{"id":1579,"date":"2009-09-07T00:00:02","date_gmt":"2009-09-07T00:00:02","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/new.brethren.org\/news\/?p=1579"},"modified":"2018-09-03T03:27:15","modified_gmt":"2018-09-03T03:27:15","slug":"1579","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.brethren.org\/news\/2009\/1579\/","title":{"rendered":"Newsline Extra for September 7, 2009"},"content":{"rendered":"<h1>\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0 <img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full wp-image-1536 alignleft\" src=\"https:\/\/www.brethren.org\/news\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2018\/08\/12050.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"282\" height=\"84\" \/><\/h1>\n<table class=\"TextBox mceItemTable\" border=\"0\" cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" bgcolor=\"#ffff99\">\n<tbody>\n<tr>\n<td>Newsline is the Church of the Brethren e-mail news service. Go to <a href=\"https:\/\/secure2.convio.net\/cob\/newsline\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">www.brethren.org\/newsline<\/a> to subscribe or unsubscribe.<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n<h6><\/h6>\n<table class=\"TextBox mceItemTable\" border=\"0\" cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\">\n<tbody>\n<tr>\n<td>\n<table class=\"mceItemTable\" border=\"0\" cellspacing=\"4\" cellpadding=\"4\">\n<tbody>\n<tr>\n<td valign=\"top\">\n<h2>Newsline Extra: International Day of Prayer for Peace and Other Upcoming Events<\/h2>\n<h6><strong>Sept. 7, 2009<\/strong><\/h6>\n<p><em>&#8220;&#8230;So that in me you may have peace&#8221; (John 16:33). <\/em><\/p>\n<p><strong>INTERNATIONAL DAY OF PRAYER FOR PEACE<\/strong><br \/>\n1) Congregations plan for the International Day of Prayer for Peace.<\/p>\n<p><strong>OTHER UPCOMING EVENTS<\/strong><br \/>\n2) Brethren to be represented at G-20 Faith Leaders\u2019 Summit.<br \/>\n3) On Earth Peace sponsors Middle East Delegation.<br \/>\n4) National Youth Conference registration to begin January 5.<br \/>\n5) October is Disabilities Awareness Month.<\/p>\n<p>6) Brethren bits: More upcoming events (see column at right).<\/p>\n<p>**********************************************************<br \/>\nGo to <a href=\"https:\/\/secure2.convio.net\/cob\/newsline\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">www.brethren.org\/newsline<\/a> \u00a0to subscribe or unsubscribe to Newsline.&#8221;<br \/>\n**********************************************************<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"mceItemAnchor\" name=\"Article1\"><\/a><strong>1) Congregations plan for the International Day of Prayer for Peace.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Brethren congregations are invited to take part in the On Earth Peace campaign to observe the International Day of Prayer for Peace on Sept. 21&#8211;and so far more than 100 congregations and groups have registered to take part through On Earth Peace. The International Day of Prayer for Peace is an initiative of the World Council of Churches.<\/p>\n<p>Following are just a few of the stories from congregations and groups that are planning events, provided by the On Earth Peace campaign organizers Michael Colvin and Mimi Copp.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Manassas (Va.) Church of the Brethren and Unity in Community: <\/strong>The congregation is taking part in a vigil with Unity in Community, a local multi-faith organization in Manassas. Unity in the Community has been observing the International Day of Prayer for Peace since the beginning of the On Earth Peace campaign three years ago. Illana Naylor, one of the organizers, said that working on the event &#8220;has been a joy.&#8221; The event carries the theme &#8220;Healing for Our Community,&#8221; and will take place at the Reformed Jewish synagogue, Congregation Ner Shalom. Rabbi Jennifer Wiener attended the event last year at the Islamic center in Manassas, the Dar Al Noor Masjid, held in the middle of the Muslim holy days of Ramadan. The rabbi was warmly greeted by Muslims at the mosque, and spontaneously offered to hold this year&#8217;s International Day of Prayer for Peace event at her congregation. This year, Sept. 20 marks the beginning of Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year, and so it was agreed to hold the event on Sept. 13. Naylor is particularly excited about having the composer of the &#8220;Suite for Peace,&#8221; Ahmad Nadimi, on hand to conduct a performance of his orchestral work for choir. She reports that accommodations to the customs and traditions of the participating groups has grown each year, resulting in greater tolerance between faith groups.<\/p>\n<p><strong>First Church of the Brethren in San Diego, Calif.: <\/strong>The congregation is part of an exciting listening initiative. Linda Williams, one of the organizers, reports, &#8220;The San Diego church has wanted for years to get more closely connected with&#8211;and to better serve&#8211;our immediate neighborhood. We were recently blessed with the most perfect open door one could imagine!&#8221; Marigold Hernly, who has recently become a part of the church family, is closely connected with neighborhood groups and put the church in contact with a facilitator for the listening process connected with the California Endowment Grant. The endowment has chosen City Heights, the area of San Diego where the church is located, for a Healthy Cities Grant, part of the &#8220;Building Health Communities Initiative.&#8221; &#8220;This grant will provide more than $10 million over the next 10 years to work on youth and health issues&#8211;including preventing Youth Violence!&#8221; Williams reports. &#8220;The California Endowment has given grants to 14 other locations in California, but the grant to City Heights is the only one where the decision about what project to pursue is being made at the grassroots level via a listening initiative.&#8221; First Church of the Brethren San Diego is opening its building to host a listening process meeting for neighbors to give input about how grant money may be used. Williams anticipates that in the City Heights neighborhood, the focus may include gang violence, school attendance, and nutrition. The issues that arise from listening efforts in City Heights will form the substance of the prayers that will be raised by San Diego First Church of the Brethren and the other participating congregations during their International Day of Prayer for Peace vigil.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Prince of Peace Church of the Brethren, South Bend, Ind.:<\/strong> The South Bend International Day of Prayer for Peace committee formed three years ago with On Earth Peace&#8217;s first campaign, at the impetus of Lois Clark, a member of the congregation. This year the group is holding a vigil on Sept. 21 and then an extended listening initiative that will culminate on Martin Luther King Jr. Day. Clark reports the group has &#8220;given the spirit full reign here&#8221; in their desire to have a season of listening particularly about youth violence, which they see as a public health crisis. Driving this effort is a diverse group of people and organizations including United Religious Community, Church Women United, CURE (a group that holds a prayer circle on each Thursday after a shooting or killing), TAP (Transforming Action into Power), Mennonite pastor Andre Stoner who has organized the Center for Peace and Nonviolence, Michiana Peace and Justice Coalition of union leaders and Notre Dame University professors and other community members, community outreach staff from a local hospital, the director of the Charles Martin Center (named after a young man who was killed in South Bend), and a person who works in the criminal justice system.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Green Tree Church of the Brethren, Oaks, Pa.: <\/strong>Two years ago, pastor David Leiter got a call from pastor Nathan at Bethel Baptist Church, a neighboring African-American congregation, who had read Leiter\u2019s book &#8220;Neglected Voices: Peace in the New Testament&#8221; and wanted to talk more about it. That phone call started a friendship between the pastors, and has brought the two to organize a joint worship service for their congregations on the International Day of Prayer for Peace. The service will be held Sept. 20 at Bethel Baptist, followed by a meal. The two congregations are inviting the community to attend and asking other local clergy to participate in leadership. Pastor Nathan will preach on &#8220;Peace and Violence: Broadening our Definitions.&#8221; After the sermon, Leiter will offer a challenge about where the community may go from here.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Mack Memorial Church of the Brethren, Dayton, Ohio: <\/strong>The congregation has a whole weekend of activities planned for the International day of Prayer for Peace. On Saturday, Sept. 19, the church will participate in a peace festival at the Dayton Peace Museum. On Sunday, Sept. 20, they will worship with five other churches at Island Park, where two rivers converge. The theme will be, &#8220;Peace Like a River.&#8221; On Monday, Sept. 21, the congregation will hold a vigil in front of the church, and has invited other churches in the area to join in the vigil. The theme will be, &#8220;Peace in the Community.&#8221; The Dayton area, since the economic crisis, has experienced an increase in petty theft, juveniles breaking into houses, more gang activity, and violent crime, according to a report from the church. Mack Memorial is interested in finding ways to gather people together and listen to their needs. Even though the congregation is smaller than in the past, it has adopted a vision calling for the church to be the hands and feet of the community.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Middlebury (Ind.) Church of the Brethren:<\/strong> According to the website of this small town (population 3,191), &#8220;Middlebury is everyone\u2019s idea of a small town: the neighborhood butcher, the Main Street hardware store, the proud shop owner; all busy serving residents and visitors alike in a thriving Main Street historic district. Amish and \u2018English\u2019 come to Middlebury to do business and trade.&#8221; Yet Middlebury, in the heart of Elkhart County, has been hit hard by the economic downturn. Melissa Troyer, the congregation\u2019s coordinator for the International Day of Prayer for Peace, reports that in previous years, participating churches have been the four or five Mennonite and Brethren congregations in the area. This year, to focus on the economic situation, the community is going to hold an International Day of Prayer for Peace celebration &#8220;with all the groups around town who have worked towards the struggles of our 18 percent unemployment&#8230;. It won&#8217;t be a quiet vigil, rather we&#8217;re having probably eight churches and five different music groups involved. The theme will be taken from Matthew 5:23-24.&#8221; The celebration will have three focus areas: a story of reconciliation between two Mennonite congregations that split 80 years ago over issues that are no longer relevant, and are now beginning to merge in light of their economic circumstances; activities of the Middlebury Ministerium including the Community Food Pantry that used to feed 12 families a week and is now feeding 200; and recognition of the new Middlebury Area Recovery Committee&#8211;an effort to coordinate church and civic programs that are helping people.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Mechanic Grove Church of the Brethren, Quarryville, Pa.: <\/strong>The congregation\u2019s peace committee has made an intentional and concerted effort to involve the children of the church in learning and talking about peacemaking, according to a report from pastor Jim Rhen. The church participated this year in a &#8220;Kids as Peacemakers&#8221; mural project as part of a larger initiative through the Lancaster Interchurch Peace Witness. The church used curriculum and resources provided by Lancaster Interchurch Peace Witness for a six-week teaching time with the 20-30 children in their congregation, culminating in the children painting two mural boards. The murals incorporated what the children experienced in learning and talking about peacemaking. The murals will be displayed in an Art Walk, along with others from the county, on Sept. 19 at the Lancaster Clipper baseball stadium. The Barnstormers team will donate $4 from the price of admission to that day&#8217;s game to the Lancaster Interchurch Peace Witness.