Making Connections November 2018

Heartland Regional Newsletter

A Note from Mark | Joell Haugan | Meet Pastor Joe Welty | Settlement Report

Zion Baptist Solar Project

One year ago Zion Baptist Church in Edmonton hit the switch on their brand new solar paneled roof. They estimate that over the course of each year, they’ll generate 100% of their electricity needs! In the summer, when the solar panels produce more electricity than they need, they’ll sell the excess and earn credits. On less sunny days they’ll use the credits to buy electricity the way they used to.

It all started when a small group expressed interest in renewable energy sources, and found out about a grant the church could apply for. With the support of the board, they applied for an Eco City municipal grant. No church had done it before, and it was a major process to provide the research required. But it was worth it – Edmonton awarded Zion a grant of approximately $38,000. The church decided to go ahead, and budgeted for the remaining ~$15,000.

Part of the grant required the church to do some renewable energy educating, so they had fun hosting some local classrooms to learn about how solar energy works. The whole congregation got involved too, and it’s turned into a fun learning experience.

Creation care has become a focus for the congregation. Last year they converted their lights to LED which has reduced their energy consumption by about 25%. And they have a community garden which has become an important connecting point for the neighbourhood.

The panels themselves are very noticeable. Last December, for example, with a snow covered landscape the roof remained clear, collecting solar rays on sunny winter days. The visibility of the project has enabled the church to develop connections with the green community in Edmonton, a door they didn’t have before. They’ve had a number of phone calls from other churches interested in how they could also install solar panels.

“Creation care is incredibly important,” Pastor Craig Traynor says. “It’s a hot topic in our culture, and when we as churches take that seriously it gets the attention of our city and government and province. It sets an example of being stewards. We’ll also save a lot of money in the future.”

On the last Sunday in October they hosted Solar Celebration Sunday, with a potluck meal and lots of invited guests to commemorate one year of solar power.

Meal for a Meal in Leduc

The youth at Leduc Community Baptist recently threw their energy into preparing and serving a huge spaghetti feast for their church. Dinner was by donation – youth pastor Dean Haugan suggests guests donate what they would normally spend on a Friday night out. For some that’s $15, for others it might be $100.

And the thing they’re fundraising for? It’s not what you might expect. The $1500 they raised will purchase food for another meal which the youth group will serve at The Mustard Seed. A meal for a meal, as it were.

Spaghetti feasts are something the Leduc Youth Group has done periodically over the years. This year it was their experience at SERVE in Kamloops that energized the kids to serve more.

“They just wanted to keep going,” Dean says. “They came home from SERVE and wanted to find ways to keep helping here at home.”

This year Dean says they’re starting a new core group of youth, since a bunch recently graduated., so there were a lot of younger kids there, relatively new to youth.

“Sometimes youth have ‘workitis’… when there’s work to be done, they disappear. But that didn’t happen. They all worked so hard, they just didn’t stop.” Dean says. “One girl who is pretty new, I don’t think she’s a Christian, but she heard about the dinner and came down at the last minute to help serve.”

The fundraiser dinner served easily a hundred people at two sittings. That’s a lot of garlic toast. Dean told the youth before each sitting, “It’s going to get crazy out there, but as you’re serving, think about someone downtown who might be going without food tonight. That’s what we’re doing this for.”

“There are moments when you just stand back and watch. I’m so proud of my kids,” Dean says. “They really got behind it.”

Reflecting Theologically with the Hungry

By Rupen Das, National Director, Canadian Bible Society and Gordon King, Westview Baptist Church –JMN Blog

Gordon taught a course on Christian ethics last year at Ambrose Seminary in Calgary. He covered a number of approaches to ethics that were helpful in framing the way Christians could think and talk about moral issues. “Right” and “wrong” seldom present themselves without a difficult fog of collateral issues, personal interests and economic considerations.

Rupen ended his international career in 2017 in order to become President of the Canadian Bible Society. During the previous decade his vocation had included leadership for food assistance programs in the Middle East and work with the European Baptist Federation in response to the refugee crisis. His book called Compassion and the Mission of God was published in 2016.    

Our conversations in 2017 often included theological and ethical reflections that moved from places of relative power to social locations on the margins. We pondered a Biblical perspective that we called the “WOA” approach to ethics. WOA stands for the scriptural triad of the widow, orphan and alien. The three groups represented people that lived in the borderlands, or margins, of the community. They were often isolated, poor and vulnerable. The community of faith was called to identify with them, to protect their rights and to offer compassionate care for their needs.

We think that the WOA approach helps Canadian churches to think about hunger from the perspective of the hungry. The reality is that in 2018 we are seeing the number of hungry people climb for the third consecutive year. The official hunger count of the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) now is 815 million people—11% of the world’s population. In Africa, 23% of the population receives insufficient kilocalories for their daily activities. 

We believe these figures actually mask the truth of hunger. The FAO works with a definition of hunger that requires 12 consecutive months of inadequate nutrition before one qualifies for the hunger count. Furthermore, the measurement is based on the kilocalorie requirements of a sedentary person. In semi-retirement, Gordon’s lifestyle could be described as mostly sedentary. In contrast, a woman farmer in Rwanda, a male laborer in El Salvador or a high school student in India have the nutritional needs of an active person.

How do we think theologically about hunger from the perspective of sisters and brothers that live in the borderlands of poverty, disease, and violence? How do we prayerfully consider the meaning of righteousness in a global context?

We would like to make a few suggestions for our thoughts, conversations, and praxis:

  • Hunger is largely a matter of geography. 98% of the world’s hunger people live in the Global South and the Middle East.
  • The hungry ask about root causes. One of the causes is poverty. Food follows money. Look at our grocery stories in middle class suburban areas. 
  • Hunger is related to conflict and violence in 18 countries of the world including Yemen, South Sudan, Syria, and Somalia. The hungry cry out for peace.
  • Hunger is affected by environmental issues. The number of extreme climate-related disasters, including extreme heat, droughts, floods and storms, has doubled since the early 1990s. The hungry attribute blame to the lifestyles of citizens of the Global North. 
  • Hunger is primarily a rural issue. There is a tragic irony that the places that produce crops are often the locations of highest under nutrition. The hungry ask questions about just rewards for the food they produce.

Moving our theological reflections to the margins encourages us to think of food as a human right rather than a simple economic commodity. We submit that there is something inherently different about food, water and air because they are a common good to be shared by all people. We encourage individuals and congregations to struggle with St. Paul’s teaching about a fair balance (NRSV) or equality (NIV) between the hungry and the food-secure in first century churches.

Our desire is not that others might be relieved while you are hard pressed, but that there might be equality. 2 Corinthians 8:13 (NIV)

We suggest that the Biblical virtues of discernment, generosity and courage are needed in facing this issue from the perspective of those who hunger and are asking God to intervene on their behalf. We need discernment to determine actions that are effective rather than alternatives that simply make us feel good. Generosity will enable a transfer of resources toward those who are most in need. Courage is required to raise our voices about the importance of working to end conflicts, tackle climate change and increase aid budgets.

Most importantly, we are called upon to pray alongside the hungry that God’s kingdom will come, His will be done, and that all people will have the daily bread that they require for a full and meaningful life.

Copyright ©  2018 Canadian Baptists of Western Canada, All rights reserved.

Making Connections is the Monthly Newsletter of the CBWC. The senior editor is Zoë Ducklow, who works under the executive editorial direction of Rob Ogilvie and the Communications & Stewardship committee. Have a story idea? Want to tell us how great we’re doing? Or how terribly? Email Zoë at zducklow@cbwc.ca.

Mountain Standard Regional Newsletter October 2018

A Dying Church Reborn

It was back in April 2016 when our Bonnie Doon Baptist Church in Edmonton decided to end services and pass their building on to the CBWC. The pastor and much of their small congregation were in their eighties at that point in time. A quick study shows the church’s rich 104-year history and recalls the influence of many highly regarded CBWC pastors and ministers in its wake. At the last meeting of the church, they appointed Dennis Stone, Sam Breakey, and Sue Hunter as trustees of the church.

