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Notes to Pastors

March 13, 2008 by Conference Office

Conference Center Closed
The Mennonite Conference Center will be closed on Good Friday, March 21.
We wish you and your families a Blessed Easter.

Menno data Profiles
Pastors are reminded and encouraged to update their profiles on the Ministerial Leadership Registration System at www.mennodata.org. You can do this by visiting the website and entering your ID and password. Once logged in, go to “Personal Information”, where you can update addresses, continuing education, history of ministerial positions, etc. Please take time to assure that your ministerial positions are up to date. If you are not sure of your ID and/or password, email DebR@MennoniteUSA.org, and that information will be mailed to you via the US Postal Service.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Notes to Pastors

Notes to Pastors

March 6, 2008 by Conference Office

Thursday Pastors’ Breakfast
The March breakfast will be held on Thursday, March 13 from 8 – 10 a.m. at the Mennonite Conference Center. The subject will be “Creating Safer Spaces for Children in our Congregations.” Come for a conversation about the Franconia Conference Child Protection Initiative and some steps you can take to make your congregation a safer place for the children in its care. Please register for this event by Monday, March 10 by contacting Jessica Walter, jwalter@mosaicmennonites.org. A $5 donation is appreciated towards this hot breakfast.

Pastor’s Family Retreat
Pastor’s Family Retreat is scheduled April 11-13 at Spruce Lake Retreat. This retreat was initially developed for Franconia, Eastern District and Atlantic Coast Conference pastor families. Spruce Lake has extended the invitation to other interested pastor families to attend. Duane Beck, pastor of Raleigh Mennonite Church, is presenter. For more information, visit www.sprucelake.org, and click on “Programmed Events” to view the schedule for Pastor’s Family Retreat. The cost is $166/individual, $211/couple, $299/family of four. To register, call 800-822-7505.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Notes to Pastors

Notes to Pastors

February 26, 2008 by Conference Office

Retirement Celebration
Wes Boyer will celebrate 35 years of ministry as he retires from pastoral ministry at Vincent Mennonite Church as of February 29. The congregation will have a farewell service on Sunday, March 2 in the morning and a time of greeting Pastor Wes and Lois in the afternoon. All are invited to a drop-in time from 2 – 5 p.m. at Vincent Mennonite Church on Sunday, March 2 to celebrate with him and wish him well as he moves into his retirement years.

Pastors’ Day
March 5 is Pastors’ Day at Christopher Dock High School. Please notify them of your attendance by Wednesday, February 27, at cschmidt@dockhs.org or 215-362-2676 ext.103.

Monthly Pastors’ Breakfast
The March pastors’ breakfast will held on the second Thursday this month, March 13, from 8 – 10 a.m. at the Mennonite Conference Center. The discussion will be led by Julie Prey-Harbaugh, Franconia Conference Trainer in Child Protection and Child Abuse Recovery. Further information will be forthcoming. Please RSVP by Saturday, March 8, by contacting Jessica Walter, jwalter@mosaicmennonites.org.

Prayer and Worship Celebration
Pastors, you are invited to join with the regional church in a Prayer and Worship celebration for 40 Days of Prayer/Fasting, Friday, March 14, 7 p.m. at Souderton Mennonite Church fellowship hall. Prayer will be the focus of this service, large group, small groups, and at prayer stations. Immediately following this service, you are invited to participate in the 24 Hour Prayer & Worship event being held at Souderton Mennonite Church in their fellowship hall through Saturday, March 15, 8 p.m.

Pastor Seminar
The Lombard Mennonite Peace Center has designed a long-term approach to congregational change grounded in the family systems theory of Dr. Murray Brown. Here I Stand: Leading Change through Self-Differentiation is a three-day event at which pastors will be trained to integrate this approach into their ongoing ministries. The event will be offered on April 8 – 10 at Zion Mennonite Church in Souderton, PA. Additional information is available on the website at www.LMPeaceCenter.org. To register, call 630-627-0507 or email Admin@LMPeaceCenter.org.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Notes to Pastors

Notes to Pastors

February 14, 2008 by Conference Office

Death of Curtis Bergey
Curtis Bergey, pastor and bishop in Franconia Conference died on February 4, 2008 at the Souderton Mennonite Home. Brother Curtis was 91 and was preceded in death by his wife Esther in 2003. Curtis was ordained in 1958 as a pastor in the
Franconia Mennonite Church where he served until 1987. He was ordained a
Bishop for Franconia Conference in 1961. He served 10 years as chair of the
Leadership Commission of Franconia Conference and served on the Board of Directors of
Christopher Dock. He will be remembered by many for his big smile and gentle
spirit. He was an encourager to people young and old. His
funeral service was held on Saturday, February 9, at Franconia Mennonite Church.

