Tennessee Conference Review

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

Thomas Nankervis, Editor

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

TENNESSEE CONFERENCE REVIEW June 25, 2010

Index of articles in this edition of THE REVIEW

1. Nine ordained as Elders at 2010 Annual Conference
2. Three ordained as Deacons,
3. Three honored with J. Richard Allison Social Holiness Awards: Laity, George Bass and Abrahoma McIntyre; clergy, The Rev. Jay Voorhees.
4. A Prayer for My City, May 3, 2010, reflective poem written in the midst of the flooding crisis by the Rev. Jay Voorhees
5. Good Shepherd United Methodist Men build ten Personal Energy Transportation vehicles,
6. Forest Hills United Methodist Church launches Farmer’s Market on the church grounds
7. Ninth Annual “Native Moccasins Rock” Festival and Workshop, Camp Lake Benson, August 13-15, 2010, article with one captioned photo, Photo #12
8. The wedding at 61st Avenue: A love story
9. Youth from other Annual Conferences Help Middle Tennessee Recover
____________________________


Nine ordained as Elders at 2010 Annual Conference

(Front row left to right) Rickey Wayne Wade, Marilyn Eileen Thornton, Francis DeSales “De” Hennessy, III; (Second row left to right) Cynthia Annette Talley, Erin Ann Racine, Vona Rose Wilson, and Jodi Ann McCullah; (Third row) John McFatridge Feldhacker and Peter Frederic Ferguson



Three ordained as Deacons

(Left to right) Jackson Wayne Henry, Elizabeth Thompson “Libby” Baxter, and Holley Gaye Potts.


Three honored with J. Richard Allison Social Holiness Awards

This award was established by the 2001 Session of the Tennessee Annual Conference to recognize persons whose lives and ministries are focused on ministries of love and justice. Each year one layperson and one clergy person is selected. Sadly, we had no layperson recommended this year. This award remembers the persons who have answered the call of Christ to feed the hungry, visit the imprisoned, clothe the naked, visit the sick and help to bring about God’s kingdom here on earth. J. Richard Allison, for whom the award is named, was a pastor in the TN Conference, and a missionary, and a social activist in Nashville. Dick Allison was described by one of his peers as “a man of God with a mission of doing what he did best--building bridges between the needs of the community and the resources of the church.” This year, we celebrate the choice of George Bass and Abraham McIntyre (Laity) and Jay Voorhees (Clergy):

Social Holiness Award, Layperson, George Bass

Family, friends, and fellow church members gathered to celebrate the honor received by George Bass. Many in the group were in one of the original Mt. TOP volunteer teams.

George Bass spent more than thirty years training and developing youth and young adults through the Mountain T.O.P. ministry which sensitized these church members to the social, spiritual, economic, emotional, and relational needs of the weak, the least, the last, and the lost of the Cumberland Mountains. Youth and adults on work teams through Mountain T.O.P. learned the benefits of working together as a team, of meeting the needs of persons who are less fortunate, and of relating to people who simply needed a listening ear or a simple touch.

Bass did this for more than thirty years. It began when George was working with the youth at Blakemore United Methodist Church in Nashville. He took his youth to a work camp at Hinton Rural Life Center. He felt the nudge of God which led to the question, “Shouldn’t our Tennessee Annual Conference provide ministry other than simply a spiritual fun camp at Beersheba Springs Assembly? Should we help young people realize the needs of others as well as meet the needs of others?” Thus, George began to develop the Mountain T.O.P. (Tennessee Outreach Project) ministry.

Immediately, the vision ignited the enthusiasm of the youth of not only our Tennessee Conference, but the interest of youth throughout the United States as well as with youth from all other denominations. It became obvious that this ministry was greater than what our Tennessee Conference Youth Council could provide. It needed its own board of directors and trained leaders.

The first Mountain T.O.P. camp was in 1974 at Beersheba Springs United Methodist Assembly. Through the years, George has led this ministry that hired, trained and developed more than 1,050 young adults as summer staff. More than an estimated 15,000 to 20,000 youth and adults from local churches in 28 states participated in the intensive weeklong work camp that had a major spiritual emphasis. They even added a day camp for the children of the Cumberland Mountains who had nothing to do in the summer.

The Rev. Skip Armistead who nominated George Bass for the Richard Allison Social Holiness Award shared his own personal experiences at Mt. T.O.P. “Having been an active participant with Mt. T.O.P. through the years, I got to see lives changed. I saw two elderly widows’ faces light up with new hope when our work team cleared their orchard, an orchard these widows hasn’t seen since they were children. I saw men with green teeth and no teeth moved to tears because some youth cared to take time to listen to them. I’ve seen arrogant spoiled youth from wealthy homes humbled as a result of their contact with people of an entirely different culture. I’ve seen youth who felt like they were nothing and of no value to anyone become aware that they were ‘somebody’ when they helped others. I’ve seen the morale of Grundy County change for the better and the people of Grundy County say it was because of the Mountain T.O.P. ministry.

I’ve also seen the lives of many youth and young adults change in their attitudes towards the weak, the least, the last, and the lost as a result of participating in Mountain T.O.P. – and many have returned home to provide similar ministries in their own community. Many learned to appreciate the difference in cultures. Many have even entered the ministry. George Bass’ work facilitated this social transformation that continues to take place on the Cumberland Mountains even now that he is retired.”


Social Holiness Award, Layperson, Abraham McIntyre

(Some information supplied through the reflections of his father, David McIntyre, others by his sister Ingrid, still other information is quoted from writer Kathy Noble’s article, “Pilots carry people out, bring supplies into Haiti.”)

The second person to win the 2010 Richard Allison Social Holiness Award is Abraham McIntyre who serves as the Executive Director of the Bahamas Methodist Habitat, Eleuthera, Bahamas.

The Social Holiness award was accepted on June 15th by Abraham McIntyre’s parents and sister. Abraham followed the proceedings from the Bahamas using Skype (video, photo communication), and responded thankfully for the award
Bahamas Methodist Habitat is an outreach ministry of the Bahamas Conference of the United Methodist Church. Its mission is to build sustainable communities through partnership. They seek to improve the quality of life for Bahamian families by providing an array of services that build self-reliance and foster personal and community achievement. Abraham McIntyre is the Executive Director of Bahamas Methodist Habitat.

McIntyre, a son of the Tennessee Conference and a Preacher’s Kid, has always chosen work that reflects his love for people and concern for social inequities. His spirit is love. When you are around him you feel loved . . . and throughout his life he shows love where ever he is. He lives a life of ministry every day, and he adapts to the environment he is in –be it Appalachia, Belize or the Caribbean. Wherever he is in ministry he figures out a way to make things happen.

