May 2015 Spire - First Baptist Church of Ames, Iowa
Transcription
May 2015 Spire - First Baptist Church of Ames, Iowa
The Spire First Baptist Church, Ames, Iowa Sabbatical Begins May 11 Dear Church Family, May 2015 Volume 61, No. 5 FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 200 Lynn Ave. Ames, IA 50014-7188 Worship Sundays 9:45 am PHONE: 515-292-9612 FAX: 515-292-0403 E-MAIL [email protected] WEB: www.fbcames.org First Baptist Church is an open and caring family of faith where worship is central and faith engages both heart and mind. We are warmly ecumenical, delight in our diversity, and cherish our Baptist heritage of freedom. We are called by Christ to share God’s love with the campus, community, and the world. As we seek to follow the way of Jesus, we welcome all people to fully participate in our fellowship: all ages, colors, backgrounds, political affiliations, and physical and mental abilities; male and female, gay and straight, rich and poor, single and married, skilled and unskilled. We are all God's children, and all are welcome here. As most all of you know, Susan and I will begin our sabbatical this month. We will be on sabbatical for 10 weeks, May 11-July 20. I will be taking the last two weeks of sabbatical in January of 2016. The American Baptist Churches USA recommends a pastoral sabbatical of 12 weeks every 7 years as a time for pastors to rest from the demands of church ministry and renew their own spirits and calling. We are grateful for this opportunity and so thankful for a congregation that has the foresight and generosity of spirit to see this time of sabbatical as valuable both for pastors and congregation. Many of you were involved in helping to plan for the sabbatical and have served as sounding boards and offered helpful input as Susan and I have made plans, and we appreciate that too. The goals of our sabbatical are Retooling, Research, Rest and Renewal. Our plans include continuing education, visits with family, attending the ABC Biennial/Mission Summit in Kansas City, and a family trip “out west” (we have never been to that part of the country). We will have a chance to experience worship “from the pews” and visit churches both from the perspective of worshiper and researcher. We will be in town off and on throughout the ten weeks. When we are away, we will mostly travel together, with a few events involving one or the other of us. Zoe will be able to accompany us on some of our trips. I’ll be using the two weeks in January 2016 for a trip to the Holy Land. While we are away, pastoral duties will be covered by a variety of people, working together. Our worship team has met several times to plan for the sabbatical, and a preaching schedule is printed in this Spire. Our deacons will handle pastoral care needs, with a couple of other ministers available if needed. We print the name and contact info for the Deacon of the Week in each bulletin. This is the “on-call” person for the week; please contact the Deacon of the Week if you will be going to the hospital, are facing a crisis, or could use a visit. You can also feel free to call the church office or contact our deacon co-chairs Dianne Borgen or Jack Cleasby. Our Office Manager Bev Shirbroun will manage the dayto-day operations of the church. Susan and I will be in touch periodically with Dianne and Bev, and they will be able to reach us in emergencies. Continued on page 2 Continued from page 1 Schedule continued from Column 1 As well as being a time of renewal and growth for us, we expect that the same will be true of the congregation. Hearing a variety of voices in worship can be valuable. As members take on different responsibilities, this can be a time for growth. The sabbatical is a chance for church members to know the blessing of truly depending on one another and “flexing new muscles” in pastoral care and leadership. Just as the change of pace can be renewing for us, the same can be true for you. We are looking forward to the sabbatical experience both for us and for you, and we will also look forward to being back with you again. Please know that we will be praying for you during our time away, just as we know that you are praying for us. June 28 – Rev. Linda Hanson. The daughter of Earl and Johnie Hammond, Linda is an ordained UCC minister who has served as a missionary to Honduras. She is also a physical therapist and is director of the new Primary Health Care Clinic in Ames, which serves the uninsured and underinsured in our community. Linda will give a presentation on Primary Health Care during Fellowship Time. July 5 – Dr. Gary Grogan. A longtime friend of our congregation, Gary retired as Executive Minister for our region. Before that, he served a number of churches, most recently at Ft. Dodge. Gary is an avid golfer and has preached here at our church many