Showing posts with label Photo Album. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Photo Album. Show all posts

Thursday, June 15, 2023

From @austinseminary ... "The Reed" for June 2023

For the glory of God and to proclaim the gospel of Jesus Christ, Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary is a seminary in the Presbyterian-Reformed tradition whose mission is to educate and equip people for ordained Christian ministry and other forms of Christian service and leadership; to employ its resources for the nurture of the church; to practice and promote critical theological thought and research; to engage a range of voices and perspectives within and beyond the life of the seminary; and to be a winsome and exemplary community of God's people.



The State of the Seminary address

ate! The Inauguration for The Reverend Dr. Irizarry, Austin Seminary's tenth president, is scheduled for March 30-31 in Austin, Texas.


President Irizarry shares the highlights from the 2022-23 academic year and points to new directions for the Austin Seminary community.


Education Beyond the Walls
August 18 | "Healing Trauma: Resources for working with immigrants" is a a two-hour workshop to learn about our new video series on Healing Trauma to better prepare you and your congregation to help asylum seekers, immigrants, and refugees in your community.

Location: Austin Seminary campus.

• More Information and registration ....


First Latina scholars bring experience and expertise to faculty openings

The Reverend Patricia Bonilla and The Reverend Crystal Silva-McCormick have been called by the Austin Seminary Board of Trustees to fill faculty positions. Bonilla, a PhD candidate from Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary, will teach in the area of Christian education. Austin Seminary alumna Silva-McCormick (MDiv’10), a PhD candidate from the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago, will teach in the area of evangelism and missions, beginning with the 2023-24 academic year.

Dean Margaret Aymer said, "We welcome Reverends Bonilla and Silva-McCormick who bring scholarship and ecclesial commitments that strengthen us as we become a seminary that increasingly resembles the global church! In their appointments, these two scholars make history as the first Latina faculty members of Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary.

Welcome New Austin Seminary Alumni!

The Commencement for the Class of 2023 was held on May 14 with The Reverend Carol Howard Merritt (MDiv’98), pastor of Bedford Presbyterian Church in New York, delivering the Commencement Address to forty-two graduates and their friends and families. It was a joyous occasion and the first under the leadership of President José Irizarry and Dean Margaret Aymer.

• Enjoy scenes from the day by accessing our photo gallery ....

Support Our Students

Your gift to our Annual Fund supports the formation of Christian leaders.

• Click here to support our students... 




Get the latest news from Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary in their digital monthly eNewsletter. Features on events, students, faculty, and alumni can be sent directly to your inbox.





Tuesday, June 6, 2023

In the News ... "2023 fan drive going on NOW"

OA Photo by Jacob Ford
• Annual fan drive benefits Salvation Army

Staff Report
Odessa American


WEST TEXAS - Westlake Ace Hardware stores nationwide are holding their annual fan drive to benefit the The Salvation Army

Odessa’s Salvation Army needs your help to provide fans to low income Odessans. You can donate at Westlake Hardware or online at westlakehardware.com/fan-drive ...

Thursday, February 16, 2023

In the News ... Photo Album "Mission: Permian Basin"

OA Photos by Michael Bauer
"God's ministry where the people help the community"

Michael Bauer, Reporter/Photographer
Odessa American


ODESSA, TEXAS - The Permian Basin Mission Center ad the honor of welcoming Congressman August Pfluger for a 45 minute visit with our staff and board of directors ...

Enjoy the rest of this OA photo album ...

Friday, February 10, 2023

From @FWMission ... Friday Story: “You Helped Make This Happen in January”

Founded in 2001, Free Wheelchair Mission is an international nonprofit organization dedicated to providing wheelchairs for the impoverished disabled in developing nations. Headquartered in Irvine, California, FWM works around the world in partnership with a vast network of humanitarian, faith-based and government organizations, sending wheelchairs to hundreds of thousands of disabled people, providing not only the gift of mobility, but of dignity, independence, and hope.



