23 Jan

Juniors Explore Racial Themes In Plays On MLK Jr. Day

Loveland, Colorado … During Campion Academy’s school assembly January 20, the school celebrated Martin Luther King, Jr. Day by watching the American Literature classes perform plays based on their reading of A Raisin in the Sun. A Raisin in the Sun is a play about the struggles of a 1950’s African American family that is trying to move into a predominantly white neighborhood, the ostracizing they face in the process, and the struggle to achieve their dreams.

The juniors wrote and produced their different plays, A Cracker in the Sun and Una Pasa al Sol. A Cracker in the Sun was about an African American family whose daughter comes home with a Caucasian boyfriend and the family does not approve. Una Pasa al Sol was about a Latino family whose parents have died and one of the brothers wants to go to medical school but can’t afford it.

​The juniors enjoyed the process of producing and performing the plays. “The plays were so much fun to work on! My favorite part was seeing all the hard work come together to make a great performance,” said Ben Maxin.

“I was really nervous to perform, and I did forget my lines a little, but it was fun being able to perform with my friends and remember what today all is about,” commented Milka Mendoza.

Weston Humphries; photo by Jill Harlow

23 Jan

Full Communion Service Held for Incarcerated Men at Crowley County Correctional Facility

Olney Springs, Colorado … Seven years ago, a team made up of Ted Williams, Craig Hamilton, and Jimmy Schwab began ministering to the inmates at the Crowley County Correctional Facility in Olney Springs, Colorado. Williams and Hamilton drove from Fort Lupton, putting in 160 miles each way even though sometimes nobody showed up. But it wasn’t long before as many as 30 inmates began regular attendance.

Soon Delbert Hayden, a man from Pueblo, began faithful leadership every Friday night, eventually leading the Thursday night service and mentoring the inmates as they led out on Friday. As many as 90 inmates were attending each of these services.

To hear the story of God’s intervention at this detention center in January of 2017 when one inmate was baptized in a service that almost didn’t happen, was reported on January 17, 2017 in the NewsNuggets (see: “The Day the Holy Spirit Took Charge.”)

A spirit-filled service was held last October when the group was allowed to hold a communion service with basins, towels, juice, and crackers, things not usually allowed in a correctional facility. That night, 61 men, most of whom had never before experienced a foot-washing service, experienced the joy most had never before experienced.

Anton Kapusi, the new pastor in Pueblo, joined the men for this special service, having just completed the required training by the Colorado Department of Corrections. He was given permission to attend even though he hadn’t yet been approved for Crowley County, an unusual concession. During the service, Schwab, Hayden, Williams and Kapusi all took turns explaining the symbolism of communion. All 61 men, inmates of Crowley County Correctional Facility, took part in this cleansing rite before commemorating the sacrifice of their Lord through the eating the bread, an emblem of Christ’s broken body, and the drinking the grape juice, an emblem of Christ’s spilled blood.

The joy in their hearts was a reflection of the joy in Heaven.

Carol Bolden; photo by Ted Williams

16 Jan

Mile High Academy and Local Community Join Together To Honor Classmate

Highlands Ranch, Colorado… Mile High Academy, local Denver churches and the community have joined together as they honor the life of one of their students who passed away Tuesday, January 14.

“We ask our community to lift up the parents of the student, the Mile High Academy students and staff, our pastors and the counselors in prayer as we continue to grieve together,” said Lonnie Hetterle, RMC Education Superintendent.

On January 15, the following statement was issued by Mile High Academy’s administration:

It is with profound sadness that Mile High Academy confirms the loss of one of our students. Our hearts go out to this family. We want the family to know that they are in our thoughts and prayers. MHA has been working closely with the Douglas County Sheriff’s Department as they continue to investigate this tragedy. Mile High Academy will have grief counselors and pastors on hand to help our students, staff and families with this loss. Prayers for our students and staff are appreciated. Thank you for respecting the privacy of our school community at this time.

Ed Barnett, RMC president, visited the school on Wednesday and Thursday. He commented, “Our hearts hurt for the parents and family of our student who is no longer with us. The way the Mile High Academy students, staff and local churches have come together speaks volumes to just how closely connected this community is, especially in times of sadness. We also want to say thank you to the counselors and the Douglas County Sheriff’s Department for their assistance during this time. Please continue to pray for all involved.”

A candlelight vigil was held on Thursday, January 16 at Mile High Academy. No memorial information is available at this time. A GoFundMe account has been set up to help with funeral and family travel expenses at https://www.gofundme.com/f/mya-pena-funeral-funds. For questions regarding additional ways to support Mile High Academy, please contact Jamie Frain, Mile High Academy’s interim principal, at [email protected] or 303.744.1069.

