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MennoLife

MennoLife, December 2006

December 20, 2006 by

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(click the header to read all stories)

Read the articles online:

  • Conference Gathers Centered In Christ, Empowering Others
  • A triptik from the open road of Assembly Scattered – Stephen Kriss
  • New Staff at FMC: Following the Call to Prayer – Sandy Landes
  • Perceiving Our Present and Our Future – Noel Santiago
  • Special Invitation from New Beginnings Community Church
  • Staff Sightings, Pastoral Transitions, Credentials, and Conference Board Transitions

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Staff Sightings, Pastoral Transitions, Credentials, and Conference Board Transitions

December 20, 2006 by

Staff Sightings

Phil Bergey is currently reading The End of Religion: an Introduction to the Subversive Spirituality of Jesus by Bruxy Cavey. He has also begun to organize his learnings from the past decade of transformation within FMC which will serve as the basis for his writing in the first half of 2007.

Gay Brunt Miller visited several congregations this fall including New Beginnings Community and Frederick Mennonite. She spent the first week of November in the United Kingdom exploring partnership opportunities with The Anabaptist Network. Gay also visited Germantown Mennonite Church for the ordination of the congregation’s pastor Mark Schlotterbeck. Finally, Gay attended the Missional Team meeting in Chicago and the Constituency Leaders Council.

Marlene Frankenfield attended the regional conference youth ministry gathering in New Jersey with Atlantic Coast Conference and Allegheny Conference. She has been offering support to the Blooming Glen and Franconia churches as they are in youth ministry transition and also paritcipated in Brad Alderfer’s commissioning at Salford. Marlene is assisting with Convention Worship Planning in San Jose. Finally, she conducted the annual youth Leadership Retreat where 19 congregations were represented.

Claude Good is currently writing to the many international students with whom we have had contact in the past 15 or so years. He recently ordered two million de-worming pills. One million will be going to Nicaragua for the fourth distribution. The other million will be going to a group that is distributing the capsules along with food supplements among the poor across the world.

Noah Kolb recently conducted the ordinations for Bill Kull at Methacton and Don McDonough at Spring Mount. He also attended the ordination of Michael Bishop at Blooming Glen. He met with several congregations in pastoral transition including Rocky Ridge and Vincent. Noah attended the pastors appreciation breakfast at Philadelphia Mennonite High School and the annual Conference Ministers’ gathering in Pittsburgh.

Pastoral Transitions

David F. Derstine, long-time minister in the conference, passed away December 15.

Credentials

Hien Truong was approved for ordination as a pastor at Vietnamese Gospel on December 6.

Conference Board Transistions

Rita Hoover and Roy Yoder finish their terms as Board members on December 31. Rita was also a member of the Executive Committee. Both have served with the Board for six years.

Jim Laverty (Souderton) and Vina Krisnadi (Philadelphia Praise Center) will begin three year terms with Conference Board on January 1.

Carolyn Egli, Jerry Musselman, and Ray Yoder will begin three year terms with the Conference Board Minsterial Committee on January 2.

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Special Invitation

December 20, 2006 by

New Beginnings Community Church is inviting all FMC staff, Board Members, and delegates to a special showing of the movie Akeelah and the Bee. Pastor Jon E. Moore was so inspired by this underground hit, which addresses issues of leadership cultivation and encouragement, that he bought a copy for all his members. Now Pastor Moore and New Beginnings would like to share this inspirational story with you. Refreshments will be provided.

Friday, January 12, 2007 at 6:30 p.m.

New Beginnings Community Church
5201 Lloyd Street
Bristol, PA 19007-3302

RSVP by January 5, 2007 by email at newbeginningscommunitychurch@verizon.net; or call 215-785-2233

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: MennoLife

Perceiving Our Present and Our Future

December 20, 2006 by

Noel Santiago
nsantiago@mosaicmennonites.org

This picture was taken during Franconia Conference Assembly at Salford Mennonite Church. These three persons, who formed part of the intercultural praise band that led singing at the Assembly, represent in part, who Franconia Conference is becoming.

What I want to observe however is the wall behind the them. The stones of this wall came from a mill and a local mason put it together where it now beautifully adorns the front of the sanctuary at Salford Mennonite Church. This wall speaks to the history as well as the quality of workmanship and commitment of the people who both built and preserved these stones. We thank God for them.

What strikes me about this image is that both past and present are captured in a single photo. History continues to sing today in what that wall represents. History continues the melody in the faces of those joining the peoplehood of God and singing a new song.

