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The Missions Committee
 
The heart of Sunnyside UMC Missions is outreaching love. Missions is the expression of the mind and heart of Christ by demonstrating gratitude and devotion, witness and service, celebration and discipleship. The forms of this mission are diverse in locale, in interest, and in outreach.  We believe that in order to pass on the love of Christ, we first need to feed, clothe, shelter, and educate those in need.  Please feel free to participate in any or all activities and meetings of the Sunnyside UMC Missions committee.
 
 

August Mission News

We received a very nice Thank You Note from the Peace House.  It read as follows:

 

To all our friends at Sunnyside,

     Thank you so much for your incredibly generous gift to our work here at Peace House.  We were very grateful and humbled when we opened your envelope.  We will put it all to good use - we promise you!

      We very much cherish our relationship with you and look forward to many years of good work to come.  Peace be with you, Jen D. - for all of us here.

 

Lane 4: UMCOR/Hunger Relief

Jesus said, for the third time, “Do you love me? Then feed my sheep!”--John 21:17

The Mission Highway is often a road that takes us to places of crisis, disaster, famine, and war. The focus in Lane 4 is on hunger and relief. Projects, many of them sponsored by the United Methodist Committee on Relief (UMCOR), focus not only on immediate alleviation of suffering but also attack the root causes of hunger and poverty. Whether there are refugees to be housed, school children to be fed, HIV/AIDS patients to be treated, storm-damage to be repaired, or landmines to be removed, UMCOR is there. Projects are in need of goods, cash donations and volunteer time.  We will be giving you a chance to help by participating in the HEIFER PROJECT in the fall and you have already helped by giving to the MITE BOX in the narthex. That money along with the Sunday School offering supports the HOT LUNCH PROGRAM in Haiti. 

 

P.E.T. Rolls in the Village of Kiaba

Following is an article I read on the West Michigan Conference web page.  Although we have not given to them in the last couple of years it is most heartwarming to see what our giving in the past has done.

 

For many years United Methodists in the West Michigan Conference have supported the P.E.T. Project. But how often does a person from West Michigan get the chance to help deliver a P.E.T.? That rare opportunity materialized on July 3 when Alfred, the head nurse at the Dispensary at Mulungwishi, DR Congo, invited the DeMoss family to jump in his ambulance and drive to the village of Kiaba, some five miles away.

 

With Alfred at the wheel, Lynn, Kay, David and Drew shared the back of the van with a P.E.T. supplied by missionary, Delbert Groves. Groves is the director of the New Life Center in nearby Zambia. A United Methodist Advance Special, New Life Center assembles and distributes these hand-pedaled tricycles from parts received from the United States.

A large crowd greeted the ambulance in Kiaba. People had gathered at the clinic there to receive mosquito nets. Malaria disables and kills many in Congo, particularly children. Sixteen hundred nets, procured from the government, are being made available through the Mulungwishi Dispensary. They are making a big difference in controlling the disease. Pierre Mutanda, head nurse at the clinic, greeted us. When the P.E.T. was unloaded from the van, two men began to push and to pull it into the village. It was then that David DeMoss jumped on the seat and peddled it to the home of Kiembe Francoise. All ran to keep up.

How did David know how to peddle a P.E.T.? Easy! His home congregation, Holland United Methodist Church, has been assembling P.E.T.s for the past two years in partnership with P.E.T. Florida, operated by retired missionaries, Larry and Laura Hills. “Sometimes us kids ride a P.E.T. in our sanctuary when nobody is looking,” his brother, Drew, confided. The Holland affiliate is the only one in the country manufacturing child-size Personal Energy Transports (PETs).

As the group arrived, Francoise was seated in front of her house. There were braces on her legs and crutches next to her chair. With the help of nurse Mutanda, she got on the P.E.T. and immediately started to peddle. “I like this very much,” she beamed. “I am filled with joy! Thank you. Thank you.” She went on to say that the P.E.T. would enable her to go to church and to the market. Right now the uneven ground and inclines around her house present a bit of a challenge. But the more Francoise uses her P.E.T., the more strength she will gain in her arms.

Returning to the ambulance, we met another woman without use of her legs. Nurse Alfred said that she also would benefit greatly by a P.E.T. He also noted that there are 23 children in the greater Mulungwishi region who cannot walk either from polio or injuries. The cost of making and transporting a PET is $450. The life-changing gift…priceless!

Reported by Kay DeMoss. The DeMoss family has been in DR Congo since May 2. They will return to Michigan on July 20 after participating in the Centennial Celebration of Methodism in Southern Congo.

 

 

                                                                                   Rose Ann, Missions Chairperson

 
Volunteer at the Peace House
 
Do you ever wonder where your donated mission funds go and what that money is used for? Well check out some of the awesome work that God is doing with our financial gifts in the Eastside Neighborhood. Enclosed in your newsletter this month is a copy of the Peace House summer activities (and volunteer opportunities!).
 
Through our Christmas offering and other designated fundraisers Sunnyside United Methodist Church provided $700 to help make some of these programs possible. If you haven’t yet had a chance to meet the families of the Peace House or spend time with the children and families they serve, this summer offers a wide variety of opportunities to check them out. Visiting the Peace House will provide you an opportunity to see the faces of those lives who have been touched by your gifts. God is moving in our neighborhood!
 
 

Sunnyside is being called to a bold and committed journey of discipleship;
engaging in service, united in God's purpose.

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