Monday, February 25, 2013

Wow!

I returned last week from our annual President’s Circle Retreat, a gathering of Wheat Ridge supporters who receive updates on our seeding ministry, hear from leaders of projects we are supporting or have supported, and enjoy Christian fellowship. This year’s retreat took place in Orlando, Florida, and we highlighted several ministries, many of them located in Florida, that were seeded by Wheat Ridge. What a joy it is to receive encouragement, ideas and perspectives from these people who support our work so generously.
 
The retreat was a “Wow!!” experience for me again this year. It’s so great to hear from leaders whose hearts God has touched with a passion for serving others. As is always the case when I’m around such leaders, I came away inspired by their commitment to impact lives by sharing health and hope in Christ’s name. These leaders all have questions on their hearts and minds and are determined to pursue answers …
 
  • How can we help new people who have fled their homeland due to war or persecution and find themselves in prison-like detention centers in the U.S., often times for years, while they wait for a resolution? Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service’s CEO, Linda Hartke, and her team answered this question by designing a training program for volunteers from congregations who enter detention centers to visit with and offer a caring presence to people who, through no fault of their own, find themselves in this lonely and vulnerable situation. 

  • How can our congregation take seriously its commitment to reach out to homeless and disenfranchised people in our community? Buy a strip mall and fill it with a variety of needed services! That’s what Holy Cross Lutheran Church in Lake Mary, Florida, with help from some partner congregations, has done. One of the ministries in the mall is called “The Oasis.” It’s a drop-in center for homeless people who need a safe place to take a shower, access the internet, or get referrals for needed services available elsewhere in the community. Another ministry in the strip mall is “Shepherd’s Hope,” a fully equipped medical clinic staffed by volunteer doctors and nurses.  

  • How can we help young adults who have never been exposed to the Good News of Jesus or who have been hurt or disillusioned by the organized church, or have never been exposed to a worshipping community? Young pastor Ben Hoyer has answered this question by starting “Downtown Credo,” a coffee shop designed with intention to create and nurture authentic relationships among young adults. This commitment to building relationships has resulted in a growing Christian community called, “The Cross.”

  • What do we do with the lessons we learned after a tragedy struck our congregation in the form of a loved family of the congregation viciously murdered in their home? Rev. Rick Armstrong and school psychologist Ann Eissfeldt decided to help other congregations and schools develop crisis plans so that people in communities impacted by such tragedies can be ministered with love and in appropriate ways as they experience loss and grief. Leaders of hundreds of congregations and schools around the country have benefitted from “God’s Care in Times of Crisis” training. Rick and Ann have also provided needed assistance for caregivers in places like New Orleans, Louisiana; Columbine, Colorado; and, most recently, Newtown, Connecticut.

  • How can the church serve older adults who can no longer manage their own lives and resources?  This question resulted in the development of a guardianship program that became one of the initial services provided by Lutheran Services Florida in the early 1990s. This important service continues to make a difference in the lives of hundreds of older adults who do not have family or loved ones to help care for them. 

  • What do I do when I visit a city in Ghana, Africa, and find tons and tons of plastic water bags littering the street? And what do I do after I learn of the plight of hundreds of young women with babies who are living on these same streets? And what is my response when the poor and orphaned children of Lesotho, Africa, capture my heart and seek ways to serve their needs? Rebecca Brandt and her college friends founded “A Ban Against Neglect,” a non-profit organization that provides shelter, education, vocational and parenting skills to help young women and their children live full and productive lives. Andrew Steele and his friends started “Bloom Africa,” a new organization that is helping children orphaned by the AIDS epidemic access educational opportunities.

  • How can my congregation serve the caregivers of elderly adults who require full-time care from family members? Terri Ziegler and Jane Corcoran of Prince of Peace Lutheran Church in Largo, Florida, answered this question by starting “Ruth’s Promise,” a community of care for senior adults that provides a safe and caring environment several days a week, thus allowing family members of these older adults an opportunity to renew and take care of important chores and commitments that are otherwise difficult to accomplish when their loved one requires full-time care.

I was also “wowed” during our President’s Circle Retreat by the reminder our participants provide of the awesome blessing of thousands of other people whose generosity makes possible the seeding ministry of Wheat Ridge. We have been able to seed all of the ministries described above, but only because of the support we receive from so many who believe in the importance of assisting inspired leaders during the fragile initial stages of new ministry development. If you are reading this, you are most likely one of these generous people. Without you, our ability to seed new ministries in Florida and around the world simply would not be possible. Thank you!!  

Blessings as you continue your journey through Lent on the way to the empty tomb. Wow!!
  

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