The church building is situated in the French section of Edmonton. With a developing Haitian church in the area, there was a French-speaking congregation in need of a building, without the financial resources to obtain one. The CBWC does not wish to lose its inner city buildings because once they are gone, they are truly gone. Therefore, the CBWC board agreed to take a loan against the value of the building in order to make some necessary repairs. The CBWC would then rent the building out at a reasonable rate to the Haitian church and possibly another CBWC church plant in order to repay the loan. To date, the building has received a new roof, new windows, drainage work, and interior paint. Further repairs will mean new steps, new carpet, improved parking, and more.

Another significant step has also been completed. This new Haitian congregation has adopted the constitution of the existing Bonnie Doon Church. On September 8th Dennis, Sam, and Sue witnessed the church bring 52 new people into membership. The congregation is Haitian and French speaking. That night they appointed deacons and other officers to take over the functions of the church. They also appointed a new pastor, Jonas Seide (pronounced “saw-ee-de”). Dennis, Sue, and Sam were also voted out of their trustee positions as new ones were appointed.

Now this church on a Sunday morning has vibrant music, numerous kids, and excitement about the way forward. It is a church plant that has not had to take the tedious steps required to gain recognition by the CRA. It is now, in fact, part of the continuing story that is Bonnie Doon Baptist Church. Praise be to God!

FBC Calgary Manse Fire Rebuild

The manse at First Baptist in Calgary experienced a fire some months ago. As you will see in the accompanying pictures, it has now been newly refurbished. The manse will become the new office spaces for the church staff and will fulfill some other useful purposes. The rebuild maintains the classic and historical look of the building on the outside, but much of the inside also has the bold and sturdy wood look of the architectural period. Pictures show some of the CBWC Calgary ministerial looking through the facility, which is scheduled to open in just a few weeks.

Photos

Executive staff met for an annual retreat at Gull Lake in early September

This September, Clinton Pigeau started as Trinity Baptist’s new Associate Pastor of Youth and Young Adults in Sherwood Park, AB.

Dennis and Sue packed up their worldly belongings … well, the ones they had in their old office anyway… and moved to the Taylor Seminary campus as of July 1, 2018. Come visit Dennis in his new office!

Ministerial meetings: Central Cluster, Edmonton and Calgary

Settlement Report

To see open positions, visit our Careers page: https://cbwc.ca/careers/

New Hires
  • Rebecca Thornber, Minister of Discipleship and Community, FBC Vancouver, BC
  • Brian Munro, Senior Pastor, Kitimat First Baptist, BC
  • Brian Carnahan, Senior Pastor, Bethel Baptist Church, Sechelt, BC
  • Don Oddie, Interim Pastor, FBC Brandon, MB

This regional newsletter is published quarterly within the CBWC’s monthly newsletter, Making Connections. Have a story idea? Want to tell us how great we’re doing? Or how terribly? Email our editor Zoë: zducklow@cbwc.ca or the BCY office: bcarea@cbwc.ca

Mountain Standard Regional Newsletter July 2018

No, I Don’t Agree with You, But …

In life we cannot go very many minutes without running up against someone who has an opinion contrary to our own. We might see it in the paper, hear it on the radio, watch it on the television, possibly absorb it from our kids, sense it in advertisements, or glean it from clerks at the store. The feeling of wanting to stop the world and set others straight is a common experience, especially when we feel like we are in touch with the heart of God.
I, too, have to cool myself down on minor or even major confrontations to my values. The verses of 1 Peter 3:15-16 have had special meaning to me lately. You may have it memorized, but hear it anew: “But in your hearts revere Christ as Lord. Always be prepared to give an answer to everyone who asks you to give the reason for the hope that you have. But do this with gentleness and respect, keeping a clear conscience, so that those who speak maliciously against your good behavior in Christ may be ashamed of their slander.” (NIV) Historically for me, I have placed these verses as a shield about me for when I feel formally attacked for my beliefs. It can certainly be applied that way, but more often in my spirit, I feel attacked by informal encroachments upon my values. I think there is something here for me in terms of how I handle myself in those moments.

The part that sticks out to me is: “…Do this with gentleness and respect, keeping a clear conscience.” If, in my spirit and attitude or words, I fight back hoping to dominate as though I have an argument to win, then I lose. I need first to have gentleness, respect, and a clear conscience. The verse says I am to be ready to give a reason, but it is not my duty to convince an opponent. My opponents are ultimately accountable to God themselves. If my words convince them of my position, I will indeed be pleased. But if my words are void of gentleness, respect and a clear conscience, then something is truly wrong. Dare I forget the challenge to “love your enemies”? The internal attitudes reflecting the fruit of the Spirit in the inevitable challenges of opponents speaks volumes for the Kingdom.  

Another challenge in these verses is to be sure our behaviour does not give others the privilege of slander against us or against the Lord Himself. The moments we feel challenged are the very times we need to breathe, pray, request the Spirit’s filling, then respond with godly attitude, and then think of what words God might give. The truth sets us free, but it does not set us free to release attitudes that reflect badly on His name or His work within us.

May God help us all to be known for shining forth “love, joy, peace, patience …”

Your co-worker, Dennis

Recommended Reading

It’s All Your Fault!: 12 Tips For Managing People Who Blame Others For Everything by Bill Eddy

This book comes recommended by Paul Spate and a friend of mine, Alan Simpson. It speaks about ‘high-conflict people.’ The book gives some practical guidelines on how to understand and approach this difficult type of personality. Everyone comes in contact with these personalities from time to time, but those in ministry can find them especially awkward to handle within a church context. You can read an excerpt here.   

-DS

Canadian Baptist denominational leaders (CBWC, CBOQ , CBAC, and L’Union d’Eglises Baptistes Francaises au Canada) met in Guelph in May 2018. One of the projects they are working on together is the development of a new Worship and Service Manual.

Coming Up: Alberta Women in Focus Retreat

October 12-14, 2018 Canmore, Alberta. Get more information and register here.

Bonnie Doon Baptist Church is undergoing a transformation. In addition to some renovations of the building (a new roof, flooring, etc.), a growing Haitian group is holding weekly Sunday services in Creole. Bonnie Doon is a French neighbourhood in Edmonton, AB. We’re thrilled to see the ministry of Christ thrive in this place.

We’ve Got a New Name!

As promised, in our April newsletter, our region has agreed on a new name. Thank you to many who submitted suggestions. As of now, we are no longer the Alberta and Northwest Territories Region. The CBWC Board approved our new name in April 2018: Mountain Standard Region. This name is now inclusive of our AB, BC, and NT churches. Our corresponding new email address for our Edmonton office is msregion@cbwc.ca. 

Speaking of the Edmonton office, we’ve also moved! As of July 1st you’ll find us on the Taylor Seminary campus. Our phone number remains the same: (780) 462-2176.

11525 – 23 Avenue NW
Edmonton, AB T6J 4T3

We are planning to host an open house sometime in September so you can drop by and see the new space. Stay tuned for the date.

Obituaries

It is with deep sadness that we announce the passing of Faye Webber. She died suddenly on the afternoon of May 29. Faye had a passion for mentorship and was involved in various ministries including marriage retreats and worship leadership. She had been involved with the Alberta Regional Advisory Group and with Gull Lake Camp. Along with her husband, Bob (a former CBWC staff member), Faye was actively involved in her home church, Brownfield Baptist Church, AB. The funeral was held at Brownfield Community Centre on Monday, June 11.
John Easter passed away on Sunday, June 17 after battling cancer for quite some time. He is survived by his three children, Martha Jean, Ian and Elizabeth. Along with his late wife Martha (who passed away in January 2017), John was a missionary in India for 19 years. They worked at First Baptist Church in Victoria and then settled into retirement and served at Laurier Heights Baptist Church in Edmonton. John’s love for God and gregarious positivity will be remembered by all who knew him. The celebration of life was held on Tuesday, June 26 at Laurier Heights Baptist Church.

