gpconnect 09/3/14 -...
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GPconnect 09/3/14
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Bishop Jones begins weekly blog
Have you been keeping up with Bishop Scott Jones’ weekly blog that is posted most Mondays?
In this week’s blog, Jones discusses difficult conversations as he reflects on a meeting in Wichita, Kansas, that
addressed the question of how to prevent the same type of conflict seen in Ferguson, Missouri. To follow his blog,
go to greatplainsumc.org/bishopsblog
District superintendent/district connectional ministries orientation cultivating vital ministries
By Michael Rich
“This training is like receiving a large suit of clothes that I haven’t grown into yet,” that’s according to an insight
that Myron Wingfield, coordinator of the event, discovered from a 2013 participant.
District Superintendents and
Conference Directors of
Connectional Ministries from
across the connection gathered
from August 24-28, 2014 at Lake
Junaluska Retreat and Conference
Center in North Carolina.
Attending this year were 75 new
district superintendents, 8 new directors of connectional ministries, and over 30 spouses. A total of 41
conferences/episcopal areas were represented between participants, faculty and staff.
Read the full article.
Photos: Bishop Sandra Steiner Ball of the West Virginia Conference; Chris Holmes of Holmes Coaching Group, one
of the five coaches who led sharing groups during this week of orientation; and the Rev. Myron Wingfield, interim
associate general secretary, Division of Ordained Ministry, GBHEM.
Youth workers UNITE! to gather Oct. 14
Youth Workers UNITE! is a
group of youth ministers
and coordinators who
gather a couple times each
year to share ideas, learn
from one another, and
share our plans for youth
ministry for the months to
come.
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The next gathering for this event Tuesday, Oct. 14, at Countryside C-side in Topeka, Kansas, from 9:30 a.m. to 3
p.m. If interested, please contact Allison Bond at [email protected], Tami Clark
at [email protected] or Lisa Freeman at [email protected].
If you are a youth worker, or know one would be interested, join Youth Wokers UNITE! on Facebook.
Wathena UMC choir sings national anthem
The Angel Choir of the Wathena UMC, in Kansas, was invited to sing the National Anthem at the Wathena Fall
Festival Friday, Aug. 30. Ms. Ara Ju, wife of the Rev. Ji Seok Ju, directs the choir.
Watch a video of the choir singing.
Four Conference UMMen Rally 2014 to be Sept. 26-28
“First, I thank my God through Jesus Christ for all of you, because your faith is proclaimed throughout the world. For
God, whom I serve with my spirit by announcing the gospel of his Son, is my witness that without ceasing I
remember you always in my prayers, asking that by God’s will I may somehow at last succeed in coming to you. For
I am longing to see you so that I may share with you some spiritual gift to strengthen you - or rather so that we
may be mutually encouraged by each other’s faith, both yours and mine.”
Romans 1:8-13
The United Methodist Men (UMMen) will host the Four Conference United Methodist Men Rally 2014 in Spirit
Lake, Iowa. UMMen from the Dakotas, Iowa, Great Plains and Minnesota conferences are invited to attend the
rally held Sept. 26-28, at the Lake Okoboji United Methodist Camp and Retreat Center (21413 154th
Street Place).
The spiritual retreat will have the theme “What has Romans Done for You?”
Men are sought to volunteer to speak on their favorite passage out of Romans with an explanation of how the
passage has affected their Christian faith. One of the speakers will be Daniel Wickham. Wickham spent 20 years in
prison and will share his story of ‘lost and found’. Lost in crime and depravity and found by Christ in prison.
Wickham devoted 15 years of his sentence to prison ministry. As you listen to Wickham l’s testimony you will find
an un-common strength of faith and a life fully dedicated to Christ.
Men will be blessed by the music of Daniel Everson. Everson plays the electric piano and guitar and will lead Friday
and Sunday worship as well as lead everyone in song all day Saturday. Preferences to hymns and worship songs
attendees would like to sing over the weekend are sought in advance. Hymnals and song books are provided.
There will be a time of sharing ‘what is working in our local units?’ on Saturday afternoon. Attendees are asked to
bring materials (photos, videos, power-point shows, etc.) and be ready to demonstrate the events and projects
that their local unit has been involved in. The idea is to share ideas that motivate men to join men’s fellowship
activities and discuss how to build a stronger presence of men in the congregations.
