Randy and Crystal Carpenter with daughter Marlee (right).

Among the 130 soldiers at the Call to Duty Ceremony on June 23.

A Call to Duty Ceremony was held Saturday, June 23, at Bowsher High School in Toledo for the 323rd Military Police Company, which is getting set to deploy to the Middle East in support of Operation Enduring Freedom. Among the 130 soldiers is Crystal Carpenter, wife of Randy Carpenter, who is senior pastor of Sunfield UB church in Sunfield, Mich.

Crystal has been a member of the Army National Guard for about seven years. This deployment, which will last 9-11 months, will be her first with the National Guard.

Caleb Kennedy

Huntington University 6’6′ senior forward Caleb Kennedy was named the first-ever Male Athlete of the Year in the Mid Central Conference. The award recognizes athletic and academic excellence. Kennedy was chosen by the league’s athletic directors from among the 1600 male student-athletes in the MCC.

Kennedy, from Charlottesville, Ind., graduated this year with a business management degree. He averaged 20 points and 8.5 rebounds per game, and was the only member of the MCC to be named to the NAIA First Team All-America team. He was also named the MCC Player of the Year for this past season. Kennedy had a high of 43 points against Saint Xavier in December 2011, and ranks 21st on HU’s all-time scoring list.

The Mid Central Conference, in which Huntington competes, consists of these schools:

  • Bethel College (Mishawaka, Ind.).
  • Goshen College (Goshen, Ind.).
  • Grace College (Winona Lake, Ind.).
  • Indiana Wesleyan University (Marion, Ind.).
  • Marian University (Indianapolis, Ind.).
  • Mount Vernon Nazarene University (Mount Vernon, Ohio).
  • Spring Arbor University (Spring Arbor, Mich.).
  • Taylor University (Upland, Ind.).
  • The University of Saint Francis (Fort Wayne, Ind.).

A volleyball player from Taylor University received the Female Athlete of the Year award.

As of Thursday, June 21:

  • 14 people have registered for the UB Staffing Course, to be held July 11 in Huntington, Ind. Two-thirds are taking it as a requirement for ordination. The others are taking it (at half the cost) as a CEU.
  • The UB Women’s Conference is still three months away, but already 160 women have registered.

Frank Y, Associate Director of Global Ministries

Jennifer Blandin has been a UB servant in Macau for 16 years. Over the past years, Jen has played many roles: teaching, preaching, discipling, and team leading. In that largest gambling city in the world, her faithful work has produced deep relationships and plenty of fruit.

Last year, Jen returned home for an academic leave and obtained a Master’s degree to better equip herself in developing disciples overseas.

Jen is back in Macau now, but finds that her financial support has been greatly depleted due to a decrease in support and increase in costs last year. If you would like more information about Jen’s ministry, or would like to become a part of her support team, please contact the Global Ministries office at by email or by calling toll-free 1-888-622-3019. Or, you can drop a check in the mail, with a note explaining that it is for Jennifer Blandin’s support, to:

Global Ministries
302 Lake Street
Huntington, IN 46750

Donna Hollopeter, Associate Director of Global Ministries

I had an email this morning from Fonda Cassidy (right) giving me an update on how things are going for the medical team in Honduras. This team of 21 persons is in southern Honduras in the midst of some very poor, remote villages. They have had three clinics so far and have treated almost 1400 patients with varying problems. The really neat thing is that there have been several first time decisions for Christ as they minister not just to physical needs but spiritual ones. The team members are all doing well.

A team of 7 persons will depart for Spain on Sunday, June 24. They will work with Ron and Brenda Anderson (right), missionaries with European Christian Mission, in an English Camp. The 7 are: April Dice (team leader), Chuck Malson, Beth Palmer, Mallory Jones, Todd and Quinn Fetters, and Joann Gardner. They will be gone for 8 days.

On July 1, a team of 10 youth and adult leaders from the Monroe UB Church will travel to Nicaragua to work with Jeff Dice on a couple of projects there.

The Germany team led by Tom and Kim Datema will depart on July 27 for a week-long English Camp and then a week of ministry with the Sierra Leonean Church plant in Berlin.

  • Because of growth at Mill Chapel in Reedsville, W. Va., the church hired Mike Charlton as associate pastor.
  • Walter L. Marshall, whose son Terry E. Marshall is pastor of Pen Mar UB church (Cascade, Md.), passed way May 28 in Hagerstown Md.

This synagogue in Kizkalesi is believed to date back to the Roman period based on adjoining architecture.

After discovering two previously unknown synagogues in Turkey, Huntington University Bible and Religion Professor Dr. Mark Fairchild (right) is sharing his findings in a noted academic journal.

Fairchild will lead a UB tour of biblical sites in Turkey in October 2012.

In an article published this month in the Biblical Archaeology Review, Fairchild begs the question, “Could the world’s earliest known synagogue be buried amid rubble?” The Biblical Archaeology Review is a prestigious publication that documents archaeological digs relating to Biblical findings around the world.

