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Congregations Ministers

A middle governing body of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)

serving 130 congregations in 34 counties

in Eastern North Carolina


 
 

New Hope Presbytery Resource Center
New Resources - March 2009

 
Click here to go to the Resource Center where all of these resources are available to be checked out
 
 
 
 

 

What's this resource all about?

This disk contains several electronic resources and downloadable print resources to help you enliven and enrich your congregation's One Great Hour of Sharing campaign.

·  Sample letter—One of the most effective strategies for engaging the congregation is sending a letter in a congregational mailing. Instead of sending you a hard copy of a sample letter, this year we're including it on the CD for easier customization.

·  Video—What in the world is One Great Hour of Sharing? This resource, playable in a set-top DVD player, is a good reason to keep this DVD around for several years. Not tied to a particular year's theme, this video should continue to be a good way to introduce the offering to those who don't know it and to remind its supporters why it's an important part of their mission giving.

·  PowerPoint—Where is your treasure? There's an automatic version you can play in worship or meetings, a manual one with a script you can customize and narrate yourself, and a worship background you can use for announcements and liturgy during worship.

OGHS Art—A variety of downloadable OGHS art resources you can use in bulletins, in a newsletter, or on your Web site.

·  Print Resources—Minutes for mission, worship resources, offering history, etc.

Please take a few minutes now to explore the various items on the disk. Then share it with others you think need to see it. If you have any questions about what's available or how to use it, please contact us at (888) 728-7228, ext. 5168 or 5183, or by e-mailing alan.krome@pcusa.org or margaret.boone@pcusa.org.

Remember, everything on this disk is also available on the One Great Hour of Sharing Web site, www.pcusci.org/0ghs.

 

 
 
 

 
 

We Make A Difference:

Victories from Recent Offerings of Letters

2001 Bread for the World members succeeded in getting both houses of Congress to pass the "Hunger to Harvest" resolution—putting themselves on record as supporting increases for effective programs that help in sub-Saharan Africa. An additional S593 million for these types of initiatives allowed countries like Mozambique to begin projects for agriculture, clean water, health and education.

2002 Bread for the World members sought to strengthen and improve Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF) to help poor people and working families in the United States move out of poverty. Congress was seeking to change TANF in ways that would make it more difficult for families struggling to lift themselves out of poverty. Bread members were able to block these harmful changes until 2006, when Congress included some of the changes in a budget bill.

2003 Bread for the World members helped establish the Millennium Challenge Account, a new U.S. assistance program aimed at reducing poverty and fighting corruption in the world's poorest nations. Since then, countries as diverse as Madagascar and Mongolia have signed compacts with the United States to implement comprehensive plans to address the root causes of poverty in their countries. We also helped win the largest increase in poverty-focused development assistance in 20 years.

2004 Bread for the World members won more than $l billion in additional funding for the Millennium Challenge Account and other programs to fight disease and poverty in poor countries. This funding has helped to lower the infant mortality rate in the developing world.

2005 Bread for the World members stopped Congress from cutting nutrition assistance to hundreds of thousands of hard-working people and their children. They also wrote letters on behalf of the Hunger-Free Communities Act, which Congress passed as part of the 2008 farm bill. The act requires the next administration to develop a plan for cutting hunger in the United States and strengthens community anti-hunger coalitions across the nation.

2006 Bread for the World members continued their winning record of significant increases in funding for programs that address the causes of poverty in developing nations. The 51.4 billion increase in 2006 went largely to addressing the HIV/AIDS epidemic. Now that millions more people are receiving life-saving medications, more people in the working years of their lives are again able to produce food, care for their children, and contribute in their communities.

2007 This offering sought to win broad reform in the U.S. farm bill—making commodity programs into a more equitable safety net for our nation's farmers, and shifting additional resources into nutrition, conservation, and rural development programs. Though commodity payment programs were not substantially reformed, the Food, Conservation, and Energy Act of 2008 did include the largest-ever funding increase for food stamps and food banks—an additional $IO billion over 10 years.

2008 Bread for the World pushed for more and better international development assistance. Our efforts helped win a supplemental appropriation of 51.8 billion to respond to the global hunger crisis. Election-year politics stalled efforts to pass the Global Poverty Act. But having one of the bill's lead sponsors, Barack Obama, now as president should help in our 2009 efforts to better coordinate assistance and raise the profile of development.

2009 The outcome depends on you!

HAVE FAITH. END HUNGER.

50 F Street NW, Suite 500
Washington, DC 20001
1-800-82-BREAD Fax: (202) 639-9401
www.bread.org

 

 
 
 

 
 
 

Learning the Way



"If you are serious about engaging in authentic discipleship in times of change and in contexts of increasing religious diversity, you'll want to read Learning the Way. It invites church practitio¬ners to critique their present practices and see how the wise ways of the early church communities can speak to the challenges of being and forming followers of Christ today." Pat Baxter, Associate Pastor for Education and Congregational Care, Sun City West, Arizona

"How can we raise up healthy Christian communities? Williams helps us explore that question without giving in to the tempta¬tion to reinvent the church. Instead, she turns our focus to the marks and practices of the earliest Christian communities. These reflections are blended with stories drawn from her own life to form a mosaic of practical and timely ideas for building authentic Christian communities in today's world."
Terry L. Martin, Program Officer, Evangelism, Episcopal Church Center

"Good reading for all those engaged in and called to the teaching ministries of the Christian church." Robert W. Pazmifio, Valeria Stone Professor of Christian Education, Andover Newton Theological School


Cassandra Carkuff Williams is the National Coordinator for Discipleship Resource Development with National Ministries, American Baptist Churches USA, and has over a decade of pastoral ministry experience. She is the author of Children Among Us and Children, Poverty, and the Bible.
 
 

© 2002 - New Hope Presbytery