This year the Friday work day at camp will include the take-down and removal of three dead trees near the main
hall. The material will be trucked to the south campus where a bonfire will be constructed for the Friday night
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worship with communion. The campfire and worship service will be within easy walking distance. Everson will lead
the group in campfire songs and worship will include Holy Communion. There will be paint and clean-up projects
for those who don’t want to do any lifting.
The total cost of the weekend meals and lodging is $60 or $30 for those who commute for Saturday only. The
Friday work day will reduce your cost by $15.00 and Friday meals will be provided. If you will be with us on Friday
and/or Saturday nights you must bring your own towels, pillows and bedding. The dormitories have kitchenettes
with living rooms and nice shower bathrooms. The sleeping rooms are shared.
Please, share this notice and invitation with all men you think would be served by this rally. For more information
or to volunteer to present your favorite passage of Romans or ‘what your local unit is doing,’ contact Karl
Schwichtenberg at [email protected] or 952-334-8279. Please, give notice of your intention to
attend the rally by contacting Jim Smith at [email protected] or to Karl Schwichtenberg at 952-334-8279.
View schedule.
Run wild in the wilderness
Camp Fontanelle Halloween Wilderness 5K Run and 1.25 Mile Walk
The 5th Annual Halloween Wilderness
5K Run and 1.25 Mile Walk is set for
Saturday, Oct. 25, at Camp
Fontanelle, near Fontanelle,
Nebraska. The start time is 11 a.m.
Beginning at the 7:24 shelter, the 5K
course will have runners going up and
down the hills/bluffs of the Elkhorn River, across Buttermilk Creek and on and off the Camp Fontanelle trails, a true
wilderness run. The 1.25 mile walk will be on trails only.
Download a registration form or register online at CampFontanelle.com. Entry fee is $30 and includes a T-shirt,
spaghetti dinner and medals for the top three male and female finishers. All walkers 14 and under will receive a
medal. Registrations received after Oct. 14 will not receive a T-shirt. Medals will be awarded at the spaghetti
dinner immediately following the run.
Costumes are encouraged and spectators may enjoy a spaghetti meal for $5. Those additional meals may be
purchased at the time of registration.
For additional information, contact Trent Meyer at 402-459-0686 or [email protected].
This is a fun event for all ages. The corn maze will be open at 1 p.m. All runners/walkers will be given a free pass to
the corn maze. Spectators will need to purchase their entrance to the corn maze. The proceeds from this run/walk
go towards their summer camping program.
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Order through Great Plains Conference for discount
Effective church-school partnership resources are available from the Lewis Center for Church Leadership. See the
newsletter link and note that the DVD/CD resource is available for $25 if ordered through the Conference
Resource Center. Contact Diane Dunkerson at [email protected] to order one for your
congregation.
Bravehearted Boys to visit Lincoln
Every parent knows their son dreams of becoming a superhero someday, but they also want to protect him from a
scary world of “villains” ready to trip him up. How does a super mom or dad raise a super man? That’s where
Bravehearted Boys: The Superhero Experience can help. It’s an all-new parent-son date night where bravery is
rewarded, fun is guaranteed and capes are optional. According to one dad, it’s an event that’s “way worth skipping
football practice for.”
Bravehearted Boys: The Superhero Experience national tour will stop locally in Lincoln, Nebraska, on Wednesday,
Oct. 8 at St. Mark’s UMC. The event starts at 6:30 p.m., with tickets available online at Braveheartedboys.com.
Tickets are $12 in advance and $15 at the door. For more information, please call Darci Warner at 402-489-8885.
Developed for parents (or mentors) and their boys (typically ages 5-12), this one-of-a-kind connecting experience is
boy-friendly, dad-endorsed and mother-approved. You can think of it as real life superhero training. (And yes, you
can even come dressed as your favorite superhero character.)
In between seat-gripping movie clips, superhero training challenges and a whole lot of high-energy hands-on fun,
boys will almost forget they’re learning important lessons about character, courage and integrity, all while
discovering their true source of bravery. They’ll also be reminded that mom and dad have a few superpowers of
their own.
Meanwhile, parents take their own adventure into “boy world” — that strange, confusing place where their boys
are laughing together one minute and beating the stuffing out of each other the next. They’ll walk away with a
better understanding of their son’s unique wiring through multiple connecting moments that intentionally set
parents up to win.
