The CCC Blog
Introducing the 2023 Residency Cohort
CCC is thrilled to welcome our seventh cohort to the Church Residency program! The residency is a two-year program focused on combining practical experience with graduate-level education. This year we’re welcoming six residents working in four different ministry areas.
CCC is thrilled to welcome our seventh cohort to the Church Residency program!
The residency is a two-year program focused on combining practical experience with graduate-level education. This year we’re welcoming six residents working in four different ministry areas. The goal is for each of the residents to complete the program fully prepared for ministry without further debt, which is why the church, along with a generous discount from Crown, will pay 100% of their tuition.
As we endeavor on such an ambitious and Kingdom-focused approach to leadership training, we would ask you to consider doing four things in the coming months:
Pray
Pray for residents as they receive their training. Pray for the staff who are mentoring and training the residents. Pray for the churches, missions, and organizations that will soon be hiring our residents. And most of all, pray that God gets all the glory and that the mission of the Church advances because more bright, young leaders are being sent out!
Give
Although the church is paying for the residents’ tuition along with a small monthly stipend, each resident is required to raise support to cover their monthly expenses. Because we want the residents to focus on their experience without overextending themselves to get a part-time job, this support is crucial to free them up to focus on their training. If you feel led to contribute to an individual resident or if you’d like to designate giving to the program overall, visit cccomaha.org/give.
Host
Each resident will live with a CCC member/attender for the duration of their residency. This is not only a great way to save them money, but also to connect them with caring people who can provide additional leadership and support in their lives. If you have the gift of hospitality, an extra room or basement, and would like more information on becoming a host home, visit cccresidency.org/hosthome.
Connect
We’ll introduce you to the new cohort of residents below. As you see them around the church, please approach them and introduce yourself. Say “hi” and get to know them. Perhaps you would want to bless them with lunch or coffee or giving them an occasional gift card. More importantly, bless them with your words of love and encouragement.
A program like this can only be realized and accomplished together. It’s not just our staff who can pull this off. We need everyone in the church to capture the vision and recognize that, in order to provide a great program for residents, we need to have a culture that values training and equipping young leaders for work in church ministry. They are the future—but to send them into the future with everything they need, the Church of today needs to get behind them, support them, and mentor them so they can lead us into tomorrow. The CCC Church Residency is a huge step in that direction. Thanks for taking that step with us!
Get to know the 2023–2025 cohort:
MAISEN STURT
HIGH SCHOOL
AGE: 22
HOMETOWNS: Toledo, OH & Rowlett, TX
COLLEGE/DEGREE: Toccoa Falls College; major in Cross-Cultural Studies and minor in Bible & Theology
CALL TO MINISTRY: Ministry has always been a part of my life; it seems this is where God has me for now. He has called me to follow him and love people along the way.
FAVORITE FOOD: Chili
STARBUCKS DRINK: Caramel Frappuccino®
DANTÉ EDWARDS
LOCAL MISSIONS
AGE: 23
HOMETOWN: Duluth, GA
COLLEGE/DEGREE: Toccoa Falls College; Ministry Leadership
CALL TO MINISTRY: I want to partner with the Holy Spirit in equipping the Church to love its congregants of color.
FAVORITE FOOD: Oxtail stew with rice and peas
STARBUCKS DRINK: Cinnamon Hot Chocolate
MORGAN HARTHOORN
EVANGELISM & SPIRITUAL DISCOVERY
AGE: 22
HOMETOWN: Ponca, NE
COLLEGE/DEGREE: South Dakota State University; major in Exercise Science and minor in Psychology
CALL TO MINISTRY: I was involved in the Navigators’ campus ministry leadership team throughout college, where my passion for reaching the lost and equipping other believers grew. I desired to devote my whole life to helping others encounter Jesus, and God soon switched my path from pursuing a health science career to ministry.
FAVORITE FOOD: Falafel
STARBUCKS DRINK: Iced oatmilk shaken espresso
EUGENE LU
COLLEGE
AGE: 24
HOMETOWN: Omaha, NE
COLLEGE/DEGREE: University of Nebraska Omaha; Neuroscience
CALL TO MINISTRY: I loved doing outreach and spreading the gospel during college and wanted to keep that going!
FAVORITE FOOD: Scallion pancakes
STARBUCKS DRINK: I don’t drink coffee.
CAROLINE LAKE
COLLEGE
AGE: 21
HOMETOWN: Olathe, KS
COLLEGE/DEGREE: Kansas State University; Bachelor of Arts in Communication Studies with concentrations in Identity Formation and Coaching & Consulting
CALL TO MINISTRY: At church camp the summer after I graduated high school, I got a word from the Lord telling me to “go” and live my life on mission for him and his Kingdom. That moment lit a flame in my spirit to share Jesus’ love and healing power everywhere I go.
FAVORITE FOOD: Alfredo pasta
STARBUCKS DRINK: Iced caramel latte with oatmilk
ETHAN ARNOLD
HIGH SCHOOL
AGE: 22
HOMETOWN: Omaha, NE
COLLEGE/DEGREE: Crown College; Pastoral Leadership
CALL TO MINISTRY: I have wanted to live my life for Christ since I was fifteen. I want to help others see how Christ gives purpose and joy that the world can't provide.
FAVORITE FOOD: Prime rib
STARBUCKS DRINK: Smoothie
To learn more about the CCC Residency program, to support a resident financially, or to apply for the residency program yourself, visit cccresidency.org.
Divine Encounters
In a world brimming with challenges and complexities, it’s natural for us to seek a sense of purpose, peace, and wholeness. Fortunately, the age-old wisdom found in ancient texts offers insights that resonate deeply with our innate desire to flourish. The core concept of “Shalom,” rooted in both the Old and New Testaments, represents a state of peace and wholeness that only God can bring.
In a world brimming with challenges and complexities, it’s natural for us to seek a sense of purpose, peace, and wholeness. Fortunately, the age-old wisdom found in ancient texts offers insights that resonate deeply with our innate desire to flourish.
The core concept of “Shalom,” rooted in both the Old and New Testaments, represents a state of peace and wholeness that only God can bring. It’s an intricate interplay between tranquility and completeness, a state in which we can truly thrive. The manuscript highlights the journey towards Shalom as an integral part of our relationship with God, our personal well-being, and even the harmony of creation itself.
Understanding Divine Encounters
At the heart of flourishing lie the transformative encounters with the divine. These encounters, often referred to as “Divine Encounters,” act as catalysts for growth, healing, and emotional well-being. Drawing on neurological insights, the manuscript introduces the concept of the “Window of Tolerance,” a range of emotional responses that allow us to navigate stressors effectively.
Attachment theory is a psychological framework that reveals the pivotal role of early experiences in shaping our ability to handle stress, conflict, and manage reality. The manuscript vividly explains how being Seen, Soothed, Safe, and Secure during early stages of life lays the foundation for emotional regulation and a healthy window of tolerance.
Divine Encounters in Ancient Wisdom
The manuscript beautifully bridges modern attachment theory with ancient wisdom, specifically focusing on Psalm 34. This passage from the Bible mirrors the four key needs of attachment theory, highlighting God's role in meeting these needs:
Seen: God’s eyes are on the righteous, acknowledging their presence and importance.
Soothed: God’s attentive ears are attuned to their cries, offering comfort and emotional regulation.
Safe: God’s protection is against evil, providing a sense of safety and security.
Secure: God’s deliverance from troubles assures a general sense of well-being.
The correspondence between attachment theory and the biblical narrative underscores the divine nature of these encounters. The manuscript emphasizes that God’s healing is woven into these encounters, filling the gaps left by human deficiencies.
Worship and Community: A Nexus of Flourishing
The manuscript extends its exploration to the power of worship and community. Weekly worship services are not merely rituals but integral components of a flourishing life. These services provide a platform for truth to be expressed through music, for biblical teachings to be internalized, and for suppressed emotions to be released and healed. Neuroscientific research is even beginning to unravel the intricate connection between brain health and worship experiences.
Moreover, the manuscript underscores the significance of community in this process. Regular worship and community engagement are associated with longer life spans, reduced depression and suicide rates, increased generosity, improved health, and stronger values in children.
Flourishing: A Transformative Journey
In the journey of life, the pursuit of flourishing requires a harmonious interplay of divine encounters, community engagement, and personal growth. The manuscript’s insights demonstrate that our Creator, who designed us to flourish, offers pathways to peace, healing, and joy. By embracing divine encounters, engaging in community, and seeking God’s presence, we unlock the potential for a life marked by Shalom—a life of deep fulfillment, wholeness, and purpose.
Blog adapted from August 20, 2023 message by Minister Mark Ashton
The Power of Community and Purpose in Flourishing
In a world filled with anxiety, economic uncertainties, and societal challenges, the concept of flourishing may seem distant. Rates of depression and anxiety are on the rise, educational outcomes are declining, and social issues like racism persist. Despite these daunting circumstances, there is a subset of people who are not only thriving but flourishing amidst the chaos.
In a world filled with anxiety, economic uncertainties, and societal challenges, the concept of flourishing may seem distant. Rates of depression and anxiety are on the rise, educational outcomes are declining, and social issues like racism persist. Despite these daunting circumstances, there is a subset of people who are not only thriving but flourishing amidst the chaos. Recent studies from Gallup, NBC News, and Harvard University shed light on a surprising key to achieving flourishing—weekly worship attendance. This unexpected finding challenges common perceptions and underscores the importance of community and divine encounters in achieving a fulfilling life.
As Americans grapple with mounting challenges, the pursuit of flourishing becomes a focal point. The Gallup survey reveals that only 51% of Americans express deep satisfaction with their lives. However, a staggering 67% of regular weekly worship attendees report high levels of life satisfaction. This compelling statistic raises questions about the factors contributing to this sense of flourishing. Harvard researcher Dr. Tyler VanderWeele delves into the concept of flourishing, examining various applications in the context of modern life. One of the key areas of focus is the impact of family and satisfying relationships on flourishing. This study highlights the idea that flourishing is not solely the mission of religious institutions but rather an essential side effect of a meaningful life.
The Components of Flourishing
Flourishing encompasses five realms and is driven by four key factors that contribute to a life lived to the fullest:
Community of Shalom: Healthy relationships, stable families, and deep friendships contribute significantly to flourishing. The Bible emphasizes the importance of community, both in the Old and New Testaments. Being part of a supportive network aligns with our innate human need for companionship and connection.
Divine Encounter Shalom: Encountering God and experiencing his love, grace, and power is pivotal to internal flourishing. Our journey with God provides an anchor amidst life’s storms, and these divine encounters feed our souls’ longing for meaning and purpose.
Character of Shalom: Flourishing requires aligning our inner selves with our external personas. When our true selves match our public presentation, we experience inner peace, unity, and authenticity.
Shalom Meaning and Purpose: Discovering and living out a purpose that aligns with God’s purpose is a critical aspect of flourishing. Living each day with a sense of meaning and contributing positively to the world around us adds a profound layer of fulfillment.
The Power of Community
One significant driver of flourishing is the presence of a supportive community. Community serves as a crucial backdrop for achieving life satisfaction. Studies show that individuals who are part of a strong community experience lower levels of loneliness, depression, and anxiety. Healthy relationships provide a buffer against life’s challenges and offer opportunities for growth and mutual support.
Marriage and Flourishing
The Harvard study also highlights the impact of healthy marriages on overall well-being. Contrary to popular belief, divorce rates among regular churchgoers are significantly lower than the general population. Churches provide resources such as premarital counseling, marriage groups, and pastoral support that contribute to healthier marriages and, consequently, flourishing individuals.
Embracing Flourishing
In a world marked by turmoil, it is possible to achieve flourishing by nurturing essential aspects of life. Community, divine encounters, and meaningful relationships play a vital role in fostering well-being and life satisfaction. Recognizing the power of these pillars and actively engaging in them can lead to a life that thrives even in the face of adversity.
Flourishing may appear elusive, especially in the midst of societal challenges and personal struggles. However, the unexpected link between weekly worship attendance, community, and divine encounters underscores the transformative power of faith and relationships. By embracing these pillars, individuals can navigate life's complexities and truly flourish, embodying the Shalom that God intended for his creation. As we strive for a life of fulfillment and purpose, let us lean into the support of a nurturing community and seek divine encounters that guide us toward a flourishing existence.
Blog adapted from August 13, 2023 message by Minister Mark Ashton
Called to Faith
“I would kind of do whatever I wanted or whatever I’d feel without any repercussions.”
A freedom to live however he wanted marked Nick McShannon’s high school and young adult years. Nick’s involvement in church was infrequent up through his middle school years, mostly attending services on Christmas and Easter. Once he hit high school, Nick stopped attending church completely. Yet God was not finished with Nick, even if Nick felt finished with God.
