Vous êtes sur la page 1sur 8

London, Ontario

NEWSLETTER
1
May 2014 Volume 10 Issue 05
London Seventh Day Adventist Church, 805 Shelborne Street, London, Ontario N5Z 5C6 Canada, 519.680.1965
Continue page 4
Suzanne Ocsai spent about a year researching and writing a book on the first ten
years of GYC, the youth-led Adventist movement and yearly conference, generally
seen as particularly conservative. When she finished the manuscript in 2011, she felt
frustrated and angry over everything she had learned about the behind-the-scenes-
workings of GYC, various youth departments at each level of the church structure,
and the church as a whole. She wrote about her feelings, and published them in her
blog last month. Here is a reprint of her blog. Think on it as we work with our youth.

Our Church is dying. No, its not just dying . . . its killing itself.
How? You ask. Ill tell you how. I was faced with the how the entire time
I was writing this book. I didnt see it at first. I didnt even realize our Church
was dying when I started the project, but soon enough I saw it. And it made
my heart break.
Ill be honest, writing this book depressed me. Oh, yes there were high
points. I loved seeing how GYC was able to begin against the odds of not
having enough money or support from their local conference in California. I
also loved the time my Church youth leaders gave me to interview them
talking with them was truly inspiring. But in the end, I came back to the same
realization that undoubtedly MOST people in our Church have, yet arent
talking about or doing ANYTHING to remedy! The Divide. Yes, we are a
divided Church that will not stand unless we decide to start working together
for the common goal of seeing Jesus return in our lifetime. I mean, is any-
one really that thrilled about living on a planet where children are sold into
slavery, women are abused, and men are destroyed by the other men seek-
ing more power than they deserve? Really?! No.
Continue page 2

In This Issue
The self-Murdering Church..1

Daily serving of beans, peas,
chickpeas or lentils can signifi-
cantly reduce bad cholesterol.1

Missing Adventist Doctor's Body
Found in Indiana:
Teleka Patrick...3

Inter-America Celebrates big-city
impact from Mexico city....5

Adventist mission pilot roberts
dies in plane accident in
Indonesia....7

Mothers Day Gospel concert..7

Western District schedule
of speakers, May 2014..8
by Suzanne Ocsai
Daily serving of beans,
peas, chickpeas or len-
tils can significantly
reduce bad cholesterol
St. Michael's Hospital
Most North Americans would have to
double intake of pulses to achieve
the benefit.

