Superintendent Juanita Chavez leading EBTL training.

Superintendent Juanita Chavez leading EBTL training.

Juanita Chavez sent an update on recent visits to churches that have been using the EBTIL (Church-based Theological Education) program. Local pastors and lay leaders are participating. The training begins with a thorough program of discipleship that takes place in a small group setting. This is followed by Bible and leadership training.

All 115 UB churches in Honduras are being challenged to contribute 20 lempiras ($1.00 US) for every adult, youth, and child in their congregation to support this ministry. They have asked Global Ministries to assist them with another $9200 for 2014 and 2015. We recently sent the first gift of $186 in support of this ministry.

Needed: $15,000 from July 2014 to January 2015

The Ebola virus is on the rise in West and Central Africa. The population in Sierra Leone is highly at risk of infection. Cultural and burial practices which bring people into close contact with corpses also risk infection. Weak nursing practices can also easily expose medical and nursing professionals to the infection.

Recently, Sierra Leone confirmed at least 14 cases in the Kailahun district. In June 2014, suspected cases have been reported in Bo, Moyamba, and Koinadugu districts in both the northern and southern parts of Sierra Leone. Ebola is highly contagious and has no treatment. The fatality rate can be as high as 90%.

But though Ebola can’t be treated, it can be prevented. Sierra Leone Conference, which includes 78 United Brethren churches plus many schools, has proposed a project which would engage faith leaders (not just United Brethren) in fighting the spread of Ebola. Pastors and teachers are highly respected and listened to in their communities. Engaging them will go a long way in making the wider population aware of high-risk behaviors.

Most of our 78 churches in Sierra Leone are located in the Bo and Bonthe districts. The project would focus on creating awareness about the Ebola virus and its prevention in the Bo and Bonthe districts. They want to:

  • Hold two consultative meetings with 200 stakeholders each in Bo and Bonthe districts.
  • Make 100,000 residents in the Bo and Bonthe districts aware of the contribution of religion to the prevention and control of   Ebola.
  • Bring together 100 pastors and church leaders in the Bo and Bonthe districts to train them to teach people about the   transmission and prevention of Ebola.
  • Bring together 200 teachers from all schools in the Bo and Bonthe districts to teach people about the transmission and   prevention of Ebola.
  • Produce and distribute promotional materials on the subject.
  • Pay airtime for daily radio discussions by facilitators and panelists, with jingles created in several local tribal languages.
  • Use “street sensitization” to make people aware of the issue—motorcycles and other vehicles with public address systems,   comedians to move with the vehicles, jingles in the local tribal languages, fact sheets on Ebola to distribute in street parades,   large signs erected in strategic locations, and more.

Interested in supporting this project?

Send your check to:
Global Ministries
302 Lake Street
Huntington, IN 46750

Include project code “SL005” on the memo line.

Bob and Darlene EberlyDarlene Eberly, the wife of Robert Eberly, passed away at 7:45 Tuesday morning, July 8. In March, she began radiation treatments for aggressive melanoma cancer.

Bob and Darlene Eberly served as United Brethren missionaries in Sierra Leone 1979-1983–Bob as business manager (and, for a while, acting field superintendent), and Darlene as hostess in the UB mission house in Freetown. They have remained heavily involved in mission work, including UB work in Honduras and Sierra Leone.

Their daughter, Brenda Moore, and her husband Chris, an ordained UB minister, are endorsed staff with Global Ministries; they serve with Here’s Hope Ministries, which operates in Belize and several other countries. Bob Eberly is founder and president of Here’s Hope Ministries. Bob is also a member of the denominational Executive Leadership Team.

Funeral details will be posted when available.

Addresses:
Robert Eberly
PO Box 323
Greencastle, PA  17225

Chris and Brenda Moore
336 Hillside Ave
Roanoke, IN  46783

Global Ministries provides opportunity for ministerial students to receive sponsor funding for ministry/theological education.

Rev. Justin Marva (right) is the conference administrator for Sierra Leone National Conference. He has served in his current role and as a pastor for 15 years. He currently holds a Bachelor of Theology degree with a minor in Missions, and also holds a secondary education teacher’s certificate.

Rev. Marva would like to pursue graduate education at the Africa International University in Nairobi, Kenya. It is a three-year program that will cost $7000 per year. Rev. Marva currently earns $170 per month. He has a wife and one daughter, but has committed to paying 2% of his expenses.

