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WIC Resource Letter for PCA Women in
Leadership
Winter Quarter 1999 Vol.VII, No. 1
WIC RESOURCE LETTER
Janes
reminders!
- If you have not received conference brochures, call our office immediately.
- Use page 2 to make conference flyers to distribute to all women in your church.
- Get your registrations in ASAP. Rememberregistrations must be
postmarked by March 15 to get the early registration discount.
- Visit the conference web site for updated information: www.pcanet.org/cep/wic99.htm
- Use the pattern on page 6 to make conference reminders for the women in your church.
- Make copies of Charles Dunahoos letter and ideas on pages 4 and 5 for your
council. Pray together and discuss what is appropriate for your church.
- Schedule the 99 Love Gift video presentation (see page 11).
- Make copies of The WICK and distribute to every woman in the church.
- Make copies of pages 8 and 9 for your council, and perhaps for your pastor. Discuss
implications for your WIC ministry.
- PresWIC Presidents: Make final plans for attending the Leadership Training Seminar (see
page 5).
- Local WICS: Make sure the WIC office has a correct and updated address for your WIC
president/contact woman.
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| Dear
Daughters of the Covenant,
Writing the date 1999 jolts me into the realization that this is the year of the WIC
Conference. With the flip of the calendar the conference is no longer years away. It is
now months away.
True to form, two of our daughters are expecting babiesLaurin is due any day and
Kathryn is expecting in May. Our son and daughter-in-love had a baby boy in September.
Jane Patetes daughter decided to get in on the action and is expecting in April. All
to say, the other parts of our lives do not go into neutral as we step on the conference
fast-track. All to saypray for us!
As we look toward September, you are a key in preparing your church for this
conference. This is not just a fun event to attend. Will this conference catapult us to
practical, passionate expressions of compassion? Much depends on youthe women who
lead the women in your church. To help you in this task, we asked Charles Dunahoo to give
us a male perspective on women working with the male leadership of the church to utilize
the vision and training women will receive (see pages four and five). Also, please use the
information on page three to help women understand some of the issues involved in planning
this conference.
As you look at the conference brochure, consider the expanse of compassion ministries
where PCA women are on the cutting edge. This should not surprise us. Compassion is a
characteristic of the covenant of grace. We are women who are privileged to be a part of
churches where Gods grace is preached.
Prayer is the essential ingredient in this conference. Please pray that our merciful
Father will accomplish beyond what we can even think to ask Him to do.
For His Glory,
Susan Hunt
Director of WIC Ministry
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|
1999 WIC Conference
A Matter of Praise
October 1st Billie Underwood, our precious administrative assistant, was
diagnosed with colon cancer.
October 5th she had surgery.
October 6th the pathology report was clear. No radiation is required.
October 15th Billie started working from home to take care of the zillion
details she is managing.
Rewind to October 1st. Billie had the peace that passes understanding. We went into a
tailspin personally because of our love for her, and administratively because she is
carrying huge chunks of the business side of this conference. After a few days our hearts
started hearing what our heads were trying desperately to hold on to: God is sovereign;
Billie is His and He will take care of her; this conference is His and He will take care
of it; rest in His sovereign love. We were driven to our Father, and that is a good thing!
Pray that we will stay there, and pray for Billies continued recuperation.
- Frequently Asked Questions
The following two questions deserve answers. Please help us by passing this information
on to women who may be asking these questions.
1. Why cant this be in a church so it would not be so expensive?
Actually, it would probably make little difference in cost if we had the conference in
a church. Let me explain.
At the convention center we do not pay for meeting space because the meals and the
hotel rooms we use entitle us to meeting space.
Our other costs, such as brochures, increased staff to process registrations,
confirmation materials, mailings, speakers, large-screen projection, sound, printed
programs, etc. are essentially the same wherever the conference is held.
Finding a church that can seat 6000, provide meals, have adequate seminar space for the
pre-conference seminars, and have enough hotel rooms in the vicinity, is no easy task.
