New Wilmington Mission Conference

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  • 2007 New Wilmington Mission Conference AIDS Service Project Press Release

    P R E S S   R E L E A S E

    For Immediate Release

     

    This week people from all over the world will gather in New Wilmington to make a difference.  Sleepy New Wilmington is home to the New Wilmington Mission Conference, a 102 year traditional gathering of Presbyterians who care about missions. The week-long event is marked by speakers and singing, prayer meetings, and small groups, all intent on learning about what in the world the Church is doing in mission.

    While there, the youth will do some mission service themselves.

    Junior and senior highs will visit the local nursing homes, playing bingo, talking and making friendships with older adults three and four generations older – usually five and six times their age. They will make a small gift for each person they visit as a way to “break the ice” and as a reminder of the visit.

    Elementary children will make handmade crafts for mission workers in Ethiopia and Taiwan. In addition, they will make health care kits for a rural hospital in Mombin Crochu, Haiti. A simple zip lock plastic bag will hold basic items for hygiene – a washcloth, soap, tooth brush and tooth paste, three Band Aids and safety pins, a pen and small notebook.  Paul and Joan McClain, who worked at the Covenant Hospital say even these simple items are more than most Haitians can afford.  The children will assemble about 125 kits, which will be shipped to Haiti, courtesy of the Sixth Presbyterian Church in Pittsburgh.

    They will even have a car wash to raise money for a specific mission project.

     But the main service project this year is to gather and assemble the items needed to make 700 AIDS Care Kits, promoted through World Vision, an international Christian relief organization. 

    40 million people worldwide are living with HIV.  Local caregivers in Africa, Asia, and Latin America are already helping families affected by HIV and AIDS.  But they lack simple items needed to prolong lives and comfort the sick. Caregivers are family members and local volunteers around the world who are providing compassionate support to people living with AIDS.  Hardworking community volunteers offer physical and emotional support to affected households, while family members—many of them children—sacrifice everything to care for sick mothers, fathers, and other relatives.  Many of these courageous caregivers lack the basic supplies they need to safely and effectively minister to the sick. 

    Caregiver Kits are filled with basic supplies that improve and prolong the lives of those living with AIDS while protecting caregivers and preventing the spread of infection.  Each kit consists of a carrying case filled with:  Antibacterial soap, Petroleum jelly, Antifungal cream, Cotton balls, Latex gloves, Washcloths, Notebook and pens, Flashlight with batteries.  A handwritten note is included in each kit to encourage the caregiver who receives the supplies.  

    First Lady Laura Bush was recently on ABC Good Morning America promoting the World Vision AIDS Care Kits. See the video at  http://worldvision.org/  or

    http://abcnews.go.com/Video/playerIndex?id=3321172&lid=gma&lpos=day:txt:first_lady

    On Friday, the kits will be boxed and loaded into a semi-truck, where they will begin their long journey across the country, and across the world, carrying hope, love and care, in the form of soap and medicine, to a world which needs them all.

    It’s been said that “God is in the details.”  The truth is, you can see God’s loving hand in each of the estimated 17,000 items that we will assemble this week.

    ·         20 items for AIDS kits per kit, times 700 kits, equals 14,000 items.

    ·         14 items for Haiti health care kits, times 125 kits, equals 1,750 items.

    ·         9 items for Nursing Home gifts, times 125 elderly, equals 1,125 items.

    ·         10 items for New Baby kits, times 50 kits, equals 500 items.

    ·         Handmade gifts for mission workers in Ethiopia and in Taiwan, approx. 500 items.

     

     

    For more information please contact the New Wilmington Mission Conference office at (724) 946-7195.

     

    Submitted by Rev. Barbara Price-Martin,

    Service Project Staff

    New Wilmington Mission Conference

    229 S. Market Street

    New Wilmington, PA 16142

    724.946.7195

  • 2007 New Wilmington Mission Conference Mission Speaker Schedule

    We are pleased to announce the 2007 New Wilmington Mission Conference Mission Speaker Schedule.  There may be a few tweaks between now and conference, but they will be made to this page as soon as possible.  We look forward to seeing you there.

    16 Days!

  • Steve Saint to Speak at the 2007 New Wilmington Mission Conference

    We are pleased to announce Steve Saint will be speaking Saturday July 22 at the evening meeting (7:45 PM at Anderson Auditorium).  You can read more about Steve along with the bios of most other speakers for the week.

    Stephen Saint grew up in Ecuador, son of martyred missionary Nate Saint who was killed by the Waodani tribe in 1956. He came to know and love these people who were served by his aunt, Rachel Saint until her death in 1994. Steve will be the Saturday evening speaker at NWMC July 22, 2007.

    A graduate of Wheaton College, Steve has launched several successful businesses and has worked as a missionary in West Africa, Central America and South America. At the request of the Waodani elders, he returned to the Amazon in 1995 along with his wife and children. Steve is the founder if I-TEC (Indigenous People’s Technology & Education Center) whose focus is on enabling indigenous churches to overcome the technological and educational hurdles that stand in the way of their independence - a vision that grew out of this experience among the Waodani. This formerly proud and independent group had become a welfare state, and their church a welfare church. While the Waodani people were the initial concern of I-TEC, its mission includes other hidden people groups around the world who will benefit from support such as dental equipment, solar-powered radio transmitters, canoe motors and powered parachutes.

    Steve and his wife Ginny have been married 33 years and have four children, Shaun, Jaime, Jesse, (who are married to Anne, Jessica and Jenni Joy) and Stephenie, who died suddenly in 2000 at age 20. Ten grandchildren (soon to be eleven) are the joy of their lives.

    Steve is a hands-on participant in I-TEC projects, is the author of three books and numerous articles, and is increasingly involved in speaking and radio and television appearances. The story of his father is featured in the recent movie "End of the Spear" and he narrates the documentary Beyond the Gates of Splendor.

     

  • More 2007 New Wilmington Mission Conference Speakers

    We've confirmed more speakers for the 2007 NWMC!

     

    • Adult Bible Hour - Rev. Glenn McDonald, pastor of Zionsville Presbyterian Church, IN
    • Adult Mission Hour - Dr. Alan Seaman, chair of ESL Dept at Wheaton college
    • Career Bible - Rev. Bill Crooks
    • Career Mission - Shane Bennett, Caleb Project (now called Initiative 360)
    • High School Bible Hour - Rob Bradford

    More details will be posted to the speakers list when available.

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