New Ministers Orientation

We had 23 participants this year for New Ministers Orientation (NMO) at the end of April. Each year we hold the NMO at Carey Theological College in Vancouver. It’s proven to be a helpful orientation, and in fact, it is required that all of our pastors and chaplains attend an NMO within the first few years of their ministry. 

It’s a 2-day orientation, with lots of interaction between staff and participants. CBWC covers the cost of transportation, accommodation and meals at Carey.

Brenda and Everett Budd (pastor, First Baptist Church, Peace River) celebrate the birth of their son David James Budd. Congratulations to the new parents!

Sam Breakey (CBWC Church Health Strategist) facilitates discussion Fort Saskatchewan Community Baptist Church. If your church is interested in participating in this initiative, please contact Sam at sbreakey@cbwc.ca.

Settlement Report

New Hires:

  • Joseph Steeves, Senior Pastor, Faith Community Baptist Church, Claresholm, AB
  • Dick Schonewille, Interim Pastor, Virden Baptist Church, MB

Moving on:

  • Bill Christieson, Senior Pastor, Awaken, Calgary, AB
  • Barry Breker, Senior Pastor, First Baptist Church, Pincher Creek, AB
  • Paris Perry, Interim Pastor, Sonrise Community Baptist Church, Calgary, AB

Retiring:

  • Al McPhedran, Senior Pastor, Fort Saskatchewan Community Baptist Church, AB

Making Connections July 2018

Click here for the Mountain Standard regional newsletter

A note from Dennis | We’ve Got a New Name! | Obituaries | New Ministers Orientation | Settlements

Chuck Harper: Chaplain and Advocate for the Homeless in Vernon

Chuck Harper’s friend was found, dead, behind a gas station dumpster in Vernon a couple of years ago. He had been homeless; no one knew the cause of death, and few seemed to care.

“There was nothing made of it. It was like he never existed,” Chuck recalls.

It happened a few years after Chuck started the North Okanagan Community Chaplaincy (NOCC). Amid grieving his friend’s death, the experience underscored again an acute need in the community. Every year, a startling number of homeless people die in Vernon, and the town struggles to understand the issue of homelessness.

“There’s a lot of misinformation and a lack of understanding,” Chuck says. When a homeless person dies, it’s hard for their friends to find out what really happened. They often don’t know if they died from exposure, murder, poor health, a drug overdose, or some other cause. People come to Chuck for information that he often doesn’t have.

So when yet another person he knew died after falling down a stairwell, Chuck knew he needed to do something more. With the help of other agencies and the city, he organized an annual Homeless Memorial and monument in a downtown park. The monument has become a safe place for the community to mourn their dead, and the annual gathering helps to raise the issue of homelessness in the public eye.

The BC Coroner’s Service heard about his work and reached out to see if they could collaborate to learn more about the deaths. Since then, Chuck’s developed a good relationship with them, and now when someone is missing or has passed away, he can get accurate information to share with

the community. He’s also working with the Coroner’s Office to get better statistics on homeless deaths and the challenges facing this community.

“It’s often said that opioids are the problem, but in fact the leading cause of death among homeless people is compromised health, including malnutrition,” he says. “The second leading cause is cancer.”

Having this information allows Chuck to help in educating and advocating on behalf of the homeless. Chuck shares this information with the agencies he collaborates with so that front-line response is better targeted to real needs. He also uses the information to tell the whole story of homelessness.

“This person who died is not just some nameless, homeless bum. It’s a person of value who had a life and had fallen on hard times,” he says.

Homelessness is a political hot potato in Vernon, and there’s a lot of misunderstanding about the issues. Politicians like to say the homeless people come from other towns, that it isn’t really Vernon’s problem. But actually, the majority of homeless people are from Vernon, Chuck says. Instead what needs to be focused on is Vernon’s serious lack of affordable housing, which has dramatic costs on the lives of the marginalized. Compromised health and a hard time accessing health care are contributing to over a dozen deaths every year.

“If there were fatalities at an intersection, and 14 people died at that location, you can guarantee that something would be done about it,” Chuck says. “Yet our guys and gals are dying, largely from preventable issues. And it doesn’t appear to be important enough.”

At the heart of his work is the love of Christ. “For me, the bottom line is that people are dying without knowing Jesus,” he says.

Chuck spent time on the streets in Vernon as a teen, has lived a life of addiction and experienced firsthand how CBWC churches’ shared the love of Christ to the “least of these.” He encountered the transforming love of Christ at First Baptist Calgary’s Burning Bush coffeehouse years ago, and was able to turn his life around. “I don’t know where I’d be if the Burning Bush hadn’t been there,” he says. Later he helped found the Mustard Seed, and in 2013 he started the North Okanagan Community Chaplaincy to fill a gap in Vernon.

A big part of his work is spending time with people going through hard times, giving them friendship, mentorship and support. He also does a lot of speaking to small groups to educate people about issues related to homelessness, and advocates on behalf of the homeless. In 2016 he started a monthly street church at First Baptist Vernon. The church service and meal gets about 70-80 people out each month, with the support of seven local churches and two dozen volunteers. They’re working towards becoming a regular, weekly church plant.

“I think our denomination does well at looking after our less fortunate, and we need to keep on keeping on. Too many people are dying without knowing the love of Jesus.”

Moving On: Sherry Bennett & Majd AlAjji

Sherry Bennett energized intergenerational ministry at CBWC churches

Over the last 12 years, Sherry Bennett has been a key advocate and resource for our churches in their ministries to reach children and families for Christ. Whether a church has 5 or 500 children in their congregation, she endeavoured to offer ideas to provide a meaningful ministry through inter-generational engagement. She became trained in safe practice policies and assisted many of our churches in establishing workable guides and policies for responsible risk management. She led workshops both with Carey and on location in churches, answered numerous email queries, researched curriculums, and the list goes on.

Sherry finished her role as the Children and Families (CFam) Coordinator at the end of June in order to take on a teaching position in Kelowna. We are so grateful for the years of service Sherry has given and we know that she will continue to offer support and encouragement as she is able, though no longer in an official capacity.

Thank you, Sherry for serving us so well and faithfully!

Children and Families Ministry Going Forward

In order to continue to resource our churches, Sherry has helped to line up leaders from our churches who could offer you workshops on a variety of topics listed below. If you would like to host a workshop in your church, the CBWC can help with travel costs so a presenter can come to you and in-service your leaders. Contact Faye Reynolds (cfam@cbwc.ca) to book a workshop or training event. Faye will also be your primary contact for other questions or needs and she will endeavor to point you to the best source. A brochure with a fuller description of these workshops will be available on our CBWC website later this summer.

* Biblical Storytelling — Amanda Hecht, pastor in Wakaw, SK

* Volunteer Recruitment — Bree Young, Children & Family Director, Summerland, B.C.

* How to Go from a Great Children’s Ministry to a Phases Ministry — Bree & Lee Young, Summerland, B.C.

* Why Family Ministry? — Bree Young, Summerland, B.C.

* Generations Worshiping, Learning & Serving Together — Sherry Bennett, Kelowna, B.C.

* Creative Worship — Joan Dosso, Minister of Music, Emmanuel, Victoria, B.C.

* Parenting and Partnering with Impact — Sherry Bennett, Kelowna, B.C.

* Developing Mission Minded Family — Sherry Bennett, Kelowna, B.C.

* Teaching for Transformation — Sherry Bennett, Kelowna, B.C.

* Growing Your Children’s Ministry — Natasha Ewaskow, Children and Family director, Cranbrook, B.C.

* Intergenerational Church Ministry — Natasha Ewaskow, Cranbrook, B.C.

* Inviting and Supporting Volunteers — Natasha Ewaskow, Cranbrook, B.C.

 

Majd AlAjji invested incredible energy into CBWC’s refugee sponsorship ministry

If you are a church that has been involved with refugee sponsorship, then you are well aware of Majd AlAjji and the wonderful expertise and support he has offered our churches in navigating the many requirements and complications of sponsoring refugees. Majd’s attention to detail, his tenacity, his compassion for families coming to Canada, his desire for our churches to be safe landing places for refugees and his fluency in Arabic have all been incredible gifts to the CBWC.