McIntyre has worked with Bahamas Methodist Habitat since 2005. The organization is not related to Habitat for Humanity International. Bahamas Methodist Habitat is normally a hurricane relief and sub-standard housing relief effort for the Bahamian islands. Many volunteer teams go there to serve each year ... including several Tennessee Conference congregations such as Fayetteville First, Hendersonville First, Belle Meade, Manchester First and Brentwood. Beyond mission trips, Abraham has spoken to over 20 churches in the Tennessee Conference about his ministry in Eleuthera.

Part of what makes the Bahamas Methodist Habitat ministry possible is the team of volunteers private pilots, recruited and trained by the BMH staff. They come from across the United States and ferry supplies needed by BMH to the Islands of the Bahamas—at a considerable savings of time and money over relying on boat transportation.

In a United Methodist News Service report “Pilots carry people out, bring supplies into Haiti,” writer Kathy Noble tells what happened with the Bahamas Methodist Habitat ministry after the earthquake in Haiti: “Abraham McIntyre was at home in Eleuthera, Bahamas, when he learned that a major earthquake had occurred in Haiti. The concern that a tsunami might flood the Bahamas was among his first thoughts. McIntyre initially expected the quake to have little effect on the mission he directs, Bahamas Methodist Habitat. The organization usually flies volunteers to construction and medical mission sites throughout the islands.

“That changed within hours when he received a call from the organization’s treasurer, Steve Merritt of Cary, N.C., asking, “’How fast can you get to Haiti?’ I went from apathetic to full on, and haven’t stopped since,” he says.

Since Jan. 15, McIntyre and his staff have coordinated flights evacuating missionaries and mission teams and helping relief workers and medical supplies reach Haiti. “

Through Facebook and texting, McIntyre soon told the world that his organization is ready to help evacuate missionaries and others from Haiti. Requests became steady. He learns about supplies needing transport in the same way.

“Between Facebook and texting, we are really making a difference,” he says. “Much as I hated Facebook at first, it’s really saving lives.”

Abe’s father and mother, retired Tennessee Conference minister, the Rev. David and Patty McIntyre, had just arrived in the Bahamas for a visit the day before the quake hit Haiti. David McIntyre reflected on some of the experiences with his son on what turned out to be a very extended stay in the Bahamas: ‘Merci. Merci.’ The beautiful, humble Haitian nurse in a 48 bed, one room hospital in Les Cayes, Haiti, sweetly spoke the sentiment of the poverty- stricken Haitian people. Abraham McIntyre and his team of volunteers from Bahamas Methodist Habitat (BMH) had just delivered two more plane loads of medical supplies donated by caring and generous US and Bahamian citizens. BMH is making an immediate difference in the lives of these precious and hurting Haitian people, their Caribbean neighbors. “

“This effort has been swift and direct service! Multiple plane loads of needed supplies and short-term medical missionaries, flown by BMH volunteer pilots recruited and coordinated by BMH staff and board members, have been delivered day after day since the massive earthquake of January 12 dealt a devastating blow to the people of Haiti. Abraham saw the need immediately after he learned of the disaster and rapidly went into action. He used the Internet, email and face-book to reach volunteers.”

It has been a remarkable experience to meet the scores and scores of doctors, anesthetists, nurses and surgeons who have come to Bahamas Methodist Habitat for transportation into some of the more remote areas of Haiti. Most of the news stories have focused on Port au Prince - - the epicenter of the earthquake. However, as the days moved by more and more of the victims evacuated the devastated city and went to these smaller towns seeking medical care, shelter and food. Delivering supplies and personnel into and out of these more rural areas has been the particular nitch of Bahamas Methodist Habitat.

The elder McIntyre admits he has learned from his son. “Abraham, though fearless in his pursuit of mission goals and support, is essentially a very humble young man. He has taught me a lot about shunning turf battles and seeking recognition. As I have periodically and quietly offered ‘politically motivated’ suggestions that might bring him or his agency a bit of support or recognition, he politely reminds me, ‘you know, Dad, you can get a whole lot more accomplished when you're not concerned about who gets the credit!’ I give thanks that he's learned that lesson so much earlier in his journey than I am learning it in mine.


Social Holiness Award, The Rev. Jay Voorhees, Clergy

The 2010 Richard Allison Social Holiness Award for clergy was awarded to the Rev. Jay Voorhees. The person that nominated him for the award knew Richard Allison personally and sees a great deal of Richard in Jay.

Jay Voorhees and his family

Jay Voorhees has been the pastor of the Antioch United Methodist Church since June of 2003. During his life he has served as a restaurant manager, a television engineer, an event manager, a hospital chaplain, and as a pastor. Prior to his appointment in Antioch, Jay served as the Associate Pastor of the Bellevue United Methodist Church in Nashville. Jay has also served as the chairperson of Tennessee Annual Conference Board of Church and Society, ensuring lots of interesting email. Jay is also involved in much conversation around “the emergent church,” a group of religious professionals who are talking about the impact of postmodernism on church and faith. He writes about these issues (and many other things as well) on his weblog, “Only Wonder Understands.” Jay is married to the Rev. Kay Hereford Voorhees who is the pastor of Cornerstone United Methodist Church in the Murfreesboro District. Kay and Jay have two daughters, Grace and Anna.

Jay left his work at United Methodist Communications to enter pastoral ministry years ago, when he realized that lives are touched more by relationships than by media. He had no idea that loving people would lead him to activism of any kind.

Voorhees became involved in social justice issues when he became chairperson of the Tennessee Conference Church and Society Work Area. His first immediate issue to tackle was the Tennessee Lottery battle. He became a member of the Religious Leaders for a Gambling Free Tennessee and work to defeat the lottery.

In more recent years he has taken a leadership role in the campaign against the Metro Nashville English Only bill and worked diligently on efforts to help save General Hospital.

With his pastor colleague at Lighthouse Baptist Church, Jay helped organize an interdenominational group of pastors that meets weekly to pray for the community. This group began to think of their congregations as “the church of Antioch” called to claim the entire community for Jesus. Among the achievements of this group are developing anti-drug campaigns, working with the Hickory Hollow Mall management and businesses on community issues, and working with the Metro Nashville Police Department on similar community issues. Jay even led Antioch United Methodist Church to become involved in the community Easter Egg Hunt, of which he also became a leader. He has also led Antioch UMC to open its gym doors to the community.

Jay pursues both social and personal holiness and depends heavily on God’s grace to make up for his deficiencies. His moderate core is similar to that of our Social Principles, which often reflect more than one “side” of a given issue. Jay is definitely able to see things for a variety of perspectives and respect a variety of opinions while standing firm on his own beliefs.

