our story god `s story - Bidwell Presbyterian Church
Transcription
our story god `s story - Bidwell Presbyterian Church
B IDWELL P RESBYTERIAN C HURCH 2012-2013 O UR S OR T S S G OD’ Y TOR Y IN ABOUT THIS REPORT This report provides highlights and fiscal information from July 2012 - June 2013. For more information about our church, please visit us at www.bidwellpres.org Table of Contents A Letter from Steve2 Stories of CARE3 Stories of FAMILIES 9 Stories of WORSHIP11 Stories of YOUNG ADULTS 17 The Bible Initiative23 Financials 29 Statistics31 Staff Listing 33 The Legacy Continues35 Dear friends, By now, I hope you have heard about the Bible Initiative and how we will be discovering our story in God’s story throughout the coming year. Of course, we’ve been discovering our stories in God’s story all along! This report provides a glimpse into our story…as individuals and as a church. As I read these stories about how people have reached out in love or have been touched by the ministries and people of this church, I think about how we are really living into God’s story: A story of grace and love that He continues to write through each of our lives and on each of our hearts. So, in this report, we focus on people’s stories that happened this past year and we talk about how our story over the next year and beyond is being shaped by God’s love. Fasten your seat belts and hold on, this is going to be an incredible ride! I honestly cannot think of a year I have been more excited for our church and our ministries than this year! It is through your sacrificial generosity to this church that we have been able to grow our ministry. It is so important to express our gratitude to God for the strength of our ministries. As we give, we express our love and gratitude to God for his continued goodness and generosity to us. Through giving, we experience yet another way of participating in God’s work by furthering his ministry in our church, in Chico and in the world. It is truly a joy to be your pastor, Stories of Care During my first year at BPC, I led a task force on Congregational Care. I spent time with the task force assessing the various channels of care at our church, including a survey of the congregation to find out how well we were doing in the area of care. We found that the valuable ministries of Deacons, Stephen Ministry, and our support groups were excellent ways for those in need to receive care. It made sense to us to continue supporting these ministries, to grow them, and to fine tune them along the way. During my second year at BPC, that became my goal as the Congregational Care Pastor. We grew the Board of Deacons, both in numbers, and also in ministries. We added a “telephone ministry” through which deacons call members of our congregation to ask them for prayer requests, and a “memorial ministry” through which deacons assist at memorial services held in our sanctuary. In Stephen Ministry®, we trained eleven individuals to join our current caregivers in providing one-on-one spiritual care to those experiencing difficulty in their lives. In addition, we continued to offer such valuable support groups such as Grief Share®, DivorceCare®, DivorceCare 4 Kids® and Celebrate Recovery®. One of our primary goals in Congregational Care is to be present for one another so that none of us has to go through hardship or life’s transitions alone. God working through us is a beautiful experience! - Shannon Christopher (Pastor of Congregational Care) 15 Val Bowlby on Grief Share® Some years ago, Val Bowlby was approached by Pam Wear and Cindy Young to start a support group for those experiencing the grief of losing a loved one. They had seen a need in the church and thought that Val, whose husband had died several years earlier, would be a strong and understanding leader. “I had life experience” says Val, “that qualified me in that way, plus business and leadership experience that allowed me to move into getting the program going. The first year or so, I made up the discussion topics on my own. I could have written a book right about then, at least on widowhood.” Prior to her husband’s death, she had walked with him through a traumatic loss of his own. “My husband had lost a son and so I’d lived with him through that even though I was not the biological parent.” After that initial year of leading the grief support group, someone approached Val and told her about a program called Grief Share®, which was being held at a church in Paradise. She thought the program looked helpful so she recommended it to Bidwell. We now have four leaders for Grief Share® who alternate leading the 13 week sessions. “Typically in a grief share group,” Val says, “in the first several weeks, people come in and their body language tells a whole lot. The anger is evident. Yet God wiggles his way into everything we do “Yet God wiggles his way into everything we do and say in that room, and eventually people are greeting and hugging when they see each other. They are engaging in each other’s lives and emotions.” and say in that room, and eventually people are greeting and hugging when they see each other. They are engaging in each other’s lives and emotions. They are ministering to each other and I get to sit back and watch. Now, to me, that’s watching God do his work.” Robin Yant on DivorceCare 4 Kids® A significant way in which Robin Yant was cared for at Bidwell was through DivorceCare®. She had attended DivorceCare® meetings before coming to Bidwell. “When I took it I was such a mess, I’d been married 20 years and pretty much the whole series I didn’t even speak in the group because I’d cry.” So when Larry and Karen Wasson began a DivorceCare® group at Bidwell, Robin decided to try again. “It was lovely, I actually did start talking without crying and they we so kind. I still meet with the people from that first group every two months just to reconnect. I got to know them really well and kept in contact. It’s a really good program.” 