• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Mosaic MennonitesMosaic Mennonites

Missional - Intercultural - Formational

  • Home
  • About Us
    • Our History
    • Vision & Mission
    • Staff
    • Boards and Committees
    • Church & Ministry Directory
    • Mennonite Links
  • Media
    • Articles
    • Newsletters
    • Video
    • Audio
    • Bulletin Announcements
  • Resources
    • Conference Documents
    • Missional
    • Intercultural
    • Formational
    • Stewardship
    • Church Safety
    • Praying Scriptures
    • Request a Speaker
    • Pastoral Openings
    • Job Openings
  • Give
    • Leadership Development Matching Gift
  • Events
    • Pentecost
    • Delegate Assembly
    • Faith & Life
    • Youth Event
    • Women’s Gathering
    • Conference Calendar
  • Mosaic Institute
  • Vibrant Mosaic
  • Contact Us
  • 繁體中文 (Traditional Chinese)
  • English
  • Español (Spanish)
  • Indonesia (Indonesian)

Call to Ministry Stories

Never Too Young for God

November 4, 2021 by Conference Office

I remember feeling a calling to the ministry as a young boy growing up in the Catholic Church. In third grade, I was preparing to receive my communion for the first time. I took this very seriously; it was a big deal.  

Leading up to this time, I recall being picked on and teased for my faith. “Kyle is going to be the priest of the family,” I heard.  Even though I was teased, I found a love for God’s church. However, due to unfortunate circumstances, my family stopped going to church before I started high school.  

This was the beginning of some very dark years for me. During my high school years, I was involved with the wrong group of friends, my family relationships were distant, I did not care about my studies, and I had little to no relationship with God.  

In my early college years, I met Alicia, who later became my wife. Alicia told me more about Jesus than I had ever known before. This also led me to have my first interaction at Franconia (PA) Mennonite Church, where I felt a real sense of welcome and community.   

During the Good Friday service in 2015 at Franconia Church, I heard the voice of God. God told me, “This is where I want you; this is where you will raise your family. This is where you belong.” This was the first time I heard the audible voice of God, and I have desired to be obedient to his calling for me to be at Franconia.  

Prior to that, my plan for my life had been one of destruction and sin. Yes, I felt a calling to ministry when I was a boy, but I wanted to ignore that calling. But when I heard God speak, I was open to his guidance and will for my life. I was tired of keeping my back to him. When God spoke, I realized that his plan for my life was better than my own. When God spoke, I was ready to listen. Since then, I have developed a strong desire to share God’s truth and God’s truth alone. 


I have been told that I am too young to be a pastor, too young to be preaching the Word, or too young to be so conservative. In the past, these comments would hurt, and it would cause self-doubt. Maybe I am not ready?  

However, I have taken a new approach to this mindset. I desire for God to use me for the church today and the church of the next generation. Too often I see youth and others feel like they need to take a back seat because they feel too young and inadequate. I want to help them be open for God to use them, whether they are 11 or 43.  

While in my pastoral role at Franconia, I have seen God use the youth in powerful ways, ways that have taught me, and other adults, a thing or two. So, I challenge you: How is God using the children or youth in your life? What can you learn from them? Don’t say they are too young. God can use them just like he can use you!  

Filed Under: Articles, Call to Ministry Stories Tagged With: Call to Ministry Story

From Banker to Pastor: A Story of God’s Call

July 29, 2021 by Cindy Angela

God always has a purpose and special call for us. Prior to moving to the US in 2015, I was a banker in one of biggest banks in Indonesia. In Indonesia, I had a good life with a very good job, great salary, and excellent benefits. I also enjoyed serving in my church as a youth pastor and worship leader. I thought that I could be a businesswoman while doing ministry in the church. However, God had a different plan for my life.

One day, as I was riding my motorcycle to church to lead youth group, God spoke to me. It was raining very hard, and it was hard to drive. During that difficult moment, I felt God asking me, “Lia, do you love me?”

I said, “Yes, Lord.”

And God said, “Feed my sheep.”

I replied, “I do. I am serving in the ministry as youth pastor. I believe that our youth are your sheep.”

Then God asked me again with the same question, “Do you love me?” I replied, “Show me your will, oh Lord. I don’t understand what I need to do.”