Editor’s Note: After Voorhees was nominated for the Allison Social Holiness Award, his life took a sudden and dramatic turn. Mill Creek flooded along with other creeks and streams in Southeast Nashville in the historic Tennessee early May flood. Three days after the flood he accepted the role of Relief Volunteer Coordinator for all of SE Nashville—a large geographic area which sustained heavy flood damage, and Antioch United Methodist Church became a volunteer deployment center to send out volunteers into the community.



A Prayer for My City, May 3, 2010
By the Rev. Jay Voorhees*, used with permission


God, what do you think you are doing?
Many times I can write off bad times as the result of a broken humanity;
but rains that seemed never ending?
I think you are on the hot seat for this one.

Yes, I know, nature happens, and we have very little understanding of the stuff of our world,
but there are a lot of people suffering tonight,
a lot of people scared,
a lot of people whose hope is challenged,
a lot of people questioning their belief that you never give more than we can handle.

If I sound a little ticked off, it’s because I am.
A day watching poor people throwing all their ruined belongings in the street will do that to a man.
So does looking at pictures of places I love now destroyed,
destroyed by that which is necessary for life.

This stinks, God.
Sorry, I said it, but it’s true.
It’s true when you fall through the floor of a trailer because the flooring is so saturated with water that it can’t hold you.
It’s true when the flood water subside and everything inside the house is covered with mud.
It’s true when the mold comes — the deep, black fungi that seek to take over the home.
It’s true when you know that a city — my city — is put on the ropes by something that has never happened before.
It’s very true when you read the story of a 21 year old father whose only failing was that he worried so much about the well being of his kids that he challenged the rising waters and lost the battle.

And yet,
you still are God,
and as we find ourselves by the rivers of Babylon weeping,
you take that which stinks and wring out the good things,
things like people from different nationalities and faiths working together to empty a house,
things like inmates and students working cooperatively to sandbag a water plant to keep water going,
things like people opening their homes and their hearts to those in need.

So God, if you will,
take some time off from the water business and get on with the heart transformation business,
leading brother and sister to transcend the mud and mold,
and rebuild something even better.

And God, if you will,
keep an eye on my city,
cause it’s home and I love it.
Dry it out and lead us to new depths of love and care.

Amen.

*Just a few days after this prayer was written, Jay Voorhees was named Relief Volunteer Coordinator for Southeast Nashville.



Good Shepherd United Methodist Men build ten Personal Energy Transportation vehicles

Ten Personal Energy Transportation (PET) vehicles under construction.
On Saturday, May 22, 2010, the men's group of Good Shepherd United Methodist Church in Hendersonville, assisted by donations and other volunteers from the congregation, participated in an international outreach event for PET International. The group of volunteers built ten (10) Personal Energy Transportation (PET) vehicles which will be shipped to third world countries around the globe. The PET vehicle is a hand cranked wheel chair-cart designed to provide the gift of mobility to persons who have lost their legs or the use of their legs. For detailed information about the PET Project and the recipients of these life-changing vehicles, you can visit the sponsor’s website at www.PETinternational.org

The men's group and other volunteers at Good Shepherd United Methodist Church in Hendersonville, shown with 2 of the 10 Personal Energy Transportation (PET) vehicles (in forefront) built on May 22nd to be shipped to third world countries around the globe. Photo by Julie Rutledge



Forest Hills United Methodist Church launches Farmer’s Market on the church grounds

When the idea of hosting a Farmer’s Market came up at Forest Hills United Methodist Church, it seem like the right time for such a ministry – and certainly the right place. Forest Hills church is located along busy Old Hickory Blvd close to the intersection with Granny White Pike. Lay person Leigh Ann Pettus became the point person in working with nearby growers to create a weekly Farmer’s Market on the spacious grounds of Forest Hills church.

Forest Hills pastor, the Rev. James Hughes, enthusiastically comments about the new ministry and its value to the church and to the community. “We are very excited about our new Farmer’s Market. The market will bring lots to people to our campus, which will give us a chance to tell our story. It gives a chance to be a vital community partner with the cities of Forest Hills and Brentwood.

We envision a local gathering place – a piazza, if you will. The Market gives us a chance to support local growers, which becomes a stewardship issue for us. And, finally, we will not charge the growers for space, but will ask them to make a donation to the Second Harvest Food Bank. In this way, the Market will support a local hunger mission.

The Market is a joint initiative of our Evangelism and Missions Councils. There will be about ten growers to start with and we expct that number to grow. The market began on Saturday, June 19th and will run each Saturday through mid-September. The hours will be 8:00 a.m. until noon.”


Ninth Annual “Native Moccasins Rock” Festival and Workshop, Camp Lake Benson, August 13-15, 2010
Jamie Russell, a leader at Native Moccasins Rock, sang at the opening of the 2010 Annual Conference.

The 2010 edition of Native Moccasins Rock will be held at Camp Lake Benson in Bon Aqua, Tennessee, August 13, 14, and 15.

You will be able to explore Native American Culture, Traditions, and Spirituality – along with a catching a glimpse of American History often hidden from the text books. In three days you can learn:

• The basics of Pow Wow drumming
• Creation of Medicinal Salves and herbal knowledge
• How to make a Native American flute, and learn the basics of playing the flute
• The basics of cooking with a clay pot and making tempting and delicious frybread
• How to make a gourd rattle, bead in a Native American style, carve soapstone, PLUS attempt a hands-on creation of rivercane and pine needle baskets.
• All this PLUS Native American storytelling, Choctaw Social Dancing and culture, making stories come alive.

You can learn for yourself how to use Native Arts and Crafts techniques and raw materials to create stunning jewelry and musical instruments (Examples of Native crafts often command VERY high price estimates on Antiques Roadshow).

This is a workshop but it is also a festival of great traditional music and dance. It is one of the few festivals in America where the whole family is welcome and can participate – children, youth and adults. Come and see for yourself why performers in the past as well as participants have called this one of America’s great festivals.

Download a brochure with information about housing, meals, description of individuals workshops, and price options. http://nativeamerican.tnumc.com%20or%20moccasinfootprints.org/


The wedding at 61st Avenue: A love story
A UMNS Commentary by David Briggs*

On the 22nd of May, there was a wedding on 61st Avenue in Nashville, Tenn.

The servants of the bride and groom had long ago gone out into the streets and invited everyone to the wedding banquet.

The homeless, those with mental and physical disabilities, and all of the other people who were members of the mission congregation were in their seats as family and friends walked up the street of small, closely packed houses, past young men playing basketball in the road and older residents keeping a watchful eye from their stoops, and into the white brick sanctuary.
Nancy Neelley and Robby Hicks exchange vows before the Rev. Joe Shelton

There, they sat next to men and women in plain dresses and white shirts and dark pants, some with wedding robes as casual as a T-shirt or a vest with a cowboy hat. And the wedding hall was filled with guests.

The bride, dressed in a cream-colored dress crocheted by a woman in Zimbabwe, walked around the room, greeting each person with a hug. None was humbled. All were exalted.

