Monday, December 2, 2013

United Methodist News and Communications Service - Daily Digest - Open hearts. Open minds. Open doors. The people of The United Methodist Church – Monday, 2 December 2013

United Methodist News and Communications Service - Daily Digest - Open hearts. Open minds. Open doors. The people of The United Methodist Church – Monday, 2 December 2013
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“I don’t follow Christ because Christians don’t get sick. I don’t follow Christ because Christians live longer. I follow Christ because I’ve seen the face of God in Christ as he cares for people.”(The late Bishop Wayne K. Clymer in a sermon on his 90th birthday.)
Bishop remembered as wise, compassionate leader
MINNEAPOLIS (UMNS) — “Over the years, his primary concern was not so much organization or institution, but compassion for people,” said Harlyn Hagmann, a retired Minnesota pastor and a longtime friend of the late Bishop Wayne K. Clymer. The bishop passed away Monday, Nov. 25.
Read obituary
Bishop Clymer remembered as wise, compassionate leader
DATE: November 26, 2013
BY: Christa Meland
Six years ago, in celebration of his 90th birthday, retired Bishop Wayne K. Clymer delivered a sermon at Hennepin Avenue United Methodist Church in Minneapolis that was called “Why follow Christ?”
In it, Clymer referred to Christ serving the masses with loaves and fishes, noting that Christ saw the crowd in need and had compassion. He told the congregation: I don’t follow Christ because Christians don’t get sick. I don’t follow Christ because Christians live longer. I follow Christ because I’ve seen the face of God in Christ as he cares for people.
That theme from Clymer’s sermon was also a theme visible throughout the bishop’s whole life, said Harlyn Hagmann, a retired pastor in the Minnesota Annual Conference who was a district superintendent from 1975 to 1981. Clymer found the crowd in need and showed them compassion.
“Over the years, his primary concern was not so much organization or institution, but compassion for people,” said Hagmann, who was also one of Clymer’s longtime friends. “His objective was to instill in the church a sense of compassion for the people within the church and beyond the church. And if the church succeeded in that, everything else would follow.”
Clymer died Monday at age 96, just hours after speaking in the Twin Cities at the funeral of a longtime friend and fellow clergy member. He is remembered as a wise and deeply spiritual leader who modeled compassion and graciousness in his ministry and throughout his life.
Born Sept. 24, 1917, in Napoleon, Ohio, Clymer began his career as an ordained clergyperson in the Evangelical United Brethren Church, a predecessor body of the United Methodist Church. After a brief time as a local church pastor, he served in several capacities at Evangelical Theological Seminary in Illinois—where he was professor of pastoral care, then dean, and eventually president. In 1970, he was a member of the United States delegation to the United Nations Conference on Refugees in Geneva, Switzerland. And he was elected a United Methodist bishop in 1972, just four years after our denomination was formed by merger.
His first episcopal assignment was the Minnesota Annual Conference, which he led until 1980. At that time, he was assigned to the Iowa Annual Conference, where he served until retiring in 1984. Between 1976 and 1984, he also served as president of the United Methodist Committee on Relief (UMCOR).
Upon retiring, Clymer moved back to Minnesota, where he and his wife, Virginia Schoenbohm Clymer, still have a residence (although in recent years, they spent winters in Florida). The year he retired, Hennepin Avenue United Methodist Church invited Clymer to be its “bishop in residence,” a role he maintained until his death.
Hennepin Avenue Pastor Teri Johnson said that Bishop Clymer was incredibly active at the church: He spent one day each week volunteering at the Dignity Center there, which supports people in poverty as they work toward self-sufficiency. He attended weekly staff meetings. He worked with confirmation students and confirmed the church’s latest group of confirmands just last month. He served on the church’s outreach committee. And he routinely visited those in need of pastoral care.
“He wanted to see the church thrive and was passionate about this congregation,” said Johnson. “He loved this church and they loved him.”
Before his weekly shift at the Dignity Center, he would walk around and individually check in with every staff person at the church, asking how they were doing and how their day was going, recounts Johnson. He wanted them to know he cared. What she appreciated most about Clymer was his “deep wisdom” and the way “he could gently enter into dialogue,” sharing his own perspective but also inviting and respectfully listening to the opinions of others.
In addition to staying involved at Hennepin Avenue, Clymer also remained active within the global church well beyond his retirement. Retired bishops retain membership in the United Methodist Council of Bishops, and upon his retirement in 1984, Clymer served as liaison for the Council of Bishops to the theological seminaries. Later, he worked on the education committee. This fall, Clymer became the oldest member of the Council of Bishops.