times. July 12 – Dr. Gary Grogan Blessings, Dave July 19 – Dr. Gary Grogan Sabbatical Preaching Schedule May 10 – Music Sunday, CE Recognition, Sabbatical Sendoff (Dave and Susan’s last Sunday before sabbatical) July 26 - Dave and Susan’s first Sunday back from sabbatical August 2 – worship with First Christian and Ames UCC at Brookside Park May 17 – Rev. Brenda Stalbaum Martin. Brenda is an ordained ABC minister. She serves as a supply preaching minister and is currently a caseworker with Lutheran Services of Iowa. Brenda has ministered as a hospice chaplain and served in volunteer ministry with Karen Christian refugees from Myanmar (Burma). Brenda and her husband Gary live in Des Moines. May 24 – Rev. Brenda Stalbaum Martin May 31 – Rev. Brenda Stalbaum Martin June 7 – Dr. Marshall Peters. Marshall is Executive Minister for Mid-American Baptist Churches, which includes around 130 ABC congregations in Iowa and Minnesota. Prior to coming to our region, Marshall served on region staff in Kansas and as a missionary to Thailand. Marshall will also give a brief report on current happenings in our denomination during Fellowship Time. June 14 – Rev. Brenda Stalbaum Martin June 21 – Rev. Brenda Stalbaum Martin Schedule continued in Column 2 Summer Sunday Fellowship Time Begins May 31: With Sunday School ending May 24 and no classes during the summer, we will have fellowship time after our morning worship service every Sunday. You are welcome to co-host with someone else. Anything light can be served as well as coffee, water, and lemonade/punch. If you have any questions, please contact Barbara Woods, [email protected] or Dianne Borgen, fhborgen@aolcom. Your willingness to host fellowship time is appreciated. May 3 Ushers: Jeanette Gee Bob Parrish*, Kent Johnson Wallace Sanders, Jan Thompson May 10 Beth Douglass Ushers Rosemarie Starrett*, Nancy Maydew Kaylinn Taggart, Michael Thompson May 17 Ushers: Jere Maddux Dianne Borgen, Jerilyn Logue Tom Logue, Katherine Thompson May 24 Ushers: Aaron Stegemöller Scott Anderson*, Julie Johnston Jere Maddux, Tiffany Nugent May 31 Ushers: Jere Maddux Jeanine Cole*, Lee Davidson Mark Reuber, Barbara Woods Flowers for May: Catherine Parrish Antorniece Lee Roberta Ridley Maxwell Keat Amari Martin Dick Gee Michael Thompson Beth Douglass Isabella Zi 6 9 11 21 23 25 28 29 29 Stephanie and Brian Keat Jessica and Andrew Beougher Elizabeth and Aaron Stegemöller Alissa and Joe Murphy Judy and Jim Demarest Martha and Tom Gleason Rita and Bob Parrish 5 5 19 20 21 29 29 Beth Douglass When: The 2nd and 4th Wednesday of each month, 11:30 am Where: 2nd Wednesday- Village Inn, 524 Lincoln Way 4th Wednesday- Perkins, 325 S. Duff Avenue Who: Any women and friends of FBC No reservations needed, just come when you can and enjoy lunch with your friends! If your birthday or anniversary is not listed on the church bulletin board outside the library or in the current directory, please send us the information. As a church family, we’d love to include you and pray for you on your special day. Congratulations Graduates! Tyra Peyton Gantt, Riverside Polytechnic High School, Riverside, California, on June 8, daughter of Cindy Robinson-Gantt, grandchild of Wilma and Ike Robinson. Richelle Juanita Goree, MBA in International Business, University of La Verne in California, on May 30, daughter of Phyllis Hawkins, grandchild of Wilma and Ike Robinson. Logan Hemmen will graduate from Ames High School on May 17. At Ames High, he is on the soccer team, plays trombone in the marching band, and participates in I-ball. Logan will be attending DMACC in Ankeny, with plans to to to Iowa State after that. In the meantime, you can find him working at Taco Time. Congratulations, Logan! Michelle Logue, Nursing Program, Kaplan University, the graduation ceremony and pinning ceremony on May 1, spouse of Neil Logue, mother of Mya and daughter-in-law of Jerilyn and Tom Logue, Jane Morrison will graduate from ISU with a BS in journalism and mass communications. She also has a second major in international studies and a minor in statistics. She is moving back to Quincy, Illinois where she will be working as the Internet Director for WGEM, the local NBC-affiliate. Jane has worked this past year in our child care rooms. We have appreciated her commitment and care for our children. Alexander L. O’Connor is graduating from Blue Valley NW High School, Overland, Kansas. He will be attending Iowa State in the fall and plans to major in pre-med. Alex is a member of First Baptist and we are glad he will be in town a lot now! He is the grandson of Joyce and Lee Davidson. Michael P. Anderson, Iowa State University, Masters of Structural Engineering, grandson of Elaine Anderson. Cindy Robinson-Gantt, Grand Canyon University, Masters of Elementary Education, on April 25, daughter of Ike and Wilma Robinson. Raven