Rev. Marva hopes to use his graduate degree to be more effective in his service to the Lord and the United Brethren in Christ of Sierra Leone in training leaders for the future. He has the full endorsement of his national conference leadership.

Behnan Konutgan

Behnan Konutgan

The United Brethren church is involved with something very exciting in Turkey, through our partnership with International Needs Network.

Turkey’s Ministry of Education asked Behnan Kanutgan, INN’s national director, to lead a team of Christians in creating a curriculum to teach Christianity in public schools. It will be an elective course for grades 5-6 and 10-11. The government also invited Dr. Mark Fairchild, a professor at our own Huntington University, to serve as a consultant to the committee writing the curriculum.

This is highly unusual for an Islamic country. Of the countries with a majority Muslim population, Turkey is the 6th largest (behind Indonesia, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Egypt, and Iran). Over 98% of the Turkish population is Muslim; less than 1% is Christian.

Part of this is prompted by Turkey’s desire to join the European Union. Konutgan says, “We didn’t expect this, but they want to show Europe that Christians exist in Turkey and [Turkey] loves them, respects them, and we love for them to learn [about their religion].”

Christian students in public schools will be able to ask to attend a Christian class, rather than an Islamic class, and those request must be honored.

The materials for grades 5-6 are finished and have been submitted to the Minister of Education. Behnan says, “If they don’t print these two books, we’re not going to work on the other books….Pray that there would be no people against this project in the ministry of education and that they will accept it and print the books.”

The 2014 Hong Kong Missions Conference.

The 2014 Hong Kong Missions Conference.

Carol Chan, Hong Kong Missions Director

Carol Chan, Hong Kong Missions Director

Hong Kong Superintendent Yiu Kin Keung introducing the Thailand missions team.

Hong Kong Superintendent Yiu Kin Keung (left)  introducing the Thailand missions team.

Jeff Bleijerveld (right), Director of Global Ministries

Each year, Hong Kong Conference gathers all of its churches for a missions conference. This was my second opportunity to attend and share about United Brethren work around the globe.

Rev. Carol Chan, the Hong King Missions Director, brought a challenge from John 4:31-36 and specifically verse 34, in which Jesus says, “My food is to do the will of him who sent me and to accomplish his work.”

During the day-long celebration, they recognized the last team that visited Thailand, some of them mere children. They also rolled out our joint vision for ministry in the city of Chiang Rai, Thailand, where Bryan and Emily Gerlach will be serving when they complete language study.

The Nicaragua medical team.

The Nicaragua medical team.

The trip was led by Robert and Fonda Cassidy, from Mt. Olivet UB church in Mt. Solon, Va.

The trip was led by Robert and Fonda Cassidy, from Mt. Olivet UB church in Mt. Solon, Va.

The team found time for some zip-lining.

The team found time for some zip-lining.

A medical team of of 25 people spent June 13-21 in Nicaragua conducting medical clinics. They came from 10 different states, from Kansas to the east coast, and ranged in age from 14 to the 70s. The initial plan was to conduct five clinics in the area around Masaya, where the Nicaragua Conference is headquartered. However, circumstances reduced that to just three clinics. Nevertheless, they were able to treat 1428 patients, and get another 552 persons fitted with eyeglasses.

Robert and Fonda Cassidy, from Mt. Solon UB church (Mt. Solon, Va.), led the trip. They had led summer medical teams to Honduras for many years. Fonda, a nurse, has served as a volunteer in a variety of countries. Requests had come to expand the medical ministry to other Central American countries, not just Honduras. This was the first attempt at that.

Team member David Gregory, associate dean of the University of Mississippi School of pharmacy, at Rancho Ebenezer, a large facility located in the mountain outside of Masaya. This is where the team stayed.

Team member David Gregory, associate dean of the University of Mississippi School of pharmacy, at Rancho Ebenezer, a large facility located in the mountain outside of Masaya. This is where the team stayed.

They arrived on a Friday, with plans to conduct the first clinic on Saturday. But there were complications, as Fonda Cassidy explains.

“At the beginning we had some difficulty dealing with the government, who would not released our meds to us for the first days. We had completed everything they had asked prior to our arrival, but oh well, they wanted a lot more. Everyone rallied and prayed and sent messages home to family, church families, and friends to pray for the situation. Jeff Bleijerveld, director of Global Ministries, rescued us from the US side and had a lawyer respond to some legal needs. We worked feverishly, and as God would have it, they finally released to us our medicines.”

The first of the three clinics was finally held on Tuesday, June 17.