“In the tradition of the early church’s desert mothers and fathers, Bishop Clymer was a contemporary spiritual father of the Minnesota Conference and much of the United Methodist Church,” said Bishop Bruce R. Ough, who leads the Dakotas-Minnesota Episcopal Area. “Even in his advanced years, and certainly because of his accumulated wisdom, his cogent insights, thoughtful reflections on the state of the church, and grasp of current realities were sought out by younger episcopal colleagues, friends, and family. For many—lay and clergy alike—he came to epitomize and represent what a spiritual leader should be.
“Bishop Clymer loved the Minnesota Conference and its faithful people and was beloved by them in return,” said Ough. “We have lost an icon—a window to God, a true spiritual father, and an irreplaceable gift from God.”
Bishop Clymer married Helen Eloise Graves on Sept. 3, 1939. Helen died on July 7, 1999. Their two children are Kenton James Clymer, professor of diplomatic history and head of the history department at Northern Illinois University in DeKalb, Illinois, and Richard George Clymer, realtor and retired senior high school principal in Hastings, Minnesota. Bishop Clymer and Virginia Schoenbohm Clymer were married on Dec. 26, 2000.
Clymer is survived by his wife Virginia; his two sons and daughters-in-law; and his grandchildren and great grandchildren.
Those who knew Clymer well say that his legacy of compassion will live on in their hearts and in the world.
“People were not entities to him, people were people; they had feelings and lives and sometimes loves and sometimes disappointments,” said Hagmann. “As precious as he felt his role was in helping develop leadership for the church, he was above all a very gracious human being.”
Christa Meland is director of communications for the Minnesota Annual Conference of the United Methodist Church.
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Arrangements
Bishop Wayne K. Clymer
Relationship to the conference: Retired bishop, Minnesota Episcopal Area, 1972-1980
Date of death: Nov. 25, 2013
Arrangements: Funeral service will be held Friday, Nov. 29, at 2 p.m., at Hennepin Avenue United Methodist Church, 511 Groveland Ave., Minneapolis. A visitation will take place prior to the service, from 12:30 to 2 p.m. at the church.
Memorials: Memorials are preferred to the Wayne K. Clymer Scholarship Fund at Garrett Evangelical Theological Seminary (send checks to the Development Office, 2121 Sheridan Rd., Evanston, Ill., 60201), or to the United Methodist Committee on Relief.
Appointment information: Bishop Clymer served as an elder with the Evangelical United Brethren Church prior to the merger that formed The United Methodist Church in 1968. He served as bishop of the Minnesota Episcopal Area from 1972 to 1980, and as bishop of the Iowa Episcopal Area from 1980 to 1984, when he retired.
Bishop Clymer is survived by wife Virginia Schoenbohm Clymer; two sons, Kenton James Clymer and Richard George Clymer, and their wives; and grandchildren and great grandchildren. He is preceded in death by Helen Eloise Graves Clymer. Cards may be sent to Virginia Schoenbohm Clymer at 2850 Inner Rd., Wayzata, MN 55391.
Within the next day, watch for a feature article about Bishop Clymer's history with and contributions to the United Methodist Church.
Obituaries at www.minnesotaumc.org
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Background information
Bishop Wayne Clymer
(retired)
Address:
November - April
Parkway Villas
6054 Coral Way
Bradenton FL 34207
May-October
2850 Inner Road
Wayzata MN 55391
Phone:
November - April
(941) 727-7875
May-October
(952) 473-2812
Email: wclymer2000@yahoo.com
Wayne Clymer was born in Napoleon, Ohio, son of Reverend George A. and Grace Sallie Hulvey Clymer. His father was a member of the Ohio Annual Conference of the Evangelical Church, and served churches in that state.
Bishop Clymer received his baccalaureate degree from Asbury College and the M.A. degree in Philosophy from Columbia University. Union Theological Seminary conferred the Master of Divinity degree, and the Ph.D. degree was awarded by New York University. Post-doctoral studies were pursued at the New York School for Social Research, the William Alanson White School of Psychiatry, and Columbia University. Clinical Pastoral Education was taken at the Massachusetts General Hospital and at St. Luke’s Hospital in New York City.
Bishop Clymer was ordained deacon and elder by Bishop John S. Stamm, and became a member of the Atlantic Conference of the Evangelical Church, where he served pastorates in Ozone Park and Forest Hills, NY. In 1946 he was appointed Professor of Pastoral Care at the Evangelical Theological Seminary, Naperville, Illinois. In 1957 he was appointed Dean of the Seminary and became President in 1967. During a sabbatical year 1966-67, Dr. Clymer was consultant to the United Church of Christ in the Philippines on ministerial training and taught at St. Andrew's Theological Seminary in Manila and Trinity College in Singapore. During his tenure in theological education, he served as President of the Association of Seminary Professors, the Chicago Theological Faculties Union, and the Mid-America Theological Center.
The North Central Jurisdictional Conference elected Wayne Clymer to the episcopacy in 1972. He was assigned to the Minnesota Area where he served for eight years before being transferred to the Iowa Area in 1980. He served as President of The United Methodist Committee on Relief from 1976-1984. In 1970 he was a member of the United States delegation to the United Nations Conference on Refugees in Geneva, Switzerland. Upon his retirement in 1984 he served as liaison for the Council of Bishops to the theological seminaries.
