Tennessee Conference Review

Electronic Version of The Tennessee Conference Review a publication of The Tennessee Conference - United Methodist Church

Thomas Nankervis, Editor

Tuesday, March 21, 2006

TENNESSEE CONFERENCE REVIEW MARCH 24, 2006

Tennessee Conference Review March 26, 2006

Bishop Richard J. Wills, Jr., Names Dr. Vincent Walkup to be Executive Director of the Nashville Area United Methodist Foundation

Bishop Richard J. Wills, Jr., has announced the appointment of the Rev. Dr. Vincent (Vin) Walkup as Executive Director of the Nashville Area United Methodist Foundation.



Rev. Dr. Vincent (Vin) Walkup to become Executive Director of the Nashville Area United Methodist Foundation




Walkup has served the church in a variety of ways from pastor to circuit churches within the Cumberland District, to campus minister, to pastor of some of the larger congregations in the Tennessee Annual Conference. Most recently he has been the senior minister at Hermitage United Methodist Church adjacent to McKendree Village in Hermitage, Tennessee.

In 1976 he was elected as ministerial delegate to Jurisdictional Conference and has been re-elected as delegate to each Southeastern Jurisdictional Conference through 2000. In 2004 he was elected as ministerial delegate to General Conference and served as clergy leader for the Tennessee Annual Conference delegation.

Within the Tennessee Conference he has served as a member of the Board of Ordained Ministry on three different occasions and was the Board’s chairperson from 1984-1988 and from 2000 to the present. He has also served as chair of the Conference Council on Ministries (1988-1992), the chair of Conference Vision and Planning (1992-1995), chair of the Conference Children’s Council (1976-1980), and at various times has been a member of the Conference Board of Pensions, the Board of Higher Education and Ministry, and the Conference Council on Finance and Administration.

His skills were recognized by the Southeastern Jurisdiction in a number of ways. Currently he is a member of the Southeastern Jurisdiction Administrative Council, a member of the Commission on General Conference for the United Methodist Church, and chairperson of the SEJ Personnel Committee. He has also been chair of the SEJ Vision and Planning Committee, member and then chair of the SEJ Nominating Committee. Walkup was born in Jackson, Tennessee, the son of Rev. Elbert and Faye (Bridges) Walkup. He is married to Ann West Walkup, formerly of Clarksville, Tennessee, and has one son Kevin, who is married to Andrea. He and Ann are proud grandparents of Hannah and Austin.

He received a Bachelor of Arts (cum laude) from Emory and Henry College, and then earned both a Master of Divinity and Doctor of Ministry from the Vanderbilt University Divinity School.

In his new position Walkup will work with the Foundation to assist United Methodists in making significant gifts and bequests to United Methodist programs and institutions. The Foundation is of direct service to local churches in a number of ways from counseling with churches interested in establishing a wills and legacies task force to entering into management agreements with local churches to manage and invest gifts previously made. Part of the Foundation, the United Methodist Development Fund of Tennessee/Kentucky, Inc. accepts investments from individuals, churches and organizations from both annual conferences. The fund pays these investors a set rate of interest. Then the Fund makes loans to churches, agencies and missions within the Conferences. The interest paid to investors is usually as high or higher than they could get with a similar investment in a commercial bank or money market. The interest paid by churches that have borrowed money is usually as low or lower than they would be charged by commercial lenders. Since the Fund is a non-profit, service organization, the goal is not to make money from this transaction but rather to bring investors and borrowers together in the most efficient and effective way for the benefit of God's work through the Church.

When asked why he is excited about becoming executive director of the Foundation, Walkup does not hesitate:

“First I’ll be building on the solid Foundation Edd Templeton and the Board have laid and that will make my job easier.” He paused, and then added, “I can’t state my appreciation for Edd Templeton’s ministry often enough. Can you imagine how great it is building for the future on the great foundation he has laid?”

“Then there are two very personal reasons why I’m excited by this job: My father was licensed to preach in the year 1935 in the Memphis Conference. This is the 8th consecutive decade of our joint ministry. The work with the Foundation gives me an opportunity to repay the two conferences and the churches who have supported us in our ministry.”

He adds, “I spent eight years as a campus minister at Austin Peay State University. In my position with the Foundation I can help provide long term support for all the ministries of the Nashville Area by connecting people with a passion for particular ministries with ways they can support those ministries beyond their lifetimes.”

Walkup sees the move to the new Conference Center as a marvelous opportunity for the Foundation. “There will be people in and out of the Conference Center ALL the time for meetings. I like the idea of a lot of foot traffic, and the Foundation staff being with all the others. There will be a lot of opportunities for persons to stop by and pick up a brochure, to stop and ask a question, or just to drop in for a chat.”

Franklin First UMC to Honor Edd and Carol Templeton, Sunday, April 9th

The Rev. W. Edward (Edd) and Carol Templeton will be retiring at the 2006 session of the Tennessee Annual Conference after some 45 years of faithful ministry.



Rev. Edd Templeton




Since 1996 when Edd Templeton assumed the post as Executive Director of the Nashville Area United Methodist Foundation he has seen the Foundation grow from $3,000,000 in assets to its present $32,000,000. During the same time the number of accounts has grown from 40 to its present 464.

To recognize Edd and Carol for all they mean to us, a reception in their honor will be held at Franklin First United Methodist Church on Sunday, April 9th from 3:00 p.m. until 5:00 p.m. The reception will be held in the church’s Fellowship Hall.

Since Edd and Carol have been a vital part of the ministries of our conference, Franklin First UMC and pastor A. Lynn Hill want to give a special invitation to other conference churches to come and share in the celebration.

Edd and Carol have touched the lives of many in the Tennessee and Memphis Annual Conferences and reception planners want this to be a great day on which we can show our deep appreciation for all they have done.

Directions to Franklin First UMC: From Nashville take I-65 southward. Exit at exit 65 (96 West). Travel on Highway 96 (name changes to 3rd Avenue), past railroad tracks to second traffic light, and turn left onto Church Street. Main parking lot for Franklin First UMC is at the corner of 4th and Church Streets.


Warmth in Winter Celebrates 25th Birthday
by Beth Morris*

What a great 25th birthday! This year, Warmth in Winter, our largest conference youth event, celebrated its 25th anniversary with cake and candles. This was a small part of the happenings of the weekend.


Choates Creek UMC, Pulaski District, poses for a group shot. Groups at the 2006 event ranged in number from 5 to 77 persons




The last weekend in January was rainy outside, but we were warm inside while 2100 participants sang, danced, prayed and shared together in a great weekend. Our theme was "Get Real. Be Fearless". Using super heroes for backdrops and decorations, our speaker Rev. Clarence Brown from the Virginia Conference helped us to see where we are in our faith and challenged us to take the next step.




Workshops at Warmth and Winter were often crowded.

Friday night, at the end of the first session, we celebrated 25 years of Warmth by honoring past leaders, volunteer and paid, and showing pictures of the first Warmth in 1982 (with 62 people in attendance). Everyone had cake to celebrate.





Colorful “Super Heroes” were backdrops and decorations for the event.






Saturday afternoon was spent in workshops of various kinds, with times of worship on Saturday morning and evening. We raised over $10,000.00 for the Youth Service Fund during the weekend. Our weekend was capped off by dynamic worship at TPAC, Jackson Hall. The 100 member design team is to be praised for a job well done!