Friday Story: “You Helped Make This Happen in January”

Wheelchair Arrivals; Container Arrival in Chile; A Life Transformed in Ecuador; Published in National News; Interviewed on a Podcast; Ministry Conferences; Blessed in Texas; Grant Report and Update; A Longtime Friend Visits, and more ...

Read the rest of this story ...

Thursday, February 2, 2023

In the News ... "Curb Side Bistro gives out free soup"

OA Photo by Michael Bauer
• For Barrientos, the main reason he enjoys doing this is his love for the community

By Michael Bauer, Reporter
Odessa American


ODESSA, TEXAS - Anyone who knows Curb Side Bistro owner Alejandro Barrientos will know that he likes to give back to the community.

On Wednesday, with most of Odessa shut down due to the winter storm, Curb Side Bistro was closed but the restaurant was able to hand out free soup to people through the drive-thru.

It was the second day that Curb Side Bistro was handing out free soup.

It’s one of the many times that the restaurant has given out free food. Curb Side Bistro is also well-known for having free Thanksgiving meals each November.

For Barrientos, the main reason he enjoys doing this is his love for the community.

“My wife and I were both born and raised here,” Barrientos said. “Our business is all face-to-face. Our community has supported us no matter what. We see that ECISD is closed. We see that the West Texas Food Bank, different churches and nonprofits are closed, that people rely on every day for food, so I was thinking ‘we have a warm kitchen and a gas stove. I’m not doing anything so I might as well feed our community.’ what better way to do with some warm soup.”

On Tuesday, the restaurant was open with soup being served for free to customers who asked. About 800 cups of soup were served on Tuesday.

“(Tuesday), we had more because we were opened as a restaurant and we had more people coming in,” Barrientos said. “I think today, everyone was afraid it would be so cold. We’ll see what happens with the roads later today.”

On Wednesday, there was enough bacon and potato soup prepared for a little over 300 cups with each cup being 12 ounces.

Curb Side Bistro began giving out the free soup at around 11 a.m. Wednesday and went until they ran out.

A couple of employees helped hand out the free soup.

“(Wednesday) it was the four of us who helped volunteer,” Barrientos said. “Tuesday, it was the whole crew. We had people running all over the place. It didn’t matter if you were washing dishes or a manager. Everybody was pitching in.”

Barrientos is hopeful that this can inspire other people to do likewise and give back to the community...

read the rest of this OA report ...

Thursday, January 19, 2023

In the News ... "'Bill Libby, 85, lived a pastor's life, served others, solved problems"

"Bill, in his practicality, looked for a need and then fulfilled it."

By Greg Jaklewicz, Reporter
Abilene Reporter-News

ABILENE, TEXAS - Bill Libby had two intentions in life, Bob Monk said.

One was to help others in their lives, be it a student-athlete at McMurry University, a veteran who felt disconnected or someone he might not know.

"The reality, as far as I'm concerned, is you look at Bill and see him as finding his life in helping others in their lives," Monk said. Particularly as a mentor to young me - on the battlefield in Vietnam or on the college campus.

The other was more practical. What could he do to make something, such as easier access to a building, happen?

"What I saw was that over the years, whatever McMurry might need that other people maybe didn't recognize, he was simply able to say to McMurry, What's going on? What else can I help with?" Monk said. "That is a major aspect of how he was generous.

"He was generous to the core."

Libby, a Vietnam War veteran, will be buried later this year at Arlington National Cemetery. His late wife, Amy, is interred there.

"Bill Libby is really the embodiment of the core values of McMurry University," said University President Dr. Sandra Harper. "One of his major characteristics was he was a problem-solver. He would see something that he felt would enhance the university, and he then would figure out if he could fix it or provide support for it or garner some other kind of group that would be able to support it.

"He was the penultimate problem-solver.

Coming to Abilene

Monk met Libby at Texas A&M University in 1964. Monk was assistant campus minister when Libby was a "fish."

