Covenant News at www.covchurch.org
A number of Evangelical Covenant churches have offered Kingdom
Adventures, sharing stories that provide food for thought as one ponders
the matter of whole life stewardship. (To learn more about two other
experiences, please see Tucker,
Georgia or Topeka, Kansas.
Bethany's saga began when pastor Stacey Littlefield received a copy of
the book during a Midwinter Pastors Conference, sharing it later with
some church members. Their reactions – along with those of other church
leaders – sparked interest in an adventure to challenge Bethany's faithful.
The adventure concept is fairly simple. A modest amount of money is
given to various individuals and/or families with the challenge to pray
about what God would have them do with the seed money – and then go
about investing it in some ministry effort and see what God does with
that seed of faith.
Seed money for the Bethany adventure came in part from proceeds from the
sale of the church parsonage. "The Care Ministries Committee at the
church asked that $3,000 of funding, which was part of the tithe from
the sale of our parsonage, be used for this," Litlefield explained. "I
was skeptical about this, but I was pushing them to take an adventure of
risk. I was surprised at how open people were to taking this risk so
quickly. But our church council was on-board from the beginning."
One Sunday morning, the pastor preached on stewardship using the Matthew
account of the Parable of the Talents as the text. Listeners were
challenged to accept $100 each in seed money and determine how best to
invest it in kingdom ministry. The responding group – including 13
individuals and 10 groups/couples – shared testimonies several weeks
later during a worship service following the conclusion of the adventure.
One family accepted the $100 and spent $48.25 on supplies to make
applesauce. They sold the applesauce and with the proceeds purchased a
television/VCR/DVD unit and 10 movies for use in a playroom at a women's
shelter. Through matching funds and other fundraising, they raised $305
for the project.
An individual sent $10 of seed money to 10 friends with the hope that
they would match the seed money on behalf of the Paul Carlson
Partnership and its relief and reconstruction work in northwestern Congo.
A second family added $100 to the $100 they were given, while another
family used its money to assist a local Youth for Christ ministry
effort. A third family raised $300 and purchased food gift certificates
for three needy neighborhood households. And a family discovered that a
woman in the community needed immediate health care assistance for her
family and they gave their $100 to her.
A woman who wanted to sponsor a Kenyan child became part of Operation
Shoebox, a Christmas gift program facilitated by the parachurch
organization Samaritan's Purse. She
told a few co-workers about the Samaritan's Purse project and about the
Kingdom Adventure and offered to pay the shipping costs if they would
fill a shoebox with toys and clothes for needy individuals. She
eventually raised $337 to help sponsor the Kenyan child.
"It feels to me that you have certain times when you have to take a
risk, and this is one of those times," said Littlefield. "There had been
some risk at giving the tithe from our parsonage sale (the church tithed
$18,000) and we've already gotten more than that. And
of the $3,000 we gave away, it multiplied to over $12,000 through
various means. We saw this as a lesson to show people that everything
we've been given has been entrusted to us by God – and that when we give
it back to God, He will do wonderful things with it.
"We had no sermons (during the follow-up worship service)," Littlefield
continued. "People just shared about what God had done. And one person
was so moved by what he had heard that he gave us a check for $1,000 the
next week."
Founded in 1953, Bethany Covenant Church is located near Cleveland in a
suburban area of more than 100,000. Littlefield has been senior pastor
of the church for nearly nine years. The congregation averages more than
150 in worship attendance.
To learn more about the church and its "Kingdom Adventure," call
Littlefield at 440-442-5050 or visit the church website at
www.bethanycov.org.
'Plant a Seed, Nurture It, Watch It Grow'
LYNDHURST, OH (January 28) - Plant a seed. Nurture it. And watch what
God can do. Forty-one parishioners at Bethany Covenant Church had that
opportunity as they participated in what has become popularly known as a
"Kingdom Adventure," a faith-building initiative that is based on the
book The Kingdom Assignment by authors Denny and Leesa Bellesi.
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