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News

Welcome Asher Jermaine Matahelemual

March 25, 2020 by Conference Office

Asher was born Monday, March 23 to Marina and Hendy Matahelemual. (Hendy is our conference Pastor of Formation & Communication.)  All are doing well.  Asher will join big brothers Judah and Levi at home in Philadelphia. We celebrate new life in the midst of a time of turmoil. Grace, peace, joy and strength to Hendy, Marina, and the boys in these days ahead.


Telah lahir Asher Jermaine Matehelemual pada hari Senin 23 Maret,bayi dari Marina dan Hendy Matehelemual. (Hendy adalah Pastor di conference untuk bagian Formation & Communication ). Mereka semua sehat dan baik. Asher menjadi adik bagi Judah dan Levi di dalam rumah mereka di Philadelphia. Di tengah situasi sulit seperti sekarang ini, kita tetap bersyukur akan kehidupan baru ini. Damai, sukacita dan sejahtera menyertai Hendy, Marina dan anak anak mereka di masa mendatang.


Asher Jermaine Matahelemual được sinh ra vào thứ Hai, ngày 23 tháng 3 năm 2020 đến Marina và Hendy Matahelemual.  (Hendy là mục sư trong giáo hội của chúng ta Mục sư thành lập và truyền thông.) Tất cả đều khỏe mạnh. Asher sẽ gặp mặt hai anh lớn Judah và Levi tại nhà ở Philadelphia. Chúng tôi chúc mừng cuộc sống mới ở trong một thời kỳ hỗn loạn này. Ân điển, bình an, niềm vui và sức mạnh ở cùng Hendy, Marina và các chàng trai trong những ngày sắp tới.


Asher Jermaine Matahelemual nació el lunes 23 de marzo, hijo de Marina y Hendy Matahelemual. (Hendy es pastor de formación y comunicación en nuestra conferencia). A todos les está yendo bien. Asher se unirá a sus hermanos mayores Judah y Levi en su casa en Filadelfia. Celebramos una nueva vida en medio de una época de agitación. Gracia, paz, alegría y fortaleza para Hendy, Marina y los niños en estos días por venir.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Hendy Matahelemual

Resources for Ministry During Social Distancing

March 19, 2020 by Conference Office

Give to the
Shalom Mutual Aid Fund*


(Updated: March 26, 9:30 am)
Technology:
  • Simple steps to use Facebook Live for a virtual service using a cell phone (video)
  • Facebook Live general tutorial for beginners (video)
  • Zoom Video Conferencing for beginners – setting up an account, joining and hosting a Zoom meeting (video)
  • Best Practices for Hosting a Digital Event (Zoom blog)
  • Zoom Events (live demos, webinars, online trainings)
  • How to Livestream Your Church Service: A Practical Guide from The Gospel Coalition (article)
  • Community Without Communing: Resources for Virtual Church – Sojourners (article)
  • Mixing audio for your church service livestream (video) – intermediate skill tutorial for churches using a sound board to mix worship
  • Top five questions about copyright coverage (article)
    • Music Licensing info for streaming/podcasts (webpage)
  • Dwell Scripture Audiobook App is offering 60 days free for congregations (email your request)
Need some personal assistance?  Contact one of our staff persons below:
  • Scott Roth – proficient in Zoom, Facebook, Instagram, YouTube and Twitch
  • Zoom coaching – Noel Santiago, Brooke Martin, Hendy Matahelemual, Danilo Sanchez, Chantelle Todman Moore
For children:
  • 1st-4th grade (or younger) curriculum – (PDF) provided by Heather Gingrich (Plains congregation).
  • Preschool Lessons – (PDF)  provided by Sarah Rittenhouse (Franconia congregation, and a PreK teacher at Little Sprout Learning Center)
  • Facebook Live daily story time (9:00 am) – Zion Mennonite Nursery School; previous story time videos are also on their Facebook page
  • Turn Quarantine Into Quality Time: 14 Days of Questions and Activities – blog from a local stay-at-home mom who used to work as a teacher
  • Shalom at Home – (PDF) resource guide provided by The City School
Worship and devotional resources from around MC USA:
  • MC USA’s 2020 Lent At Home
  • Weekly devotional email from MennoMedia. Subscribe here and click “Pandemic Resources”
  • Congregational prayer, entitled “Prayer in a time of fear,” from Eastern Mennonite Seminary
  • AMBS’ compilation of resources for prayer and worship
  • Shine resources for Sunday school at home from MennoMedia
  • Spotify worship resources/piano performance tracks of favorite hymns of hope
  • Corporate reading of Tales of the Kingdom on Doylestown Mennonite Church’s Facebook Live, Monday through Saturday at 10am. The chapters are about 25 minutes long. Great for both children and adults. Catch up with the recordings.
Finances:
  • Everence announces initiatives aimed at providing financial support (The Mennonite)