Bishop Clymer gave the Denman Lectures at the Congress on Evangelism in 1976; the Berger Lectures at the University of Dubuque, 1985; the Washburn Lectures, 1985; the George Buttrick Lectures, Bayview, Michigan, 1990. He was preacher on the NBC radio series, AArt of Living,@ in 1962; and preacher on the AProtestant Hour@, 1970. Four times he was a delegate to the Oxford Conference on Methodist Theological Studies, and represented his denomination at the Fourth World Conference on Faith and Order. He has published numerous articles, and two books: Affirmation and Membership Means Discipleship. Honorary degrees have been awarded by Westmar College, Hamline University, Iowa Wesleyan College, Rust College and by Garret-Evangelical Theological Seminary.
Bishop Clymer married Helen Eloise Graves on September 3, 1939. Helen died July 7, 1999. Their two children are: Kenton James Clymer, Professor of Diplomatic History and head of the History Department at Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, Illinois, and Richard George Clymer, realtor and retired Senior High School Principal, Hastings, Minnesota. Bishop Clymer and Virginia Schoenbohm were married on December 26, 2000.
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‘Tis the season … to think of alternative gifts
Recipients say ‘non-gifts’ are priceless by Tita Parham
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UMNS) — It is that time of year when shopping seems to overwhelm everything. Tita Parham points out in Interpreter Magazine how many are turning to alternative gifts.
Read story
One of the hottest toys on the market for children in 2012, according to Good Housekeeping magazine, was the Meep tablet, an iPad-like tablet that runs on the Android operating system.
Eight-year-old Maddie Helle decided she wanted something even better for her birthday: dog food.
She also asked for cat food, collars, leashes and food bowls.
Maddie decided she had enough toys and clothes and instead wanted the pet supplies for the local Humane Society. She received enough to fill a large SUV.
Her tour of the Humane Society's shelter about a month before her birthday prompted her request.
"I really like animals and wanted to help them," said Maddie, who attends the United Methodist Church of Farmington (Ill.)
She took that help a step further and now regularly volunteers at the shelter. She also fosters kittens at home.
And for her birthday this year, she wants the same thing.
Choosing help instead of clutter
When Sam and Lisa Abate married last April, they asked for specific wedding gifts – donations to two of their favorite charities.
The request from Sam, a firefighter/emergency medical technician (EMT), and Lisa, an EMT who works in a hospital trauma department, should have brought little surprise. For Christmas 2012, the couple, members of Union Grove United Methodist Church in Pittsfield, N.J., gave and received alternative gifts.
"We already have everything we need," Sam said, "so instead of getting more junk or clutter, we figured we would ask for and give something to be given to those who have nothing or very little. We wanted to help but wanted our gifts to be relevant and have a connection to who we were giving them to."
More of everything for many
Julie Taylor says her birthday present was "the gift of sharing."
When Taylor, executive for children, youth and family advocacy for United Methodist Women and a member of St. Paul and St. Andrew United Methodist Church in New York, turned 50 three years ago she also decided she had everything she needed.
"I need love, friendship, opportunity to work and access to it ... a healthy environment," she said. "I don't need ‘stuff.’"
She asked people for things that would help someone else, but in amounts of 50 – 50 socks for homeless people; 50 cents, dimes, dollars for any charity; 50 minutes to talk to shut-ins; 50 nails for Habitat for Humanity.
"It was the best birthday ever," she said. "When friends and family started to contact me about what things they gave and how they celebrated my birthday, I was overwhelmed. There was more food, more friendship, more assistance, more love shared with others. What could be better than that?"
No better gift
Each time the Rev. Gregory Gross has suggested alternative giving, he has been "greatly surprised and honored by the gifts."
Gross is a deacon in Chicago, appointed to the AIDS Legal Council of Chicago and Berry United Methodist Church as family ministries coordinator.
For his birthday, Christmas and ordination, he asked for contributions to Project Tariro, an initiative of United Methodist diaconal ministers and deacons that supports people in Zimbabwe living with HIV/AIDS.
Alternative giving, Gross says, is vital for a church that's called to be "counter-cultural."
"Too often our society gets caught up in wanting more — the latest and greatest device — and in ‘what's in it for me,’" he said. "Yet, we are called to think of others as ourselves."
Gross sees gifts to Project Tariro as "giving the gift of life."
"What better gift could I receive or give at Christmas, when we remember that the divine became incarnate," he said.
Tita Parham is a freelance writer, editor and communications consultant based in Apopka, Fla.
Looking for ideas for alternative gifts to receive or give?
Check out the more than 850 projects and 300 missionaries supported through gifts to The Advance. Visit www.umcmission.org/advance or see the list beginning on page 49.