We hope you will plan to join us for next year Warmth in Winter, as we begin our next 25 years. The dates are January 26 - 28, 2007


Warmth and Winter participants assembled cuddly Teddy Bears to be distributed by emergency workers as a comfort to children caught in a crisis situation..








The Erin United Methodist Church group ready to celebrate the big 25th anniversary.







*Beth Morris is Conference Director of Youth and Camping Ministries


Reservations Policies of the Committee on Camping and Outdoor Ministries

There is a new procedure in place for making reservations to book conference camp facilities.

+Reservations for both Conference Camps, Beersheba and Cedar Crest, are accepted at the Conference Camping Office in Nashville.

+ALL reservations will be made by phone. The phone number to be used is 615-327-1533 of 1-800-403-5795.

+Reservations will be taken one year in advance on the first day of the month to be booked.

+The reservations are to be booked by phone even if the first day of the month falls on a Saturday or Sunday.

+Reservations will be taken beginning at 6:00 a.m. CST on the first day of the month. Calls before 6:00 a.m. will not be accepted.

+Calls will be timed, according to the voice mail log-in system and will be responded to in order of receipt

+No reservations will be taken before that time.

+There are no standing reservations from year to year.



Report on 2005 Conference Hunger Offering
by Tom Henry, Chairperson

The 2005 Hunger Offering has been gathered and distributed back to the Districts in a timely fashion, and each District Coordinator is working upon disbursement of funds to the designated agencies in each District. The International portion has gone toward our Haitian Hot Lunch project (UMCOR Special Advance 418790), which we have supported for the last three years with 50% of the collection. The remaining 50% goes back to each district to support local hunger agencies.

Results for the 2005 Tennessee Conference Hunger Offering reflected a decrease of about 40.0% from our 2004 collections, to $28,207. This shortfall is compounded by lack of participation: only 90 churches made a Hunger Offering, compared to 137 in 2004. It has been suggested that Pastors have had to make more calls for special offerings to provide relief for natural disasters like tsunamis, earthquakes, and hurricanes, and although nationally charitable giving has been extraordinary, our conference might have been visited by “compassion fatigue”. The consequence is that local food banks will receive 40% less in support from the Conference, and although the agencies are shorter of funds and food, the need for hunger relief is still growing.

The Tennessee Conference Hunger Committee has set $75,000 as our goal for Hunger Offerings in 2006. To support that goal, we have assembled two new programs to improve the Conference support for our local food banks, and to keep the burning issue of hunger in our communities and in our world in front of us.

National Hunger Awareness Day:
June 6th is National Hunger Awareness Day, (http://www.hungerday.org/) part of a grassroots movement to raise awareness about the solvable problem of hunger in America. The Tennessee Conference Hunger Committee believes that the congregations of United Methodist Churches have a vital role we can play in filling the shelves of food banks throughout each of our 7 Districts. The twofold benefits will be in providing precious food supplies to agencies working in our respective Districts, and in fulfilling our biblical role in feeding the hungry.

Our suggestion is that each church sponsor a nonperishable food drive throughout the month of May, and then deliver the groceries to their local food bank on June 6th. Please look for more on this program, including scriptural support, recommended foodstuffs, and Hunger in Tennessee statistics in subsequent issues of the Conference Review and coordinated mailings.

UMCOR Banks:
Because of the reduced offering for Hunger Relief in 2005, the Conference Hunger Committee has chosen to begin our campaign for the Annual Hunger Offering early. Hunger Sunday falls on November 26th, but Hunger is a year-round problem worldwide. The Hunger Committee proposes that churches act now to increase participation in the Hunger Offering. Small coin banks provided by UMCOR will be distributed to each church to supply families in their congregation, ideally to be prominently placed upon the dinner table so that world hunger can be addressed daily. We hope that the UMCOR coin bank will prompt parents to teach their children the lessons of compassion, stewardship, and generosity, and will increase our collective awareness of hunger in the world, and of our responsibility to our brothers and sisters.






Miguel and Paula Carpizo






Who are the aliens?
by Miguel Carpizo*





After reading a Christmas newsletter from a friend of ours, I decided to write him and make some comments about what I read. This is the letter to our friend.

Hi my friend:

I just have a question after reading your Christmas letter where you share about what your son is doing: "and he befriended these aliens as a model to us all.” Who are the aliens in this sentence? The ones who are here from other countries or the ones who haven't embrace God's diversity?

According to the Webster dictionary an alien is defined as:
--A resident born in or belonging to another country who has not acquired citizenship by naturalization (distinguished from citizen).
--A foreigner.
--A person who has been estranged or excluded.
--A creature from outer space; extraterrestrial.

So are we from outer space and nobody has noticed that? Or maybe we have been estranged or excluded. It is possible for everybody who has embraced Jesus to become an alien because this is not our home. We are living in a foreign country because our home is heaven where one day I will return. So, who is he helping? The people that came or the people that are here?

I was listening to a sermon by Rob Bell and he was asking "How many times do we sit at the table with people different than us? With people that speak another language? That have a different point of view from us? That have a different social class than us?"

When I go back to see the life of Jesus and I sit at the table with Him in the Last Supper, I am suddenly surprised to see so many different people sitting by him. Fishermen and tax collectors sitting at the same table... (That was totally unimaginable in those times) Such imperfect people! One betrayed him; another denied him, and everybody else, except John, left him. The excluded were suddenly included, the alien were suddenly part of a family.

We can become aliens very easily when we put our eyes on people and not on God. A great psychologist once said "we need to love our enemies, but what if our enemy is our own self?” (Carl Jung)

Who are the aliens we need to befriend?... Maybe they are in our midst. Maybe they are sitting very close to us and we haven't noticed them. Maybe they are living a "normal" life but deep inside are aliens living in their own world. Maybe they want to be your friends, maybe they want to learn from you, maybe they want to live like you, maybe they want freedom, maybe they need to embrace God.....aliens every where in every place we go, you and I, but thanks to God that in Christ we are one.

One of the wonderful things of serving the United Methodist Church is realizing that I serve a church that believes in Diversity, where open doors, open arms and open hearts exist. Where there is not such a thing as illegal human being but members of the same body: Christ.

Brennan Manning in his book the importance of being foolish says: “The church of Jesus Christ is a place of promise and possibility, of adventure and discovery, a community of love on the move, strangers and exiles in a foreign land en route to the heavenly Jerusalem”
This is just a thought....think about it!!
In His Grace
Miguel Carpizo

*Rev. Miguel Carpizo is the Director of Manos Hispanas Ministries . He is dedicated to giving help and information to the Hispanic-Latino community as well as to the American, to reduce the gap between the two cultures. He works in close partnership with private founders, churches and other Hispanic-serving organization to be a source of information, to encourage personal and spiritual growth and to advocate for the community. Miguel and his wife Paula developed a Hispanic program with the help of the Hispanic Ministry of the Kentucky Conference. They have helped start many Hispanic ministries in the Cookeville District and surrounding areas. Miguel also serves as the associate pastor for the bilingual contemporary congregation called The Connection. (www.manoshispanasministries.org)


Want to know more about the Hispanics? Go to:
www.pewhispanics.org

or read:
Ramos, Jorge, The Other face of America
Ramos, Jorge, Dying to Cross
Ramos, Jorge, The Latino Wave


Clark Memorial UMC Member offers Commentary: Life at Dillard University a daily struggle after Katrina A UMNS Commentary by Erin A. Grimes*







Erin A. Grimes is a member of Clark Memorial UMC in Nashville




Hurricanes were a familiar part of each fall semester at Dillard University, the historically black, United Methodist-related university I attend in New Orleans. When I learned we were evacuating to Houston last Aug. 27, I thought it would be for a short vacation. Instead, Hurricane Katrina, which struck the Gulf Coast Aug. 29 and its tragic aftermath, changed the course of my senior year forever.