“I would kind of do whatever I wanted or whatever I’d feel without any repercussions.”
A freedom to live however he wanted marked Nick McShannon’s high school and young adult years. Nick’s involvement in church was infrequent up through his middle school years, mostly attending services on Christmas and Easter. Once he hit high school, Nick stopped attending church completely. Yet God was not finished with Nick, even if Nick felt finished with God. Through the loss of both his grandfather and his brother-in-law, God never stopped pursuing Nick, inviting him back into relationship.
Nick’s life changed with the birth of his daughter Nevaeh with his then-girlfriend. In his early twenties, Nevaeh’s arrival signified a need to embrace the responsibility of being a dad. Although his relationship didn’t work out, Nick continued to be an involved parent.
When Nevaeh was three years old, Nick attended a party that his mom hosted at her house in Council Bluffs. Peggy Hattam, friend of his mom, shared that she had a daughter his age that who had just moved back to Omaha from South Carolina. Nick decided to call Heather to invite her to the party so that they could meet. Heather decided to meet him at the party. Nick shared that since that day, they haven’t left each other’s side. In 2012, after two years of dating, Heather and Nick were married.
Nevaeh was eight years old when she started attending church with her great-grandmother. A foundation of faith was slowly being built in her life, the desire to be baptized growing in her heart. Despite Nevaeh’s growing faith, Nick remained distant from God. In 2016, after suffering a significant stroke, Nick’s grandfather passed away. Nick felt like his grandparents were the ones who raised him and made him the man he is today. He and his grandfather shared a special bond, and after his passing, Nick was angry with God. He shared, “I didn’t want to go to church or even hear about church.”
God continued to call Nick back to himself through the faith of Nevaeh. Nick and Heather enrolled Nevaeh in a catholic school, where she began catechism classes. The school encouraged Nick and Heather to start attending the church. They were told that if they became members, they could receive a scholarship for Nevaeh’s education. When they talked with the priest about becoming members, they were met with obstacles that felt insurmountable. Nick left feeling discouraged, a bad taste in his mouth.
In 2020, just as the world began to shut down due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Nick and the rest of his family suffered a devastating loss. His brother-in-law, Josh, who had dealt with a drug addiction for many years, died from an accidental fentanyl overdose. The family grieved in different ways under exceedingly difficult circumstances. Nevaeh, who was being homeschooled at the time, was searching for a community in which to belong. Peggy, Nick’s mother-in-law, found Christ Community Church and began bringing Nevaeh to CCC Middle School. Peggy began attending GriefShare, one of CCC’s Renewal Groups, and began healing from the loss of her son. Blossoming in her faith and love for Jesus, Nevaeh She decided it was time to get baptized.
The first time Nick stepped into CCC was to support his daughter’s baptism on November 21, 2021. He felt blinded from his past church hurt when he walked into the atrium. “It was a lot, I felt out of place, like I was being judged.” Lead Minister Mark Ashton’s sermon that week was part of the Experiencing God series. Mark listed off different people in the Bible and some of their shortcomings to show that they were imperfect people, but they were still used by God. Hearing how God used these people began to change the way Nick started to see God’s character. Mark invited anyone who wanted to be baptized to talk with someone out in the atrium. Feelings of being judged or the fear of being judged fell away. He realized he wasn’t being judged; he was being invited into something new. Nick surrendered his life to Christ, telling his wife: “We are definitely coming back here!”
Since then, Nick has experienced a hunger to know more about who God is. The more he has learned about him, the more his anxiety lessened. Nick set a goal to read through the entire Old Testament before he got was baptized. Nick began to read his Bible starting in December 2021, explaining everything he was learning to his Heather and Nevaeh. After he finished reading the Old Testament, Heather encouraged him to start reading the New Testament. Nick finished reading the entire Bible in six months. When Mark announced upcoming baptism opportunities, Nevaeh would nudge him. “It’s your time to be baptized,” she said. After the baptisms in February 2023, Nick decided it was time. But baptism wasn’t just on Nick’s heart—Peggy also wanted to be baptized but needed a little nudge too. Nick deciding to get baptized encouraged Peggy to step out in faith too.
Nevaeh baptized Nick in March 2023, a special moment of what God has been doing in the McShannon family, starting with Nevaeh’s faith. Nevaeh shared that before her dad came to know Jesus, she couldn’t talk about her faith with her dad without upsetting him. She wanted to share what she was learning about Jesus, but he was closed off from God. Since Nick came to know Jesus, not only does Nevaeh get to share her faith with her dad, but they are excited to watch The Chosen together, which is something that would have never happened before.
Though Nick and his family have suffered losses that have tested them, the journey toward knowing God has been transformational. Nevaeh has even noticed that Nick has been is filled with so much joy since she was baptized. As Nick looks toward a future filled with following God whole-heartedly, he has a strong Nick has shared that he has grown in a desire to share his faith and what he has learned through life’s trials with others. He now and desires to serve the Lord with whatever opportunities God has in store for him.
Story by Wendy Bornmann
Edited by Rachel Bebee
Introducing the 2022 Residency Cohort
CCC is thrilled to welcome our sixth cohort to the Church Residency program! The residency is a two-year program focused on combining practical experience with graduate-level education. This year we’re welcoming seven residents working in five different ministry areas.
CCC is thrilled to welcome our sixth cohort to the Church Residency program.
The residency is a two-year program focused on combining practical experience with graduate-level education. This year we’re welcoming seven residents working in five different ministry areas. The goal is for each of the residents to complete the program fully prepared for ministry without further debt, which is why the church, along with a generous discount from Crown, will pay 100% of their tuition.
As we endeavor on such an ambitious and Kingdom-focused approach to leadership training, we would ask you to consider doing four things in the coming months:
Pray
Pray for residents as they receive their training. Pray for the staff who are mentoring and training the residents. Pray for the churches, missions, and organizations that will soon be hiring our residents. And most of all, pray that God gets all the glory and that the mission of the Church advances because more bright, young leaders are being sent out!
Give
Although the church is paying for the residents’ tuition along with a small monthly stipend, each resident is required to raise support to cover their monthly expenses. Because we want the residents to focus on their experience without overextending themselves to get a part-time job, this support is crucial to free them up to focus on their training. If you feel led to contribute to an individual resident or if you’d like to designate giving to the program overall, visit cccomaha.org/give.
Host
Each resident will live with a CCC member/attender for the duration of their residency. This is not only a great way to save them money, but also to connect them with caring people who can provide additional leadership and support in their lives. If you have the gift of hospitality, an extra room or basement, and would like more information on becoming a host home, visit cccresidency.org/hosthome.
Connect
We’ll introduce you to the new cohort of residents below. As you see them around the church, please approach them and introduce yourself. Say “hi” and get to know them. Perhaps you would want to bless them with lunch or coffee or giving them an occasional gift card. More importantly, bless them with your words of love and encouragement.
A program like this can only be realized and accomplished together. It’s not just our staff who can pull this off. We need everyone in the church to capture the vision and recognize that, in order to provide a great program for residents, we need to have a culture that values training and equipping young leaders for work in church ministry. They are the future—but to send them into the future with everything they need, the Church of today needs to get behind them, support them, and mentor them so they can lead us into tomorrow. The CCC Church Residency is a huge step in that direction. Thanks for taking that step with us!
GET TO KNOW THE 2022–2024 COHORT:
MEGAN ELFORD
WORSHIP
AGE: 22
HOMETOWN: Fond du Lac, Wisconsin
COLLEGE/DEGREE: Luther College; Bachelor of Arts in Vocal Performance
CALL TO MINISTRY: My sophomore year of college, I attended a church service where the female worship leader was ordained as the pastor of worship and connections. I could see myself in her shoes. It was then that I felt the Lord leading me towards worship ministry. I love getting to use the musical gifts that he has given me to serve his church.
FAVORITE FOOD: Cheeseburgers
STARBUCKS DRINK: Water
ALEX SIGERSON
MISSIONS
AGE: 24
HOMETOWN: Omaha, Nebraska
COLLEGE/DEGREE: Crown College; Bachelor of Science in Global and Cultural Studies
CALL TO MINISTRY: I grew up at CCC and missions has been a huge part of my life. In the past God has really brought out qualities in me through missions. The most enjoyable thing I like to do is to sit down with international people and tell them about the gospel, the Bible, and Christianity.
FAVORITE FOOD: Salmon
STARBUCKS DRINK: White Chocolate Mocha Frappuccino
CRISTINA VASQUEZ
KIDS MINISTRY
AGE: 35
HOMETOWN: Anderson, Missouri
COLLEGE/DEGREE: Ozark Christian College; Bachelor of Christian Formation
CALL TO MINISTRY: After years of living for my own desires, our Lord drew me to himself and called me to make a drastic change. On a trip to Children’s Mercy in Kansas City, I was prompted into a chapel and felt the Holy Spirit impress upon me that I needed to make a decision. I had a series of visceral dreams that evening that led me to surrender my whole self to our Lord God and follow in the way of Jesus Christ. I was baptized a week later. Two weeks later, I was prompted to drive onto the campus of Ozark Christian College. Over the course of the first semester, he affirmed that serving him and my fellow brothers and sisters in Christ was exactly what I needed to do.
FAVORITE FOOD: Roasted chickpeas… yes, chickpeas 😊
STARBUCKS DRINK: Chai Latte with Oat Milk
REAGAN BERGEN
ADULT DISCIPLESHIP
AGE: 27
HOMETOWN: Lincoln, Nebraska
COLLEGE/DEGREE:
University of Nebraska-Lincoln; Bachelor of Journalism
CALL TO MINISTRY: Upon my conversion, I had a thirst to know more about God’s grace found in Christ. I quickly got involved in Bible studies, groups, and started to serve in youth ministry. As I shared the gospel with others, I felt a desire and invitation from God to go a step further and pursue vocational ministry.
FAVORITE FOOD: Hot wings
STARBUCKS DRINK: Iced Chai with Oat Milk
ASHLEY JARVI
KIDS MINISTRY
AGE: 22
HOMETOWN: Apple Valley, Minnesota
COLLEGE/DEGREE: Crown College; Bachelor of Psychology
CALL TO MINISTRY: I did not know God as a middle schooler, yet God saved me from the pain and brokenness of my past. He has called me to minister the hope of the gospel to those who feel they have no hope of change, but want new life.
FAVORITE FOOD: Popcorn!
STARBUCKS DRINK: Vanilla Chai
GLEN MCMILLAN
HIGH SCHOOL MINISTRY
AGE: 22
HOMETOWN: Castle Rock, Colorado
COLLEGE/DEGREE: University of Northern Colorado; Bachelor in Marketing with a minor in Communication
CALL TO MINISTRY: I became a Christian in high school after my father passed away. I found my faith by going to a local youth group. My youth pastor always supported me, pushed me to be my best, challenged my faith, and treated me as one of his own, I want the opportunity to do for my students what my pastor did for me.
FAVORITE FOOD: Fried pickles
STARBUCKS DRINK: I don’t like coffee
To learn more about the CCC Residency program, to support a resident financially, or to apply for the residency program yourself, visit cccresidency.org.
A Reflection on Residency + Introducing the 2021 Residency Cohort
As I reflect on the Lord’s faithfulness from my past year in Residency, a flood of images come to mind that spring tears to my eyes. Truly, there is no place I would have rather spent the last year of my life and no place I would go than right here at Christ Community Church.
As I reflect on the Lord’s faithfulness from my past year in Residency, a flood of images come to mind that bring tears to my eyes. Truly, there is no place I would have rather spent the last year of my life and no place I would be than right here at Christ Community Church. I don’t say this implying that everything has been easy; rather, this season has had its fair share of difficulties. However, it is clear that this is exactly where he wants me, so how could I go elsewhere?
In April of 2020, I was a senior in college with no plans for my immediate future and had the unique challenge of working in a global pandemic. I sensed that the Lord was writing the concluding paragraph of my chapter in Lincoln, Nebraska, and I began to pray about the plans he had in store for me. It seemed as though God kept flashing neon signs that screamed “Go to Omaha!”, but I still felt uncertain if it was the next best step for me. I prayed, “If Omaha is where you want me, you’re going to need to provide three things: a job, a place to live, and community.” When sipping some coffee with my dad across the table one day and telling him about this prayer, he casually mentioned the residency program at CCC. I remembered that I had some friends in the program and decided to call and get the full scoop. After the initial call, something inside of me began to stir, and all but three weeks later I was officially a resident. Now, I can see how the Lord was clearing a path for me to get here. I am amazed at how he provided not only a job, but a free place to live, and some of the sweetest community I have experienced in my life.