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Christmas shopping can benefit local churches
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UMNS) — The United Methodist General Council on Finance and Administration, in partnership with some of the largest online retailers, has built a shopping tool that provides a cash benefit for your church when you purchase through the UMCmarket — items you might be buying anyway. How does it work? Create an account at UMCMarket.org and designate the church of your choosing.
To sign up
http://www.umcmarket.org/
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UMC #GivingTuesday gifts have twice the impact
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UMNS) — Kick off the season of giving by making an online donation to mission through The Advance on #GivingTuesday, Dec. 3 and double the impact of your gift. On that date, online gifts to any project through The Advance, the designated giving channel of The United Methodist Church, will be matched 100 percent up to the first $500,000. Every gift to The Advance goes to the intended ministry; no administrative costs are taken from donations.
UMC #GivingTuesday
http://www.umcmission.org/Give-to-Mission/Search-for-Projects/Advance-Project-Search
Global Ministries will allocate the “matching funds” dollar for dollar up to the first $500,000 in gifts to Advance projects received online on December 3, 2013, between 12:00 a.m. EST and 11:59 p.m. A maximum of $10,000 per individual gift to a project will be dispersed as matching funds. A project may receive a maximum of $50,000 in matching funds.
Advance Project Search
Find and Give to a Ministry, Missionary, or Project
If you know The Advance ministry or project name, please enter it here. You can also search for words in the title, description, area, or country in which it exists.
Enter Project Name, Number or Keyword    
Select a Missionary
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Begin the Search
Search for a particular Advance project or discover a new one. Begin your search by exploring categories, population, region, UMCOR, or focus area. These buttons will lead to new pages where you may further refine your search.
 Category button rev for Advance project search page
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UMC #Giving Tuesday
See our resource page for UMC #Giving Tuesday.
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Help ‘Just Save One’ from HIV/AIDS on Giving Tuesday
NEW YORK (UMNS) — As a follow-up to the Dec. 1 observation of World AIDS Day, consider a donation to the United Methodist Global AIDS Fund on Giving Tuesday, Dec. 3, when contributions will be matched dollar for dollar. The fund’s new initiative, “Just Save One,” focuses on preventing mother-to-child transmission of HIV.
Learn more about the Global AIDS
HIV and AIDS
UMCOR's top priorities in addressing HIV and AIDS around the world are challenging stigma and mother-child transmission in partnership with the Ecumenical Advocacy Alliance.
United Methodist Global AIDS Fund
The United Methodist Global AIDS Fund (UMGAF) was established by the 2004 General Conference of The United Methodist Church. Its purpose is to stem the tide of HIV and AIDS around the world, and strengthen the church’s compassionate response to this deadly pandemic. UMGAF supports programs that focus on prevention, advocacy, testing, and counseling for people living with HIV and AIDS.
Through the generosity of United Methodists and others, UMGAF has supported more than 200 HIV/AIDS church-oriented programs in over 35 countries. For United Methodists living in the United States, 25 percent of all contributions given to UMGAF through a local United Methodist church remain in the annual conference for AIDS ministries.
UMGAF is guided by an inter-agency committee comprised of representatives from the Council of Bishops, General Board of Church & Society, General Board of Global Ministries, General Commission on Communications, the Division on Ministries with Young People, United Methodist Women, and the Office of Christian Unity and Interreligious Concerns.
Support the UMGAF Just Save One Initiative!
Just Save OneIf you could save just one person’s life, would you do it? You have the opportunity to Just Save One person living with HIV and AIDS.
Just Save One is an initiative of the United Methodist Global AIDS Fund to eradicate HIV by 2020. For the next year, UMGAF is intensifying it’s work of prevention of mother to child transmission of HIV and AIDS. Even a small gift can make a big difference. It costs less than $10 to prevent transmission of HIV from a mother to a child; and just $1 provides needed nutrients for an AIDS orphan.
Donate to UMGAF, educate your congregation, and/or get involved in the fight to advocate for persons living with and affected by HIV and AIDS around the world. For questions or comments, contact UMGAF Consultant Rebecca Yount at rlconsult1@gmail.com.
Meet One
In Zimbabwe, Gladys, a nine year old HIV positive girl, asks her mother daily what she did wrong to contract HIV. Her mother cries when hearing this. She unknowingly transmitted HIV to her daughter at birth and is dealing with her own guilt. Through the work of the United Methodist Global AIDS Fund focus on preventing mother to child transmission, children like Gladys will be born AIDS free and mother’s can celebrate the joy of child birth without guilt.
Support the Just Save One Initiative
Donate
UMGAF has raised more than US $3.5 million to assist thousands of people who are infected and affected by HIV and AIDS. Yet, there are 34 million individuals living with the virus. We need your financial contribution to Just Save One of those millions.