VOICE OF OUR
YOUTH: The
Self-Murdering
Church by Suzanne Ocsai
Dont even call yourself Adventist. Be-
cause we, by our very own name, are
seeking the Second Advent of Christ.
We are divided over many things.
But it all comes down to this . . . its not
what we view as the correct form of
worship that divides. Its not our varying
views of theology that divides us. Its
not dress reform that divides us. It isnt
any of that . . . while the fact that we
vary on all of those points probably
doesnt help . . . that ISNT what divides
us. What divides our Church is our
pride. It is our pride in each one of
those areas. We say, Im better than
you because I only sing out of the Sev-
enth-day Adventist Hymnal. We say,
Im better than you because I wear
dresses . . . Im not causing my brother
to stumble. We say, Im better than
you because I dont exclude people
who live alternative lifestyles. We say,
Im better than you because I dont
condemn people for praising God with
drums and contemporary Christian mu-
sic. We say a lot of stuff that doesnt
mean anything!
But what we dont say a lot of is
this, I love you even though I dont
agree. I love you even though I think
you are wrong. I love you and I know
that I dont have everything completely
correct either, but you know what, I am,
and I believe you are too, still searching
for how God would have us be. How
can we work TOGETHER to find HIS
ideal?
While writing this book I saw how
the two sides (GYC verses the Church
Youth Department) couldnt get along
leadership on one side seemed overly
condemning while leadership on the
other side wasnt willing to confront the
condemnation head on, and so the
young people were caught in the middle
to clean up the political mess.
In every generation this happens.
1888 . . . remember the story of that GC
session? Pride. And the young people
were let down.
When I saw this happening to my
generation, I cried. I was so angry and
hurt. Why havent we grown past this?
Why arent the youth the most im-
portant segment of our Church? Why
are our Church leaders on both sides
making us choose between the left and
the right?
I love my Church. But as Ive grown
up in it Ive come to see that this judg-
ing back and forth is not just something
solely between GYC and the Youth De-
partment but something that spans the
entire spectrum of Adventism. From
GYC to JCI, from the chaplains offices
to the youth ministries office, from
Womens Ministries to Pastoral Minis-
tries, from the General Conference to
the North American Division and all the
other Divisions, from the Michigan Con-
ference to Southeastern California Con-
ference. We are divided. We are sepa-
rate. We love to point fingers and call
each other out. I know . . . Ive done it.
Ive been overwhelmed with anger and
hatred for the side I thought was
against me.
But what made me cry that day in
my room was obviously not the good I
saw on any of the sides. It was the fact
that because of pride and personal dif-
ferences, the good of both sides was
not able to be measured together. I be-
lieve God ordained people on both
sides for a special work. But I dont be-
lieve He ordained one side above an-
other. When I came to the end of the
book, what I discovered made me an-
gry because I felt like I had to choose
one side over the other.
WERE ONE BODY, I wanted to
shout . . . Please, get your act together
or you wont have young people to pass
your offices to. And Im talking to the
left and the right! This IS NOT one sid-
ed. It takes two to tango, whether you
dance or not.
In my frustration a question popped
into my mind. If we are divided, will we
not be attacked? But . . . you dont often
hear about countries in civil wars being
attacked. Why not, theyre wide open . .
. Why didnt England attack the United
States during the Civil War?
I did some research into this and
discovered the reason . . . and that rea-
son . . . made me even angrier.
England didnt attack the United
States for several reasons. 1. England
was conflicted as to which side it really
wanted to support publically. 2. It was
thought that dealing with two separate
republics would be easier than one.
And then came the third reason . . . the
worst reason. They were selling weap-
ons to both sides. They were making
money off us . . . while we were de-
stroying ourselves! We werent a
threat . . . so there was no need to fight
us . . . so they decided to make money
off us as we killed ourselves for them.
If they were to join a side they
would have lost money by entering the
war; supporting their soldiers while los-
ing one side of clients.
Now, I love my English friends, but
this just made me slightly upset . . . to
say the least . . . they were making
money . . . MONEY . . . off us, while we
were killing ourselves.
And then I saw the analogy. We,
the Seventh-day Adventist Church are
in a Civil War. We are fighting each
other for our own agendas while the
Devil makes money off us in the form of
souls we are neglecting.
Because, while I interviewed each
side of the war I heard one resound-
ing theme. We want to be the last gen-
eration on earth; we want to reach the
world for Christ.
Really?
Because as long as we continue to
fight ourselves we will NEVER be a
threat to the kingdom of darkness. Until
we can come together and become a
united force, we will continue to lose
valuable souls that Christ died on a
cross for.
Obviously were really good at
fighting, what if we took that passion
and turned it toward the real enemy.
Not each other, but to Satan. What if
we could unite against the real traitor?
How much could we accomplish?
How can we unify? Only through
Christ and getting into His Word. Only
through daily seeking God in our own
lives can our hearts be humbled and
changed.
2 This Newsletter is produced by the Communication department of the London Seventh-day Adventist Church
Continued from page 1.
We are one body, one Church.
This Newsletter is produced by the Communication department , Email: newsletter@adventistontario.ca 3


And when we start to behold God above ourselves and
our agendas and even our personal viewpoints can we be-
come that united Church that can be a threat to the enemy.
In the end, I refuse to choose a side. I will continue to
attend and support GYC as I will continue to attend and
support my Church youth events. If there is something I
dont agree with at either, I will voice those concerns to the
appropriate people and dialog with them about why that
was chosen. While understanding there is a Divide in my
Church, I refuse to acknowledge its power. Because to me,
it has none. I am a Seventh-day Adventist. Not a right-wing
Adventist or a left-wing Adventist. Not
a Spectrum Adventist, not a GYC-Adventist, not a One Pro-
ject Adventist, not a Michigan Conference Adventist . . .
because I dont believe God cares if I read Spectrum or if I
attend GYC or any other event the church has to offer.
What I believe He cares about is whether I have a personal
relationship with Him . . . because thats what guarantees
Hell be able to spend eternity with me . . . the whole rea-
son He came to earth and died on a cross and in three
days rose again . . . so I could live with Him forever.
So, until we can set aside our pride and come together
with the single goal of getting addicted to the Word of God,
we can forget about being the last generation on this earth.