We’re so grateful for the time he spent with the CBWC, but unfortunately for us, Majd has accepted a full time position with the Canadian Bible Society, where he’ll focus on reaching ethnic churches in the prairies. This is a great move for Majd and his wife Angel, and we celebrate this opportunity for them, though it is a huge loss to us. The CBWC will continue to be a Sponsorship Agreement Holder (SAH) and assist our churches with private sponsorships or blended visa applications. Faye Reynolds will now be your contact person to assist with applications and process.  refugees@cbwc.ca

CBWC Ministry Priorities

As we’ve mentioned before, the CBWC, through prayer and discernment has decided on three ministry priorities for the coming years. Here’s a video message from Rob Ogilvie, expressing our hopes and prayers for these priorities.
You can read a summary of each here: https://cbwc.ca/about/ministry-priorities/

Thanks for joining us for Assembly 2018

We had 69 churches with more than 190 participants registered to take part in the 2018 Online Assembly. An invitation was put out to CBWC churches to submit photos or videos that would be defined by the #wearecbwc hashtag. This was compiled and shown at the start of our meeting to celebrate the beautiful diversity of our church family, united in one purpose.

Some churches got together for a potluck dinner before the Online Assembly, which was a great way for them to get to know each other and strengthen relationships before getting down to business.

  •  “Hearing from Rob was the highlight for me and made coming worthwhile. I was very glad to hear the follow up from the prayer initiative. But the others were good too and the business is important.”
  •  A highlight from one of the churches that gathered at Westview Baptist was “being with delegates from other Calgary churches.”
  •  “I appreciated the updates from Rob, Victor, Colin and Jason. It provided an opportunity for my church to see some of the people they never see.”

We continue to work towards a seamless online presentation, and got many helpful suggestions to help improve the online experience in future years. Thank you to everyone who participated and we look forward to welcoming you in person next year at the Gathering 2019 in High River, AB!

The Gathering 2019

High River Baptist Church, High River, Alberta,

May 23 – 25, 2019 https://cbwc.ca/events/#assembly

Events Coming Up

Banff Pastors and Spouses Conference: Nov 5-8, 2018 in Banff, AB. Get more info & register here.

SERVE: July 1-7, 2018 in Kamloops, BC. Pray for the youth this week.

BCY Pastors’ Retreat: July 5-6, 2018 in Victoria, BC.  Click here for more info.

BCY Assembly: July 6-7, 2018 in Victoria, BC.  Click here for more info.

Alberta Women in Focus Retreat: October 12-14, 2018 Canmore, AB. Click here for more info.

The Gathering 2019: May 23-25, 2019, High River, AB.  Click here for more info.

Copyright ©  2018 Canadian Baptists of Western Canada, All rights reserved.

Making Connections is the Monthly Newsletter of the CBWC. The senior editor is Zoë Ducklow, who works under the executive editorial direction of Rob Ogilvie and the Communications & Stewardship committee. Have a story idea? Want to tell us how great we’re doing? Or how terribly? Email Zoë at zducklow@cbwc.ca.

Making Connections May 2018

Announcing CBWC’s New Ministry Priorities

During the fall, Rob Ogilvie invited the CBWC community to participate in 77 Days of Prayer to listen for God’s direction for the coming years. Many churches shared feedback, thoughts and messages with the Board and Executive Staff, who spent the following three months praying through the results. They settled on a final focus of three areas:

Cultivating Leadership | Investing in Relationship | Engaging in Mission

Cultivating Leadership – We will be fostering future generations of Canadian Baptists by hiring a Director of Next Generation Ministries who will work with our partners in developing a possible gap year program, continue to invest in our youth leaders and youth through SERVE and work alongside our camp directors in supporting their leadership training programs.  

Investing in Relationship – We will be providing resources for our churches and clergy to maximize their health and effective ministry. In this we will focus on enhancing relationships with pastors, churches and ministry partners.

Engaging in Mission – We will be growing our CBWC family through fresh expressions and intentional implementation of the gospel. We will continue to sponsor refugees, serve alongside our Indigenous brothers and sisters, and continue to seek to plant new ministries and churches.

We are not a large denomination and we can’t do everything, but we pray that these new emphases we help us prioritize the ministries that God is calling all of us to, together, in this next season of ministry. Please pray with us that we might hear His voice and be faithful to His calling.

Click here for the Heartland regional newsletter

A note from Mark | Meet Tim Coleman | Interview with camp intern, Annika Scheelar | Dates

National Day of Prayer for Youth

All churches are invited to participate in the National Day of Prayer for Youth on Sunday June 10, 2018. It’s an annual initiative from the Canadian Baptist Youth and Family Team (a cooperative of youth and family leaders in the Canadian Baptist denominations).

“Our hope is to encourage prayer for the youth in our country, as well as educating people about what’s going on in the lives of youth today,” says Tammy Klassen, the CBWC representative on the Youth and Family Team.

“A lot of our churches don’t have a lot of youth, so they might not be that aware of what’s going on. But it’s not a reason for them not to be praying for them.”

The Youth and Family Team, who also produced the Imaginative Hope report about the state of youth and children in Canada which Making Connections wrote about here.

For the day of prayer, they’ve put together a guide with specific prayer requests, activities for youth and a prayer guide for adults. You can download it here and get more information about the team here: https://www.imaginativehope.ca/prayforyouth

“Regardless of whether a church has youth, we really want all CBWC congregations to join us in prayer on Sunday, June 10,” Tammy says.

Opportunity Grants, propelling CBWC local church ministries for 20 years

CBWC Opportunity Grants were founded in 1998 with a generous gift from the Charles Bentall Foundation. Since then, dozens of ministry start-ups in CBWC churches have been funded, expending the arms of Christ in our communities. This April, the Opportunity Grant Committee recommended to the Board that the program be dissolved for the foreseeable future, as the funds were depleted. With a heavy heart, the CBWC Board agreed.

In light of this decision, a celebration of the past is called for. Here are a few highlighted ministries that Opportunity Grants propelled forward.

Healing at the Wounding Place

Jodi Spargur founded Healing at the Wounding Place to help catalyze right, just and whole relationships between the church and First Peoples in Canada. In the past few years, Jodi has facilitated workshops across the CBWC for churches to gain a shared knowledge of the past, and a picture of current realities that prevent Indigenous/non-Indigenous relations from thriving. Only then can we begin to attend to the harms that have come—often at the hands of the church—and to seek healing and a way forward. Workshops include Indigenous leaders from the local community, so that work churches do supports that leadership. To host a workshop in your community, contact Jodi here: http://www.redclover.ca/contact/

The Wagon

Over the past 10 years ‘The Wagon’ (which was purchased and outfitted in part, through a CBWC Opportunities Grant) has enabled the Summerland Baptist Church ‘Music & Creative Arts Outreach Ministry’ to travel throughout Western Canada sharing music and a gospel message.  We have used this resource in 8 prisons, 6 North Coast First Nations communities, dozens of churches, parks, concert halls, parades, Senior facilities and Block Party Venues.  Some of the equipment even accompanied our Back Porch Gospel Bluegrass Band on 2 tours of Japan.  ‘The Wagon’ has and continues to enable our ministry teams to go where ever opportunities arise.  

Eastside Story Guild

Eastside Story Guild (ESG) is a ministry of Grandview Calvary Baptist Church in Vancouver. It’s are a community of children, youth and adults engaged in the craft of biblical storytelling. They embody stories in theatre, music and dance, exploring the intersection of our story with God’s story. Through fostering wonder and building creative skills, they deepen our faith and cultivate our imaginations.

ESG’s presentation of The Fallen Tent incorporates shadow theatre into the story of Paul and Silas in Philippi.

North OK Community Chaplancy

The gracious gift of the Opportunity Fund Grant. Enabled our chaplaincy ministry to grow into a full time operation. It gave me enough funds to work more hours and be more involved in the lives of our marginalized and homeless in our city. It helped purchase a sign, buy food for our once a month services.  Our two big roles in the city is the Homeless Memorial which we hold an annual service each October. To remember the large number of homeless related deaths we have each year. The Second of course is Street Church, we have entered our second year of operation and gone from 3 volunteers to about 15. 1 church involved to 7 represented. We are able to provide spiritual and physical food of over 70 people on a regular basis. Thank you very much for enabling us to move forward. Let me add how sorry I was to find out I could not reapply due to lack of funds. This grant was life changing in so many ways.