Since this is a conference for women, we must have hotel rooms very close to the meeting
place. The Cobb Galleria Centre provides that.
We spend many hours at the site with the Galleria Centre and hotel staffs going over
every detail. If we used a church in another city, some of our staff would have to make
frequent trips to that sitea cost that would have to be passed on to those
attending.
Our contract with the anchor hotel and the Galleria Centre entitles us to their expert
staffs who are experienced in conferences of this magnitude. Without that, we would have
to hire additional help to manage many aspects of this conferencea cost that would
have to be passed on to those attending.
If we have the conference in a church, it would have to end on Saturday since the
church would not be available on Sunday. This presents two problems: (1) increased airfare
without the Saturday night stay-over; (2) women who are employed outside the home would
have to take another day off workthus increased cost for them.
2. Then why cant you do several smaller conferences in various places instead of
one large conference?
We think we already do that. Most PresWICs have retreats, and many PresWICs join
together and have larger conferences.
We did Regional Conferences in 1995. The 1999 conference could not be repeated because
some of the speakers would not be availableit took considerable effort to get them
once!
We do not just plan the size and type of conferences at random. There are specific
reasons for doing what we do.
After the 95 Regional Conferences we prayed, evaluated, and prayed some more. We (WASC
and CE staff) felt strongly that the next step in the development of the WIC ministry in
the PCA was a call to compassion. As we continued to pray about how to do this, we came to
several conclusions:
1. The best way to turn up the volume on compassion would be a high-profile conference
with the best speakers possible on this topic.
2. There must be equipping seminars which would also feature women who are pace setters
in compassion ministries, and many of the pace setters are PCA women.
3. This conference should be a celebration and a catalyst. A celebration of those
ministries of compassion that are happening, and a catalyst to call us all to the covenant
requirement of compassion.
4. We had to locate a facility to allow as many women as possible to attend. We have
had to turn hundreds of women away at previous conferences. We had to find the realistic
balance between making it available to as many as possible and yet not sacrificing our
standard of excellence.
Have we made the right decisions? We can only say that we have proceeded with much
prayer, extreme caution, and considerable counsel. We plead for your prayers.
Encourage teens and college students to attend and consider ways to financially
assist them.
If missionaries supported by your church are on HMA, ask your missions committee to
invite and provide for them to attend with your group.
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| To: Local WIC
Presidents
From: Charles Dunahoo
Re: 1999 WIC Conference
Greetings! There is excitement in our office regarding the 1999 WIC Conference to be
held in Atlanta September 10-12. Our staff is working diligently to have everything ready
for the 4,000 to 6,000 women we anticipate will attend. Brochures and web page information
is available. Local churches are gearing up to help. However, we do not want this to be
just another conference or big event. We want this to be a strategic conference that will
touch the lives of the participants and then spill back over into their local churches as
we seek to minister on the Lords behalf to those in and outside the church.
Our staff will do everything we can to make this a special event in the life of the
PCA. We want our church to give a good witness to the worldparticularly to the
rising generations of youth who have been disillusioned by the organized church. What
better way to demonstrate authenticity and credibility than to show our love for Christ
and one another through mercy ministries.
Our desire is for the PCA to step forth as overdue leaders in local mercy ministries.
You are one of the keys in doing this. Our Book of Church Order has historically
recognized the valuable input of women in ministry. Deacons, as part of the ordained
leadership, are to select godly women to assist them in their task of mercy ministry. That
needs to happen more often. God would have men and women partner with precision and
clarity to enhance our ministries.
This conference is certainly not intended to suggest that deacons and WIC do mercy
ministries as two separate entities, but that we come together as a team. Paul says,
"The church grows and builds itself up in love as each part does its work."
While we believe there should be some amount of freedom to use our gifts as God has
intended them to be used, we believe that working together will accomplish Gods plan
better and more effectively. It is a humbling reality and an exciting truth to realize
that we do need each other. Paul makes that absolutely clear in passages such as 1
Corinthians 12.