A gift of US $20 can provide nursing care for a child born HIV positive;
A US $50 gift can help educate young people and adults how to prevent HIV;
A US $100 gift will supply nutrients to 100+ AIDS orphans suffering from dehydration.
Your gift could also help:
Distribute copies of Prayers for Encouragement for Persons Living with and Affected by HIV and AIDS through the Upper Room;
Prevent children from being orphaned by providing HIV testing and education for their parents;
Expand healthcare services to prevent the transmission of HIV from mother to child.
Ways to donate:
1. Drop a check payable to your local church with the UMGAF Advance #982345 in the memo line in the offering plate in your local church this Sunday. By contributing through your local church, 25 percent will remain in your annual conference for local AIDS ministries and the remainder will be sent to UMCOR to support worldwide ministries.
2. Mail a check, payable to UMCOR, to: PO Box 9068, New York, NY 10087, with the UMGAF Advance #982345 in the memo line.
3. Donate now by making a contribution with your credit card.
Your donation will help Just Save One person, someone like Makena in Kenya, India, or Washington DC or even in your own community. Together United Methodists can Just Save One and begin a domino effect to eradicate HIV and AIDS by 2020.
Donate
Educate
Eliminating the stigma associated with AIDS is a key educational goal for UMCOR. Having a strong AIDS education in your local church and community is critical to ensure the well-being of those who are infected and affected. Without knowledge of the virus, people have little incentive to seek help if they believe they have acquired HIV. Learn more about HIV and AIDS and encourage your congregation to become educated on HIV and AIDS by utilizing these resources:
Printable Resources
UMGAF brochure (pdf)
Just Save One bulletin insert (pdf)
Just Save One bookmark (pdf)
Just Save One one pager (pdf)
Congregation and small group resources:
Resources for United Methodist Churches, Districts, Conferences, and Jurisdiction on HIV and AIDS Ministries (pdf)
Stamp out the Stigma, Train the Trainer (an Indiana Annual Conference Resource)
How to Organize an HIV Testing Event (an Louisiana Annual Conference resource)
World AIDS Day Advent Study (pdf)
World AIDS Day/ First Sunday of Advent sample worship service(pdf)
40 Days of Prayer & Actions for Persons Living with and Affected by HIV & AIDS(pdf)
Interactive resources:
HIV 101 Powerpoint
UMGAF Powerpoint
United Methodist Global AIDS Fund Video
Other places to find resources and information:
UNAIDS
United States Office on National AIDS Policy
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Medicine Net
Foundation for AIDS Research
The One Campaign
Nick News: "Forgotten But Not Gone: Kids, HIV & AIDS"
Advocate
More than 3,000 persons have become UMGAF AIDS Ambassadors. Ambassadors are volunteers who advocate for needed funding for AIDS projects, help strengthen laws related to AIDS, and also broker partnerships between congregations and AIDS organizations globally to implement AIDS ministries. You, too, can become an AIDS Ambassador.
Be a social justice advocate! Many legislative bodies—local and national—appropriate funding for AIDS. Learn about what’s happening in your part of the world and let your legislators know about your interest and concern.  Attend district legislative meetings, write to your legislator, and call to voice your concern for persons living with and affected by HIV and AIDS.
Be a welcoming congregation! As an act of faith, we are called to welcome all people into our local churches, including persons living with AIDS who are often marginalized and stigmatized by society, including the church. By extending love and acceptance to those living with AIDS, transformation can happen. Encourage your pastor to preach on AIDS, sponsor an educational class on HIV and AIDS, explore how your congregation can become more welcoming, and invite each member to give to UMGAF as an act of stewardship and mission.
Mark Your Calendar
Lighten the Burden logoGetting to Zero: Just Save One, an Equipping Conference on HIV and AIDS will take place in Denver, Colorado September 11–13, 2014. More details will be posted as we get closer to the date, but clear your calendar for it now.
Commemorate World AIDS Day! Join people around the world working to end HIV, especially on World AIDS Day, December 1. This observance is an opportunity for people worldwide to unite in the fight against HIV, show their support for people living with HIV, and commemorate people who have died. World AIDS Day was the first ever global health day (1988). The United Methodist Church has been a strong supporter of this special day and the United Methodist Global AIDS Fund urges all congregations to commemorate World AIDS Day, either on December 1 or some other day during the year. Congregations are also strongly encouraged to take an offering for the United Methodist Global AIDS Fund on World AIDS Day, to support the work that our churches and partners do to understand and combat this disease in communities around the world.