Karrie Meyers

16 Jan

Life of Prayer Leads to Miracles, Campion Church Encouraged

Loveland, Colorado … “Prayer is definitely going to be a bigger part of my life!” “This was a great way to start the new year!” “This was a mountain top experience that will stay with me for a long time.”   “I needed to be reminded that prayer IS the answer!” “Can we do this every year?”

Comments like these and many more were heard last weekend, January 10-11, when Jerry and Janet Page joined RMC at Campion Church to inspire and propel us to a life of more prayer. In addition to their responsibilities in the General Conference Ministerial department, the Pages lead out in prayer conferences around the globe.

Together, they shared story after story of answered prayer, encouraging us to keep at it, to surrender anything that might be keeping us from a real walk with Jesus, and not to be surprised if, for a time, things seem to get worse in the situations over which we pray, rather than better!

“Don’t give up!” Janet stated, “God’s working! There’s no better way than giving up to God! Oh, it’s incredible – the life that God will give you!… I just want you to know – the more you pray – you’ll see God do miracles – miracles,” she further encouraged the church.

Did you miss the weekend? The videos are available at www.campionchurch.org/current-archives.

DeeAnn Bragaw, text; photos by Joyelle Worley, DeeAnn Bragaw,and Micheal Goetz

16 Jan

Flying Garuda Pathfinders Hosted Their First Blood Drive

Denver, Colorado … The year 2019 has been one full of blessings for the Flying Garuda Pathfinder Club. To close the year and to promote the spirit of service among its members, the club hosted their first-ever blood drive at the Colorado Indonesian-American Seventh-day Adventist Church parking lot on Sabbath afternoon, December 21.

A collaboration with Vitalant Blood Center, formerly known as Bonfils, two buses and a total of eight staff members came from Denver and Colorado Springs to attend the event. Nearly 40 people from the Colorado Indonesian-American Church in Denver and Rocky Mountain Indonesian Church in Aurora, including its Krakatau Pathfinder Club, registered as blood donors.

Donor candidates who met criteria such as having normal hemoglobin levels and having never been exposed to malaria were able to give. At least 30 people met the criteria, allowing close to 100 people to benefit.

Among those donors, one community member, who lives near the church, joined in. As a regular donor with Vitalant she was glad that instead of having to drive to the blood drive site, the buses came to her neighborhood. “It’s very convenient for me. Thank you for doing this,” said Lorraine Earley.

Vitalant’s blood drive coordinator, Michelle Lowry, onsite to help with staff expressed, “This is actually a good turnout. We need to do this again.” She was thrilled to see junior Pathfinders helping out with snacks and water bottles, while the staff helped with registration.

The best part, however, was when the eligible youth, ages 16 and above, who earlier had been reluctant, agreed to participate as donors. Having never given blood before, some were afraid to be poked. Yet, after some persuasion from the Pathfinders staff, and with words of encouragement from the parents, they decided to donate.

“It’s actually not as bad as I thought it would be,” commented Brussel Gultom, one of the Pathfinder teens. “I saved lives and I also got a free t-shirt. That’s pretty cool.”

For Michelle, after learning firsthand what Pathfinders and Adventurers are all about, she thinks it would be a great idea for the children to visit Vitalant Blood Lab in the near future. “We do that all the time with school kids, and I am sure they would love the opportunity to learn about the different parts of blood and how we process it to be ready for transfusions for those who need it,” she said.

Barry Manembu; text and photos

16 Jan

Campion Academy: Patricia Finds Her Faith Through Challenges

Loveland, Colorado … “Growing up, the only family I knew were my parents and sisters.” Patricia’s family has always been very important to her, but all of her extended family live overseas in Indonesia. “Not being able to meet my family is a huge challenge for me. Every night I would pray to God to keep them safe because prayer was my only connection to them.”

A few years ago, her uncle died in a motorcycle accident. “My heart broke when I found out because I never got the chance to formally meet him. I had a lot of questions for God and went through a lot of grieving over someone I didn’t really know.” God found Patricia in her questioning, though, and called her closer to Him.

“This experience reminded me of faith,” she says. “I need to have faith in someone I can’t physically see.” Patricia learned how to care deeply for people who she can’t be near physically and was able to find a touch of faith through a difficult experience.

During her time at Campion Academy, Patricia felt herself drawn closer than ever to God during a week of prayer. “During the Friday night vespers, the pastor spoke about how Jesus died on the cross for us. It really moved me and made me feel a spark of the Holy Spirit in me. It was a feeling I will never forget. That night, I chose to give my life to God.”

Last year, Patricia was faced with a new challenge. “I had back surgery to fix my scoliosis,” she says. “Surprisingly, this surgery helped me grow my faith in God. I was in so much pain afterwards and felt like God was not there to ease the pain. Later on, I realized that He was. He was there when the people who visited me prayed over me; He was with the hands of the surgeons who operated on me, and He was there with every hug from my family and reminder of how strong I am. Now, after having the metal in my back for a year, I feel like a brand-new person spiritually and physically.”