God continued to speak to me and confirmed my calling to serve God through the word of prophecies that I received from several pastors and preachers. In responding and preparing for the calling of God, I began looking for a seminary or Bible School in Jakarta where I was working. I was planning to continue my work at the bank while attending seminary classes in the evenings. Those plans didn’t work as I had planned.

Pastor Angelia Susanto (right) and her husband, Pastor Beny Krisbianto. Photo provided by Nations Worship Center.

However, God had some extraordinary plans for my life and future. One day, my senior pastor introduced me to a young pastor from the US who eventually became my husband. After we got married, I resigned from my bank job. I left everything behind in Indonesia to serve Jesus full time and move to the US to support my husband’s ministry.

I began taking courses at Missio Seminary in Hatfield, PA. While I was taking seminary courses, God kept reminding me of the calling to serve Him. I believe that this is the way God prepared me to enter His calling.

To be honest, it was hard for me to adjust to a new place, ministry, and culture. It was difficult because I took seminary classes while caring for our home, my husband, and our six-month-old daughter. I was also doing ministry in the church on the weekends. I was so stressed, and I cried a lot. I was ready to give up and go back to Indonesia.

God helped me through that process. Praise God! God gave me a good support system through my family who cared for us so much. Finally, I graduated from Missio Seminary, in June 2020, with a Master of Arts degree.

Pastor Lia Susanto worships with her congregation at Nations Worship Center in Philadelphia, PA. Photo provided by Nations Worship Center.

Pastor Marta Castillo, my mentor from Mosaic Conference, said that I should give thanks to God for the talents He gave me. She also said that God had already prepared me to be a minister through the seminary courses and encouraged me to take the next step to be a licensed pastor.

I cried when I heard Pastor Marta’s words of encouragement because I felt that she spoke with authority from God, reminding me of His calling in my life. After spending a lot of time to pray, think, and discern, I finally decided to say, “Yes,” to the calling of God and surrendered my life totally to Him to be His servant.

Filed Under: Articles, Call to Ministry Stories

Called to Hope

April 20, 2021 by Cindy Angela

After 20 years of pastoral service, is it surprising that the Salvatori family is answering the call to serve in the Dominican Republic as missionaries?  Most of our friends have answered emphatically, “No!”  Most people who know us well thought God might use us in intercultural ministry.

The Salvatori family: (L-R) Stacy, Talia, Franco, Micah (in back), and Anna. Photo provided by Stacy Salvatori of Salvatori Photography.

However, our ministry call story begins long before we met each other, as the legacy of serving others for the Gospel of Jesus Christ began in our families of origin.  

For Franco, his story started as a young boy when Jesus radically transformed his family.  His father, an alcoholic and addict, came home one day reporting a new faith in Jesus had changed him.  It would only be a few short years before his parents began working in the local church and eventually became the executive directors of a local mission.  

Stacy’s legacy of ministry runs even deeper.  Her maternal grandfather was a Methodist pastor in rural Kentucky, and her father’s family spent two generations in foreign missionary service in the Democratic Republic of Congo.  As a martyred missionary, her grandfather’s legacy sent all three of his children into full time mission service and Stacy’s parents still serve in the Democratic Republic of Congo as career missionaries. 

As a family, we have often prayed about opportunities to serve interculturally.  For years, God led us to serve in local churches and pastoral roles.  At this time, it is the training, education, and pastoral ministry experience that will be central to our role as missionaries. Bold Hope International has invited us to join their team in the Dominican Republic in three main areas:  Development, Pastoral Training, and Advocacy.  

Trains are used to transport sugarcane from the countryside to the central processing plant in La Romana, Dominican Republic. Photo provided by Stacy Salvatori of Salvatori Photography.

These three points of interest have led us to serve in the Dominican Republic:

  • There are migrant workers (primarily Hatians) who have found asylum in small sugarcane villages (bateys) that allow them to survive, but not thrive.  
  • Approximately 85% of pastors globally have never received any theological training.
  • We believe the good news of Jesus Christ overcomes this lack of resources and we want to be part of the solution.  

In the bateys, our family will work alongside the child sponsorship and educational initiatives to help bring hope in these villages.  We will work to strengthen and develop the pastoral networks to provide the training and resources that pastors and churches need to further the gospel.  And we will help partner individual bateys with churches and organizations in the Dominican Republic and abroad to offer long term investments and impact in these communities.  

