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Bulletin Inserts
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The
Pentecost Offering

This year’s Offering theme, “When
you send forth your spirit,” from Psalm 104:30 calls
on us to push past our comfortable boundaries and offer our resources
to make a difference in the lives of children, youth, and young
adults.
Through the Pentecost Offering
- You are raising up leaders for
the church! After serving in Tucson, Arizona, as a Young Adult Volunteer (2006–2007) Elizabeth Toland realized that she wanted
to continue to serve in mission as a long-term international
volunteer in the position of U.S. Coordinator, Comaneros en
Mision with Presbyterian Border Ministry. The YAV program
follows Christ’s call to service and develops strong
leaders for the church and the community.
- Since 1998, congregations like
yours have raised over $4.8 million for ministries with children
at risk in their own communities. Manassas Presbyterian Church
in Manassas, Virginia, gave its 40 percent of the Pentecost Offering to Volunteer
Emergency Families for Children, a program that provides short-term
shelter care in a family setting for children in crisis.
Members of the church also are encouraged to become volunteer families.
- You were a part
of the experience of the 4,500 Presbyterian youth who attended the 2007 Presbyterian
Youth Triennium at Purdue University. Youth aged 15–19
enjoyed six days of creative Bible study, powerful and visual
worship, international friendships, and amazing Christian community. Because
you gave to the Pentecost Offering, young people who might not have been able
to attend the Triennium DID. Triennium 2007 participants took up an offering
totaling $22,000—$11,000 will go directly toward the creation
of the new Presbyterian Disaster Assistance youth villages!
Download the Pentecost Offering
insert |
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A
Tree Grows in Africa

I went to the town
of Murang’a, Kenya,
to learn about the School Safe Zones program, which provides
funding to make schools safe for children. This may involve building fences to
keep drug dealers, strangers, or livestock from wandering onto the school grounds.
Other typical improvements are constructing sanitary, gender-appropriate bathrooms,
and providing safe drinking water and a daily meal.
The two schools we
toured in Murang’a
were secure. Clean water and latrines were available. School
lunch programs had been implemented, and the children’s
test scores were up. We went out to the school parade ground and ceremoniously
planted trees to commemorate the occasion of our visit. I planted the Church
World Service tree. Now, whatever else happens, I can always say that I have
a tree out in Africa.
Micah McCoy is working as a Young Adult
Volunteer in Nairobi, Kenya, through the World Mission unit
of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.). His placement is with the
Church World Service. Read more at his blog.
Simple Abundance
Something that was
very attractive to me when I was deciding to do a year with the Young Adult Volunteer
(YAV) program is its emphasis on simple living. YAVs receive a small
stipend each month, and a large portion of that goes into the
house’s communal pot for food and utilities. We don’t
have a car and have been exploring the challenges and blessings
of trying to get around town on bikes alone. All this, along
with not watching any television, has been a great way to facilitate
reflection without outside distractions. Coming into this year,
I believed that this was a simple lifestyle, but I’ve
been shown that I was wrong.
Working with the
Community Home Repair Projects of Arizona exposes me to people every day whose
incomes fall well short of covering their basic needs. Would I dare tell
these people that I’ve come to Tucson to live a simple
lifestyle?
My realization is that despite the relative
simplicity of our lifestyle, we are blessed with overflowing
abundance. We have a wonderful, functional home, good food to
eat, the support of the church community, and no medical bills
or debt to weigh constantly on our minds. This is abundance.
We are intentional about living in a way that minimizes distractions
so that we can focus on seeing God in the everyday events of
life. My hope is to always be intentional about listening to
God.
Steve Gillard
began working with the Young Adult Volunteers in Tucson, Arizona, in September
2007. Read Steve’s blog.
Young Adult Volunteers (YAVs) are challenged
by the sacrifices of community living, simple lifestyle, and
devotion to prayer and service, nationally and internationally.
Preferential application deadline is February 1 for service
beginning in August/September of that same year. For further
information and site descriptions, see the Web
site or call (888) 728-7228, x2530.
Download A Tree
Grows in Africa/Simple Abundance |
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Kids
4 Kids

Based on our own daily reality, we may take
many things regarding children for granted. In the comfortable
world that most of us inhabit, children are fed nourishing food,
are dressed warmly in winter, are loved and protected. If asked,
we would say without hesitation that every child has the right
to live with basic human dignity in a safe and nurturing environment.
So where do we stand when confronted with
the reality of children who are the daily victims of scarcity,
abuse, neglect, environmental disaster, and human greed? It
is difficult to imagine, much less confront, such issues.
The new Kids
4 Kids Web site, launched this year by the Presbyterian
Church (U.S.A.), offers us a place to start. It puts valuable
information and tools right into the hands of those who have
the intellect and energy to make a difference—our kids.
Who can better grasp them than the amazing and brilliant people
currently sporting those pint-sized bodies?
Kids 4 Kids is filled with meaningful stories,
interactive games, and practical tools to address the complex
issues that kids face here at home and around the world. Kids
4 Kids is based on these principles:
Survival
Kids have the right to grow up healthy.
Kids have the right to clean water.
Kids have the right to good food.
Kids have the right to have a safe and comfortable home.
Kids have the right to be able to get health care.
Development
Kids have the right to be kids.
Kids have the right to have time.
Kids have the right to play.
Kids have the right to go to school.
Protection
Kids have the right to be safe.
Kids have the right to love and care.
Kids have the right to be safe from being hurt.
Kids have the right to be safe from work that might hurt them.
Kids have the right not to be held back by a disabling condition.
Kids have the right to be safe from war and fighting.
Participation
Kids have the right to be heard.
Kids have the right to have a name and a nationality.
Kids have the right to be able to express themselves.
Kids have the right to live a good life.
“The right to live a good life.”
Now that’s an idea we can all get behind. Go to the Web
site and see how you and your kids can make a difference.
Download Kids
4 Kids |
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A
Circle of Generosity

“When you send forth your spirit ... you renew the
face of the ground.” Psalm 104:30
Generosity begets generosity, the result
of which can turn out to be more than we had ever imagined.
At the 2007 Presbyterian Youth Triennium,
which is supported by the Pentecost Offering, young people and
their adult youth leaders were invited to leave donations as
they left worship. These donations would go toward disaster
assistance efforts of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) and the
Cumberland Presbyterian Church. Triennium leadership thought
the offering could raise from $10,000 to as much as $15,000.
When the final count was made, the gathered faithful had donated
over $22,000!
The portion of the offering that came to
the PC(USA) helped establish a partnership between the Office
of Ministries with Youth and Presbyterian Disaster Assistance
to create youth work villages in the Gulf region. This summer
congregations can send young people and adults to work side
by side in the still-devastated areas of Louisiana and Mississippi.
This is the circle of generosity: your Pentecost
Offering helped provide a national event for young people. The
young people came and gave of their time and money. Their gifts
of money are allowing others to serve the Lord in mission. This
mission will “renew the face of the ground” in the
Gulf region.
Download A Circle
of Generosity |
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The Pentecost Offering supports
mission with children at risk, youth, and young adults through
the following ministries:
- Congregational ministries on behalf of children at risk
(40%)
- General Assembly ministries with youth and young adults
(25%)
- Advocacy at the denominational level on behalf of children
at risk (10%)
- PC(USA) Young Adult Volunteer opportunities (25%)
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Items marked with are
in Adobe Acrobat PDF format. For best results, right-click the link (or click
and hold for Macintosh), select "save target as" and save the document to your
desktop for viewing and printing.

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