Plenty of things influence a boy on his journey toward becoming a man, but there’s almost nothing that affects him
quite as powerfully as parents. In fact, studies show that boys who have positive relationships with mom and dad
(or a strong parental presence) do better in school, experience fewer behavioral problems and possess stronger
mental, social and emotional wellbeing.
However, as their sons grow older, parents sometimes struggle to find ways to connect with them. A boy often
starts pushing away from mom and dad as he discovers his own identity, so it can be hard for parents to find the
right balance between letting go and wanting to protect their little boy.
That’s why a Bravehearted Boys event is strategically designed to facilitate the parent-son connection. By
connecting with their son now, while he’s still a young boy, parents are effectively preparing him for the challenges
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he’ll face later as a teen—from peer pressure to issues of integrity. And the best part is you’ll have a blast doing it.
As one mom put it, the show is “God-centered, action-packed and SO much FUN.”
Bravehearted Boys was created by Fun and Faith Presents, a ministry organization dedicated to providing
resources and fun, high-energy connecting events that are both educational and bible-based.
Visit Braveheartedboys.com to find out more.
View the flier for more information.
Blue River District to host youth leader meeting
Staff, volunteers and student leaders are welcome to attend the Blue River District Youth Leader Meeting on
Saturday, Sept. 20. The meeting will be located at Lincoln Horizons UMC (3200 Grainger Parkway), and will be from
10-11:30 a.m.
Newsletter links
The United Methodist Church Foundation: Spiritual Giving
youTheology Institute: September 2014
Saint Paul School of Theology: Dr. Elaine Robinson to Serve as VPAAD
Ministry Matters: September 2014
Lewis Center for Church Leadership: Register for Taking Church to the Community
Saint Paul School of Theology: Save the date – Inaugural Peace Lecture
Aldersgate 2015: Schedule a Local Church renewal
Reroute the Roadmap: Putting Kansas on a path to prosperity
Money and Ministry: August 2014
David Upp: August Mission Link
Lewis Center for Church Leadership: Update for Leading Ideas subscribers
Highlights of the 2014 Clergy Age Trends Report
Fewer and older elders; more local pastors
The 2014 edition of the Lewis Center’s annual Clergy Age Trends in the United Methodist Church is now available
at www.churchleadership.com/clergyage. The report is prepared in partnership with the General Board of
Pension and Health Benefits.
Elders and local pastors are appointed as pastors of congregations. The number of active elders continues to
decline as the number of local pastors grows. Since 1990 there are 6,123 fewer elders and 3,459 more local
pastors. In 1990 there were over five elders for each local pastor; today there are two elders for each local pastor.
In 2014 there are 15,384 elders and 7,395 local pastors.
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Elders between ages 55 and 72 comprise 55 percent of all active elders, the highest percentage in history. This
group reached 50 percent for the first time ever in 2010. This age cohort represented only 30 percent of active
elders as recently as 2000. Previously their percentage of the total was even lower.
Go to www.churchleadership.com/clergyage to read more. There, you can also watch a six-minute video
summary of the report and download the report itself.
Walking clergy consultations offer a healthier alternative
“How do you take care of yourself?
Are you taking your days off? Do
you take four weeks of vacation? In
what kind of physical activity are
you regularly involved?” During
each annual clergy consultation, the
Rev. Dennis Livingston, Hutchinson
District superintendent, asks pastors
in the Hutchinson District a string of questions similar to these. He stresses his hope that all district pastors work
and play to maintain physical health because he believes that mental, emotional and spiritual fitness — and
indeed, long-term ministry — is built on physical fitness. He encourages pastors to schedule time on their official
calendars for physical activity and to treat those appointments as seriously as if they were meetings with Bishop
Scott Jones.
Livingston asks those questions and many more while he and the pastor sit in comfortable chairs in an air
conditioned office. That same pastor sat in a car up to two hours before the meeting and will sit in that same car
for up to two hours to return home, only to sit in an office chair for the remainder of the workday catching up on
work that waited while the pastor sat in the car and the district office.
Livingston decided that this year’s clergy consultations should model his hope for his pastors’ health instead of
running counter to it. This summer he offered walking consultations and one cycling consultation. Several pastors
have taken him up on the offer, discussing the state of the pastor and her or his congregation while walking the
streets of downtown Hutchinson or cycling its perimeter.