Is it possible that God is continuing to ‘build his church’ in Franconia Mennonite Conference by communicating to us through such a picture? Are we living in the present with our past as a reference and the future as our preference?

As I reflect on who was present this night, it seems to me that God brought together this faithful people, old and new, who have journeyed and continue to journey, into the same room – a sanctuary.

However, does being in the same room at the same time with different connections, understanding and history, make us one in heart and mind? Our Assistant Moderator Blaine Detwiler noted, we are seeking to learn to speak a new language. This is not a one way process, but a mutual one.

God is indeed doing a new thing in our midst. The biblical question the prophet raised was “do you not perceive it?” The question I want to raise is “how do you perceive it?”

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New Staff at FMC: Following the Call to Prayer

December 20, 2006 by

Sandy Landes

Editor’s Note: Sandy Landes recently joined the FMC staff as a contracted Prayer Ministry Coordinator. She will be coordinating and connecting prayer support throughout the conference. Sandy is also Prayer Minister at Doylestown Mennonite Church.

Does our faith journey ever take us where we expect? About five years ago I felt God leading me to begin a prayer time during our Sunday School hour at my home congregation of Doylestown Mennonite Church. Out of that prayer time grew a prayer ministry involving many people as we opened our hearts to the incredible gift of prayer. My congregation has encouraged me in so many ways as we are learning together what it means to be a house of prayer. God has been gracious in leading us to develop a prayer room, to begin an intercessory prayer ministry during our Sunday morning worship service, and to initiate an active email prayer chain. Eventually I joined the staff of Doylestown as a prayer minister. I find my ministry fulfilling and challenging.

In the past year, while continuing to seek God’s leading on my faith journey, I felt led to take another step of working to help people pray. God is already at work building houses of prayer around Franconia Mennonite Conference as congregations are developing active prayer ministries. While Noel Santiago and Jeannette Phillips have worked at encouraging the intercessors, Noel felt the need to have someone on staff at FMC to encourage and connect the prayer ministries of the different congregations. In November I began a new position as Prayer Ministry Coordinator of Franconia Mennonite Conference. I plan to work at coordinating prayer coverage for the leadership of and within Franconia Mennonite Conference. I want to be available to provide resources and encouragement for those involved in the many different aspects of prayer ministry in congregations and conference related organizations.

It is a journey of faith, one in which I am unsure of the direction it will go, but I do know the promises of God’s word. As a conference of congregations we are all being led on a journey which sometimes leads us in unexpected places. The exciting thing about this trip is not where we are going but the One who is leading us. God is faithful and will do all that he has promised. My hope and prayer is that we will continue to grow in prayer and understanding God’s heart for us as a body. I look forward to the journey!

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A triptik from the open road of Assembly Scattered: From a dirt road in Vermont to 48th & Baltimore in West Philly

December 20, 2006 by

Steve Kriss
skriss@mosaicmennonites.org

They were busy weeks of journeying, listening and leading. Beginning with a quick jaunt for an evening over chips and salsa in Vermont and concluding with a dinner at Perkins Restaurant just off Route 80 in Bloomsburg, PA, I had the opportunity and privilege (and sometimes burden) of listening and conversing with about 150 conference leaders through the Assembly Scattered gatherings this fall. I attended every session with the exception of one (Alpha, NJ).

While they don’t provide a coherent narrative, this triptik is about who we are and who we might be becoming. They give glimpses of both the faithfulness of the past and the struggle for the future. In all of the journeys, one thing emerged clearly. I began to see our conference as a body with a heart somewhere around the Route 113 corridor. The heart has some muscular responsibilities to pump out that which might refresh, energize, and renew and to recognize that the essential work of hands, feet, and head may be done in other places.

The first gathering was at Bethany Birches Camp,intended for leaders from Vermont our communication patterns were crossed and attendance was low. The lack of effective communication was emblematic to how it seems Vermonters might feel about their relationship to the rest of FMC–disconnected and distanced. I have reminded my colleagues again and again that Vermont’s not that far away, that a six hour drive is doable. The drive back from the weekend tired me out, to be honest, and I found myself looking for a hotel at 1 a.m. in New Jersey after having driven the bulk of the way back to Philadelphia. I became convinced that it wasn’t good for me or anyone else on the road to continue further down the Turnpike to Philadelphia.

At Franconia church, I stood in the lobby and in the parking lot until nearly 11 p.m. Though it seemed hard to dream and imagine where the conference might be going while we were sitting together from 7:30-9 p.m., it wasn’t hard afterward. I listened as a congregational leader described his hopes and dreams for his church, for all of us to be in the marketplace,sharing faith with open hands and hearts. What would it mean to open our churches to the community,he asked, not only on Sunday morning, but all week?