Recently, in one of our Adult Ministries meeting, we were prompted with the question, “If you could tell yourself one thing on your first day at CCC, what would it be?” After reflecting for a moment, I shared with our team that I would encourage the Mary Claire of one year ago to “Be humble and remain eager to learn.” Through various experiences, the Lord has continued to show me with grace and mercy that there is much in this world I am unaware of and there is more to learn. This theme has threaded itself throughout my first year and I anticipate that it will be woven into every part of my future. This journey of humility was not something that I learned overnight or anything that I would claim to own now. However, I do see how the Lord has placed experiences, people, and opportunities in my life that continue to challenge my pride and spur me towards the greatest example of humility, Jesus Christ. One of those experiences that has created the most transformation was the sudden and unexpected passing of my dad. On May 20, 2021, I received the news that he had a massive heart attack and was being taken to a hospital in Lincoln. I raced to my car and drove there, but by the time I arrived, he had passed away. This was my first major loss through death and I could not have predicted something of this magnitude occurring so early in life. Through the deepest of valleys, it can become easy to wonder if the Lord is present in the middle of unbearable grief. By his grace, he reminds me that he remains near to the brokenhearted and walks with them through the valley.
Although this season has been one of the deepest valleys I have walked through, I cannot help but exclaim the goodness of God. At my lowest point, he demonstrated his great love for me by providing the body of Christ and transforming me more into his likeness. The Saturday after my dad’s death, I had driven home from being with my family and walked into a kitchen that was full of care packages and letters that people connected to CCC had provided. I crumpled to the ground, tears streaming from my eyes, in awe of how much the Lord had blessed me with the people here. I sat at my dad’s funeral in utter humility as person after person approached me that had taken the time to show up and support my family during our biggest loss. The body of Christ surrounded me and continues to do so in my mourning. What an overwhelmingly sweet gift from the Lord.
I never anticipated that grief would be a time of sanctification and growth, but in the past five months, I have seen the Lord do big things in my heart. I have learned the importance of going first and foremost to the Lord when I cry, when I celebrate, when I need a friend. I learned that he alone is the source of my healing and the best comforter as I grieve. I have had to learn how to admit when I cannot do something and need help. I learned how to accept help and allow others to care for me. I have gained further awareness of the Lord and his nearness. I distinguish his voice and watch as he uses my story to elevate his name. And through it all, I have a hope that is rooted deep in my soul. Romans 5:1–5 touches on this. There is space to rejoice in our sufferings because suffering produces endurance, endurance produces character, and character produces hope. And this produces a deep joy in my soul. He does not allow me to remain the same but rather loves me enough to make me more like him. I think the Lord could have done this deep transformative work elsewhere, but I’m thankful that he chose to do so at Christ Community Church. And for that, I dwell in a state of gratitude for the God that sees us and works all things together for good.
GET TO KNOW THE 2021–2023 COHORT:
ADÈ IDOWU
COLLEGE MINISTRY
AGE: 22
HOMETOWNS: Conyers, Georgia
COLLEGE/DEGREE: Toccoa Falls College; Bachelor of Arts in Ministry and Leadership
CALL TO MINISTRY: When the Lord revealed to me my identity in him, I was convinced that every person should know that same truth. From there, a desire for ministry in any context became a flame inside of my heart.
FAVORITE FOOD: Steak
STARBUCKS DRINK: Grande Cold Brew with honey
CAMERON BOOZE
MISSIONS
AGE: 21
HOMETOWN: Kent Island, Maryland
COLLEGE/DEGREE: Toccoa Falls College; Cross-Cultural Studies
CALL TO MINISTRY: During my senior year of high school, I went to Honduras on a short-term trip and saw real poverty for the first time. I sensed the Lord moving my heart and inviting me to go to unreached places to share his love and the news of his salvation.
FAVORITE FOOD: Anything I cook with friends (especially international food)
FAVORITE STARBUCKS DRINK: Herbal tea blends and chai
DANI GABEL
COMMUNICATIONS
AGE: 22
HOMETOWN: Waconia, Minnesota
COLLEGE/DEGREE: Crown College; Bachelor of Arts in Communication with a triple concentration in Advertising/Graphic Design, Digital Arts, and Relational Communication and a double minor in Video & Film Production and Christian Studies
CALL TO MINISTRY: Growing up, I always looked up to the staff in my home church, loving that they got to work alongside other believers, and that in each of their jobs—though all very different from one another—they got to share God’s love using their specific gifts. The summer between my sophomore and junior year in college, I was given the opportunity to intern on a church's communication team, and that was when I knew that I wanted to use my gifts in design and communication to bring others closer to Jesus.
FAVORITE FOOD: Shrimp
FAVORITE STARBUCKS DRINK: Iced Cinnamon Dolce Latte with blonde espresso and almond milk
MATT BRATTON
HIGH SCHOOL MINISTRY
AGE: 22
HOMETOWN: Murrysville, PA
COLLEGE/DEGREE: Crown College; Bachelor of Science in Youth & Family Ministry
CALL TO MINISTRY: I was learning and growing in my faith in my teen years and clearly felt God calling me to pursue vocational ministry at the C&MA LIFE Alliance Youth Conference in St. Louis in 2013. I have a passion for helping teens get closer to Christ because that is when God got a hold of my life. I enjoy helping adolescents wrestle with their faith and draw closer to Jesus when life gets complex, in a season where they are learning much more about themselves, the world, and the people around them.
FAVORITE FOOD: Burgers
FAVORITE STARBUCKS DRINK: Iced Mocha
MEREDITH COWMAN
KIDS MINISTRY
AGE: 22
HOMETOWN: Quincy, Illinois
COLLEGE/DEGREE: Grace College; Bachelor of Science in Counseling
CALL TO MINISTRY: My whole life, the Lord has been using the local church to deeply shape me and mold me to become more like Jesus. The Lord has done the most transformative work in me through discipleship and people willing to pursue me. I believe the Lord has called me to this very same thing, to bring up young leaders as pursuers of Christ and people.
FAVORITE FOOD: Donuts
FAVORITE STARBUCKS DRINK: Iced coffee with white mocha syrup and half & half
PAUL GABEL
COMMUNICATIONS
AGE: 26
HOMETOWN: Watertown, South Dakota
COLLEGE/DEGREE: Crown College; Bachelor of Arts in Advertising and Graphic Design/Communications
CALL TO MINISTRY: I was saved at a young age and grew up in a home where our God-given talents and gifts were encouraged. I understood early on that God can use me anywhere to be his witness. As I grew up, I found God’s call to find new ways to spread the gospel. Now I am honing my skills as an artist and a storyteller to be God’s witness to reach people in new ways.
FAVORITE FOOD: I don’t even know…
FAVORITE STARBUCKS DRINK: Iced Caramel Macchiato (yes, I enjoy the frou-frou)
To learn more about the CCC Residency program, to support a resident financially, or to apply for the residency program yourself, visit cccresidency.org.
CCC's Nursery Renovation
There haven’t been many changes to the nursery in the twenty-nine years I’ve attended CCC. About ten years ago, we painted a few walls and added some graphics to the walls, so we are so excited to share that CCC has started renovation of the nursery!
There haven’t been many changes to the nursery in the twenty-nine years I’ve attended CCC. About ten years ago, we painted a few walls and added some graphics to the walls, so we are so excited to share that CCC has started renovation of the nursery!
This renovation would not be possible if not for the foresight and love of a wonderful woman’s legacy and the endowment she left to CCC to be used for families and kids. What better way to honor her, and to celebrate our 100th year, than to invest some of that money in the next generation! As a church that cares for and invests in the next generation, we want our space for these little ones to reflect the love and care our staff and volunteers have for these babies.
These children are the next generation who will carry on where this generation has left off, and they may still be here when CCC celebrates its 200th anniversary. In order to see another 100 years of ministry, we must invest in the lives of those who will shepherd the church one day.
Scroll through these images to see some “before” and “during” photographs
As we looked at remodeling the nursery, we determined that we would several changes:
Change the current Nursery entrance off the Atrium into a Family Care room. Parents with wiggly or fussy kids can still engage with the service via streaming on a tv, while the kids can play with toys and get the wiggles out.
Renovate the Nursing Moms’ room and move the entrance from inside the nursery to the Worship Center hallway, making the room more accessible for nursing moms.
Create a new nursery entrance inside the secure Kids wing. Parents will take their child to the child’s classroom and have a secure space to leave strollers and car seats. Parents and nursery volunteers will be able to build relationships and trust with each other.
Update the nursery with fresh carpet and paint, as well as better safety/security and usability.
CCC started the remodel on April 28 and it should be completed this summer. We are so excited to share this beautiful new disciple-making space with the families who already attend CCC and those who will come in the future!
Check out this video for more details from our Executive Director of Next Generation Ministries, Dan McClannan.
Living Generously
Warm and friendly, Carey and Susan Friesen are the type of couple with whom you feel instantly at ease. Their story of generosity began long ago, before the two of them met, married, and raised a family.
Warm and friendly, Carey and Susan Friesen are the type of couple with whom you feel instantly at ease. They have no pretense, but are hardworking and generous people who are continually looking for ways they can serve God and others, both in the church and outside it. Their story of generosity began long ago, before the two of them met, married, and raised a family.
Carey and Susan were both raised in homes with parents who followed Jesus. There was a history of hospitality in Susan’s family, with her parents heavily involved in the church. Her family was not content to simply attend church, but viewed hospitality as an act of worship to the Lord. Carey’s family had a similar emphasis on faithfully serving, with his parents moving the family overseas to participate in missions work in Manila in the Philippines. While the family served there only a year, the experience impacted Carey’s worldview. After Carey and Susan got married, they sought to build off the foundations their parents and grandparents laid as they pursued Christ as a married couple. Though circumstances in life were not always easy, the Friesens shared a strong desire to show hospitality and generosity to everyone they met.
For Carey and Susan, generosity has been about so much more than putting cash into the offering or writing a check. They have demonstrated generosity with their time and resources as well. Faithfully serving a church community has been a hallmark of their marriage. At prior churches, they served in various roles. When they began attending CCC, Carey joined the Production Team, working with sound and video. Susan also quickly became involved, leading worship as part of the Worship Team. She has also led Bible studies with Women’s Ministry and served as a mentor to younger moms at MOPS (Mothers of Preschoolers), as well as mentoring younger women one-on-one. Together, Carey and Susan have mentored and provided guidance, feedback, love, and support to younger couples who are facing challenges in marriage. When the pandemic began in 2020, they looked for ways to freely give to others, no strings attached. When many organizations were struggling financially, the couple enjoyed being able to give anonymously, using the resources that God has provided for them to help others who were struggling.
This spirit of generosity has also fueled the Friesens’ ministry to young adults at CCC. They have asked themselves, “Where is a need in the church and how can we help fill it?” The couple, who have two adult daughters and a son, noticed that young adults have often felt disconnected from the church. Creating a space for young adults to gather in community seemed a priority, so the couple gladly opened their house. Each week, young adults gather at their house to grow in their faith and build relationships with others. They see opening their home as an act of worship towards Jesus, so when the young adults want to stay late or borrow the house when the Friesens aren’t home, it’s no problem—whoever is last out just needs to remember to lock the door.
Generosity is about serving faithfully in whatever way God calls you.
Growing in generosity of time, resources, and finances wasn’t a quick process, nor was it always the easiest choice. During a time when Carey was unemployed, the family had to deeply rely on God to provide what they needed. Tithing was difficult, yet they continued to honor God with their finances. Early in their marriage, they began giving in small ways, and over time, increased what they were able to give of both time and finances. The Friesens shared that it’s not about being able to give large amounts, but to serve faithfully in whatever way God calls you.
Rachel Bebee is the Communications Project Manager at Christ Community Church.
An Atheist in a Foxhole
There is an old saying, “There is no such thing as an atheist in a foxhole.” Sadly, that is a myth. I was an atheist, and I spent plenty of time in foxholes…
There is an old saying, “There is no such thing as an atheist in a foxhole.” Sadly, that is a myth. I was an atheist, and I spent plenty of time in foxholes.
I was about thirteen years old when I first began to consider myself an atheist, not because of some tragedy that made me angry at God, or because someone told me what to think, but because that was what made sense to me. I didn’t have a problem with people who believed in God. All of my friends had some kind of religion in their lives. I had friends that were Catholic, Jewish, Lutheran, or Protestant. It didn’t matter to me. God wasn’t anything that was a part of my family growing up. It was not frowned upon, but religion just never seemed to come up. The only time I remember stepping foot in a church was when my big sister got married. My biblical knowledge at a young age came from movies like The Ten Commandments and TV shows like the Little Drummer Boy.