North Shore School of Mission

North Shore School of Mission had around 90 students attend one of the three Monday evening courses: Reading the Bible in the Church and the World; Introduction to Preaching and Teaching; and Issues in Global Mission. Students came from nine North Shore churches. Seven CBWC pastors taught classes, and four pastors from other North Shore churches and para-church leaders have been involved in teaching. Three students are enrolled full time for credit and are serving as ministry apprentices at Hillside Church. Other courses they have taken include Discipleship Then and Now, Missional Church, and Missional Leadership, as well as reflective ministry practicum courses. These three will be going on a short-term missions trip to South Africa in the Fall, during which they will conduct research work. The school’s library has been made available for use by church leaders, just had our first pastor spend a week studying with us this month.

Westside ARTS Academy

“Being created in the image of God is a mysterious thing, and one thing it means is that we can’t help but be creative. It is part of our nature. And creativity isn’t just exercised in traditional arts, but in all aspects of life. Our goal with the ARTS Academy is to give people permission to explore and grow their God-given nature. As Eric Liddell famously said in Chariots of Fire, When I run, I feel His pleasure. I echo it by saying, When I paint, I feel God’s pleasure.” – Westview ARTS Academy founder and director, Elaine Hileman

CBWC Churches in the News

Brownfield Baptist Church was featured in Alberta Farmer Express for their work with the Canadian Foodgrains Bank.

Iain Armstrong, a long time member of Laurier Heights Baptist Church in Edmonton passed away tragically after trying to stop a robbery. His son, Sean Armstrong wrote a tribute to his father, which he hopes will make people remember his father’s extraordinary life, not just the sudden end.

How to hand over a labour of love to the next generation
By Dianne Finstad, April 6, 2018 for the Alberta Farmer Express

The Brownfield and District Growing Project continues to thrive because it has been embraced by the whole community, young and old alike. This picture is from a video shot during last fall’s harvest. The video, which features swooping footage taken by a drone, can be found at the Foodgrains Bank’s Facebook page here.

It’s not only family farms facing the succession challenge these days. Community efforts such as Growing Projects for the Canadian Foodgrains Bank are looking to the future to see if they’ve inspired the next generation to carry on the cause.

One such venture finds itself in the middle of the process. The Brownfield and District Growing Project was among the first on the Prairies, and has been underway for more than three decades.

“My dad and his cousin took the first load of grain from our project 32 years ago, and my dad will turn 90 this year,” said Faye Webber, the first woman to chair the Brownfield project.

The effort began as an outreach of the Brownfield Baptist Church, and is now into its third generation of volunteers.

Succession was on the minds of many at a recent meeting of Alberta Foodgrains Project leaders. Some groups are filled with seniors who are realizing they can’t carry on indefinitely and need some younger help. However, the dedication to helping tackle global hunger becomes a real heart work, so it’s not easy for volunteers to step away.

“It’s an emotional decision, as much as it is practical, because there’s such deep meaning and commitment when you are aware of what this means to people in the world,” said Webber.

“If I had to point to one thing in terms of succession and being successful, it would be that the older generation has to ‘choose’ to let go.”

Read the whole article here.

Son of Southgate victim Iain Armstrong shares his dad’s ‘legacy of love’
By Karen Bartko, April 26, 2018 for Global News

Sharon and Iain Armstrong

Iain Armstrong was, by all accounts, the kind of man anyone would welcome into their homes and hearts. The 61-year-old was happily married for over 35 years to his wife Sharon and the father of two children, Dana and Sean.

Together with his wife, brother and sister-in-law, Armstrong owned Bunches Flowers Co. Last week while trying to stop a robbery near the company’s Southgate Centre store, he was violently attacked. He suffered severe injuries and died in an Edmonton hospital three days later.

Now, his son Sean is sharing his father’s story.

“If we would all behave just a little bit more like Iain, the benefit to humanity would be spectacular,” Sean Armstrong wrote in a touching tribute.

Given the criminal case involving his father’s death will remain in the public eye for some time, Sean said he chose to focus not on the abrupt end, but rather “the rich and worldly totality of my father’s life.”

“While the community at large has been appropriately shocked by the brazen attack, I want people to remember Iain for the adventurous life he lived all the way from his humble beginnings,” Sean wrote in his message accompanying his testimony.

Read Sean’s full statement here.

Copyright ©  2018 Canadian Baptists of Western Canada, All rights reserved.

Making Connections is the Monthly Newsletter of the CBWC. The senior editor is Zoë Ducklow, who works under the executive editorial direction of Rob Ogilvie and the Communications & Stewardship committee. Have a story idea? Want to tell us how great we’re doing? Or how terribly? Email Zoë at zducklow@cbwc.ca.

Heartland Regional Newsletter May 2018

 

It’s been a while since you’ve heard from us in the Heartland Office by means of newsletter. I do want to catch you up on some of what we’ve been up to, as the past while has been a season of transition for the CBWC.

Rob Ogilvie is our new Executive Minister, and I’ve enjoyed working with him in this new arrangement. As part of his leadership in this new role, Rob encouraged people in our family of churches to pray. This time of prayer was focused, and people from all across the denomination, including staff and board, were part of it. The Board, along with Rob, are distilling the main themes from the season of prayer, and our work together moving forward will be rooted in these themes.

In the fall, as many of you know, Jenn Gurel stepped down from her position as administrator in the Heartland Regional Office. Cindy has taken on the responsibilities, and in the process we have moved the office from our Rae Street location into an office at Argyle Road Baptist Church. This means I still get to see Jenn, as she works part-time at the church. This is a cost savings for the denomination, and Cindy is enjoying the office space, so I think the move has made sense for everyone involved. I’m grateful to Argyle Road Baptist Church for their willingness to work with us in this.

We continue to travel down the road of reconciliation as we partner with local churches in hosting Indigenous seminars. In the fall we partnered with CBM in having two events, one in Regina and one in Saskatoon. In March, Dauphin hosted an event, and I’m grateful for the opportunity to partner in these ways, working towards gaining further understanding.

Our Heartland Pastor and Spouse’s Retreat was once again held in Russell, Manitoba, with attendance being very strong. We were pleased to have Rob and Sarah Patterson lead us for our time together, and it was good to worship, eat, curl, play board games, and so forth. If you haven’t attended this retreat, please consider doing so.

There has also been lots of transition in our churches within the Heartland, as churches seek pastors and pastors seek positions. I want to thank the churches that are in an interim period right now, as many of these churches are resourceful in ensuring that ministry continues and that the needs of the congregations are met. As you well know, finding the right minister for the right congregation is very important work, and I’d appreciate your prayers for these churches and pastors who are seeking positions as well.

I continue to try and find ways to connect with pastors and churches. This includes attending ministerial gatherings, and visiting churches and pastors individually. In Winnipeg, we continue to have Leadership Forums, and I’m grateful to Filipino Evangelical for hosting such events. In June, Rob Ogilvie and Colin Godwin will join me for connecting BBQ events in Winnipeg, Saskatoon, and Regina. Please plan to attend if you are able.

Grace and Peace, and praying for you and your churches.

Mark Doerksen

Meet Pastor Tim Coleman

Reverend Timothy A. Coleman is the Associate Pastor of Adult Ministries at Westhill Park Baptist Church where he has been part of the pastoral team since August 2016. Prior to that position, he was the associate pastor and later, the solo Pastor at Kitimat First Baptist Church, a small coastal town in British Columbia where he served for nine years. He’s also served as a Youth, Adult and Associate Pastor in Alberta, Ontario, New Brunswick, Bristol in the UK and in East Africa.