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Bridgewater (Va.) Church of the Brethren: <\/strong>The congregation is hosting a premier showing of &#8220;I\u2019d Like to Buy an Enemy&#8221; by Ted &amp; Company Theater Works on Sept. 21 at 7 p.m. Other congregations are invited to attend. The show by Mennonite comedian Ted Swartz and company will be &#8220;an evening of drama&#8230;poignant and hilarious,&#8221; according to an announcement in the Shenandoah District newsletter. The Russian Baptist youth choir also is scheduled to sing. A donation of $5 is suggested to cover costs. &#8220;In the meantime, we trust you will be praying for peace in your community and in the world. There are so many situations people are facing where prayer can make a difference,&#8221; the announcement said. For more information contact Roma Jo Thompson at Rthompson5@juno.com or 540-515-3581.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Portland (Ore.) Peace Church of the Brethren: <\/strong>On Sunday, Sept. 20, the congregation plans a whole day of peace-related activities, including a morning worship service led by Brethren folksinger Mike Stern, an afternoon prayer vigil with the Metanoia Peace Community, an afternon children&#8217;s folk music concert by Stern, and an evening program with a delegation from the World Friendship Center in Hiroshima, Japan.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Church of the Brethren General Offices, Elgin, Ill.: <\/strong>General secretary Stan Noffsinger will lead a special chapel service for employees, volunteers, and guests to observe the International Day of Prayer for Peace. Because chapel services at the General Offices are held every Wednesday at 9:15 a.m., this special service will be on Wednesday, Sept. 16.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><strong><a class=\"mceItemAnchor\" name=\"Article2\"><\/a>2) Brethren to be represented at G-20 Faith Leaders\u2019 Summit.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The Church of the Brethren will be represented at a &#8220;G-20 Faith Leaders\u2019 Summit&#8221; in Pittsburgh, Pa., on Sept. 22-23, on the eve of a meeting of world leaders called the Group of 20. Vernne Greiner, a physician and member of the Church of the Brethren\u2019s Mission and Ministry Board, will attend to represent the denomination.<\/p>\n<p>The summit is sponsored by Bread for the World along with the Alliance to End Hunger and partner organizations. The Church of the Brethren was one of the denominations invited to take part.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;Leaders of the world&#8217;s richest countries recently pledged $20 billion to reduce hunger,&#8221; said Bread for the World in a statement on its website at <a href=\"http:\/\/www.bread.org\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">http:\/\/www.bread.org\/<\/a> . At a meeting in Italy in July, the G-8 group of nations pledged $20 billion, primarily invested in agriculture, to combat hunger in developing countries.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;The September Group of 20 Summit in Pittsburgh presents a unique opportunity for US religious leaders to raise our concern for the plight of the world\u2019s poor,&#8221; Bread for the World said. The G-20 brings together major industrialized and developing countries to discuss key issues in the global economy. The countries represented account for approximately 90 percent of global gross national product, 80 percent of world trade, and two-thirds of the world\u2019s population, according to the organization. The faith leaders\u2019 meeting will help represent &#8220;the needs of the world\u2019s 1.02 billion hungry people&#8221; as the G-20 meetings begin.<\/p>\n<p>Online resources related to the G-20 Faith Leaders\u2019 Summit offered by Bread for the World. Include a small-group study guide titled &#8220;The G-20 Pittsburgh Summit: Reflections for People of Faith,&#8221; and &#8220;Bread Notes: Hunger Reaches Record Levels&#8221; on the recent increase in hunger around the world. Go to <a href=\"http:\/\/www.bread.org\/learn\/global-hunger-issues\/faith-leaders-summit.html\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">http:\/\/www.bread.org\/learn\/global-hunger-issues\/faith-leaders-summit.html<\/a> .<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><strong><a class=\"mceItemAnchor\" name=\"Article3\"><\/a>3) On Earth Peace sponsors Middle East Delegation.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>On Earth Peace is sponsoring a Middle East Delegation to Israel\/Palestine on Jan. 6-18, 2010. The delegation leader will be On Earth Peace executive director Bob Gross. The delegation is co-sponsored with CPT, a violence-reduction project of Brethren and Mennonite congregations and Friends meetings. CPT has maintained a team of trained peacemakers in the West Bank since June 1996.<\/p>\n<p>The delegation will meet with Israeli and Palestinian peace and human rights workers, will join the CPT team in Palestine for some accompaniment and documentation work, and will join in a public witness to nonviolently confront injustice and violence in the area.<\/p>\n<p>Participants should be prepared to spend 12 days in Israel\/Palestine, prepare for the trip by becoming familiar with the current conditions there, communicate their experiences to local congregations and media upon return, and raise $2,750 to cover cost of the trip from a designated point in North America. The cost includes international airfare, all in-country travel, simple accommodations, two meals per day, honoraria, and delegation fees. On Earth Peace will assist Church of the Brethren members in raising funds for the trip by offering ideas, networking, and limited scholarships.<\/p>\n<p>For more information contact Bob Gross at <a title=\"E-mail bgross@onearthpeace.org\" href=\"mailto:bgross@onearthpeace.org\">bgross@onearthpeace.org<\/a> \u00a0or 260-982-7751.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><strong><a class=\"mceItemAnchor\" name=\"Article4\"><\/a>4) National Youth Conference registration to begin Jan. 5.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Online registration for National Youth Conference (NYC) 2010 is scheduled to begin on Jan. 5, 2010, at 8 p.m. central time. NYC is an event for Church of the Brethren senior high youth that is offered every four years by the denomination\u2019s Youth and Young Adult Ministry.<\/p>\n<p>The 2010 NYC will take place July 17-22 on the campus of Colorado State University in Fort Collins, with the theme &#8220;More than Meets the Eye&#8221; (2 Corinthians 4:6-10 and 16-18).<\/p>\n<p>NYC coordinators Audrey Hollenberg and Emily LaPrade, who are Brethren Volunteer Service workers, will assist Youth and Young Adult Ministry director Becky Ullom and the National Youth Cabinet in organizing the conference.<\/p>\n<p>Cost of early registration for NYC is $425, increasing to $450 after Feb. 15. The registration fee includes lodging and meals. Registration will close on April 5, 2010. A deposit of $200 is due at time of registration, with the balance due by April 5. The money is nonrefundable. NYC t-shirts costing $15 each can be ordered at the time of registration.<\/p>\n<p>Church of the Brethren musician and songwriter Shawn Kirchner has been commissioned to write the NYC Theme Song. A Speech Contest and a Music Contest are open to youth who will be attending NYC.<\/p>\n<p>In the speech contest, youth are invited to submit speeches based on the NYC theme. Two youth will be chosen to speak in front of the conference during a worship service. &#8220;We need enthusiastic youth that will be able to inspire others with their words,&#8221; said an invitation from the Youth and Young Adult Ministry. Entries must include a written and audio copy of the speech, which should be 500-700 words (about 10 minutes spoken).<\/p>\n<p>During the same worship service, the winning song in the music contest will be played or the writer will participate in the performance of the song. Youth are invited to submit a song based on the NYC theme and written for use in worship. The winning song will be included in the conference book. Songs should be three-to-five minutes in length, and entries should include an audio recording on CD as well as a copy of the lyrics.<\/p>\n<p>Submissions of speeches and songs are due by Jan. 1, 2010. Send entries to the NYC Office, 1451 Dundee Ave., Elgin, IL 60120. For more information go to <a href=\"http:\/\/www.2010nyc.org\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">http:\/\/www.2010nyc.org\/<\/a> .<\/p>\n<p>The Youth and Young Adult Ministry also has issued a call for volunteer youth workers to assist with the conference. &#8220;Youth workers are an essential part of the NYC staff, helping to carry out the programs and plans of the National Youth Cabinet as well as making sure that no details are missed,&#8221; said the announcement. &#8220;We need committed, focused, and enthusiastic people to make NYC run smoothly.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Youth workers must be willing and ready to work long hours and commit to be present for the entire week of NYC. Families of youth workers are not permitted to accompany volunteers. Youth workers are expected to arrive in the early afternoon of July 16, the day before the conference begins, and to be available to work through the evening of July 22. The registration fee will be waived for youth workers, and travel expenses will be paid (provided the Youth and Young Adult Ministry books the airline tickets).<\/p>\n<p>To apply for a youth worker position, complete an application form and mail it postmarked by Nov. 1. For an application form contact the NYC Office at 800-323-8039.<\/p>\n<p>In related news, McPherson (Kan.) College is offering free overnight lodging and breakfast to NYC attendees either on the way to or on the way home from the conference.\u00a0In exchange for this hospitality, the college is asking guests to take a one-hour tour.\u00a0Contact Tom Hurst, director of Campus Ministries, at <a title=\"E-mail hurstt@mcpherson.edu\" href=\"mailto:hurstt@mcpherson.edu\">hurstt@mcpherson.edu<\/a> \u00a0or 620-242-0503.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><strong><a class=\"mceItemAnchor\" name=\"Article5\"><\/a>5) October is Disabilities Awareness Month.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>During the month of October, Brethren congregations are encouraged to observe Disabilities Awareness Month. Resources and information for those observing the month have been made available online at www.brethren.org by the Church of the Brethren\u2019s Caring Ministries.<\/p>\n<p>The theme scripture for Disabilities Awareness Month is: &#8220;For my house shall be a house for all people&#8221; (Isaiah 56:7). An introduction to the observance by Pat Challenger notes, &#8220;It is necessary for special needs folks both young and old to experience belonging and inclusion within God&#8217;s houses&#8230;. We as churches need to recognize the talents that people with special needs can bring to our congregations.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Resources and information at the web page include a number of ideas for awareness-raising activities submitted by Cindy Barnum-Steggerda, such as a &#8220;field trip&#8221; through the church building in a wheel chair; a short guideline for doing a congregational self-evaluation, that begins by noting that &#8220;becoming an accessible congregation is an ongoing process&#8221;; and ideas for how churches may acquire funding to improve accessibility. Go to <a href=\"https:\/\/secure2.convio.net\/cob\/site\/PageServer?pagename=grow_health_disabilities_awareness_month\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">http:\/\/www.brethren.org\/site\/PageServer?pagename=grow_health_disabilities_awareness_month<\/a> \u00a0to find the online resources and information.