We pray that God will use this conference to train, equip, and encourage local
churches. I encourage you to consider the suggestions on the opposite page and put them
into practice in your local situation. We made similar suggestions in previous Resource
Letters, but I want to reiterate and underscore them because I believe they are strategic
in the results of this conference.
Pray for us, and we will pray for you as you encourage women to consider participating
in this conference. We are aware that many women will not be able to participate by
attending, but through prayer they can be a vital part of the conference. They can also
use the audio tapes as a means of experiencing some of the things that God does at this
conference. Pray that our staff will be faithful to do our part so that you can benefit to
the fullest from whatever God has in store for you in September 1999.
Suggestions for working together as WIC officers, pastors, elders, and deacons to
maximize the effectiveness of the 99 WIC Conference for local churches.
1. Be sure to include prayer in your present WIC activities for this conference. Paul
reminds us that it is not by power nor by might but by my Spirit says the Lord
We
want Gods spirit to permeate everything about this conference; calling upon Him
together can bring blessings.
2. Meet with the church officers, especially the deacons, and share your desire to
participate in this conference in a way that will benefit the local church. Communicate
your desire to make this conference part of training for effectiveness in the
churchs overall ministry.
2. Ask the deacons and/or elders to help you understand their prayers and objectives
for your churchs mercy ministries in order for you to lead the WIC to do its part.
3. Ask the deacons and/or elders to recommend which seminars women should attend based
on your churchs overall ministry plans.
4. Ask the officers to pray for this conference and for any women who will attend.
5. Ask your pastor to keep this conference before the people for special prayer.
6. Ask the deacons to encourage their wives to attend this conference. Also ask them to
develop some financial assistance or scholarships, particularly for single moms, widows,
and others who could benefit from the conference. (You might also do this with your
elders).
7. Ask the officers, especially the deacons, for a time when women can report back
after the conference to share what they learned.
8. Be available to assist the churchs officers to make the churchs ministry
everything that God would have it to be, and work alongside them in any way that would
enhance their role and responsibilities.
11. Above all, express your desire to work together with the officers to make the
churchs mercy ministries truly effective and pleasing to Christ.
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| 1999
WIC Leadership Training Seminar
March 18-20
Sheraton Suites Hotel
Atlanta, GA
This by-invitation training seminar is for PresWIC Presidents, women serving in a paid
position on a local church staff with responsibilities for women or teen girls,
denominational staff women, and other leadership women who serve in ministries to women.
If your church has a Director of Womens Ministry, or a female on the youth staff,
please make her aware of this meeting. If she has not received information, call our
office.
This gathering is designed to:
- Equip a network of women who can help equip the local WIC leadership.
- Provide a stimulating opportunity for the women who attend to fellowship and to network
ideas.
- Offer teaching that will help women minister to other women.
- Cultivate denominational awareness and support.
- Please pray for this training event.
- Pray specifically for your PresWIC President who will represent you.
This meeting is not for local WIC presidents.
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| November, 1998
Dear Sisters in Christ:
Among the Lords greatest endowments for Mission to North America across the
quarter century of our denominations life has been the consistent prayer-driven
support given us by the Women in the Church. Indeed, the devoted labors of love on the
part of WIC impart the ring of reality to our motto"MNA and you: Reaching
North America for Christ."
In the midst of the focused efforts of WIC leadership at every level of the church to
ensure maximum participation in the 1998 WIC Love Gift, which is committed to providing
support for leadership development in the multi-ethnic and mercy ministries of
Assemblys MNA, our committee and staff felt it appropriate to find a way to
recognize and honor the women of our denomination for their sacrificial service of the
Lord Jesus Christ through MNA. Our decision is to establish the Urban and Mercy Women in
Leadership Award, using a small portion of the Love Gift.