After the levees broke and we got official word that I would not be able to go back to Dillard for the fall semester, I enrolled at Spelman College in Atlanta. It was one of the hardest things I ever had to do. I could not imagine going anywhere other than Dillard; but there I was, 500 miles from my beloved school and city.

My stomach was in knots as my mother and I drove to New Orleans last Nov. 11, my first visit since Katrina. I was so afraid my New Orleans would be so marred that I would not recognize it, but I needed to see the city before I decided if I wanted to return to Dillard in January.

The eastern part of the city was like a ghost town, or a war zone. Everything had been flooded, and there was debris everywhere. I could not imagine what the campus was going to look like.

But the university's administration had decided that even though the campus suffered a great deal of damage, it would reopen at a different site in New Orleans. That was one of the best decisions they made.

Many ask why I would return to a school holding classes in a hotel, in a city barely back on its feet. One of my good friends here said: "I owe it to God, I owe it to myself, and I owe it to Dillard to help rebuild the city." I agree that it is my duty as a student of Dillard and a member of the United Methodist Church to dedicate myself to the rebuilding of my campus and my adopted city.

There is still so much work to be done to rebuild New Orleans. Everyone's support is needed to sustain the rich history I love at Dillard University and in New Orleans.

When the spring semester began on Jan. 9, I was so glad to be back at school after almost five months away. I loved seeing people and professors I had missed so much. On the first day of registration, more students returned than expected - a sign that Dillard was on its way to being whole again.

The first day of classes in the New Orleans Hilton was interesting, but not the lap of luxury some might have expected. The rooms are not real classrooms. Oversized cubicles serve as our learning areas. At times it is hard for teachers and students because there are so many people in one area, instead of in separate rooms. It's loud, and at times, extremely challenging.

However, everyone is exercising extreme patience because we know that this will not last forever. Soon Dillard will be back on its campus, and things will really begin to get back to normal.

I have found that going from having my own apartment last semester to sharing a room with another girl has been a challenge. Nevertheless, it is worth the sacrifice to be back at Dillard and helping to rebuild the city.

My birthday was Feb. 9, and it was nothing like last year's celebration when I went with my friends to Kabby's on The River, which is the Hilton's top restaurant in the hotel. This year, the day I turned 22 was uneventful and seemed burdensome beside the struggles in New Orleans.

I am glad to be back at Dillard, but there are so many adjustments. Being with my friends and seeing familiar faces keeps me sane, as does having people around who have been through the same experience. Everyone is in the same boat of grief mixed with strength and the will to help New Orleans.

Students affected by Katrina, especially seniors, are indecisive about what to do after graduation, or do not know what they want to do with their lives. Before Katrina many of us were heading to graduate, medical, or law schools. Now, fewer than 30 have applied.

I am among those who have not applied for graduate school. At this point, I do not know where to go, or what I want to do. It is not that easy to pick up the pieces. Many of the students at Dillard have not dealt with what has happened to us. Yet, here we are, survivors of the storm.

It is such a difficult time for everyone: students, professors, and patrons of the city. I work in the mall next door to the hotel and have to ask customers for their zip code. Many ask sarcastically, "Which one? The one for my flooded house or where I live now?" They laugh, but I can see the hurt and trauma behind what they say.

Still, Mardi Gras season is bringing a little life to an otherwise deserted city. This carnival season is going to be one of revitalization and remembering of a once vital city. Dillard University and New Orleans will return bigger, better, and brighter than ever.

*Grimes, a senior at Dillard University and member of Clark Memorial United Methodist Church in Nashville, Tenn., took time away from her classes and her job to describe the struggles she and other students face each day.





United Methodist minister Ryan Bennett notes the joy he feels sharing the Gospel message with groups representing various faith backgrounds during the Purity Faith Night Program at Greer Stadium




“Sermon on the Mound”—United Methodist Minister named to head up Purity Faith Night Program of the Nashville Sounds baseball team





Purity Faith Nights® -- which were introduced by the Sounds in 2002 and are entering their fifth season – have become a staple at Greer Stadium to the delight of families and church groups in Middle Tennessee, Southern Kentucky, and Northern Alabama. Purity Faith Nights® feature Christian concerts, fireworks, and personal faith stories by Sounds players. United Methodist minister Ryan Bennett has joined the Sounds front office staff as Director of Faith Nights. Bennett is pastor of Pleasant View United Methodist Church in the Clarksville District and brings to the Sounds a great deal of experience in youth and pastoral ministry.

Ryan Bennett was born in Milton, Florida, where his father was serving in the Navy. When he was one year old the family moved back to Cookeville, Tennessee, the town where his father was born. He was raised in the same church that had raised his dad-- First UMC, Cookeville. Bennett graduated from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, and worked in the area of physical therapy, but it wasn’t long before he experienced a call to ministry. Given his heritage one might say the call was almost inevitable. Ryan Bennett’s ninth great grandfather was Robert Annesley, brother to Susannah Annesley Wesley.

Starting in 1998 he became youth director at First UMC in Crossville. From the very beginning he arranged to bring youth groups to Sounds games and that expanded through the years to bringing other members of the churches he was serving to ball games—something that comes easy to an individual who grew up on t-ball, Little League and High School baseball and shared the dream of becoming a major leaguer. While working with young people he attended seminary at Asbury Theological Seminary in Wilmore, Kentucky, where he earned his Master of Divinity degree.

“This work with the Sounds is my Harley Davidson”, Bennett says with a smile, acknowledging Bishop Dick Wills’ dedication to using his Harley and the setting of local coffee houses to initiate faith conversations with persons who are basically strangers. “Bishop Wills strongly believes clergy need to reach out to the community in different ways, and not always through the church. I’ve been praying for what to do beyond the church as my outreach to the community. The invitation to head up Faith Night for the Sounds was an answer to prayers.”

It was indeed an answer to prayer for a long-time baseball fan. Not only does he experience the joy of a game he loves, hear performances by persons who are the next chart-toppers in the religious music market, and listen to testimonies from Sounds’ players, but he gets to speak to the assembled Faith Night audience for 6-7 minutes during Faith Night activities, a total of nearly 20,000 persons during the summer. Bennett notes the joy he feels sharing the Gospel message with groups representing various faith backgrounds, “ministry should be fun.” If you look close at Bennett’s eyes you can see the child who started playing t-ball at 4 years of age, the Bennett who God called to serve—the Bennett who is having the unbelievable opportunity to combine two loves.

“Last year from my small church, we brought almost sixty persons from toddlers to seniors to a faith night. It was incredible the relationships that were formed and strengthened over the five hours we were at the ballpark beginning with the Christian Concerts, ball game, and fireworks after the game. Think about it, how much time each week do your church members get to know each other? Do they get to know each other during Sunday School? A little. During worship? Not much. Eating a hot dog and watching professional baseball, top quality Christian Musicians, and a first rate fireworks display? A lot! It is incredible what I have seen Faith Nights do to that tie that binds us together as one. As a result, worship is enhanced, and ministry is that much better. After all, a Church family that plays together stays together.”

