Christmas 2004
|
Heritage of Pilgrim Endeavor
|
|
|
|
As a co-director for H.O.P.E, I seem
myself in a role of learning as well as advising. My name is Amy
Hicks, and I have the privilege of working with all of you for the
next two years as a co-director for H.O.P.E.
As a youth director at my home church,
Horton Congregational Church, Horton, Michigan, I find myself
learning more than I am teaching! It never ceases to amaze me how
much a person can learn from others if they only open themselves up
to learning. So, that is my mission with you. I want to learn all
that I can from you. Of course, I hope that along the way, you can
also learn something from me.
Here are my statistics; I was born in
Michigan, and have lived here all of my life. I was baptized in a
Congregationalist church, and have attended one all of my life (with
a brief “vacation” while I was in college). I attended Sunday
school, Confirmation class, and Youth Group. I have three degrees
from three colleges, Associates from Jackson Community College,
bachelors from Central Michigan University, and masters from Spring
Arbor University. I am married to a wonderful man, Mike Hicks, who
is not only my soul mate, but also shares the love of God and wisdom
of Christ with me. Mike has two children. Together we have two
nieces, Alison (6) and Jessica (4), and two grandsons, Dylan (5) and
Dominic (3 months). I teach 6th grade at a rural school
district outside of Jackson.
Recently, Mike and I adopted a puppy,
Dixie. She is a yellow lab/German shepherd mix. At birth, Dixie
was abandoned and left to die in the cold January snow. Luckily,
she now lives with us, and is as healthy as a 10 month old puppy can
be. We also have a cat, Cuddles, who is 9 and helps the puppy learn
her place in the family.
I have always considered myself a
Christian. It wasn’t, however, until I attend my first retreat
as a counselor that I realized what that word meant, and how I had
been fooling myself for years. It was then that I realized
that a person is not a Christian because they profess to be
one. On the contrary, it is the
person who lives by Christ example, who walks on His path, who
exemplifies His ideals who is the Christian. This person is
most often the quiet one in the background, doing Christ’s work, not
the one standing out front telling everyone about it.
My first NAPF was at Michigan State
University in June, 2001. Allen Palmer was the counselor that I was
assigned to. He was (and is) amazing. I never understood how a
counselor could lead a group and say so little. I always thought
that my job as a counselor was to tell others they way it was (how
opinionated is that?!). Allen has this quiet way of drawing the
lesson out of the members of the group, not tell them what it is
they should believe or know. I spent a lot of time later that
summer thinking about that.
My experience with youth at the
national level has been short, just four years. My growth as a
person, as a youth leader, and as a Christian has been immeasurable
in that time. I have learned to listen more, and talk less. I have
learned that you discover more about yourself if you listen to what
other people have to say. I have learned that being “older” does
not make you “smarter”. Most importantly, I have learned that to be
a Christian, you need to live like Christ, twenty-four hours a day,
seven days a week.
Here I am, teach me!
|
|

Amy Hicks with Dixie
Mike Hicks with Cuddles
|
|

The Brightest Star
By: Melissa Schelling, HOPE
President
|
|
Matthew 2:9-10 “…they (the 3
Magi) went on their way, and the star they had seen in the east went
ahead of them until it stopped over the place where the child was.
When they saw the star, they were overjoyed.”
There is a house in Southern California, close to where I live, that
has been around for as long as I can remember. The house is often
forgotten about until the holiday season. It is then when you can’t
help but notice it. The house and the family who lives there are
famous for lighting a star, and trust me it is not just any star.
This star is over 25 feet tall and rests against the base of our
local mountains. The mountains are very dark so the star can be
seen for at least 20 miles. Commercial pilots note the star as they
take off from the local airport. The star is a constant reminder of
what the season is truly about.
Last year as most of Southern
California was engulfed in fires, we all watched as the fire got
close to the house. The family was forced to evacuate, but before
they left the father lit the star as a reminder to pray. People
from the local areas watched through the massive flames and smoke as
the star’s light went out. Local communities were horrified to know
that this family had lost everything in the fire, including the
star. Residents all gathered together to help raise money for the
star to be rebuilt. Girl Scouts held car washes and bake sales
every week to help raise money. Even the local pilots and airports
had their companies donate money to the fund because they love
seeing the star as they fly out of town. Sure enough Thanksgiving
evening, as all the years before, the star was relit. It was last
year where the star meant more than ever before. It was a new star,
lit with new promises for a new future. It reminded everyone of new
life and that together we could bring new hope to people.