The Rev. Nancy Neelley, a deacon at the church, and Robby Hicks had both been married before. They understood what it means to fall short, to seek forgiveness, and to find Christ’s love in one another and those gathered around them.

There were no limousines or tuxedos or wedding gifts or lavish receptions. A bare cross provided the only backdrop on the empty raised stage behind the couple.

Yet on that night, the kingdom of the heavens became like a deacon and a songwriter-construction worker who made a wedding feast out of a Saturday night service at Sixty-First Avenue United Methodist Church.

Enduring gifts
Even in these fearful times of recession and high unemployment, our culture celebrates wealth and ostentation and personal excess. Or perhaps it is because these are fearful times that we place so much value on outward signs of financial security. The lavishness of a wedding is seen as an indicator of self-worth and one’s standing in the community.

So it is important when we can look beyond the expected and see Christ-like acts of love and forgiveness that transcend the glorification of self.

As a nation, we saw that in a young pitcher who thought he had pitched a perfect game when he caught the ball at first base for what should have been the final out of the game. When the umpire made the wrong call, the Detroit Tigers’ Armando Galarraga merely smiled, and went back to the mound to get the next guy out and win the game.

When he realized he made the wrong call after the game, the umpire, Jim Joyce, admitted his mistake and went directly to Galarraga to apologize. Galarraga, deprived of one of baseball’s rare milestones, acknowledged how bad the other man felt, and said everyone makes mistakes.

How many incidents like that have played out with screaming ballplayers uttering obscenities at umpires who yell right back in their own manner of self-righteousness?

So the tears of Joyce the next day when Garralaga – and not the Tigers’ manager - brought him the pregame lineup card in an act of forgiveness were mixed with our own at this shining example of reconciliation.

So, too, on a personal level, were the guests at the Neelley-Hicks wedding brought back to a place where love exceeded expectations.

This was not the wedding on a private island covered by helicopters for entertainment news shows. Nor was this the match of power brokers featured in the Style section of The New York Times.

This was a covenant of love before God, witnessed and celebrated by their brothers and sisters in Christ.

The wedding
A homeless woman led the congregation in the responsive reading.

Karen Andreasen, a formerly homeless woman aided by Neelley, sang the song, “There Is Love” before the vows were exchanged.

The Scripture passage was taken from the third chapter of Colossians, instructing all to “Forgive as quickly and completely as the Master forgave you. And regardless of what else you put on, wear love. It's your basic, all-purpose garment. Never be without it.”

Armando Galarraga and Jim Joyce put on garments of forgiveness, and shared an example of peace with the nation. And for a couple of hours, the wedding guests in Nashville were able to put on love. We were rich in spirit because the poor were always with us.

There was no alcohol at the wedding. Coffee and homemade cake made up the wedding feast.

Yet for so many people there, who may have gotten drunk on the inferior wine of devotion to wealth and status and power, there was a refreshing new wine.

For Jesus and his disciples had also been invited to the wedding.

(Bible study teachers, or just people who enjoy Scripture, may find in this story a fun exercise in searching for wedding references from the Gospels.)

*Briggs is news editor of United Methodist News Service.



Youth from other Annual Conferences Help Middle Tennessee Recover

The PRIORITY singers from South Carolina were one of several youth groups from outside the Tennessee Conference who came as volunteers to the “Volunteer State.” Here is the youth volunteer group from Pittman Park UMC in Statesboro, Georgia.

Mt. Horeb United Methodist Church, located in Lexington, South Carolina, has grown in the past 16 years from a little country church with 80 in worship to over 1600 in worship over the weekend and about 2600 members—it is also a congregation that reaches out where there is need. So, in early June the churches teen-age choral group, PRIORITY, eighteen strong plus adult counselors, responded to the Tennessee Conference flood victims by offering volunteer service while in Middle Tennessee to perform.

In one day PRIORITY crafted over five dozen “Prayer Bears” to give out to children affected by the flood. The bears were created at the Tennessee Conference Headquarters as Brad Fiscus, conference Youth and Young Adult Coordinator, helped them understand the magnitude of the storm. Brandon Hulette, who is helping with Conference relief efforts, also addressed the group.
The PRIORITY singers from Mt. Horeb UMC, Lexington, South Carolina. What has fueled the growth of Mt. Horeb church leaders say is “The absolute commitment to Prayer, continually seeking the guidance of the Holy Spirit, strong biblically-centered teaching, and effective leadership.” The transformational power of the Holy Spirit was exhibited by the singing group’s tour concert, “Rise &Sing.”

After lunch, and an impromptu performance for the Conference staff, PRIORITY helped load a trailer with relief supplies and then headed for Community Care Fellowship to learn about that agencies unique ministry with the poor and the marginalized. They were met by Toi King who explained how Community Care is organized to serve homeless individuals plus a growing number of families with children, families adversely effected by the economic downturn and loss of employment. After loading the Conference pick-up truck with equipment and other items to be taken to recycling. PRIORITY moved on to McKendree Village and a 5:30 p.m. performance of their mission tour concert, “Rise & Sing.” The Mt. Horeb Minister of Music, Jack T. Warren, says of the PRIORITY 40 minute concert of Praise and Worship, “when we sing our concerts, or are involved in a service projects, God opens doors and some of the greatest ministry happens following the concert when meaningful conversations and unforced opportunities to share our faith and love for Jesus happen.”

Young people from Mt. Horeb UMC created “Prayer Bears” to give comfort to children and young people who were affected by flooding -- and they also helped clear garbage and unneeded equipment from Community Care Fellowship.

God certainly opened doors at McKendree as the teenagers and the “old timers” chatted amiably, lovingly, and enthusiastically after the conference.

The young people in the group were excited to find out that Eddie Fox, Executive Director of the Foundation for Evangelism, and his wife were present for the concert. Fox, in fact was asked to give a final prayer after the concert, and persuaded Jack T. Warren to sing a solo before the benediction. Much to the delight of the PRIORITY youngsters Warren said “Yes” to the request.

In years past tours have take PRIORITY to Washington, D.C., The Gulf Coast (after Katrina), Niagara Falls and Upstate New York, and the coast of South Carolina.