Pastor Tim is married to Ragnhild and they have two daughters and a son: Erin (8), her younger sister Charlotte (5) and Philip (3). Tim is a civil engineer who grew up in Uganda as the oldest of eight children. Following his call to ministry, he lived and pastored in England where he pursued theological training at London Institute of Contemporary Christianity in London, UK. He then graduated with a Bachelors of Ministry degree from St. Stephen’s University, NB and later completed a Masters of Divinity Degree through Carey Theological College, B.C.

My names – why those names? Timothy Atuhaire Coleman. There are different ways we name in Uganda due to the influence of British colonization and the East African Revival from 1929 to the 1940s. People either have all English names, all African names, or a mix of both. My middle name is my family name and it’s not my father’s last name and neither do any of my siblings have the same family or last name. Atuhaire means ‘God’s grace and generosity.’

My wife: Ragnhild is a homemaker and also runs a hair product business. She loves connecting with people, is a great host and has a passion for the disenfranchised. She shares with me in the ministry at Westhill Park Baptist church as a Children’s Ministry volunteer and leads a weekly women’s small group study. However, she would tell you that her real passion is advocacy to end human trafficking. She enjoys the big prairie skies and the spectacular sunsets. She enjoys gardening, travel, good coffee, friends and board games.

Conversion: As someone famously said, “Life is what happens as you’re busy making plans.” That is more than a truism in my life. Like many, I thought I had my life all mapped out until I ran into God. God didn’t alter my plan, He welcomed me into His—a better one. It was the beginning of a major dismantling of my independence, religious strongholds in my family of origin, a major confrontation at my Catholic high school, a strange call into pastoral ministry, a radical change of career, being exiled from my home, and over 20 years of missionary work in Europe and North America.

Duties: I oversee the Adult Ministries, Marriage & Family support, Discipleship & Small Group Ministry, Newcomers Ministry; supervise some non-pastoral staff; coordinate our missions ministries & partnerships; give direction to our Sunday morning coffee & learn classes; preach occasionally  as well as help design & lead our Sunday morning worship among other pastoral care and administrative duties. I love my work and enjoy being part of the team of professional, godly and passionate men and women I work with.

Hobbies: I thrive on spending time with my family, playing team sports, the outdoors, overseas travel, playing scrabble, jazz music, art galleries, golfing & fishing. I love reading & debating theology, teaching the bible & playing the piano. I enjoy intercessory prayer, justice & mercy ministries (missions), and desire to disciple and equip the church to fulfill its worldwide mission.

Rough Riders Super-fan? Still working on it. One of my personal rules is that I have to reside in a province for at least 5 years before I adopt another team. I have lived here for two years. So ask me again in 2021 and we’ll see!

Life verse: Philippians 3:13b-14: Brothers and sisters, I do not consider myself yet to have taken hold of it. But one thing I do: Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead, I press on toward the goal to win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus.  

Interview with camp intern, Annika Scheelar

When Pelican Lake Baptist Camp was sold in 2010, the money was earmarked to help Manitoba youth participate in camp leadership programs. Annika Scheelar has been a part of Willowlake Baptist Church her entire life, and last summer she applied for the Camp Leadership grant, which is offered by the Heartland Area Resource Team. She got the grant and spent four weeks in a leadership program at Camp Arnes on the shores of Lake Winnipeg.

What did you learn about yourself?

I learned that I am capable of things that I didn’t think I could do. For example, during the first week of Ignite, we did a week-long canoe trip and it rained the whole first day. At certain points I wasn’t sure I could keep paddling, because I was so tired and sore. We had been paddling for hours, but we eventually reached our campsite—soaking wet, yet safe.

What did you learn about God?

I learned that you can see God in everything and everyone, that sometimes you just have to look a little closer. During the canoe trip I saw God everywhere in nature. Throughout the whole four weeks I constantly saw God in the people around me. Everyone in my group and the camp staff were so welcoming, so full of God-given joy and love for the Lord. It inspired me so much and made me, and still continues to make me want to be a better Christian.

How do you see yourself serving at your church once the summer is through?

Once summer is over I would love to be more active in helping with Sunday school and kids programs at church. I have helped in the past but after the Ignite program and shadowing a cabin leader in the final week, I know I want to do more.

Thank you for this opportunity!

Annika Scheelar

Dates

Join us this summer for BBQs with CBWC Executive Minister Rob Ogilvie, and Carey Theological College President Colin Godwin.

Alberta Regional Newsletter April 2018

This is the April 2018 regional newsletter from Alberta & N.W.T. We’re trying out a new format, instead of sending a PDF via email. Let us know what you think! You can give feedback to editor, Zoë Ducklow, regional administrator Sue Hunter, or regional minster Dennis Stone.

Let us go out of our way to be encouragers

Baptists have many wonderful qualities, but our independent streak can breed a cynical attitude. We may surmise the music could be different, the sermon could be more electrifying, the coffee much stronger and the attendance better. Without realizing it, our internal thoughts become judgments on others: on the coffee brewer, on the people who don’t attend, or on the people leading the service.

I know I can judge with the best of them. In fact, it’s not that I can, but that I do. Certainly there are times to judge, but the trails that lead to gossip or a non-cooperative spirit are easy to enter.

So last Sunday I sat through church and thought the music was excellent and the sermon was top notch—and I kept those thoughts to myself. Perhaps I perceive that these individuals are merely doing their job and they ought not to do less. Perhaps I quietly understand that they know they have done well with their gifts. But what, in fact, happens to me if I am quiet?

Hebrews 3:13 states, “But encourage one another daily, as long as it is called ‘Today,’ so that none of you may be hardened by sin’s deceitfulness.” Wow, encouragement helps resist sin’s deceitfulness!

At our recent Gull Lake Ministers Retreat, we had Joel Thiessen share with us statistics about how evangelicals are perceived by others. I gathered from what he presented, that we are generally thought of as judgmental, difficult, and unpleasant people. It was pointed out that those who declare themselves of no religion have the least interest, among other main religious groups, in evangelicals. My conclusion is that we are seen as the most judgmental.

Jesus “grew in favour with God and men/mankind/people.” Why is his church seen as a people from whom you keep your distance? Even the story of the woman at the well started with a positive, “You are right when you say you have no husband.” Why is it that people would so often look at evangelicals as negative and unfriendly? Yes, we have to discern and judge certain things, but our tendency is to “speak the truth” rather than “speak the truth in love”.

How we deal with people outside the church will take work, but let us start within the church. Let us go out of our way to be encouragers. When people take responsibilities, when they step up and speak or sing publicly, when time has been taken to prepare a message—all of these actions are worthy of our thanks and encouragement.

Let us be swift to listen and slow to speak. Let us listen for the heart of God. I think if we take time to encourage, God doesn’t just do a ministry to those we speak to; He does a work in us. Let’s seek that work too!

Your co-worker in Christ,

 

Dennis Stone, CBWC Alberta Regional Minister and Settlement Coordinator

dstone@cbwc.ca 

Follow Dennis on Twitter @Rockpileca or on his blog www.rockpileca.wordpress.com 

Rare and special time of connection at the Gull Lake Ministers Retreat

The annual Gull Lake Ministers Retreat was held February 5-7, 2018. On the first afternoon, Paul Spate led a number of people through a time of spiritual reflection. Our guest speaker was Joel Thiessen, a Christian sociologist at Ambrose with a long relationship with the CBWC. It was also a privilege to have our new Executive Minister, Rob Ogilvie, join us for two sessions. Activities included floor hockey (of course), ice hockey, table games, snowshoeing, and a few of us went out to a movie one night.

The privilege of this collegial connection is rare and special. Although our numbers were normal, let me speak candidly to those who chose not to come: this annual event is an elective, to be sure, but your absence means that your colleagues miss gleaning who you are and what you offer. True, those in the city have greater access to training and retreat events, but this unique event grants you opportunity to give of yourself to others. Some wrestle in ministry and some do not, but this time together provides us with a bonding opportunity. This is a place you can come and give encouragement and prayer with others travelling a similar road. You and your ministry experience and gifts were missed. I warmly invite you to consider joining us next year.