Bateys are villages that house sugarcane workers.  This half-court basketball court serves as a central gathering point for the young people in this batey. Photo provided by Stacy Salvatori of Salvatori Photography.

We believe in the hopeful news that God offers humanity through Jesus.  We believe in the work of Bold Hope International.  And we believe God has been preparing us for this for a long time.  

We are excited about the opportunity God is calling our family to and ask you to partner with us in prayer. If you would like to offer financial support or become a partner organization in a batey, please visit our website at The Hopeful Endeavor.

Filed Under: Articles, Call to Ministry Stories Tagged With: Call to Ministry Story, Franco Salvatori

Saying “Yes”

March 18, 2021 by Cindy Angela

Where did my call to ministry begin? Was it when I invited Jesus into my heart in secret at the age of four? Was it when my parents read me missionary biographies, and I proclaimed that I too wanted to be a missionary? Or when I decided to be baptized at 12? Was it when I asked my grandfather to teach me Greek at age 15? Or during my five months in Chile with Eastern Mennonite Missions’s YES program and learned that overseas missions is not my calling yet I can participate in God’s mission anywhere?

I’m not sure when the call began, but I remember the moments when I began to say “yes” to God’s call to pastoring. 

Michelle Curtis, co-pastor of Ambler (PA) Mennonite Church. Photo provided by Michelle Curtis.

I said “yes” the summer I finally realized my childhood dream of becoming a camp counselor at Spruce Lake Wilderness Camp. I had just finished my first year at Messiah College, majoring in Bible. I loved planning Bible studies for each age group. I delighted in engaging my campers’ questions and sharing what I had learned. When I wrote to my pastor, Sandy Drescher-Lehman, to tell her all about it, she responded, “You’re doing ministry!” I was not convinced. But I kept pondering her words. Maybe, just maybe, my love for teaching the Bible had something to do with ministry. 

I said “yes” two summers later in an internship at Souderton (PA) Mennonite Church. I did not want to be a pastor. But I did want to go to seminary, so following  Pastor Sandy around for ten hours a week didn’t seem like a bad idea. 

Pastor Sandy sent me to the Friendship Sunday School class, a self-described group of women ages 70+. They embraced me as an earnest 21 year-old, and gave me the honor of teaching them. I soon realized that teaching meant I got to ask all the questions and then soak in their wisdom – wisdom that came from decades of reading the Bible as their beloved friend. Their “yes” to me helped me keep saying “yes” to becoming a teacher of the Bible.

I said “yes” when I went to Anabaptist Biblical Mennonite Seminary (AMBS), dreaming of future Ph.D. work and teaching. But I discovered I was far more interested in taking “electives” like Foundations of Worship and Preaching. I agonized over whether to switch M.Div. concentrations from an academic track to a pastoral one. 

Michelle Curtis with her husband, Jacob. Photo provided by Michelle Curtis.

I remember the day Jewel Gingerich Longenecker, Dean of Lifelong Learning at AMBS, told me that my deep, theological mind was not only acceptable for a pastor but a gift to the church. I would not have to stop thinking and reading and dabbling in the academic world to be a pastor! In that light, pastoring began to seem possible.

I said “yes” on a Tuesday in March when the first crocuses had just bloomed. After a full day of leading worship in chapel and then communion in class, something was shifting inside me. As I walked home, the sun shone on my face and joy bubbled up inside. I heard the Holy Spirit whispering in me, “I am a pastor. I am a pastor!” Eventually I heard the specific call to pastoring. Finally, I accepted, “Yes, I am a pastor.” Then I breathed, “Thank you.” And, “Help!” 

Those “yeses” paved the way for many more yeses that have led me to the joy of co-pastoring with my husband, Jacob, at Ambler (PA) Mennonite Church, where we continue to say, “Thank you Holy Spirit for leading us here!” And, “Help us serve you faithfully!”

Filed Under: Articles, Call to Ministry Stories Tagged With: Michelle Curtis

Calling to Ministry

February 25, 2021 by Cindy Angela

God has been calling me into pastoral ministry since … I don’t even know. Since I was born? Or before? It’s just taken me most of my life to accept it. 