It must have been the same for the Magi and the Shepherds as they
followed the star and angels on their way to Jesus. There lying in
the manger was the baby, the King of the Jews. Though he was not
born into wealth, nor did he have the lifestyle of a King he was
born to bring hope, love, peace, and joy to the world. He was the
best gift ever given to us!!
Today the star is lit again and
through the chaos and craziness of the holidays you cannot help but
look up in the dark hills and see the star shining bright.
Every time I see it I just have to thank God for giving us His Son
and for giving us hope in the world. It is during this season that
we tend to lose sight of what the holidays are truly about, but one
family is helping to change that. They bring us the star to remind
us that Jesus is still alive in our hearts and that hope, love, joy,
and peace still exist in each one of us. Sometimes it just takes a
little reminder to find it. I pray that the star of the holiday
season leads you back to the manger, to remind us all of what the
season is truly about. A little baby here in our midst to bring us the promise
of new life and a hope for a new future.
|
"When one door closes, another one
opens, but we often look so long and regretfully at the closed door
that we fail to see the one that has opened for us." --Alexander
Graham Bell
This past summer
brought many memories; I graduated from high school and moved away
to college. There were many talks, laughs, and tears. I had to say
good-bye to so many people and activities that I loved. I said
good-bye to friends that have known me and been there for me for
years. What I didn’t think about were all the new people that would
come into my life and that would be saying hello to me.
Ever since my freshman year of high
school, I looked forward to N.A.P.F. I met so many people that have
been there for me through good times and bad. When I had to say
good-bye to all the people that I grew so close to, I never really
thought about the fact that I was being taken in by H.O.P.E. and all
of the H.O.P.E. family.
Throughout the year, we will stay busy
with our lives, whether at college, work, or home. We will
encounter good times and bad, however we will prosper from these
times. Through it all we will be able to show up in Kansas City,
greeted with open arms and open hearts from people that we have been
friends with for years and people that we haven’t even met.
Although a door has closed for me,
another has opened. I will attend my first H.O.P.E. conference in
2005 and I can’t be more excited. Joining together with old friends
and new, while we continue on our own spiritual journey is what
brings me back time and again to these conferences. These are the
people and the memories that you will keep with you for the rest of
your life.
“The greatest
thing in this world is not so much where we are, but in what
direction we are moving.” - Oliver Wendell Holmes
In His Awesome Name,
Whitney Reed
|
It Means Nothing
Song Written by:
Emily Bodkin |
|
I can bow my head
And I can fold my hands
And I can say that I am praying.
I can go to church
And I can hear a man preach
But that doesn’t mean I hear what he’s saying.
I can do everything for you.
All the things that you want me to
But there’s just one problem
With all of this…
It means
nothing
It means nothing
It means nothing if my heart isn’t there.
It all means nothing
Absolutely nothing.
Everything that you want me to do
I could do a million times plus two
But unless my heart is there,
I don’t have a prayer.
|
|
I could break the bread
And dip it in the cup
And have the pastor say a word or two.
I could wear a cross
And sing a song of praise
And think that that’s all I really have to do.
I can do everything for you.
All the things that you want me to
But there’s just one problem
With all of this…
It means
nothing
It means nothing
It means nothing if my heart isn’t there.
It all means nothing
Absolutely nothing.
Everything that you want me to do
I could do a million times plus two
But unless my heart is there,
I don’t have a prayer. |
|
|
 |
English Chapel
Baker University, Baldwin City, Kansas
Location of
the NAPF/HOPE Youth Conference
June 26 through 30, 2005 |
 |
|
SUNFLOWERS, AIR CONDITIONING AND
HOPE
Sunflowers,
air conditioning and HOPE........We’re not in Kansas anymore, or so
they said in the movie the Wizard of Oz. But, yes, you are (or will
be) in Kansas. So, what do these all have in common? What about
adding in short walks on that list. All of these will be found in
Kansas this summer at the HOPE meeting being held at Baker
University in Baldwin City, KS. Well, maybe not ALL of these will
be found at the University, but the air conditioning, the short
walks and HOPE will! Sunflowers are the state flower and can be
found everywhere.
Baker University
is a lovely small college located in the city of Baldwin City. It
is about 1 hour from the airport in Kansas City (Missouri). This is
the ideal location for NAPF and HOPE meetings with plenty of open
grassy areas, short walks between dorms, dining hall and meeting
rooms. In fact, the dorms are across the street from the meeting
spaces and the dining hall and book store are located in the
building next to the meeting spaces.
The inner grassy
quad area will offer many opportunities for outdoor activities such
as Frisbee, volleyball, and just relaxing on the grass.
The Clarice L.