4 Stories of Care Robin was later approached to begin DivorceCare for Kids®, a program similar to the adult version, but geared towards kids whose parents are divorced, or going through divorce. She believes in God’s good plan, and loves the verse Jeremiah 29:11: “‘For I know the plans I have for you’, declares the Lord, ‘plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.’” She claims this verse for the kids she works with as well as for herself. “These kids didn’t do anything, it just got thrown at them. I was in the same place. God has a plan and he can work with us when we mess up. He’s always got a plan B, and it’s always a good future and a hope. He didn’t want me to get divorced, but He still has a wonderful plan by turning it into DivorceCare for Kids®. I feel like I’m used for God. He takes the mucky stuff and turns it into a wonderful future for you.” Jan Hasak on Divorce Care Author and cancer survivor, Jan Hasak, was introduced to Bidwell Presbyterian through attending the Divorce Care program. “I could see that everybody was really struggling but we all had a chance to talk and air things. Someone else would say well ‘I went through that too,’ and then you know you’re not alone. I joined the church through that experience, because I really liked the people.” Jan found that DivorceCare® helped her deal with the personal nature of the hurts she had experienced. “It helped in the area of forgiveness. In terms of forgiving, it’s really for you, not for the other person. I found that I have to keep forgiving over and over.” Reconciliation is another thing that Jan learned about in the program. Because of the DivorceCare® classes Jan felt that she was prepared to see her former husband at her son’s college graduation even though she hadn’t seen him for a year and a half. “Oh, I don’t like this” she thought, “but I guess he was just as nervous as I was, and it turned out fine. My son said to me ‘Mom, I think you’re dealing with it a lot better than Dad because you had DivorceCare®.’” “I feel like I’m used for God. He takes the mucky stuff and turns it into a wonderful future for you.” “Divorce Care program is a spiritual experience. You feel like you have a hole in your heart, and you’re empty, but God is right there filling that void, and really, He is all that you need. It’s learning that you’re always loved.” 5 -- Erin Smith (Divorce Care member) Babs Donoho on Stephen Ministries® Babs Donoho completed her training as a Stephen Minister in January of this year, and was commissioned in March. “I love it,” she says, “it’s a gift to me to be a Stephen Minister because the training is so helpful and God’s so into it.” Being a Stephen Minister has stretched Babs. “It makes me lean really heavy on my prayer life,” she says, “because you pray for your care receiver, you pray with your care receiver, you ask God to fill you with the right things to say, because that’s not always easy to know. What I need to do most as a caregiver is listen, listen, listen. Before I ever go meet my care receiver I ask, ‘Lord help me keep quiet, help me to really listen.’” She believes her role as a caregiver is to be a “vessel” for listening. “You’re letting God speak through you, but mostly, you’re a vessel for someone to talk to.” Being a Stephen Minister has motivated Babs to engage in personal Bible study in a new and deeper way. Though she finds memorizing verses difficult, she finds ways to keep scripture in front of her on a daily basis. “I have cards that I use constantly that are verses from the Bible which help me with my walk. A lot of times I’ll take a card and either give it or read it to my care receiver.” “What I need to do most as a caregiver is listen, listen, listen. Before I ever go meet my care receiver I ask, ‘Lord help me keep quiet, help me to really listen.’” Herman and Bea Gray on Stephen Ministries® and Visitation Stephen Minister Herman Gray says “caring for others isn’t so much what you say, but that you’re there.” His wife, Bea, agrees, “It’s the ministry of presence... God created us to be in connection with others. We cannot live all alone.” About Herman’s role as Stephen Minister he says, “I always enjoy listening to people’s stories. I think that sometimes leads to sharing stories of our own with others, sharing the ways that God cares for us. It can be an encouragement to them and to us.” Herman also visits several shut-ins with Bea on the first Sunday of each month. “We serve communion to residents at Townsend House and Oakmont, as well as individuals confined at home and at Roses and Ivy, an assisted care facility. Herman says, “What I do is take some notes during the sermon and then write a short half page, then we hand those to the people so they can read it over again 6 Stories of Care “It’s the ministry of presence... God created us to be in connection with others. We cannot live all alone.” when they want to. We also sing a hymn with them.” Reflecting on their motivation for serving as they do, Bea says, “I think every one of us needs a purpose, and as Christians we have that. We know that God is with us.” Bea wrote a “self-portrait” for a class some time ago, an excerpt of which speaks to the generosity she and Herman show to others. “I know that there is a larger perspective to living than what I can dream up for myself. It puts me in touch with others in a caring way. My reaching out to others is fueled by my experience of being loved greatly, by God Himself, through Jesus Christ, His Son, and this gives me courage to live my life.” “I know that there is a larger perspective to living than what I can dream up for myself. My reaching out to others is fueled by my experience of being loved greatly, by God Himself...” 7 Jan Simpson on Stephen Ministries® Jan Simpson says going through the Stephen Ministry training has enriched her life, that it’s helped her become a better listener. “In relationship with friends, and certainly at my age, every time we sit down everybody’s got a health crisis right now. We all need a compassionate listener, everybody does. It has really opened my eyes to that. The hardest thing is to just take yourself out of the picture, and know that you’re a conduit. It’s what God is doing, we’re not the cure-givers, we are the care-givers.” Tom Hayes on Stephen Ministries® Tom Hayes found the Stephen Ministry training materials engaging and informative. “They constantly keep coming back to the idea that listening is probably the most valuable thing you can do, allowing somebody to express their feelings. You’re not asking yes or no questions, you’re asking questions that allow them to expand and talk about something. It’s an attempt to draw them out to talk about their feelings because only then can they begin the healing process.” Tom says that the benefit of becoming involved in Stephen Ministry is the spiritual element of the relationship. “That is the most important thing as a Christian caregiver. You’re showing compassion, you’re showing care. It’s an attempt to really walk in Christ’s shoes as best you can and do that with your neighbor.” Virginia Wharton on Stephen Ministries® Virginia Wharton didn’t decide to become a Stephen Minister on the spur of the moment, but approached it prayerfully. She says, “I felt that because of my own life experiences I could probably understand how other people would feel in the same situation. So I thought