Mission Moment 5.1.24

Brook and Mike

CBF Field Personnel, Southeast Asia

Esau is the youngest in his family. He is the third of four siblings to have come through our ministry for university students here in Southeast Asia. The others have graduated and Esau will soon. Although many times we are mentored by our mentors, sometimes, we are mentored by our mentees. We have looked at expanding our ministry team through the pandemic and we have been weighing individuals in our ministry. For two years, I have had my eyes set on Esau’s taking a leadership role.

He is not your typical leadership candidate. He is one of the younger members of our group and he is quiet. He’s not shy, but he is careful not to speak out of turn. He is slow to speak, but quick to listen. He waits for others to move into their own conversations and then he comes to me to ask questions, deep and profound questions, that the others do not expect from him.  

For the last year, Esau had been applying for a job that he knew nothing about. We have seen his helpfulness, his willingness to work when others are happy to sit, his desire to learn new things and push past his comfort zone, and his courage to lead our men’s Bible study, men who are older than he. And, recently, he said yes to joining our team after graduation.

In our country, the pandemic is just now ending, and things are returning to normal. Esau will graduate in a month and the whole world is ahead of him. Esau is helping me to see the world and ministry potential with younger eyes. His faithfulness and his helpfulness remind me of our role as servants, not just teachers. Esau is encouraging me to be quick to listen, slow to speak and to ask difficult questions, even when I know I may not like the answers or that I would have to change. Most importantly, after a long pandemic with so many losses, Esau is reminding me of God’s impact even in dark times and the hope for the next generation of Christ’s servants in this country.  

Pray. . .Give. . .Go.

More Details About the Passport Yard Sale

May 11 is the date for the yard sale to help our children raise funds to attend Passport.  It will run from 8:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon. The location will be the Mission and Fellowship Center.

People have been asking about good items to sell. Here is a list of some proven favorites:

“What-nots"
Garden Tools
Tools
Books
Camping Gear
Appliances
Games
Toys
Bicycles

Jewelry
Dishes
Casseroles
Working lamps
Exercise Equipment
Fishing gear
Furniture
Clothing (Children & Adult)

Also, just a reminder that only working items can be accepted.  We would like to have some homemade cakes, pies, breads to sell that day.  Can anyone help us with this?

Please bring your contributions to the Sunday School room beside the Choir Room.

If you have questions, please contact Cheryl Beck at 828-421-3820.  Thank you for helping our children!

Left: A decorative fire screen and office chair have already been donated for the sale.

Congregation-Wide Conversation and Called Church Conference

Our second congregation-wide conversation has been moved to Wednesday, May 1 to follow our regular first Wednesday Potluck family meal. Dr. Yelton will lead us in a group discussion that will provide information to the Pastor Search Committee team to use in calling a new pastor. 

We will also vote to approve new Church Leadership Teams and Committees(updated) to serve 2024-2025. Please make every effort to attend as your thoughts and input are so important to making this a successful process. Thank you!

Mission Moment 4.24.24

Jessica Hearne

CBF Field Personnel, Danville, VA 

I have known Daniel for many years, though his relationship with our community has not always been a positive one. Daniel had started coming to Grace and Main Bible study over 11 years ago. He was the one who finally convinced Bruce to come to my house for a community dinner, a decision that eventually led to Bruce’s getting sober and becoming a leader in our community. Bruce and Daniel were old friends, and Daniel tried several times to get sober like Bruce. The process was much more difficult for Daniel, though, and every time he relapsed, he got more frustrated with Bruce’s success in the face of his own failure. Finally, during a particularly bad relapse, Daniel broke Bruce’s wrist with a baseball bat before leaving the community, possibly for good, we thought.

So, it was a surprise to me when, about three years later, not long after moving in to the first home of his own in many years, Bruce invited Daniel to be his first hospitality guest. Even though I had been helping run my own hospitality house for years at this point, I couldn’t understand how Bruce was able to forgive the abuse that he had endured from Daniel and, more importantly, how he could trust his old friend again after such a bad break. But Daniel’s health was starting to decline, and Bruce knew that Daniel needed a place to stay where he would have a friend to help care for him.

It wasn’t long before Daniel would return the favor. Daniel was there when Bruce went to the doctor and found out the first time about the cancer. Daniel was there at the hospital every day, helping Bruce eat as much as he was able, sitting with him so he wouldn’t be alone. Daniel helped sneak Bruce’s cat into the room one evening as the nurses conveniently didn’t come by the room for a while. Daniel was at Bruce’s side when he went home to die, watching the sun set over the community urban farm that he had put so much of himself into. And after Bruce passed, Daniel stayed in Bruce’s house, offering hospitality himself to another friend, Jody, who needed a place to stay while he also tried to quit drinking. Daniel would tell me, in those times when Jody would relapse that, if Jesus could help him after all that he had done, Daniel knew Jesus could also help Jody. And when he did, Jody would need a place to stay. 

Daniel and Bruce certainly aren’t the people that I would have ever thought could be spiritual guides for me. However, I do not think I’ve ever known anyone else who could so radically embody Jesus’ command in Matthew 18 to forgive “seventy times seven” times. Daniel and Bruce lived the gospel of forgiveness: they forgave each other, just as God had forgiven them. And they both lived that forgiveness through acts of radical hospitality.

Hurray for Our Nursery Workers of the Week!

We thank Mary Lou Millwood and Judy Henderson for their willingness to serve in the nursery on April 28.  Enjoy the little ones!

There is still room on the schedule to serve “the least of these”
on Sunday mornings.  It is a blessing to see their smiles and enthusiasm as you spend
time with our infants, toddlers, and preschoolers. 
Please contact Cheryl Beck (cabeck@ncsu.edu) if you would like to help.