“In addition to pushing blood out of the legs, elevating the heart rate and opening the lungs, walking or cycling
side-by-side outdoors produces a kind of talking and listening different from when we sit face-to-face in district-
office chairs,” Livingston said. “It’s a nice change.”
Livingston is so pleased at the way the walking consultations have worked that he hopes annual conference
planners will pick up on his model for a future annual conference session. “Sitting all day is deadly. Why not
conduct annual conference business while 1,800 members walk the streets of downtown Lincoln, Wichita, Topeka
or Kansas City?” he mused. “Well — maybe not.”
Sheila Bartley is the photographer.
Photos: On bicycles are Amy Lippoldt (pastor at Newton Trinity Heights UMC) and Dennis Livingston. Walking are
Dennis Livingston and Ben Hanne (pastor at Stafford/Alden UMCs).
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Arkansas City First UMC offers second year of ESL classes
Arkansas City First UMC, in Kansas, started this year's English as a second language (ESL) classes on Wednesday,
Aug. 27, 2014. The 2013-2014 school term was the church’s first year offering ESL and was a glorious adventure for
all of the volunteers, leaders, students and children. Training with Tim and Jennifer Jepsen and ongoing support
from Corey Daniel Godbey, Great Plains Conference Hispanic ministries coordinator, gave the congregation a
strong start. As the church begins its second year, it’s thrilled to welcome back all but two of the students
(pictured) who completed their
instructional level during the first
session.
Wednesdays begin with registration
and a snack supper, time for sharing
and prayer, and then everyone
disperses for class. Infants through
pre-kindergarten are cared for by nursery staff. Children in grade school attend Kids Club where they experience
Bible stories through active and engaging stations. Tutors are available for all students needing homework help.
Though the church was very concerned, even scared, about launching a new outreach ministry with language
barriers, the congregation took on the challenge. The "reunion" of students and volunteers only confirms the
decision, as the atmosphere in the fellowship hall was filled with the Spirit's warmth and joy. Arkansas City First
UMC is excited to reconnect with friends from last year and welcome new ones. The congregation is being deeply
blessed by God for its efforts.
ERT training to be held in Salina, Kansas, on Sept. 6
If you are willing to help in the early days following a disaster, this training event is for you. It only takes a day’s
commitment to be prepared for service as an Early Response Team (ERT) member in the early days following a
disaster. Early responders are trained and organized for leadership roles as the team leader and assistant leader,
site safety, base camp food and shelter, equipment maintenance and listener. If you have a heart to get involved,
this UMCOR one-day class will equip and prepare you to be an early responder.
A very good way to prepare for disasters is to become trained in early response activities. When media coverage
shows how lives have been harmed, emotions run high and we find ourselves ready to jump up off the couch and
offer help. Now is the time to become trained so you are ready to offer help and can be involved in the early
disaster response ministry and service. This invitation is for you to attend a one-day UMCOR training for Early
Response Teams.
The training in Salina, Kansas, on Sept. 6, will be from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., at University UMC, Little Sanctuary (1509 S.
Santa Fe). Register here.
The cost for the disaster training is $25, which covers meal, training materials, t-shirt and ERT badge.
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Farnam United Methodist Church sends people to UMCOR’s Sager Brown Depot
The following was submitted by the
Rev. Neil Kloppenborg, pastor at
Eustis UMC and Farnam UMC, in
Nebraska.
For many years there have been
opportunities for churches to take
kits and supplies to the Annual
Conference Session for the purpose
of sending them to Sager Brown, for
distribution around the world. This
caused many people to wonder
about the process of sending kits. For us, it was time to get answers.
After a year and a half of waiting after a time had been scheduled, seven people from the Farnam UMC, in
Nebraska, loaded their things and crawled into a vehicle to begin a life-changing trip together on Saturday, Aug. 9.
After 17 hours of riding, we unloaded our things and began our work at Sager Brown Depot in Baldwin, Louisiana.
Here, we joined with teams of volunteers from Arkansas, Georgia and Illinois. There were a total of 31 persons
volunteering this week.