Third Thursday Pastors’ Breakfast
The February breakfast will be held on Thursday, February 21 from 8 – 10 a.m. at the Mennonite Conference Center, hosted by the Faith and Life Advisory Council. The subject will be “Leadership and Authority: How do we claim it?” Come for a conversation on claiming and exercising authority as pastors and leaders in our congregations. In preparation for the event please read the following article from the most recent edition of Growing Leaders, “A Nervous Embrace…Cultivating Leadership and Authority.” This article can be found on the mosaicmennonites.org website under the “Publications” tab. Please register for this event by Saturday, February 16, by contacting Jessica Walter, jwalter@mosaicmennonites.org. A $5 donation is appreciated towards this hot breakfast.

The Meaning and Practice of Servant Leadership Seminar
Atlantic Coast and Lancaster Mennonite Conferences invite pastors and CEO’s of conference-related ministries to a training seminar scheduled for Friday, February 22 at Garden Spot Village in New Holland, PA from 8:15 a.m. – 3:30 p.m.

Larry Spears, from the Greenleaf Center for Servant-Leadership, will speak on the topic of The Meaning and Practice of Servant Leadership. Click on the following website for more information about the Greenleaf Center: http://www.greenleaf.org/leadership/servant-leadership/What-is-Servant-Leadership.html.
The registration fee (includes breakfast and lunch) for pastors is $60. To pre-register, please contact Keith Wilson, ACC administrative assistant at keithw@frontiernet.net or call
717-355-0550, or 800-238-0126.
For a brochure with more information and registration form for this event, go to the Lancaster Conference web site: http://www.lancasterconference.org/. Click on menu bar on the left side of the screen, click on:
Calendar/Events
Resource Packet
December 2007 (center of screen)
The Meaning & Practice of Servant Leadership

Every Pastor A Coach: Enhancing Your Effectiveness and Impact in Ministry training is designed to equip leaders with basic coaching skills that can be integrated and incorporated into the day-to-day ministry setting. This is ideal for pastors, ministry leaders, local church leaders, and small group leaders. Training presenter J. Val Hastings is the President and Founder of Coaching4Clergy, which works to empower today’s spiritual leaders through coaching, consulting, and coach training. This event will be held at Mennonite Mutual Aid’s 2008 Stewardship University at Lancaster Mennonite High School on Saturday, March 1 from 9:00 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. For more information and to register, visit www.stewardshipuniversity.org or contact Walter Sawatzky at 267-664-5542 or water.sawatzky@verizon.net.

Pastor Seminar
The Lombard Mennonite Peace Center has designed a long-term approach to congregational change grounded in the family systems theory of Dr. Murray Brown. Here I Stand: Leading Change through Self-Differentiation is a three-day event at which pastors will be trained to integrate this approach into their ongoing ministries. The event will be offered on April 8 – 10 at Zion Mennonite Church in Souderton, PA. Additional information is available on the website at www.LMPeaceCenter.org. To register, call 630-627-0507 or email Admin@LMPeaceCenter.org.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Notes to Pastors

Intersections January/February 2008

February 12, 2008 by Conference Office

intbanner.jpg

(click the header to read all stories)

Read the articles online:

  • Seven Core Convictions: Hints of an astonishing imagination– Blaine Detwiler
  • Living in faithful intercultural fellowship and witness– Ertell Whigham
  • Letting your life speak: Reflecting Christ’s love and service– Maria Rodriguez
  • Current Area Conference Leadership Fund Recipients
  • Bringing relief to those in need: Assisting Vietnamese refugees in Cambodia– Renee Gehman
  • North American Vietnamese Mennonite Fellowship: A small organization with a big impact-Deborah Froese
  • International volunteers serve in Conference Related Ministries: Hospitatlity from an unexpected place– Renee Gehman
  • Connections bring healing Witnessing a miracle . . .– Charles Ness
  • A legacy of 35 years: Longtime New Jersey pastor retires– Lora Steiner
  • In the face of uncertainty: Living with a long view– Martha Kolb-Wyckoff
  • Responding to urgent needs: Material Resource Center opens doors to serve the world from Indian Creek Farm– Norman Good

intersections_oct_thumb.jpg

Click to View/download the printable PDF

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Intersections

Seven Core Convictions: Hints of an astonishing imagination

February 11, 2008 by Conference Office

Blaine Detwiler
detwiler@nep.net

dove.jpgBlaine Detwiler is Moderator of Franconia Mennonite Conference and pastor at Lakeview Mennonite Church. This is the beginning of a series of reflections from Blaine on the Seven Core Convictions, established by Mennonite World Conference in 2006 at Pasadena, California. Blaine’s reflections are intended to stimulate discussion and offer a basis for formation as we move into a global Anabaptist future. We invite your thoughts and responses to intersections@mosaicmennonites.org

Core Conviction One: God is known to us as Father, Son and Holy Spirit, the Creator who seeks to restore fallen humanity by calling a people to be faithful in fellowship, worship, service and witness.