*The Shalom Fund supports pastors, congregations and ministries in direct response to the Coronavirus and the ensuing economic crisis.   We will seek to respond to the most vulnerable within our membership and neighborhoods by empowering local ministries to meet real needs with Christ’s love and generosity in a time of fear and anxiety.

Online Support:
  • Alcoholics Anonymous

Filed Under: News Tagged With: coronavirus, formational, live streaming, resources

Capítulo 8.2

March 16, 2020 by Emily Ralph Servant

 

Muchos zapatos, el primo mío, “no me llame tierno”, las cosas del facebook, el autobús bíblico y las fronteras.

SARASOTA

 Luego de una breve vida de tour, Yamile y Robinson debían volver a Colombia, finalizado el convenio hecho con el circo, pero después de meditarlo mucho decidieron quedarse en éste país; en esto sí habría influido algo el contraste de aquellos días cuando Robinson caminaba por las calles de Colombia y al pisar un chicle sabía de inmediato el sabor del chicle y esta nueva época de habitaciones y líneas dibujadas con pares de zapatos. 

Llegaron a Sarasota, Florida, en compañía de sus hermanos. En esta ciudad pequeña volvía a re empezar su vida: en un país desconocido e inmenso, sin la protección de ningún circo y un bebé en camino. Robinson consiguió trabajo con otros hombres latinos en una pequeña empresa dedicada a pintar superficies, al poco tiempo compró un carro. 

LOS NUGGETS Y LAS PAPAS FRITAS

El tiempo fue pasando lentamente y con la llegada de su segundo bebé se daban cuenta que cada día se hacía más difícil la opción del regreso, siendo que ahora no se debían únicamente la subsistencia propia sino que también velaban por sus dos hijos. 

Wilches y Santiago. El más joven es un bebé que a pesar de ser un bebé negro, y estar viviendo en Florida, una zona donde han vivido por generaciones afrodescendientes norteamericanos, de verlo se nota de sobra que es colombiano debido a algún hipnotismo extraño que posee y que es bastante difícil de explicar; o eso experimentan los colombianos al verlo, igual que el autor de esta crónica, que lo supo de inmediato al verlo por primera vez en el salón de la Iglesia Seguidores de Cristo, una comunidad anabautista. En ese momento pensó: “Ese pelado parece ser primo mío”, sin haberse enterado que era el hijo de Robinson y Yamile.

El mayor, Wilches, trae en su ADN, su carácter y su ánimo, la herencia costera de ser, donde quiera que se pare, el alma de la fiesta. Tiene apenas 4 años pero ya tiene claro lo que piensa hacer con su tiempo en esta tierra: será misionero. Y yo no estoy muy seguro que la labor de un misionero sea la de dar respuestas sin filtro, pero sea así o no lo sea, Wilches ya cuenta con esa característica que le podrá aportar en cualquier oficio que se resuelva finalmente a hacer en el tiempo que tiene de vida. 

Es un niño de cosas claras: -¿De qué hincha eres?- pregunta el entrevistador- Soy hincha de los nuggets y las papas fritas– responde Wilches. mientras unta una papa frita con mostaza- Luego de un tiempo – ¿Qué es lo que más te gusta hacer?- Lo que más me gusta hacer es jugar y comer – responde sin mirar una sola vez al entrevistador, no apartando sus dos ojos grandes y cafés de los nuggets y las papas. 