I arrived in Bally with time to grab something to eatat Longacre’s Dairy Bar, a community fixture. I had good homemade ice cream and a burger, watched and listened as high schoolers served food and two women next to me split a sandwich so that they’d have room for dessert sundaes. I took a quick drive up into the hills just outside of town, got my first glimpse of Barto and realized how beautiful this still somewhat rural area is. I spoke with Jim Longacre (Salford) at length afterward. Jim’s family has farmed in this community, initiated the dairybar that I enjoyed, and wondered what it would mean to search deeply for Anabaptist responses to the complicated realities of our time. Even at Bally, in the midst of a picturesque small-town, change is coming as suburbanization from Allentown creeps southward and Philadelphia creeps northward.

As I led our time together at Perkasie I was acutely aware for the first time, that I am still new to Franconia Conference. A tenure of a little over a year doesn’t do much within an organization that’s got more than 300 years of history. I felt vulnerable, both to the questions and the possibilities that persons were asking. I felt burdened to some degree, who am I to be entrusted with the dreams of these persons? Ertell Whigham, Leonard Dow, and Ken Burkholder, my vision and financial plan teammates were there, along with other conference staff; but in leading and inviting consideration of Scripture and dreams, there was a juxtaposition of new leaders, rooted ministry and ongoing questions. This was the first gathering where the tough question of what is going to happen to the Indian Creek farm emerged. We acknowledged it carefully. I read later in the responses from Perkasie that it would be helpful if the conference would find ways to inspire new vision.

It rained hard the night we met at Hersteins. I was surprised on my drive there to pass a Buddhist temple right in the middle of rural Montgomery County. The world has maybe already arrived here. The night was dark and the gathering in a narrow room at the rear of the sanctuary felt somewhat awkward because it was hard to see each other’s faces. I talked with Wes Boyer (Vincent) who was excited about all that FMC is doing, grateful for the way that the conference could move into influencing and shaping Mennonite Church USA and looking forward to hosting Jim Schrag on the Sunday morning following Conference Assembly.

As I arrived, somewhat late, at Line Lexington I noticed the cemetery, the generations of faithful who have gone before. I was aware of its presence behind me as I led that night and as I listened. I stayed late again listening to someone who wondered if change was really possible. I heard divergent viewpoints. I heard us wonder where the Conference might be going and how we might better understand it. I heard questions about whether the work that we had done in the past was recognized as significant. I wonder how those who have gone before us had experienced cultural changes? I heard one pastor remind us that our work is ultimately about sharing the Gospel. In this evening, I experienced much of our latent divergences in viewpoints. How do we move ahead? What is the significance of our institutions from previous generations? What is the role of evangelism? What are we doing in this visioning process anyway?

Gathering at the Gryphon Coffee Shoppe in St. David’s to meet with Mennonite students at Eastern University turned out quite differently from other Assembly Scattered. With this group of seven students, we (FMC staff Dave Landis, Jessica Walter, and I) listened and wondered. Students offered practical ways to connect and shared good ideas that ranged from supporting justice and peacemaking initiatives on campus to finding a way to play a giant game of Dutch Blitz with local Mennonite leaders. We wondered what our roles and responsibilities might be as followers of Jesus in the wealthy Philadelphia Mainline suburbs? The students who came that night were from different conferences. They didn’t know that it mattered whether they were from Lancaster or Franconia congregations. And maybe that in and of itself gives us a glimpse of our future.

The meeting at West Philadelphia was a cultural mix of folks. Here we were Franconia Conference—black, white, Indonesian, Slovak, Mexican; Pentecostals, cynical scholars, and peaceniks. Meeting in the basement of Calvary United Methodist Church in West Philadelphia in front of a large colorful mural created a different context from our other gatherings. Communication across cultures wasn’t easy for us. We strained to hear each other both figuratively and literally. People talked about how they might change their city. They wondered what resources the conference might have to help them do that. There was a presence of persistent hope tamed by a bit of cynicism, knowing that it’s never easy to change the city (or the organizational embodiment of the church) and the call to change the relational pattern of the city and the suburbs is a long, hard road.