Sunday evening brought about a time of orientation to the work of Sager Brown, and a time for devotions and a
time to get settled in. Monday morning, we had another orientation session, and then determined where we were
going to work. Our choices were to work on repairing floors in a couple of homes in the community, mowing the
Sager Brown campus, working in the depot or working in the sewing room. With there being 31 persons, there
were people willing to do each of these chores, with the majority of people working in the depot. Those in the
depot worked on putting school kits together on Monday and Tuesday morning. Then it was time to help the depot
staff with a very important task. On Tuesday, Wednesday morning and Thursday, we counted: wash cloths, baby
blankets, baby sweaters, school bags and onesies. We also dumped boxes of health kits into tubs, so they were
ready to be verified (inspected to make sure each kit has the exact things in it that are required).
Wednesday afternoon, each of the teams were given the afternoon (or full day if they wanted) to go site seeing or
do any other activity of their choosing. Our team from Farnam chose to go on a swamp tour with Cajun Jack. It was
a great 2.5 hour trip back into the back part of a bayou. Yes, we were able to see a couple of alligators and a lot of
beautiful plants and flowers. We learned about the history of the area, and learned about much of the wildlife in
that area.
On Thursday afternoon, some of the people who were tired of counting to 25, started to go through cleaning
buckets. Each bucket had to be opened. The contents were then inspected to make sure all of the items in each
bucket was the same as the others and that all of the required items were in each bucket. Friday morning, the
remainder of the people in the depot joined in verifying the cleaning buckets and cleaning up the depot.
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Through the week, the people in the sewing room were making additional school bags and changing handles that
had been put on the bags incorrectly. The grounds were mowed and I believe the repairs to the floors were
finished.
On Wednesday morning, a group of ladies also went to a home for abused women and children. There, they were
able to work on organizing closets, shoes that had been collected for distribution and several other projects to help
the home. Friday afternoon, exhausted, but fulfilled, we began our trip back to Farnam.
The week was a wonderful experience for all seven of us from Farnam and a trip that each of us are ready to make
again, maybe not next year, but in the near future. So now we will start to look to find additional persons to go
next year.
Photo (left to right): Front row: Lisa Einspahr, Pastor Neil Kloppenborg. Middle row: Donna Hazen, Brenda Davis,
Ruth Ann Hess, Irvin Hess. Back row: Ginger Craig.
Living our United Methodist Social Principles Consultants needed
The United Methodist General Board of Church and Society (GBCS) project, “Living Our Principles,” is a video series
highlighting people of faith around the world who are responding to human need. You can find short video clips to
each of the sections of our Social Principles at www.livingourprinciples.org. A screening of the whole videos can
also get organized.
Currently, the GBCS is accepting applications for persons to participate in consultations to consider a process to
make the United Methodist Social Principles more succinct, theologically founded and globally relevant. Seven
consultations are planned: five in central conferences and two in the United States.
The consultations are a preliminary step to develop a recommendation to the 2016 United Methodist General
Conference, the denomination’s highest policy-setting body, to fund a process of six to eight public hearings across
the connection. Those hearings will lead to a proposal to the 2020 General Conference to update the Social
Principles.
If you are interested, and would like more information, please visit the GBCS website and let the Rev. Chali
([email protected]) or Andrea Paret ([email protected]) know.
Zimbabwe newsletters
Lloyd Chaukura is a volunteer communicator in the Zimbabwe area working to report for the partnership churches
and other work of the Matusa-Nyanga district. He produced the following newsletters for the Chisipiti
congregation. He did a recap of the entire Ebenezer Convention including Bishop Scott Jones.
Chisipiti Connection: Aug. 15
Chisipiti Connection: Aug. 16
Chisipiti Connection: Aug. 17 – Ebenezer Convention
Harare East District Farewell Party for Ebenezer Delegates: Aug. 22
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"Intellectual hootinany" brings environment enthusiasts together
The following was written by Gloria
Kimbulu, Micah Corps intern.
This summer I spent time at The
Land Institute along with the other
Micah Corps interns. Located right
outside of Salina, Kansas, The Land
Institute is an non-profit research
organization that is dedicated to
advancing perennial grain crops and
poly culture farming solutions. During our time there we harvested kernza, an intermediate wheat grass which was
developed by The Land Institute.