Patricia Simamora with Naomi Boonstra, Student Editor

16 Jan

Expectation Is Over As RMC Supply Drop Off Sites Are Announced

Franktown, Colorado … Rocky Mountain Veggie Meat is now open for business! With a new Rocky Mountain Conference supplier announcing two drop off sites and customers can place their orders now.

“You can order your favorite veggie meats at https://www.rmveggiemeat.com/shop and we will be setting up two drop off sites at Mile High Academy and the Conference office,” says Erin Houghton, who started the veggie meat company.

“If you don’t live in the Denver area, please contact us directly and we will see if we can do a bulk order to your area. Our first order will be going in the weekend of January 17-19, so check out the products on the website and you can receive your order on our first shipment if your order comes in by Sunday night,” Erin says.

This is good news for many of us in the church and in the community. We grew up with many of the popular products,” said one former customer of the Adventist Book Center, which closed at the end of December 2019. The ABC offered a variety of popular veggie meat products.

To order, go to the website and on the top right of the page, click “shop” and you will see pictures of the products. As you scroll down to the bottom of the page you will see a button that says “load more.” Click that button and more products will appear. Rocky Mountain Veggie Meat carries 69 different products, many that will be familiar to the ABC customer. Orders placed by this Sunday will be on the first delivery!

–Erin Houghton

09 Jan

Envisioning Church’s Growth Strongly Expressed at 2020 RMC Ministerial Retreat

Glacier View Ranch, Colorado… Planning for church growth was one of the main features of the 2020 Rocky Mountain Conference Pastors Retreat.

The annual gathering of pastors from nearly 130 congregations in the Rocky Mountain Conference met January 5-8 to further “learn ways to make Christ known in RMC,” said Mickey Mallory, RMC ministerial director, and organizer of the retreat.

“If we are not planning to grow, we are going to die [as a church],” said Jose Cortes Jr. associate ministerial director for North American Division, one of the presenters at the retreat. Cortes called for a re-focus of our mission throughout America.

“Growth is not going to happen unless we envision it,” Cortes said in an interview with NewsNuggets. He continued, “If we don’t believe it’s going to happen, it’s never going to happen. Many times, it begins with the pastor and with the leadership. If we believe that we can grow and we begin praying about it and we can begin planning with our church members about it, I see a difference taking place when you have pastors that they believe that they’re going to grow.”

The retreat was “designed to give our pastors practical tools to help them be more effective in their ministry,” Mallory explained. It brought together 80 ministers, some with their spouses. In a parallel program on two mornings, Shepherdess meetings were organized for spouses of the ministers.

Ivan Williams, who has served as NAD ministerial director since 2010, commented on an often-heard comment remark among the younger ministers that there’s a problem is with the church continuing to worship tradition rather than Jesus Christ. He said that “Unfortunately, sometimes the institution is revered more than the mission. We have to change that. We have to fight that. Every institution is in the business of keeping itself alive, but the church has not been called to be an institution. It has been called to be an incarnational, missional entity, a movement, and we have to really focus on that or else we’re just a club. And if we want to stay a club and remain an institution, we know they all have death cycles.”

Cortez listed six areas for the church to include in its growth plan. “Love, serve, disciple, baptize, plant and revitalize. Six words describe the plan. Commenting on the need to revitalize our congregations, Cortes said that “we have dying churches, plateauing churches that we need to do a few things with it in order for the churches to be growing churches again. If the churches are not going to be revitalized, if they are going to keep going down, we need to do a burial for the church and use those resources for churches that are doing the work of the Lord and the mission of the church. We shouldn’t be investing resources in churches that have decided that they want to die. If we’re not wanting to grow, we’re going to die.”

Williams commented on what motivates him not to give up on the future of Seventh-day Adventist ministry. “I think what motivates me to go beyond is the future of our ministry. We are getting older and passing on to the next generation the fact that God is still calling young people. We need to make it cool again to work for the Lord, to work for the church. I also believe the harvest is still plentiful [even though] Christianity is still dying in western countries. That’s always a challenge for us. So, to go way beyond means for me to really be all in, to impact the next generation, to pass on the legacy, a calling, an attachment to the gospel that they can share,” Williams said.

The retreat presenters also included two more members of the Ministerial Department team from North American Division (NAD), Ester Knott and Dave Gemmell. In their presentations, they encouraged the RMC pastors to consider many and varied resources available to ministers in North America. Among other presenters were Mic Thurber, Mid-America Union Conference ministerial director, Leander Tomazelli, NAD Risk Management Account Executive, as well as administration and ministry leaders from RMC.