“God was glorified, and our clinics were awesome,” says Fonda. “We worked with Juan Pavon (Nicaraguan superintendent) and Pastor Jesus Vega. They were truly the rock and stayed by our side for support and guidance. Our team was flexible and continued to be upbeat about our situation. As all situations are learning, we learned a lot. God kept us healthy and protected us as we traveled in country.

“With many acts of love and medical care, we felt that we were truly able to share God’s love and helps of healing to the many doors in Nicaragua that we walked through, shining the light that God gave us to carry!”

A team of 13 persons leaves today, June 27, for Poland. There, they will help conduct the annual English Camp in the city of Kutno, alongside UB endorsed missionaries Arek and Donna Delik.

The team includes:

  • Jason and Donna Hollopeter (New Hope UB church, Huntington, Ind.).
  • Roger and Sharon McDonald (Corunna UB church, Corunna, Ind.).
  • Darrell, Tammy, and Brooke Snyder (Corunna UB church, Corunna, Ind.).
  • Kyley Proud (Corunna UB church, Corunna, Ind.).
  • Patsy Harris (Hopewell UB church, Auburn, Ind.).
  • Al and Linda Carter (First UB church, Columbus, Ohio).
  • Hope Grube (Corunna UB church, Corunna, Ind.).
  • Kaleb Peters, a non-UB from Wheeler, Mich.

Roger and Marilyn Reeck, endorsed staff with Global Ministries, serve in Honduras with Wycliffe Bible Translators. For the past couple years, Roger has experienced much pain in his left foot. He recently underwent a bone fusion operation, which was successful. However, the pain has persisted. So while in San Antonio, Roger made an appointment at a pain clinic.

The doctor concurred with what a surgeon in Honduras had previously detected–that Roger has Complex Regional Pain Syndrome. This refers to “a chronic pain condition in which high levels of nerve impulses are sent to an affected site and results in a dysfunction in the central or peripheral nervous systems.” It is also called sympathy nerve.

The doctor in San Antonio agreed with the meds prescribed by the Honduran doctor.

Marilyn wrote on June 26, “At the pain clinic, they are also doing an intervention in the spine to see if this will help the problem, but it will take awhile to see if it is effective. In the meantime the pain level remains high. He is receiving physical therapy and will remain in the US for awhile. He can do a lot of his consulting work online.”

Nicole Parrish–“Nichie,” as she is called–is the newest member of the Global Ministries team. She is preparing to serve long-term in South Africa with an organization called Impact Africa. Nichie is from McCallum UB church in Delton, Mich.

Nichie tells about how God grabbed hold of her heart.

“I grew up in UB churches and started participating in short-term mission trips in 1994. Sixteen years later, the Lord led me to the place I would come to love. In 2010, I traveled to South Africa for the first time as a leader on a two-week mission trip. It was then that God began to change my heart and life.

“After returning to the States, I couldn’t get South Africa off of my heart or out of my mind. I would often wake up from dreams filled with the faces of children I had met in Africa, and would be reminded of the stories of heartache and brokenness I had heard. This only broke my heart more for the people of South Africa, and increased my deep yearning to return.

“The Lord opened the door for me to return in the summer of 2011 as a volunteer. It was during my two months there that I answered the call to a life of fulltime missions. I didn’t know what it would look like, but I was willing and listening for the voice and direction of the Lord in my life. I was then invited to return to South Africa for the summer of 2012 as a summer volunteer. Late that summer, the Lord made it clear where He wanted me.”

In 2013, Nichie began discussions with Global Ministries, resulting in her being accepted as a sojourn staff. These persons raise support and are employees of Global Ministries, but are assigned to a partner agency–in this case, Impact Africa. Global Ministries will pay Nichie’s salary, health insurance, pension, and all other benefits. Impact Africa will direct her ministry while she’s on the field. A common description would be to say Nichie is being “seconded” to Impact Africa.

Nichie will serve in Johannesburg, the largest city in South Africa, with a population of over 7 million in the greater metropolitan area. Her role will include coordinating the baby abandonment center, where mothers in desperate situations have an alternative for their unwanted children rather than dumping them in a garbage bin or leaving them in a field. Nichie will be a part of a team ministering to the physical and spiritual needs of 300,000 people who live in the section of the slums, or squatter camps, near her.

For the next year, Nichie will be based in Michigan while engaging in pre-field preparations and raising support. If you are interested in finding out more about her work and possibly coming alongside her as a supporter, contact Global Ministries.