We also went on a tour of the area and learned a lot about how and why it was founded. Wes Jackson, the founder
told us about The Prairie Festival, or as he calls it, an “intellectual hootinany.” The Prairie Festival is Sept. 26-28,
and is open to the public. Leaders from all over the world attend this festival to discuss different topics such as the
environment, economy, energy and agriculture. The speakers include Dr. Ted Burke, a professor at Creighton
University, in Omaha, Nebraska; Dr. Ellen Davis, a Duke professor formerly at Yale; Brother David Steindl-Rast, a
Benedictine monk; Priti Cox who is passionate about human and ecological toll taken by Hindu fundamentalism
and casteism; Bill Vitek, a philosopher; Kristine Tompkins, who raises money to save wild diversity; and Dr. Ken
Levy-Church who will speak on the current crisis in Eastern Europe.
View more information. You can register for this event online or download the PDF to call or fax in your order. For
those needing a place to stay, there are prairie campgrounds on site and local hotels. Any questions you may have
can be answered by calling The Land Institute office at 785-823-5376 or sending an email
to [email protected]. Organize a group from your church and learn more about caring for God’s creation right
here in the Great Plains Conference!
Young people advocate for global health
Great Plains Micah Corps delivers 200 letters to senators
The following was written by the Rev. Clayton Childers, director of conference relations at the General Board of
Church and Society.
Great Plains Conference members got more than a nice lunch at this year’s Mission Luncheon during the annual
conference session in Lincoln, Nebraska, in the middle of June. They got an opportunity to support funding for
global health.
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Over 200 attendees wrote personal letters to their U.S. senators
asking for continued federal government support for critical
foreign assistance programs fighting diseases such as HIV/Aids,
malaria and tuberculosis.
Read the whole article and to see how you can advocate for
global health.
Photo: Hannah Bannister and Carter Oberheu, 2014 Micah Corps
interns, hand over the letters to the staffer of Senator Jerry
Moran.
Stevens Cottage opens on Epworth Village campus
“It’s taken a ton of work,” Epworth Village president/CEO Harrietta Reynolds said. “We are coming up on two
years since we have had kids on campus.”
Reynolds admits it was hard for her to imagine this happening so quickly, but kids are back on the main campus —
living in Stevens Cottage, a ranch style house that had been setting vacant.
The vacant house has been refurbished thanks to Epworth Village employees and supporters. Countless hours of
volunteer labor and hard work by Epworth staff have gotten Stevens to this point. Several United Methodist
churches, including regulars from Grace UMC in Hastings, Nebraska, have sweat equity in the cottage. Staff and
helpers, along with volunteer supervisor Cliff Reynolds have cleaned, painted and performed carpentry work.
There are a few things still needing attention — the weather has literally put a damper on work on the gable siding
and couple of other things but that’s okay.
Reynolds calls volunteer hours invaluable and credits Carrie Stutzman, Stevens residential manager, with inspiring
staff.
“There was Stevens, sitting vacant,” Reynolds said. “We realized we wanted to open it up and license it as a Group
Home A.” And, that is just what the Epworth Village Board, CEO, staff and supporters did.
Stevens Cottage has been licensed as a “Group Home A” by the State of Nebraska, and the week before last the
okay was given to get ready for kids to move in. Sunday, Aug. 24, the cottage opened its doors.
“We already have a one in Grand Island,” Reynolds said, speaking of Kruse Group Home. “We are looking to open
another one on campus in two to three months. That one is Mills and it is already licensed,” bringing the total
cottages operated by Epworth
Village to three.
Having youth on campus again is an
uplifting experience some Epworth
Village staff haven’t experienced in
their tenure. They say it’s fun to see
kids playing a pick-up game of
basketball or kicking around soccer
balls from their office windows.
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Epworth Village is now receiving referrals from the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services and
Probation Office as required by the state.
“Two days after I took over we put a self-imposed hold on beds. We re-trained and trained staff (both old and
new). That is a huge part, we want
them to have the tools to be
successful and make a difference in
the lives of these young people,”
Reynolds said.
“The whole staff made this
possible. I thank you — it truly has
taken a village. Our board is looking
for support of all kinds … we
encourage the greater community
to make an investment in the lives
of these young people as well,”
Reynolds said.
In Stevens Cottage, each young man has his own bedroom and the youth, ages 13-18, are thrilled. At this time
clients in the cottage number four. The license is for 12. All attend the Epworth Village Learning Center (EVLC) and
participate in individual, group and ‘family’ therapy sessions.
Epworth Village has had a rough time the last few years, “We need the community to be with us as they have been
for the past 125 years — we are overjoyed and are feeling better about ourselves, said Reynolds. This (having
youth back on campus) clears yet another path to helping with the healing process.”
