by Sharon Hernandez, Editorial Content Specialist, Everence
Editor’s Note: This year, Everence will honor Ivan and Evelyn Moyer, Leon and Karen Moyer, and Eileen and Jeryl Knechel with their National Journey Award. The Moyers were longtime members of the former Rocky Ridge (Quakertown, PA) congregation. An Everence Journey Award honors people who live out the faithful stewardship of their God-given gifts. The presentation will take place at Quakertown (PA) Christian School on March 24, 2024 at 4pm.
The original, longer version of this article first appeared on Everence’s Everyday Stewardship.
Ernest and Verna Moyer started their business, Moyer’s Chicks, in Quakertown, Pa., in 1946. Through their business and their lifestyle, they instilled in their children – Ivan, Leon and Eileen – lifelong values of generosity, humility and compassion.
Their story is one of generosity and love across family, community and the world at large, spanning decades and impacting generations.
While still in their late teens, Ernest and Verna began assisting with a small Mennonite mission station outside Quakertown, an hour north of Philadelphia, initiated in part by Verna’s older brother Linford Hackman.
They married in 1936 and Ivan was born two years later. As their commitment to this mission work intensified, they and other like-minded Mennonite families decided to move there to start a new community infused with a gospel-centric lifestyle.
Within a year of returning home from a Civilian Public Service assignment, Ernest bought some land, built a home for his family and started his hatchery business. He famously made his first delivery of chicks in his 1941 Oldsmobile sedan during a snowstorm in January 1947.
Unbeknownst even to Ernest at the time, the hatchery would become so much more than a lucrative business, it would be a means for helping his community and missionaries abroad.
In 1950 Ernest became the lay pastor of the Rocky Ridge Mennonite Mission and continued in this pastoral role into the late 1980s. In 1951 he also cofounded Quakertown Christian School, at which he served as board chair in its early years.
“It is not an overstatement to say that the Moyer family embodies the biblical idea of stewardship.” said Franco Salvatori, Everence Stewardship Consultant and pastor of Rocky Ridge from 2010-2020. The Moyers were no strangers to trying new programs to help communities, and the family regularly engaged in mission work across the country and abroad.
In 1953, Ernest connected with Mennonite missionaries in Puerto Rico and began a partnership in which Moyer’s Chicks shipped them about 500 chicks every other week to eventually 10,000 weekly.
Ernest also flew to Puerto Rico about four times a year to assist with agricultural and community development projects – and, eventually, opened a satellite hatchery on the island in 1960, which continued on into the 1980s.
It was no surprise, then, that giving would be second nature for their children. To them, sharing of their time and resources with the community and the world around them was all they knew, said Leon Moyer. In time, Ivan, Leon and Eileen also would pass these values to their children.
None of Ernest’s children felt obligated to return to the hatchery after going to school – Leon lived abroad for many years in Haiti and Bolivia, involved in mission work – but ultimately, they all returned to the family business.
Under the direction of a new generation of Moyers, the business continued finding ways to give back. Nowadays the family – having sold the hatchery and retiring in 2020 – is still active in the community, serving on boards and continuing their volunteer work in other ways. Ivan meets with a local group of community leaders from around the world. Leon and his wife help immigrants settle in the community. And Eileen and Jeryl donate hours of time and machinery work at Spruce Lake Retreat, a Christian retreat center and camp in northeast Pennsylvania.