Thankfully, because light pollution hasn’t spoiled the night sky over northern Pennsylvania, it’s possible to gaze upwards and consider the full depth of creation. Looking up into the black cold, I cannot see “God with my naked eye.” Yet when an orange lollipop moon rises over the tree line against a backdrop of stars light years away, it all hints of an astonishing imagination.

We have Moses to thank for his courage to pose the question many of us have stopped asking of God since we were children, “What is your Name?” While we can be quite pleased with a name like ‘God’ as a ready handle for our discussions, God’s answer from the fiery bush, “I Am Who I Am,” comes off sounding more like a verb, a promise to “go along,” especially when the road out of Egypt will get difficult.

Sometimes I imagine my own great-something-grandparents boarding a sailing ship to leave the religions of Europe behind. Some days I try to imagine what they sensed of God as they climbed up the gangplank and looked over distant waters towards Philadelphia. What would become of their move? Was the promise of “I Am Who I Am” enough for them? Some Sunday mornings I secretly wonder if we would be wise to remember “the going along during times of great difficulty” part of God’s name, when sharing time gets stuck at reciting mountaintop highs.

It was a teacher, Anil Solanki at Eastern Mennonite Seminary, who began pushing our class to probe further into the full heart of God. Anil is a gentle soul and was the right person to begin rounding the harsh edges off Old Testament scriptures for us. It turns out the ancient Ten Commandments were not so much a giant cosmic index finger pointing a damning “or else” at the world but were instead designed to be a way of life, a compelling way for peoples of the earth to live with each other. Anil further pointed out that troubles abound when a command is ignored or at worst defied and becomes like a plague, infecting people for three or four generations or even more. But what he also invited us to consider, and what I prefer to be measured in light years, is God’s steadfast love like arms that can reach and wrap their way around a full thousand of generations.

In Genesis a sense develops that God invested a lot in the earth he created. Enough to get tired. A favorite story of mine comes from the children’s book “Does God Have a Big Toe?” where author Marc Gellman, who is Jewish, takes this to mean that God needs partners to help finish His project. The earth is not finished, not yet.

It strikes me as a surprising move when God decides His “arms of steadfast love” will belong to people. Abram was the first to be approached on this matter and then slowly His program of “blessing” begins to spread out.

In our community, in a woman named Donna Cosmello, a recent blessing took shape. With Thanksgiving Day getting close, Donna, who is single and keenly aware of how loneliness and poverty work to diminish holiday spirits, decided to “make dinner.”

vietnamese-gospel-4.jpgArmed with her wits, her restaurant savvy, her connections, a hive of community volunteers, several churches, donations of fresh baked apple and pumpkin pies, and a small white bus to transport senior citizens Donna pulled off her Thanksgiving meal. It was an open door town gathering where people’s stomachs got full on turkey and yams and the room with chattering voices. The spirit breezed in through those open doors and rested on both servant and served. This meal could no longer be claimed as just Donna’s.

Sometimes I find the word “church” as difficult to capture in words as “God” is. We end up preferring an image like a building that has a solid foundation. Or we hold on tightly to certificates of membership we can store in our filing cabinets. But maybe the experience of Moses can instruct us. Like God, perhaps “church” becomes vital when it stops standing around like a noun but instead becomes a verb. An active verb. A people of blessing. A church defining itself as an action…like its Creator.