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Contribute to Advance Special No. 982345
United Methodist Global AIDS Fund Advance #982345
#982345 - Combatting HIV/AIDS globally through prevention, treatment, support and capacity development
Annual Goal:$270,000.00
YTD Gifts:$53,006.51
Location: Global Global
Partner:General Board of Global Ministries
Background/History
The United Methodist Global AIDS Fund (UMGAF) was set up at the 2004 General Conference to mobilize the denomination and give action to our commitment to help end HIV/AIDS in the world. UMGAF gives United Methodists a tangible way to respond to the HIV/AIDS pandemic. The United Methodist Global AIDS Fund Executive Committee, representing a cross-section of the UMC, oversees the fund and is charged with increasing HIV/AIDS awareness in the Annual Conferences and churches. The Executive Committee also oversees fundraising efforts. The health unit of the United Methodist Committee on Relief (UMCOR) administers the grant review process and financial disbursement for the fund.
In 2001, there were an estimated total of 28.6 million adults and children living with HIV throughout the world. In 2010, the global estimate rose to 34 million. Yet, the annual number of new HIV infections has been on a steady decline with 3.1 million new cases in 2001 and 2.6 million new cases in 2009. Many factors have contributed to the decline in new infections. These changes include increased education and awareness; behavior change promotion; increases in the number of people being tested; interventions that promote prevention of HIV from mother to child; increased access to treatments; and the development of more programs and resources that take an integrated holistic approach to addressing the needs of impacted by or living with HIV/AIDS. The UMGAF has funded work in all of these areas. By the end of 2011, the 229 projects in 37 countries had received funding. Many of the projects have focused on orphans and vulnerable children, the poor, widows, people living with HIV/AIDS, community-based health workers, and populations considered high risk for exposure to HIV/AIDS.
Due to generous contributions to the UMGAF, people in some of the most remote places in the world have been impacted; countless numbers of lives have been saved. Through continued support, the UMGAF will be able to continue supporting community-based programs that provide care and support, promote disease prevention, educate, advocate, and build the capacity of vulnerable populations to address HIV/AIDS.
Goals & Objectives
1. Promotion of HIV/AIDS awareness and prevention through education, information, and communication.
2. Promote behavior modification.
3. Increase the number of people who received voluntary testing and counseling.
4. Decrease barriers to accessing treatment, thereby increasing the number of people that received treatment for HIV/AIDS.
5. Increasing the capacity of communities to respond to HIV/AIDS; combat stigma.
Activities Plan
The UMGAF will continue to receive and review applications. Projects that are in line with the UMGAF goals will be considered for funding.
Budget and Financial Information
Income
Annual Advance Financial Goal$270,000.00
Local Financial Support$25,000.00
$295,000.00
Expense
Grants to Organizations$295,000.00
$295,000.00
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Gifts to help to feed the hungry
BIG ISLAND, Va. (UMNS) — The Society of St. Andrew offers ways to honor your family and friends while still helping to feed the hungry. Gifts donated on Tuesday, Dec. 3, will be matched dollar for dollar. Society of St. Andrew is a nonprofit ecumenical organization with the mission of introducing people to God’s grace through meeting their hunger.
Giving Tuesday
A Special Day of Giving ~ Tuesday, December 3
Donations Matched Dollar-for-Dollar*
Resources to Promote #GivingTuesday▪
For Congregations (pdf)▪
For Individuals (pdf)▪
Graphics to Download
Donate Online to SoSA on December 3 and the Donation will be matched 100% by a special one-day program of the United Methodist Church.
Click on this button to learn more about
the matching funds program (but make your donation on December 3.)
Make a donation to Society of St. Andrew anytime on December 3 - on a special donation page - and your donation will be matched 100%*. That doubles your contribution, and the amount of food your contribution will provide to hungry families.
* Rules of matching funds:
1. Up to $10,000 per individual gift
2. up to $50,000 total for SoSA
3. up to $500,000 total for all Advance projects.
Bonus Drawing:
SoSA's 2013 Alternative Christmas Card of Original Art, Signed by the Artist, Jerry Malzahn
     All who donate through this program on December 3 will be entered in the drawing for a framed copy of the original artwork for this year's card, signed by the artist. Four winners will be randomly drawn
The retail industry benefits from
Black Friday, Small Business Saturday,
and Cyber Monday ...
#GivingTuesday inspires
personal philantropy and enourages bigger, better, and smarter charitable giving.
Return to EndHunger.org
on December 3 and click on the special 1-day donation button!
This year, on Tuesday, December 3, SoSA will celebrate a special day of giving, when charities, families, businesses,, community centers, students, retailers and more will come together for #GivingTuesday - a movement to celebrate giving, and to encourage more and smarter giving during the holiday season.
The first $50,000 in gifts made to Society of St. Andrew on #GivingTuesday will be matched dollar-for-dollar by one of our denominational partners, @umcmission.
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Alternative Christmas Card
Honor Your Family & Friends
While Feeding the Hungry
While you and your family are celebrating the joyous Christmas season, many Americans will experience first-hand the reality of hunger and poverty in our land of abundance.  Even in this economic downturn, America is still the richest nation on earth, but some 40 million of its citizens are suffering in poverty. This Christmas you can give them hope by the simple act of honoring your loved ones with a gift donation to feed the hungry.