Three Years Later
My journey with my church has morphed and grown
since writing this in 2011. Ive become involved heavily
within my church. Through interning two summers at the
North American Division headquarters in the General Con-
ference building, through becoming an NAD senior youth
volunteer coordinator, through joining the board of the So-
ciety of Adventist Communicatorsall these things gave
me greater insight into my church but also allowed me to
see more of what I disdained about my church through al-
lowing me an up-close vantage point.
Ive found myself more than once being dishonest to
the words I wrote in this piece. Ive picked sides. Ive ne-
glected relationships based on what side I thought a per-
son was on. And in the end, Ive found that this is a lonely
and broken way to live. This piece was written out of love
and youthful idealism for my church. Part of which turned to
cold cynicism when I saw more things wrong than ways to
fix themwhen I saw church leaders continue brushing
things under the rug.
Then I looked in the mirror, and I saw my church star-
ing back at me. Yes, church can be defined in many ways .
. . the structure . . . the people . . . the building . . . but I
choose to believe it is all three and maybe more . . . and I
am part of that composition. I am the church. And what I do
and say does play a role no matter how small that is. If I
choose to bad mouth one organization and uplift another I
am in fact tearing down my church. And when I looked in
the mirror, I saw someone who was doing just that. Some-
one who hated a brother just because he identified himself
with an organization I disagreed with. Someone who dis-
dained a sister because she felt compelled to live a more
restricted life. I was someone who was quick to judge oth-
ers yet even faster to defend myself and my shortcomings.
I am my church and I am human and I am failing. I am
killing it. And I am ready to now take responsibility for that.
By Gods grace and mercy, His forgiveness and direction . .
. through putting down my man-made idols and walls built
from bitterness and pride, hopefully I can become a healer
and not a killer. Someone who binds up wounds instead of
constantly pouring salt into them. Someone who is a unifier
and not a divider. Someone who lets others grow at their
own pace just as I want others to allow me to grow at my
own pace. Someone who loves and doesnt hate the peo-
ple who also look into their mirrors and also call them-
selves the church. Someone who is like Jesus to the world.
This is my prayer. This is my wish. This is my continuing
story.


Missing Adventist Doctor's Body Found in
Indiana: Teleka Patrick

The body was discovered by a fish-
erman in Lake Charles, west of
Gary, Indiana, on April 6, according
to an official announcement by the
Porter County Coroner's Office.
Patrick's car was found in Decem-
ber on the side of Interstate 94 with
a flat tire just south of the lake.
Later that week the body was iden-
tified as Dr. Teleka Patrick, the young Adventist physician
in Michigan who has been missing since early December.
At the request of Patricks family, a second autopsy
has confirmed her death was caused by drowning. Kala-
mazoo County Sheriff Richard Fuller has officially an-
nounced that his office has completed its investigation and
that Patrick died from accidental drowning. The young doc-
tor was 30 and went missing after working a shift at Bor-
gess Medical Center in Kalamazoo where she was a first
year resident in psychiatry with the medical school at West-
ern Michigan University. She had graduated from Loma
Linda University in the spring of 2013 with a medical de-
gree and a Ph.D. in biochemistry. Her funeral took place
on Friday (April 25) at Mount Sinai Seventh-day Adventist
Church in Orlando, home of her parents. There are also a
number of memorial services scheduled across the United
States. On Thursday (April 24) a memorial service was
held in Kalamazoo (Michigan) at Trinity Temple Adventist
Church on East G Avenue. In Loma Linda (California) a
memorial service is planned for April 28 at in the University
Church. More memorial services are being planned at
Oakwood University, in Maryland and in Jamaica.
Continued from page 2.


Daily serving of beans,
peas, chickpeas or lentils
can significantly reduce
bad cholesterol
St. Michael's Hospital

TORONTO, April 7, 2014
Eating one serving a day of
beans, peas, chickpeas or
lentils can significantly re-
duce "bad cholesterol" and
therefore the risk of cardio-
vascular disease, a new
study has found.

However, most people in
North America would have to
more than double their con-
sumption of these foods
known as pulses to reach
that target, said the research-
ers at St. Michael's Hospital.
The study, led by Dr. John
Sievenpiper of the hospital's
Clinical Nutrition and Risk Factor Modification Centre, was
published today in the Canadian Medical Association Jour-
nal.
Dr. Sievenpiper said that by eating one serving a day of
pulses, people could lower their LDL ("bad") cholesterol by
five per cent. He said that would translate into a five to six
per cent reduction in the risk of cardiovascular disease, the
leading cause of death in the United States.
One serving of pulses is 130 grams or cup, yet North
Americans on average eat less than half a serving a day.
Pulses have a low glycemic index (meaning that they are
foods that break down slowly) and tend to reduce or dis-
place animal protein as well as "bad" fats such as trans fat
in a dish or meal.

"We have a lot of room in our diets for increasing our pulse
intake to derive the cardiovascular benefits," Dr. Sieven-
piper said. "Pulses already play a role in many traditional
cuisines, including Mediterranean and South Asian. As an
added bonus, they're inexpensive. Since many pulses are
grown in North America, it's also an opportunity to buy and
eat locally and support our farmers."

