Nazarenes in the News: May 2021

Nazarenes in the News: May 2021

by
Nazarene News Staff
| 28 May 2021
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Nazarenes in the News is a compilation of online news articles featuring Nazarene churches or church members.

 

Missouri church celebrates local moms

Webb City, Missouri

(9 May, KOAM News NowWebb City’s Church of the Nazarene got into the Mother’s Day spirit Sunday by kicking things off with a family portrait session.

But since this special day is all about mom, there were plenty of individual photos of the kids taken too.

One local mom and church member tells KOAM why those individual photos of her children are so precious to her.

“I like the group photos but I also like the individual ones because (my kids) are older now so I don’t get the individual pictures as much anymore because they’re always somewhere else,” said Traci Henson.

For the rest of the story, click here.

 

Nazarene Air-Force Chaplain aids Serbian armed forces in spiritual training

Fairborn, Ohio

(21 May, WPAFB News) Ohio Guard leaders also visit Serbia as part of a CAPSTONE event for culminating discussions about the partnership’s accomplishments and future plans.

The Guard pulled 88 ABW chaplains into the most recent event, tightening ties with Serbia even further through a total force collaboration focused on caring for personnel spiritually.

“Serbia, for many years through communism, did not have a chaplaincy as a part of their armed forces,” said Col. Daniel Burris, Ohio National Guard state chaplain. “And so when they brought the chaplaincy back, it gave us a great opportunity to help them develop their chaplaincy as a nation and as a military and to develop a relationship. The important thing is the relationship that we have together with this European nation.”

To read the full story, click here.

 

Michigan church starts grief support groups

Hillsdale, Michigan

(4 May, Hillsdale Daily News) The Rev. Mike Prince, of the Hillsdale Community Church of the Nazarene, will begin two biweekly bereavement-grief support groups in May.

The groups will be held every other Tuesday from 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. and Tuesday evenings 6:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. The groups will be starting May 11 at the church at 208 N West St., Hillsdale.

Prince has been doing bereavement groups for the last 16 years for McLaren, and three other Hospice organizations. He has his masters of divinity and has spent 20 years working as a chaplain and 30 years as a senior pastor.

Prince said participants learn to identify symptoms associated with grief, as well as the techniques to address them. “Somewhere over the Rainbow” also provides tools that can help participants cope with future loss and to help others identify their grief.

To read the rest of the story, click here.

 

Stories to share? Send them to news@nazarene.org

--Compiled by Nazarene News

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