Yo me río y me asombro de su carácter resuelto y alegre, aplomado y juguetón, que no parece encajar con el entendimiento de las personas de esta parte del continente, cualidades que reunidas parecen una invención del humor, pero son explicables si se tiene en cuenta la circunstancia de nacer en un hogar donde sus padres son de un país donde confluyen ordenada y salvajemente dos océanos, un sin fin de ríos, llanos, desiertos, la cordillera de los Andes, el Magdalena y la jungla amazónica. País que lleva este niño en la sangre y sin embargo nunca lo ha visitado. 

Por eso hay que respetar a Wilches, verdad que me confirma Miriam Martínez, una señora colombiana de la costa atlántica, con quien compartimos mesa a la hora de la cena y de la divertida entrevista con Wilches:

 –Una vez le dije a Wilches “Qué niño tan tierno que eres”- me cuenta Miriam- y él me respondió enojado “No me diga tierno, mi nombre es Wilches Delgado”.

MIRIAM Y PAUL

 Miriam es otra historia increíble que puede dejar a cualquiera con la boca abierta y con una sensación de no entender bien lo que está viendo frente a sus ojos, y nuevamente por esas cosas del amor.

Ella es esposa de Paul Hershberger, quien creció en una comunidad Amish y que hoy comparte vida con esta costeña hermosa que se ha trasteado para este país pero trae en su piel canela, su cabello risado y su alma alegre el sello de nacimiento de la playa. la brisa y el mar. Esta pareja, así no se crea, se conoció gracias al Facebook y también los une su fe cristiana, pero no precisamente sus hábitos dominicales: Miriam es de un tipo de cristiana de alabanzas y pandereta, de esas que tienen el don de ver con facilidad una razón por la cual agradecer y gritar ¡Alabado sea el señor!, mientras que Paul es más un hombre de coros y tradiciones, cuyas experiencias con Dios suelen estar más orientadas hacia la confortación y la meditación.

Compartir una tarde con esta pareja y mirar cómo comparten mesa en un restaurante colombiano, donde la señora pide pescado y patacones mientras que el señor no pide nada porque lleva una dieta de años comiendo únicamente vegetales, hábito que lo ha orillado a cargar siempre su comida en una coca de plástico personal, es algo que toca verlo para creerlo. 

Pero eso es con lo que uno se encuentra en la Iglesia Seguidores de Cristo, una comunidad de raíces anabautistas y que se ha vuelto hogar de acogida para todo tipo de inmigrantes de América Latina, donde se reúnen familias como las de Robinson y Yamile y como las de Miriam y Paul, para compartir su fe y tratan de tejer una relación que estreche cada vez más a las personas en cercanías y tratos como de una familia, que es exáctamente lo mismo que todos, colombianos, mexicanos, salvadoreños, hondureños, ecuatorianos, no importa de donde vengan, han tenido que dejar atrás por muy variadas razones y en un camino de muy variadas historias. 

¿Cómo llegó Robinson a Seguidores de Cristo?

De nuevo volvemos al asunto del fútbol. Los primeros meses en Sarasota pasaban, Robinson trabajaba y Yamile aprendía a conducir para poder moverse con libertad por la ciudad, que es un lugar donde los turistas de corto presupuesto sabemos más sobre el transporte público que la gran mayoría de los habitantes, quienes a pesar de vivir por años sin embargo nunca se han subido a un bus y preguntan a los viajeros sobre cómo es el interior de estos con la misma curiosidad de un colombiano al preguntar por la nieve. Es aquí, en el Estado de Florida y en la gran mayoría de los Estados Unidos, debido a la cultura centenaria del carro, un lujo del presupuesto público mantener trabajando el sistema de buses públicos.

Aprender a conducir en los Estados Unidos no es tan fácil, así como no es precisamente fácil aprender a montar en bici, así lo testifica Yamile quien recuerda la vez que se fue de frente a un arbusto por razones que no entiende totalmente, -El idioma-, dice.  En estos días Robinson jugaba partidos de recocha con sus hermanos y una noche los invitaron a jugar para un equipo de polacos, ellos fueron preparados, sin contar el secreto de que en el equipo iba un hombre que le había anotado tres goles a la defensa del Patrón Bermúdez, pero al final no lograron demostrar nada porque los polacos cambiaron intempestivamente de decisión y no quisieron dejar jugar a los colombianos, a pesar de que estaban cambiados y calentando sobre el cesped humedo.