I’m a missionary kid. My parents, Joe and Linda Liechty, left their home in Goshen, IN, to serve with the Mennonite Board of Missions in Dublin, Ireland. There, they formed a little Christian community that lived and worshiped in a dilapidated house in the inner city. That house was my first home, and that community was my first church. 

Jacob Curtis, co-pastor of Ambler (PA) congregation engages in discussion. Photo provided by Jacob Curtis.

I grew up in Dublin, trying to make sense of who I was. My parents were Americans. So, did that make me an American? I didn’t feel like one. I’d never lived in the US. I went to school with Irish kids. All of my friends were Irish. If you asked me, I would have said I was Irish too. 

And yet, I was aware that there was something different about me. It wasn’t always obvious, but it came out. Like the time the neighborhood kids were playing cops and robbers —hiding behind parked cars, making guns with their index fingers, pretending to shoot at each other. I knew from my parents that Mennonites were pacifists, and that meant I couldn’t shoot anyone, or even pretend to. Reluctantly, I went inside and asked my mother if she would play chess with me. 

After graduating from “secondary school” (grades 7–12) in Dublin, I moved to Goshen, IN for college. At that point, I assumed that I would become a missionary like them, probably somewhere in West Africa. 

In college, I got the chance to actually visit West Africa for the first time. With a group of 21 other students, I lived and studied in Mali for three months. It was brutally hard. I got malaria, giardia, and a staph infection that left oozing welts on my legs. I became skeletally thin. By the time I returned to the US, I was mentally and spiritually broken, no longer sure who God was or where God might be calling me. 

Jacob Curtis preaches at an outdoor service, summer 2020. Photo provided by Jacob Curtis.

I spent the next decade drifting. I longed to feel close to God again, but I often felt abandoned and alone instead. In my search, I hiked all 2,200 miles of the Appalachian Trail. I lived in a little cabin in the woods for a year without running water or electricity. I tried my hand at a number of different jobs. 

Finally, I landed at a United Church of Christ congregation outside Denver, CO, where I worked as the Office Manager and Director of Communications. It was there that it became obvious—first to everyone else and then to me—that God was calling me into pastoral ministry. 

When I told my parents that I was applying to seminaries, they were delighted, but not at all surprised. “Jacob,” my father said, “You could have gone to seminary at any time since you were fourteen years old. But everything you’ve done since then is going to make you such a better pastor.” 

I hope he’s right. I often feel that, at the age of 40, I should be deep into a career by now, not just starting one. But, since becoming co-pastors of Ambler Mennonite Church last May, my wife and I have often talked about how right it feels. There are many things about my life that don’t make sense to me, and maybe never will. But I am as sure that God brought us here to Ambler as I am sure of anything else in the world. And I can’t wait to see where God will lead us and our little church next.

Filed Under: Articles, Call to Ministry Stories

Stepping Out in Faith… Into God’s Perfect Way

February 18, 2021 by Cindy Angela

I was born in Indonesia to a very “pastoral” family. My grandfather, dad, and aunts were all pastors. I am the second child of four. I am grateful that my parents introduced me to Christianity from early childhood.

Our house was next to the church building when I grew up. Because of that, I rarely missed any church activity. Beginning in seventh grade, I was involved in the Sunday School ministry. From there, I was active in music ministry. 

Steve Zacheus’ Profile Photo

I never had formal education in music, but found my passion in it. I taught myself to play instruments. I wanted to take what I loved to do (music) and use it to minister to others. After high school, I decided to major in church music at a Christian university in Yogyakarta.

After graduating from university in 1997, I ministered in a church in Jakarta. Periodically, I also ministered in my hometown. 

During this period of time, I met an Indonesian who lived in the US. He often ministered in Indonesia and was a member of JKI Anugerah – Grace International Fellowship Church (JKIA)  in Sierra Madre, CA. In short, he invited me to come to the United States and sponsored me to attend Calvary Chapel Bible College.

It was a long process before I could come to the United States. My visa application was rejected three times. Finally, in 2000, my student visa was granted. JKIA was the first church I attended in the USA and still is my church.

Even though I grew up surrounded by many pastors and was a church activist, my calling to ordination was a gradual process where God showed his patience to me, responding to His love and grace.

On January 12, 2003, I was credentialed by the Pacific Southwest Mennonite Conference at JKIA and ministered in the music department. My main responsibility was overseeing the music team and small groups. Though I enjoyed serving the Lord, I was not sure about taking the path to ordination. 