Hope and healing is what Epworth Village is all about; it’s what it has always been about, according to Reynolds.
The focus just changes as the needs of children and families change. In addition to group homes for boys, Epworth
Village also offers foster care, in-home and safety services, intensive family preservation, out-patient counseling
and its Rule 18 alternative school EVLC.
“We are elated,” Reynolds says, looking out her window over a campus that is once again open for the business of
caring.
Epworth Village shares history with former resident’s daughter
You never know when company is going to drop by Epworth Village. Sometimes when folks stop over it is for a
genealogical reason. That’s because the history of the former Mothers’ Jewels Home dates back some 125 years.
Last month, on a Friday, a white sedan with Colorado license plates pulled into a visitor’s parking space near the
central administration building on the main campus of Epworth Village. Roy and Barbara Ring of Thornton,
Colorado, were paying their first visit to a place they had heard a bit about.
It was Barbara’s Aunt Darlene who prompted the visit. Aunt Darlene had shared with the Rings a story of two little
girls, Verla and Opal Castor, who had been brought to the home back in 1914 by their mother who had fallen on
hard times and needed someone to care for the girls. Verla was Barbara’s grandmother.
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“I spent time with my grandmother (Verla) up until the time I got married and moved away,” Barbara tells.
She recalls her grandmother as a woman who loved to cook and have family around. “She owned (or ran) a huge
hotel in Denver. I remember the kitchen — it was huge and seemed grand, said Barbara. She had nine children
and I remember grandma and the girls doing all of the cooking.”
Barbara doesn’t know why, but her mother never spoke of Mothers’ Jewels Home. It was her Aunt Darlene who
spoke of Verla and Opal’s time at the orphanage. It was Aunt Darlene who placed a tree on campus with a plaque
honoring the two young girls who spent five years of their life there before returning home to live with their
mother Lilly.
Stories like Verla and Opals are not
uncommon. History books located
at Epworth Village document the
lives of fathers and mothers who
were victims of circumstance and
the children who were taken in.
A search through records yielded further information about the girls’ stay — logs showing payments, an
application for admittance, even a picture of the pair which was found on display in the glass case in the lobby.
“It is really cool to look at the history,” Barbara says as she looks over decades-old records.
Marcia Schlegelmilch, public relations coordinator, enjoys helping families look through the archives.
“It’s fun when company comes, you never know what you will find and the stories are always interesting,”
Schlegelmilch states.
While on campus the Rings toured Epworth Village accompanied by Abbi Kleinschmidt, Epworth Village Foundation
president.
Epworth Village, Inc., is a non-profit agency based in York, Nebraska. From its beginning as an orphanage in the
1880's, the mission of Epworth Village has been to bring hope and healing to children and families in the name of
Christ.
Office manager needed at First UMC in Falls City
First UMC of Falls City, Nebraska is seeking a part time office manager/secretary. Computer skills are necessary.
Experience working with Publisher, Excel and other software. Excellent communication skills and working with the
public are also a necessity. This position is 20-25 hours a week at $8.50 per hour. There is a possibility to have 30
hours a week with right candidate in the future. Hours are flexible.
If interested, contact John Hogue at [email protected].
GPconnect 09/3/14 Page 14
Lincoln Christ UMC looking for director of youth ministries
Christ UMC in Lincoln, Nebraska, is searching for a part-time director of youth ministries. This person is responsible
for developing and overseeing the youth program for a church with active membership of 300 and youth
participation of 20 to 30. View the full job description, and find out more information at christumclinc.org.
Director of children and youth ministries sought at Salem UMC in Newton, Kansas
Salem UMC in Newton, Kansas, is accepting applications for a full time director of children and youth ministries.
This position will develop and promote a comprehensive approach to youth and children's ministries, schedule
children's Sunday school teachers, develop and recruit participants in a weekly after-school program, and more.
View full job description.
Interested applicants should send a cover letter and resume to Brian Rickard, pastor-parish relations chairman,
at [email protected], you can also call 316-288-0243.
Editorial Policy: The content, news, events and announcement information distributed in GPconnect is
not sponsored or endorsed by the Great Plains Methodist Conference unless specifically stated.
Want to submit a letter to the editor? Email Kathryn Witte at [email protected]