I was a senior in high school when I decided to join the military. My first thought was the US Army, but I was also impressed with the Marine Corps. Back then, the military recruiters were allowed to reach out to high school kids to tell them about all the great opportunities the military offered. They came to the schools and met with anyone who would talk to them. I was an easy mark. I knew from an early age that I was destined for the military. One of my grandfathers fought in WWII, and my father fought in The Korean War. Reruns of Rat Patrol were on TV and the greatest American action hero of all time, John Wayne, had made movies like The Longest Day, The Sands of Iwo Jima, and The Green Berets. The Vietnam War was ending. Yet like God, my dad never really talked a lot about Korea, nor my grandfather about WWII, and when my oldest brother enlisted in the Army, Vietnam was over. My brother just missed the draft when he graduated from high school and frankly I doubt he would have enlisted at all if it hadn’t been at the suggestion of the local judicial system. Yep, back then it was considered by some a favorable alternative to jail. I think some still would agree to that, except anymore the military can afford to amend the old adage, to “beggars can be choosy.” The Air Force called me, and I told them, “Sorry, if you’re not a pilot in the Air Force, what good are you?” Don’t worry, the Air Force got back at me for that one later on. I said, “I’m blind as a bat without my glasses, so I think I’ll pass.” When the Navy called, I said, “I’m 6 foot 2, I hit my head every time I walk into the basement of the house I’ve lived in since before I could walk. If you put me on a ship, I’ll have a head wound in the first twenty-four hours.” Swing and a miss, strike two.
When I took my oath of service, I even left “God” off the “So help me God.”
Okay, it was up to the Jar Heads now to try and steal the show. By now, you can guess I didn’t join the illustrious and honorable ranks of the US Marine Corps. I had one thing in my head. I wanted to jump out of airplanes. I figured that would be more fun than flying them. Everyone always asks, “Why would you want to jump out of a perfectly good airplane?” My reply has always been, “You obviously have never flown in an Air Force aircraft. There is nothing perfectly good about them.” I’ve always felt safer jumping out of them then landing in them. Remember the payback I talked about earlier? The Army promised to throw me out of airplanes, so that’s how I ended up in the foxhole. When I took my oath of service, I even left “God” off the “So help me God.” When I went to get my dog tags, they asked me my religion, so I told them atheist. My dog tags said “No Preference.” I thought, that’s not right, I have a preference, it’s atheism. Still, I had no problem with religion. As long as I was left alone about my choices, I was fine with what everyone else’s choices were. Now so far most people would say, “Okay, you’re falling out of planes but it’s not like you’re being shot at.” That was about to change.
Over the course of ten years, I would see combat three times. The first was over the skies of Panama City, Panama, in 1989. I came out the door of a C-141 aircraft at 450 feet above the ground at 2 AM on December 20. Thankfully, training paid off. The first night one of my own soldiers and close friends almost shot me. With a few thousand paratroopers trying to link up with each other in the middle of the night, they had a plan to make it happen without the good guys getting shot by each other. The plan was that every American soldier had the same challenge and password. When a unit in motion comes upon a stationary unit, the stationary unit issued a challenge, and the unit in motion needed to respond with the correct password, or the stationary unit would shoot the unit in motion. For Operation Just Cause, the challenge and password was a number combination. That combination was nine. That means the stationary unit said a number between one and nine. The unit in motion had to respond with a number that was added to it to total nine.
There I was, walking through the night in very tall grass and brush surrounding our drop zone, gun fire all around, and I hear a voice in the dark say, “Five!” I froze, my mind starts to race. The number combination is nine and someone just said “Five.”
Okay, I can do this. Five plus what equals nine? Um, five plus....
I hear again, “Five!!!” Ummm, nine, that’s five plus...
One more time: “Five!!!”
“Geisler?”
“Who is that?”
“Sergeant O.”
“Holy Crap, I almost shot you!”
“Four, right?”
An entire brigade of paratroopers running around in the dark, not to mention all the not- so-nice guys, and I happened to run into one of my own team members, A. P. Geisler. One out seven or eight thousand people with guns and I run into the one guy whose voice I recognized. Guess what—still an atheist.
Same country, two days later, middle of the night again. I was getting ready to lie down after a long, hot day. I had just checked on my soldiers on watch. We were in a building that was, just days before, occupied by the Panamanian Army’s paratroopers. They picked this particular moment to mount a counter attack. I laid down and, all heck breaks loose. I jumped up and ran to my men. I went to the window that one of my guys was manning, firing his Squad Automatic Weapon about 750 rounds a minute. Since I was getting ready to lie down, I was in a t-shirt and a jungle hat while everyone else was wearing flak vest and Kevlar® helmets. I was standing about a foot away from my guy when he ducked his head and said, “Did you hear that explosion?” I didn’t think anything of it and went on directing fire and calling for a forward unit on the radio. The next day, he and his roommate Geisler came up to me and asked if I remembered the explosion comment from the night before. “Yeah, I guess.” They showed me the slug from the bullet buried in the back of his Kevlar® helmet. One foot to the left, and my mom and dad were getting a visit from an Army chaplain. Yep, still an atheist.
Fast forward about a year to the other side of the world in the desert of Iraq. I had jumped into a foxhole—an Iraqi foxhole—but nevertheless, a foxhole. I jumped in to it to clear it. There was an AK-47 and a RPG (Rocket Propelled Grenade launcher) leaning up against the side of the foxhole. I pulled the AK out and handed it to one of my guys outside and reached for the RPG. Just as I did, I noticed a small wire coming off the trigger guard of the RPG. I stopped long enough to follow the wire to the pin of the hand grenade shoved into a hole in the back of the foxhole. I cut the wire, remove the grenade and the RPG. Not very sophisticated, but I think the previous occupant left in a hurry. Still, I remained an atheist.
A few years passed and this time I was on the Horn of Africa. Now things get a little hairy. There really isn’t much to joke about that came out of Mogadishu Somalia. Well, there isn’t much to joke about in polite company about Somalia at all, and polite company is anyone who wasn’t there. This was the conflict called The Battle of Mogadishu, but most people refer to it as the Black Hawk Down incident because of the movie by that name. I’ve watched this movie twice in my life. Once was by myself in a dark theater… that was a good decision on my part. The second was with my sons when it came out on DVD. I wanted them to understand a little bit about why I am who I am. That DVD sits on a shelf in my basement to this day and I will likely never watch it again. Partly because of the inaccuracy of the story, partly because of the Hollywood aspect of the story, but mostly because it makes me angry for all of those reasons and many more. The point is that I’ve been in some really not-nice places. I’ve done and seen some really not-nice things, things that would give the average person nightmares. I guess that makes me somewhat average, as after twenty-five years, some of these things still give me nightmares. I left the service in 1995, and yes, I was still an atheist.
I had always seen myself as a lifer in the Army—I never really expected to retire. I planned to spend my entire life in the Army, and I was good with that. Ultimately, I left because I had just gotten divorced and felt I needed to take custody of my two sons, ages two and three at the time. I knew with my chosen profession the chance of my winning custody of two small boys was slim to none. I was no longer in a foxhole, but yes, I was still an atheist.
Jesus is pulling for you, too.
All the flying bullets, explosions, and parachute jumps at Zero Dark Thirty hadn’t opened my eyes. Ten years of beating up my body and soul didn’t show me what God had in store for me. In the end it was my loving wife, a house fire, and a visit from Pastor Paul Gedden. I’m no longer in a foxhole, and as of four and a half years ago, I’m no longer an atheist, either. All those years ago, God had plenty of opportunities to right me off. One foot to the left, a better-concealed trip wire, or a trigger-happy buddy and no one would have known my story. Most would not have missed it.
We are all broken and God can make the broken beautiful again. For all my veteran brethren who still fight the nightmares and demons, I can’t say that the nightmares have gone away, but even those are brighter today than they were when I was just an atheist in a foxhole. To quote a saying from another of my philosophical heroes, “Keep your stick on the ice. Remember, I'm pulling for you. We're all in this together.” And Jesus is pulling for you, too.
–Written by Ron Oglesbee; edited by Rachel Bebee & Marie Dufour
HEAR MORE OF RON’S STORY:
Charles Williams
A national evangelist, Charles was the field representative of the C&MA in charge of Black Ministries (now known as the African-American Pastors’ Association).
A national evangelist, Charles was the field representative of the C&MA in charge of Black Ministries (now known as the African-American Pastors’ Association).
Charles Williams was born December 7, 1923, at the little mining town of Logans Ferry, Pennsylvania (now known as Logans Ferry Heights). His father and mother were the late Mr. Jeremiah Henry Williams and the late Mrs. L. K. Cook.
[Jeremiah] Williams was a graduate of Tuskegee Institute, Alabama, and a tailor by trade. He also was a veteran of World War I. Charles was age three when his father died, and it became his mother’s responsibility to raise him, his brother Jeremiah Henry Williams Jr., and his sister Rosa Williams. This was not an easy job, especially during the Great Depression years.
Some years later, Charles’ mother married the late Mr. Colonel Cook. Charles’ sister, Rosa Williams, died at eight years of age.
Time of Growth
Mrs. Cook was a hard-working widow who successfully raised her two sons and taught them how to work even from an early age. In time, the family moved from Logans Ferry, Pennsylvania, to New Kensington, Pennsylvania, and from there to Lincoln Beach, Pennsylvania.
Charles and his brother, Henry, delivered the Pittsburgh Post Gazette during the early mornings of those formative years in sub-zero temperatures, which was good training in teaching them responsibility.
Charles attended the Stewart Grade School along with our late missionary Rev. Edward Thompson of Viet Nam. He attended high school at New Kensington, Pennsylvania, and graduated in 1940. He worked hard and in 1942 entered the Missionary Training Institute at Nyack, New York, and graduated in 1945.
He was converted to Christ at the Community Church at Lincoln Beach, Pennsylvania, around 1937 under the ministry of an Alliance minister named Pastor Peterson and received much spiritual help under the later field representative, the Rev. J. D. Bell. He was a spiritual father to Charles and was used by God in involving him in the Christian ministry.
Rev. Bell founded Lincoln Beach Camp, which was later called the John Davis Bell Camp. It was there that Charles, along with many others, found special help and inspiration through the various evangelists and missionaries.
Evangelistic Ministry
Upon graduating from Nyack, Charles went on to hold pastorates at Twinsburg, Ohio, and Birmingham, Alabama. These were very difficult pastorates with few members in attendance, and Charles had to trust the Lord for his livelihood, but God graciously sustained him.
While at Twinsburg, Ohio, he was ordained into the Christian ministry by the then District Superintendent Allen and the late Pastor Zeimer of the Toledo Gospel Tabernacle. He also journeyed to Birmingham, Alabama, and married Miss Rosalia Bernice Oliver on October 22, 1947.
To this union was added three boys and a girl: Charles H. Williams Jr., Smith E. Williams, John D. Williams, and Lois Williams. The eldest son served in the United States Coast Guard, and the second son attended the Concordia Junior College at Portland, Oregon. Mrs. Williams is the Lutheran sister of the Revs. Douglas and Herbert Oliver who also were students at Nyack along with Charles.
Upon the completion of the Twinsburg and Birmingham pastorates, Charles entered full-time evangelistic ministry and traveled extensively both in and out of the country. He made some 10 evangelistic tours outside of the country which carried him to Liberia, Ghana, England, Haiti, Trinidad, Tobago, Jamaica, Mexico, South America, Canada, and South Africa. Many souls were won to Christ through these various meetings in conjunction with various churches and mission boards.
Charles was the president director of the National Negro Evangelical Association of Oregon, the president of the Evangelical Holiness and Missionary Association, which was an affiliate of the C&MA, and a national evangelist and field representative of the C&MA in charge of Black Ministries (now known as the African-American Pastors’ Association).
He resided in Portland, Oregon, with his wife and family until his death in 2008. Charles’ dear mother died at the age of 76, and Charles was eternally grateful to God for having given him a devoted mother who lived a dedicated Christian life before him and taught him how to be responsible in life and supported him during his years of schooling.
Story provided by The Alliance News
E. B. Nichols
E. B. Nichols graduated in 1896 from the Mission Training Institute (now Nyack College in New York). In God’s providence, he became superintendent of the early African-American ministries of the C&MA.
E. B. Nichols graduated in 1896 from the Mission Training Institute (now Nyack College in New York). In God’s providence, he became superintendent of the early African-American ministries of the C&MA.
E. B. traveled extensively holding meetings and overseeing his team in the establishment of many Alliance branches throughout the United States. He reported the following in The Alliance Witness July 13, 1989:
Our Third Annual Convention commenced on Friday morning, June 2, 1898, in the Wylie Avenue A. M. E. Church of which Dr. J. W. Gazaway is pastor. The Convention opened with a meeting for prayer and humiliation before our Father, who graciously showered upon us an “earnest” of what was to follow, praise be to His name! From the very first, the Holy Spirit wonderfully manifested His presence and power in saving, sanctifying, and healing. Many were saved and filled with the Holy Spirit.