When baseball season starts Ryan Bennett will have been at his job with the Sounds for several months, and has attended lunches throughout Middle Tennessee to build support for Faith Night and explain to church leaders how Faith Night can enrich their ministries.

“The two areas I’m focusing on this year are OUTREACH and MISSION at Faith Night. The outreach is really a low pressure, low confrontational way of reaching out to the un-churched and the marginally churched people. I’m encouraging churches, wanting to evangelize, to invite individuals to a Faith Night baseball game and while they are here quality bands and quality performers give a solid message and some of the performers share stories in the midst of their songs. Then I’ll be presenting a message encouraging the living a life of faith. The experience opens the way for persons to enter into dialogue and prompts faith questions. The evening will be planting a seed that we trust God will harvest. I bring to this job with the Sounds a heart for reaching un-churched people. In fact, I want to help you grow your church because that grows the Kingdom of God. If these un-churched and marginally churched people are invited by your church members and come to a Faith Night and hear a message of love and hope and then have questions about their faith, who are they going to ask? If they feel something stirring inside of them, what church will they be inclined to begin coming to? And all you and your parishioners have done is invite them to a baseball game with a concert before it.’

“I’ve mentioned focusing on mission. The Sounds have built a relationship with Jars of Clay and their clean blood/clean water mission in Africa. $1.00 can provide clean water for one person for a year, or provide clean blood for an individual undergoing surgery. In Africa the two ways that diseases are mainly transmitted is through unclean blood and unclean water. 65% of all disease is spread through those two media.”

“Faith Night will be helping Jars of Clay build a well in Africa. $15,000 is the goal on that night. It would provide clean water for a community of 15,000 people.”

“The Sounds are heavily involved with Habitat for Humanity,” Bennett adds. “In the past two years Faith Nights have enabled the building of two houses for Habitat. So, you can say that persons attending Faith Night are going to be seeing mission in new ways.”

Bennett is also working on Methodist Night at Greer Stadium, a tradition that goes back a number of years, but this year there will be a great deal more than just sitting in a reserved section of the ballpark. On Sunday evening June 4th there will be a special evening at the ballpark for United Methodist youth groups from throughout the conference—the evening, featuring a concert by “Cross Culture,” will mirror some of the elements to be found in the regular Friday evening Faith Nights—with leadership by a talented praise team, and performances by several contemporary groups. “We expect the pre-game program to run from 4:00 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.,” notes Bennett.

Schedule of Purity Faith Nights 2006

Friday, May 19th Sounds vs. Tacoma Concert Performer: MainStay
Friday, June 2nd Sounds vs. Iowa Concert performer Aaron Shust
Sunday, June 4th Special Methodist Night Concert performers “Cross Culture”
and Mike Rayson
Friday, June 16th Sounds vs. Oklahoma Concert performer Peasall Sisters
Tuesday, June 27 Sounds vs. Memphis Concert performer Jars of Clay, Derek Webb
Blood:Water Mission Night
Friday, June 30 Sounds vs. Round Rock Concert: Denver & The Mile High Orchestra
Friday, July 14 Sounds vs. Memphis Concert: TBD
Friday, July 28 Sounds vs. Colorado Springs Concert: Warren Barfield

Church groups can purchase tickets for this special night at least 30 days in advance for only $10. The price of admission includes admission to the concert, reserved seat for the game, hot dog, 20 oz. soft drink, recognition of the group over the public address system and on the scoreboard, and a fireworks show. In 2005, Faith Nights® continued to be an incredible success for the Sounds. More than 650 church groups attended games last season, an increase of 220 groups from 2003. Of last season’s top 11 attended Sounds games, five were Faith Nights®. The Sounds expect between 800-900 church groups to attend Purity Faith Nights® this season.

Individual game tickets for Faith Nights® of any other game may be purchased by calling the Sounds at (615) 242-4371 ext. 2, ordering through the official team website at http://www.nashvillesounds.com/, or by visiting the Greer Stadium box office, located at 534 Chestnut Street.







Volunteers attending Mountain T.O.P. Friends Weekend in early March assisted in renovating the lodge at Camp Cumberland Pines for use as Mountain T.O.P.'s new offices. The ministry relocated to Camp Cumberland Pines from Nashville on Feb. 27.





Mountain T.O.P. Relocates to Grundy County

ALTAMONT, Tenn. -- Mountain T.O.P. (Tennessee Outreach Project), an interdenominational missions group affiliated with the Tennessee Conference UMC, has relocated its offices from Nashville to Camp Cumberland Pines, its base camp near Altamont in Grundy County.

The move is expected to save the ministry $30,000 per year and to improve Mountain T.O.P.'s connection to the people it serves in the Cumberland Mountains of Tennessee, according to executive director Rev. Ed Simmons.

"This makes sense for the ministry today," said Simmons.

The ministry had been based in Nashville since its formation in 1975 by George Bass and members of Blakemore UMC. The ministry had rented office space on 12th Avenue South for many years.

When Bass retired last year as executive director, the Mountain T.O.P. board began considering moving the ministry's headquarters to the mountains.

"The staff changes that were taking place, and the need to run the ministry as efficiently as possible, made this the right time to move things to the mountain," said Mountain T.O.P. Board Chair Rich Campbell. "And I think it helps keep us in closer contact with the people we serve, both campers and Cumberland Mountain families."

The move became official Feb. 27, and volunteers at the ministry's annual "Friends Weekend" March 2-5 helped to continue the process of renovating space at Camp Cumberland Pines for office use.

In addition to Simmons, the ministry's staff in Altamont includes newly-hired director of programming Betsy Ruhlig; newly-hired director of service area operations Jeff Grammer; and long-time food service and facility manager Ken Swift. They will be joined in May by new program director Pat McLaughlin.

Buddy Boyce, the ministry's development resources manager, will continue to be based in Nashville but will now work from his home.

The ministry's new mailing address is Mountain T.O.P., PO Box 128, Altamont, TN 37301. The telephone number is (931) 692-3999.

In addition to Camp Cumberland Pines, the ministry operates Camp Baker Mountain in Van Buren County. It also rents camp facilities for some events.

Mountain T.O.P. has program areas for youth, adult and college-age volunteers. Its Youth Summer Ministry program places volunteers from church youth groups into the Mountains for week-long camps at which the volunteers provide minor home repairs for Cumberland Mountain families.

In the “BreakOut” program, college groups work on churches or public facilities from the mountains and help prepare Mountain T.O.P. camps for the summer season.

Adults In Ministry uses adult volunteers to do major home repairs for mountain families or to provide programming for teenagers or special needs children from the mountains.

More information about Mountain T.O.P. is available from its web site, http://www.mountain-top.org/.

Friday, March 03, 2006

TENNESSEE CONFERENCE REVIEW MARCH 10, 2006

Tennessee Conference Review March 10, 2006

Bishop Richard J. Wills, Jr. Announces the Appointments of Two New District Superintendents
Bishop Richard J. Wills, Jr. has announced the appointment of two new district superintendents for the Tennessee Annual Conference. Dr. Ronald D. Lowery will become superintendent of the Cumberland District replacing Rev. Larry Layne who is retiring at conference after 44 years of ministry. The Cumberland District includes the counties of Sumner, Macon, Robertson, Trousdale, and Wilson.