Women eligible for the award will be those who have made significant contributions to
urban, mercy, or multi-ethnic ministry in the PCA. Such contributions may center on
personal involvement and service, inspiring and motivating other women to serve, or
educating and training women for effective service in these crucial areas of opportunity.
Each woman receiving the award would use the funds, as she chooses, in a way that
distinctly furthers leadership development in urban/mercy ministries, as a clear addition
or augmentation to already available resources, rather than simply providing normal
operational support for a ministry. The idea would be to provide motivation and training
for one or more other women to serve Christ in urban and mercy ministry settings within
their communities.
We invite you to nominate women for the Urban and Mercy Women in Leadership Award. The
awards will be presented during the September 1999 WIC Conference.
On behalf of the MNA Committee and staff, as well as for myself personally, please know
of our gratitude to the living God for His having called you along side us to serve Him,
and to you for your faithfulness in that service. Soli Deo Gloria!
Grace and Peace, in Jesus,
Cortez A. Cooper, Jr.
Coordinator
Urban & Mercy Women in Leadership Award
Sponsored by MNA through the 1998 WIC Love Gift
Nomination Form
Please return this nomination form to Fred Marsh at MNA, 1700
North Brown Rd, Lawrenceville, GA 30043 by March 15 1999. No nominations accepted after this date.
You are invited to nominate any woman who is a member of a PCA church and who has made
a significant contribution to urban, mercy, or multi-ethnic ministry within the
denomination in one of the following ways:
By providing direct service to the poor in a relational, holistic ministry, or
By inspiring and mobilizing people for service in urban, mercy, or multi-ethnic
ministries, or
By educating and training people for effective service in urban, mercy, or
multi-ethnic ministries.
Nominee: ______________________________
Address: ______________________________
City: __________________________________
State: _________ Zip: ______________
Telephone Number (day) (_______)___________
(evening) (_______)______________________
e-mail ________________________________
Church Membership: _____________________
Brief paragraph describing why she qualifies for this PCA Leadership Award:
Information on person making nomination:
Name: __________________________________
Address: ________________________________
City: ___________________________________
State: _________ Zip: ______________
Telephone Number (day) (________)___________
(evening) (_______)________________________
e-mail __________________________________
Church Membership: _______________________
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Step by Step God Starts, Builds,
and Sustains a Womens Ministry
This story by Joan Sato is an example of WIC 101 (see the Sept./Oct. 1997 issue of the
WIC Resource Letter). Joan is President of Great Lakes PresWIC.
As I share the story of what God has accomplished in the womens ministry at
Christ Community Church in Carmel, Indiana, I pray that He will receive the glory due to
Him alone.
In the Fall of 1991, Christ Community Church was a one-year-old church plant meeting in
a local Junior High School north of Indianapolis. Like many church plants, there was much
to do, and resources were limited. The members of our congregation were covering several
bases and highly committed to what God was doing.
I was asked by our Pastor, Tim Kirk, to begin a Bible study for women. We met in my
home and soon grew to a group of eighteen women with baby-sitting for nineteen children in
my basement. We were a diverse collection of women with minimal training in Biblical
thinking and Reformed theology. By the end of the second year we were down to a group of
six discouraged, resentful women. We had lost our focus. Troubling circumstances,
heart-breaking situations, and spiritual and personal immaturity took us down the road of
self-centeredness and conflict. We met with our pastor and his wife and asked for
guidance.
From the beginning, Tim and Sally made an investment of time and energy in the
womens ministry. This was not a ministry delegated away from their hands of care and
responsibility. As we refocused and worked on a vision statement, our excitement for
womens ministry was rekindled. Our eyes were on Gods amazing, sacrificial love
for us and the love He had given us for the women in the North Indy area. We wanted to be
known as a church that loved women unto Jesus Christ. We knew that women came with
children, and if we were serious about loving women we needed to love their children.