In 2007 while researching in Turkey, Fairchild discovered two synagogues in the areas of Kizkalesi (the ancient city of Korykos) and Çatiören. In the years since, he has returned to conduct surface surveys and to continue his research.

“We know almost nothing about the churches that existed in Cilicia in that time period,” he said of that region of Turkey. What he and other researchers suspect is that the Apostle Paul established the churches during the 10 years after his conversion to Christianity. There is documented evidence, however, that Paul travelled through those regions on his missionary journeys later in life, Fairchild said.

“That’s why these synagogues are particularly interesting to me,” he said. “There is a good chance that Paul shared the Gospel message in these synagogue cities.”

The synagogue in Kizkalesi, Fairchild suspects, dates back to the Roman period based on adjoining architecture. The Çatiören synagogue, however, more than likely dates back to the Hellenistic Period around the 1st or 2nd Century B.C. If this proves to be true, it would be the earliest synagogue ever discovered.

In the BAR article titled, “Turkey’s Unexcavated Synagogues,” Fairchild calls for the excavation of these regions, particularly the synagogues, to unearth more of the treasures that they may be hiding.

“On my recent trip this summer, I found four more tombs with menorahs,” he said of the inscriptions in the stones. “I know there are more. That’s an indication of how many Jews lived in that area.”

As a researcher, Fairchild conducts surface surveys of the regions and then documents his findings. Over the past 15 years, he has visited more than 200 sites and plans to continue his work in Turkey in future years. Last summer, he visited 30 sites dating back to the 5th and 6th centuries B.C. This summer, he continued his research of ancient sites around Turkey from Gaziantep, near the Syrian border, to the ancient city of Iconium where Konya stands today.

Global Ministries is launching an email newsletter called “Global Ministries Prayer Guide.” We invite you to sign up for it.

On a regular basis, you will receive an email spotlighting several ways you can pray for Global Ministries staff and ministries around the world. Each edition has four sections, with a couple prayer needs under each one:

  1. The World. Ways to pray for needs of a global nature, or to direct prayer at a specific country, whether or not United Brethren people are involved there.
  2. International Partners. Prayer needs involving people, churches, and ministries in the nearly 20 countries with United Brethren churches.
  3. Global Ministries Staff. Prayer needs involving Global Ministries personnel serving around the world.
  4. Volunteers and Trips. Prayer requests regarding overseas trips, seminars, and other matters involving volunteers.

You can sign-up for the Prayer Guide here. We will not use your email to place you on any other lists.

Former Global Ministries director Kyle McQuillen reported in May that he had been declared in remission from lymphoma cancer. However, since then he has suffered other major health problems. On June 12 he had a platelet transfusion because his count had dropped to 17, and a bone marrow biopsy was done the next day. They’re still waiting on the results.

Kyle’s wife, Mar Louise, reported on Friday, June 15, “He still has severe double pneumonia and is still on 2 antibiotics for the next 7 days. He had been on 6 antiobiotics in the hospital, and even at that things weren’t all that great. The major concern now is getting his blood levels up to keep him from getting any other problems. The doc has told him to stay away from people until this gets better.”

He is now at home, and is very weak, but is able to use a walker. His daughters have spent time with him, and home health care checks in occasionally.

“This has been a very rough 3-4 months and I sure hope we have reached a bright spot,” Mar Louise says. “He does have some nodules in his thyroid, but they can’t test them at this point and for now, they are not the biggest concern. I sure praise God for kids. Don’t know where I would be if we had not had them the last 2 weeks.”

Please keep Kyle and Mar Louise in your prayers. Here is a mailing address:

Kyle W. McQuillen
299 Casa Grande
Edgewater, FL 32141

You can keep tabs on Kyle’s progress, view photos, and leave comments on Kyle’s Facebook page.

Kyle McQuillen served as a UB missionary in Sierra Leone, as an associate director of Missions, as pastor of College Park UB church (Huntington, Ind.), and then as Director of Global Ministries 1993-2001.

Parkview Field

At the ballgame. Global Ministries director Jeff and Charlene Bleijerveld (middle) with Dr. G. Blair Dowden, president of Huntington University, and his wife Chris.

On Thursday night, June 14, Bishop Phil Whipple took the staff and family of Healthy Ministry Resources, the UB national office, out to the ballgame. In this case, it was the Fort Wayne Tin Caps vs. Lansing. The group had a spot behind home plate, and when the team recognized the various groups present, “Healthy Ministry Resources” was flashed on the big scoreboard. Unfortunately, Lansing won 5-4.

This happened to be the stadium’s third highest attendance in the team’s three-year history. The Tin Caps are a single-A affiliate of the San Diego Padres. The stadium, considered among the best minor-league stadiums in the country, is located across the street from the Grand Wayne Center, where the 2013 US National Conference will be held.

A full gallery of photos of the group at the game can be viewed on the United Brethren Facebook page.