Rev. Cathie A. Leimenstoll will become superintendent of the Murfreesboro District which covers the counties of Rutherford, Cannon, Bedford, Coffee, Moore, Franklin and Grundy. She replaces Dr. James C. Clardy, Jr., who is retiring at Annual Conference. Clardy has held the position since 1999.

Ronald D. Lowery
Lowery is a native of Robertson County, Tennessee, and a graduate of Greenbrier High School. His B.A. is from Belmont University and he received his Master of Divinity from Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary. In 1998 he was awarded a Doctorate of Ministry from Drew University in Madison, New Jersey.

After college Ron served as a social studies teacher in Metro Nashville for three years before becoming a Southern Baptist pastor for fifteen years. In 1987 he became an Assistant Minister at Blakemore United Methodist Church in the Nashville District. He has since served pastoral appointments including: Westview UMC, Matthews Memorial UMC, and is presently serving Cross Plain UMC.




Dr. Ronald D. Lowery. Lowery is both a local church pastor and chaplain in the Air National Guard.







In addition to being a local church pastor, Chaplain (LTC) Ronald D. Lowery has served as a National Guard chaplain. From August 11, 1987, until he joined the Air National Guard, he served as a chaplain with the Tennessee Army National Guard and for a brief period with the Army Reserves in Texas. In February, 1996, he transferred to the 118th Air Wing, Tennessee Air National Guard and is the Wing Chaplain (LTC). His staff consists of two chaplains and three chaplain assistants.

As part of his work with the National Guard, Lowery graduated from the Air Command and Staff College in 1999 and from the Air War College on January 30, 2006. He is a trained instructor (Basic Level) in Critical Incident Stress Management (CISM), a National Guard emergency response program. Because of his desire to train people to bring healing in times of crisis, Ron has been instrumental in offering CISM training to the Tennessee Annual Conference. After 9/11 he was called to Washington, D.C. to assist the Air Guard chaplains’ response to the crisis, and in November, 2005 spent 15 days as a chaplain to military personnel in areas affected by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita.

He has served the Columbia and Cumberland Districts in a number of positions including chairperson on Evangelism and chairperson of the District Council on Ministries. On the Annual Conference level he has been chairperson of the Tennessee Conference Camping Committee, and is an interviewing chairperson for the United Methodist Endorsing Agency, the agency responsible for the national accreditation of chaplains.

He is married to Connie Cagle Lowery who works for the Tennessee Society of CPAs in Brentwood, Tennessee. They have three children and three grandchildren.

Cathie Ann Leimenstoll
Cathie was born in the community of Blanchester in southwest Ohio and received her B.A. degree from Wilmington College, a Quaker school in Wilmington, Ohio. She worked on a Masters of Education degree while living in Pennsylvania but husband Dwight Leimenstoll was transferred to Nashville to work at Donnelley Printing and her studies were interrupted.

She taught English in secondary schools for a total of 8 years in Ohio, Pennsylvania and Tennessee but took a five-year leave of absence when their son A.J. was born. When A.J. was five and entered kindergarten, Cathie began work on an Master of Divinity degree from the Vanderbilt Divinity School with wonderful support from her husband and son. She jokes that A.J. was the only child picked up at Kindergarten who had a mom studying Hebrew flash cards while she waited for his classes to get out. Dwight remained a major part of Cathie’s ministry until his death in August, 2005.





Rev. Cathie A. Leimenstoll. Leimenstoll was awarded the Denman Evangelism Award in 1999






Leimenstoll was appointed to Connell Memorial United Methodist Church first as a student pastor and then as an Associate Pastor in 1991, and in 1994 was appointed to Rehoboth United Methodist Church in Sumner County. During this 12-year appointment, the church has experienced amazing growth and renewal.

Since June of 2002 Cathie has chaired the Tennessee Annual Conference Council on Ministries and served as the secretary of the Board of Ordained Ministry from 1999 to 2001. In 2000 she was elected as a clergy alternate to the 2000 General Conference and as a clergy delegate to the 2000 and 2004 Southeastern Jurisdictional Conferences.

Friend and colleague, Judi Hoffman, affirmed Leimenstoll’s leadership as a pastor: “Cathie’s deep love for the local church and the congregations with whom she has served is evidenced by her commitment to excellence in preaching and the priority she places on faith formation and the study of the Scriptures. Over the years she has offered leadership in an untold number of retreats, Covenant Groups and Disciple Bible Studies, but her model for the empowerment of the laity is best exemplified in the Gallatin Shalom Zone.

Collaborating with neighboring churches, Cathie’s commitment to the concept of shared ministry led to the creation of an incredible partnership in the Gallatin community. Her leadership style of intentional mutuality has been a blessing to our Council on Ministries and will be to the Cabinet and to the Tennessee Conference. Discerning and compassionate, Cathie is an esteemed clergy colleague, a graceful witness to the faith, and she will be an extraordinary District Superintendent.”





Tennessee Conference Purchases a New Annual Conference Center


Five Area, Conference and District offices will be housed in a newly acquired Tennessee Conference Center building at 304 South Perimeter Park Drive in southeast Nashville. The new building replaces the former college campus ministry building adjacent to the Scarritt-Bennett Center, which has served as office space for the Conference Council on Ministries and the Office of Administrative Services for 26 years.

The 2004 and 2005 Sessions of the Tennessee Annual Conference approved a resolution authorizing a Conference Building Committee to pursue the relocation of the Conference offices with the condition of adequate resources realized from the sale of the 1110 19th Avenue South property. The resolution also required the approval of the Bishop and Cabinet, as well as the Conference Board of Trustees. The sale of this property to Vanderbilt University has made it possible for the purchase and renovation of the Perimeter Park Drive building and property. The new building formerly housed a call center for State Farm Insurance. Closing for the purchase of the new property took place on February 22, 2006.

Moving to the new building from three different Nashville locations will be the offices of the Nashville Area Foundation, the Nashville District Superintendent, the Conference Connectional Ministries, the Conference Administrative Services, and the Board of Ministry’s Office of Ministerial Concerns.

The move has been heavily studied by the Building Committee, chaired by Joe Williams (Conference Lay Leader); the Tennessee Conference Trustees, chaired by L.C. Troutt and by all the involved agencies. Conference Treasurer David Hawkins feels the sale of the old property and purchase of the larger facility was wise. “This is a matter of good stewardship for the Tennessee Conference. This is an opportunity to use wisely the valuable property on 19th Avenue South to obtain a more adequate Conference Center on South Perimeter Park Drive without placing additional financial demands on the annual conference budget.”





Front view showing the three loading bays






Though the location of the 19th Avenue South building is in close proximity to the Scarritt-Bennett Center and the United Methodist Boards of Discipleship and Higher Education and Ministry, which many found to be helpful, there were strong reasons for the move to South Perimeter Park Drive:

+The old building would have required major and very expensive renovation in the next few years.
+The new facility will have meeting space to hold several meetings at the same time, and will be able to comfortably hold meetings for up to 50 people. The old facility had one conference room that could hold a dozen persons.
+Parking, which is extremely limited on 19th Avenue South, is no problem on South Perimeter Park Drive. There are 100 spaces adjacent to the new building.
+Five agencies that were previously at three different locations will be able to share the new Conference headquarters building.
+The new Conference Center is just off of Harding Place and Interstate 24, conveniently accessible to all Tennessee Annual Conference Districts.
+A traffic light at the intersection of South Perimeter Park Drive and Harding Place makes possible easy and safe access to the Conference Center even during the busiest times of the day.
+Three large loading bays in the new building will be able to handle the collection and loading of emergency supplies in response to regional, national or global disasters.
+There is 13,000 square feet of space in the new facility versus 5200 square feet in the 19th Avenue South Building.
+The new building is in compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act.