God blessed us with male leadership who provided the protection we needed by insisting
that the womens ministry be an intentionally Bible-study based ministry. They shared
our vision and the need for financial support by making baby-sitting available. This was
quantitatively backed up by their generous approval of the budget. Pastor Kirk wisely
protected us from being over-extended and burned out by not allowing us to assume total
responsibility for the food and fellowship needs of the entire church.
Our pastors good standing with other area ministers soon led to a neighborhood
church donating the use of their building and nursery facilities. God was teaching us to
rely on His provision for all our needs. We adopted the slogan "You dont grow
an oak tree overnight." An acorn became representative of the womens ministry
God was growing in our church. We came to a point of understanding that God would keep His
promises to sanctify and equip us for the work.
In September 1995, the WIC Regional Conference, "Daughters of ZionRise
and Shine!" was held in Indianapolis. After Susan Hunts seminar, two of us
approached her and quickly explained some of the female to female relationship
difficulties in our church. Susan said, "The problem is your women dont
understand covenant relationships." We both knew Susan had summarized the situation
accurately because as leaders in our womens ministry we werent sure we
understood covenant relationships. We went home asking God to teach us and to help us
understand which way to proceed. We were not really sure what to do, but we were convinced
that Susan must be on to something.
We studied The Holiness of God by R. C. Sproul. This book and video study had a
profound impact on us as women. As we grew in our understanding of who God is, we came to
see that our standing before Him is based solely on grace.
This knowledge was strengthened by our next study The Discipline of Grace by Jerry
Bridges. We learned the essentials of preaching the Gospel to ourselves daily. The Gospel
became a necessary part of our lives and not something just to share with an unbeliever.
God was transforming the women of Christ Community Church and building a ministry.
Step by step, things were progressing at CCC. By August 1995 we had moved into a
building. The WIC Resource Letter had become a welcomed source of information and
encouragement. I learned of the WIC core curriculum. The leaders of the womens
ministry soon realized the value of this material and made a strong commitment to study
these books. Our pastor insisted that the leadership of the womens ministry not
change each year. He stressed the need for this ministry to be relationship-based and not
only task-oriented. Our vertical relationship with God was now more biblically sound and
rooted in the truth of the Gospel. The next step was our relationships with one another.
As we studied, Spiritual Mothering, God knit our hearts together in love. The riches of
the Gospel had prepared our hearts to receive the scriptural mandate of Titus 2. For the
first time we stopped complaining that there were no older women in the church to mother
us. We caught a vision and realized we were the older women that God was going to use to
train the younger women. This was also our first introduction to thinking in terms of
generations in regards to womens ministry. For the first generation Christians in
our group, this idea filled us with hope for what God was accomplishing in our families.
We became intentional in including our teens in panel discussions and fellowship
gatherings. Our prayer was that spiritual mothering would become a lifestyle.
Chapter by chapter, question by question, we worked our way through the core
curriculum. By Design helped to move us from misery to ministry. We gained clearer
understanding of our helper design and were challenged to use our spiritual gifts within
the ministry of the church.
I was invited to speak to our session on the status of our womens ministry. The
story I relayed to them reflected the distance God had taken us. In one of our weekly
Bible studies, we were asked to tell about a woman in our life whom we considered wise. A
new believer replied with enthusiasm, "Oprah Winfrey." There was not one sigh or
tsk sound made. The women responded to her with grace, gentleness, and love. If this had
occurred in the earlier years there would have been strong correction and judgment. After
the incident there would have been gossip. Now by Gods grace we were building up and
not tearing down in our responses.
We had not escaped the sting of the curse as we saw two of our women lose their beloved
husbands, a young mother lose a child to SIDS, and several women suffer miscarriages.
There were marriages in distress, women fighting breast cancer, struggles with rebellious
children, and dealing with aging parents and the loss of parents. There were women healing
from abuse, their own sin, and from being the innocent victims of others sin. There
was an obvious need to build community and develop ministries of compassion.