Fue en este momento cuando conocieron a unos hermanos de la iglesia Seguidores de Cristo quienes los invitaron a otro partido y así fue que empezó su contacto con esta comunidad pastoreada por el pastor hondureño Juan José Rivera. En esta iglesia conocieron a Miriam, quien accedió a prestarles el patio de su casa para estacionar el trailer donde viven actualmente mientras logran comprar una casa propia. 

En esta iglesia las personas han descifrado el espíritu viajero de Robinson que se materializa en la dificultad casi ontológica de permanecer mucho tiempo en un solo sitio, porque es casi siempre el primero en llegar y el primero en despedirse, y porque ha iniciado un ministerio por redes sociales donde comparte cada mañana una reflexión que él mismo ha llamado el Autobús Bíblico.

LA PREGUNTA DE SIEMPRE

Responden a la pregunta con la velocidad de un reflejo: lo extrañamos todo, la comida de mar, el arroz con coco, salir a pescar, nuestras familias, Tumaco, el ritmo de la vida, pero aquí estamos.

Si volvemos atrás, hacia la historia improbable y sin embargo con mucho sentido histórico que describimos sobre la red de articulos y anuncios periódicos conectados entre sí alrededor de la familia Delgado Quiñones, puede que en nuestro drama, hace mucho, los medios se hubieses desinteresado sobre la suerte de esta familia de cirqueros colombianos que cruzaron la frontera hace algunos años para encontrar un mejor porvenir, pero vale la pena recalcar lo que es más que obvio a esta altura de la crónica: el andar de estas personas ha continuado y con ella la trama de su vida sigue moviéndose, cruzando fronteras, despidiendo seres queridos, separándose, reencontrándose, extrañando su hogar, construyendo otro, conectando y, en resumidas cuentas, siguiendo adelante. 

 

Autor: B. Javier Márquez.

[contact-form][contact-field label=”Name” type=”name” required=”true” /][contact-field label=”Email” type=”email” required=”true” /][contact-field label=”Website” type=”url” /][contact-field label=”Message” type=”textarea” /][/contact-form]

 

Filed Under: El Blog de las Pequeñas Cosas, News

Updates from Eastern District & Franconia Conference

March 14, 2020 by Emily Ralph Servant

Give to the
Shalom Mutual Aid Fund*



During this time of responding to the public health emergency of COVID-19 (coronavirus), Conference leadership has encouraged localized decision-making that prioritizes both love of God and love of neighbor. 

Many of our congregations have chosen to experiment with new technologies (and many have successfully been using these technologies for a while now!).  As you experience God in the challenges and inspiration of these creative worship spaces, please share your stories by emailing communication@mosaicmennonites.org or posting on our Facebook page!

***

(Updated as of March 26, 2020 at 10:00am EST)

Congregations:

  • Alpha (Alpha, NJ) – shared, at-home worship service
  • Ambler (Ambler, PA; Montgomery Co.) – worship service by Zoom (or join by phone at
    312-626-6799)
  • Bally (Bally, PA; Berks Co.) – worship services canceled 
  • Bethany (Bridgewater Corners, VT) – worship services canceled  
  • Bethany Elevation (Queens, NYC) – online streaming
  • Blooming Glen (Blooming Glen, PA; Bucks Co.) – worship service recorded and posted on website;  4/4 Easter Egg Hunt is cancelled; 4/5 Pathways, Passion and Promise is cancelled
  • Boyertown (Boyertown, PA; Berks Co) – worship services canceled  
  • Centro de Alabanza (Philadelphia, PA) – live streaming worship service
  • Christ Fellowship (Allentown, PA; Lehigh Co.) – worship services canceled  
  • Church of the Good Samaritans (Holland, PA; Bucks Co.) – worship services canceled  
  • Covenant Community Fellowship (Lansdale, PA; Montgomery Co.) – worship services canceled
  • Deep Run East (Perkasie, PA; Bucks Co.) – online worship service
  • Deep Run West (Perkasie, PA; Bucks Co.) – Facebook Live
  • Doylestown (Doylestown, PA; Bucks Co.) – March 29 service cancelled; 4/5 Sam Sandler presentation cancelled; 4/12 Easter breakfast cancelled
  • Ebenezer (Souderton, PA; Montgomery Co.) – worship services canceled  
  • Fairfield (Fairfield, PA; Adams Co.) – worship services canceled 
  • Finland (Pennsburg, PA; Montgomery Co.) – worship services canceled 
  • Franconia (Telford, PA: Montgomery Co.) – Scriptures, prayers, & sermon posted online
  • Frederick (Frederick, PA; Montgomery Co.) – worship services canceled  
  • Garden Chapel (Dover, NJ) – worship service by Zoom
  • Indonesian Community Christian Fellowship (Colton, CA) – worship services canceled  
  • Indonesian Light Church (Philadelphia, Pa) – online streaming
  • International Worship Church (San Gabriel, CA) – worship services canceled  
  • Jemaat Kristen Indonesia Anugerah (Sierra Madre, CA) – streaming sermon
  • Lakeview (Susquehanna, PA; Susquehanna Co.) – Zoom worship service
  • Line Lexington (Line Lexington, PA; Bucks Co.) – live streaming, via YouTube; all activities cancelled until further notice
  • Mennonite Bible Fellowship (Morris, PA; Tioga Co) – worship services canceled 
  • Methacton (Norristown, PA; Montgomery Co.) – shared, at-home devotionals
  • Nations Worship Center (Philadelphia, PA) – Facebook Live
  • Nueva Vida Norristown New Life (Norristown, PA; Montgomery Co)
  • Perkasie (Perkasie, PA; Bucks Co.) – Zoom worship service
  • Perkiomenville (Perkiomenville, PA;  Montgomery Co.) will livestream services on Facebook at 10:15 am
  • Philadelphia Praise Center (Philadelphia, PA) – dispersed worship
  • Plains (Hatfield, PA; Montgomery Co.) – recording of worship service online, connecting through Zoom on Wednesday, March 25 at 2:00 pm
  • Providence (Collegeville, PA; Montgomery Co.) – Zoom worship service
  • Rocky Ridge (Quakertown, PA; Bucks Co.) – virtual worship with interactive blog
  • Salem (Quakertown, PA; Bucks Co.) – worship services canceled  
  • Salford (Harleysville, PA; Montgomery Co.) – simulcasting online with children’s activities
  • San Francisco Chinese (San Francisco, CA) – YouTube sermon
  • Souderton (Souderton, PA; Montgomery Co.) – live streaming
  • Spring Mount (Spring Mount, PA: Montgomery Co.) – Facebook Live
  • Swamp (Quakertown, PA; Bucks Co.) – all activities canceled through May 3
  • Taftsville Chapel (Taftsville, VT) – Zoom worship service
  • Towamencin (Kulpsville, PA; Montgomery Co.) – live streaming on website
  • Upper Milford (Old Zionsville, PA; Lehigh Co) – Zoom worship service
  • Vietnamese Gospel (Allentown, Pa; Lehigh Co.) – worship services canceled  
  • Vincent (Spring City, PA; Chester Co.) –  worship service on Facebook Live (10am)
  • Wellspring Church of Skippack (Skippack, PA; Montgomery Co.) – Zoom worship
  • West Swamp (Quakertown, PA; Bucks Co.) – worship services canceled 
  • Whitehall (Whitehall, PA; Lehigh Co.) – Facebook Live
  • Zion (Souderton, PA; Montgomery Co.) – live streaming (9am)

Partners in Ministry:

  • 7 Ways Home Fellowship (Bowie, MD) – Zoom gatherings
  • Arise (Harleysville, PA; Montgomery Co.) – worship services canceled 
  • Homestead Mennonite Church (Homestead, FL) – worship services canceled 
  • Iglesia Evangelica Menonita Shalom (Tampa, FL) – gathering in small prayer groups
  • Iglesia Menonita Luz y Verdad (Lakeland, FL) – worship services canceled 
  • Iglesia Menonita Seguidores de Cristo (Sarasota, FL) – YouTube worship service
  • Nueva Esperanza New Hope Fellowship (Alexandria, VA) – worship services canceled 