-Dennis Stone

New Church Joining CBWC

It is a privilege to be in dialogue with a church in Longview, Alberta that has expressed an intent to join the CBWC. It was once a Canadian Sunday School Mission church, and the CSSM churches later came under the canopy of One Hope Canada. With the blessing of One Hope, several of these churches are now affiliating elsewhere.

Longview is an hour south of Calgary in a beautiful spot near the mountains with plentiful fishing in Kananaskis country. Pastor Gilbert Kidd, formerly from the CBOQ, is semi-retired but 100% engaged in the Lord’s work. He and his wife Andrea are very gifted musically. Gil and his church family have already organized much of what the church needs for CRA recognition. Gil is looking ahead at whomever may be the next pastor of the church to take them to a new level of positive outreach in this region.

Occasionally churches look at affiliating with the CBWC because of our protocols, our practices, our resources, our beliefs and our history. Please pray for this church and others that enter this process.

Changes in the Alberta Region

We’re changing our name! Our office lease us up at the end of May, so we’re looking for a new space. Since this means we’ll have to get new stationary & signage, it’s also a good time to rename the Alberta and Northwest Territories Region to something shorter and that will be more inclusive of our east-of-the-Rockies B.C. churches.

Many of you submitted suggestions for this name change and you’ve been entered into a draw for a $50 Tim Horton’s card. Some of your more creative ideas were: “Western Canadian Middle of Western Canada for the Canadian Baptists of Western Canada Region” (WCMWCCBWCR for short), “The West of Us for the Rest of Us Region”, the “Too Big to be Named Region”, “God’s Country Region” (because Heaven is already taken), and the “Stoney Region” (named after Dennis Stone, though the timing is somewhat premature for a memorial designation!).

The CBWC board will choose the name shortly and we’ll let you know the results!

Photos Left-Right:

  • Israel: On the edge of the cliff site in Nazareth where an attempt was made to throw Jesus off. Mt. Tabor, the site of the transfiguration, is the hill in the background. Jeff Logan (Southgate Community, Calgary), Jodi Spargur (Healing at the Wounding Place), and Jason Johnson (High River Baptist) were part of a group who travelled to Israel in February to study the Holy Land. Jason Johnson led the group on a tour ranging from northern Golan Heights to as far south as the Ein-Gedi desert, bordering the Negev. “Much of our time was spent surveying the region around Jerusalem and Mt. Zion. It was a joy to fellowship and see scripture come to life as we shared in this as a small community of pilgrims. The next trip is tentatively targeted for the winter of 2020.  For any CBWC pastors or ministry workers who would like to be a part of the team, a limited number of discount clergy rates will likely be offered.”
  • Cluster Calgary: Pastors near Calgary met in March for a regular ministerial meeting with Dennis Stone.
  • Cluster south: Pastors in the southern area gather for a regular ministerial meeting with Dennis Stone.

 April Settlements 

Some extra news:  Former CBWC Executive Minister Jeremy Bell was appointed the General Secretary of the North American Baptist Fellowship (a regional organization for the Baptist World Alliance) in January. Congratulations Jeremy!

test test

Dean Eisner is the new Interim Minister at Braemar Baptist Church

Gord King is the new Interim Pastor of Community Outreach at Westview Baptist Church in Calgary

Alberta

New Alberta Pastors:

  • Dean Eisner, Interim Lead Minister, Braemar Baptist Church, Edmonton
  • Sarah Wipf, Interim Worship Leader, Westview Baptist Church, Calgary
  • Gordon King, Interim Pastor of Community Outreach, Westview Baptist Church, Calgary
  • Natalie Wong, Children and Family Ministry Leader, Crescent Heights Baptist, Calgary
  • Josh Goetz, Lead Pastor, Charlie Lake Community

Moving on in Alberta

  • Amanda Strain, Children’s Minister, FBC Edmonton
  • David Reed, Interim Pastor, Community Baptist, Cold Lake
  • Cliff Gonzales, Lead Pastor, Greenhills Christian Fellowship, Calgary

Retiring in Alberta

  • George Neily, Chaplain, High River Hospital
  • Geri Redekop, Senior Pastor, Braemar Baptist, Edmonton

Available positions in Alberta

  • Trinity Baptist, Sherwood Park, Youth Pastor
  • Braemar Baptist, Edmonton, Senior Pastor
  • Sonrise Community Baptist, Calgary, Senior Pastor

Heartland

New Heartland Pastors

  • Mat Lortie, Lead Pastor, Willowlake Baptist, Winnipeg
  • Noel Dwarika, Pastor, Faith Community Baptist, Souris

Moving on in the Heartland

  • Dwight Holditch, Interim Minister, FBC Brandon
  • Dean Lentini, Pastor, Fairmont Baptist, Saskatoon

Available positions in the Heartland Region

  • Asquith Baptist, Senior Pastor
  • FBC Prince Albert, Lead Pastor
  • FBC Brandon, Lead Pastor
  • FBC Moose Jaw, Senior Pastor
  • Strathclair Baptist, Pastor
  • FBC Portage la Prairie, Pastor

BCY

New BCY Pastors:

  • Gordon Patterson, Interim Associate, FBC Nanaimo
  • Ted Veal, Interim Minister, Kitimat First Baptist
  • Clark Taylor, Co-Pastor, FBC Penticton
  • Les Clark, Co-Pastor, FBC Penticton
  • Axel Schoeber, Lead Pastor, West Vancouver Baptist
  • Doris Kung-Poon, Associate Pastor, Trinity Baptist, Vancouver

Moving on in BCY

  • Jeremy Bell, Interim Minister, Kitsilano Christian Community
  • Randy Baker, Associate Pastor, FBC Nanaimo
  • Shane Wiebe, Lead Pastor, Southwest Community Baptist, Kamloops
  • Keith Boschman, Outreach and Evangelism Pastor, FBC Vancouver

Available positions in the BCY Region (with active search committees)

  • Southwest Community Baptist, Kamloops, Provisional Pastor
  • FBC Vancouver, Senior Pastor
  • Joy Fellowship, Vancouver, Pastor of Women’s Ministries
  • Grace Community Baptist, Vancouver, Associate Pastor for English Ministry
  • Kitsilano Christian Community, Vancouver, Senior Minister
  • Kitimat First Baptist, Senior Pastor

SaveSave

SaveSave

Making Connections April 2018

We’re simplifying!

Introducing new newsletter nodes for noteworthy narratives

It is our joy to share stories from among our CBWC family through our regular newsletters. We hope you are at turns inspired, encouraged and challenged to see the work of God in your own context.

Over the years, we’ve found a lot of stories to tell, and so it’s developed that we also send a lot of different emails to you. So we’re trying a new thing. From now on, all our newsletters will be gathered together and sent out once a month.

  • Making Connections, the monthly storytelling newsletter for the whole denomination. (Not to be confused with Connections, a less frequent printed brochure that helps with fundraising. No judgement if you’re confused, we were too, it’s why we’re simplifying.)
  • Alberta’s regional newsletter, a quarterly newsletter about goings on in the Alberta/NWT region, distributed to Alberta churches by Sue Hunter and Dennis Stone.
  • BCY’s regional newsletter, a semi-regular newsletter about goings on in the BCY region, distributed to BCY churches by Dawn Johannesson and Larry Schram (and of course, formerly Rob Ogilvie)
  • Heartland’s regional newsletter, a bi-annual newsletter about goings on in the Heartland, distributed to Heartland churches by Cindy Emmons and Mark Doerksen.

You’ll still hear from the regional offices directly about regular operational things, and updates from the regional ministers. It’s just the stories & events that will be here.

In the new Making Connections format, each month we’ll still feature articles from around the denomination, and in addition each issue will include one region’s local newsletter. This month it’s Alberta, and you’ll find their newsletter here.

We’ve also updated the way the stories are hosted on our website. Instead of clicking on each article separately from the email, all the articles will be accessible from one link. Just scroll down for the rest.

As with all new ideas, we’re eager to hear your feedback. Does this format work for you? Do you like it? Does it make you mad? (If it does make you mad, you can certainly unsubscribe, but we’d really like a chance to talk about it first.) Let us know. Email me at zducklow@cbwc.ca.