Lakeview Mennonite Church is by no means perfect. But I see these things as indicators of a church that defines itself as a verb: card senders and Meals-On-Wheels drivers who tackle curvy roads with little complaint; encouragers, pray-ers, healers, teachers and more than one preacher who will give God a voice; a man brooding in worship, silently rubbing his forehead as if the impatience of God were becoming his own; animal repair persons, elder care specialists and a couple of hospice workers who stay up all night; artisans working with their hands whose banners, bookshelves, cupcakes and cartoons help give God’s world a shape; on any given Sunday I hear an 87 year old singer and a singer only two just beginning to find her praise. All this is, of course, mounting evidence of an imagination at work, of a world steadily moving on towards completion.

bbc-july-2007-34.jpg Seven Core Convictions Mennonites Share
1. God is known to us as Father, Son and Holy Spirit, the Creator who seeks to restore fallen humanity by calling a people to be faithful in fellowship, worship, service and witness.
2. Jesus is the Son of God. Through his life and teachings, his cross and resurrection, he showed us how to be faithful disciples, redeemed the world, and offers eternal life.
3. As a church, we are a community of those whom God’s Spirit calls to turn from sin, acknowledge Jesus Christ as Lord, receive baptism upon confession of faith, and follow Christ in life.
4. As a faith community, we accept the Bible as our authority for faith and life, interpreting it together under Holy Spirit guidance, in the light of Jesus Christ to discern God’s will for our obedience.
5. The Spirit of Jesus empowers us to trust God in all areas of life so we become peacemakers who renounce violence, love our enemies, seek justice, and share our possessions with those in need.
6. We gather regularly to worship, to celebrate the Lord’s Supper, and to hear the Word of God in a spirit of mutual accountability.
7. As a world-wide community of faith and life we transcend boundaries of nationality, race, class, gender and language. We seek to live in the world without conforming to the powers of evil, witnessing to God’s grace by serving others, caring for creation, and inviting all people to know Jesus Christ as Saviour and Lord.

photos by Timoyer

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Intersections

Living in faithful intercultural fellowship and witness

February 11, 2008 by Conference Office

Ertell Whigham

ertell.jpgAs I read through the articles for this issue of Intersections, I was struck by the diversity of the writers and stories. While it is indeed true that many of our previous issues may have contained as much or more diversity, for some reason in this issue a spirit of intercultural representation spoke to my heart. Though there was no particular article that directly addressed intercultural fellowship as a primary focus, it was the cultural mix of names that hit home.

In Franconia Conference we say that our core values include being missional, intercultural, and transformational. But what does it mean when we say that we value being intercultural? Or what does it mean to be intercultural or to have to do processing in intercultural ways? Many of us understand that it is more than a diversity of articles in Intersections, a tolerance of different worship styles, sharing a “mission moment,” or gathering for a special Martin Luther King time of remembrance. It is even much more than diversity. At the very heart of being the intercultural people of God is a willingness to share in the ownership of another culture as our own and being open to the Spirit of Transformation.

intersections-jan-feb08-2.jpgEmbracing intercultural as a value can be threatening, confusing, and at the very least move us to feel out of control. Valuing intercultural perspectives can often take us to a place some of us are not really prepared or willing to go. After all, who wants to be “out of control?”

Whatever the case, I believe the call to be faithful in fellowship and witness comes with the promise of being enabled. That ability, given by the spirit of God, to be the intercultural people of God in a way that demonstrates true fellowship and witness.

No matter how we approach it, the work of real intercultural fellowship can be difficult. As a work in progress, on God’s potter’s wheel, some of the things I continue to learn are:

• Intercultural work requires a secure identity in who and what you are called to be in Christ. As a result there is less chance of “losing” how and what God has designated you to be and you don’t have to work at protecting “your culture.” In his paper, Creating Intercultural Communities through Dialogue, Roberto Chene says, “Before we can engage in true intercultural relationships we must first be secure with and in our own culture.”

• It requires a personal reality check about what is most important.

• It demands open and honest expression in ways that strengthen relationships.

• It calls for an adaptability and flexibility that takes us beyond what we feel prepared for.

• It requires a spirit that understands that different isn’t wrong, it’s just different.

• It calls us beyond tolerance to an “ownership” of any expression that glorifies God.

In our conference we have included the “value” of being intercultural at the center of how we function in every aspect of what we do. As stated in the Seven Core Convictions shared by Mennonites globally, we are called to be “faithful in fellowship, worship, service and witness.”

I believe being “faithful in fellowship and witness” is one of the things that translates to our conference’s openness to the work of being intercultural. It does indeed take work. The work of the spirit and a spirit of cooperation that enables us to enjoy the process.

So, as I read the names of Detwiler, Rodriguez, Truong, Meag, Prather, Ford and others, I see the written witness of an ongoing move toward intercultural growth and I am grateful to God. Let us continue to honor that which we claim to value and surrender to that which God has called us to be.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Intersections

Letting your life speak: Reflecting Christ’s love and service

February 11, 2008 by Conference Office

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Intersections

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