it was something that the Lord prepared me for.” Virginia says that there’s absolutely no reason why anyone has to suffer alone. “We’re all children of God and we should be there for each other. All anyone has to do to receive help from a Stephen Minister is ask and someone will come.” She says that there is no need for anyone to feel embarrassed. “It’s all natural and the care receiver has total control. If they don’t wish to speak of something, they don’t have to, only what they are willing to share about what they feel is troubling them.” Though she knows she cannot remove another’s burdens, she knows she can listen, share the scriptures, and reaffirm God’s love for them. “I just pray that the Lord will use me,” she says. “I ask the Lord to give me peace and joy. There’s no worry about tomorrow because he’ll take care of it. He says his yoke is light. My life is full of joy because I’m a child of the Lord and I know he loves me.” It’s an attempt to really walk in Christ’s shoes as best you can and do that with your neighbor.” Stories of Families Partnering with parents to fuel faith in the next generation, is the mission for Kidwell Park. What we do with children on Sunday morning is increasingly powerful if it is continued in the home. This past year we created events to provide families shared experiences. Each month we highlighted specific resources in order to equip parents toward this goal. Our WOW class in the spring, encouraged parents to understand and develop their child’s faith. The mission of partnering with parents to fuel their children’s faith was so well received that it has become a permanent lens by which we view children’s ministry. This year we look forward to celebrating faith milestones in children such as baptisms, key verse memorization, scripture study, and Bible presentation to 2nd graders. We also have planned a parenting conference in the fall, a Bible class for children that will parallel the teaching of the adult Bible class, and events and Sunday programs to promote faith in children. 219 Robin Wilder Heather Fontana Robin Wilder was attracted to Bidwell by the children’s ministry of Kidwell Park. When she and her girls first started attending, her youngest daughter, Laura, was pre-school age and attended the Kidwell Acres program. Her daughter Nicole, age 11, attended Upper Kidwell Park. Kidwell Park program coordinator, Heather Fontana, is also involved and enthusiastic about Bidwell’s family ministry. She started attending Bidwell in 2002 when she was a student athlete at Chico State. Heather comes from a strong Christian family. “Even before I had kids, I knew I wanted to get into children’s ministry at some point. So when I had kids it was easy. I started helping with child-care and I absolutely love it! I emailed Kelly Hock, the Children’s Ministry Director, one day, and I think the subject line was ‘I love my job!’ Robin appreciates that Kidwell Park sends things home with the kids to help them and their families incorporate what the children have learned on Sunday into the rest of their week. “We talk about different things” Robin says, “and we love the crafts that come home and we put the Bible memory verses on the refrigerator or we have them in the car so she can work on them.” Robin recalls “one Sunday after we came home from church we were all working in the yard. All of a sudden, I heard Laura singing. She was singing this song from church called Dig Down Deep. Here was Laura, digging in the dirt, playing in the dirt singing this song, and she just sounded so joyful. I thought ‘Wow’. So I asked her about it and she said she learned it at Sunday school. She’s taking these things home afterwards. It’s very special.” Heather says, “There are a lot of resources for parents at this church. Every time they pick their children up they get some kind of sheet explaining what they’ve done and what they’re going to do next Sunday. There is always a focus on a particular theme. It’s neat, they keep the same theme for a long time so the kids really understand; they really grasp it.” 10 Stories of Worship “Sing to the Lord a new song; sing to the Lord, all the earth. Sing to the Lord, praise his name; proclaim his salvation day after day. Declare his glory among the nations, his marvelous deeds among all peoples. For great is the Lord and most worthy of praise; he is to be feared above all gods.” Psalm 96:1-4 It is a joy to worship the Lord together in community with all of you. Our God is “most worthy of praise!” Our goal last year was to strengthen and provide four full, vibrant worship services. We are happy to report that the 8:30 a.m. traditional service grew, and the leadership of David and Dara Scholz with Chancel Choir has been tremendous. Creative use of the Psalms and other elements were added to the service during Lent. We also continued the development of the Choral Scholars program. Dan Holmes did an excellent job last year with the Gospel Choir and additional concert elements such as the concert with Michael W Smith and the Hosanna Concert on Palm Sunday. The El Rey service gained traction, grew in excellence, and stabilized in numbers last year. The bands have continued to improve and our El Rey Tech Director, Alex Johns, brought a confidence to the team as all things technical became dependable. This year, Worship & Arts Ministry at Bidwell seeks to bring honor and glory to Christ together. We are grateful for the newer grand piano for the Traditional service. We praise God for the growth and stability we see in the El Rey service. We will try to bring more people into all our choirs and bands, and seek to train new sound and tech volunteers. This year we will seek to strengthen our four sanctuary bands and four El Rey bands. We hope to have a worship CD project. Pray for us as we seek the Lord together, that we might “declare his glory among the nations, his marvelous deeds among all peoples.” 