Conference Related Ministries:

  • Care & Share Thrift Shoppes (Souderton, PA) – closed through March 28
  • City School (Philadelphia, PA) – closed through March 30
  • Dock Mennonite Academy (Souderton & Lansdale, PA) – closed through March 30
  • MCC Material Resource Center (Harleysville, PA) – closed through March 30; MCC Meat Canning is cancelled
  • Mennonite Heritage Center – closed through March 30
  • Penn Foundation – see info here
  • Quakertown Christian School – closed through March 30
  • Retirement Communities – Almost all retirement communities are restricting visitors and have cancelled any large group gatherings or services. If you plan to visit, please be sure to call ahead. Please call residents of the retirement communities to stay in contact with them rather than visiting during this time, if at all possible. 
  • Spruce Lake/Pinebrook – closed until April 1

Other Conference events that have been cancelled (rescheduled, TBA):

  • “Women of Remarkable Faith” Gathering (March 28)

We know that this list will continue to grow and change. We hope to keep you updated as much as possible–if you have updates or changes to this list, please send them to communication@mosaicmennonites.org.

*The Shalom Fund supports pastors, congregations and ministries in direct response to the Coronavirus and the ensuing economic crisis.   We will seek to respond to the most vulnerable within our membership and neighborhoods by empowering local ministries to meet real needs with Christ’s love and generosity in a time of fear and anxiety.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: cancellations, coronavirus, creative, news, online, streaming

Good News to the Poor

February 20, 2020 by Conference Office

by Joe Paparone, Poor People’s Campaign (New York)

We were concluding a short-term mission trip in Poipet, Cambodia when I asked our host, the full-time medical missionary, what he thought the next five years there looked like. “When we travel in the US, everyone wants us to talk about conflict between Christianity and Buddhism, but that’s not what’s capturing people here,” he said. “What’s capturing people is capitalism.”

Joe Paparone

It was in Cambodia that we first witnessed people being denied healthcare because they lacked the ability to pay. We witnessed a young boy who’d been assaulted by police, allegedly for stealing mangoes. We learned how wealthier people could take property by simply building a wall around what they wanted, and their poorer neighbors had no recourse.

Then I traveled for 15 hours and thought about what that meant for a suburban, wealthy, white church in Upstate New York.

In New York, as we attempted to translate these experiences to our own neighborhoods, we began to encounter similar stories, and simultaneously, a resistance among our church family to engaging these issues at home. A church that was willing to donate thousands of dollars and use their vacation to travel overseas for several weeks, was less willing to volunteer a few hours to serve a meal at the city mission, and certainly less willing to consider the systemic reasons why nearly all the people we served at the mission had one skin color and everyone at our church had a different one.

Our church was wonderful at being gracious and compassionate with our neighbors, when they were people mostly like us. We didn’t realize it at the time, but the hurdles we were encountering were race and class differences.

Jump forward a few years, and I’d completed seminary, continuing to wrestle with questions of systems and violence and justice, and finding there was no place for me in the denomination I had sought to serve in. I still knew I was called to ministry, but I didn’t know what that meant. 

On April 2, 2015, in Albany (NY), Dontay Ivy was walking home late at night when he was racially profiled, stopped, harassed, chased, assaulted, and murdered by police officers. In the months that followed, I was part of an organization that held marches, rallies, and education events, organizing and mobilizing the community to speak out against this injustice and demand accountability. We were dismissed by the police and more “respectable” members of the community, like many pastors of local churches, who pursued minor and ultimately meaningless reforms to police practices.

While we were unsuccessful in our pursuit of justice for Dontay, I believe that work was sacred. Our role as disciples of Jesus is to pursue justice, even and especially when it is elusive.

Jump forward a few more years, and now I work for an organization helping to build a new Poor People’s Campaign, following Martin Luther King Jr.’s vision of a “Freedom Church of the Poor” – a new and unsettling force building unity among poor and working class people to challenge systemic racism, poverty, militarism, and ecological devastation.