Monday, June 21, 2010

TENNESSEE CONFERENCE REVIEW June 11, 2010

Index to articles in the June 11th REVIEW
1. Franklin First UMC and the TOTALLY Unexpected Day,

2. McKendree Village and Hermitage UMC work together to host UMVIM teams
3. Tennessee Justice for Our Neighbors(JfON) worker, Katherine Dix-Esquivel, wins award,
4. Inaugural Certified Lay Minister Academy proves to be Spirit-led event
5. Father-son partnership reveals amazing lessons in love, faith,
6. Four Given Ingram Scholarship Awards on May 16, 2010
7. .Bless Be the Tie That Binds
8. Justice for Our Neighbors is a Gift: A UMC.org commentary by Kathryn Spry
_________________________


Franklin First UMC and the TOTALLY Unexpected Day

By Brooke Rainey

Franklin First United Methodist Church had a unique experience when the worst flood in the community’s history coincided with their May 2 Commitment Sunday worship service at The Factory in Franklin, TN. The church had been planning for many months to hold this special service as part of their commitment to a new capital campaign: God’s Vision, our Future. On the morning of May 2nd, all plans literally began changing as the flood water rose.

The Franklin First Family Mission Team cancelled a trip to Biloxi, Mississippi, to care for flood damaged homes in Franklin.

Worship was held but the focus changed. In the midst of this disaster the church rerouted a catered breakfast meal to the local Red Cross shelter where over 250 people had been placed after evacuation from their homes. The message from Dr. Lynn Hill changed to the response Jesus would expect from all of us: love one another as you have been loved. The church rallied around its membership via Facebook, Twitter, the website and with the 250 people who braved the waters and showed up for worship.

The process of cleaning and drying a flooded home was time consuming

Franklin First senior pastor, the Rev. Dr. Lynn Hill, reflected on the May 2nd experience; “Starting back in September of 2009 we began planning for a historical worship service at Franklin First United Methodist Church to celebrate our Commitment Sunday for our Imagine: God’s Vision, Our Future campaign for the development of our North Campus facilities. Little did we realize just how historic that day would turn out to be with flooding considered to be the 100 year, the 500 year, and perhaps even the millennial flood. All of the months of preparation, design, and coordination had to immediately be changed. The focus was not to be on the financial goals of new campus development, but on loving and serving people in critical need. This service was indeed historic as it became the launching of a response from Franklin First United Methodist Church to be in ministry in incredible ways. We were reminded that we were to love others as Jesus loves us. In some amazing ways, that is what the faith community at FUMC did and continues to do.”


There seemed to be an endless supply of refuse from flooded homes—here Rachel Luna fills a garbage container.

For the persons that braved the flooding to attend the worship service at The Factory, things became even more dramatic than Hill realized at the time. Church member Vicki Sharber tells what happened from her vantage point in the congregation: “At the end of Lynn Hill’s moving sermon about responding to and loving our neighbors as Jesus would want us to respond, an unexpected occurrence took place before Lynn could conclude the service.”


Tom Overstreet and Ben Johnson at work on a flooded home.

“We could hear the rain begin to fall on the tin roof and the lightning and thunder flashed and popped as Lynn stood before the congregation getting ready give the benediction. Suddenly, water began to gush up out of the floor and that ended our service. People began to pick up their wet feet and dash to drier ground. I thought it to be God giving an ‘Amen’ to Lynn’s sermon and warning us to heed the call. To this day Franklin First certainly has responded to the community.”


More to clean.

Angela Overstreet, a dedicated lay person, took the lead from her home computer and began collecting names of those in need of help and those who were willing to lend a hand. That was Day One.



As this issue of THE REVIEW goes to press the following summary of the congregation’s efforts includes:

• 33 homes clean up completed with 3 still in progress (as of Jun 1)
• 18 others we consulted on
• Total 54 homes entered or assisted
• Over 220 volunteers have emerged from the church to respond to the needs
• Passed out information on FEMA and Flood safety
• Hard Bargain community effort assistance
• Red Cross (providing food for their shelter)
• Flood collection for Centerville, TN
• 61st Ave. UMC – working in the neighborhood; sorting supplies; communication
• We collected furniture and delivered trailers full of supplies for 61st Ave neighbors in their temporary FEMA locations
• 50-70 lunches 3 times/week for work teams. Then daily during the Family Mission Team. Today the lunch team is on standby to prepare and deliver as needed.
• General contact/communication with outside people
• Collaboration with other teams coming into area. Lots of people coming in.

Planning the work for the day

As she continues to lead the response of the Franklin First UMC congregation, Emergency Response Team (ERT) leader Angela Overstreet comments on the response of her fellow church members: “It is only through being faithful, studying and staying in the Word and making a commitment to prayer were we ever able to accomplish all that He has given us to do. God gets all the glory here. The only reason we knew how to respond was because of the faith development that has been happening in our church. It is our blessing and honor to serve.”

Pastor Paul Slentz of Sixty First Avenue UMC – Franklin First did volunteer work in the hard hit area near Sixty First Avenue UMC

A group from the church, the Franklin First Family Mission Team, was scheduled to go to Biloxi, Mississippi, during the last part of May but chose to stay home and work on the homes of two church members in a local neighborhood. Parents and their kids of all ages, plus singles and others, dropped in just to help for the day which showed great love for their church family. Floors were replaced, paint was carefully brushed, and flowers were planted which returned gardens to their former beauty. The church’s Associate Pastor, Vona Wilson, reflected on the situation. “God keeps blessing us with opportunity to help and we are deeply grateful. This is transforming our church family.”


Cleaning surfaces that have held flood waters is a priority—here Carson Stafford and Andrew Hill give the surface a good scrubbing.



As this issue of THE REVIEW goes to press, Franklin First is planning and organizing for long-term recovery. They already had a June 12th Early Response Team training scheduled and expect to have many more in the future.

Flood cleanup in the steamy heat of the day was tiring—here, a group of very tired teens.


Children from First UMC decorated bags for food to be handed out


McKendree Village and Hermitage UMC work together to host UMVIM teams


The thirteen rooms for volunteers are on the first floor, North Wing of the Health Center which was a skilled nursing unit for long-term care. Hermitage UMC remodeled one room in the Volunteer in Mission center as a station where wireless use of computers would be possible.

McKendree Village, in cooperation with Hermitage UMC, is opening a section of its unused space to house UMCOR and UMVIM teams who are coming to the Nashville area to assist with flood relief work. Rev. Alan Black, senior pastor at Hermitage UMC, along with Todd Moore, executive director of McKendree Village, are working together to help persons affected by the flood.

Teams of workers from Hermitage United Methodist Church keep the sleeping rooms clean and supplied with fresh linens. They also provide notepads for the workers, hand sanitizer, toiletries, maps and brochures to help visitors find their way around Nashville and surrounding area.

Hermitage UMC is acting as host congregation, with members working to prepare part of the Health Center wing to lodge 26 flood relief team members in thirteen rooms. A fresh cleaning, making beds, and creating a hospitality room have been part of the church’s service. Hermitage UMC is also helping to provide meals and other supplies as needed.

McKendree Village is excited to be able to offer a portion of its campus for outreach and ministry to the community and to those who are called to serve in our flood-affected neighborhoods. As part of its heritage, McKendree Village is committed to the ongoing work of Christ in the world and welcomes this new opportunity to fulfill that calling.


