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Pastor Tim Hallman prepares to unleash the kids, ready to part with their toys.

On August 17, 2009, Pastor Tim Hallman of Anchor Community Church (Fort Wayne, Ind.) preached from Luke 12:33, “Sell your possessions and give to the poor.” The message was directed at children, who gathered around the front of the church.

He gave them an assignment: go through their toys and bring some to church the next Sunday. We would then sell the toys and give the money to the poor–specifically, to a micro-business opportunity in Peru which would benefit a poor family. The money would be channeled through UB endorsed missionary Anna Geivett, who serves with Food for the Hungry in Peru.

These were the options provided by Food for the Hungry:

  • $25 buys a fruit-bearing tree which can produce hundreds of pounds of food each year, helping feed that family and produce additional income.
  • $20 buys 4 rabbits, which can become 80 rabbits in one year’s time.
  • $40 buys a sow, which can produce 20 piglets each year, yielding income for the family. In just six months, each piglet can grow to 200 pounds.
  • $150 buys a dairy goat, able to produce up to a gallon of milk each day.

On August 23, the children showed up with all kinds of toys, books, stuffed animals, and other items. After a short message, Tim told the children to walk through the sanctuary with their toys. Adults then bought the items from the children–a quarter, a dollar, a couple dollars. The kids then brought their money to the front of the church, where it was counted. Over a period of about ten minutes, the children sold all of the possession they had brought.

When it was all counted, the total raised came to $241–enough to finance each of the four projects!

It was a great lesson not only for the children, but for adults, who have much bigger toys which could be sold to benefit someone in need.

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Emily brought a whole bag of stuffed animals, which she placed on this cart and wheeled around the sanctuary until they were all sold.

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Two adults count the money as kids bring it to the front of the church.

Church legal expert Richard Hammar talks about the 10 greatest legal issues facing today’s churches. Here’s the list. The article, on the Brotherhood Mutual site, gives brief explanations of each, along with good links for additional reading.

1. Negligent selection of youth workers.
2. Registered sex offenders.
3. Same-sex marriages.
4. The duty to warn (giving employment references).
5. Child abuse reporting.
6. Church security.
7. Church computer policies.
8. Employment liability: the ministerial exception (staff classified as clergy).
9. Discrimination based on morals or religion.
10. Automatic excess benefit transactions (taxable fringe benefits for pastors). 

The reason Healthy Ministry Resources exists is found in the success of each of our local churches. I want to be a lead cheerleader in encouraging each of our churches to be engaged in the harvest that God has for us. We are here for you. Thank you for the opportunity to serve you and the United Brethren in Christ Church in this capacity.

I believe the local church is the vehicle that God uses to reach a hurting world and to grow people up in their personal journey of faith. I believe that God wants to create in us a movement that shows our communities the love and compassion that is born out of the lives of believers who are sold out to follow hard after Christ.

Beulah “Dot” Hasler has been named senior pastor of McGuire Bend UB (Dayton, Iowa) effective July 1, 2009. She is an ordained minister in the United Methodist Church. McGuire Bend continues sharing pastoral leadership with three United Methodist churches in that area. The previous pastor at McGuire Bend, Remigio Panlaqui, was assigned to UMC churches in Fremont and Cedar, Iowa.

My wife Sandy and I moved to Huntington on July 27. Our belongings followed us a few days later. Since then:

  • I have officiated at 3 weddings back at Colwood, the church I pastored in Caro, Mich..
  • I have visited 4 different churches on Sunday mornings in 3 different states.
  • I have been involved in stationing committee work.
  • I met with a group of pastors.
  • I have been appointing people to serve on various teams.
  • I have begun meeting individually with each member of the fine staff here at Healthy Ministry Resources.

As I write this, I am at the end of my first official day as bishop. I am glad that I have had a few days over which to stretch all of that activity. But it raises a flag to me of the importance of making sure I do what is needful and productive. Staying busy is easy, but working God’s plan is where we all need to focus.

I came across this article, “Quoting Satan,” on SermonCentral.com. It is by Chad McCallum, pastor of Compass Point church in Byron Center, Mich. While we often kick ourselves for not being effective Christians, this article imagines how we must look to Satan–a strong, flexible, resilient force that he’s been unable to stop.

I know a church where people have strong opinions about what their church should be, but their opinion has no relation to what God says the church should be. They are people of power. And in the UB church–probably all churches–people with power tend to be people with money.

Nobody will say to them, “We’re going to build a church here, and we don’t need you or your money. We could use you and your money, but if you’re just going to be an obstinate person used by Satan to create problems–no, we don’t need you.”

I’ve had those conversations. It’s not easy, not something I relish. But it’s necessary.

David Datema, UB endorsed missionary who is director of the US Center for World Mission, wrote a blog post called, “My Unsolicited Advice for Mission-Minded Singles.” He offers three pieces of advice, with explanation. The second one include:

Instead of stopping to look, look while going. I wouldn’t expect anyone to stop looking for someone. But don’t make it the main thing. Go after the vision of the kingdom before you. If someone gets in your way and you like them, by all means marry them. But the Kingdom waits for no one. Get on the Kingdom train and you’ll be surprised who else might be on board.

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Bishop Ron Ramsey scored one of the morning’s 3 holes-in-one.

As mentioned yesterday, the Healthy Ministry Resources staff took Ron Ramsey and
Pat Jones out for breakfast that morning, as a way to spend time with them before they left office. But that was only Part 1 of the morning.

Part 2 was mini-golf.

After breakfast, we headed over to the domed building on Engle Road to play 18 holes on their indoor miniature golf course. Ron and Pat are avid golfers. Actually, Ron is avid, and Pat is fanatical. The staff thought it would be fun to play golf with them, but in a setting where the playing field is more level–in other words, not on a real golf course.

The staff divided into three groups and gave it a whirl. When scores were tallied, Jeff Bleijerveld, Director of Global Ministries, emerged as the winner. Darlene Burkett, fresh from vacation (her first day back) and full of energy, placed second. Actually, she was tied with newly-elected bishop Phil Whipple for second. Then came Pat Jones. Here’s most of the list (we’ll skip the last-place finishers) and their scores:

1. Jeff Bleijerveld (43).
2. Tie: Darlene Burkett and Phil Whipple (46).
3. Pat Jones (48).
4. Donna Hollopeter (55).
5. Tie: Ron Ramsey, Steve Dennie, and Jane Seely (56).

There were only three holes-in-one: Ron Ramsey, Pat Jones, and Marci Hammel.

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The Healthy Ministry Resources staff book Bishop Ron Ramsey and Pat Jones out for breakfast this morning (Wednesday, August 12). They’ll be leaving office in a couple days, and we wanted to treat them. We went to Spyros, a family restaurant in Fort Wayne that feeds you obscene amounts of food, and wise souls always leave with a doggy bag.

We gave both Ron and Pat a bag of goodies, mostly golf-related gift cards, since they areĀ  avid (to put it mildly) golfers. Then Phil Whipple, who will officially take office as bishop on August 15, presented a retirement pin to Ron Ramsey: 32 years of service to the United Brethren in Christ.