11 7 Janis Barnett “Make a joyful noise unto the Lord, all ye lands. Serve the Lord with gladness; come before his presence with singing.” Psalm 100: 1-2 Joyful noise is, without a doubt, a sweet characteristic of Bidwell Presbyterian Church. One Sunday morning in May, I was in the breezeway between the sanctuary and the patio just before the 9:45 service. As I walked, I noticed the partially enclosed space was filled with the voices of people fellowshipping on the patio. Then the sound of the band filtered into the space as they began to play in the sanctuary, and in that moment the bell began to ring. All those rich noises combined in that moment, reverberating off the walls, and stirring my heart. Tears sprang to my eyes and all I could do was whisper, “God, I love your house; I love your people; I love being in your house!” I was surprised to find myself choked up by the experience of the enveloping music of voices, and instruments, and church bell. That moment was a compelling experience of worship, a thin place, a moment when heaven drew near. As I think back on that moment, and my response to it, I wonder what was so powerful in the simple combination of such ordinary sounds. Alive in that moment was all the power and deep inner meaning of worship, of fellowship, and community, voices in fellowship echoing the presence of Christ in his people, music drawing the soul into worship, and bells joyously ringing out, ‘Come, Come in, Come into God’s house’! Psalm 100 ends with these words: “Enter into his gates with thanksgiving, and into his courts with praise; be thankful unto him and bless his name. For the Lord is good; his mercy is everlasting; and his truth endureth to all generations.” Scott & Sharon Nichols Scott and Sharon Nichols recently moved to Chico in order to spend more time with Scott’s parents. They have been attending Bidwell for a little over a year now and have settled into the 8:30 worship service. Sharon feels that God made a way for them to be in Chico for this time. “I was talking with someone on the phone recently who was asking how we’re doing. I said, ‘This may sound trite, but I’m trying to say it as genuinely as I can. Scott and I feel like we’re in this season 12 Stories of Worship of ridiculous goodness that God has given us.’ Even when Scott was interviewing and we’d go to other places I could feel God wooing us here. I remember the weekend we were here. I was at Sycamore Pool, the oak trees were reflecting in the water, and it was so peaceful and still. This was during my dissertation stuff and I’d been turning to Psalm 23 quite often to calm me down. I felt God saying ‘This is a place of rest and peace.’ I felt he was lovingly inviting us here. I’m lifted and I feel like my spirit is just dancing and leaning closer to the Lord. I’m feeling and sensing his joy and pleasure and that’s pretty great.” Geoffory Felver Geoffory Felver has been attending Bidwell since he moved here to go to school in 2010. “I moved up to Chico and joined the choir with Dr. Scholz here at Chico State. He asked me to come over and sing in the Bidwell choir.” Geoffory remained in the choir until he graduated from Chico State last May with a degree in Music Education. Geoffory says he didn’t have a religious background before coming to Bidwell. He says he began to feel a part of Bidwell because of the 13 music and friendly atmosphere, and the sermons touched some hurting places in his life. “Three years ago,” he says, “I was not a very religious person. So I went in there and I listened to the sermons and I really enjoyed it. Then my Grandmother passed away. That was just devastating to me because she and I were very close. So when she passed, that was really hard and I remember every week, it seemed like the sermon was meant for me. Then my girlfriend and I broke up, another big devastating factor for me. Then, in church, we’d start talking about relationships. I always enjoy how there’s a theme in our church. So when that came up, I thought ‘Oh boy, here we go. I’m not going to want to hear anything about this.’ But they talked about hurt and how we go through these things and it all comes out for the better. I told Pastor Steve, one of the last times I was able to be at church, ‘Thank you, I feel like I have been brought closer to God through all these things, through all my experiences, and through this special church that we have.’ It was very nice and that is how I’ve grown.” Matt & Cassie Johnson Matt and Cassie Johnson moved to Chico from Southern California a couple of years ago. “Matt’s Dad was a professor at Chico State” Cassie says, “So Matt and I met when I was going to college here. My parents were from here, and I went to high school here. So coming back to Chico just seemed like a natural transition and a lot of wonderful things have come out of it.” “From the very first service,” Matt says, “we really liked it. We like the music, we like the contemporary feel to it. We were really hooked from the first time we came, the music was a big deal and we thought that Steve was very charismatic.” Cassie feels like the message speaks to her each time. She says, “It just seems like this is where we needed to be and this is where I needed to grow.” “I also went to the EL Rey worship service,” Matt says, “the first month that I started going to this church, just to check it out, and I was impressed that they were that forward-thinking, reaching out in that way. It’s more of an organic way of doing things instead of having a template for the Presbyterian way. I always go back to the music- the music blew our minds. They were so energetic, contemporary. It’s just another thing that showed me that this church is real and living.” Chad Kelly Chad Kelly started attending Bidwell about 5 years ago, “It’s not the most beautiful story,” he says, “I was in the middle of divorce central at the time and not feeling too good. In fact,” Chad says, “When I first came, I felt like a squashed bug crawling in the door. Then I started going to church and felt a little better, then kept going to church and felt even better, and it ended up being this place where life in Christ was evident. There ended up being people who were smiling and had a positive attitude, you could almost see the Holy Spirit.” Hearing the message of grace at Bidwell has also affected Chad. “Grace is a good one- that idea of being able to hit the reset button. That’s what I love, when Steve is up there talking about grace, and mercy, and hitting the reset button.” The relational aspect of participating in worship is also meaningful for Chad. “I think as I’ve worked with more people,” he says, “it does start to become a family.” 14 Stories of Worship Erica Borello Erica Berello, her husband, Robert, and their 3 children moved to Chico a couple of years ago from Morgan Hill. Erica loves the contemporary music of the 11:11 service. “I think that for me,” she says, “one of my most intimate ways of worshiping is through music. I tear up thinking about it. That’s where I get most emotional. It’s something that for me is just very connecting to God. I feel really blessed to have found this church. I feel like it gives you hope, and all those wonderful things that God has for you.” 15 16 Stories of Young Adults There is no doubt that for the last few years God has been laying the groundwork for a vibrant ministry to young adults in our community. The launching of the El Rey worship service has been drawing young adults into worship and into the community of our church for the last couple of years. We believed that God was calling us to take risks, and do something different to reach the next generations. We are now seeing some of the fruit of those risks. We have a thriving worship community of youth, college students and young adults. Each week it seems like a miracle to watch the El Rey Theater fill up with young people and become a sanctuary. 