In my work with the Poor People’s Campaign, I’ve had the privilege of joining with poor and working class people who’ve struggled their entire lives – not only with material deprivation, but with the cultural and psychological lies that tell them their struggles were their fault and their fault alone. That there weren’t entire systems set in place to keep them poor and isolated from one another. Instead, we’ve begun to join together, learning and taking action together, singing songs and building power to confront the forces that oppress our communities, our country, and the world. To bring freedom to captives, food for the hungry, healing to the sick. 

If that isn’t good news for the poor, I’m not sure what is.

Filed Under: News

Director of Community Engagement

February 13, 2020 by Conference Office

Eastern District and Franconia Conference, a historic and growing network of almost 80 Mennonite congregations and ministries, seeks a creative, committed, and collaborative person to serve in a leadership position focused on strengthening connections and relationships across the Conference community.  

The full-time position, based at the offices in Lansdale, PA (north of Philadelphia), has two key components:

  • Leader of the communication and development team.
  • Team leader for community organizing, networking, and facilitation with the Conference’s network of Conference Related Ministries. These ministries include social service agencies, schools, camps, retirement communities, and international initiatives.

Alternatively, these components could be separated into two part-time roles.

Essential for this position is a commitment to the Anabaptist perspective of Christian faith and a willingness to join an Eastern District and Franconia Conference worshipping community.  The role includes leadership within a diverse and dispersed staff with a priority of intercultural transformation.  Member communities of the Conference stretch from Southern California to Vermont, although the majority of conference staff and members live in the Philadelphia and Lehigh Valley metro areas.  The position includes up to 20% domestic and international travel beyond those metros.

Ideal candidates will have experience in non-profit organizational leadership and a graduate level degree.  They will also have experience with supervision and capacities in community/public relations, as well as fundraising, with an understanding of changing technology and diverse constituencies. Candidates must have working capacities in Microsoft or equivalent software, diverse communication platforms, and social media.  An understanding of Adobe Creative Suite and WordPress would be helpful.

As a multilingual community, an ability to speak and work in English as well as at least one other conference language—Bahasa Indonesian, Cantonese, French Creole, Spanish, or Vietnamese—would be preferred. 

The position will begin in late spring or summer of 2020.  To apply, send a resume or CV and intro email to info@FranconiaConference.org.

Filed Under: News

An Update from the December Ministerial Committee Meeting

January 23, 2020 by Conference Office

by Mary Nitzsche, Associate Executive Minister

Janet Panning

The Conference Ministerial Committee met in December to finish up some agenda as 2019 drew to a close.  In preparation for the combined Ministerial Committee of the new, reconciled Conference, Beth Rauschenberger (Zion congregation) joined the committee after serving many years on the Eastern District Conference Ministerial Committee.  We also look forward to Janet Panning’s first meeting in March 2020, as the newly-affirmed Ministerial Committee Chair.

The Ministerial Committee processed the following credentials:

  • Daniel Tran was approved for a license toward ordination and continues to serve as pastor of Vietnamese Gospel (Allentown, PA).
  • Charlene Smalls was approved for a license toward ordination and continues to serve on the pastoral team of Ripple (Allentown, PA).
  • Buddy Hannanto was approved for ordination and continues to serve as pastor of International Worship Church (San Gabriel, CA).
  • Stephen Zacheus was approved for ordination and continues to serve as associate pastor at JKIA (Sierra Madre, CA).
  • John Stoltzfus (formerly of Plains congregation, Hatfield, PA) has requested a transfer of his credentials to Virginia Mennonite Conference; this transfer was acknowledged.
Beth Rauschenberger

The Ministerial Committee also approved revisions to the  Record Retention Policy for Credential Files and the Position Statement on Confidential Communication Policy and approved the Sample Congregational Misconduct Policy for Lay Leaders and Congregants. An equipping event is scheduled for February 20 to introduce the sample misconduct policy and discuss how congregations can utilize it if needed.

Members of the Ministerial Committee said farewell to Ken Burkholder (Deep Run East), Mike Clemmer (formerly of Towamencin), and Jim Williams (Nueva Vida Norristown New Life) and thanked them for their years of service and contribution to this committee.