<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"aligncenter wp-image-1581\" src=\"https:\/\/www.brethren.org\/news\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2018\/09\/chicago-peace-rally-by-Cheryl-BC-PICT0138.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"265\" height=\"183\" \/><br \/>\n<em>Find out more about the International Day of Prayer for Peace at <\/em><a href=\"http:\/\/www.onearthpeace.org\/drupal\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><em>http:\/\/www.onearthpeace.org\/<br \/>\ndrupal\/<\/em><\/a><em>\u00a0. The online resources\u00a0provided by On Earth Peace include background on the event&#8211;which was initiated by the World Council of Churches and its Decade to Overcome Violence program&#8211;as well as a variety of worship resources, a list of participating groups, sample press releases for use by congregations, and much more.<\/em>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"aligncenter size-full wp-image-1561\" src=\"https:\/\/www.brethren.org\/news\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2018\/09\/noac-conference.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"200\" height=\"103\" \/><\/p>\n<p><em>Coverage of the Church of the Brethren National Older Adult Conference (NOAC) begins this evening, Sept. 7, at\u00a0<\/em><em> <a href=\"https:\/\/secure2.convio.net\/cob\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">http:\/\/www.brethren.org\/<\/a> <\/em><em>. Coverage will be offered through the close of the conference on Friday, Sept. 11. Some 900 older adults are expected at NOAC, to meet on the theme &#8220;Legacies of Wisdom: Weaving Old and New&#8221; (1 Corinthians 2:6-7). Coverage offered from on-site at Lake Junaluska, N.C., includes photo albums, reports from main sessions and other events, and the daily news sheet &#8220;NOAC Notes.&#8221; Go to <\/em><a href=\"https:\/\/secure2.convio.net\/cob\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><em>www.brethren.org<\/em><\/a><em> \u00a0and click on the word &#8220;News&#8221; at the bottom of the page to find the links to NOAC news or go directly to <a href=\"https:\/\/secure2.convio.net\/cob\/site\/PageServer?pagename=cob_news_NOAC2009\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">http:\/\/www.brethren.org\/site\/<br \/>\nPageServer?pagename=cob_news_NOAC2009<\/a>\u00a0.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<h2>More upcoming events<\/h2>\n<p><strong>A deacon ministry workshop,<\/strong> &#8220;The Challenges of Change: Growing the Role of Deacons&#8221; will be held in Idaho District on Sept. 26 from 9 a.m.-3 p.m. at Nampa (Idaho) Church of the Brethren. The event will be led by Donna Kline, director of the Church of the Brethren\u2019s Deacon Ministry and Disability Ministry, and editor of &#8220;Caregiving&#8221; magazine. Topics include &#8220;What are deacons supposed to do, anyways?&#8221; &#8220;The art of listening,&#8221; &#8220;Offering support in times of grief and loss,&#8221; and &#8220;Deacon spirituality.&#8221; Cost is $10. Participants are invited to bring a dish to share for lunch. To register contact Howard Garwick at <a title=\"E-mail hgarwick@yahoo.com\" href=\"mailto:hgarwick@yahoo.com\">hgarwick@yahoo.com<\/a> \u00a0or 208-466-2896.<\/p>\n<p>The Church of the Brethren\u2019s Global Food Crisis Fund is encouraging attention to the <strong>35th anniversary of Bread for the World<\/strong> and a tour by its founder Art Simon. The Global Food Crisis ministry &#8220;has come to consider Bread for the World a full-fledged partner,&#8221; said manager Howard Royer. The 18-city nationwide tour promotes a new book by Simon, &#8220;The Rising of Bread for the World: An Outcry of Citizens Against Hunger.&#8221; The tour began Sept. 1 in Sunnyvale, Calif., and continues through the fall with stops in cities such as Los Angeles, Seattle, Portland, Chicago, Long Island, Cincinnati, and Washington, D.C., among others. For details, go to <a href=\"http:\/\/www.bread.org\/get-involved\/community\/events-simon.html\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">http:\/\/www.bread.org\/get-<br \/>\ninvolved\/community\/events-<br \/>\nsimon.html<\/a> .<\/p>\n<p><strong>Brethren Volunteer Service <\/strong>(BVS) has announced the start of its fall orientation, to be held Sept. 20-Oct. 9 at the Brethren Service Center in New Windsor, Md. This will be the 286th unit of BVS and will include 23 volunteers&#8211;nine from Germany, one from Canada, and the remaining 13 (nine of whom are Brethren) from around the US.\u00a0The unit will spend three weeks exploring project possibilities and topics of community building, peace, social justice, faith sharing, sustainable agriculture, and more.\u00a0They will have the opportunity for several work days in the New Windsor area and in Harrisburg, Pa.\u00a0Contact the BVS office at 800-323-8039.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Upcoming courses <\/strong>offered by the Brethren Academy for Ministerial Leadership include &#8220;Passions of Youth, Practices of Christ&#8221; with instructor Russell Haitch, to be taught at Codorus (Pa.) Church of the Brethren on Sept. 24-27; &#8220;Judges,&#8221; an online course with instructor Susan Jeffers, to be taught Sept. 28-Nov. 6 (register through the Susquehanna Valley Ministry Center, go to <a href=\"http:\/\/www.read-the-bible.org\/SVMC-Judges.htm\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">www.read-the-bible.org\/<br \/>\nSVMC-Judges.htm<\/a> \u00a0); and &#8220;Brethren Polity and Practice&#8221; with instructor Warren Eshbach, to be taught at the Young Center on the campus of Elizabethtown (Pa.) College on Nov. 20-22 (contact the Susquehanna Valley Ministry Center at <a title=\"E-mail SVMC@etown.edu\" href=\"mailto:SVMC@etown.edu\">SVMC@etown.edu<\/a> \u00a0or 717-361-1450). &#8220;Messages of Peace in the Old Testament&#8221; is a continuing education event led by David Leiter on Sept. 16 at Elizabethtown (Pa.) College (contact <a title=\"E-mail svmc@etown.edu\" href=\"mailto:svmc@etown.edu\">svmc@etown.edu<\/a> \u00a0or 717-361-1450). Registration brochures for these and other training opportunities are available through the Brethren Academy for Ministerial Leadership, contact <a title=\"E-mail academy@bethanyseminary.edu\" href=\"mailto:academy@bethanyseminary.edu\">academy@bethanyseminary.edu<\/a> \u00a0or 800-287-8822 ext 1824.<\/p>\n<p><strong>The 39th Annual Dunker Church Service at the Antietam National Battlefield<\/strong> in Sharpsburg, Md., will be held Sunday, Sept 13, at 3 p.m. Jeff Bach, a Church of the Brethren historian and director of the Young Center at Elizabethtown (Pa.) College, will preach for this worship service, held in the restored Mumma Meeting House commonly referred to as the Dunker Church. The church was built in 1853 and heavily damaged by the Sept. 17, 1862, Battle of Antietam. After extensive repairs were made, services resumed in the summer of 1864. The service is sponsored by area Churches of the Brethren. Bach also will preach at Sharpsburg Church of the Brethren that Sunday morning at 9:30 am. For more information contact Eddie Edmonds at 304-267-4135 or Tom Fralin at 301-432-2653.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Bridgewater (Va.) Church of the Brethren<\/strong> hosts a production of &#8220;The Final Journey of John Kline,&#8221; about the Civil War-era Brethren elder and peace martyr, on Oct. 10 at 7:30 p.m. The performance benefits an effort to preserve the John Kline Homestead in Broadway, Va., which is threatened by proposed development. The John Kline Homestead Trust hopes to raise an initial $425,000 to purchase the property by the end of 2009. Kline was a legendary leader in Brethren history&#8211;a preacher and healer who practiced natural medicine and traveled more than 100,000 miles on horseback serving people on both sides of the Mason-Dixon Line. During the Civil War, he helped keep the Brethren unified in an anti-slavery stance. In 1864, returning from one of his preaching missions, he was ambushed by Confederate irregulars and killed near his home. &#8220;The Final Journey of John Kline&#8221; by Lee Kr\u00e4henb\u00fchl was commissioned as part of the 200th anniversary of Kline\u2019s 1797 birth. The New Millennium Players of Everett (Pa.) Church of the Brethren, directed by pastor Frank Ramirez, will present the play. An offering will support the John Kline Homestead Preservation Trust. For more information contact Dale V. Ulrich at <a title=\"E-mail daulrich@comcast.net\" href=\"mailto:daulrich@comcast.net\">daulrich@comcast.net<\/a> .<\/p>\n<p><strong>Mutual Kumquat<\/strong> will give a concert at Beacon Heights Church of the Brethren in Fort Wayne, Ind., on Sept. 19 at 7 p.m. Proceeds from this Annual Benefit Concert of the congregation will go to the Center for Nonviolence. Mutual Kumquat features Seth Hendricks, Chris Good, Drue Gray, Jacob Jolliff, and Ben Long&#8211;a Brethren group of singer\/songwriters accompanied by a mandolin virtuoso and the rhythms of hand drums. A release describes the band as &#8220;Inspired by visions of radical, loving, creative communities living in mutual relationship and the sweet yet tart, tiny but powerpacked-with-flavor wonder fruit that is a kumquat.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p><strong>Midland (Va.) Church of the Brethren<\/strong> is offering sessions on the theme, &#8220;All We Are Saying&#8230;Is Give Peace a Chance&#8221; on the weekend of Sept. 19-20. A workshop will be offered that Saturday from 1-4 p.m. On Sunday, David Radcliff of the New Community Project&#8211;a Brethren-related nonprofit working at earth care and human justice&#8211;will teach peace to the children during Sunday school at 10 a.m. and lead worship at 11 a.m.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Three districts will hold conferences<\/strong> on the weekend of Sept. 18-19: Northern Indiana District Conference in Milford, Ind.; West Marva District Conference in Moorefield, W.Va.; and Southern Pennsylvania District Conference at Bunkertown Church of the Brethren in McAlisterville, Pa.<\/p>\n<p><strong>The 33rd annual Brethren Disaster Relief Auction<\/strong> will be held on Sept. 24-25 at the Lebanon (Pa.) County Expo Center and Fairgrounds. The event is a joint effort of the Church of the Brethren\u2019s Atlantic Northeast and Southern Pennsylvania Districts. For more information go to <a href=\"http:\/\/www.brethrenauction.org\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">http:\/\/www.brethrenauction.org\/<\/a> .<\/p>\n<p><strong>The annual Good Samaritan Banquet <\/strong>of the Village at Morrisons Cove, a Church of the Brethren retirement community in Martinsburg, Pa., is on Sept. 19. The banquet raises support for residents who have outlived their resources. The event begins with a reception at 5:30 p.m. at the Casino in Altoona, Pa. The program of sacred music features members of University Baptist and Brethren Church in State College, Pa., directed by Chris Kiver, director of Penn State Glee Club and Chamber Singers and winner of two Grammy Awards in 2006 for best Choral Music Performance and best Classical Album. The event also celebrates the opening of a new Village Center. The price of a ticket is $100. Call 814-793-2249.<\/p>\n<p><strong>&#8220;Steward Leaders in Changing Times&#8221;<\/strong> is offered by the Ecumenical Stewardship Center on Nov. 30-Dec. 3 at the Hilton Marco Island Resort in Florida. The Church of the Brethren is a member denomination of the Ecumenical Stewardship Center. The event is planned for congregational leaders to learn, network, share, and worship together. Featured speakers include Anthony B. Robinson, president of Congregational Leadership Northwest and author of &#8220;Transforming Congregational Culture&#8221;; Peter Steinke, author of &#8220;Congregational Leadership in Anxious Times&#8221; and founder of Healthy Congregations; and Mardi Tindal, executive director at Five Oaks Retreat Center, and participant in the Center for Courage and Renewal facilitator preparation program provided by Parker J. Palmer. To register and to receive group or first-time attendee discounts, contact Carol Bowman, coordinator of stewardship formation and education for the Church of the Brethren, at <a title=\"E-mail cbowman@brethren.org\" href=\"mailto:cbowman@brethren.org\">cbowman@brethren.org<\/a> .