"Our lives were intertwined" since then, Monk said Thursday. Libby later would attend seminary not far from where Monk was going to graduate school

They reunited when Libby came to Abilene in 1991 to take an assistant pastor's role at St. Paul. Monk already was here, at McMurry, where he taught for 31 years in the religious life department. In 1996, that Methodist connection and Monk's push landed Libby as a faculty member there.

His Old Testament and History classes were student favorites.

Libby was religious, too, about running, and seeing a need, launched a cross country program in 1995. It became a school athletic program the next year. For five years, he personally funded the program. He won two conference titles before stepping down in 2002 to return to teaching. Before doing so, he established an endowment to continue to fund the sport.

"His most important aspect at McMurry was to be appointed so that he had the opportunity to work with the athletes," Monk said. Libby was a marathoner, who run courses in Europe and in the U.S. - wherever he was stationed in the military.

Libby served as athletic director from 2006-08 and headed a life skills program called CHAMPS.

Monk said Libby was tasked to help athletes in academics "but also in the variety of how the college could serve through athletes," Monk said.

“Bill loved McMurry, and that love was reciprocated,” Sam Ferguson, vice president for student Affairs and intercollegiate athletics, said in a university statement. “He was the guy who would go out of his way to add value to others, and we were lucky to call him a friend."

His third and fourth callings in life were leading biblical and archaeological trips to Jordan and teaming with McMurry political science professor Paul Fabrizio as hosts of the radio talk show "The Professors," from 2005-17.

Earlier life

Libby was born in Barnsdall, Okla., and graduated from high school as a Dumas Demon. He traveled 600 miles southeast to College Station to attend Texas A&M to play the French horn in the band. But the calling for the pastoral ministry began there, leading him to also become chaplain of the band and the then-all-male Corps of Cadets.

"I think he knew every person in the band ... and the Corps," Monk said, laughing. "Bill was concerned about people. You already saw him as a pastor. That became his major focus, really."

Libby's education included attaining his Master of Divinity degree from Drew Theological School, a Methodist campus in Madison, New Jersey.

He married Amelia Ann Dunkle on Sept. 9, 1961, in Wilmington, Delaware.

Libby served for 30 years in the Army. His service included duty in Vietnam, where he earned a Bronze Star for his ministry. He retired as a colonel.

"Vietnam was very important to him. It defined a lot of aspects of his life," Monk said.

He was photographed in Hue, Vietnam, in 1968, as soldiers mourned the fallen. It was included in Ken Burns' documentary on the war

Have need, will fund it

Monk said Libby didn't look for list of people in need, he found that person or that need on his own.

"Which is a pastor," Monk said. "That was part of who he was. There would be no way to account for how many students he personally helped, not only in terms of their spiritual life and academic world but also simply helping them financially."

Or giving them a ride.

His friend, Monk said, lived a simple life so he could pour his time and resources into others and into projects.

"When I also think about the core values," Harper said, "what stands out to me, we have a core value about relationships being the catalyst for life. With the students, the student-athletes, student artists and thespians and musicians, he would really garner those relationships. He would be the ultimate fan or the ultimate audience member and then would come back and talk about how great a production it was or how great a game it was. Be sure to support the students.

"When I think about our core values, his relationships will stand out to me and it will be his lasting legacy at McMurry."

As he recognized the needs of young athletes, Libby in later years saw needs for those growing older, as he was.

If became a challenge for him to navigate the stairs in the McMurry administration building.

"He said, 'OK, we need an elevator in this place," Monk said. "So he funded it."

A similar thing happened at St. Paul, where Libby led an effort to install a ramp to make back-door entry to the kitchen easier for seniors ...

Read the rest of this ARN report ...

Tuesday, January 17, 2023

In the News ... "A day of service: Lubbock, Texas Tech community work on Martin Luther King Day"

LAJ Photo by Mark Rogers
"It's Martin Luther King Day and we should be giving back."

By Alex Driggars, Reporter
Lubbock Avalanche-Journal

LUBBOCK, TEXAS - Lubbockites showed up in force on Martin Luther King Jr. Day to volunteer for a cause King himself was passionate about. ...