Gods perfect timing of the book Treasures of Encouragement amazed us. God used
this study to mold us into mature encouragers who were biblical thinkers. The climate of
our church changed significantly as we went through the twelve principles of this study.
Our hearts became sensitive as we grew in our understanding of Gods love for us and
how we should love one another. God was using ordinary people, homemakers, mothers,
working women, to show compassion by doing ordinary things like visiting the sick, writing
notes of encouragement, taking meals, providing clothing, sending care package to college
students, caring for one anothers children, and giving Joy Boxes.
In response to this study, a compassion corps was more clearly defined and a "Salt
and Light" committee was formed. We used the information in the Loving Leadership
Manual to develop Salt and Light days. The sick, the hurting, the lonely were loved
through painful circumstances. As we developed formal programs for compassion, it was
joyous to watch the informal, individual responses to the Holy Spirits prompting
increase. God caused our compassion to have both an inward and an outward focus. We are
able to be a small part in supporting the work of the local Crisis Pregnancy Center and an
inner-city mission.
When we studied The True Woman, we were convicted by Gods Word to abandon our
cultural idols and to think redemptively. The empty pursuit of emotional happiness was
replaced by a desire to be a true reflection of our redemption in our homes and our
community.
The last two summers we used Leadership for Women in the Church as training for the
leadership of the womens ministry. This past summer we were privileged to include
women from two church plants in the Indianapolis area. This well-worn training tool
effectively reminds us why we do the things we do in the church.
Of course, there are still times of conflict, discouragement, and selfishness in our
church. We still have to deal with the consequences of sin. Prayerfully, our responses are
different as we call one another back to Gods Word and view each other in the light
of Gods glory. God continues to teach us about living in community as His covenant
people. We look forward to our next study, Heirs of the Covenant, and to deepening our
understanding of covenant living.
We have now traveled from 1991 to 1998 on a journey where God started, built, and is
sustaining a womens ministry at Christ Community Church. God established this
ministry by using ordinary women with no special training to do ordinary things for His
glory. He has been both preventative and restorative in this work. A small tree has now
grown where the acorn was planted. God has been faithful to keep His promises in the
process of sanctifying us and equipping us.
Glorify the Lord with me; let us exalt His name together. Psalm 34:3
From the pastor . . .
I recently had a conversation with a dozen of the emerging pastoral leaders in the PCA.
One of the topics of discussion was how to identify and encourage the gifts of women in
our congregations. I shared about the impact of the WIC core curriculum on our church,
particularly the womens ministry. It was encouraging to hear those pastors echo my
sentiments.
I went on to share with them that I have yet to find a dynamic, vital church that does
not have an equally vital womens ministry. Then, in light of three churches that I
know are struggling, I said that in each of those churches there is little or no organized
womens ministry. If we are to grow healthy, prevailing churches, we cannot do it
without a vital womens ministry.
In the next two years I will be spearheading the effort to establish an Indiana
Presbytery. This effort will be accomplished through the revitalization of existing
churches as well as the planting of many Biblically-based, Christ-centered, Grace-oriented
churches. I will be working along side my wife, Sally, and the leader of our womens
ministry team, Joan Sato, to see to it that every church in Indiana develops a dynamic
womens ministry.
Tim Kirk
Christ Community Church, PCA
Carmel, Indiana
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The
Wick
Winter Quarter 1999 |
Christ Community Church
Carmel, IN
In August, 1997, the womens ministry
of Christ Community Church sent four elders wives to Atlanta for the Helpers By
Design Conference. Sally Kirk, wife of the senior pastor, returned to Indiana with a
vision to develop a ministry to elders wives at CCC. God had laid on her heart a
desire to encourage and equip the wives of ruling and teaching elders. Sally began by
making the conference videos and tapes available to the elders wives. She opened her
home for meetings to offer encouragement and a time of prayer. God used these sessions to
cultivate community, strengthen leadership marriages, and build unity among these women. A
year later, in August 1998, the elders wives served together by hosting the first
Kick Off Brunch for all the women in the church. Sallys ministry has now
expanded to include three church planters wives in the Indianapolis area. Her vision
includes ministering in a preventative way especially regarding the challenges and
responsibilities in a church plant situation.