“I was struck by Jose Cortes Jr., when he respectfully said, ‘People were not attracted to Jesus because of His clothes, nor because of His diet, or His taste in music. They were attracted to Jesus because He cared about them.’ Amen to that,” said Shayne Vincent, pastor of the Casper, Wyoming district. “It is so refreshing to hear spiritual truth remaining strong with our leadership,” he added.

“Kicking off the year with a ministerial retreat provides our pastors with a boost as they prepare to make a difference in their family, church, and community,” commented Mallory. “The retreat far exceeded expectations. The presentations were informative and very practical. The meals were superb with a number of healthy options,” he commented.

“I love our pastoral team,” Ed Barnett, RMC president said in his farewell. He again, as in previous gatherings, said that “we hire pastors to grow healthy churches.” He encouraged the RMC ministers to “preach biblical sermons on stewardship. It’s a benefit to our people to be involved in stewardship.”

Commenting on the retreat, Anton Kapusi, pastor from Pueblo, said that the gathering “has showed me, as a new arrival, that pastors can be friends and on the same team with the leadership and that the leadership could embrace and empower the pastors on the front line not only on the organizational [level], but also on a spiritual level.”

For Lee Lee Dart, lead pastor of The Adventure Church in Greeley, two areas stood out at the retreat. She particularly appreciated that “pastors were given a good chunk of time for rest and relaxation, unlike at previous meetings.” She welcomed having to put faces to names for the North American ministerial leaders. “Often, we are so involved with the microcosm of our own little world in our [local] church that we don’t understand the bigger picture. Meeting these leaders broadened my view of the church,” she added.

Rajmund Dabrowski, text; photos by Rajmund Dabrowski and Shayne Vincent (prayer)

09 Jan

God’s Math is Perfect

Lamar, Colorado …Bonnie Guder, a member of the Lamar Church, attended the first prayer meeting with her new pastor, Ted Williams, and upon hearing about the work being done in prison ministries, asked if she could volunteer. Soon after, she witnessed God’s work with prison ministries in the Rocky Mountain Conference.

On the first night of Guder’s volunteer service, she witnessed the hunger of the women for the gospel message when several asked if they could have their own Bible. Williams promised to get them one and Guder had a front-row seat for what transpired.

The following week on his way to a ministerial alliance meeting in Lamar, he stopped at the local Christian bookstore to purchase the Bibles. Entering the store, he noticed a man standing in a corner near the back and felt moved to share a “Ticket to Heaven” with him. He often uses these tickets as conversation starters which can lead to some meaningful dialogue. It was then that Williams discovered the man had met Jesus in prison.

Afterward, the proprietor happily showed him Bibles ranging in price from $20 to $40. “Too much,” Williams said. “I need something more cost effective.” She directed him to the only three large-print, paperback Bibles she had for $5.75, exactly what the three women had requested.

Then she said, “I have a case of 32 Bibles in the back that I haven’t been able to sell I can give you for one dollar each,” the proprietor said. “If you’ll step back until I take care of these people, I’ll be happy to ring you up.”

Williams waited somewhat impatiently, knowing the delay would make him rather late for his scheduled meeting, but also knowing these Bibles would be useful. While the proprietor was ringing up items, the man who’d received the ticket, the man now being waited on, touched the box of Bibles and said, “Put this case on my bill.”

After the transaction was complete, he and Williams prayed together by the cash register and Williams headed for his car. The man followed saying, “When I saw you come into the store, an electric shock went through me and I knew we needed to talk. I want to give you my contact information so you can help me get involved in prison ministry.”

Taking the information, the two prayed again and Williams, knowing he was decidedly late, headed to his appointment.

Following the meeting, he drove by the jail to drop off the Bibles. As he handed the three Bibles to the prison guard, he asked for the total number of inmates in the jail. “Thirty-five” the guard responded. “Well, I have 32 more Bibles in this box and with the three I just gave you, we have the exact amount needed for everyone.” The box changed hands and Williams left knowing that every inmate in that jail would receive one.

Williams thought about Guder’s interest in volunteering for prison ministry; he thought about the man who paid for the Bibles who also wanted to volunteer with prison ministries, and he considered how he had found the exact number of Bibles needed to cover every inmate in the jail. “Only God could’ve done that,” he thought.

Carol Bolden; photo Ted Williams

09 Jan

Growing Arvada Churches Report Several Baptisms

Arvada, Colorado … Three Advada churches are reporting baptismal celebrations in 2019.  Jani Pungus, pastor of the Indonesian church, studied with 16 young people for most of the year and 13 were baptized in December with another three who plan to be baptized in January.

Arvada Spanish Ministry also prepared one person for baptism. During the year 2019 God has blessed Arvada with 32 baptisms, reports Pastor Gordon Anic.

“We are hoping that God will help us in many more baptisms in 2020,” he said.

For more information about Arvada’s different ministries visit www.aachurch.org or find them on Facebook.

–Gordon Anic, text; photos supplied