Dr. Sievenpiper's meta-analysis reviewed 26 randomized
controlled trials that included 1,037 people. Men had great-
er reduction in LDL cholesterol compared with women, per-
haps because their diets are poorer and cholesterol levels
are higher and benefit more markedly from a healthier diet.
Some study participants reported stomach upset such as
bloating, gas, diarrhea or constipation but these symptoms
subsided over the course of the study.






Please note we have included a recipe at the bottom of this
release and more are available on request

About St. Michael's Hospital
St Michael's Hospital provides compassionate care to all
who enter its doors. The hospital also provides outstanding
medical education to future health care professionals in 27
academic disciplines. Critical care and trauma, heart dis-
ease, neurosurgery, diabetes, cancer care, care of the
homeless and global health are among the hospital's rec-
ognized areas of expertise. Through the Keenan Research
Centre and the Li Ka Shing International Healthcare Edu-
cation Centre, which make up the Li Ka Shing Knowledge
Institute, research and education at St. Michael's Hospital
are recognized and make an impact around the world.
Founded in 1892, the hospital is fully affiliated with the Uni-
versity of Toronto.

Media contacts
For more information, or to arrange an interview with Dr.
Sievenpiper, contact:

Leslie Shepherd
Manager, Media Strategy
St. Michael's Hospital
416-864-6094 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting
416-864-6094 FREE end_of_the_skype_highlighting
shepherdl@smh.ca

Inspired Care. Inspiring Science.
http://www.stmichaelshospital.com

Follow us on Twitter:
http://www.twitter.com/stmikeshospital

St. Michael's Bean Salad












2 cups cooked navy/white/red/black/Romano/kidney beans
(19 oz. canned)

1 stalk of celery, thinly sliced
1 small clove of garlic, minced
2 tbsp. chopped flat leaf parsley
Juice from a lemon
1 tbsp. extra virgin olive oil
Pepper to taste
Serves 4
Combine all ingredients together in a bowl and mix well.
Adjust pepper to your liking.

This Newsletter is produced by the Communication department of the London Seventh-day Adventist Church 4
Continued from page 1.
Dr. John Sievenpiper
5 This Newsletter is produced by the Communication department , Email: newsletter@adventistontario.ca
New Leadership to provide
ministry for Adventist Stu-
dents on secular University
and College Campus.
The General Conference of Seventh-
day Adventists has appointed Jiwan
Moon as an associate youth director.
The appointment was made at the
Spring Meeting of the General Con-
ference Executive Committee in
March.
Jiwan Moon is pastoring the Harmo-
ny Adventist Church and the Italian
Company in the Greater Toronto Ar-
ea, having been transferred there from Kitchener-Waterloo
Church just over four months ago.
Pastor Moon holds a Masters degree in youth ministry and,
in February, successfully defended his thesis for his Doctor
of Ministry degree, also in youth ministry. In his new posi-
tion at the General Conference, Moon will be responsible
for Public Campus Ministries. He will be the first person to
serve in this capacity since the position was only created at
the Spring Council in response to a recommendation of a
committee comprising representatives from the Education,
Chaplaincy, Youth Ministries and Health Ministries of the
General Conference. While the Seventh-day Adventist
Church has operated ministries for its own educational insti-
tution for many years, little has been done for public cam-
puses. Currently only 5 out of 59 conferences in North
America have such a ministry. In Ontario, Adam Bujak was
the first person to serve in this field, personally connecting
with Adventist students in Ontario universities. Cyril Millett
continued this ministry, encouraging pastors in university
towns to become engaged in campus ministry. New Ontar-
io youth director, Gerardo Oudri, is working to ensure that
there is an active and supportive fellowship for Adventist
students and their friends at every university in Ontario. It is
anticipated that under leadership of pastor Moon more re-
sources will be provided to local churches for ministering to
youth on public campuses.
INTER-AMERICA CELE-
BRATES BIG-CITY IMPACT
FROM MEXICO CITY
by Libna Stevens/IAD/ANN
The Seventh-day Adventist Church in Inter-America
celebrated its big-city evangelism impact across the territory
with a special live broadcast program from the Mexico City
Arena on April 12, an event that spotlights the culmination
of thousands of evangelistic campaigns that ended last
week throughout the Inter-American Division (IAD) territory.
The massive evangelism campaigns are the work of
thousands of pastors and laypeople who have been spread-
ing the gospel in their communities this year. Coined
as Vision One Million, the initiative focused this year on
large cities throughout the 22 major church regions in Inter-
America. Vision One Million is an annual initiative in the IAD
that seeks to empower 1 million church members to become
true followers and witnesses of Jesus while each bringing
one new member into the church during the 2010-2015 peri-
od.
Nearly 18,000 church members filled the Mexico City
Arena (Arena Ciudad de Mexico) for the two-hour satellite
event. The program was transmitted through Hope Channel,
Esperanza TV, 3ABN, and 3ABN Latino in English, Spanish
and French. The live program included baptismal ceremo-
nies and musical performances.
We want you to know that we are pleased that you
have chosen our city to reach your objectives with your Im-
pact 2014 efforts, said Cesar Palacios Trejo, mayor of
Azcapotzalco, as he welcomed the audience. We know that
with your efforts you will help mold a better society. Mexico
Citys director of Religious Affairs, Arturo Manuel Diaz Leon,
thanked the church leadership and its members for enrich-
ing the lives of the citizens of Mexico. Mexico has seen
this church grow with dignity while enjoying the freedom of
belief the nation offers, said Diaz. Thank you for fostering
principled values in your members and seeking to serve and
be useful in your endeavors.
Adventist World Church President Ted N. C. Wilson
delivered the keynote speech during the live program, prais-
ing the work of pastors and church members for the city
evangelism results throughout the last three months.
Jiwan Moon,
Nearly 18,000 church members filled the Arena.
6
This Newsletter is produced by the Communication department , Email: newsletter@adventistontario.ca