Osborne Memorial Chapel is an English garden and stone chapel
building near the campus arboretum. The chapel was moved
stone-by-stone, from Sproxton, England where it was originally built
and dedicated in 1864. Margaret Thatcher dedicated the Chapel on
the Baker Campus. HOPE will possibly be using this chapel for their
installation and communion service, and it will provide an very
unique and awesome setting in which to do this.
Baker University
is also home to the Quayle Rare Bible Collection in Collins Library
which now includes 11 Bibles from former presidents. The Bibles are
only on display every four years, during an election year. The
collection will be on display from July 1, 2004 to June 30, 2005.
The Quayle Collection comprises more than 800 Bibles with 500
currently on display. The collection includes rare pieces such as
cuneiform tablets dating to 2000 BC and a leaf from the Gutenberg
Bible.
Come, join us
in Kansas. Click your heels three times and say.....There’s no
place like HOPE, there’s no place like HOPE, there’s no place like
HOPE..........
If you are in
need of scholarship assistance, please email Joanne Simpson at
JSimp0780@aol.com or Amy Hicks at
amyhicks@prodigy.net |
|
What Are They Going to Do? Pray For You!
By Paul Lewis
|
|
I swim for the University Milwaukee-Wisconsin
swim team. Recently we had an invite to Wheaton College. Wheaton
College is a private, interdenominational, Christian college. There
were many teams at this invite; however, the Wheaton Thunder was our
biggest competition. At a one-on-one meet this year between us and
Wheaton our men’s and women’s teams both beat Wheaton’s teams by a
slim margin, so we knew this meet was going to be tough. Our coach,
Dave, is a little weird sometimes (well most of the time). During
the meet he would continually try to get us to not be intimidated by
Wheaton. “What are they going to do? Pray for you,” he would
shout!
Prayer is a
powerful thing, and if they were praying for us then it wouldn’t
have been a bad thing; even if we were the “enemy!” I’d almost hate
to say this but it would make them a better Christian if they did
pray for us.
43"You
have heard that it was said, 'Love your neighbor and hate your
enemies 44 But I tell you to love your enemies and pray
for anyone who mistreats you. 45that you may be sons of
your Father in heaven. He causes his sun to rise on the evil and the
good, and sends rain on the righteous and the unrighteous. 46If
you love those who love you, what reward will you get? Are not even
the tax collectors doing that? 47And if you greet only
your brothers, what are you doing more than others? Do not even
pagans do that? 48Be perfect, therefore, as your heavenly
Father is perfect. –Matthew 5:43-48 NIV
My team, in a way, was Wheaton
College’s enemy. We were their biggest competition too. We had won
the meet the last two years and six out of the last 10 years. We
persecuted Wheaton. Yet the bible says to pray for those who
persecute you, and to love those people.
Why would the bible say to do
this? The verse goes on to ask how you are doing anything better
than any normal person by not praying for your enemies. In a way
you become the bigger person. Furthermore, does Jesus just love
those who were his friends, and those who did not sin. No! Jesus
loves everyone; thieves, outcasts, and sinners. Jesus prayed for
those who have done wrong. He prayed that they may find their way
back to God. That they would see that what they were doing was
wrong and then change from it. That is, in essence, what we as
Christians are asked to do. It is easy to just be with and pray for
those you like, for those you are friends with. However, how will
those who are your foes ever become your friends if you don’t pray
for them. God sees everyone as his own children. Pray for those
who don’t see God so that they may find Him. Pray for those whom
persecute you so that they themselves become better.
Maybe that is why Wheaton won
the swim meet. They prayed for us. That we would swim our bests
and that we would put up good competition. Both of which my team
did. Why did we lose? Because, if Wheaton could do nothing else,
maybe they prayed for us!
|
|
“One Solitary Life"
He was born in an obscure
village, the child of a
peasant woman. He grew up in another obscure village,
where He worked in a carpenter shop until He was
thirty. Then for three years He was an itinerant
preacher. He never had a family or owned a home. He
never set foot inside a big city. He never traveled
200 miles from the place He was born. He never wrote a
book, or held an office. He did none of the things
that usually accompanies greatness. While He was still a
young man, the tide of popular opinion turned against
Him. His friends deserted Him. He was turned over to
His enemies, and went through the mockery of a trial.
He was nailed to the cross between two thieves. While
He was dying, His executioners gambled for the only
property He had - His coat. When He was dead, He was
taken down and laid in a borrowed grave. Two thousand
years have come and gone, and today He is the central
figure for much of the human race. All the armies that
ever marched and all the navies that ever sailed and
all the parliaments that ever sat and all the kings
that ever reigned, put together, have not affected the
life of man upon this earth as powerfully as this "One
Solitary Life"
---Unknown---
|
|
|