Tennessee Justice for Our Neighbors(JfON) worker, Katherine Dix-Esquivel, wins statewide award

On Friday, May 22nd, Katherine Dix-Esquivel was awarded a 2010 Long-Haul Award by the Tennessee Alliance for Progress. TAP's annual Long Haul awards salute the achievements of outstanding people who work for social, economic and environmental justice in Tennessee.
Katherine Dix-Esquivel receives a 2010 Long-Haul Award from Mark Burnett, Chair of the Board of Tennessee Alliance for Progress

Dix-Esquivel is a volunteer lawyer for Justice for Our Neighbor Program (an advance special of the Tennessee Annual Conference). Justice for Our Neighbors is a faith-driven ministry, welcoming immigrants into our churches and communities by providing free, high-quality immigration legal services, education and advocacy. The ministry was created in response to increasingly complex immigration regulations.

The United Methodist Committee on Relief (UMCOR) initiated the program in 1999. Today there are more than 20 JFON programs operating nationwide. Our program in Tennessee began in April 2008.

When Katherine Dix-Esquivel was nominated for the Long-Haul Award it was noted that “Katherine is an attorney, guided by her faith and her commitment to social justice -- she directs the Tennessee Justice for Our Neighbors office (under the umbrella of Belmont United Methodist Church) -- providing free legal counsel to immigrants, serving as a mentor to many, going about her work with cheerful passion and enviable earnestness. Never one to take herself too seriously, though the work itself maybe serious, Katherine generously gives of her time and talent, often crediting others for work done.”

Liz Shadbolt, Chairperson of the JfON Board, feels that “Katherine Dix-Esquivel is a major powerhouse behind all that JfON does in Nashville. Thanks to efforts like Katherine’s, we are making a difference in many lives in our community.”

The mission of JFON is four-fold: to provide high quality immigration legal services, to create an atmosphere of welcome for immigrants, to educate others around the issue of immigration, and to advocate for lasting policy change on both a local and federal level.

While in most communities, the monthly legal services clinic serves as the anchor for the JFON project - it is, in fact, the most visible and tangible manifestation of the ministry - it's important to keep in mind that the JFON mission goes beyond improving the wellbeing of individual clients and families to encompass creating a welcoming and supportive community and achieving social justice.

Tennessee Alliance for Progress (TAP) is a think/act tank with a mission to create healthy families and communities in Tennessee. TAP believes in true political and economic democracy, that people should participate in decisions that affect their lives.TAP believes that we need to articulate a hopeful vision for the future based on the idea that we are all in it together, not that we’re all on our own and we’re all out for ourselves. For further information about TAP or to make donations go to the TAP website: http://www.taptn.org/


Inaugural Certified Lay Minister Academy proves to be Spirit-led event


Front lower, left to right: Amanda Diamond, Carol Ann Richardson (New Union UMC), Nita Heilman (St. Bethlehem UMC), Deborah Gregory (St. Bethlehem UMC), David Grace (Bell Buckle UMC).
Second row: left to right: Mary Noble Parish, Dale Wells (Donelson Heights UMC), Gloria Watts-Jones (Columbia First UMC), Beverly Dycus (Wilee’s Chapel UMC), Betty Ann Meriwether (St. Bethlehem UMC), Bud Whipple (Hillcrest UMC), Ruthan Patient (Concord UMC).
Back row: left to right: Susan Padgett, Pat Mathews (Glenwood UMC), Merrily Walters (Gideon UMC), Opal Ransom (Gordon Memorial UMC), Steve Fisher (Epworth UMC), Michael West (Hickory Point UMC), Bill Dowell (Saundersville UMC), Jim Melrose (Bethlehem UMC), James Marks (St. Luke UMC), Erik Augustson (Salem UMC), and James Brewer (Linden First UMC).

The inaugural class for the Certified Lay Minister Academy was held Mary 21-23, 2010, at the Beersheba Assembly. “The Certified Lay Minister Program,” notes Susan Padgett, Director of the Office of Ministerial Concerns, “is intended to enrich the means by which laity lives out their calling in their local congregation and community.”

Twenty persons were in attendance for the inaugural event and they represented six of the seven Tennessee Annual Conference Districts.

Providing leadership for the Certified Lay Minister Academy were the Rev. Susan Padgett, the Rev. Mary Noble Parrish, Director of the Academy, and the Rev. Gayle Watson, Dean in Residence.


Jared Wilson leads a session on worship.

Six persons served as presenters during Academy sessions: the Rev. Amanda Diamond, “Call and Spiritual Gifts”; the Rev. Jared Wilson, “Worship”; the Rev. Gerald Liu, “Preaching”; the Rev. Dr. Vin Walkup, “Leadership and Administration”: the Rev. Dr. Joy Samuels, “Pastoral/Congregational Care”; and the Rev. Deb Smith, “Faith Formation and Discipleship.”

Susan Padgett was deeply moved by the quality of the event and the active participation by all registrants for the Academy: “The weekend was an amazing experience and reaffirmed for me the meaningful ministry in which our lay people are engaged through the churches of the Tennessee Conference.”

Participants were no less excited by the impact of the event. Merrily Walters, Clarksville District, shared her feelings: “I have felt the presence of the Holy Spirit this entire weekend and made new friends in Christ that I KNOW will last a lifetime. I am leaving with the beginnings of a new spiritual plan. Thank you so much!”

Beverly Dycus, Clarksville District, reaffirmed Merrily’s feelings: “I have received fresh insights and ways to more effectively minister . . . the sessions were informative with dynamic leaders offering practical and experienced ways of ministry. I leave Beersheba energized with Holy Spirit inspired ideas.” Steve Fisher, Columbia District, agreed: “The Spirit was alive and present at the Academy this weekend! I have been affirmed in my call to deepen ministry in my local church and in my community.”

Jim Melrose, Columbia District, had a surprise waiting for him: “SURPRISE! I only thought I knew what my ministry direction was. God and the CLM Academy helped point me in the ‘right’ direction.”

And Bill Dowell from the Cumberland District concluded: “The most important thing I learned at the CLM Academy was thinking about and learning all the ways we encounter God and how we share this encounter with others.”

For further information about becoming a Certified Lay Minister, contact the Academy registrar, Gloria Watts-Jones @ 931-209-6510 or
watt7@msn.com



Father-son partnership reveals amazing lessons in love, faith
Wheelchair-bound Adam Andrews and father, Dwight, honored at commencementBy Grant Vosburgh*

PULASKI, Tenn. – As his name sounded through the public address system, fellow members of the Class of 2010 immediately rose to their feet in applause, quickly followed by the faculty and staff of Martin Methodist College. Amidst that ovation, Adam Andrews began maneuvering his wheelchair toward President Ted Brown, who waited with two academic degrees in hand – one a Bachelor of Business Administration in sport management and the second a Bachelor of Science in Business with Secondary Licensure (to teach at the high school level). Within moments, everyone in Curry Christian Life Center was standing and applauding a remarkable young man and his inspiring perseverance after a high school football injury had left him without the use of his arms and legs seven years earlier.