On Wednesday, June 8, Dr. G. D. Watson gave very helpful and instructive messages on “Our Blessed Hope, the Lord’s Second Coming.” The Lord wonderfully used our dear brother, Rev. R. H. Shirley of Coxsackie, New York. The noble corps of workers from Ohio, namely Sisters Bowles, Smoot, Brown, Johnson, and others were very effectually used of the Holy Spirit in spreading the joyful message. May the “Lord of the harvest” give us many such Spirit-filled hearts to labor for Him.
Thursday, June 9, was given to the ministry of divine healing—brief messages showing Jesus Christ as not only willing to heal our sicknesses but also to be to us our very life, health, and strength. Bless His name! After the messages many were anointed, after which some wonderful cures were testified to, namely, sight restored, internal ailments of long standing cured, and some were brought back from sick beds and went away healed. Praise God! “He is just the same today.”
Marvelous Light
The interest increased steadily, and we believe there has been a great and effectual work accomplished by our Father through this branch of the C&MA among African Americans, who, because of past oppression, feel somewhat backward, and will not press their way into Conventions where these truths are taught, and learn of Him “more perfectly.” And because of this we are working to obtain and praying that the Lord may give us means and workers to carry this marvelous light of the Fourfold Gospel into some of the much needed localities of the South, and so the close of the Convention we started a side fund apart from our regular missionary offering for the purpose stated above.
Our dear sisters Bowles and Smoots of Cleveland, Ohio, came to us directly from Kentucky to assist in the Convention. They were trying to establish a work but failed owing to the above needs. Therefore, as soon as the dear Lord will enable us to sufficiently increase the said fund we expect to send a party of four or five workers in His name to these very same places. We are sure that after they shall have heard and seen examples of His marvelous work they will readily welcome messengers and support their work. Do pray that God may order our steps.
Sunday afternoon, June 12, we gave especially to the subject of missions which lay so near to the heart of our dear Lord and which He has placed so near to some of our hearts, but owing to that day being a day set apart by that denomination for missionary purposes, etc., we were not allowed to take our usual missionary offering, which is always the chief feature and most joyful time of an Alliance Convention, when we can give Him back part of what He has so freely given us.
Above All
The winding-up was Sunday night, June 12, when the church and neighborhood rang with our late brother Macomber’s “song.” “We’re bound to take the Congo for Jesus.”
Dr. Gazaway did his utmost for us to make the Convention a success. God will bless him for the same. May the dear Lord give us more pastors who are not afraid of the truth.
We are much indebted to many of the liberal merchants of Pittsburg for their hospitality, Messrs. Marvin & Co., Lutz & Co., Dilworth & Co., etc. Last year our late brother Conley gave our workers a luncheon in the Alliance Rooms on Penn Avenue. In his stead the dear Lord has given us a friend and brother in the person of Mr. J. T. Gilbert, of the Hotel Anderson, whom the Lord so wonderfully delivered through the Convention last year. He sent us a whole dinner and a waiter to serve it, besides giving most liberally of his means. May God indeed give us many such people who love Him above all!
The people could not understand how our dear members, who are Methodists, Baptists, Presbyterians, Congregationalists, and converted and sanctified Catholics, could work so peaceably together, but many learned the secret by receiving the Holy Spirit.
Our beloved president, W. P. Robinson, did his best, and now everybody is longing for the next Convention. Pray that our Father may keep us low at His feet.
Story provided by The Alliance News
What is Lent?
In our pandemic-induced isolation, a date threatens to pass without our notice. Tomorrow (as I write) is Ash Wednesday. On this date, some of your friends may receive a cross smudged on their foreheads.
In our pandemic-induced isolation, a date threatens to pass without our notice. Tomorrow (as I write) is Ash Wednesday. On this date, some of your friends may receive a cross smudged on their foreheads. They probably did not get this from an infant playing with markers; it was likely intentional, and is a symbol of religious observance. It is a mark designed to recognize the beginning of Lent.
Today (Tuesday), many who enjoy a good party will celebrate Mardi Gras. (For the language-challenged, Mardi Gras is French for “Fat Tuesday.” Social-media “experts” on fat may shudder at the phrase; but the idea is that people get one last bash at celebrating before Lenten sacrifices begin on Wednesday.)
“Whether or not you celebrate Lent, Ash Wednesday or Mardi Gras, their origins are actually in the Church Calendar.”
Whether or not you celebrate Lent, Ash Wednesday or Mardi Gras (or Carnival, Carnaval, Carnevale, etc.), their origins are actually in the Church Calendar. For numerous religious traditions around the world, the day before Ash Wednesday (Mardi Gras) is also known as Shrove Tuesday. It is the last day of Shrovetide, or the period prior to Lent itself. (Our unfamiliarity with terms/phrases like Shrove Tuesday, or Quinquagesima [the Sunday before Ash Wednesday, 50 days before Easter] reflects Evangelicalism’s general avoidance of liturgical formalities ... an avoidance less common outside of western, informal expressions of Christianity.)
Since the earliest centuries after Christ, Jesus-followers have felt the impulse to reflect on Jesus’ first coming and work out how they might also sacrifice something as an expression of love for Christ and His mission. Shrovetide, virtually unheard of today, begins on the Sunday before Lent (though traditions vary), and observers mark this time with introspection, confession of sin, and a consideration of Lenten sacrifices one might make during Lent itself.
Observance of Lent was/is the church’s way to remember Jesus within its calendar. In ancient Israel, and for centuries in the church, the calendar was used to retell stories. Mostly stories of deliverance. In many ways, we do the same in our country ... though we have replaced deliverance under Moses (in Judaism) and through Christ (in Christianity) with the American story of deliverance (e.g. July 4th, Labor and Memorial Days, etc.). Which story do you most identify when you look at your daily, weekly, monthly and annual calendar? The loss of awareness of a religious “calendar” is understandable in our relaxed church culture, but may also be a loss to our memories. Leviticus shows us that God taught his people their “story” through that calendar. Is it any wonder the Bible tells us often to “Remember!”? Celebrating holidays (holy-days) is to collectively remind ourselves or our identity and roots. Our story. (When God “remembers us,” he takes action ... not that He ever forgot. When WE remember, it is often a miracle!)
Ash Wednesday begins the 40-day period of Lent. Lent (which excludes Sundays, for those who are counting closely) precedes Easter each year. It echoes the extended time Jesus fasted in the wilderness before beginning his ministry and his trip to the cross and resurrection. The linkage to those 40 days prompts the desire of so many to consider fasting or sacrificing elements in our lives. Of course, Easter is THE central day of remembrance in the year for Christians, and sacrifice in front of that celebration has seemed normal and natural throughout church history.
“Giving up” things is popular during Lent. For many, it is an excuse to go on another diet. For others, giving up things like chocolate (or sugar?) feels like serious sacrifice. For those with faith in Jesus, the impulse to imitate their savior, even if in smaller ways, can be strong. Some “sacrifices” are fairly silly; but others can be more serious indeed.
Should you or I consider such sacrifices this Lenten season? What does Jesus think about such things? Truthfully, there is no easy answer. In our upcoming sermon series on Leviticus, we will learn that coming into the presence of God always required sacrifice in the old system, something that cost the worshipper. But with the sacrifice of Christ, such costs have already been borne. Nevertheless, the impulse to return in kind to our savior remains, doesn’t it? Perhaps the answer to the question is to be found in our motives.
In Hebrews 2:11, we are told Jesus was “not ashamed” to call us his brothers and sisters (cf. the language of “kinship” in Matt 12:49-50). And in John 15:14, Jesus reminds us that he calls us his friends! For those of us who love Christ, he has established a family under his leadership; he is our brother, but also our Lord. The relationship is established due to our trust in him and his sacrifice … not ours. And the gift that we gain due to our faith is a new relationship, with him and with other Jesus followers. If our motive is to respond in thanks, and to give space in our lives for him to do a work in our souls, then small steps of sacrifice during Lent may be appropriate.
Should you consider forgoing something (or adding a habit?) so as to understand the grace of God in a new way?If so, I am quite confident that God will find that sacrifice acceptable. Our current consumer culture, a culture that seem to thrive on paying it great attention while indulging ourselves, might argue otherwise. However, Romans 12:1 suggests that giving ourselves unreservedly to God is always warmly received.Perhaps some of you will look for new ways to give space for God to be at work in your lives.
Carrie Elizabeth Merriweather
The first female African-American missionary to be sent by the C&MA
The first female African-American missionary to be sent by the C&MA
In 1890, The Christian and Missionary Alliance established a mission post in Sierra Leone hoping that it would provide a gateway into what was known as “French Soudan”—a vast expanse of land stretching from present-day Mali to the eastern highlands of Ethiopia. The French government stonewalled the missionaries’ entrance to the Soudan for nearly 30 years. In that time, our missionaries faced hardship and death from disease and tribal conflict.
When recalling the treacherous conditions that these early workers encountered, R. S. Roseberry, pioneer missionary to French West Africa, wrote in his book The Niger Vision, “It is doubtful if any effort to open a road into the Dark Continent surpasses the heroism of the early pioneers of the Soudan Mission.”
On the trail from Freetown to the highlands, one may find the last resting place of men and women who had a vision and followed on to the end. Some sleep in unmarked graves in the long grass. More than 30 lives were laid down in those years of trial, when the strongest hearts were tried.
At a point of desperation, the field sent out a call in 1912 for more missionaries. Carrie Elizabeth Merriweather, a second-year student at The Missionary Training Institute (now Nyack College, Nyack, N.Y.), heard that call and decided to respond, ultimately forgoing her graduation. She arrived at Freetown, Sierra Leone, in November 1913, becoming the first female African-American missionary to be sent by the C&MA.
Born July 28, 1881, in Carthage, Indiana, Merriweather moved to Cleveland, Ohio, at the age of 17 to attend Friends’ Bible School. While there, she befriended Mrs. B. H. Smoot, ardent supporter of the foreign missionary effort. At Smoot’s encouragement, Merriweather enrolled at Nyack in 1910 with only $50 to cover her expenses. She spent the next two years studying and paying for her tuition by faith and hard work.
At the beginning of her second term in Sierra Leone, Merriweather was forced to leave the field because of illness. Although she continued to suffer from her condition after returning home, Merriweather still managed to travel and invite people to her house when she was too sick to leave. She spent the rest of her life stirring interest for Africa and encouraging others to follow God wherever He might call them.
Carrie Merriweather went to be with the Lord March 20, 1931. She left a tremendous legacy as over the next two decades, seven more African-American missionaries—Eugene M. and Sadie Thornley, Montrose and Ella Mae Waite (and later his second wife, Anna Marie), Mr. R. H. Wilson, and Mrs. A. A. Fitts (neé Bolden)—followed in her footsteps to spread the gospel in Sierra Leone and the regions beyond.
Story provided by The Alliance News
Introducing the Newest CCC Residency Cohort
Introducing the newest CCC Residency Cohort! Get to know each of our brand-new residents as they start their two-year residency here at Christ Community Church.
CCC is thrilled to welcome our fourth cohort to the Church Residency program!
The residency is a two-year program focused on combining practical experience with graduate-level education. This year we’re welcoming seven residents working in five different ministry areas. The goal is for each of the residents to complete the program fully prepared for ministry without further debt, which is why the church, along with a generous discount from Crown, will pay 100% of their tuition.
As we endeavor on such an ambitious and Kingdom-focused approach to leadership training, we would ask you to consider doing four things in the coming months:
Pray
Pray for residents as they receive their training. Pray for the staff who are mentoring and training the residents. Pray for the churches, missions, and organizations that will soon be hiring our residents. And most of all, pray that God gets all the glory and that the mission of the Church advances because more bright, young leaders are being sent out!
Give
Although the church is paying for the residents’ tuition along with a small monthly stipend, each resident is required to raise support to cover their monthly expenses. Because we want the residents to focus on their experience without overextending themselves to get a part-time job, this support is crucial to free them up to focus on their training. If you feel led to contribute to an individual resident or if you’d like to designate giving to the program overall, visit cccomaha.org/give.
Host
Each resident will live with a CCC member/attender for the duration of their residency. This is not only a great way to save them money, but also to connect them with caring people who can provide additional leadership and support in their lives. If you have the gift of hospitality, an extra room or basement, and would like more information on becoming a host home, visit cccresidency.org/hosthome.
Connect
We’ll introduce you to the new cohort of residents below. As you see them around the church, please approach them and introduce yourself. Say “hi” and get to know them. Perhaps you would want to bless them with lunch or coffee or giving them an occasional gift card. More importantly, bless them with your words of love and encouragement.