 • Read the rest of this LAJ report, and enjoy a photo album ..

Wednesday, January 11, 2023

In the News ... Photo Album: "Venezuelan migrants pray in front of Sacred Heart Catholic Church"

EPT Photo by Gaby Velasquez
After crossing into the U.S.

By Luis Torres, Photographer
El Paso Times


EL PASO, TEXAS - The number of undocumented migrants staying at Sacred Heart has been decreasing, though many remain at the the historic church in the Segundo Barrio, hoping to receive political asylum in the United States....

See the rest of this EPT photo album ...

Thursday, December 1, 2022

In the News ... "GOOD NEWS: Gift Boxing"

Courtesy Photo
• Andrews High School girls soccer program joins 'Operation Christmas Child' program

Staff Report
Odessa American


ANDREWS, TEXAS - The Andrews High School girls soccer program recently finished boxing up 40 Samaritan’s purse boxes for the Operation Christmas Child program.

The players shopped, stuffed the boxes, wrote notes of encouragement, and spoke words of affirmation for the child who would receive the box.

They raised money to purchase the items for each box by working the Green Exchange cleanup on the weekends during the fall ...

Enjoy the rest of this OA photo album ...

Wednesday, November 30, 2022

Equal Exchange Blog ... "Walking the “K’ojolaa” Coffee Trail"

Equal Exchange's mission is to build long-term trade partnerships that are economically just and environmentally sound, to foster mutually beneficial relationships between farmers and consumers and to demonstrate, through our success, the contribution of worker co-operatives and Fair Trade to a more equitable, democratic and sustainable world.



Equal Exchange Photo
Walking the “K’ojolaa” Coffee Trail

On the shores of Lake Atitlán, in the southwestern highlands of Sololá, Guatemala, a promising new cooperative initiative is beginning to take root. The “Coffee Tour K’ojolaa,” is an ecotourism project that was envisioned, planned, and organized by ten Tz’utujil Mayan youth in the small town of San Pedro La Laguna. Ranging in ages from 23-28, the project’s creators are members (or the sons and daughters of members) of Adenisa, a local, small-scale coffee cooperative.

The project is part of a much larger effort by Equal Exchange to support the social, environmental, organizational, and productive efforts of their Latin American small farmer coffee and cacao cooperative partners ...

Read the rest of this post ...




Join Us!

We invite you to join our growing community of citizen-consumers who are getting even more deeply involved in Equal Exchange.

We need consumer participation in our organization to build a deeply democratic trade system made up of farmers and their democratic organizations, workers and their democratic organization, and citizen-consumers who now have a democratic space in Equal Exchange as well as their own network. Join us in changing trade, together!


Local Equal Exchange partners include Grace Presbyterian Chuch, Midland, TX.

Monday, November 28, 2022

In the News ... Photo Album: "Mount Cristo Rey pilgrimage"

EPT Photo by Luis Torres
Including 'Christ the King' mass

By Luis Torres, Photographer
El Paso Times


EL PASO, TEXAS - EWorshippers make a pilgrimage to the summit of Mount Cristo Rey in Sunland Park, where Las Cruces Bishop Peter Baldacchino celebrates a Mass in honor of the feast of Christ the King ...

See the rest of this EPT photo album ...

Thursday, November 24, 2022

In the News ... "Letters of Thanksgiving"

Artwork by Bryson Strangby
• Here’s wishing everyone a happy and bountiful Thanksgiving

Staff Report
Odessa American


ODESSA, TEXAS - We thank these young letterwriters from the STEM Academy and St. John’s Episcopal School for penning these letters to tell us what they are thankful for this Thanksgiving. STEM students were in Julia Carrasco, Patricia Gaytan and Bianca Borunda’s classrooms. Alexa Muller’s St. John’s students also provided the letters. They also showed off their art skills with these fantastic drawings ...

Read the rest of this OA report, and enjoy the photo album ...