One thing I know through all the seasons of my life, I can trust and take refuge in God. He has been faithful to me. He shows His love by guiding me whenever I face challenging situations. Through His love, he called me over and over to step into faith to His calling. “Now faith is confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see”  (Hebrews‬ 11:1, NIV).

Steve Zacheus ordination in Mosaic Conference, October 2020.

I finally came to the personal assurance that we are called to serve God within our capacity. Servanthood is our response to God’s love. The best way I could respond to God’s unfailing love is to serve Him with the gifts He entrusted to me. All this time He had been patient, waiting for me to be ready.

On October 25, 2020, I was ordained by Mosaic Conference. It is a new chapter of my ministry. For God has been so faithful, I believe He will guide me again in this journey of faith. His work is not done with me. 

“God had planned something better for us so that only together with us would they be made perfect” (Hebrews 11:40, NIV).  As human beings, our self-doubt and fears haunt us, but the Word of God reminds us, “There is no fear in love. But perfect love drives out fear” (I John 4:18, NIV).

God’s love guides me in stepping out in faith into his perfect way.

Filed Under: Articles, Call to Ministry Stories Tagged With: JKI Anugerah, Steve Zacheus

The Call: A Lifelong Journey with God

February 4, 2021 by Cindy Angela

I understand God’s call a bit differently than most people.  I have always felt the call to a life of service and never remember a time when I questioned that call as a goal for my life.  My wife, Sharon, and I often experienced this call together.  God’s call was the guiding force in my life’s trajectory, and I view this as simply my journey with God. 

My call has involved specific times of focus, but service in the name of Christ has been central to my life’s journey.  There were times we experienced God’s call in a sacred way as with our call to serve in Indonesia and other times when the call came through intellectual discussions with wise counselors as with the process of discerning our move to Bangladesh.

Photo provided by Conrad Swartzentruber.

I grew up in a Mennonite family with a father who pastored a mission church with the Conservative Mennonite Conference in Eastern Kentucky.  I only understood life in the context of ministry and service to others.  Our church building, Turners Creek Mennonite Church, was 50 feet from our house and the church community was all around us.  Much of my life happened in the church building.

I recall Dad’s words to me as a teenager as we discussed my life goals, “Conrad, whatever you decide to do in life, it’s good to help other people”.  Those simple words made sense to me.  Passages such as Matthew 25 and Micah 6:8 affirmed this simple call to serving and making a difference around me.

In 1982, Sharon and I answered the call to serve with the Mennonite Central Committee (MCC) and spent 11 of the next 14 years in Bangladesh and Indonesia.  In 1997, my call involved stepping into Mennonite school leadership at Shalom Christian Academy in southeastern Pennsylvania.  Today I serve as Superintendent at Dock Mennonite Academy.  

A local congregation has always been an essential part of discerning and affirming our call.  We have been blessed to connect with congregations in several states and countries that have provided guidance and encouragement.  We have been involved at Plains Mennonite Church since 2009.  We have traveled to India several times to learn from and to resource pastors and their wives through the Peace Proclamation Ministries International.  We continue to support the work of MCC through events like the Pennsylvania Relief Sale.  Sharon’s work at the Material Resource Center directly benefits the ministry of MCC.

God’s call for me was always affirmed by a local congregation but was not formalized by ordination until this year.  In my school leadership role, I had prepared academically by completing a doctoral degree.   We recognized, however, my role in the Mennonite school was equally one of faith leadership.  Conversations with school and church leaders encouraged me in the direction of pursuing ordination.  The connection of our Mennonite schools and the Mennonite denomination is essential in preserving our mission and vision for our schools.  The role of a local church in the lives of our students is critical for encouragement, faithfulness, and accountability. 

In October 2020 we celebrated my ordination via a Zoom service.  This unique format due to COVID-19 allowed family and friends in many different places to join.  It felt symbolic of the community that has surrounded me and affirmed my call throughout this journey.  Sharon and I are grateful for the many people who have encouraged and challenged us.  We are always aware of God’s presence in our journey.  

Our call will continue.  We have much more to learn.  We want to continue our work of reconciliation.  We want to continue to walk humbly with our God!

