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Ministry Roundup: Covenanters Seek to Bless Their World

PAXTON, IL (July 2, 2004) - Linda Tammen of the Evangelical Covenant Church of Paxton was named the local honoree of Wal-Mart's ninth annual Teacher of the Year program. A first grade teacher at Clara Peterson School in Paxton, Tammen was nominated for her willingness to help the special needs students in her class and her work to assist them into the school's educational programming. As a result of her honor, Peterson School was given $1,000. Tamman is now being considered for a statewide award.

Tammen is one of many Covenanters in who are making a difference in their churches and communities throughout the Covenant. Here's a sample of them, organized by the conference and regions they belong to:

CENTRAL

  • South Bend, Indiana: Marcia McBride of the Evangelical Covenant Church of South Bend was named the 2004 Teacher of the Year for the Penn/Harris/Madison schools.
  • Iron Mountain, Michigan: Minnie Nelson of First Covenant Church celebrated her 100th birthday May 9.
  • Lake Geneva, Wisconsin: More than 100 people from six Covenant churches in the Chicago area attended the Hispanic Women's Retreat at Covenant Harbor, June 11-13. Gloria Rios spoke to the theme "Restoration, Promise of God," taken from Ruth 4:15. The women presented "This Is Your Life" event for their friend, Nancy Reed. Reed, the retiring coordinator of Hispanic church relations for world mission, is moving to Spain with the husband Jerry in September as a short-term missionary.

NORTH PACIFIC

  • Port Orchard, Washington: Covenant Fellowship recently celebrated its fifth anniversary with a spring banquet Saturday evening and a special Sunday morning worship service, stated pastor David Rasmussen. The church has met in a local school and found ways to minister to teachers, administrators, and kids in and around Sidney Glen Elementary School, sending cookies to teachers and providing practical seminars, among other things. In June, the church hosted a service of baptism at a local lake, along with a BBQ/potluck meal. The church also will host an all-church retreat in July at an area camp and mission center off Puget Sound.

NORTHWEST

  • Mankato, Minnesota: The Evangelical Covenant Church of Mankato hosted "The SonGames," a vacation Bible school with an Olympic theme, from June 7-11 and had 130 participants and another 103 volunteer. Meanwhile, 40 people have assisted on a quilt project for Alaska Christian College that will provide 48 quilts for student's use. Sally Trask of RiverCity Quilts and Susan Covey were leaders for the project.
  • Rochester, Minnesota: Ken Olson of Rochester Covenant Church, a Wycliffe Bible translator working in Dallas, recently spent two months teaching in the Central African Republic at the Bangui Evangelical School of Theology (known as FATEB). One of the courses Olson taught introduced computer software used in translation work.
  • Willmar, Minnesota: Shirley Portinga was named the 2004 Auxiliary President-Elect of Rice Hospital Auxiliary. A former ward clerk on the hospital's medical unit, Portinga was named by the Rice Hospital Board of Directors. She has been active in volunteer work both at church (she is chair of the worship commission) and at the local level (she was director of the Central Minnesota Foster Grandparent Program) during recent years.

PACIFIC SOUTHWEST

  • Concord, California: Six representatives from Covenant congregations joined Walter Contreras of the Pacific Southwest Conference at a Hispanic leaders conference in Washington D.C. recently. The event included a prayer breakfast that had U.S. Department of Commerce Secretary Don Evans as guest speaker and senators Joseph Lieberman and Hilary Clinton giving remarks. During one day, approximately 300 pastors made 70 visits to Congressmen and women on Capitol Hill, with current immigration policy reform a key topic of discussion.
  • Oakland, California: First Covenant Church's recent newsletter recognized the academic achievements of Patten University's Chung Taylor, who earned a Dean's Award for the most recent academic year.

SOUTHEAST

  • Cary, North Carolina: Redeemer Covenant Church sent 22 people to Mexico on a mission trip April 3-10 as groups worked in Monterrey and Sabinas Hidalgo. The theme of the trip was "Do It," said Bill Goodale, who wrote an article on the trip for the church's newsletter. Workers helped with construction projects at a Covenant church in Monterrey, scrubbing and painting restrooms, scraping and sealing the church roof and doing landscaping and renovating the pastor's apartment above the church. Another group hosted a vacation Bible school for 85 children at the church, sharing Bible parables, doing crafts, etc. Janet Hobble and Kathy VanOsdell told a story about how believing in Jesus washes away sins and the group taught the children worship songs during the week. The group also led a similar program at another church nearby and more than 200 attended. In Sabinas Hidalgo, Greg Burton and Jim Hobble led a one-week basketball camp. Assistance for the week was provided by Covenant-sponsored Merge Ministries, based in McAllen,Texas. The work of the church's youth leader, Mike Przybowski, was also integral to the effort.

ELSEWHERE

  • Puebla, Mexico: Covenant missionaries Jerry and Vicky Love reported that their church has been busy recently. On Mother's Day weekend, the dads pit-barbecued two sheep - buying the animals in the market and slaughtering and butchering them and then prepared the meat by cooking it overnight before serving a tasty meal in honor of the women in the congregation. There were 120 at the meal that day, from a normal attendance of about 50, said the Loves in a recent email. "Pentecost Sunday we initiated the baptism tank in our new facilities - it was included when we poured the floor for the worship center - and that Sunday we 'buried' eight new believers who were 'raised up to new life' in Christ Jesus. One of them was Lulu, the mother of two children in our Bible club. Because of their enthusiasm for the things of the Lord, she began to attend Sunday events, participate in the life of the congregation, and opened her apartment for a Bible study among the mothers of our kids clubbers. Since her recent baptism she has been proclaiming, 'I have joy--joy all the time! I used to be sad and crying! Now I tell all my friends and I can't understand why everyone doesn't believe in Jesus and get baptized! I'm not making up this joy. It just keeps flooding through me!' " A picture of Lulu and others can be found on the Internet under: http://pacto.org/photos/NewBelievers/.

    The Loves ask prayer for the church, especially its leaders, and in the spiritual renewal of people who used to be part of the congregation and have drifted away. An upcoming baptism is part of that process. They also ask for prayers so that the congregation procures the necessary finances to finish remodeling work and final payments for a building the church recently purchased.

To hear more about what Covenant adults are doing to bless their world, check out www.covchurch.org. To send information about them, email Covenant Communications at newsdesk@covchurch.org.

Copyright © 2008 The Evangelical Covenant Church.

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