<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n<h6><\/h6>\n<table class=\"TextBox mceItemTable\" border=\"0\" cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"2\" align=\"left\">\n<tbody>\n<tr>\n<td>\n<table class=\"mceItemTable\" border=\"0\" width=\"100%\" cellpadding=\"0\" align=\"left\" bgcolor=\"#ffff99\">\n<tbody>\n<tr>\n<td>\u00a0Newsline is produced by Cheryl Brumbaugh-Cayford, director of news services for the Church of the Brethren, <a title=\"E-mail cobnews@brethren.org\" href=\"mailto:cobnews@brethren.org\">cobnews@brethren.org<\/a> \u00a0or 800-323-8039 ext. 260. Newsline appears every other Wednesday, with other special issues sent as needed. Michael Colvin and Mimi Copp contributed to this report. The next regularly scheduled issue is set for Sept. 9. Newsline stories may be reprinted if Newsline is cited as the source.\u00a0For more Brethren news and features, go to the News page at <a href=\"https:\/\/secure2.convio.net\/cob\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">http:\/\/www.brethren.org\/<\/a> or subscribe to Messenger magazine, call 800-323-8039 ext. 247.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/secure2.convio.net\/cob\/site\/R?i=z1mfmGLoL01UDGJXBp2wCA..\">Forward\u00a0Newsline to a friend<\/a><\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/secure2.convio.net\/cob\/site\/R?i=kBaPxpLPJb3Y_bpiI6nB0Q..\">Subscribe to Newsline<\/a><\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/secure2.convio.net\/cob\/site\/CO?i=KWqdPu_9utQhvo6xlCIB1ukMlteoXQH1&amp;cid=1081\">Unsubscribe from receiving email, or change your email preferences.<\/a><\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n<div class=\"PoweredByConvio\"><a href=\"http:\/\/www.convio.com\/site\/PageServer?pagename=support\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/secure2.convio.net\/cob\/images\/content\/pagebuilder\/poweredbyconvio.gif\" alt=\"Powered by Convio.\" border=\"0\" \/> <\/a><\/div>\n<div>\n<form><span class=\"NetscapeFix\"><textarea id=\"email_plain_text\" cols=\"100\" name=\"email_plain_text\" readonly=\"readonly\" rows=\"40\">Newsline: The Church of the Brethren e-mail news service. &lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;Go to www.brethren.org\/newsline to subscribe or unsubscribe.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;Newsline Extra: International Day of Prayer for Peace and Other&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nUpcoming Events&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;Sept. 7, 2009&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;&#8221;&#8230;So that in me you may have peace&#8221; (John 16:33).&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;INTERNATIONAL DAY OF PRAYER FOR PEACE&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\n1) Congregations plan for the International Day of Prayer for Peace.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;OTHER UPCOMING EVENTS&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\n2) Brethren to be represented at G-20 Faith Leaders&#8217; Summit.&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\n3) On Earth Peace sponsors Middle East Delegation.&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\n4) National Youth Conference registration to begin January 5.&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\n5) October is Disabilities Awareness Month.&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\n6) Brethren bits: More upcoming events.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;**********************************************************&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nGo to www.brethren.org\/newsline to subscribe or unsubscribe to Newsline.&#8221;&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\n**********************************************************&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;1) Congregations plan for the International Day of Prayer for Peace.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;Brethren congregations are invited to take part in the On Earth Peace&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\ncampaign to observe the International Day of Prayer for Peace on Sept.&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\n21&#8211;and so far more than 100 congregations and groups have registered&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nto take part through On Earth Peace. The International Day of Prayer&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nfor Peace is an initiative of the World Council of Churches.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;Following are just a few of the stories from congregations and groups&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nthat are planning events, provided by the On Earth Peace campaign&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\norganizers Michael Colvin and Mimi Copp.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;Manassas (Va.) Church of the Brethren and Unity in Community: The&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\ncongregation is taking part in a vigil with Unity in Community, a&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nlocal multi-faith organization in Manassas. Unity in the Community has&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nbeen observing the International Day of Prayer for Peace since the&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nbeginning of the On Earth Peace campaign three years ago. Illana&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nNaylor, one of the organizers, said that working on the event &#8220;has&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nbeen a joy.&#8221; The event carries the theme &#8220;Healing for Our Community,&#8221;&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nand will take place at the Reformed Jewish synagogue, Congregation Ner&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nShalom. Rabbi Jennifer Wiener attended the event last year at the&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nIslamic center in Manassas, the Dar Al Noor Masjid, held in the middle&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nof the Muslim holy days of Ramadan. The rabbi was warmly greeted by&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nMuslims at the mosque, and spontaneously offered to hold this year&#8217;s&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nInternational Day of Prayer for Peace event at her congregation. This&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nyear, Sept. 20 marks the beginning of Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nYear, and so it was agreed to hold the event on Sept. 13. Naylor is&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nparticularly excited about having the composer of the &#8220;Suite for&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nPeace,&#8221; Ahmad Nadimi, on hand to conduct a performance of his&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\norchestral work for choir. She reports that accommodations to the&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\ncustoms and traditions of the participating groups has grown each&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nyear, resulting in greater tolerance between faith groups.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;First Church of the Brethren in San Diego, Calif.: The congregation is&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\npart of an exciting listening initiative. Linda Williams, one of the&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\norganizers, reports, &#8220;The San Diego church has wanted for years to get&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nmore closely connected with&#8211;and to better serve&#8211;our immediate&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nneighborhood. We were recently blessed with the most perfect open door&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\none could imagine!&#8221; Marigold Hernly, who has recently become a part of&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nthe church family, is closely connected with neighborhood groups and&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nput the church in contact with a facilitator for the listening process&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nconnected with the California Endowment Grant. The endowment has&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nchosen City Heights, the area of San Diego where the church is&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nlocated, for a Healthy Cities Grant, part of the &#8220;Building Health&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nCommunities Initiative.&#8221; &#8220;This grant will provide more than $10&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nmillion over the next 10 years to work on youth and health&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nissues&#8211;including preventing Youth Violence!&#8221; Williams reports. &#8220;The&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nCalifornia Endowment has given grants to 14 other locations in&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nCalifornia, but the grant to City Heights is the only one where the&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\ndecision about what project to pursue is being made at the grassroots&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nlevel via a listening initiative.&#8221; First Church of the Brethren San&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nDiego is opening its building to host a listening process meeting for&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nneighbors to give input about how grant money may be used. Williams&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nanticipates that in the City Heights neighborhood, the focus may&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\ninclude gang violence, school attendance, and nutrition. The issues&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nthat arise from listening efforts in City Heights will form the&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nsubstance of the prayers that will be raised by San Diego First Church&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nof the Brethren and the other participating congregations during their&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nInternational Day of Prayer for Peace vigil.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;Prince of Peace Church of the Brethren, South Bend, Ind.: The South&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nBend International Day of Prayer for Peace committee formed three&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nyears ago with On Earth Peace&#8217;s first campaign, at the impetus of Lois&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nClark, a member of the congregation. This year the group is holding a&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nvigil on Sept. 21 and then an extended listening initiative that will&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nculminate on Martin Luther King Jr. Day. Clark reports the group has&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\n&#8220;given the spirit full reign here&#8221; in their desire to have a season of&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nlistening particularly about youth violence, which they see as a&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\npublic health crisis. Driving this effort is a diverse group of people&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nand organizations including United Religious Community, Church Women&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nUnited, CURE (a group that holds a prayer circle on each Thursday&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nafter a shooting or killing), TAP (Transforming Action into Power),&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nMennonite pastor Andre Stoner who has organized the Center for Peace&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nand Nonviolence, Michiana Peace and Justice Coalition of union leaders&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nand Notre Dame University professors and other community members,&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\ncommunity outreach staff from a local hospital, the director of the&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nCharles Martin Center (named after a young man who was killed in South&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nBend), and a person who works in the criminal justice system.