The Gift
Each $12 gift donation to the Society of St. Andrew provides about 600 servings of fresh, nutritious food to America’s hungry families. The extraordinary popularity of this program continues to grow, providing more and more servings of fresh food to the hungry every year. It’s such a sincere and loving way to feed the hungry and honor special people in your life. And when you do, each person you so honor will receive our exclusive Alternative Christmas Card announcing your generous gift in their name.
The Card
Our Alternative Christmas Card was designed exclusively for and donated to the Society of St. Andrew by Texas artist Jerry Malzahn. The full-color, 7"x5" card features original art on the front. This one-of-a-kind card announces your generous gift to feed the hungry in the name of your chosen honoree(s). You will also receive the same card with our thanks and confirmation of the number of people you honored.
Finish your Christmas shopping in the next few minutes!
This is the perfect gift for family, friends, coworkers and the people important in your life. You give a gift that demonstrates your love and respect to the recipient and to those in need. It is a wonderful way to say “thank you” … a terrific stocking stuffer … a great host/hostess and last-minute gift
No other gift can do so much, for so many, with so little.
Just go to our ordering page. We’ll send you the cards and envelopes to personalize and mail or, if you prefer, we will send them on your behalf in time for Christmas. For your convenience, you can use your VISA, MasterCard or American Express credit card on our secure website.
The minimum gift donation for EACH card is just $12
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As we fulfill God’s command to share His love and peace and feed the hungry, may you experience the joy of sharing His abundance with those in need and be blessed with God’s peace.
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UMTV: Hunger-free ZIP code
KENSINGTON, Md. (UMNS) — Members of St. Paul’s United Methodist Church in Kensington are making a bold promise to their neighbors: that no one in their area will go hungry, an effort they’re calling a “hunger-free ZIP code.”
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INTRO:
Members of St. Paul’s United Methodist Church in Kensington, Maryland, are making a bold promise to their neighbors: that no one in their area will go hungry, an effort they’re calling a “hunger-free ZIP code.”
SCRIPT:
(Kensington, Maryland)
Meg Baker: “She wasn’t there last Thursday.”
Meg Baker, St. Paul’s United Methodist Church: “This program has brought a lot of surprises and unexpected joy. We’ve, over time, developed a rapport.”
When St. Paul’s United Methodist Church promised to create a “hunger-free ZIP code” in Kensington, Maryland, members didn’t realize what a blessing it would be.
Tomashawn Lewis-Johnson: “My car was having the issues….”
Creating a food distribution system gave congregants like Meg Baker a new way to connect with neighbors like
she’s my friend.  Many times, I’ve called her my angel. She’ll send a text and just say, ‘Hi.  I’m thinking about you and praying for you.’”
The Rev. Adam Snell: “My name’s Adam.”
In 2010, Pastor Adam Snell felt God calling him to reach out to the church’s neighbors and feed them.
The Rev. Adam Snell: “Morning. Good morning.”
Now, St Paul’s delivers a three-day supply of food to anyone who calls, no questions asked. The ministry began with “smart sacks” to give elementary school children food to take home for the weekend, and became a monthly food pantry, called “Communion Collect.”
The Rev. Adam Snell: “Give us this day our daily bread…”
The Rev. Adam Snell, St. Paul’s United Methodist Church: “During communion, we get fed in body and soul.  Is there a way for us to take communion and transform that into food for the community?  So, when our parishioners go to the Safeway and pick up groceries for their own table, we encourage them to pick up a bag for the hungry.”
Debra McCurry, St. Paul’s United Methodist Church: “I think this is one of the most gratifying things I’ve ever done.  It’s unified so many of us here, we enjoy it.”
Members have taken on personal missions, too, like purchasing fresh produce and delivering baked goods that would have been discarded.
Stewart Longsworth, St. Paul’s United Methodist Church: “This bread comes from stores, restaurants, whatever, that have excess food material that they would otherwise throw away, so that we can eliminate food waste within the county.”
Brian Ruberry: “Glad you’re inside tonight.”
Currently, the church opens its doors to about 45 families. “Personal shoppers” help them make selections. Church member Evan Gaalswyk, a 12-year-old volunteer, is fluent in Spanish.
Evan Gaalswyk, St. Paul’s United Methodist Church: “They usually have no idea when I walk in, they’re looking at me like, ‘This is the guy that supposed to be translating?’ One lady from Columbia came in and she talked about her family history and where she was from and her kids and her grandkids, and it was a great experience.”
(Volunteer) “Zucchini!  You like zucchini?”
Stella Mitchell, St. Paul’s United Methodist Church: “The people I just helped, it was a mom and a young boy who is in third grade.  We talked a lot about what kind of foods he likes or we talked about his favorite movie, which is ‘Turbo.’”
(Volunteer) “Really, that’s so cool!”