A program like this can only be realized and accomplished together. It’s not just our staff who can pull this off. We need everyone in the church to capture the vision and recognize that, in order to provide a great program for residents, we need to have a culture that values training and equipping young leaders for work in church ministry. They are the future—but to send them into the future with everything they need, the Church of today needs to get behind them, support them, and mentor them so they can lead us into tomorrow. The CCC Church Residency is a huge step in that direction. Thanks for taking that step with us!
GET TO KNOW THE 2020–2022 COHORT:
MARY CLAIRE JOHNSON
AGE: 22
HOMETOWNS: Lincoln, NE and Dallas, TX
COLLEGE/DEGREE: University of Nebraska–Lincoln; Leadership
CALL TO MINISTRY: I was a nursing student feeling unsatisfied with my future career. I knew I had a passion to care for others and it was through varying mentorship/discipleship opportunities in college that I recognized my passion of long-term development and healing in both myself and others!
FAVORITE FOOD: Chick-fil-A!!!
STARBUCKS DRINK: Decaf White Mocha
MATT CLURAGHTY
AGE: 24
HOMETOWN: Milaca, MN
COLLEGE/DEGREE: Moody Bible Institute; Bachelor of Science in Ministry with Leadership Emphasis
CALL TO MINISTRY: Since God brought me into relationship with himself my senior year of high school, he has placed a deep passion in my heart for the lost. God proved that he would equip me for whatever he would call me for, and in my case that was full-time ministry. My passion is to be used by God to draw people close to Jesus.
FAVORITE FOOD: A rare steak
FAVORITE STARBUCKS DRINK: Hot White Mocha
ISAIAH LACKEY
AGE: 24
HOMETOWN: Roanoke, Virginia
COLLEGE/DEGREE: Toccoa Falls College; Cross-Cultural Studies & Bible and Theology.
CALL TO MINISTRY: My call to ministry has been a journey of going through doors the Lord opens for me and to using the gifts of the Spirit that he has given to me. The Lord has given me a heart and a passion for serving others in any capacity, especially those of different cultural backgrounds.
FAVORITE FOOD: Any kind of Asian food, or Chick-fil-A.
FAVORITE STARBUCKS DRINK: Mocha, Caramel Macchiato, or just a plain black cup of coffee.
CAITLIN FETTIG
AGE: 23
HOMETOWN: Portland, OR
COLLEGE/DEGREE: Social Work; George Fox University
CALL TO MINISTRY: My call to ministry stems from my desire to leave people better than I found them by being the hands and feet of Christ to everyone I meet.
FAVORITE FOOD: Cereal… just any and ALL of the cereal.
FAVORITE STARBUCKS DRINK: Matcha Latte
LOTTIE ELLIS
AGE: 22
HOMETOWN: Columbia Falls, MT
COLLEGE/DEGREE: Crown College; Youth & Family Ministry and Christian Studies
CALL TO MINISTRY: God is continually revealing to me the beauty of himself, and the beauty in those around me. I feel called to empower people, through the love of Jesus, to share their stories and pursue him with their whole lives.
FAVORITE FOOD: Fried Chicken
FAVORITE STARBUCKS DRINK: The caffeinated kind
MATT JOHNSON
AGE: 22
HOMETOWN: Lutz, Florida
COLLEGE/DEGREE: Florida Southern College; BA in Religion
CALL TO MINISTRY: My call to ministry has been more of a fall to ministry. God has faithfully ruined all of my plans that did not align with his, and with my future freed of obligations, God made it clear that I was to build up the Church with the gifts I have been given.
FAVORITE FOOD: Meatloaf or Tuna Casserole
FAVORITE STARBUCKS DRINK: Salted Caramel Crunch Frappuccino
SETH RENICKS
AGE: 22
HOMETOWN: Grove City, PA
COLLEGE/DEGREE: Toccoa Falls College; B.S. in Ministry and Leadership
CALL TO MINISTRY: Right now I’m called to be in the Residency program and learn as much as I can to be ready for where the Lord has me next!
FAVORITE FOOD: Steak 🥩
FAVORITE STARBUCKS DRINK: Pineapple Matcha Latte
Answering God's Call
Like almost all other aspects of life, the coronavirus pandemic has dramatically impacted Matt and Teri Perrotto’s mission work in Miami. Their prime focus, right now, is food—collecting it and passing it out to neighbors in need. The Perrottos and their team held their first food distribution event on April 18.
Matt & Teri Perrotto: Serving God and Neighbor During the COVID-19 Pandemic
“It’s been all glory to God. He’s given us the wisdom we’ve asked for, and he’s provided the means to help.”
– Matt Perrotto, site coordinator, Envision Miami; member, Christ Community Church
Like almost all other aspects of life, the coronavirus pandemic has dramatically impacted Matt and Teri Perrotto’s mission work in Miami. Their prime focus, right now, is food—collecting it and passing it out to neighbors in need. The Perrottos and their team held their first food distribution event on April 18.
“That day, when we showed up, there was a line of cars already. It was eye-opening for us to see the need,” Matt says. “After that, we decided we’re going to hold as many food distribution events as we can. We started calling around, asking food distributors, food suppliers, grocery stores—anyone we could think of—for donations.”
And things started to happen. One supplier donated 900 dozen (10,800) eggs, another donated three pallets of canned fruits and vegetables. Christ Community Church’s Carlos Ramirez (resident who graduated in 2020) connected Matt and Teri with his father, a food broker, who introduced the Perrottos to a professional peer in their area. That resulted in an astounding donation of 8,000 pounds—four tons—of fresh produce each week. The Perrottos and their team have begun distributing food to local partner schools and a partner church. They’ve held three more community food distribution events in May alone.
“We usually have over 1,000 people come through in about 200 cars,” Matt says. “God has provided in some really cool ways. Not only has that enabled us to give food away, but it’s increased our faith. It helps us to realize that asking God for big things—things that will impact his kingdom—is something we should be doing on a regular basis.”
“We need to be bold in our prayers,” Teri says.
As the pandemic was beginning to unfold and the Perrottos were unsure how to proceed, that’s exactly where they started, with prayer.
“Every day, our whole team sets a timer on our phones at 1:28, and we pray according to James 1:2–8, which talks about counting it all joy when you encounter various trials. The second part involves asking for wisdom. That’s made all the difference,” Matt says.
Matt and Teri believe their pandemic outreach will have a lasting impact as they continue working to “transform lives and increase the Kingdom of Heaven through the power of the gospel.”
“Just the fact that we’re still here, that we’re still trying to do whatever we can to help, I think that’s going to go a long way,” Matt says. “As we continue to reach out to the community, we’re going to have some relationships and some credibility that we didn’t have before.”
Matt & Teri Perrotto: Answering God’s Call to Combat Spiritual Darkness and Spread the Light of Christ
“This is where we need to be no matter how hard it is.”
– Matt Perrotto
Christ Community Church’s Matt and Teri Perrotto know what it’s like. They’ve experienced uncertainty and reluctance like Jonah,
But Jonah ran away from the LORD and headed for Tarshish (Jonah 1:3, New International Version [NIV]).
the fear of failure like Moses,
What if they do not believe me or listen to me and say, “The LORD did not appear to you?” (Exodus 4:1, NIV).
and Gideon’s feelings of inadequacy:
“Pardon me, my Lord,” Gideon replied, “but how can I save Israel? My clan is the weakest in Manasseh, and I am the least in my family” (Judges 6:15, NIV).
And like Gideon, Jonah, and Moses, Matt and Teri came to answer God’s call anyway.
“God can use anyone, and it’s not based on our qualifications,” Matt says. “The power that is within us is the same power that raised Jesus from the dead and that’s endless. If you trust God, he can do anything through you.”
For the last four years, the Perrottos have served as site coordinators for Envision Miami, a ministry of the Christian and Missionary Alliance (C&MA). Envision Miami exists to collaborate with Miami-area churches, schools, homeless shelters, and other organizations to “transform lives and increase the Kingdom of Heaven through the power of the gospel.”
“We started an ESL (English as a Second Language) program to reach more of the people near us,” Matt says. “Our goal this year is to do prayer walks for 1,000 hours. We believe prayer is our first work that we should be doing.”
The Perrottos say Miami might seem an odd mission field—it’s not Haiti, Kenya, or Tanzania—but the need for Christian outreach and spiritual transformation is stark.
“Miami is a different place, a challenging place,” Matt says. “There is a spiritual darkness that we see, and we’ve experienced a lot of spiritual battle. I feel like every step forward we take in our ministry center is met with resistance.”
That includes efforts to rehab the ministry center building, a structure in dire need of upkeep and renovation. The Perrottos have run into steady opposition from the county.
“We have been trying, since we’ve been here, to get basic permits passed, and they stop every single one of them. Our contractors said they have never seen anything like this. They can’t believe how hard this has been,” Teri says. “Honestly, it’s felt like more of a spiritual battle.”
Moses returned to the LORD and said, “Why, Lord, why have you brought trouble on this people?” (Exodus 5:22, NIV).
Matt says the work is going to get done eventually, but he tries to not put a timeline on it.
“Even with the state the building is in—we have doors falling off their hinges—God has been moving and working in people’s lives. We see people coming alive in their faith. It shows us it’s not about the building. It’s in his presence where life change happens,” Matt says.
The Perrottos have also had to build bridges with a diverse group of neighbors, including a primarily Haitian congregation that shares their campus.
“When we first started there, you could feel tension. We felt like we were not wanted at this campus and it was very uncomfortable. We knew we had to earn their trust,” Teri says. “Now, it’s changed so drastically. That relationship has grown. The pastor will call now and check in, ‘How are you guys doing? I haven’t seen you for a little bit.’”
Personal struggles have added to the complexity of their ministry as well. The kids (ages 9–19) had a tough time adjusting, though, Matt says, Miami feels like home now. Members of their extended family still question why they do what they do. And they’ve had to wrestle with loss. Teri’s mother died in February, and her father’s health is failing.
“It’s been kind of a spiral since December, but we have still seen God’s hand through it all,” Teri says.
Balancing out the challenges—all of the victories so far.
“We’ve had a lot of encounters with our neighbors where we’ve been able to share the gospel,” Matt says. “They’re excited about the outreach we’re doing in that neighborhood. We’ve had people get saved. The mission teams that come down and stay here—we’ve seen so many people be transformed, just being in the presence of God and being on a mission with God.”
Matt and Teri’s own experience with mission work began with short-term service trips during college. After joining Christ Community Church (CCC) in 2010, they became involved with youth and children’s ministry and community outreach. In 2012, Teri served on a pivotal mission trip to China. While interacting with Chinese college students, she was profoundly struck by the way they worshipped.
“It was a true relationship with God,” Teri says. “When I came back, it hit me really hard because I wanted our kids to have that relationship and not just a ‘Sunday God.’ That’s when Matt and I started talking seriously like, ‘I think God is calling us to more.’”
At the time, Matt had an “excellent job,” working as an electronics engineer. Teri was raising the kids full-time after transitioning out of her social work career. While they pressed on with life, God continued to press on their hearts the idea of long-term mission work. The Perrottos started praying about it and asked members of their Journey Group to pray for them as well.
“It just didn’t seem like we were qualified. It didn’t seem like it made sense for us to move from Omaha where we both grew up,” Matt says. “When we did pray, we asked God to make it really clear because it was still this crazy idea.”
Gideon replied, “If now I have found favor in your eyes, give me a sign that it is really you talking to me” (Judges 6:17, NIV).
“After praying, we had to decide, are we going to continue following what we thought God was directing us to do or just drop it?” Matt says. “We decided, let’s take a step and see what God does.”
That step, in early 2013, involved talking to Craig Walter, CCC’s director of missions.
“We wanted him to close the door because we weren’t sure we could actually do it,” Matt says.
He didn’t.
“He was 110 percent all for it,” Matt says. “That was one of the first signs that we thought, ‘Okay, maybe this is what God wants.’”
In 2014, the Perrottos left everything and moved to the Dominican Republic to serve with Envision. Toward the end of that two-year assignment, they received a phone call from the director of Envision asking if they would be interested in starting a site in Miami.
“We started praying about it. We really were not sure,” Teri says. “During a site visit, when we met the pastors and we heard their hearts, our hearts broke and we knew God wanted us here.”
Teri recalls a time when one of their five children—daughter Madelyn—asked flat-out, “Why are we in Miami?”
“As we walked around the neighborhood, I asked her, ‘How many of these people do you think are going to heaven? How many do you think believe in God?’ It was like a lightbulb went on and she said, ‘We have to get all these people to believe.’”
Matt adds, “When people come down, their lives are impacted and they sense the presence of God. This is where we need to be no matter how hard it is. If you’re committed to obeying God, the only reason you stop is if God tells you to—and if he doesn’t tell you to, you keep going.”