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;Green Tree Church of the Brethren, Oaks, Pa.: Two years ago, pastor&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nDavid Leiter got a call from pastor Nathan at Bethel Baptist Church, a&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nneighboring African-American congregation, who had read Leiter&#8217;s&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nbook &#8220;Neglected Voices: Peace in the New Testament&#8221; and wanted to talk&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nmore about it. That phone call started a friendship between the&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\npastors, and has brought the two to organize a joint worship service&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nfor their congregations on the International Day of Prayer for Peace.&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nThe service will be held Sept. 20 at Bethel Baptist, followed by a&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nmeal. The two congregations are inviting the community to attend and&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nasking other local clergy to participate in leadership. Pastor Nathan&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nwill preach on &#8220;Peace and Violence: Broadening our Definitions.&#8221; After&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nthe sermon, Leiter will offer a challenge about where the community&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nmay go from here.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;Mack Memorial Church of the Brethren, Dayton, Ohio: The congregation&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nhas a whole weekend of activities planned for the International day of&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nPrayer for Peace. On Saturday, Sept. 19, the church will participate&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nin a peace festival at the Dayton Peace Museum. On Sunday, Sept. 20,&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nthey will worship with five other churches at Island Park, where two&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nrivers converge. The theme will be, &#8220;Peace Like a River.&#8221; On Monday,&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nSept. 21, the congregation will hold a vigil in front of the church,&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nand has invited other churches in the area to join in the vigil. The&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\ntheme will be, &#8220;Peace in the Community.&#8221; The Dayton area, since the&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\neconomic crisis, has experienced an increase in petty theft, juveniles&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nbreaking into houses, more gang activity, and violent crime, according&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nto a report from the church. Mack Memorial is interested in finding&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nways to gather people together and listen to their needs. Even though&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nthe congregation is smaller than in the past, it has adopted a vision&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\ncalling for the church to be the hands and feet of the community.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;Middlebury (Ind.) Church of the Brethren: According to the website of&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nthis small town (population 3,191), &#8220;Middlebury is everyone&#8217;s&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nidea of a small town: the neighborhood butcher, the Main Street&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nhardware store, the proud shop owner; all busy serving residents and&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nvisitors alike in a thriving Main Street historic district. Amish and&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\n&#8216;English&#8217; come to Middlebury to do business and trade.&#8221;&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nYet Middlebury, in the heart of Elkhart County, has been hit hard by&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nthe economic downturn. Melissa Troyer, the congregation&#8217;s&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\ncoordinator for the International Day of Prayer for Peace, reports&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nthat in previous years, participating churches have been the four or&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nfive Mennonite and Brethren congregations in the area. This year, to&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nfocus on the economic situation, the community is going to hold an&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nInternational Day of Prayer for Peace celebration &#8220;with all the groups&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\naround town who have worked towards the struggles of our 18 percent&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nunemployment&#8230;. It won&#8217;t be a quiet vigil, rather we&#8217;re having&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nprobably eight churches and five different music groups involved. The&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\ntheme will be taken from Matthew 5:23-24.&#8221; The celebration will have&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nthree focus areas: a story of reconciliation between two Mennonite&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\ncongregations that split 80 years ago over issues that are no longer&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nrelevant, and are now beginning to merge in light of their economic&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\ncircumstances; activities of the Middlebury Ministerium including the&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nCommunity Food Pantry that used to feed 12 families a week and is now&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nfeeding 200; and recognition of the new Middlebury Area Recovery&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nCommittee&#8211;an effort to coordinate church and civic programs that are&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nhelping people.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;Mechanic Grove Church of the Brethren, Quarryville, Pa.: The&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\ncongregation&#8217;s peace committee has made an intentional and&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nconcerted effort to involve the children of the church in learning and&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\ntalking about peacemaking, according to a report from pastor Jim Rhen.&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nThe church participated this year in a &#8220;Kids as Peacemakers&#8221; mural&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nproject as part of a larger initiative through the Lancaster&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nInterchurch Peace Witness. The church used curriculum and resources&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nprovided by Lancaster Interchurch Peace Witness for a six-week&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nteaching time with the 20-30 children in their congregation,&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nculminating in the children painting two mural boards. The murals&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nincorporated what the children experienced in learning and talking&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nabout peacemaking. The murals will be displayed in an Art Walk, along&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nwith others from the county, on Sept. 19 at the Lancaster Clipper&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nbaseball stadium. The Barnstormers team will donate $4 from the price&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nof admission to that day&#8217;s game to the Lancaster Interchurch Peace&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nWitness.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;Bridgewater (Va.) Church of the Brethren: The congregation is hosting&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\na premier showing of &#8220;I&#8217;d Like to Buy an Enemy&#8221; by Ted &amp;&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nCompany Theater Works on Sept. 21 at 7 p.m. Other congregations are&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\ninvited to attend. The show by Mennonite comedian Ted Swartz and&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\ncompany will be &#8220;an evening of drama&#8230;poignant and hilarious,&#8221;&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\naccording to an announcement in the Shenandoah District newsletter.&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nThe Russian Baptist youth choir also is scheduled to sing. A donation&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nof $5 is suggested to cover costs. &#8220;In the meantime, we trust you will&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nbe praying for peace in your community and in the world. There are so&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nmany situations people are facing where prayer can make a difference,&#8221;&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nthe announcement said. For more information contact Roma Jo Thompson&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nat Rthompson5@juno.com or 540-515-3581.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;Portland (Ore.) Peace Church of the Brethren: On Sunday, Sept. 20, the&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\ncongregation plans a whole day of peace-related activities, including&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\na morning worship service led by Brethren folksinger Mike Stern, an&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nafternoon prayer vigil with the Metanoia Peace Community, an afternon&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nchildren&#8217;s folk music concert by Stern, and an evening program with a&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\ndelegation from the World Friendship Center in Hiroshima, Japan.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;Church of the Brethren General Offices, Elgin, Ill.: General secretary&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nStan Noffsinger will lead a special chapel service for employees,&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nvolunteers, and guests to observe the International Day of Prayer for&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nPeace. Because chapel services at the General Offices are held every&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nWednesday at 9:15 a.m., this special service will be on Wednesday,&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nSept. 