17 In talking with Brian Solecki, Director of the El Rey and Young Adult Ministry, Joshua Kerney expressed his passion and vision for the El Rey service. “I am excited to see how God is going to continue to use Bidwell at El Rey to further young adult ministry. The El Rey is much more than an old theater where people come to hang out for an hour on Sundays. It is a place where believers and non-believers alike come to celebrate, find comfort, and experience truth. My hope is to see Bidwell at El Rey truly come together as a community, a community of the churched and un-churched, a community that cares for each other and challenges one another, a community that experiences freedom in Christ and desires for others to know Him in the same way, a community that wants to take the good news of God out of the confines of El Rey, and allow it to permeate every aspect of their lives. I hope to see it become a community that isn’t just about possibilities and what ‘can’ be...but a community about action and what ‘will’ be.” Bidwell has a growing community of young adults who are taking the next steps into relationship with Christ and one another. Currently, we have two small groups that are led by adults from our church who feel called to care for and disciple this next generation. Ben Garcia describes his experience: “I cannot express in words how instrumental our small group leaders have been in teaching and growing us as people and as a community of young adult Christians. They make me feel loved, they challenge me, and they encourage me. They are our Chico parents for those of us that do not have family nearby; they truly have been a blessing to my wife and me in our early time of marriage. Through our leaders, El Rey, and the community of BPC, I really have found this a place to call home.” It is inspiring to watch these groups grow together as they experience the joys and challenges of life, marriage, kids, and more. Each week the El Rey doors open and young adults come into the worship life of Bidwell. Now is the time to start building on the foundations that have been laid over the past years. We want our young adult community to come together and grow. Brian Solecki emphasizes that they want to provide ways for people who attend the El Rey to connect beyond 18 Young Adults & El Rey the Sunday morning worship time. “How do we make it an entry point to more? “How do we make it a place where people feel connected and cared for?” This coming year we look forward to launching a full-scale ministry to reach out to, care for, and bring together the young adults of our community. We have a full calendar of opportunities to connect over the course of the year. Connecting in 4 different areas: 1 2 3 4 19 WORSHIP We want our young adult community to have multiple opportunities to connect with God and experience deep and meaningful worship through all of our worship services as well as other concert and worship opportunities. COMMUNITY We look forward to creating relationships with one another through a variety of events, gatherings, and opportunities that will bring together our young adult population. SERVICE Our young adults deeply desire to have a faith that impacts the world. As a response, we will be working to provide a number of ways to serve through local service opportunities, Bidwell ministry leadership, and foreign mission partners. DISCIPLESHIP We simply want our young adults to grow in their faith. We will be rolling out a number of ways to get people connecting with their faith and others. Small groups, triads, mentoring, Bible initiative classes and more will all provide different modes of connecting with their relationship with Christ. Brian says, “Each week as people leave the El Rey worship service, I am amazed. I look around at all of the smiles and faces of young people from junior high students to young adults and beyond to those well into their retired years. I am amazed because the risks we took in order to follow God to the El Rey are working. The next generations are coming. They are experiencing God in worship together. Now, we have the responsibility to care for and love them as they grow in their faith and live out their relationship with Christ in their world.” Ray Johnson Ray and Nancy Johnson attend Bidwell at El Rey in part because they are drawn to ministry with young adults, they also worked with college age students for many years, and the El Rey attracts both these demographics. Ray started volunteering as a greeter at the El Rey. “However,” Ray says, “I felt the real call for me was simply to disciple men, to make disciples. Matthew 28:19-20 says the last thing Jesus said before he went home was ‘Go therefore into all nations and make disciples.’ I am so absolutely “I think that we, as a church, should be praying for the service, that it might become what God envisions it to be. Maybe he has a totally different idea or something bigger than we have in mind. I think we should definitely keep it in our prayers, and invite new and different people- to have it be a place where we can just be who we are, the way that God loves us, and go from there.” -- Sophia Hammond (Recent High School Graduate & El Rey Attender) jazzed about having been given the opportunity by Bidwell Presbyterian to enter into this thing with these kids in their 20’s and 30’s.” “Daily scripture reading and prayer are essential” Ray says, “in order for me to do what I feel that God has called me to do. What it does is sensitize me to God’s spirit 20 Young Adults & El Rey throughout the day. I can’t get him out of my mind, and it is a very good thing. I came from a bad spot in life where I understood what being saved was. I was an air to ground attack pilot and flew in Vietnam. I went down in the ocean one time, and went down in the jungle once, and I got rescued both times. I’ll tell you, being saved has a feeling. When you’re bobbing out in the ocean, or you’re hunkered down in a hole in the jungle and they come get you, there is a word called being saved that has a very special meaning for me. And God saved me through his Son’s shed blood. I understand that, and I want everybody I come in contact with to have a really good shot at getting to the other side. I’m dead serious about that, it means everything to me. If anything 17 21 in me can transmit that passion to somebody else . . . Hebrews 10:2425 says, ‘Let us consider, let’s sit down and think about this, how can we stimulate one another to love and good deeds, not forsaking our assembling together, but as a habit of some let us encourage one another and all the more as we see his day drawing near.’ I look at that day drawing near and it makes me get vigorous and fired up about reaching the fields that are ripe for harvest. I see a whole lot of people out there that don’t have that sense of urgency, probably because they’ve never ever been at the end of a rope getting winched up out of a jungle. And I have that experience, and everything in me wants to get everybody saved that I possibly can.” 22 18 The Bible Initiative Discovering Our Story in God’s Story Bidwell Presbyterian Church recognizes that living the truth of Scripture is key to spiritual growth. After prayer, reflection, and discussion, the senior staff and elders have decided to make our primary church-wide goal, the Bible Initiative: Through sermons, our Bible Journal and Reading Guide, adult education classes, young adult fellowship times, women’s and men’s fellowship groups, Kidwell Park, youth and college ministries, as well as Real Life Groups (and other small groups), we are offering a brief, but indispensable journey to learn the essential story of the Bible and how it can become our story. It is “brief” in that we are highlighted just 388 passages— which is about one-third of the entire Bible (or 144, if you want to take a shorter tour of Scripture)—to grasp the Bible’s narrative. It is “indispensable” for us all as we seek to follow Christ and grow in grace. In these stories, you will see how God has used the Bible to transform the lives of our congregation. And as we continue this journey in the coming year, let us add our own stories. We believe that God has powerful things in store for us this year as we discover our story in God’s story. 27 23 Allen McCallum Allen McCallum is a teaching pastor at Bidwell Presbyterian and has worked closely with Greg Cootsona since arriving eight years ago. Allen, like Greg, has a passion for scripture. He explains, “The Bible Initiative is really an attempt to get God’s story and our story all put together, to really look at the Biblical narrative as a whole, to see the flow and the movement of the Biblical narrative and the main turning points. So often,” he says, “responsible pastors will pick out a passage, or maybe a book, that speaks directly to the needs of the congregation. Our pastors do a wonderful job of that- connecting those passages with the concerns we have. The trouble is though, on a Sunday morning there is no time to give people this whole sense of flow and movement of the story. With the Bible Initiative we want to address questions like, ‘Where does this passage, and that one, fit together in the total scheme?’ It’s really hard to understand a single passage unless you see it in its context, the context of the book in which it’s placed, and where that book fits in the big story. It makes quite a difference in the way we might interpret a passage.” A new understanding of scripture proved transformative in Allen McCallum’s life. “I think as a young person and a young adult,” Allen says, “I kind of had the fear that God was out to get me. I’d heard stories, growing up in the church, about God sending people out to the mission field. Stories about how the great heroes of mission had died early deaths, and about how wonderful it was that they had given their lives to this cause. And I remember as a child, the preacher thundering away on ‘You’ve got to give your life to God!’ And as I child, the way I filtered that was ‘God’s out to kill me.’ I had these dark 24 The Bible Initiative 25 suspicions that God was somebody I did not want to run into in a back alley somewhere. So I think as a young adult I was very fearful, and very anxious, and finally I got hit with an awful case of flu, which apparently generated an ulcer.” suddenly realized that God was something like my Dad, only better. Then spiritual healing began for me. It must have been the Holy Spirit bringing that verse of scripture, telling me that this is what God is really like, and ultimately it changed everything for me.” Allen was in the hospital for 3 weeks in his early 20s, and the doctor told him they didn’t know if he was going to make it or not. “He said, ‘You’ve got to do something about the way you orient yourself toward life or you’re not going to make it. You’re going to be an invalid.’ And that night, sitting in my hospital bed, I was remembering how my Dad, when I was sick as a kid with measles, or mumps, or chicken pox, would bring me something like a model airplane and a bottle of ginger ale. He would say ‘Now you get well, and we’ll build this together.’ I knew that he cared about me, wanted me to get well, and genuinely loved me as his child… and all of a sudden I remembered this verse from the Sermon on the Mount: ‘If your earthly fathers who are evil give good gifts to their children, how much more your father in heaven is able to give good gifts to his children.’ I Kimberley Wun Kimberley Wun, often shares her love of the scriptures with others. “There’s this beautiful story of scripture,” she says, “of redemption, of reconciliation from the beginning to the end that we’re invited into.” Kimberley is a Bible teacher and our current Elder for Adult Discipleship. She also took part in the planning for the Bible Initiative. “I just love bringing people into scripture,” she says, “and what we wanted to do was invite a larger part of our community into understanding it.” Kimberly calls scripture a place of home. “I just finished reading Jeremiah,” she says. “It was one those things . . . I forced myself, and I wasn’t reading for depth. I read all of Jeremiah just for consistency. ‘How does God do it?’” she asks. “These people, he gives them a call, and then they pervert it, and then he gives another call, and they pervert it again, and they get in trouble. But there’s just that grace that continues. I need to keep reading scripture because that’s what it keeps reminding me of. Because if I don’t my perspective gets really skewed. I think that goes back to why, if I can get people to do anything, I just want them to understand scripture.” them that everything they knew about the Bible they learned at Bidwell. Wes and Sandy hope that the Bible Initiative will bring more friends like this and others into contact with the Bible. “If they can just see the thread that goes all