The Perrottos are asking members of CCC to pray for them, their family, and their work, and if they are so inclined, to support them financially. (Right now, they are about 85 percent funded.) They also encourage others to discern how they can join God in the Great Commission.
“We can all get involved in our own way, and that doesn’t necessarily mean going to the mission field,” Matt says.
His and Teri’s work is inspiring their children in that direction. Their oldest, Alec, is already leading mission teams. Son Marcus and oldest daughter Ellah are talking about moving to the Dominican Republic and Tennessee, respectively, to do ministry. Even nine-year-old Isaac has started sharing the gospel with peers.
“When we first started, Matt and I weren’t sure why we were doing this, but we both felt that we had to obey,” Teri says. “To see our kids following that path is so amazing.”
Matt adds, “Seeing people come to the saving knowledge of Jesus Christ through different activities and ministries that we do, that’s a game changer for all eternity. It’s a privilege to be a part of it.”
Moses answered the people, “Do not be afraid. Stand firm and you will see the deliverance the LORD will bring you today” (Exodus 14:13, NIV).
Dan McCann is a freelance writer whose work appears in the Omaha World Herald.
Volunteer Spotlight | Nancy Hanson
The Christ Community Church Volunteer Spotlight is a chance to get to know a volunteer you might see around the church building. From time to time, we'll feature a volunteer, share a little bit about their life, how they got to CCC, and something you may not know about them. This post features Nancy Hanson, who serves in CCC’s Renewal Ministries.
The Christ Community Church Volunteer Spotlight is a chance to get to know a volunteer you might see around the church building. From time to time, we'll feature a volunteer, share a little bit about their life, how they got to CCC, and something you may not know about them. This post features Nancy Hanson, who serves in CCC’s Renewal Ministries.
FAMILY: Widowed, six children, and ten grandchildren
ORIGINS: Born and raised in Scottsbluff, Nebraska; spent thirty years in California before returning to Nebraska.
ENJOYS: Spending time with my grandkids (three are here in Omaha), games, music, gardening, reading, and ministry.
WHAT AREA DO YOU SERVE?
I serve as a Renewal Group leader for a group called Hope After Betrayal.
HOW LONG HAVE YOU BEEN SERVING?
About eight years.
HOW DID YOU GET TO CCC?
When I moved to Omaha in 2011, I began coming with my daughter and her family who were already attending CCC.
WHY DID YOU BEGIN SERVING AT CCC?
I first served in Kid’s Ministry after a request for help in that area was mentioned. After about 1.5 years, I heard a sermon from Pastor Wendell Nelson. God spoke to me during that sermon and said he wanted me to serve in Adult Ministries. After prayer and talking with Pastors Nelson and Marc Montanye, I started the Renewal Group.
WHAT’S YOUR FAVORITE PART ABOUT SERVING?
This is a hard question as there are so many benefits to serving! I would say the blessing of coming alongside another who may be struggling/hurting and just letting them know they are not alone, and also being part of a community of women who love and support each other.
IF YOU COULD ENCOURAGE SOMEONE TO SERVE, WHAT WOULD YOU TELL THEM?
It’s much more blessing than effort. If someone is not sure where God wants them to serve, try a lot of different serving opportunities. God will confirm the right one with joy in being there and a peaceful sense of belonging.
Freed, Forgiven, Loved.
Face down on the floor of a prison cell, emotions welling in his chest, Brent Springer was officially done. There was not a lot more that he could lose in that moment. He was done—done living for himself and following his rules, done pursuing his selfish desires, done with the addiction that led to him landing in prison. He was done. This was not the doneness of the man one month prior, the suicidal intentions that led to him injuring another person, but the doneness that ended in surrender.
Face down on the floor of a prison cell, emotions welling in his chest, Brent Springer was officially done. There was not a lot more that he could lose in that moment. He was done—done living for himself and following his rules, done pursuing his selfish desires, done with the addiction that led to him to prison. He was done. This was not the doneness of the man one month prior, the suicidal intentions that led to him injuring another person, but the doneness that ended in surrender.
Surrender. His ways of living, surrendered to God’s ways. His wants and needs, surrendered to God’s greater plan for his life. This is Brent’s story.
Brent was adopted as a baby by Norm and Joyce Springer. He was raised in a loving, supportive family and was pretty happy growing up. But as he entered his teens, Brent began to experience some deep, negative emotions. At age 13, he was diagnosed with depression and was subsequently put on antidepressants. He discovered that alcohol helped numb the pain and provided escape from what he was feeling. Physical fights with other students in high school was a frequent occurrence for Brent. Hoping that a change in environment would help, Brent’s parents enrolled him in a private Christian school in Omaha during his freshman year. However, an external change wasn’t enough to keep him from returning to his old habits and friends. After two semesters there, he switched to a different school, once again hoping that this time it would be different. He finished high school at Lewis Central and made plans to attend a small Christian college in rural Iowa. After starting his freshman year at the college, he quickly determined the school wasn’t a good fit and returned to Council Bluffs. He started attending Iowa Western and studied criminal justice, but just felt lost and purposeless. Something was missing in his life.
At nineteen, Brent met a recruiter for the United States Marine Corps (USMC). After talking with the recruiter for several weeks, Brent decided to enlist. He spent his twentieth birthday at boot camp in San Diego, was transferred to South Carolina, and then spent two years in Okinawa, Japan. Though he had left the situations that he felt pulled him down, addiction followed him wherever he went. Brent eventually got married while serving in the USMC. After five years of military service, he was honorably discharged, and he and his wife moved to Omaha. Neither Brent nor his wife were really trying in their marriage, and one evening after a particularly bad fight, she packed her things and left. Brent turned to his familiar comfort and began drinking. Two of his friends showed up and drank with him in solidarity.
Brent found himself in a situation he had never envisioned—behind bars.
In that moment, life shifted. Angry and hurting, Brent reached for his gun, ready to end his life. The weight of depression, alcoholism, and his marriage falling apart was too much to carry. In a valiant attempt to save Brent’s life, his friends attempted to take the gun from him. In the struggle, Brent shot and injured his coworker and shot at the other man who was unharmed. Brent found himself in a situation he had never envisioned—being arrested and placed behind bars.
His family was heartbroken. His sister called CCC and asked that Lead Minister Mark Ashton to visit Brent in jail. Mark visited Brent and then shared his story with CCC’s Director of Counseling, Marc Montanye, who began to visit Brent regularly.
Brent returned to his roots and requested a Bible, which he began to read voraciously. During the month of September, he realized the weight of his sin and his desperate need for God’s forgiveness. He lay prostrate in his cell, crying out to God for the forgiveness of his sins. “Lord, I’ve seen where my way leads me, and I don’t wanna be here. I want you to change me. I’m going to do it your way now.” His heartfelt prayer on the prison cell floor led to a soul transformation. When others said offensive things to him, it no longer bothered him. Things that would have led to a physical fight in previous years didn’t affect him. He recognized that his identity was not based in what others thought of him, whether good or bad, but was based in Jesus Christ. A deep love of Scripture was planted in his heart and he read through the Bible three times within several months. Montanye began discipling Brent and a friendship flourished between them. As his faith continued to grow, Brent shared his love for the Bible by leading Bible studies for other men in prison. As his heart was transformed, he desired to ask the man he injured for forgiveness. Brent and Marc began praying that forgiveness would happen one day.
At his sentencing in 2015, Brent received ten to twenty years to be served in the Nebraska State Penitentiary. He would be eligible for parole in five years. Though the weight of the sentencing was heavy, Brent did not despair. God continued to mold Brent as a disciple through mentoring relationships and an educational program through the Christian and Missionary Alliance. Brent started the Ministerial Study Program through the C&MA’s Church Leadership Academy. While prison is not an ideal place to complete a degree, Brent persevered in his studies. Every night before he went to sleep, he asked God to wake him up at 3 AM so that he could complete his homework without disturbing other people in his cell block.
Nearing the end of the five years, in March 2019, Brent was transferred to the Community Corrections Center in Omaha, which allowed him to begin attending Christ Community Church. He was paroled on August 28, 2019, and was able to begin working. The profound healing that Brent has experienced has led him to helping others heal from their traumas. He helps lead a CCC Renewal Group for those who deal with drug and alcohol addictions. He has nearly completed his undergraduate degree and looks forward to beginning a master’s degree in counseling, which he hopes to use to use in the future.
Brent is overwhelmingly grateful for what he’s been through. Though it has been a difficult road, one that he never expected, he wouldn’t change anything because it has led him to knowing God truly. Relationships with family and mentors have been essential to his continued spiritual growth. Studying Scripture and sharing what he believes with others have been key to remaining faithful to God.
Editor’s note: As my interview with Brent came to a close, something unexpected happened. The man Brent shot and injured happened to be at Christ Community Church attending a small group, not knowing that Brent was part of the same group or even that Brent attended CCC. There was a momentary awkwardness as they recognized each other. The man walked up to Brent, hugged him, and told Brent that he was forgiven. It was an overwhelming picture of God’s grace and mercy poured out on Brent’s life. A man sentenced to prison has been redeemed so that he can pour out his life for others. A life that was far from God has been drawn close.
Rachel Bebee is the Project Coordinator for the Communications Team at Christ Community Church.
Seeking Community, Finding Family
“I never understood what family was and what it meant because I was so used to being alone. I became the best at hide and seek with God. I would run and push God away as much as I could. I would always ask, ‘Why does it have to be like this?’”
“I never understood what family was and what it meant because I was so used to being alone. I became the best at hide and seek with God. I would run and push God away as much as I could. I would always ask, ‘Why does it have to be like this?’” On September 29, 2019, Mike Atkins shared these words with the Christ Community Church congregation. Mike’s wife Katie and CCC staff member Jim Ratte were with him on stage. “Son,” Jim asked, “Do you believe that Jesus Christ is your Lord and Savior and do you commit to following him all your days?” Mike affirmed that he did. Buried with his sins, Mike came out of the water raised to new life.
Mike’s early life was difficult. His parents met while his dad was serving in the military in Korea, and then his mom joined her husband in the US. Their marriage was physically and verbally abusive and ended shortly after Mike as born. After the divorce, Mike lived with his mom. He attended church with his mom, but didn't feel connected there. The deep pain from broken family relationships led him to put up walls that kept God and people out. It felt easier to hide the deep losses, the sadness, and the anger than to deal with the pain. His relationship with his dad, which was severely strained after the divorce, affected how he viewed God, yet God was not through with Mike yet. Mike became close friends with another student in elementary school. His friend's family invited Mike into their daily life. He would stay with them for days at a time. Through his “adopted” white family, he began to experience unconditional love in his life.
Knowing Jesus has brought peace into their lives that they never expected.
Growing up on her family’s farm near Tecumseh, Nebraska, Katie's early life was different. She learned about Jesus through the Lutheran church her family attended and accepted him as Savior when she was in junior high. A self-described “comfortable” Christian, Katie didn’t understand how to have a thriving relationship with Jesus. She joined Campus Crusade for Christ for several years in college. After moving to Omaha for pharmacy school, a friend invited her to CCC and began to get connected. She tried another church, but ended up returning to CCC.
Katie and Mike’s stories intersected on a Wednesday in January 2015 at a local bar. Mike was playing wingman for his friend who was interested in Katie’s best friend. Though neither was interested at first, they saw each other later that week at the same place. Mike’s friend encouraged him to ask Katie on a date. Katie said yes and the two started dating, but their early relationship was difficult. Both had been wounded in past relationships. Although Mike wasn’t yet a Christian, Katie made it clear that he would need to attend church with her if he wanted to date her. She hoped that her faith would help Mike accept Jesus as Savior. Despite his initial reluctance about going to church, Mike knew he needed to start attending church again. They slowly started to get connected.
Life wasn't easy for Mike and Katie during this time. Rotations for pharmacy school sent Katie away for a year. Serious fights ended in frustration with each other. Finally, Mike’s dad passed away. Though his relationship with his dad was distant, Mike still felt the loss. He was angry with God, but tried to keep his emotions under wraps.
Mike and Katie continued dating and kept coming to CCC. They got engaged and participated in CCC’s marriage class. They were married in October 2017. Though he had not yet surrendered his life to Jesus, Katie felt like a change was coming in Mike's life. After moving into their first house, Mike noticed that one of his coworkers lived in the neighborhood. Upon investigating, he found out that it was Glen Farmer and his wife Susan, who were members at CCC. The Farmers invited them to a BBQ their Journey Group was holding. Mike and Katie had been considering joining a Journey Group for young adults, but the intergenerational group welcomed them warmly. Immediately the group felt like family. Finding a community where questions and doubts were okay was the turning point for Mike. One night, he asked a question of the group. Jim Ratte asked him a question in return. Something inside Mike broke. The childhood pain that he had stuffed finally spilled out. In that moment, he found acceptance and grace as the group prayed for him.