16.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;2) Brethren to be represented at G-20 Faith Leaders&#8217; Summit.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;The Church of the Brethren will be represented at a &#8220;G-20 Faith&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nLeaders&#8217; Summit&#8221; in Pittsburgh, Pa., on Sept. 22-23, on the eve&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nof a meeting of world leaders called the Group of 20. Vernne Greiner,&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\na physician and member of the Church of the Brethren&#8217;s Mission&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nand Ministry Board, will attend to represent the denomination.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;The summit is sponsored by Bread for the World along with the Alliance&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nto End Hunger and partner organizations. The Church of the Brethren&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nwas one of the denominations invited to take part.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;&#8221;Leaders of the world&#8217;s richest countries recently pledged $20 billion&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nto reduce hunger,&#8221; said Bread for the World in a statement on its&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nwebsite at http:\/\/www.bread.org\/ . At a meeting in Italy in July, the&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nG-8 group of nations pledged $20 billion, primarily invested in&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nagriculture, to combat hunger in developing countries.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;&#8221;The September Group of 20 Summit in Pittsburgh presents a unique&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nopportunity for US religious leaders to raise our concern for the&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nplight of the world&#8217;s poor,&#8221; Bread for the World said. The G-20&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nbrings together major industrialized and developing countries to&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\ndiscuss key issues in the global economy. The countries represented&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\naccount for approximately 90 percent of global gross national product,&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\n80 percent of world trade, and two-thirds of the world&#8217;s&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\npopulation, according to the organization. The faith leaders'&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nmeeting will help represent &#8220;the needs of the world&#8217;s 1.02&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nbillion hungry people&#8221; as the G-20 meetings begin.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;Online resources related to the G-20 Faith Leaders&#8217; Summit&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\noffered by Bread for the World. Include a small-group study guide&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\ntitled &#8220;The G-20 Pittsburgh Summit: Reflections for People of Faith,&#8221;&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nand &#8220;Bread Notes: Hunger Reaches Record Levels&#8221; on the recent increase&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nin hunger around the world. Go to&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nhttp:\/\/www.bread.org\/learn\/global-hunger-issues\/faith-leaders-summit.html&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;3) On Earth Peace sponsors Middle East Delegation.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;On Earth Peace is sponsoring a Middle East Delegation to&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nIsrael\/Palestine on Jan. 6-18, 2010. The delegation leader will be On&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nEarth Peace executive director Bob Gross. The delegation is&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nco-sponsored with CPT, a violence-reduction project of Brethren and&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nMennonite congregations and Friends meetings. CPT has maintained a&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nteam of trained peacemakers in the West Bank since June 1996.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;The delegation will meet with Israeli and Palestinian peace and human&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nrights workers, will join the CPT team in Palestine for some&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\naccompaniment and documentation work, and will join in a public&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nwitness to nonviolently confront injustice and violence in the area.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;Participants should be prepared to spend 12 days in Israel\/Palestine,&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nprepare for the trip by becoming familiar with the current conditions&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nthere, communicate their experiences to local congregations and media&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nupon return, and raise $2,750 to cover cost of the trip from a&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\ndesignated point in North America. The cost includes international&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nairfare, all in-country travel, simple accommodations, two meals per&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nday, honoraria, and delegation fees. On Earth Peace will assist Church&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nof the Brethren members in raising funds for the trip by offering&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nideas, networking, and limited scholarships.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;For more information contact Bob Gross at bgross@onearthpeace.org&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\n or 260-982-7751.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;4) National Youth Conference registration to begin Jan. 5.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;Online registration for National Youth Conference (NYC) 2010 is&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nscheduled to begin on Jan. 5, 2010, at 8 p.m. central time. NYC is an&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nevent for Church of the Brethren senior high youth that is offered&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nevery four years by the denomination&#8217;s Youth and Young Adult&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nMinistry.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;The 2010 NYC will take place July 17-22 on the campus of Colorado&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nState University in Fort Collins, with the theme &#8220;More than Meets the&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nEye&#8221; (2 Corinthians 4:6-10 and 16-18).&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;NYC coordinators Audrey Hollenberg and Emily LaPrade, who are Brethren&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nVolunteer Service workers, will assist Youth and Young Adult Ministry&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\ndirector Becky Ullom and the National Youth Cabinet in organizing the&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nconference.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;Cost of early registration for NYC is $425, increasing to $450 after&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nFeb. 15. The registration fee includes lodging and meals. Registration&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nwill close on April 5, 2010. A deposit of $200 is due at time of&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nregistration, with the balance due by April 5. The money is&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nnonrefundable. NYC t-shirts costing $15 each can be ordered at the&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\ntime of registration.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;Church of the Brethren musician and songwriter Shawn Kirchner has been&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\ncommissioned to write the NYC Theme Song. A Speech Contest and a Music&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nContest are open to youth who will be attending NYC.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;In the speech contest, youth are invited to submit speeches based on&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nthe NYC theme. Two youth will be chosen to speak in front of the&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nconference during a worship service. &#8220;We need enthusiastic youth that&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nwill be able to inspire others with their words,&#8221; said an invitation&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nfrom the Youth and Young Adult Ministry. Entries must include a&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nwritten and audio copy of the speech, which should be 500-700 words&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\n(about 10 minutes spoken).&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;During the same worship service, the winning song in the music contest&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nwill be played or the writer will participate in the performance of&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nthe song. Youth are invited to submit a song based on the NYC theme&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nand written for use in worship. The winning song will be included in&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nthe conference book. Songs should be three-to-five minutes in length,&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nand entries should include an audio recording on CD as well as a copy&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nof the lyrics.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;Submissions of speeches and songs are due by Jan. 1, 2010. Send&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nentries to the NYC Office, 1451 Dundee Ave., Elgin, IL 60120. For more&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\ninformation go to http:\/\/www.2010nyc.org\/ .&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;The Youth and Young Adult Ministry also has issued a call for&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nvolunteer youth workers to assist with the conference. &#8220;Youth workers&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nare an essential part of the NYC staff, helping to carry out the&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nprograms and plans of the National Youth Cabinet as well as making&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nsure that no details are missed,&#8221; said the announcement. &#8220;We need&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\ncommitted, focused, and enthusiastic people to make NYC run smoothly.&#8221;&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;Youth workers must be willing and ready to work long hours and commit&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nto be present for the entire week of NYC. Families of youth workers&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nare not permitted to accompany volunteers. Youth workers are expected&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nto arrive in the early afternoon of July 16, the day before the&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nconference begins, and to be available to work through the evening of&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nJuly 22. The registration fee will be waived for youth workers, and&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\ntravel expenses will be paid (provided the Youth and Young Adult&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nMinistry books the airline tickets).