Welcome to the new Making Connections!

— Zoë Ducklow, on behalf of the CBWC Communications team

Click here for the Alberta regional newsletter

A note from Dennis | Gull Lake Retreat | New church joining CBWC | Changes & updates from the region | April settlements

“Language is the window to culture”

An Alberta couple is studying Cree to get to know their neighbours

When their ministry as the pastors at Battle Lake Church ended last summer, Erwin and Coral Buchholz turned their attention to learning Cree. They had been spending more and more time with their Cree neighbours, and wanted to get to know them more.

“Language is the window to culture. That was our primary motivation, to help us understand the Cree worldview,” Erwin says. They now know some simple phrases and pronunciations, and they have a song and a prayer memorized.

“The fact that we’re learning Cree makes them feel like we’re more interested in them, I think,” Coral adds. “It’s a way of building relationships and communicating that we’re interested in their culture, their ways, and understanding who they are.”

While still pastoring at Battle Lake, Erwin and Coral met several people from the nearby reserves, and noticed a stark divide between the Cree people and the non-indigenous neighbours.

“At Highway 13, you could say there’s an invisible wall—and more than a little antipathy on both sides,” Erwin says. “People on either side don’t really have much to do with each other.”

This seemed, to Erwin and Coral, like something that wasn’t right. So they started spending more time on the reserve, nurturing the friendships they’d started and meeting more people. They’re invited to the regular Thursday community lunches and special events on the reserve.

Pigeon Lake reserve is an extension of the main Maskwacis reserve where four Cree bands have their administration offices. The two communities are nearly an hour apart, separated by acres of farmland and the Queen Elizabeth Highway that runs between Calgary and Edmonton. Pigeon Lake was formerly a fishing community, but when the walleye fish was introduced, the native whitefish species declined so sharply that the commercial fishing industry collapsed. The rise and fall of revenues from oil leases also adversely affect the community. Life on the reserve today is marked with poverty, high unemployment, a lack of literacy and numeracy skills and lack of transportation, Erwin says. The community of 600 often feels isolated and cut off from Maskwacis.

For Erwin and Coral, the Pigeon Lake connection really began when they met an elderly Cree woman in Maskwacis. Miriam had been recovering from a recent illness and was unable to attend church, but still wanted to take communion. Erwin and Coral visited her at home to worship, pray and take communion. Thus began a friendship where the three became prayer partners, praying about bringing hope and healing to the reserves. They still visit each month to take communion and worship together.

“She is a wonderful prayer warrior. She’s connected us with people, and helped us understand the history,” Erwin says. On the reserve, he says, it’s not like David Livingston taking the gospel to the heart of Africa. “They have heard the gospel, but there has not been continuity in shepherding.”

Missionaries have visited, churches have been planted, and to some extent the work has continued. But there is no church at Pigeon Lake reserve. Nearby pastors have taken interest at times, and several people have made faith commitments as a result. But when those pastors moved on, the thread was snapped, and the relationships came to an end.

“They have sort of a half-forgotten Christian faith,” Erwin says. “One person told me there was a time when a bunch of them gave their hearts to God in the late 1990s. But something happened, there’s been a disconnect. They’re no longer part of a worshipping community.”

The fact that Erwin and Coral have started learning Cree is a big deal. It says they’re planning to stick around. (Who would learn a language of place you’re itching to leave?) And, it says they hold Cree culture in high esteem.  

Considering the vehement efforts to suppress Cree language, culture and dignity historically—often in the name of Christianity—and the inconsistent attention Pigeon Lake reserve has had from churches, Erwin and Coral’s approach represents a new way to build relationship.

Where will they go from here? The Buchholz’s have no firm agenda. “When people say, Oh you have a heart for the Native people, I really get uncomfortable with that, because that turns people into projects” Erwin says. “I have a heart for people, and these people happen to be my neighbours.”

Sure, they’d like to see a church at Pigeon Lake. But what could it look like, Erwin wonders? “Do we need a pulpit? Maybe we don’t need benches, maybe we don’t need hymnbooks. But somewhere along the line, I think there needs to be a place where God’s people can come together and worship and be taught, and grow together and be real together.”

They’re not in a big rush to plant one, though. “We need a Native partner,” Coral says.

Along with a posture of respect, is a disinclination to take charge. Whatever Christian community looks like at Pigeon Lake, it’s got to be led by the Cree people. Like at the church they’ve built a friendship on the Maskwacis reserve, pastored by Mario Swampy.

“Mario can say things that we cannot say, because he is Cree,” says Coral. “For us to say, You need to do this or that, is just more of the white guy telling the Natives what to do. So partnership is really important.”

Through their involvement with the Cree people and learning the language, Erwin and Coral are hopeful that they will be able to do their part.

Events

Potential Impact

The deadline to register is April 10, 2018. The Potential Impact conference will be at beautiful Keats Camp, B.C. this year, from April 26-29, 2018. Registration is $200. Register here or click here for more details about the conference.

Hear from some of last year’s conference goers participants.

New Ministers Orientation

April 29-May 2, 2018 in Vancouver B.C. “Why did we become a CBWC church?” “Where do I find help with ministry?” “Who else is in this family of churches?” These questions are answered at New Ministers Orientation (NMO), a 3.5-day seminar for all ministers joining the CBWC, held at the beautiful Carey Centre in Vancouver. At NMO, you will meet new people and learn about the all resources available through the denomination. Contact Dawn Johannesson at bcyarea@cbwc.ca for details. Download the modules here.

Assembly

Online, May 24, 2018 at 5:30 pm PST (6:30 MT, 7:30 CT) Each year, we gather either in person or online for an annual meeting. The CBWC holds itself accountable to local churches, presents audited financial statements and special motions, and proposes budgets for future years. This year the 60-90 minute meeting will primarily include a financial report and updates on CBWC initiatives. We hope you will join us!

Download a printable poster here. | FAQ

Don’t forget, we’re making a greeting video, and we need your submissions by April 24, 2018. Submission guidelines | Add videos to Dropbox

SERVE

July 1-7, 2018, Kamloops B.C. Early bird registration deadline is May 15. Register here, click here for more information, or see our recent article about SERVE here .

BCY Pastors & Spouses Retreat

July 5-6, 2018 in Victoria, B.C. with guest speakers Rob and Sarah Patterson. Email Dawn Johannesson for more details and to register bcyarea@cbwc.ca

Copyright ©  2018 Canadian Baptists of Western Canada, All rights reserved.

Making Connections is the Monthly Newsletter of the CBWC. The senior editor is Zoë Ducklow, who works under the executive editorial direction of Rob Ogilvie and the Communications & Stewardship committee. Have a story idea? Want to tell us how great we’re doing? Or how terribly? Email Zoë at zducklow@cbwc.ca.

Changing a Charity’s Bylaws

This article comes from the CRA website

A charity’s bylaws provide information on the organization’s structure and internal procedures such as the duties of its officers. Generally, incorporated charities have bylaws. Charities that are established by a constitution or a trust document may not always have separate bylaws.

When a registered charity amends its bylaws, it should provide a copy to the Charities Directorate. Under the confidentiality provisions a copy of the registered charity’s governing document, including its bylaws, can be provided to anyone who asks for it. This information comes from the CRA website.

Charities that are incorporated
The process for amending an incorporated charity’s bylaws varies depending on the jurisdiction, (federal, provincial, or territorial). Incorporated charities should contact their incorporating authority to determine the process that applies to them. For information on federal, provincial, and territorial statues and regulations that apply to corporations, visit the CanLll website.

Charities established by a constitution
If the charity has separate bylaws, provide a copy of the amended bylaws showing the signatures of two directors and the effective date. If the bylaws are contained within the constitution, provide an amended constitution with the signatures of three directors and the effective date.

Charities established by a trust document
We recommend that a charity get legal advice before making any changes to a trust to ensure that changes can be made and that they are legally valid.

Mail or fax the documentation to:
Charities Directorate
Canada Revenue Agency
Ottawa, ON K1A OL5

David Holten
Church Resources Consultant