Symonne Gantt, California Baptist University, Riverside, California, Bachelor of Arts degree in Broadcast Journalism, on May 2, daughter of Cindy Robinson-Gantt, grandchild of Wilma and IkeRobinson. Graduate Updates continued from Column 1 If you know of other graduates (including grandchildren!), we will include news about them in next month’s Spire. FBC Book Group: We are reading “Nobody Knows: The Forgotten Story of One of the Most Influential Figures in American Music” by Craig von Buseck. The compelling, little-known story of Harry T. Burleigh, an African American music pioneer best known for his artistic arrangements of spirituals. Burleigh studied under famous Czech composer Antonin Dvorak. From the book cover: "Now Harry T. Burleigh, once worldrenowned for his career as a beautiful baritone soloist, an arranger of Negro Spirituals, and a composer in his own right, is lifted once more out of obscurity by Craig von Buseck. This inspiring true story will take readers back in time to Southern plantations and Northern boom towns, to minstrel shows and soaring sanctuaries, and into the heart of a man who never suspected that God had destined him for greatness." We will meet to discuss this book on May 21 at 6:30 PM in our Church Library. If you would like to be put into the rotation to read the book with us, please contact Catherine Parrish. The book will also be available in our Church Library after May 21. Responding to the Nepali Earthquake A massive earthquake struck Nepal on Saturday, April 25. By April 28, Nepal's National Emergency Operation Center announced that the official death toll had exceeded 5,000 and that some 11,000 have been found injured. These numbers are expected to rise as rescue workers reach remote villages. An estimated 450,000 have been internally displaced by the quake and 8 million have been affected, with 1.4 million in urgent need of food supplies. Our American Baptist biennial gathering is in Kansas City this year. Because of the proximity, this is a good opportunity to attend. Registration is $40; for more information see one of the pastors or go to americanbaptists2015.com. As a first response to this disaster, emergency relief funds from One Great Hour of Sharing (OGHS) have been released to trusted partners of American Baptist International Ministries (IM) in Nepal. Funds will go to provide food, water, shelter and medical assistance for victims. This initial grant will support the Nepal Baptist Church Council (NBCC), Human Development and Community Services (HCDS), and the United Mission to Nepal in on-the-ground relief efforts. These are all organizations with whom we have worked with for many years. “Our heart goes to the survivors who lost their beloved ones, and to those who are still struggling in fear and in the devastated areas,” said the Reverend Dr. Benjamin Chan, IM area director for Asia. “IM has worked closely with NBCC and HDCS to build capacity and to enhance social development in Nepal. Our priority is to provide immediate relief assistance to the survivors in cooperation with partners in Nepal and through the global Baptist network.” Through our budgeted support for local missions, First Baptist Church supports several agencies that provide services or aid in Ames. To help acquaint our members with these mission agencies, a series of descriptive paragraphs will appear in the Spire. ACCESS is an acronym for Assault Care Center Extending Shelter and Support. Quoting from their website, “ACCESS provides free and confidential support to victims of sexual violence [or] domestic violence.” “ACCESS operates an 18-bed emergency shelter facility in Ames. All services are free and confidential.” Included are those auxiliary services needed to fully meet the needs of the victims. Our support helps to enable this vital and life saving service. -Jeanette Gee Churches in the U.S. and Puerto Rico are asked to keep Nepali families, emergency response workers and government in prayer. A BIG thank you for those who provided refreshments this past year for Fellowship Time on the 2nd Sunday of the month. These persons include Dianne and Fred Borgen, Nancy and Gary Maydew, Jill and Mike Leininger, Johnie and Earl Hammond, Catherine and Joe Parrish, Irene and Wayne Shireman, Beth Douglass and Jere Maddux, Barbara Woods, and Trey Belle-Larson and all others who helped with set up and clean up. You are all appreciated! “Blowing on Dandelions (Love Blossoms in Oregon)” by Miralee Ferrell New in the library for children are two picture books. “To Every Thing There Is a Season”, Illustrations by Leo & Diane Dillon “The famous verses from the Book of Ecclesiastes are accompanied by exquisite illustrations, each rendered in the style of a different world culture. An ecumenical, artistic, and cultural experience, rich in beauty and expansive