Close-up of the main entrance area


Moves to the new Center are expected to begin upon completion of renovation. Estimated time for this move is mid-May of 2006. Dates for dedication and grand opening of the Tennessee Conference Center will be announced at a later date.









Jason Brock, Joy Jones, Paul Purdue and John Purdue of the Tennessee Annual Conference. Charlie Jones, a member of Hendersonville First UMC and husband of Joy Jones is missing from the picture.
Southeastern Methodists Plan for Hispanic Ministries
by John Purdue*

We are living in a time of great social change as we witness a massive influx of persons from south of the Rio Grande into Tennessee. According the US Census Bureau, the number of Hispanics in Tennessee increased 278% between 1990 and 2000 and the growth of the Hispanic community since then has accelerated. Methodists have adjusted to change in the past and we must now adjust again. We adjusted during the Great Awakening and flourished; We adjusted during the Revolutionary War and flourished. We adjusted after the Civil War and flourished. Now the ground is changing underneath us again. Will we adjust and flourish or will we hold tightly to structures, patterns and beliefs that worked in the past but are likely to fail in the future?

The Southeastern Jurisdiction of the UMC recently hosted a convocation for non-Hispanic/Latino churches involved in Hispanic/Latino Ministries to help United Methodists adjust and flourish. Dr. Edwin Aponte of the Perkins School of Theology lead the three day workshop along with a host of other leaders in the field. Sixty five Methodists from across the Southeast attended including clergy Jason Brock, Paul Purdue and John Purdue and lay persons Charlie and Joy Jones of First UMC Hendersonville.

Many important ideas for adjusting and flourishing were discussed. One of the most salient was that it is not essential to speak Spanish to be involved in Hispanic Ministry. Often churches are stymied in their efforts to reach out because they think that language barriers make it impossible. While language can be problematic, all of the initial steps toward Hispanic ministry can be taken without reference to language skills. Further, solutions to language issues often emerge during a churches' initial engagement with the Hispanic community from the Hispanic community itself.

Another important idea discussed was that many of the best entrance points for Hispanic ministry are social justice ministries. Clothing and food pantries, help with health care, transportation and ESL classes (English as a Second Language) are all examples of important primary areas where churches can get involved with ministry and none of which require Spanish language skills.

The convocation emphasized that the most important things in developing Hispanic ministries are no different from the most important things in developing ministries with any other groups: prayer and developing relationships between people.

The essential challenge to our church is that we face the need to change because our world is changing around us, but we are also able to remain the same, because the change is slower than those in the past. But the change is coming.

When the Hebrews were captives in Babylon, their lives threatened, Mordecai spoke these words to Queen Esther: "Who knows? Perhaps you have come to royal dignity for just such a time as this." Perhaps God has put you and your church where you are today "for just such a time as this."

Five Ways Your Church Can Be Involved in Hispanic Ministry

· Inviting Hispanic children to VBS and Sunday School
· Being open to Hispanics in worship and other events
· Providing ESL classes for Hispanics
· Providing poverty relief services
· Praying for the Hispanics in your area.

Five Resources for Your Church As It Considers Hispanic Ministry

· Partners in the Mighty Works of God, Jo and Russ Harris, from Discipleship Resources. This is the basic starting point for non-Hispanic churches interested in Hispanic ministry.
· Pentecost Journey, Jeannie Treviño-Teddlie, from Discipleship Resources. This book illustrates step by step implementation of Hispanic Ministriies.
· “National Plan for Hispanic Ministries” available at http://gbgm-umc.org/nphm/. Print copies also available offline at 212-870-3693. The official UMC plan for developing Hispanic Ministries.
· Catalogue for bilingual resources from Discipleship Resources: 1-800-972-0433
· Seven Steps: A Preview into Hispanic Ministries, Anna Maria and Conrado Soltero, General Board of Global Ministries, 1-212-870-3828

Two Resources for Understanding Wider Issues in Hispanic Ministry

· http://www.TNImmigrant.org/Information.htm This webpage contains links to eight very good documents related to Hispanic immigrants in Tennessee.
· Mexifornia (Victor David Hanson: Encounter Books) An examination of change in California as a result of Mexican immigration.

*John Purdue, pastor of Hartsville UMC and Chapel Hill UMC, Cumberland District, is much involved in Hispanic Ministries.

Training for non-Hispanic Churches Interested in Starting Hispanic/Latino Ministries
There will be training for non-Hispanic churches interested in starting Hispanic/Latino ministries offered at the Clarksville District Training event on Sunday April 2nd at 3pm at Madison Street UMC. Open to interested persons from all Tennessee Conference districts, the workshop will describe ways that any church can reach out and minister within the growing Hispanic communities in Middle Tennessee. Please Contact Paul Purdue,
revpaul@newchapelumc.org, for more information.



United Methodist Singer/Song-writer Tricia Walker weaves a Multi-Media Story of Reconciliation
Tricia Walker has performed at the Grand Ole Opry, the Country Music Hall of Fame and other important venues across the country. Her instrumental skills earned her a spot backing Grand Ole Opry star Connie Smith, with whom she played for six years. She also toured extensively with Shania Twain and Paul Overstreet as a keyboard player and vocalist. Along with Pam Tillis, Karen Staley and Ashley Cleveland, Tricia was a founding member of “Women in the Round,” one of the most celebrated foursomes at Nashville’s prestigious Bluebird Café. Her songs, Down in Capetown, reflecting on apartheid, and Halfway Around the World, written after the Tianemen Square uprising in China, illustrate how important songs with a conscience are to Tricia. Her uplifting What a Wonderful Day! was written at the request of a friend for breast cancer survivors and sold over 25,000 copies. Tricia Walker is a singer and songwriter whose songs are steeped in the passion, pain and grace of the American South. Her music has been recorded by Faith Hill, Patty Loveless and Alison Krauss, whose performance of Tricia’s Looking in the Eyes of Love earned a Grammy. Information excerpted from Tricia Walker’s website at http://www.bigfrontporch.com

Nashville singer/songwriter Tricia Walker was raised in the small Mississippi community of Fayette. In her tradition family stories were important—often shared on the front porch on a hot summer evening. The front porch was also the place were you could invite strangers, individuals you wanted to get to know, “to come on up and set for a spell.” It was a place of sharing hopes and dreams with friends, and a place where you could be reconciled with persons that had angered you. The imagery of the front porch remains with Walker some 25 years after leaving Mississippi to settle in Nashville, Tennessee. The name of her music publishing company is The Big Front Porch, and her song lyrics are front porch storytelling at its best.

Walker who has a Bachelor of Music Education from Delta State University and a Master of Music degree from Mississippi College is adept as a vocalist and instrumentalist. She plays the keyboard, guitar, and five other instruments. For awhile, before coming to Nashville, she even served several local Mississippi United Methodist Churches, including Crystal Springs UMC, in youth ministry. Whatever she has accomplished however, she has not strayed far from her roots and has a passion for sharing the story and culture of rural southwestern Mississippi—always with the overriding themes of reconciliation and love.