Filed Under: Articles, News

Conflict resolution: We are all beloved by God

January 9, 2020 by Conference Office

(originally printed by MennoniteUSA.org)
By Scott Roth

Scott Roth is a credentialed leader in Franconia Mennonite Conference that is exploring and creating cultural masterpieces through Urban Expression North America and Young Life.  Some of his current projects are the reconciliation of Eastern District and Franconia Mennonite Conferences, directing Bike & Sol, a community non-profit bicycle shop, and establishing and growing the ministries of Young Life in the Upper Perkiomen School District. Roth frequently speaks and writes for organizations and publications on youth formation, community development and incarnational ministry.

This post is a reflection from the Conference Ministers’ Gathering, in Banff, Alberta, Canada, December 4-7, 2019.

I am a sinner. I attend a church full of sinners, and Jesus died for my sins. This is a common way of viewing our identity with Christ. I often have been taught and heard these phrases. Yet, I do not hear the fact that we are, first and foremost, beloved.  Beloved by our Creator, in whose image we are made. The one who lived and showed us a way to live that is epic compared to our own human condition. The one who died and rose from the grave to create a bridge for us through grace to be with him forever! Why? Because our Creator loves us.

This was the narrative from our time in Banff, Alberta, Canada. Conference ministers from Mennonite Church USA (MC USA) and Mennonite Church Canada retreated to the Canadian Rockies to reflect and engage with Betty Pries, CEO of Credence & Co., Kitchener, Ontario, and Sue Park-Hur, MC USA’s denomination minister for Transformative Peacemaking. They led sessions on dealing with conflict in a variety of ways and scenarios, showing how we can realize our own story and the story of others as they intertwine in conflict. I cannot do the teachings justice by trying to summarize every nuance, but I want to reflect on us, as a denomination, and on what it means to be a people that is beloved.

Conflict resolution starts at the core of recognizing that each person is beloved by God. At our essence, we are children of God – individually and wonderfully made. As we see this, it is our basis for handing any conflicts that arise between us. We start with that foundation and build from there with an attitude of curiosity.

Think of a time in your life when you were at odds with someone. Was it your first instinct to understand and know where the other person was coming from? Or was it to try to defend and debate your side of the story? In other words, are we ok with trying to understand the other person with whom we are in conflict? Do we take the time to really dig deep with them and plunge the depths of their “why” regarding the conflict? It is through this curiosity of understanding that we can begin to build a bridge that leads to a restored relationship.

Many times, this is easier than healing “systems.” Systems get created over time and are reflective of those who have power and authority of the system. I am sure that if you take time, you can name many broken systems. Apply the same principle that those put in authority and power of these systems are beloved by God. In my heart of hearts, I don’t want to hear that about certain systems! I mean, come on, Jesus, can’t you just smite them off the earth, so we don’t have to deal with them?

As I continue to reflect on the Conference Ministers’ Gathering, I think of Jonah. Jonah had this attitude about Nineveh, the capital seat of the Assyrian Empire and a city that took three days to cross. This was a system. Jonah wanted God to smite the whole city. He was so entrenched in his thinking that he was willing to be thrown into the sea to avoid God’s plan. Wow, that is stubborn!

Even dealing in a system situation, we see that having a beloved attitude would have changed what Jonah was looking to do. His approach would have been different, because his heart would have viewed the people of Nineveh differently.

We need to be a people who know we are beloved and seek to show others they are beloved.  Over the years, I have watched many people leave faith communities without ever really recognizing that all involved are beloved. Can we start doing this more? Can we see the other person sitting across the table as beloved – no matter what they may think or do?  Can we plunge into the depths of their lives with curiosity to know them?

I leave you with this quote from Betty Pries:

“It is not magic that we are talking about here. It is not that we are lost one day and Christ-like the next. Or scoundrels today and saints tomorrow. But slowly, with each day that we awaken to Christ within us, and with each day that we open ourselves to the realization that we are deeply beloved of God, we are transformed into the likeness of the Christ. Slowly but surely, we become what we receive. We become transformed in our personhood. And, as we eat the bread and drink the cup, we find ourselves more able to join Jesus in pouring ourselves out for our loved ones, for our neighbor, for the world and for our enemies. We become the Body of Christ.”

Filed Under: Articles, News

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