Mitchell Road
Presbyterian Church Greenville, SC
Mitchell Road WIC produced a prayer guide to be
used every day of the month. Each day has a verse of adoration, confession, thanksgiving
and supplication and lists specific requests for their church staff, ministries, missions,
and one request that has something to do with civil or community needs. These guides are
being used to strengthen community and focus prayer in the life of the covenant body.
Cedar Springs
Presbyterian Church, Knoxville, TN
WIC goes to the movies! In an effort to be
creative in showing the WIC Love Gift Video, the Cedar Springs WIC planned a surprise
event. Women were invited to dress casually, meet at the church, and take part in a
special WIC afternoon. Upon arrival, the women were ushered into a room decorated like a
movie theater, complete with tickets, popcorn, candy and drinks. After a time of
fellowship, the lights dimmed and the presentation of the video began. A memorable and fun
afternoon was had by all!
West Boca Presbyterian
Boca Raton, FL
During Missions Week, the WIC hosted a
progressive brunch for the five missionary women who attended. The local women were
divided into groups with a designated driver and one of the missionary women. As the women
progressed from house to house, they were given questions to ask the missionary and each
other. Moving from one home to another gave everyone a grand opportunity to fellowship and
to learn more about each other. At the final stop, the missionary women shared a personal
testimony, prayer requests, and thoughts on missions through their childrens eyes. |
Back Creek Presbyterian
Mt. Ulla, SCSpurred on by two
articles in the 98 Summer WIC Resource Letter, the pastors wife and WIC
president wanted to encourage the women who serve on the WIC council. They hosted a
luncheon with the theme, "Let Us Serve One Another In Love." As guests arrived,
they were encouraged to visit with each other and locate 23 items strategically placed
around the room that represented a servants heart. Items included a heart-shaped
mold, pruning shears, a broom, and a serving tray. The thought-provoking game was a
catalyst for a brainstorming session about ways the WIC council can serve the women in the
church throughout the year. As each guest left, she received a gift bag containing three
items representing love, light and salt. It was suggested she keep one item and share the
remaining two with other women. The entire church was touched by one small luncheon
originally meant only to thank, serve, and encourage a WIC council.
Great Lakes PresWIC
Each fall Great Lakes PresWIC has annual
state-wide meetings to provide opportunities to equip and encourage women. On Saturday,
September 26th, PresWIC President Joan Sato and Carolyn Ogburn joined the women of
Michigan at Christ Church in Grand Rapids for Michigans first state-wide MICHWIC
meeting. The conference theme verse was Romans 15:5-7. The topics were "Unity, Why Do
We Do The Things We Do?" and "Am I My Sisters Keeper?" The day also
included three seminars: "Prayer: Rest in the Battle," "Leadership for
Women in the Church," and a panel discussion on comfort. The women had the privilege
of connecting with sixty-six other women representing all five PCA churches in Michigan.
This meeting will be repeated in Kentucky and Indiana.
Grace Toronto Church
Toronto, Ontario
Here is another clever idea for saving money for
the 1999 WIC Conference
..a "LOONIE-TWOONIE DRIVE" campaign. If each woman
can save one loonie and one twoonie per day she will have enough money to go to the
conference! To help those who cannot do this, a special jar will be put out each Sunday,
giving everyone in the church the opportunity to put their extra LOONIES and TWOONIES in,
to help sponsor other women. ( A LOONIE is a Canadian dollar coin; a TWOONIE is a $2
coin.)
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Published by:
Christian Education & Publications, 1700 North Brown Road,
Lawrenceville, GA 30043
Charles H. Dunahoo, Coordinator; Susan Hunt, Director of WIC Ministry; Jane Patete, Editor |
1999 WIC Love Gift
The WIC Love Gift rotates between all of the committees and agencies of
the PCA.
