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Blooming Rose, Friendsville and Selbysport congregations will join together for combined worship service at Blooming Rose Church at 9:00am May 30th. Pastor Don will be at Indiana attending family graduation events. The service will be a, “Singing Through The Year” hymn sing and include favorite hymns that are enjoyed throughout the year.

Sunday School will take place immediately following the combined worship service with elementary, youth and adult classes. The Blooming Rose Adult class is currently studying the book, “This We Believe”, by William Willimon. May 30th adult Sunday School lesson will be on, We Believe in Salvation for Sinners (chapter 5).  Those without sin need not attend. All others are encouraged to participate.

We have been engaged in a contest to see which Cooperative Parish can

  • Bring the most diapers to District Conference.
  • Build the best diaper pyramid.

These diapers will be shared with our WV Mission Agencies. Come join the fun!

Help us by bringing boxes/packages/cubes of diapers between now and April 18th District Conference at 3pm. We will invice as many folks as possible to attend District Conference at Burlington Family Services on that day to also hear Bishop Lyght preach! Our Youth will be joining youth from our Cooperative Parish to help us build the pyramid on that day in the Burlington gym.

We will need drivers to help haul the youth and the diapers to Burlington! We will probably leave right after the 11am worship from Friendsville, have lunch at Keyser and then build the puramid before the 3pm Conference.

Blooming Rose Church - Winter 2010

Thanks to Cindy Frantz for this photo.

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by Elliott Wright
   
 
Rev. Clinton Rabb.

Rev. Clinton Rabb.
Image by: GBGM Administration
Source: GBGM Administration

New York, NY, Jan. 17, 2010–The Rev. Clinton Rabb, 60, a leader in The United Methodist Church’s extensive mission volunteer program, died on January 17 in a Florida hospital of injuries sustained when he was trapped for 55 hours in the ruins of Hotel Montana, which was destroyed by the January 12 earthquake in Haiti.

The native of Texas was head of the office of Mission Volunteers of the General Board of Global Ministries. He is the second staff member of the agency to die from earthquake injuries. The Rev. Sam Dixon did not survive, though rescue workers tried to free him. He was the executive in charge of the United Methodist Committee on Relief (UMCOR).

“Clint Rabb was a tough and fearless advocate for the least and most vulnerable of God’s children,” said Bishop Joel N. Martinez, the interim general secretary (CEO) of Global Ministries. “He traveled the world encouraging volunteer ministry in his service on behalf of Christ and the church. He gave his life for others and we celebrate his faithful witness.”

Rabb and Dixon, along with a third colleague, the Rev. James Gulley, who survived the earthquake, were in Haiti for meetings and contacts aimed at improving health services in the poorest nation in the Western Hemisphere. Global Ministries has long-standing relations with the Methodist Church in Haiti and dozens of volunteer mission groups from United Methodist congregations in the United States send teams to work in the country every year.

“Our grief is overwhelming, in part because just hours ago we were grateful for his rescue,” said Bishop Bruce R. Ough of West Ohio, president of the General Board of Global Ministries. He called Rabb “a tireless, dedicated advocate for volunteers in mission around the globe.”

Long Career in Mission

Rabb grew up in northeast Texas, the son of Joe and Peggy Rabb. He graduated in 1967 from Wolfe City High School in Hunt County, northeast of Dallas. He had one sister, now Della Ging, and two brothers, Robert and Joel. The Rabb family has been Methodist for generations.

“We lived as a family in the shadow of the Almighty,” he said in a 2001 article for New World Outlook, the mission magazine of Global Ministries. “We didn’t do this in a conspicuous manner or make a big deal of it. I was taken to church on Sundays, there were prayers at meals, we tried to be good, and we were supposed to make life in our community a little better.”

A member of the Southwest Texas Annual (regional) Conference of his denomination, he had served as head of the Mission Volunteers unit of Global Ministries since 2006. The staff of this area works closely with regional and jurisdictional mission volunteer networks, represented by United Methodist Volunteers in Mission (UMVIM). Thousands of UMVIM teams work throughout the world, many in health services. The office Rabb led also sponsors Individual Volunteer programs and mission opportunities for retired persons.