By the time we met with leaders from Conference Related Organizations, I was tired. I knew that this was likely our most disparate gathering, it’s hard to corral the diverse ministries and possibilities of Franconia Conference CRO’s. What do our ministries share in common? Can our centeredness in Christ hold us together? I spent some time with Rick Young, the new executive director of Liberty Ministries, and he wondered if he was really allowed to dream and if his dream could include revisioniong the Indian Creek Farm? I told him we’d take his dream seriously. I hope we do. Where do our dreams overlap and exponentialize?

The last gathering was intended for Northern Pennsylvania church leaders. This was my first real immersion in the diaspora congregations north of I-80. They are almost as far apart from each other as they are from the Conference Center in Souderton. I picked what I thought was a central meeting location in Bloomsburg where I knew there was a Perkins Restaurant. Juanita Brodnicki remarked that it was close to where her dad (retired pastor at Mennonite Bible Fellowship) used to meet with his bishop (so at least we were in good historical company). We gathered together in a small room at the rear of the restaurant with a gracious waitress, quick smiles and hopeful conversation tempered by the lingering hard economic realities that persist in Pennsylvania’s mountain communities. I heard a poignant question, “When was the last time that someone sold a farm to do ministry in another community?” There were questions about whether it was time to do that again.

In these weeks of listening, we focused on passages from 2 Chronicles about Solomon’s conversations with God, his recognition of God’s faithfulness, and his petition that God might grant him knowledge and wisdom. It’s a prayer appropriate for our day in this time of discerning and listening, in hoping, doubting, and believing. We’ll need the wisdom that comes from God and the practical knowledge of experience and imagination that might carry us into what El Savadoran martyr Oscar Romero called, “the future that is not our own.” This is God’s future and we’re all invited to create, to enliven our own possibilities of work, and hope in a new day.

The Long Road to New Jersey

Karen Moyer

The trip to Alpha that should have been 45 minutes, turned into 95 minutes as Charlotte Graber Rosenberger and I struggled to interpret misleading software directions. This challenge of finding the church perhaps symbolizes the distance the gathered group that evening sometimes feels from the Conference. They asked for help to educate their congregations on the benefits of belonging to a broader body. They also invite representatives from churches from the “heartland” to occasionally worship with them. They dreamed of partnering with other congregations on joint work projects and developing relationships with other congregations and Conference leaders to strengthen their understanding of what it means to be Anabaptist/Mennonite in their communities.

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Conference Gathers Centered in Christ, Empowering Others: A historic Pennsylvania meetinghouse is filled with new music and languages

December 20, 2006 by

Anna Musselman, minister of church programs at Salford Mennonite Church, told her congregation that the walls of their historic meetinghouse would hear new songs and sounds during the Franconia Conference Fall Assembly held at the church on November 10-11. She was right. Praises rang out for 24-hours with words spoken in Indonesian, Spanish, and Vietnamese (the worshipping languages of the conference’s congregations) while leaders gathered to celebrate, discern, and learn.

Kicked off with energetic worship led by a multiethnic, multilingual worship team composed of members of Nueva Vida Norristown (PA) New Life, a multicultural, bilingual conference congregation,and Philadelphia Praise Center, a congregation composed mostly of recent immigrants from Indonesia, the assembly focused on the theme of “Centered in Christ, Empowering Others.” Conference delegates and guests gathered from as far away as Chile to celebrate connections that cross lines of ethnicity, language, and denominational differences. The 24-hour worship featured groups from congregations with a variety of affiliations.

The assembly included the affirmation of Philadelphia Praise Center as the conference’s newest member congregation. In the litany read by conference leaders they said together, “In the spirit of God’s biblical mandate to protect the vulnerable and in the spirit upon which Dutch forebears 300 years ago sent pastors to shepherd fledgling congregations in the New World, we acted on behalf of Franconia Mennonite Conference, risking protocols and precedents to use our 300-year old residency in this land to . . . provide leadership for a fledgling congregation in Philadelphia.” The conference’s board acted in June to accept PPC as a member in order to secure pastoral leaders for the rapidly growing congregation.

While worship and discernment are traditional features of the conference’s gathering, this year “equipping” seminars included opportunities to hear from denominational leaders, James Schrag (Mennonite Church USA) and Stanley Green (Mennonite Mission Network); conference leaders Gay Brunt Miller and James M. Lapp; biblical scholar, Laura Brenneman from Bluffton University; and young adult leaders David P. Landis of Harleysville, PA and Felicia Moore from Bristol, PA. Seminars were packed with attendees spilling into the halls.

While the walls of the Salford meetinghouse heard new songs and sounds, the conference ended its work for the day with a decades-old affirmation of simple and nonresistant faith this time read in Indonesian, Spanish, and Vietnamese as well as English.

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