Stella Mitchell: “I like to talk to them and know about their lives.
“Thanks, Meg.”
Several families can’t drive to the church, so volunteers take their groceries to them.   Shari Connor and her daughter Gabi always deliver to Maria’s family….grabbing special treats like Pop-Tarts for her four-year-old twin girls.
Shari Connor, St. Paul’s United Methodist Church: “The first time we came to the door, it took them a long time to turn on the light and open the door because they didn’t know who we were.”
 “Hello!”
Shari Connor: “Now, they know we’re coming and they open the door and they bring their daughters to the door. So, I do feel there’s some sort of relationship that has built up.  We do feel a big loyalty to them, especially Gabi.  She always wants to make sure we get to the church right when the pantry doors open so we can get the best stuff.”
Maria came from Honduras and shares her home with five other families.  Her husband works full-time as a custodian at night making minimum wage.
The Rev. Adam Snell: “From the very beginning, it’s been all about relationship. We can write checks.  And, that’s a gift.  That’s part of what God has called us to do…”
(Nat sound) “You’re ready to go, huh?”
The Rev. Adam Snell: “But we’re not really making friends when we write a check… but when people come to us, when we go to their homes, all of a sudden, we know their names and we know their story and we embrace their kids.  These become our neighbors in the truest sense of the word.”
TAG:
Some of the families who receive food come to the church to volunteer.  Others attend the church’s community breakfasts, Christmas parties or vacation Bible school. Learn more or support this ministry by contacting Brian Ruberry, Justice and Compassion Ministry team leader, at (240) 506-6323 or call the St. Paul United Methodist Church office at (301)933-7933, or visit the website.
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Looking Ahead:
Here are some of the activities ahead for United Methodists across the connection. If you have an item to share, email newsdesk@umcom.org and put Digest in the subject line.
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Advent, Dec. 1-24 — Resources for Advent wreath lighting and sermons from the United Methodist Board of Discipleship and resources for drawing and welcoming visitors to Advent and Christmas services from United Methodist Communications. Ministry Matters, part of the United Methodist Publishing House, also offers the free Advent series "Follow the Star."
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#GivingTuesday, Dec. 3 — United Methodists are invited to participate in #GivingTuesday, when every gift made online through the The Advance will be matched dollar for dollar up to $500,000 total and $50,000 for any one project. Visit umcmission.org/give
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Lecture by former ambassador, Tuesday, Dec. 3 — 5 p.m. CT, Miguel H. Díaz, professor of faith and culture at Dayton University and former U.S. ambassador to the Holy See, will deliver a lecture on peace at Southern Methodist University’s Perkins School of Theology. Learn more
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Sermon by former ambassador, Sunday, Dec. 8 — 11 a.m. CT, Miguel H. Díaz, former U.S. ambassador to the Holy See, is scheduled to speak on “Becoming God’s Ambassadors to Build the House of God” at University Park United Methodist Church in Dallas. Directions to the church.
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Free webinar “Best Practices for Teaching and Implementing Creation Care and Appreciation,” Wednesday, Dec. 4 — 3 p.m. CT. Seminar highlights the best practices of United Methodist camp and retreat ministries through their operations and programs. To register.
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Free webinar “Developing Your Ministry Plan 4: The Next 12 Months,” Thursday, Dec. 5 — 6:30 p.m. CT. Building on the previous three sessions, your team will be guided in a process to identify key steps for your congregational development. To register.
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Holy Spirit Seminar: Signs and Wonders, Friday, Dec. 6 — 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. ET, United Theological Seminary will present speaker Randy Clark, founder of Global Awakening, at Ginghamsburg (United Methodist) Church, 6759 S. County Road 25A, Tipp City, Ohio. Details.
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Deadline to register for Young Clergy Leadership Forum, Friday, Jan. 10, 2014 — The United Methodist Board of Church and Society is accepting applications from people 35 and under for gathering Sunday to Wednesday, Jan. 26-29, 2014, at the United Methodist Building on Capitol Hill in Washington. Event is $175. Details.
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Certified Lay Ministers Academy, Friday-Monday, Jan. 10-12, 2014 —Lake Junaluska Program Ministries, in partnership with the Cal Turner Jr. Center for Church Leadership at Martin Methodist College, will present the academy at Lake Junaluska, N.C. Details.
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Deadline to apply for local church racial/ethnic ministries grants, Wednesday, Jan. 15, 2014 — Applications for grants up to $10,000 to help local United Methodist churches build ministries that strengthen and support racial and ethnic church concerns are available from the United Methodist Board of Discipleship. Details.
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Early bird deadline for 2014 Large Church Initiative, Wednesday, Jan. 15, 2014 — April 28-30 at Mount Pisgah United Methodist Church in Johns Creek, Ga., for United Methodist churches with 1,000 or more members and/or with an average attendance of 350 or more in worship. Details.
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