&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;To apply for a youth worker position, complete an application form and&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nmail it postmarked by Nov. 1. For an application form contact the NYC&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nOffice at 800-323-8039.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;In related news, McPherson (Kan.) College is offering free overnight&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nlodging and breakfast to NYC attendees either on the way to or on the&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nway home from the conference. In exchange for this hospitality,&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nthe college is asking guests to take a one-hour tour. Contact Tom&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nHurst, director of Campus Ministries, at hurstt@mcpherson.edu  or&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\n620-242-0503.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;5) October is Disabilities Awareness Month.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;During the month of October, Brethren congregations are encouraged to&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nobserve Disabilities Awareness Month. Resources and information for&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nthose observing the month have been made available online at&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nwww.brethren.org by the Church of the Brethren&#8217;s Caring&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nMinistries.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;The theme scripture for Disabilities Awareness Month is: &#8220;For my house&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nshall be a house for all people&#8221; (Isaiah 56:7). An introduction to the&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nobservance by Pat Challenger notes, &#8220;It is necessary for special needs&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nfolks both young and old to experience belonging and inclusion within&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nGod&#8217;s houses&#8230;. We as churches need to recognize the talents that&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\npeople with special needs can bring to our congregations.&#8221;&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;Resources and information at the web page include a number of ideas&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nfor awareness-raising activities submitted by Cindy Barnum-Steggerda,&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nsuch as a &#8220;field trip&#8221; through the church building in a wheel chair; a&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nshort guideline for doing a congregational self-evaluation, that&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nbegins by noting that &#8220;becoming an accessible congregation is an&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nongoing process&#8221;; and ideas for how churches may acquire funding to&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nimprove accessibility. Go to&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nhttp:\/\/www.brethren.org\/site\/PageServer?pagename=grow_health_disabilities_awareness_month&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\n to find the online resources and information.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;6) Brethren bits: More upcoming events.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;&#8211; A deacon ministry workshop, &#8220;The Challenges of Change: Growing the&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nRole of Deacons&#8221; will be held in Idaho District on Sept. 26 from 9&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\na.m.-3 p.m. at Nampa (Idaho) Church of the Brethren. The event will be&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nled by Donna Kline, director of the Church of the Brethren&#8217;s&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nDeacon Ministry and Disability Ministry, and editor of &#8220;Caregiving&#8221;&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nmagazine. Topics include &#8220;What are deacons supposed to do, anyways?&#8221;&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\n&#8220;The art of listening,&#8221; &#8220;Offering support in times of grief and loss,&#8221;&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nand &#8220;Deacon spirituality.&#8221; Cost is $10. Participants are invited to&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nbring a dish to share for lunch. To register contact Howard Garwick at&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nhgarwick@yahoo.com  or 208-466-2896.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;&#8211; The Church of the Brethren&#8217;s Global Food Crisis Fund is&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nencouraging attention to the 35th anniversary of Bread for the World&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nand a tour by its founder Art Simon. The Global Food Crisis ministry&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\n&#8220;has come to consider Bread for the World a full-fledged partner,&#8221;&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nsaid manager Howard Royer. The 18-city nationwide tour promotes a new&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nbook by Simon, &#8220;The Rising of Bread for the World: An Outcry of&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nCitizens Against Hunger.&#8221; The tour began Sept. 1 in Sunnyvale, Calif.,&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nand continues through the fall with stops in cities such as Los&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nAngeles, Seattle, Portland, Chicago, Long Island, Cincinnati, and&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nWashington, D.C., among others. For details, go to&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nhttp:\/\/www.bread.org\/get-involved\/community\/events-simon.html .&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;&#8211; Brethren Volunteer Service (BVS) has announced the start of its fall&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\norientation, to be held Sept. 20-Oct. 9 at the Brethren Service Center&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nin New Windsor, Md. This will be the 286th unit of BVS and will&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\ninclude 23 volunteers&#8211;nine from Germany, one from Canada, and the&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nremaining 13 (nine of whom are Brethren) from around the US. The&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nunit will spend three weeks exploring project possibilities and topics&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nof community building, peace, social justice, faith sharing,&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nsustainable agriculture, and more. They will have the opportunity&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nfor several work days in the New Windsor area and in Harrisburg,&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nPa. Contact the BVS office at 800-323-8039.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;&#8211; Upcoming courses offered by the Brethren Academy for Ministerial&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nLeadership include &#8220;Passions of Youth, Practices of Christ&#8221; with&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\ninstructor Russell Haitch, to be taught at Codorus (Pa.) Church of the&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nBrethren on Sept. 24-27; &#8220;Judges,&#8221; an online course with instructor&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nSusan Jeffers, to be taught Sept. 28-Nov. 6 (register through the&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nSusquehanna Valley Ministry Center, go to&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nwww.read-the-bible.org\/SVMC-Judges.htm  ); and &#8220;Brethren Polity&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nand Practice&#8221; with instructor Warren Eshbach, to be taught at the&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nYoung Center on the campus of Elizabethtown (Pa.) College on Nov.&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\n20-22 (contact the Susquehanna Valley Ministry Center at&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nSVMC@etown.edu  or 717-361-1450). &#8220;Messages of Peace in the Old&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nTestament&#8221; is a continuing education event led by David Leiter on&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nSept. 16 at Elizabethtown (Pa.) College (contact svmc@etown.edu&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\n or 717-361-1450). Registration brochures for these and other&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\ntraining opportunities are available through the Brethren Academy for&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nMinisterial Leadership, contact academy@bethanyseminary.edu  or&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\n800-287-8822 ext 1824.&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nhttp:\/\/www.read-the-bible.org\/SVMC-Judges.htm&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;&#8211; The 39th Annual Dunker Church Service at the Antietam National&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nBattlefield in Sharpsburg, Md., will be held Sunday, Sept 13, at 3&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\np.m. Jeff Bach, a Church of the Brethren historian and director of the&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nYoung Center at Elizabethtown (Pa.) College, will preach for this&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nworship service, held in the restored Mumma Meeting House commonly&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nreferred to as the Dunker Church. The church was built in 1853 and&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nheavily damaged by the Sept. 17, 1862, Battle of Antietam. After&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nextensive repairs were made, services resumed in the summer of 1864.&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nThe service is sponsored by area Churches of the Brethren. Bach also&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nwill preach at Sharpsburg Church of the Brethren that Sunday morning&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nat 9:30 am. For more information contact Eddie Edmonds at 304-267-4135&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nor Tom Fralin at 301-432-2653.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;&#8211; Bridgewater (Va.) Church of the Brethren hosts a production of &#8220;The&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nFinal Journey of John Kline,&#8221; about the Civil War-era Brethren elder&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nand peace martyr, on Oct. 10 at 7:30 p.m. The performance benefits an&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\neffort to preserve the John Kline Homestead in Broadway, Va., which is&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nthreatened by proposed development. The John Kline Homestead Trust&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nhopes to raise an initial $425,000 to purchase the property by the end&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nof 2009. Kline was a legendary leader in Brethren history&#8211;a preacher&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nand healer who practiced natural medicine and traveled more than&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\n100,000 miles on horseback serving people on both sides of the&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nMason-Dixon Line. During the Civil War, he helped keep the Brethren&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nunified in an anti-slavery stance. In 1864, returning from one of his&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\npreaching missions, he was ambushed by Confederate irregulars and&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nkilled near his home. &#8220;The Final Journey of John Kline&#8221; by Lee&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nKr\u00e4henb\u00fchl was commissioned as part of the 200th anniversary of&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nKline&#8217;s 1797 birth. The New Millennium Players of Everett (Pa.)