the way through the scripture,” Sandy says, “then maybe it will make some sense to them.” Sandy and Wes Mercer Clyde Powers Coming to understand scripture has been a vital element of spiritual growth for long-time Bidwell members, Wes and Sandy Mercer. Sandy recalls asking pastor Allen McCallum about the creation accounts in the Bible, how if the writers of scripture weren’t there, how did they know what happened? “He sat down and explained it all to me.” Then she began to take his classes. “It was like a puzzle,” she says, “and all the pieces began to fit together.” Reading and understanding scripture has been vitally important for BPC member Clyde Powers. Clyde relates how a message about King David given at family camp one summer informed his response to tragedy in his own life. “The speaker was an Old Testament scholar who loved the Psalms,” says Clyde, “he just made them come alive. One day he was talking about King David, about his fall with Bathsheba and the son that they had that had died, and how David had begged God to heal his son. Then he started to tell us about his own little girl, Rachel, who was about three years old. Rachel was a bald headed little girl and she had leukemia. The speaker said he was devastated and would ask God ‘why this little child?’ And then he came to the point where he realized Sandy and Wes hope the Bible Initiative will deepen our understanding of scripture. “There are so many people,” Sandy says, “that do not know one thing.” Sandy relates that one friend recently told 26 The Bible Initiative that in his journey of faith, that’s the wrong question. The question should be: ‘God, how do I glorify you in this?’ Well, I never forgot that.” When his first wife, Leslie, died suddenly, this passage of scripture took on a new importance for Clyde. He relates that while Leslie was in Memphis, her own mother died unexpectedly in Los Gatos. Clyde called her with the news and she returned home for the funeral. “Two weeks later,” he says, “somewhere in Livermore, she pulled off the highway and her car just swerved off. The car went down the embankment and she was gone. That night I called her sister, to talk to Leslie, and her sister said ‘She’s not here yet.’ Finally, they found her in a morgue in Alameda County.” Clyde thinks it was his daughter who contacted his best friend. “He came over and I’m just sitting by the phone and he hugged me and all I could say was ‘Oh God’ for about two hours. Then some friends who I served with from my church showed up, and the pastor showed up with them, and they prayed for me.” 27 “That was in 1994, and Leslie was 53. I was 54. I know my brother stayed with me a couple of days, but I lost a whole month. Then, I started to get a sort of a hold on life, and I was remembering David. I was remembering that he was on his face in mourning and they were afraid to come and tell him that the boy had died. Finally, they did come in and he got up and he said, ‘He’s died hasn’t he,’ and they said ‘Yes.’ Scripture says that David got up, he washed, put on fresh clothes and he said, ‘I’ll see him someday in heaven. I’ve done all that I can do.’ My interpretation of that was that David chose to live… and that became my choice, to live. It was scripture. It was remembering what I had learned, the choices that David had made, and the faith in God over the years that informed my life and where I go from here.” Clyde is now married to Betty Dean. “Betty and I married in 1995, about 15 months after I lost Leslie. Betty loves my daughters, and they love her. I just couldn’t put it together any better.” THE BIBLE Discovering our Story I N I T I AT I V E In God’s Story Bidwell Presbyterian Church recognizes that living the truth of Scripture is key to spiritual growth. Therefore, we are offering a brief, but indispensable journey this year to learn the essential story of the Bible and discover how it becomes OUR story. Ways to connect with The Bible Initiative Take a Bible Class: Invitation to the Old/New Testaments: Wednesdays (6:30-7:45pm) Invitation to the Old/New Testaments: Thursdays (9:30-11:00am) Weekly Sunday Bible Initiative Class: (9:30-10:20am) Subscribe to receive Bible Initiative e-mails Use the Bible Journal and Reading Guide Attend worship services on Sundays Sermons and videos online Join the conversation on Facebook More at www.bidwellpres.org FINANCIALS 2012-2013 Actual Expenses and Revenue $1,882,066 $ Total Giving Toward Operating Budget 43,891 2.2% Mission (see note below) 5,234 0.3% Care Ministries 20,407 1.0% Worship 2,056 0.1% Connecting, Equipping 66,913 3.4% Discipleship (Adult, Group Life, Children, College, Youth, Women) 469,971 23.5% Building Loan, Physical Facilities, Admin & Finance 1,387,036 69.5% Personnel, Workers Comp & Payroll Taxes $1,995,508 100.0% $(113,422) Total Expenses Expenses in Excess of Contributions NOTE: Not included above, $205,960 was given in addition to operating budget for missions, mission-related and deacons funds. Missions Care Ministries Worship Connecting, Equipping Discipleship (Adult, Group Life, Children, College, Youth, Women) Bldg. Loan, Physical Facilities, Admin. & Finance Personnel, Workers Comp & Payroll Taxes 29 Building Fund at 6-30-13 $ 916,105 98.3% 15,584 1.7% $ 931,689 100% $ 49,753 $ 1,481,441 Amount Collected before June 30, 2012 Amount Given July 1, 2012 - June 30, 2013 Total Collected at June 30, 2013 Building Fund Cash Balance Loan Balance at June 30, 2013 Support & Investments at 6-30-13 $ $ 85,519 Cash and Designated Funds 349,156 Investments, Market Value 158,975 Manse and General Fund Loans 593,650 Total Support & Investments at June 30, 2013 2013-2014 Expense Budget $ 48,700 2.4% Missions 5,250 0.3% Care Ministries 20,881 1.0% Worship 4,500 0.2% Connecting, Equipping 70,800 3.5% Discipleship (Adult, Group Life, 339,240 16.6% 1,546,967 76.0% Building Loan, Physical Facilities, Admin & Finance Personnel, Workers Comp & Payroll Taxes $ 2,036,338 100.0% Giving Needs for 2013-2014 $ 1,953,000 Projected General Contributions 2,036,338 Expense Budget Children, College, Youth, Women) $ (83,338) 4.3% Increase Needed in Giving Missions Care Ministries Worship Connecting, Equipping Discipleship (Adult, Group Life, Children, College, Youth, Women) Bldg. Loan, Physical Facilities, Amin & Finance Personnel, Workers Comp & Payroll Taxes 30 Statistics In Memory Of Total Active Members (July 2012 – June 2013): Frances Bowen Lois Borgen Helen Carlisle B. F. Moseley Mabel Smith Lurena Whipple Kathryn Lygrisse Thelma Van Bronkhorst Donald St. Clare* Clair Frazer Scott Harrington Helen Porter July 2012 1571 Arthur Welch Myrtle Charles Beatrice Hill Helen Wallen Pina Hammond* Ellen Stewart