in its appreciation of ethnic variety." School Library Journal, starred review.” “It Will Be Okay, Trusting God through fear and change” by Lysa TerKeurst From the book cover: “Whether we like it or not, growing up brings change. For many children, this conjures fears that are sometimes real and sometimes imagined. How can kids learn that even when they face new and unfamiliar situations, they don’t have to be afraid?” “Katherine Galloway knew this moment of calm wouldn’t last, blown away like the dandelion seeds she scattered as a girl. In 1880, three years after her husband’s death, she struggles to run an Oregon boardinghouse and raise two girls alone. Things don't get easier when her critical, domineering mother moves in. Katherine must make the situation work, but standing up for herself and her family while honoring her mother isn't easy. Then she crosses paths with Micah Jacobs, a widower who could reignite her heart, but she fears a relationship with him might send things over the edge. She must find the strength, wisdom, hope, and faith to remake her life, for everything is about to change.” -from the back cover “To Everything a Season” by Lauraine Snelling “Trygve Knutson is devoted to his family and his community. With his job on the construction crew, he is helping to build a future for the North Dakota town of Blessing. Though he loves his home, he sometimes dreams of other horizons--especially since meeting Miriam Hastings.Miriam is in Blessing to get practical training to become an accredited nurse. She's been promised a position in the Chicago women's hospital that will enable her to support her siblings and her ailing mother. Although eager to return to her family, Miriam is surprised to find how much she enjoys the small town of Blessing. And her growing attachment to Trygve soon has her questioning a future she always considered set in stone.” -from the back cover New Non-fiction New Fiction books in the Library “Esther, Royal Beauty” by Angela Hunt “before amen, The Power of a Simple Prayer” by Max Lucado “When Xerxes, king of Persia, issues a call for beautiful young women, Hadassah, a Jewish orphan living in Susa, is forcibly taken to the palace of the pagan ruler. After months of preparation, the girl known to the Persians as Esther wins the king's heart and a queen's crown. But because her situation is uncertain, she keeps her ethnic identity a secret until she learns that an evil and ambitious man has won the king's permission to exterminate all Jews--young and old, powerful and helpless. Purposely violating an ancient Persian law, she risks her life in order to save her people...and bind her husband's heart.” -from the back cover “We pray to stay sober, centered, or solvent. When the lump is deemed malignant. When the money runs out before the month does. When the marriage is falling apart. We pray. But wouldn't we like to pray more? Better? Stronger? With more fire, faith, and fervency? Yet we have kids to feed, bills to pay, deadlines to meet. The calendar pounces on our good intentions like a tiger on a rabbit. And what about our checkered history with prayer? Uncertain words. Unmet expectations. Unanswered requests. We aren’t the first to struggle with prayer. The first followers of Jesus needed prayer guidance too. In fact, prayer is the only tutorial they ever requested..” -from the back cover Sunday 3 Monday 4 11 9:45a Worship 11:00a Church School Last day of Church School until Fall 7 Friday 1 2 8 9 ISU Graduation 12 13 14 15 16 21 22 23 29 30 7:00p Trustees 18 19 20 8:00a Men’s Breakfast, Perkins 6:30p FBC Book Group, Library 25 26 27 28 11:30a Women’s Lunch, Perkins 6:30p Deacons 31 9:45a Worship 11:00a Ice Cream Social, Fellowship Hall Saturday 11:30a Women’s Lunch, Village Inn 9:45a Worship 11:00a Church School 12:00p 3rd Sunday Lunch, El Azteca 2:00p Prayer Shawl Circle 24 6 Thursday 5:15p CCJ Board Meeting 6:30p Choir Music Sunday Christian EducationWorker Recognition Sunday Sabbatical Send-off 9:45a Worship 11:00a Fellowship 11:15a Church School 17 5 Wednesday 8:00a Men’s Breakfast, Perkins Graduate Recognition Sunday 9:45a Worship/Communion 11:00a Church School 10 Tuesday Coming in June: Music Camp 8-12 Our 16th annual Music Camp is set for June 812. Campers grades K-6 (completed) will enjoy a week packed with music, learning, friends, and fun!. If you can help with the camp as a counselor or assistant, please see Mindy or Pastor Dave. Registration forms are available in the narthex. Please share them with friends, neighbors and grandkid! Everyone is welcome! First Baptist Church 200 Lynn Avenue Ames, Iowa 50014-7188 Our Church Staff: Rev. Dr. David Russell Pastor Rev. Susan Russell Associate Pastor Mindy Phomvisay Director of Music Bev Shirbroun Office Manager John Kellogg Custodian Jane Morrison Child Care Abby Gero Child Care