&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nChurch of the Brethren, directed by pastor Frank Ramirez, will present&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nthe play. An offering will support the John Kline Homestead&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nPreservation Trust. For more information contact Dale V. Ulrich at&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\ndaulrich@comcast.net .&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;&#8211; Mutual Kumquat will give a concert at Beacon Heights Church of the&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nBrethren in Fort Wayne, Ind., on Sept. 19 at 7 p.m. Proceeds from this&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nAnnual Benefit Concert of the congregation will go to the Center for&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nNonviolence. Mutual Kumquat features Seth Hendricks, Chris Good, Drue&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nGray, Jacob Jolliff, and Ben Long&#8211;a Brethren group of&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nsinger\/songwriters accompanied by a mandolin virtuoso and the rhythms&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nof hand drums. A release describes the band as &#8220;Inspired by visions of&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nradical, loving, creative communities living in mutual relationship&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nand the sweet yet tart, tiny but powerpacked-with-flavor wonder fruit&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nthat is a kumquat.&#8221;&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;&#8211; Midland (Va.) Church of the Brethren is offering sessions on the&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\ntheme, &#8220;All We Are Saying&#8230;Is Give Peace a Chance&#8221; on the weekend of&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nSept. 19-20. A workshop will be offered that Saturday from 1-4 p.m. On&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nSunday, David Radcliff of the New Community Project&#8211;a&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nBrethren-related nonprofit working at earth care and human&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\njustice&#8211;will teach peace to the children during Sunday school at 10&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\na.m. and lead worship at 11 a.m.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;&#8211; Three districts will hold conferences on the weekend of Sept. 18-19:&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nNorthern Indiana District Conference in Milford, Ind.; West Marva&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nDistrict Conference in Moorefield, W.Va.; and Southern Pennsylvania&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nDistrict Conference at Bunkertown Church of the Brethren in&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nMcAlisterville, Pa.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;&#8211; The 33rd annual Brethren Disaster Relief Auction will be held on Sept.&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\n24-25 at the Lebanon (Pa.) County Expo Center and Fairgrounds. The&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nevent is a joint effort of the Church of the Brethren&#8217;s Atlantic&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nNortheast and Southern Pennsylvania Districts. For more information go&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nto http:\/\/www.brethrenauction.org\/ .&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;&#8211; The annual Good Samaritan Banquet of the Village at Morrisons Cove, a&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nChurch of the Brethren retirement community in Martinsburg, Pa., is on&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nSept. 19. The banquet raises support for residents who have outlived&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\ntheir resources. The event begins with a reception at 5:30 p.m. at the&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nCasino in Altoona, Pa. The program of sacred music features members of&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nUniversity Baptist and Brethren Church in State College, Pa., directed&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nby Chris Kiver, director of Penn State Glee Club and Chamber Singers&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nand winner of two Grammy Awards in 2006 for best Choral Music&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nPerformance and best Classical Album. The event also celebrates the&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nopening of a new Village Center. The price of a ticket is $100. Call&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\n814-793-2249.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;&#8211; &#8220;Steward Leaders in Changing Times&#8221; is offered by the Ecumenical&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nStewardship Center on Nov. 30-Dec. 3 at the Hilton Marco Island Resort&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nin Florida. The Church of the Brethren is a member denomination of the&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nEcumenical Stewardship Center. The event is planned for congregational&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nleaders to learn, network, share, and worship together. Featured&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nspeakers include Anthony B. Robinson, president of Congregational&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nLeadership Northwest and author of &#8220;Transforming Congregational&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nCulture&#8221;; Peter Steinke, author of &#8220;Congregational Leadership in&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nAnxious Times&#8221; and founder of Healthy Congregations; and Mardi Tindal,&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nexecutive director at Five Oaks Retreat Center, and participant in the&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nCenter for Courage and Renewal facilitator preparation program&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nprovided by Parker J. Palmer. To register and to receive group or&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nfirst-time attendee discounts, contact Carol Bowman, coordinator of&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nstewardship formation and education for the Church of the Brethren, at&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\ncbowman@brethren.org .&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;Newsline is produced by Cheryl Brumbaugh-Cayford, director of news&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nservices for the Church of the Brethren, cobnews@brethren.org  or&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\n800-323-8039 ext. 260. Newsline appears every other Wednesday, with&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nother special issues sent as needed. Michael Colvin and Mimi Copp&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\ncontributed to this report. The next regularly scheduled issue is set&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nfor Sept. 9. Newsline stories may be reprinted if Newsline is cited as&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nthe source. For more Brethren news and features, go to the News&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\npage at http:\/\/www.brethren.org\/ or subscribe to Messenger magazine,&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\ncall 800-323-8039 ext. 247.&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;Forward Newsline to a friend&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nhttp:\/\/www.brethren.org\/site\/R?i=z1mfmGLoL01UDGJXBp2wCA..&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;Subscribe to Newsline&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nhttp:\/\/www.brethren.org\/site\/R?i=kBaPxpLPJb3Y_bpiI6nB0Q..&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;Unsubscribe from receiving email, or change your email preferences.&lt;br \/&gt;<br \/>\nhttp:\/\/www.brethren.org\/site\/CO?i=KWqdPu_9utQhvo6xlCIB1ukMlteoXQH1&#038;cid=1081&lt;\/p&gt;<br \/>\n&lt;p&gt;<\/textarea> <\/span><\/p>\n<\/form>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0 Newsline is the Church of the Brethren e-mail news service. Go to www.brethren.org\/newsline to subscribe or unsubscribe. Newsline Extra: International Day of Prayer for Peace and Other Upcoming Events Sept. 7, 2009 &#8220;&#8230;So that in me you may have peace&#8221; (John 16:33). INTERNATIONAL DAY OF PRAYER FOR PEACE 1) Congregations plan for the International<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":6,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"rop_custom_images_group":[],"rop_custom_messages_group":[],"rop_publish_now":"initial","rop_publish_now_accounts":[],"rop_publish_now_history":[],"rop_publish_now_status":"pending","ngg_post_thumbnail":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[125,68,304,3,931,379,287,511,427,266,769,500,303,232,300,129,103,127,314],"wf_post_folders":[],"class_list":["post-1579","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-uncategorized","tag-beacon-heights-church-of-the-brethren","tag-brethren-volunteer-service","tag-bridgewater-church-of-the-brethren","tag-church-of-the-brethren","tag-first-church-of-the-brethren-san-diego","tag-global-food-crisis-fund","tag-green-tree-church-of-the-brethren","tag-international-day-of-prayer","tag-mack-memorial-church-of-the-brethren","tag-manassas-church-of-the-brethren","tag-mechanic-grove-church-of-the-brethren","tag-middlebury-church-of-the-brethren","tag-midland-church-of-the-brethren","tag-nampa-church-of-the-brethren","tag-national-older-adult-conference","tag-newsline","tag-on-earth-peace","tag-portland-peace-church-of-the-brethren","tag-prince-of-peace-church-of-the-brethren"],"acf":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.brethren.org\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1579","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.brethren.org\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.brethren.org\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.brethren.org\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/6"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.brethren.org\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=1579"}],"version-history":[{"count":2,"href":"https:\/\/www.brethren.org\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1579\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":1583,"href":"https:\/\/www.brethren.org\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1579\/revisions\/1583"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.brethren.org\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=1579"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.brethren.org\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=1579"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.brethren.org\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=1579"},{"taxonomy":"wf_post_folders","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.brethren.org\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/wf_post_folders?post=1579"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}