In the News ... "Real Church Midland reaches out with Thanksgiving meal giveaway"

Photo courtesy of Real Church
• Promoted the event on social media and through word-of-mouth

By Ben Shaffer, Reporter
Midland Reporter-Telegram

MIDLAND, TEXAS - Real Church Midland held a turkey and Thanksgiving meal drive on Sunday for area families.

The event was held at Real Church’s headquarters, 401 W. Industrial Ave. Real Church Midland officials organized a car line where families could drive-thru and pick up a Thanksgiving turkey with green beans, corn, gravy and mashed potatoes. Church members handed out 175 meals.

Although the church caters to the spiritual needs of Midlanders, lead Pastor Carlos Rodriguez said it’s important for them to assist in improving the physical well-being of others.

“The scripture’s so clear that we need to be meeting people’s physical needs as well,” he said. “I wanted our community to see our hearts through our hands. Rodriguez added the church doesn’t need to just pray for people but can also be an answer to their prayer.

Rodriguez added that an event like this had been on his mind since Real Church began, but he considered walking away from the idea until he met with local church leaders.

“I had lunch with another pastor, just connecting with him getting to know him over at Faith Church, and he said they were doing it and it just kind of built some faith in me and I said, ‘You know what? We need to do it,'” he remarked ...

 • Read the rest of this MRT report, and enjoy the photo album ...

Friday, November 4, 2022

In the News ... "Carpet Tech comes through for Meals on Wheels"

Contributed Photo
• Technicians will collect cans when they come to clean

Staff Report
Odessa American


ODESSA, TEXAS - Just in time for the winter months, Carpet Tech has teamed up with Meals On Wheels Odessa to collect canned soup donations for senior citizens in need in our community.

Meals on Wheels delivers hot, nutritious meals to the homebound elderly and severely disabled who cannot prepare adequate meals for themselves.

“When Meals on Wheels began asking for food and supply donations for winter, we created the Soup for Seniors initiative, a canned soup drive that includes our customers,” said Carpet Tech Marketing Director Stephanie Fox.

Carpet Tech is asking for a donation of at least five cans of soup and offering donating customers a 15% discount on services. Technicians will collect cans when they come to clean.“Not only do we get to give back to an often overlooked population of seniors in our community, but we have a unique opportunity to offer our customers a convenient way to participate,” said Fox.

Donated soups will help feed Meals on Wheels clients during weekends and days when food delivery is unavailable due to severe winter weather. “Canned soup is not only nonperishable, but a nutritious alternative that is easy for seniors to open and prepare,” said Fox ...

Read the rest of this OA report ...

Saturday, October 22, 2022

In the News ... "San Angelo area churches offer worship, volunteer options"

SAST Photo

• Submit upcoming options for YOUR church to the Standard-Times

Staff Report
San Angelo Standard Times


SAN ANGELO, TEXAS - Faith briefs may be submitted by emailing News@GoSanAngelo.com. Briefs are published in print on Saturdays and the deadline to submit an entry is noon Wednesdays ...

Read the rest of this SAST report

Friday, October 21, 2022

From @FWMission ... Friday Story: “You Helped Make This Happen in September”

Founded in 2001, Free Wheelchair Mission is an international nonprofit organization dedicated to providing wheelchairs for the impoverished disabled in developing nations. Headquartered in Irvine, California, FWM works around the world in partnership with a vast network of humanitarian, faith-based and government organizations, sending wheelchairs to hundreds of thousands of disabled people, providing not only the gift of mobility, but of dignity, independence, and hope.



Friday Story: “You Helped Make This Happen in September”

Wheelchair Arrivals; F&M Bank Foundation Visit; Story of a Life Transformed in Pakistan; WSending Wheelchairs to Ukraine; Sharing Our Vision with Churches; Mobilize Officially Launches, and more ...

Read the rest of this story ...

In the News ... "‘Pillow Pals’ exists because of Jane Pase’s servant’s heart"

Courtesy Photo
• Let’s step back and take a closer look at Jane and her life.