Fred Montgomery Benjamin Yorkowitz* Brettiva Strobel* Walter Richards* Jack Mallory* Total Active Members June 20131598 GAINS: Profession of Faith, Reaffirmations 43 Certificates of Transfers 7 LOSSES: Certificates of Transfer 5 Deaths17 Other0 BAPTISMS: Child18 Adult8 Weddings DateNamesPastorLocation 8/11/12 Skylar Lautt & Michaela Warthen Brian Solecki Bidwell 9/1/12 Jennifer Johns & Brett Johnsen Steve Schibsted Offsite 9/2/12 Leland McCorckle & Ellen Pehrson Greg Cootsona Bidwell 9/2/12 Thomas Esposito & Chistina Arnold* Steve Schibsted Offsite 9/8/12 Paige Parsley & Dustin Bush Jim Coons Offsite 9/15/12 Josh Bruder & Rachel Fulmer Steve Schibsted Bidwell 9/22/12 Sarah Dickman & Will Frampton* Steve Schibsted Bidwell 10/20/12 Adriann Lema & Jason Anderson* Steve Schibsted Offsite 10/27/12 Gilbert Jones & Wendy Canny Steve Schibsted Bidwell 11/17/12 Cody Hasty & Whitney Rhoades Greg Cootsona Bidwell 12/12/12 Robert Linscheid & Pam Montana Steve Schibsted Offsite 12/30/12 August Petersen & Christina Tetreault Steve Schibsted Bidwell 2/2/13 Katie Boese & Brandon Homan* Brian Solecki Offsite 6/8/13 Maddie McHenry & Ryan Rodriguez Steve Schibsted Offsite 6/8/13 Kayla Bentley & Casey Annal* Steve Schibsted Offsite 6/15/13 Eddie Wilson, IV & Devan Giuliani-Wilson* Steve Schibsted Offsite 6/29/13 Ryan Burnett & Katharine Raley* Greg Cootsona Offsite 31 * Non-Members New Members Membership Kendra Randle 10/3/2012 Helen Etz10/3/2012 Ryan Rodriguez 10/3/2012 Maddie Rodriguez 10/3/2012 Merri Kelley 10/3/2012 Lollie DeYoung 10/3/2012 Robin Wilder 10/3/2012 Heidi Siegall 10/3/2012 Richard Evenson 10/3/2012 Penny Evenson 10/3/2012 Janet Hasak 10/3/2012 Bradly Hays 10/3/2012 Jessica Hays 10/3/2012 Julie Phillips 10/3/2012 Aletta Coetzer 10/3/2012 Annie Kramer 10/3/2012 Stacy Johnson 11/3/2012 Tim Edwards 11/3/2012 Ann Edwards 11/3/2012 Ms. Terry Neri 11/3/2012 Erica Borello 11/3/2012 Clara Lo Giudice 11/3/2012 Jamie Tibbles 11/3/2012 Paul Wesbecher 2/6/2013 Richard Mesa 2/6/2013 Lauren Mesa 2/6/2013 Wiley Whitley 2/6/2013 Marna Whitley 2/6/2013 Judy Harding 2/6/2013 Danielle Marden 2/6/2013 Patricia Villasenor 2/6/2013 Joshua Olszewski 2/6/2013 Lucas Rossmerz 2/6/2013 Richard Wodrich 2/6/2013 Andrea Chaumont 4/20/2013 Rick Pero4/20/2013 Ross Lemcke 4/20/2013 Scott Nichols 4/20/2013 Sharon Nichols 4/20/2013 Mr. Mike Malcolm 4/20/2013 Gustavo Covarrubias 4/20/2013 Angelina Covarrubias 4/20/2013 Cassie Johnson 4/20/2013 Erin Smith 4/20/2013 Rodney Worthington 4/20/2013 Dorothea Maguire 6/20/2013 Gene Rideout 6/20/2013 Don Dahlmeier 6/20/2013 Elaine Fell 6/20/2013 Merlin Hoyt 6/20/2013 32 Staff Steve Schibsted Head of Staff [email protected] Greg Cootsona Associate Pastor for Adult Discipleship [email protected] Shannon Christopher Associate Pastor for Congregational Care [email protected] Jim CoonsAssociate [email protected] Brian Solecki Director of Young Adults and El Rey [email protected] Lisa StoneBusiness [email protected] Marcie Anderson Office [email protected] Janet Larson Executive Assistant to Head of Staff [email protected] Allen McCallum Teaching [email protected] Jeannie Brossoit Administrative Support (Adult/College) [email protected] Chad Fransen Director of College Ministries [email protected] Amanda Moreno College [email protected] Ben GarciaCollege [email protected] Glenn Park Director of Youth Ministries [email protected] Cambria Eber High School Youth Intern [email protected] Sophia Hammond Junior High Youth Intern [email protected] Kristy Hughes Administrative Support (Youth) [email protected] Bill Hammond Worship and Arts Director [email protected] Shawn Bentley Worship Administrative Support Specialist [email protected] Dara [email protected] David Scholz Chancel Choir Director [email protected] Dan Holmes Gospel Choir Director [email protected] Alex Johns El Rey AVL Technical Director / Custodian [email protected] Brent Sesnon El Rey Worship Leader [email protected] Belle Fricke Wedding Coordinator [email protected] Kelly Hock Director of Children’s Ministries [email protected] Emily Hughes Children’s Program Manager [email protected] Heather Fontana Elementary Children’s Program Coordinator [email protected] Hilary Tricerri Early Childhood Program Coordinator [email protected] Christi Harrington Administrative Support (Children) [email protected] Sharon Osborn Account [email protected] Marne Pritchard Account [email protected] Jodi Drysdale Hospitality Director / Wedding Coordinator [email protected] Lea HallHospitality [email protected] Lindsey Holmberg Hospitality Coordinator [email protected] Robert Engstrom Lead [email protected] David Mosier [email protected] Richard White [email protected] James Hefner [email protected] Mimi Amani Hospitality Assistant Meghan Warthen Hospitality Assistant Sabrina Hart Hospitality Assistant Anna Troudy Hospitality Assistant Ellie Troudy Hospitality Assistant Katherine Denny Hospitality Assistant 33 OFFICE LOCATIONS: Administrative offices: 119 Broadway. Hours: Mon - Fri 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Church campus office: 208 W. 1st Street. Hours: Mon - Fri 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. Mailing Address: 208 W. 1st Street, Chico CA 95928 Phone: (530) 343-1484 Fax: (530) 343-7990 www.bidwellpres.org ANNUAL REPORT CREDITS Photography: Cover, Doors: ARG VBX, El Rey: Alex Johns Steve, Choir, Baptism, Kid’s Choir: Chelsea Parker Staff: Christi Harrington Graphic Design: Jeannie Brossoit Interviews: Janis Barnett 34 And the Legacy Continues tten ,” a book wri on ti ec ir D e Sam grimage rney in the life-long pil r ou “A Long Jou to s u nts as we Peterson, poi er (and old, d ol by Eugene w ro g e as w ships self. And, our relation h is er to God Him ch d n ves a Christ, plify our li d sisters in n a s are) we sim er th ro db , friends, an hurch. with family sbyterian C re P l el w id especially B an this Christi in e b to ce n erie Christian tful life exp al support in tu u It’s a deligh M . rs yea on. We r so many r congregati ou fellowship fo in le d ro ig h classes an rc fe plays a b u li ch d r n a ou h it fa teaching in the patio te the Bible a ci re p p a ng people on o ti ee als m e il h ee w ps, and coff small grou ip service. after worsh h with our of the churc fe li e th t to or pp ating a sum vilege to su n ri p ig a es d ’s it re e’ o, S g. Also, w ancial givin n fi r la u g re our will. the church in e to support th er b em m re o ute d can contrib this, please d ou a y re t a h ou w y s er A h. Consid of our churc s ie tr is in m e future! r and in th ea y g in m for the co In Christian 35 love, ray Herman G d n a ea B For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also. Matthew 6:21