Covenant News at www.covchurch.org
Elsewhere, Evangelical Covenant churches employed imaginative ways of
participating in Bread for the World's "Offering of Letters" campaign
that calls attention to world hunger and poverty.
Teenager Emily Poor shared that nearly two million people around the
world die from tuberculosis each year, although the cost to treat a
person is only $15. She added that AIDS has orphaned 12.3 million
children and that 2.2 million are living with the disease.
Kari Sager spoke on the scripture passage from John 3:16-19, suggesting
that while it is easy to get depressed and feel guilty over the fact
that others are suffering while the students have so much, God doesn't
want them to wallow in their guilt – they were to bless others with what
they have been blessed with. In response, students donated $1,200 that
will be given to Covenant World Relief.
Bryan Phelan, a North Park Theological Seminary student who is interning
with Bread for the World, addressed the teenagers who then wrote about
50 letters to encourage their Congressional representatives to vote for
increased aid to the poor. Seventy teenagers and 10 adults then fanned
out across the community to work on numerous projects that included
working at a Vacation Bible School, yard work at St. Luke's Home for
elderly women in Middletown, Connecticut, serving meals at a friendship
center, and various jobs at the Children's Home. (See full list below).
Becky Poor noted that bringing the churches together enabled students to
get to know one another better, but also provided smaller churches the
opportunity to participate in larger projects.
Meanwhile, in Rockford, Illinois, the congregation of Broadway Covenant
Church got a sense of what it means to be hungry by being subjected to
the aroma of fresh-baked bread.
Pastor Eric Filkin had been preaching on the Parables and had chosen the
story of the woman who pounded yeast into dough (Matthew 13:33). He
placed six bread machines across the front of the church, each baking a
loaf during the service. The entire sanctuary was filled with the smell
of fresh baked bread.
Afterwards, Filkin says, congregation members commented to him, I'm
really hungry now." No one had any of the bread that day – it was served
the next week during Communion.
Filkin used the opportunity to encourage members to participate in the
Offering of Letters. "I was very impressed by the congregation's
response in participating in the offering of letters," he says. "It was
a way of living out their faith and in a way that most have never done
before."
At Northwest Covenant Church in Mount Prospect, Illinois, church members
followed their service with a luncheon and watched a Bread for the World
video before encouraging people to participate in the Offering of
Letters. Phelan, who formerly was a youth pastor at the congregation,
educated the congregation on the campaign.
The church made up a large mailbox for letters the congregation writes.
The letters were scheduled to be mailed at the end of March.
Bread for the World was the March mission focus of the church, which
dedicates each month to a different need, says pastor Paul Thompson.
Editor's note: the top photo was taken during activities at Covenant
Village of Cromwell. The lower photo came during events at St. Luke's
Home in Middletown. To see additional photos from the various
activities, please visit : Offering of
Letters.
Bethany Projects – listed by church:
Youth Join Effort to Advocate for Poor, Hungry People
BERLIN, CT (April 25) - Students from nine Evangelical Covenant Church
youth groups gathered here recently to worship together, raise awareness
concerning several health and justice issues and participate in numerous
community projects.
The churches in Berlin were responding to the CHIC challenge to make a
difference in the world, says Becky Poor, youth pastor at Bethany
Covenant, which hosted the event.
Bethany students planned the worship service that kicked off the weekend
and their youth band led music, while other students talked about
tuberculosis and AIDS. Students from Haddam Neck Covenant Church
performed a drama and presented a sign language piece. Students from the
Children's Home in Cromwell, Connecticut, read scripture.
"It helped illustrate that one of our callings as Christians is to feed
the hungry," Filkin says. "Yeast is something that is really small, but
can truly have a huge impact in terms of affecting the lives of people
around the world."
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