This past fall, Mike and Katie joined Foundations, CCC’s membership class. During discussion one morning, Mike realized that he hadn’t made the decision to follow Jesus. He didn’t want to be the ruler of his life anymore—he wanted to follow Jesus. So on September 29, 2019, Mike was baptized at CCC! He publicly declared that Jesus was king of his life. The celebration was extra special because Katie was also baptized the same day.
Since trusting Jesus and joining a community, Mike and Katie have experienced profound transformation. Their marriage is growing stronger. Knowing Jesus has brought peace into their lives that they never expected. Mike shared, “I think the thing that’s crazy about all of this, for a non-believer to get baptized and to start believing, looking back at your life and you see all the things that’s happened—it’s crazy to say this—but God has always been by my side. Having a family, my white ‘adopted’ family, putting us in our neighborhood with Glen and Susan...it’s crazy how it all intersects.” No matter what Mike and Katie face in the future, they rest assured that God is working in their lives for their good and his glory.
Rachel Bebee is the Project Coordinator for the Communications Team at Christ Community Church.
The Power of Prayer
Her name was Fatou, and the grittiness of her reality is something few of us can fathom: abducted off a busy West African street at the age of 15—the victim of a “bride kidnapping”—scurried to the groom’s village, raped, and forced to accept an afflicted marriage.
Witness and celebrate the power of prayer: transforming lives and communities in West Africa
Her name was Fatou*, and the grittiness of her reality is something few of us can fathom: abducted off a busy West African street at the age of 15—the victim of a “bride kidnapping”—scurried to the groom’s village, raped, and forced to accept an afflicted marriage. Weeks into the ordeal, Fatou fled her abusive husband but not the darkness of her situation. Pregnant now and desperate to the extreme, she tried on multiple occasions to kill her unborn child and later bought rope at the local market with designs on hanging herself.
The teenager’s emotional wounds were deep and festering. What could possibly begin to heal them?
For the last seventeen years, Becky and her husband, Shawn, have been serving as Alliance missionaries in West Africa. They met as missionary kids (MKs), attending boarding school together in the Ivory Coast. They returned to do an apprenticeship in Gold Kingdom in 2004 and ended up staying there for thirteen years.
“We’ve been living out a calling to walk with the poor,” Becky says. “Everywhere we work, it’s really in the context of ‘Okay Lord, where are the marginalized? Where are the vulnerable? Where are the people who need to encounter you where they’re at?ʼ”
Shawn’s work in Gold Kingdom included the launching of a sustainable fish farm in S-Town to combat food security issues and providing economic stability. Becky channeled her gifting for mercy, compassion, and justice into the plight of West Africa’s female child laborers.
Through those endeavors, and more recently through their missionary work in a slum in Senegal, Shawn & Becky have not only witnessed and joined the struggle of the marginalized and vulnerable, they have witnessed the astounding power of prayer.
After escaping from her abusive husband, Fatou made her way back to the Gold Kingdom capital where a Christian family hired her to assist in their home, a common happening in West Africa where amenities are few and hard manual labor is part of daily life. But the nightmare of Fatou’s past left her traumatized. She spent much of her day crying, hardly able to perform her duties.
Fatou’s employer, a member of a local Alliance church, knew the girl needed intensive help and reached out to the staff of a program she’d heard about at church. The outreach was called Hands of Honor, and one of its founders was Becky, an International Worker.
“We began a preventative, church-based program,” Becky says. “It’s a safe place in our city.”
She and her Alliance CAMA (Compassion & Mercy Associates) Services team started Hands of Honor in 2014 in partnership with a local Alliance church. What started with eight girls in one location now has sixty-eight girls enrolled in three locations. The program provides life-skills training, health and hygiene education, and literacy education.
“The literacy rate for women in Gold Kingdom is thirty-three percent,” Becky says. “We’re teaching them to read and write.”
The girls, ages fifteen to nineteen years old, pray and study God’s word together. Some receive vocational training. All have advocates in the Hands of Honor staff, adults who will speak up for them in situations where they are being mistreated.
Hands of Honor staff connected urgently with Fatou and got her the resources and help she needed. But more than that, they began to pray for her, and then with her.
What could possibly begin to heal this teenager’s deep and festering emotional wounds? The power of prayer.
“We saw Jesus begin to heal her deep wounds,” Becky says.
It was a joyous day, a few months later, when Fatou put her trust in Jesus. Right away, she asked to take a new name, Elizabeth.
“Jesus had healed her and given her freedom from the past. She wanted a name to express that she was now following Jesus,” Becky said.
Dramatic and ultimately joyful, Fatou’s rescue is just one example of the power of prayer the couple has witnessed.
Hands of Honor Prayer Cards
In an effort to get people to pray specifically for the girls served by Hands of Honor, Becky and the staff came up with the idea of individual prayer cards. They began distributing the cards at Alliance women’s events, and things started happening.
“From when those cards started being distributed, we saw God answering,” Becky said. “All these girls we’d been walking with, who were so close to making a decision to follow Christ, finally made that decision.”
That includes one underage teen, a former Muslim, who decided to “follow the Jesus road” and get baptized, but first, she had to call her father for permission.
“She was trying to convert her dad on the phone, saying, ‘Dad, remember how I was such an unhappy child and I’ve always been really bitter? She said, ‘I’m so happy now and I’m at peace for the first time in my life.’ He allowed her to be baptized.”
Praying for Open Eyes
Becky cites another example of powerful and answered prayer in the very behavior and attitudes of Hands of Honor staff.
“Most of our staff are lay women or pastor’s wives, and, culturally, they didn’t see anything wrong with the idea of child labor or the way that these young girls were treated. My teammate and I realized that we need to pray that our staff would understand the context of injustice and see a biblical perspective of who these girls are in Christ’s eyes because in culture’s eyes, they are called slave girls… We prayed, ‘Lord, open their eyes, help them to see these girls through your eyes.’ We prayed this for years,” and sure enough, attitudes changed.
Becky says the staff has “become these mama bears, and they are protective of the girls in their groups… It’s exciting to see how the Lord has answered our prayers and how our staff is now looking at our girls through a biblical lens, through Christ’s eyes, instead of through culture’s eyes.”
“It’s Just God’s Hand”: Shawn’s Experience at the Fish Farm
Shawn believes he’s witnessed the power of prayer at work in the story of Adama, a former Muslim who came to the Lord, was persecuted for his belief, and cast away by his family.
“When I was looking at launching a sustainable AG fish project, I needed a farm hand. A fellow missionary said, ‘What about Adama?’ When I look back, it’s just God’s hand. Adama is an awesome guy, very teachable and smart, super engaged… God transformed him from this really shy person to someone on fire for the Lord—to the point that he was actually invited to come back to the village to share these stories. That’s largely due to prayer and the Spirit’s work in Adama’s life.”
It’s only through the power of prayer that people’s hearts are going to be transformed and eyes are going to be opened.
From Hands of Honor and the fish farm to the work the couple have been overseeing in the Badalo slum, they say the power of prayer is needed more than ever, another way the congregation at Christ Community Church can continue to support the important work of all CAMA missionaries financed through Alliance Missions (attendees who give to CCC automatically contribute financially to Alliance Missions).
“When we look at prayer—even in the context of praying for laborers or praying for unity among believers—those are the things that are going to help us complete the Great Commission successfully, praying that we can fearlessly make known the gospel,” Becky said. “It’s only through the power of prayer that people’s hearts are going to be transformed and eyes are going to be opened. That’s what we’ve seen, from our staff to our girls.”
Shawn adds, “Right thinking leads to right doing, and I firmly believe that prayer puts us into that posture of having right thinking.”
Beyond praying for their work—and for CCC’s Gilbert family who is now serving in Senegal—the couple wants the congregation to dream with them for what’s next and celebrate what’s been accomplished, to “celebrate the impact our partnership in seeing lives and communities transformed.”
Becky says, “The reason Hands of Honor exists today is because of Christ Community Church. From day one, you all have been so incredibly supportive financially, by praying, by coming and sending teams. You can claim Hands of Honor as your own through your partnership and encouragement.”
Her name was Fatou, a child abducted and abused. It is now Elizabeth, and this is the reality of her redemption: Elizabeth delivered a healthy baby boy, and today, a local Christian family is in the process of adopting him. Witness and celebrate the power of prayer.
*For the safety of those involved, the woman pictured is not related to Fatou or Hands of Honor in any way. Fatou's name has also been changed for her protection.
Dan McCann is a freelance writer whose work appears in the Omaha World Herald.
A Place to Belong
After spending nearly a lifetime searching for a faith community, what Haley and Collin Reeder have found in CCC’s Deaf Ministry feels exceptionally precious. Though they grew up in different parts of the country, their stories are painfully similar and echo what many in their circumstances encounter daily—the struggle to find a place to belong.
After spending nearly a lifetime searching for a faith community, what Haley and Collin Reeder have found in CCC’s Deaf Ministry feels exceptionally precious. Though they grew up in different parts of the country, their stories are painfully similar and echo what many in their circumstances encounter daily—the struggle to find a place to belong. Collin moved numerous times growing up, and though he loved his family deeply, he often felt alone. There simply weren’t many people who understood what it was like to live in a silent world. Then Collin attended a high school for the Deaf and Blind in Florida. Suddenly he was surrounded by those with whom he could relate to in an academic environment he could readily understand. His world expanded considerably. After high school he went to college. Upon graduation, he immersed himself into the local Deaf community, taking on numerous different roles in an attempt to find his fit.
Collin experienced depression and his faith slowly starved. He went to church with his parents, but without an interpreter, the sermons had no effect. Hungry for God, he tried a different church. This one had an interpreter, but no Deaf individuals, so it offered no real sense of community. It felt as if there wasn’t a place for him in the evangelical world.
Not only was Collin struggling spiritually, he also was having a difficult time finding employment. This only added to his feelings of isolation and depression. “I started talking with my sister about moving to Omaha [where she lived],” he said. “And she kept telling me to pray about [moving here].” So he did. Then one day, she texted him with good news. “She said she’d met a lady through vocational rehab,” a service that helps those with various disabilities or injuries find work, “who could help me look [for a job] if I came to Omaha.”
After talking with his parents, Collin made a scouting trip to the Midwest, during which he learned about the Deaf community at Christ Community Church. Anxious to find the faith community he’d been longing for, he went and felt blessed by what he encountered. “I could understand what the pastor was saying!” he said. Not only that, but he found his people, those who understood him on an emotional and spiritual level. Through this experience, God ignited a two-part passion within him. Collin became excited to grow in his faith and experience Christ on an ever-deepening level, and he longed to give others in the Deaf community the same opportunity.
CCC is representative of so many languages and cultures—African, Spanish, Chinese, and the Deaf.
“We’re an unreached people group,” he said. “Christ Community Church is representative of so many languages—African, Spanish, Chinese, and the Deaf.”
Now, Collin knows that he belongs both to God and to CCC. This brings him great joy!
In bringing him to Omaha, God did so much more. Two years ago, he led Collin’s heart to his forever love, Haley Reeder, a woman to not only do life with, but to serve with as well.
Like Collin, Haley had experienced significant loneliness. Though surrounded by support and love, her soul hadn’t yet connected to Christ or his family. She first learned about God in college, where she joined a campus ministry. Once she graduated and began searching for a career, she found herself disconnected once again. She moved out of state and away from family to pursue her dreams, but this became a major struggle that led to days of sadness, hurt, and low self-esteem. “I was depressed and crying all the time,” she said. “Plus, work was really stressful. I had no community whatsoever.”
During this time, she happened to go to a Deaf event where she met Collin. “He told me about the Deaf ministry at Christ Community Church and invited me to come.” She did, and her experience mirrored his. She was surrounded by the interconnected community for which she’d been longing.
Collin and Haley are both growing in their faith and leadership within CCC’s Deaf Ministry. They help with events and outreach. Collin teaches the group. Both advocate for the Deaf community, something they feel is very important. The more involved they become and the more they use their gifts to serve, the more they come alive.
They’re amazed with all God has done in and through the Deaf Ministry in the past thirty-three years. “It started with one woman named Mary Kay,” Collin said. “God touched her heart to bring one Deaf kid, and this is what it’s grown to.” Today, the ministry has fifteen to twenty leaders who serve fifty to sixty individuals. Collin and Haley are committed to seeing the growth of the community.
When asked what their experience has shown them about God, Haley replied, “His love. When we’re in community, our love for one another grows, and we can see God’s love in one another. It’s all about reaching one more.”
Jennifer Slattery is a published author and a member at Christ Community Church.