1999
Recipient: Covenant Theological Seminary
Project: Uniting Hearts in Ministry
Scholarship
Your 1999 WIC Love Gift will help create a legacy of training and impact future
generations by:
Equipping spouses of ministers to serve Gods kingdom more effectively in
support of spreading the Gospel of Grace.
Assisting spouses as they grow together in their knowledge of Gods Word.
Strengthening the marriages and families of future church leaders.
Helping husbands and wives receive seminary training together without the burden
of doubled tuition costs.
Creating a source of permanent funding for spousal scholarships.
Helping increase enrollment by attracting more quality married couples to
Covenant Seminary, the denominational seminary of the PCA.
The 1999 WIC Love Gift will create the Uniting Hearts in Ministry Scholarship.
This endowed scholarship will provide a permanent source of funding for Covenants
unique spousal tuition assistance programa program which allows the spouses of
full time students to attend regular seminary classes, even earn a degree, on scholarship.
Presentation Ideas for Local WICs
Thank you for helping to make this years Love Gift a success! As you show the
1999 WIC Love Gift video, please open by discussing:
that Covenant Seminary is the national seminary of the PCA
that this years WIC Love Gift will strengthen the families of
tomorrows pastors by helping Covenant Seminary offer scholarships to the spouses of
full time students.
that these scholarships allow the spouses of fulltime students to attend
seminary classes, or even earn a complete seminary degree (such as a Master of Arts in
General Theological Studies), on scholarship.
Before showing the video, please:
Mention the names of anyone from your church who is attending
Covenantespecially the spouses of full time students (perhaps there are some who
have attended Covenant in the past).
Ask the women to write a note of encouragement to these individuals. The women
could also send an encouraging article, book, or sermon tape.
Ask the women to pray for these students, or, if no one from your church attends
Covenant Seminary, simply pray for all Covenant students, keeping the following prayer
requests in mind:
1) That they would study diligently, with the primary goal of seeking deeper intimacy
with Christ as they come to more fully embrace Gods inerrant Word.
2) That God would help them order their priorities and grant them strength and wisdom
as they juggle study, work, ministry internships, and family obligations.
3) That God would use their seminary time to fashion their hearts for service in His
kingdom, kindling an ever-increasing love for His Word and His people. Pray that their
ministries would impact many generations to come.
Just before showing the video, ask the women to discuss what kind of impact they think
Covenants spousal scholarship program might have on the students who currently
participate. How do they think it might make a difference in these womens lives as
they:
build their marriages?
raise their children?
go through seminary together with their husbands?
serve in their husbands church or ministry after graduation?
relate to, and encourage, their husbands as their husbands serve in demanding
ministry roles?
*** SHOW VIDEO ***
After the video:
discuss what surprised the women or what they learned.
Did they learn something new about Covenant Seminary?
Did they discover that the spousal scholarship program had an impact that they
did not anticipate?
distribute a copy of the bulletin insert to each woman.
discuss where, and to whom, the women can direct a contribution.
remind the women that the Seminary deeply appreciates their continual prayer for
its ministry. Regardless of whether every woman can make a financial donation, each one
can make a vital and coveted contribution by her prayers.
If you show this video prior to July 1, please remind the women that donations and
written commitments (in letters) received before July 1 will help the Seminary earn
special challenge funds.
Finally, please close in a word of prayer for Gods blessing on this years
Love Gift. Pray that God will use this gift to strengthen many families and touch many
lives with the Gospel of grace.
Thank you for your interest in this years WIC Love Gift!
Please schedule our church for the 1999 Love Gift
video!
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Published by: Christian Education & Publications,
1700 North Brown Road, Lawrenceville, GA 30043
Charles H. Dunahoo, Coordinator; Susan Hunt, Director
of WIC Ministry; Jane Patete, Editor
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