Walker, who is a member of the Pleasant View United Methodist Church in the Clarksville District, is presently working on a multi-media two hour show built around her newest CD The Heart of Dixie. The show will be built strongly on her experiences as a teenager. She admits to carrying the idea for the song The Heart of Dixie around in her writing notebook for nine years before one night she could feel the song moving towards completion. Here Tricia shares some of the experiences that have become part of her personal story, the soul of The Heart of Dixie:




Over the years Tricia Walker has been a volunteer in the Country Music Hall of Fame Words and Music program. She was a member of the creative team carrying this songwriting workshop into public schools in the 5 boroughs of New York as part of the CMA Awards held in New York City in 2005.






“In the fall of 1969 or beginning of 1970 there was a mandate that states would have to integrate immediately. Up until then the process was built around freedom of choice with the goal of gradually integrating the schools. Jefferson County was heavily African American with a black high school on one end of town, and a white high school on the other. When the mandate came down there was a concern on the part of our parents for the quality of our education and for our safety. We were all going to be thrown together and it looked like there would be chaos.

There were 32 students in my junior class and the decision was made—I can’t say WE made it, we had a voice in it, but our parents made it—and 16 classmates chose to go to the next county to finish their senior years, and the other 16 of us, lacking only a few credits for graduation, took them early in the summer and we graduated from high school without a senior year. Randy Moomaw’s play The Class of 1971 and a Half is based on an experience that I had with two friends many years later. To celebrate a particular birthday—and I’m not going to say which one—we planned a trip to New York for two or three days. Since we didn’t have a senior trip in high school we playfully called the trip to New York our “senior trip.” Unbeknownst to the others, the character that is sort of my character has invited one of the black students from our hometown to the reunion but she hasn’t told the other two. In the surprise lies the comedy and the seriousness of the play as the women deal with the situation.

My mother was the newspaper editor of the paper in my home town during the 60s and 70s. She was a self-taught journalist, very outspoken, very much a southern lady but she had a strong backbone, and there were many things to write about during the civil rights movement. She wrote a column every week called Just Whittlin’, called that because her daddy, a railroad man, used to sit at the courthouse on Saturdays whittling.

“I love stories, and I love the physical sound of voices and dialects particularly in the south. Those dialects are quickly disappearing. We’ve gotten too homogenous. At any rate, I wanted tape recordings of my mother’s voice, and asked her, ‘Would you please read some of your columns on tape for me?’ She kept putting it off. ‘You don’t want me to do that!’ I’d respond, ‘Yes I do.” I finally had to pull the one-sentence trump card that all children play at one time or another, ‘I’m not coming home for Christmas this year unless you tape these things.’ Which she did--so fortunately I’ve got several hours of her reading from her columns, mostly from the years 1969 and 1970 while all the Civil Rights turmoil was going on. In the show you’ll hear components of my mother’s voice blending in with some of my personal perspective on things. There will be some visual pieces as well. There will also be audio from a contemporary of mine. I didn’t grow up with her, she’s from the next county. She’s an African American woman about my age and she shares her perspective on changes that were going on at the time. So all these things are going to filter in—some audio and some video, still shots, and some music. The songs are threaded through the presentation and are what holds everything together. I’m not doing any character. I’m a song writer, not an actress. So the songs carry a lot of the meaning of the two hour presentation segued between stories told in other ways. It is my hope that the stories are part of a common experience for much of the audience—or if not common experience at least stir up some memories.

“I grew up in a small Methodist Church and it was not without controversy during the civil rights movement because in 1968 when the Methodist Church became the United Methodist Church I remember the tension in our small town—fear that the churches were going to become integrated. That never happened, but that was a point of contention for while. Part of this Heart of Dixie show is growing out of the memory of the struggle of being a kid and going to Sunday School and having my elders teach me the bible and the Gospel and right from wrong. Then somewhere when I was 15-16 all this change occurred and suddenly what I was seeing out the door didn’t jibe with what my elders had been telling me all along. This was a real struggle for a teenager and I think that has germinated into what a lot of Heart of Dixie is about. Yet, underlying everything that I went through, everything the community went through, was a real sense of love. You could see that love manifested in the relationship of the African American women to the children they cared for—white as well as black. That love in my mind symbolized a real sacrificial love—and the challenge is to try to live that sacrificial love even if everybody doesn’t agree with you.”

Heart of Dixie will have its premiere at the Dixie Carter Performing Arts Center in Huntingdon, Tennessee, March 10th, 7:30 p.m. Information at http://www.dixiepac.net/schedule.htm

Tricia Walker’s faith has played a big part in her life. She feels her faith has been the rock even through some muddy places, and even when she faced difficult issues. She says, “The verse that pierced my heart in a wonderful way goes back to a strong relationship that I have with a group of believers here in Nashville: Roman 2:4b ‘God’s kindness is meant to lead you to repentance.’ You know when I was in the midst of dark places, walking away from God, I’d come across that scripture in my journals and in the Bible. Those words pierced me in such a way that I started back to God. I hope all the music and hopefully my life will be one where people can feel the kindness of God.”

Brenda Strunk, who serves as Director of Music at Pleasant View UMC, Pleasant View, Tennessee, talks about Tricia’s contributions to her local church: “Tricia Walker shares her considerable musical talent with our congregation to enhance and enliven the worship services regularly at Pleasant View United Methodist Church, especially during special seasonal services. Her talent enables her to bring new awareness to traditional, familiar hymns, as well as bringing glory and worship through her own musical works. She also brings God's spirit to light by sharing her music through programs such as music therapy for chemotherapy patients at the Vanderbilt Ingram Cancer Center. We are very blessed to have a musician of her caliber as a regular part of our congregation and worship services.

Her pastor Ryan Bennett echoes Brenda Strunk’s remarks: “Tricia is just special. Her heart for God, her love for people, and her amazing voice unite together intertwined with a sweet spirit to make her such a powerful tool in the building of the kingdom. Whether she is singing in worship, working with the youth and children, working with the American Cancer Society, or in Ireland or the gulf coast doing mission work, Tricia brings a message of grace to the lives of the people she meets, most of the time without saying a word at all.”



Twins Delivered at McKendree Village

More than 100 people gathered recently to celebrate the delivery of "twin" 15-passenger vans at McKendree Village continuing care retirement community. Willie McDonald, far right, chairman of the McKendree Village Foundation board, cuts the ribbon on one of the vans as McKendree Village residents and staff members watch. Pictured left to right are McKendree resident Rev. Bill Gamble; Bill Black, executive director of McKendree Village Foundation; Paul Clinard, van driver dressed in surgical scrubs for the delivery; Rev. Jim Robinson, McKendree's director of pastoral care; Suleiman Aziz, van driver; Roxie Mathison, co-chair of the residents' van campaign committee; Bob Feldman, co-chair McKendree Village Foundation development committee; Curt Silverthorne, co-chair of the residents' van campaign committee; Sue Peters, co-chair McKendree Village Foundation development committee; and Mary Anna Womeldorf, president and CEO of McKendree Village.


The temperature was a little too low to provide all the outdoor activities planned for the dedication of two new vans at McKendree Village on February 20th—hot air balloon rides were cancelled—and McKendree residents were decked out in winter coats to keep off the chill.