Filed Under: Articles, Call to Ministry Stories Tagged With: Conrad Swartzentruber

Provoked by God

August 5, 2020 by Conference Office

by Melky Tirtasaputra, Whitehall (Allentown, PA) congregation

I grew up with one older brother and two younger sisters, all with various religious beliefs.  My grandmother was a mystic from Banten (Indonesia) and converted to Christianity.  My mom only believed in God and my father was an animist.  My brother attended a Catholic school since kindergarten, while my two other sisters went to a Christian school.  I used to lived in a Buddhist temple, learned mysticism, and went to a Muslim school where I learned how to pray and follow the Muslim lifestyle. I searched for my religious identity.   

God’s purpose for my life started in 6th grade.  The way God called me was amazing.  At an early age, I was an independent child who sold goods to make money. I was fascinated by money. A friend invited me to go to church. Every time I walked to church, I found money on the street. God “provoked” me through money. 

On April 24, 1981 (Good Friday), I was baptized.  Since that day, I became more and more interested in serving God and always longed to go to church, until I was almost kicked out of my home. God changed my life not only to be His servant, but also by helping my parents see the changes in my life. Finally, my parents became believers and were baptized. On Pentecost my entire family went to church together. 

When I was 16 years old, I felt a strong calling from God for me to be more engaged in the Bible so I took an online course while I also studied psychology.  For three years, I took Bible classes at night and then started to preach at our church. 

Through the years, earning money came very easily for me. It caused me to almost forget what my calling was, even though I was a high school religion teacher. 

One day I met a girl who has now become my wife.  She saw my potential and God’s calling on me as His servant. This is why she wanted to marry me.  However, I ignored that calling because I wanted to be a businessman who could also serve God. 

In 2001, we moved to the USA and lived in Philadelphia. We started a new life, working at the factory. Every Sunday I attended church services and sometimes served as a singer. 

In 2005, we joined Philadelphia Praise Center (Philadelphia, PA) and served together with Aldo Siahaan as Head Elders. 

In 2007, I pursued an opportunity to start a business with FedEx as an Independent Contractor, while still serving as an Elder at Philadelphia Praise Center.  In 2010, I moved to Nations Worship Center (Philadelphia, PA) to assist Pastor Beny Krisbianto and the congregation, who had just joined Franconia Conference. My duties were to serve as an elder and head of the church construction, while my wife was in charge of the church’s finances. 

In 2015 I began taking pastoral ministry classes at Eastern Mennonite University, graduating in 2018.  In October 2019, I responded to God’s calling as a pastor at Whitehall Mennonite Church (Allentown, PA), joining Pastor Rose Bender.

It turns out I enjoy my calling as a pastor.  I thank God for His faithfulness and love as God waits for my response to His calling. Thanks to my wife who always supports me and never gives up either. Thank you to EMU and to Mosaic Mennonite Conference who helped me fulfill my calling.

Filed Under: Call to Ministry Stories Tagged With: Beny Krisbianto, Call to Ministry Story, Melky Tirtasaputra, Nations Worship Center, Philadelphia Praise Center, Whitehall Mennonite Church

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Go to page 1
  • Go to page 2
  • Go to page 3
  • Go to page 4
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 9
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

  • Home
  • About Us
    • Our History
    • Vision & Mission
    • Staff
    • Boards and Committees
    • Church & Ministry Directory
    • Mennonite Links
  • Media
    • Articles
    • Newsletters
    • Video
    • Audio
    • Bulletin Announcements
  • Resources
    • Conference Documents
    • Missional
    • Intercultural
    • Formational
    • Stewardship
    • Church Safety
    • Praying Scriptures
    • Request a Speaker
    • Pastoral Openings
    • Job Openings
  • Give
    • Leadership Development Matching Gift
  • Events
    • Pentecost
    • Delegate Assembly
    • Faith & Life
    • Youth Event
    • Women’s Gathering
    • Conference Calendar
  • Mosaic Institute
  • Vibrant Mosaic
  • Contact Us

Footer

  • Home
  • Contact Us
  • Delegate Assembly
  • Vision & Mission
  • Our History
  • Formational
  • Intercultural
  • Missional
  • Mosaic Institute
  • Give
  • Stewardship
  • Church Safety
  • Praying Scriptures
  • Articles
  • Bulletin Announcements

Copyright © 2025 Mosaic Mennonite Conference | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use