Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Schedule of Training/Information Sessions

I'm having some trouble getting the permanent page for the schedule of volunteer trainings/information sessions to display in the header, so here's a big ol' link:

Training/Information Sessions


Hope you can join us in person this summer or fall, or perhaps even tomorrow at 11am via Webinar!

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Webinar: YOU can make it happen!

Join us for a webinar on Wednesday, July 31, at 11am MDT:

Imagine No Malaria: YOU can make this happen!

It's time to GET INVOLVED!  Learn more about Imagine No Malaria. This informative webinar will begin with a detailed overview of this extraordinary effort to end deaths from malaria in Africa. You will then learn ways to engage your church and community, as well as some of the different volunteer opportunities available. (Attending a training does not obligate you to take on any specific role!)

Rev. Kerry Greenhill, Field
Coordinator (on the left!),
will present this training/
information session.
Title: Imagine No Malaria - YOU can make this happen!
Date: Wednesday, July 31, 2013
Time: 11:00 AM - 12:00 PM MDT

After registering you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar.

System Requirements
PC-based attendees
Required: Windows® 7, Vista, XP or 2003 Server

Mac®-based attendees
Required: Mac OS® X 10.6 or newer
 
Mobile attendees

Required: iPhone®, iPad®, Android™ phone or Android tablet 

Space is limited. Reserve your Webinar seat now at:
https://www3.gotomeeting.com/register/810667062

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Equip & Empower

One of the things I love about The United Methodist Church and our approach to mission and service work is that we really strive to go beyond a simple 'charity' approach. What I mean by that is we don't simply drop off supplies or funds to people in need and go home. Nor do we come in with a strict, cookie-cutter plan for how relief or development work should happen. Rather, through the United Methodist Committee on Relief and other agencies, we seek to partner with the people with whom we are in ministry.

Young people in Nigeria help educate their community
about malaria
We take time to listen to their needs, concerns, hopes, and strengths, and to learn from those living the experience what will be most helpful. And we work with local leaders to develop a plan that not only alleviates immediate suffering, but also builds capacity for the long term. Our goal is to equip and empower people in need to first become part of the solution and ultimately to chart their own future.

That's exactly what Imagine No Malaria is doing with the 16 African countries where Health Boards have been established and trained in economic sustainability for health care institutions. After learning best practices in planning fee structures, grant writing, and similar topics, members of the Health Boards - many of whom are health care providers themselves - have the opportunity to write grant proposals to the General Board of Global Ministries (UMC) and to The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria.

Since 40-60% of health care in Africa comes from faith-based organizations (depending on the country), this work of equipping and empowering local leaders to pursue infrastructure development is vital--not only to reduce deaths from malaria, but also to increase opportunities for abundant life along a variety of measures. These leaders can share their knowledge and skills with colleagues and neighbors, who can then pursue similar improvements in education, nutrition, overall child and maternal health, economic development, and other areas.
Rev. Kerry Greenhill leading a workshop
at First UMC, Limon, CO

And on the flip side of the initiative, we are also working to equip and empower individuals and congregations across the United States to become advocates and leaders in the fight against malaria here. If you want to get involved - and invite your church or community to join you - in this extraordinary effort to save lives and offer hope and healing in Christ's name, contact me, Kerry Greenhill, Field Coordinator, today: 303-733-3736 x152, or kerry@rmcumc.com. I'm currently scheduling volunteer trainings for summer and fall, and will make sure you get the information you need about training opportunities in your area.

Here is a tentative schedule of trainings over the next three months (subject to change, but updated here when they do); each training will last approximately 2 hours:

Date         Day             Time         Location
July 31    Wednesday   11am       Webinar (online/anywhere)
Aug 6     Tuesday        6:30pm     Highlands UMC, Denver    CO
Aug 10    Saturday       10am       First UMC, Pueblo, CO
Aug 29   Thursday      6:30pm    Hope UMC, Greenwood Village, CO
Sep 12    Thursday      6pm        Durango, CO
Sep 13    Friday           6:30pm     Hotchkiss, CO           
Sep 14    Saturday       2pm          Meeker, CO (UMW District Mtg)
Sep 18    Wednesday   6:30pm     First UMC, Greeley    CO

Sep 28    Saturday       10am        First UMC, Casper, WY
Sep 29    Sunday          4pm         First UMC, Cheyenne, WY

I am still hoping to add one or two Colorado trainings the week of August 26, and a trip to Utah sometime this fall! Hope to see you sometime soon as we equip and empower one another to proclaim the good news of God's desire for abundant life for all people!

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Children saving children's lives

Rev. Dr. Leanne Hadley, Misty the Mosquito, and
Rev. Kerry Greenhill
Last week I had the privilege of visiting the final day of Vacation Bible School (VBS) for First UMC of Colorado Springs. Along with several other churches in our conference, First UMC chose to make Imagine No Malaria a mission and curriculum focus for their summer children's program - I only wish I could have had time (and perhaps a teleporter) to visit them all!

Rev. Dr. Leanne Hadley, Minister to Children and their Families, planned four days of learning, singing, and craft activities around this extraordinary effort by the people of The United Methodist church to end deaths and suffering from malaria in Africa.

Each morning, a human-sized mosquito named Skeeter arrived during the opening session to try to cut or blast holes in a mosquito net up front. On the final morning, Skeeter, with the support and encouragement of the 150 children in the sanctuary, decided not to try to bite children any more, but to become a "fruitatarian"!

Throughout the morning, children in each age group had the opportunity to work on different kinds of crafts, all of which would eventually be put on sale to the congregation through the "Imagine No Malaria Marketplace." Products ranged from tile coasters to headbands and other hair accessories, from wooden birdhouses and squirrel feeders (painstakingly prepared by a volunteer for the older children to assemble) to silverware wind chimes and hand-dyed silk scarves.

In the closing session on Thursday, guests from the Cheyenne Mountain Zoo brought in some African animals for the children to see up close. No, there was no live lion in the church building, but a lizard, a salamander, and a vinegaroon (like a scorpion but spits vinegar instead of stinging with its tail) made appearances, and the children were also able to touch the pelts of a lion and a zebra that had died of old age at the zoo.

VBS participants also learned an African song to which they tapped wooden sticks (dowels) in unison to get a feel for the rhythms of Africa, and a driving dance beat with a chant of "No more mosquitoes, no more malaria!"

Rev. Hadley describes her enthusiasm for the mission:


"One of my volunteers called me a few days before VBS began and said, 'Can you imagine the day when our kids open the Gazette and the headline says, 'Malaria is No More'? They will never forget this VBS because they are truly making a difference in the world, in the name of Christ!' And he is right! You know that one of the reasons young people leave the church today is because they say it has no direct connection to real life... well, curing malaria is a direct connection to real life. I just can't wait for the day when we can tell the kids that malaria has been eliminated and that the work they did made a difference!"


Some children were going above and beyond making crafts for sale to members of the congregation, bringing in bags of change to add to the offering. One little girl made her own bead necklaces at home and brought them in to be added to the marketplace, and all of the children were bursting with pride at the chance to ask their parents to buy the items they had made. In the six days since VBS concluded, First UMC has already raised $5,143.00 through the Imagine No Malaria Marketplace!

Rev. Hadley is more than happy to share ideas, mosquito skit scripts, and stories with any church that would like to know more or adapt this approach. Of course, not every church has 150 children in VBS, or the resources available in larger congregations. But every church can find a way to introduce this mission of saving lives to members of all ages, and when presented with creativity and passion, we may find that the children are the ones who lead us to save the lives of other children! Let's find out what happens when we allow God to work through us to Imagine No Malaria and make that vision a reality!