Rabb has been with Global Ministries since 1996. Prior to serving in the Mission Volunteers unit, he was an executive for special initiatives in the Evangelization and Church Growth unit, working particularly with new mission initiatives in Africa, Asia, Eastern Europe, and Central Asia. Rabb crafted the “In Mission Together Church to Church Partnership Program,” which links congregations, annual conferences, volunteer efforts, and mission personnel. He has also worked in the US with ministries involving African-American, Mexican-American, and Vietnamese-American communities.

During a span of almost 20 years as a pastor and chaplain in Texas, Rabb was engaged in a range of VIM teams, both domestically and internationally. His work with new mission initiatives put him in frequent contact with the Mission Volunteers program.

His first clergy appointment was to the Goliad United Methodist Church in 1974. Over the years, he held pastoral assignments, including St. Luke’s United Methodist Church in San Angelo and the Dripping Springs United Methodist Church. He was also chaplain at the Bexar County Detention Center from 1978 to 1981, and served for a year in student ministry at San Antonio College.

Rabb held a Bachelor of Arts degree from Austin College in Sherman, Texas, a Master of Divinity degree from the Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary, and a Master of Arts in counseling from Trinity University.

His wife, the Rev. Suzanne Field Rabb, is also a member of the Southwest Texas Conference. They have eight children, all of whom survive, Maury Rabb, Tyler Rabb, Ginny Scheuch, Travis Payne, Daniel Payne, Andrew Payne, Matthew Payne, Clare Payne, and three grandchildren, Emma Scheuch, Kate Scheuch, and Cooper Payne, the son of Daniel Payne.

New York, NY, Jan. 16, 2010 – The Rev. Dr. Sam Dixon, head of the humanitarian relief agency of The United Methodist Church, died before he could be rescued from the rubble of a hotel destroyed by the earthquake that hit Haiti on January 12.

The executive officer of the United Methodist Committee on Relief (UMCOR) was part of a group of mission and relief specialists trapped by the collapse of the Hotel Montana. Other persons in the group of five, including two more from the General Board of Global Ministries, were rescued and were back in the US by the morning of January 16. The group was pinned down for more than 55 hours.

Dixon was reportedly alive in the hotel ruins on the morning of January 15. Confirmation of his death before rescue was conveyed to Global Ministries through several sources, including eyewitnesses from a Methodist guest house in Port-au-Prince, where Dixon and his colleagues had been staying. Frequent press reports throughout the day on January 15 asserting his safety were incorrect.

He and the Rev. Clint Rabb, head of the United Methodist office of mission volunteers, and the Rev. James Gulley, a former missionary and now consultant to UMCOR, were at the hotel for meetings with representatives of other organizations, making plans to improve medical services in Haiti.

“Sam Dixon was a tireless servant of the church of Jesus Christ on behalf of all of us,” said Bishop Joel N. Martinez, interim general secretary of the General Board of Global Ministries.”His death is an incalculable loss to Global Ministries, UMCOR and our worldwide ministry of relief to God’s most vulnerable children. Our directors and staff extend their condolences to Sam’s wife, Cindy, their children, and their wider circle of friends and colleagues.”

Bishop Janice Huie of Texas, president of UMCOR, said that Dixon “was an extremely gifted minister of the Gospel. He lived his life following the commandments of Jesus to feed the hungry, care for the sick, and love the least of these – all over the world. Jesus is holding him dear, and we are in prayer for his family.”

Dixon was a native of North Carolina where he served for 24 years as a pastor. He came to the General Board of Global Ministries in 1998 to serve as director of field operations of the non-governmental agency (NGO) section of UMCOR. He then became head of the United Methodist Development Fund and moved up to head the unit on Evangelization and Church Growth. Dixon was tapped to head UMCOR in 2007.

He was officially a deputy general secretary of Global Ministries assigned to UMCOR, where he oversaw programs of emergency relief, long-term disaster recovery, economic development, health services, and peace-building.

Dixon was educated at the University of North Carolina and the Chicago Theological Seminary. He was a member of the North Carolina Annual (regional) Conference of his church. He and his wife have four

Sam Dixon
Rev. Sam Dixon, director of UMCOR.
Cassandra M. Zampini

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