By PJenifer Dumire, The Breast Center at Midland Health, Contributor
Midland Reporter-Telegram

MIDLAND, TEXAS -In January of 2015, I was invited to Grace Lutheran to conduct an outreach to educate the ladies on the need for mammography and early screenings and detection. It was a wonderful evening arranged by the pastor’s wife, Jane Pase. After the event, Jane approached me and asked me, “What can we do for your ladies who are diagnosed, that would bless them?”

As I later learned, this was so indicative of Jane’s servant’s heart ...

 • Read the rest of this MRT report ...

Thursday, September 29, 2022

FBR Report: "Murdered and Thrown in Sewers and a Well"

The Free Burma Rangers (FBR) is a multi-ethnic humanitarian service movement. They bring help, hope and love to people in the war zones of Burma (Myanmar) and the Middle East. Groups send teams to be trained, supplied and sent into the areas under attack to provide emergency assistance and human rights documentation. Together with other groups, the teams work to serve people in need.



FBR Photo
Murdered and Thrown in Sewers and a Well

28 July 2022
Karenni State, Burma

Dear friends,

The women began to cry and, as we hugged them, they clung to us, weeping uncontrollably. One of them let out a mournful wail and held on to Suu tightly. We were in a hiding place with about 1000 men, women, and children, in tarp shelters under trees, trying to keep away from the Burma Army. The four women we were speaking to were telling us about their husbands and brothers who had been killed. They continued to cry and it seemed to me they wanted the opportunity to tell their stories ...

CLICK HERE to read the rest of this FBR Report ...

Thank you and God bless you,

Dave, family, and team

CLICK HERE to learn how YOU can get involved in FBR and its mission ...

“LOVE EACH OTHER.
UNITE AND WORK FOR FREEDOM, JUSTICE, AND PEACE.
FORGIVE AND DON’T HATE EACH OTHER.
PRAY WITH FAITH, ACT WITH COURAGE, NEVER SURRENDER.”

Thursday, September 22, 2022

FBR Report: "Nothing Done for Love is Wasted: Two Rangers Killed in Burma Army Attacks"

The Free Burma Rangers (FBR) is a multi-ethnic humanitarian service movement. They bring help, hope and love to people in the war zones of Burma (Myanmar) and the Middle East. Groups send teams to be trained, supplied and sent into the areas under attack to provide emergency assistance and human rights documentation. Together with other groups, the teams work to serve people in need.



FBR Photo
Nothing Done for Love is Wasted: Two Rangers Killed in Burma Army Attacks

18 July 2022
Karenni State, Burma

Dear friends,

We are very sorry to inform you that we have just lost two more of our Rangers while a third was seriously wounded. ...

CLICK HERE to read the rest of this FBR Report ...

Thank you and God bless you,

Dave, family, and team

CLICK HERE to learn how YOU can get involved in FBR and its mission ...

“LOVE EACH OTHER.
UNITE AND WORK FOR FREEDOM, JUSTICE, AND PEACE.
FORGIVE AND DON’T HATE EACH OTHER.
PRAY WITH FAITH, ACT WITH COURAGE, NEVER SURRENDER.”

Tuesday, September 20, 2022

Partners Blog: “We’re still here”

Steve and Oddny Gumaer started Partners Relief and Development in response to the needs of refugees and displaced people from Burma, and now in the Middle East, as well. Their mission is to demonstrate, through holistic action, God’s love to children and communities made vulnerable by war in Southeast Asia, the Middle East and other conflict zones.

PR&D Photo
“We’re still here”

Through countless battles,
unrest,
a coup,
a pandemic,
and displacement,
we’ve always delivered what you bought.

This movement of love is nearly 30 years old and it will last as long as there are children affected by conflict and oppression ...

Read the rest of this post ...




Partners Relief and Development is a registered charity in Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Norway, the United Kingdom and the United States. "We’re a small, grassroots nonprofit passionate about making a big impact in communities affected by conflict and oppression, demonstrating God’s love to children and giving them the opportunity to live free, full lives." For more information aboput Partners, visit their website at partners.ngo/