Inside the tent set up for dedication, however, the winter weather wasn’t a problem. Exhibited in the tent was a whole lot of warm friendliness and an incredible amount of “parental pride.”

Planners of the event played off on the fact that most of the money for the purchase of the two vans was contributed by residents and employees of McKendree Village—and it was obvious that everyone at the dedication shared “parental pride” in the arrival of two new vans. The two vans, one decked out in pink ribbon and the other in blue, were treated as a birth in the family—a birth of “twins” to be exact. Invitations had been sent out about the arrival of twins at the McKendree Village Retirement Community and bubble gum cigars were passed out to commemorate the occasion.




Four McKendree staffers, wearing surgical scrubs in preparation for the delivery, added their voices in song to the dedication event.




Though many McKendree residents have automobiles to drive, many do not, and they require the services of three vans to go shopping, go to medical appointments, or to participate in McKendree Village outings such as going downtown to the theatre or symphony. Even those with automobiles prefer to use McKendree transportation when the trip is to be at night.
Van 2, a 2006 Ford E450, Startrans Senator series, will accommodate 13 passengers plus a driver or can be converted to accommodate four wheelchairs plus ten ambulatory passengers and a driver. The vehicle, which has a wheelchair lift, is very versatile because seating can be easily configured in a variety of ways.
Van 3, a 2005 GM, Startrans Senator Series, also has a wheelchair lift and can accommodate 2 wheelchairs plus 14 other passengers.


“Both of these vans have multi-use capabilities, in addition to being very spacious and comfortable. The large windows on the side of the vans make traveling more fun,” said Kevin Rainbolt, Support Services Coordinator at McKendree Village, who is responsible for the managing and maintaining all vehicles.



Prayer time at dedication of "The Twins"


The new vans replace a 1996 Ford passenger van and another van approaching “retirement” in McKendree’s existing fleet; only one of these vehicles could accommodate wheelchairs. In 2005, McKendree residents traveled more than 57,000 miles in McKendree Village vehicles.




Hilarious “The Musical Comedy Murders of 1940” Heads to Franklin
An ingenious and wildly comic romp “The Musical Comedy Murders of 1940” is being presented by the community theatre production team, The Bethlehem Players, March 10-19 at the Performing Arts Center of the Bethlehem United Methodist Church in Franklin off Hillsboro Road.

Respected theater veteran J. Dietz Osborne returns as director for this ensemble production. The original play enjoyed a long, critically hailed run both on and off-Broadway. Osborne said his veteran team is presenting a clever, twist on this show biz farce.

“It’s not a musical but it certainly is a comedy and a clever murder-mystery which will provide lively entertainment for adults and children. The play was hailed by New York media as ‘hugely enjoyable.’ The play pokes fun at show biz antics while providing who-dunnit intrigue,” Osborne said.

Written by John Bishop, the comedy is set in the library of an old mansion in Chappaqua, New York during a snowstorm in December of 1940. A fake musical audition is set up at the mansion by the owner, a Broadway investor, trying to solve the mystery of the stage door slasher. Numerous secret passages and disguises keep the audience guessing all evening.

The Bethlehem Players community theatre production of “The Musical Comedy Murders of 1940” takes place March 10, 11, 17 and 18 at 7:00 p.m., March 14 at 5:00 p.m. and March 12 and 19 at 6:00 p.m.

Tickets are $14.00 for adults and $10.00 for students. Only on Tuesday, March 14 at 5:00 p.m., the show includes dinner in the $14.00 ticket price with underwriting support from Stroud’s Barbeque. This special show is open to the public and available for the senior community with seating at 4:45 p.m. BUMC is wheelchair accessible, and accommodations are available for the handicapped.

The Bethlehem Players were established in 1997 by Harry Robinson and former minister Jim Hughes as a church outreach project “and a team sport beyond softball,” according to Robinson. The program has ambitiously grown successfully staging “Fiddler On The Roof” in 2005 to packed audiences. Other Osborne productions include: “Steel Magnolias,” “Rumor” and “A Bad Year For Tomatoes.”

For more information, directions and ticket reservations, contact Harry Robinson, BUMC Music and Arts Director, at (615) 794-6721, ext. 228 or visit http://www.blogger.com/www.bethlehemumc.com.

Applications Requested for the Position of Elementary Camp Director
The Tennessee Annual Conference is receiving applications for the position of Elementary Camp Director. The position requires that the person be deeply rooted in Christian faith and practice and have a sense of the importance of making disciples for Jesus Christ; knowledge of the structure and polity of the Tennessee Camp Program; knowledge of needs, abilities and behavioral patterns of elementary children or youth; ability to make independent decisions; demonstrated communication skills; demonstrated cultural sensitivity; ability to use discernment, judgment and initiative.

The Elementary Camp Director will work with the Cedar Crest Executive Director to plan, implement, and evaluate the summer camp experience; coordinate plans and supervise staff counselors; and will consult with the camp nurse about the medical needs of the campers. The applicant must be at least 21 years of age, have a bachelor=s degree or at least two years of camping experience as a staff person. The director will be required to be in residence at Camp Cedar Crest during the summer. There is opportunity to be off on Saturdays. Salary is based on experience and training. For inquires about Elementary Camp, please contact Susan Groseclose, 1-800-403-5795, 615-329-1177 or email sgroseclose@tnumc.org for a job description and an application.

Conference is Receiving Applications for Elementary and Youth Camp Counselors
The Tennessee Annual Conference is receiving applications for Counselors at Elementary Camp and Youth Camp. As a counselor, you will be responsible for a small group of children or youth each week. The committee is looking for a person deeply rooted in Christian faith and practice and who has a sense of the importance of making disciples for Jesus Christ; knowledge of the structure and polity of the Tennessee Camp Program; knowledge of needs, abilities and behavioral patterns of children or youth; ability to make independent decisions; demonstrated communication skills; demonstrated cultural sensitivity; ability to use discernment, judgment and initiative. The person needs to be able to lead elementary children or youth in Bible study, crafts, nature experiences, music, swimming, and sports activities.

The applicant must be at least 18 years of age, have a high school diploma and at least one year of academic training or the equivalent of two years of camping experience. The counselor will be required to be in residence at Camp Cedar Crest during the summer. There is opportunity to be off on Saturdays. For inquires about Elementary Camp, please contact Susan Groseclose, 1-800-403-5795, 615-329-1177 or email sgroseclose@tnumc.org for a job description and an application. For inquires about Youth camp, please contact Beth Morris, 10800-403-5795, 615-327-1533 or bmorris@tnumc.org.


2006 Summer Camp Dates at Cedar Crest

Elementary Camp Weeks
Please note that graduated 3rd-graduated 6th graders are eligible to attend any week of camp, unless otherwise specified.

June 12 – 16
June 19 – 23
June 26 – 30
July 10 – 14 Special Week for graduated 3rd & 4th graders
July 10 – 12 Mini-Week I for graduated 2nd graders
July 12 – 14 Mini-Week II for graduated 2nd graders
July 17 – 21 Special Week for graduated 5th & 6th graders
July 24 – 28

Youth Camp Weeks
Junior High includes graduated 6th – 9th grades
Senior High includes graduated 9th – 12th grades
June 12 -16 Graduated 6th – 12th graders
June 19 – 23 Junior High
June 26 – 30 Junior High
July 10 – 14 Junior High
July 17 – 21 Junior High
July 24 – 28 Senior High Adventure Week