Dwight Andrews stoically stood a few steps behind his son, prepared to assist Adam as he received his degrees. It was the very thing he had done each day for the past five years as he had chauffeured the 100-mile round trip from Collinwood, Tenn., to Pulaski and gone to every college class with his son – writing lecture notes, collecting needed books and resources, recording his son’s answers on multiple choice tests . . . whatever assistance the eventual cum laude graduate might need to complete his assignments. The father was even wearing a matching cap and gown as he escorted his graduate through the pomp and circumstance of the May 1 commencement.


 

Adam Andrews receives his degree from Martin Methodist College president Ted Brown. His father Dwight is standing next to him. A Martin Methodist College Photo.

But now, as he took a step toward the podium to be with his son, a marshal’s outstretched arm gently blocked his way. “Just wait here,” came the whispered instructions. “Dr. Brown has a surprise for you.”

With that, Martin Methodist’s president stepped to the microphone and briefly informed the audience about the second part of this compelling story.

“This is a man who served as academic assistant for his son, attending an estimated 1,720 class sessions with no hope of receiving a degree, but simply to support his son,” Brown said. “Mr. Andrews has been an inspiration to everyone who has seen his unstinting devotion, especially those of us who are fathers or mothers, or who dream of being fathers or mothers. He has been a courageous and poignant figure on our campus for five years, and we will miss him just as we will miss Adam.”

And, with that, Brown conferred an honorary bachelor of science degree to Dwight Andrews.

Now the standing ovation and thunderous applause were tempered by tears all throughout Curry Christian Life Center. Longtime college personnel later said it was the most moving moment they had ever experienced at a Martin Methodist graduation.

Gail Newton, associate professor of business, had witnessed this partnership from the very start of Adam’s college life, and this final scene immediately brought back a wave of emotions and reflections.

“Mr. Andrews is such a devoted father, a very unassuming gentle person to talk with, but a definite strength when it comes to his work with Adam,” she said. “Of course, it was always with Mr. Andrews very content to be in the background.

“Adam and his father have become such a part of the academic routine that they just come into a classroom with all the other students, and you honestly don’t notice anything out of the ordinary,” Newton said. “Adam is usually talking with some other student about some sporting event, yesterday’s scores, that sort of thing. I was lecturing one day in class, just a routine day, and I noticed Mr. Andrews reach over and lightly scratch Adam’s forehead, a simple gesture to us that we take for granted and yet that was a definite moment for me. Very quickly I was reminded what an extraordinary young person and father I have had the privilege to come to know.”

Indeed, whether he’s mastering – and often improving – computer programs that allow him to accomplish a myriad of assignments and tasks, whether he’s coaching the Collinwood middle school football team, or whether he’s taking accurate aim at a rifle range (he’s president of the local chapter of Outdoors Without Limits, better known as O.W.L.), Adam Andrews never ceases to amaze friends and acquaintances.

Yet, while he reluctantly acknowledges that others consider him an inspirational role model – Tennessee Titans head coach Jeff Fisher invited Adam to speak at his son’s school in Nashville a few years ago – he certainly doesn’t view himself in that light.

For the son, life goes on and a person finds alternative ways to do what must be done.

“I realized pretty quickly that I can do a whole lot more than I thought I could do,” Adam said. “The way my sister and I were taught by our parents, whether in athletics or academics, you always find a way to get things done, and you don’t settle for less than your best. After 15 years of being taught this everyday by my mother and father, I wasn’t going to let this stop me.

“I’m trying the best I can so that I don’t see myself any different than before. This shouldn’t change my attitude or my work ethic. I know there are things I can’t do or that I’ve got to do differently, but that’s my problem, not anybody else’s,” he said. “I’ll deal with it.”

And his dad is there at his side, each step of the way, whether in a biology lab at Martin Methodist College, a public school classroom as Adam does his student teaching, or, this summer, in the athletic ticket office at the University of North Alabama, where Adam is doing a sport management internship. For the father, there’s nothing heroic happening here; it’s just what a parent does for his child.


The Andrews family photo, standing behind Adam are (from left): his grandmother, Jeanette Calton; his parents, Keddith and Dwight; and his sister, Abby. A Martin Methodist College Photo.

“Adam wanted to go to college, and we needed to find a way for that happen,” Dwight said, explaining that because the family’s insurance came from his wife’s employer, it was more financially feasible for him to give up his job. “I knew it would be hard on him with me being by his side all the time, but he wanted me to go with him.

“Sometimes you’ve got to do what you’ve got to do,” he said. “I’m glad I had the opportunity to do it.”

He also is quick to note that his wife, Keddith, deserves equal credit.

“I don’t have the words to say how I felt when they gave me the honorary degree,” he said. “I almost cried, but I held it back. It was a real surprise – I thought they had given me the cap and gown just so I would blend it with everyone else as I went with Adam through the ceremony. I really appreciated what the college did, but, honestly, my wife should have gotten part of it. She did all the work at home, especially because she had to type all of Adam’s papers, and . . .” he paused to cast a father’s knowing smile toward his son, “he always waits until the last minute to get assignments done.”

The Rev. John Ives, who has been the family’s pastor at Shawnettee United Methodist Church in Collinwood, since July 2003 – nine months after Adam’s injury – sees the entire Andrews family as a role model.

“Had it been Dwight who had the job with insurance benefits, then it would have been Keddith doing this with Adam. She is 50 percent of that equation,” Ives said. “They are a family that definitely loves each other. They are there for each other, 110 percent of the time. Adam’s sister, Abby, has been heavily involved in basketball and summer softball, and they’ve always been there for her, too, getting her wherever she needs to be.”

Indeed, Gail Newton recalls the morning after Abby signed a scholarship to play basketball at Middle Tennessee State University; Adam and his father arrived in class proudly wearing Blue Raider T-shirts and baseball caps. (Following a knee injury and a redshirt freshman season, she has transferred to the University of North Alabama, where she will have four years of basketball eligibility remaining.)

It’s not just the members of the Andrews family who are there for one another, however. As Ives has witnessed over the past eight years, it’s as if the entire Shawnettee congregation and Collinwood community are an extended family.

“This church has offered as much support as they’ve needed . . . and more than what is needed. I can’t tell you how many times the church has responded, financially and beyond, and there have been other people who have had dramatic health issues, and these church members are there for each other, stepping in any way they can,” Ives said.

