, and formational priorities, received delegate feedback for further board processing and consideration.   

Meet representatives from each of the eight congregations in Florida that joined Mosaic Conference during Assembly 2020.

While Zoom allowed us to gather efficiently, we missed the hugs, handshakes, and time of fellowship together over Longacre’s ice cream and food that represents the cultural diversity of the Conference.  We missed singing together and stumbling over each other’s languages.  At the same time, the work of the church continued, and I believe the kingdom of God was glimpsed and extended through our two-hour session.

Sunday’s worship included multilingual music led from coast to coast, a children’s story, a “virtual choir” recitation of the Lord’s Prayer, and a time of honoring newly credentialed leaders.  General Secretary of Mennonite World Conference César Garcia offered an important message for our time, challenging our mutual care and witness to glimpse the reign of God “on earth as it is in heaven” (the assembly’s theme) both in the midst of our Conference’s diversity and the turbulence of the time and context.

Assistant moderator Angela Moyer Walter (Ripple congregation, Allentown, PA) and Leadership Minister Aldo Siahaan (Philadelphia Praise Center) hosted Sunday morning worship at Assembly 2020.

In a time when so much seems so tumultuous, the work of God continues.  Even in the imperfections and less-than idealness of online meeting, the beauty and possibility of the Spirit’s work with us came through.  Mosaic Conference is emerging in the midst of pandemic and social and political unrest.  The deep love of Christ grounds us, the Spirit empowers us, and the principalities and powers will not prevail.

Tami Good from Swamp congregation (Quakertown, PA) challenged children (and adults) to dream God’s dream for the world.

We will continue to trust the Spirit’s guidance, continue to work and hope, continue to use technology as best we can to connect us in these days of disconnection. Even in challenging times, and maybe even more so in challenging times, the message of Christ’s peace sustains us so that we can bear witness of the love of God in our broken and beautiful world.

Special thanks to all of the delegates who navigated the technology to be present on Saturday as well as guests who were present to bear witness to our time together.   I’m grateful for the hospitality of the Luz y Vida congregation in Orlando and their work to make sure the technicalities of connecting would be possible.  Also, much appreciation to the representatives of each of the Florida congregations who made their way to Orlando so we could be present together for this time. 

And to our assembly planning team who worked hard, carefully, thoroughly to make the virtual meeting and worship possible—Brooke, Cindy, Tami, Emily, Kristine, Hendy, and Scott—thanks for working, believing, navigating, and imagining so that our time together could be meaningful and fruitful.

Grace and peace to each of you from Florida to Vermont, New Jersey to California.  May we continue to live together as witnesses of Jesus, “on earth as it is in heaven.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Conference Assembly, Steve Kriss

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