“The whole Collinwood community is just a tremendously loving community,” he continued. “This is a town of about 1,000 people, and when we held a prayer gathering at their home on the first anniversary of his injury, there must have been 500 people that evening, all standing outside around their house.”

Just as an estimated 1,500 people in Curry Christian Life Center stood on the morning of Martin Methodist College’s commencement, honoring a story of resilient determination, unflagging faith . . . and a love story for the ages.

“A lot of people think it’s amazing what I’ve done,” Adam Andrews said, relaxing at his home three weeks later, his father at his side. “But if you started writing down the names of all the people who have helped, you wouldn’t have enough paper. Family, friends, Martin Methodist College, people we don’t know . . .

“Granted, we’ve not always had the best of things, but we’ve not had the worst of things, either. We’ve always loved each other as much as possible in this family. My mama and my daddy have made their life about their kids, and it’s something God has blessed me and my sister with. Daddy didn’t get paid as if he had been working for himself, and I know it’s put them in a bit of a bind, but they’ve decided that if somebody is going to do without, it’s going to be them, not us,” he said.

Then, as his father forced a small smile and slightly lowered his head – perhaps trying not to become emotional for the second time in three weeks – Adam revealed the most important lesson learned during his Martin Methodist College experience.

“If I ever have kids or if my sister ever has kids, that’s the way we’ll do it, because our parents have taught us that your kids come first.”

*Grant Vosburgh is Director of Communications, Martin Methodist College

Four Given Ingram Scholarship Awards on May 16, 2010
Left to right: R Bill Mitchell, Samatha Stafford, Torri Carver, Rev. Kathie Bowles, Jonathan Goodwin, Kaleb Allen, Shirley Ingram

On May 16, 2010, the Gainesboro First UMC awarded scholarships to four Jackson County Seniors. The scholarships are made available through the generosity of Shirley and the late Rev. Cliff Ingram. Dr. Vin Walkup was our guest speaker and Shirley Ingram gave the children's message. Bill Mitchell and Pastor Kathie presented the scholarship awards. There was a luncheon for the recipients and their families immediately following the church service. We would like to congratulate Jonathan, Torri, Samatha, and Kaleb and wish them the very best as they continue their education.

Bless Be the Tie That Binds
By Lucy Neeley Adams

Summer days bring many different experiences . Children look forward to getting out of school unless they are in the year ‘round system. Families plan vacations. Picnics by the lake or in the park bring happy memories.

However, since my husband is a United Methodist minister, June was a month to move to another church or to stay at the one he was serving. Moving vans were a common thing to see in our driveway after about five years of serving one church. We did this several times and the numerous friends that we have are a great blessing to our lives.

I cherish God’s word in John 13:35 as I remember our years of ministry in local churches. “By this love everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.” Because we Christians have Jesus in our hearts our love unites us to all brothers and sisters in the Body of Christ.

Ministry was also good for another family. Rev. and Mrs. John Fawcett served a small Baptist church in Waingate, Yorkshire, England in 1722. Church members loved listening to his sermons, prayers and singing hymns together. The Fawcetts were very content.

But one day an invitation came from a church in London for Fawcett to come and be their pastor. It was a larger, more prestigious church with an increase in salary. Everything indicated that this would be a very good move.

The decision was made as they packed their belongings and said their farewells. Fawcett preached his final sermon at the little church on their last Sunday.

Then the unexpected happened. Rev. Fawcett changed his mind. The tie that bound him to this small parish was too strong. His members sorrow and unembarrassed tears convinced him to stay. He remained there for fifty-four years.

History records that “Blest Be the Tie That Binds” may have been a direct response to the expressions of love from his congregation during that one short time of indecision.

When I sing the third stanza of this hymn I remember friends who will always be loved because “we share each other’s woes, our mutual burdens bear: and often for each other flows the sympathizing tear.” Caring love can be expressed with words, but often is expressed with tears.

The story is told of little Billy, who sat on the sidewalk curb with his friends. Since they were all crying, someone stopped to ask what was wrong. One little boy replied, “We’ve got a pain in Billy’s stomach.” Billy will never forget his friends who helped him cry. That is the tie that binds our hearts in everlasting love – God’s kind of love.

Lucy Neeley Adams -- parts taken from 52 HYMN STORY DEVOTIONS



Justice for Our Neighbors is a Gift: A UMC.org commentary
By Kathryn Spry*

JFON. A friend mentioned it to me. It sounded interesting—something about helping our neighbors—and before I knew it, I was totally immersed in helping immigrants get the legal advice they need.

Justice for Our Neighbors is a faith-driven ministry, welcoming immigrants into our churches and communities by providing free, high-quality immigration legal services, education and advocacy.
Photo #14, caption: Kathryn Spry is the Tennessee Justice For Our Neighbors clinic co-coordinator at Hillcrest United Methodist Church in Nashville. A UMNS photo by Ronny Perry.

One Saturday a month, I serve as the coordinator for a clinic in Nashville, Tenn. offered by JFON. I am able to offer hospitality to individuals and families who find themselves in need among strangers. I see volunteers give their time to gather the information needed to help hurting people feel safe. I witness children smiling and laughing while their mother’s face is filled with fear and confusion about her family’s future.

I hear kind words of comfort offered to our clients who are unsure that they deserve our attention and our help. I am surprised that I hear no complaints from those who have to wait for hours to see the attorney who may or may not be able to give them the news they are hoping for. I listen to volunteers who are so pleased to be able to offer their time and attention to these neighbors in our midst.

Justice for Our Neighbors has been a true gift to our community. We have been fortunate to have the assistance of gifted lawyers and dedicated volunteers. Each clinic is different. We may not know what to expect as far as the needs of our clients, but I can always expect the very best support from our volunteers.

Once we were in need of 15 extra volunteers for a special clinic. I was so anxious. Could we pull this off? We were overjoyed to welcome even more than the 15 volunteers we needed! Recently we all shared tears of joy as clients completed processes to be able to travel and visit their families in their home countries again. It reminded us all of how much we take for granted in our own lives.

Refugees are struggling to make a new life for themselves and their families. Many have endured multiple losses as they left the only home they had known to protect their loved ones. Our local churches, along with the support of the United Methodist Committee on Relief, can offer some help to ease their way.

For many years, Micah 6:8 was my favorite scripture. Now, at least one Saturday each month, I get to see my favorite scripture acted out by my neighbors, for my neighbors. “But he’s already made it plain how to live, what to do, what God is looking for in men and women. It’s quite simple: Do what is fair and just to your neighbor, be compassionate and loyal in your love, and don't take yourself too seriously—take God seriously.” (The Message)

*Kathryn Spry’s commentary can be found on the blogsite
http://www.umc.org/site/apps/nlnet/content.aspx?c=lwL4KnN1LtH&b=5733249&ct=8412923