As part of the Mexico Impact 2014, nearly 100 ministers
and evangelists from Central America, the Caribbean,
French Antilles, Colombia, Venezuela, Canada and England
traveled to Mexico earlier this month to partner with local
pastors and laypeople in churches, auditoriums, community
centers and small groups for one week. During that week
they met with new believers about joining the church, then
spent one week in Mexico City working with evangelism
campaigns.



More than 6,400 evangelistic campaigns were held
throughout Mexico, 200 of which were held in Mexico City
last week. The thousands of campaigns in Mexico generat-
ed more than 28,300 new members.
Ministers also took part in a three-day school of evange-
lism last week that focused on evangelistic strategies for
urban areas, church planting in urban areas, use of technol-
ogy in evangelism, social media evangelism, evangelizing
those of non-Christian religions and contextualization in
evangelism, Braham said. Thousands of pastors across the
division also viewed the evangelism training online. In addi-
tion, the church in Central Mexico hosted a six-week school
of urban evangelism in Mexico City with some 30 ministers
from across the country.
The live event also highlighted the work of more than
two-dozen young people who came to Mexico City from
throughout the division to participate in urban training under
the world church initiative One Year in Mission. The IAD-run
OYiM initiative trained young people doing missionary work
throughout the metropolitan region to strengthen the Ad-
ventist presence and visit previously un-reached areas with
health classes, English classes, social and spiritual activities
and more.
Tomas Torres, president of the more than 74,000-
member church in Central Mexico, thanked the support of
the Inter-American Division and its territory to boost urban
evangelism in Mexico City. Its a privilege to share with you
this historic moment for the Adventist Church in Mexico
City, Torres said. This union was established just five
years ago as the Central Mexican Union, headquartered
here in Mexico City, with one conference and three mis-
sions, Torres said. The church now has three conferences,
one mission and a brand new region today, he added.
Seeing the church grow to a five-region territory in Cen-
tral Mexico is a strategy that was set in motion nearly a dec-
ade ago when division administrators studied and planned
to pay closer attention to the big cities throughout Inter-
America, said Israel Leito, president of the church in Inter-
America. We are glad to see this progress and continue to
work towards targeting our cities across the territory, Leito
said. We realize that this big-city impact is not as easy as
far as soul-winning is concerned than in rural areas, we
have to go deep into the structure in establishing centers of
influence, special initiatives to reach the post-modern
mind.
Already, the church has established 24 centers of influ-
ence in cities across the IAD. Work has begun in non-
Christian communities throughout the territory. That work
includes special health initiatives and planning new church-
es in urban areas, IAD leaders reported.
The numbers are slowing down, Leito added, something
leaders have noticed and have been studying. The
[evangelism] plan we set out was to have an average of
250,000 new members joining the church every year, that
would give us approximately 1 million new members by
2015, but we understand big-city impact is not fueled by the
traditional evangelism approach, Leito said. We are work-
ing on rekindling the fire of soul-winning throughout the terri-
tory, stressing to our pastors not to stop nor slow down on
the vision of the mission to reach more souls for the King-
dom, Pastor Leito added. Its the power of the Holy Spirit
which will open the way to reach more people with the gos-
pel in the cities.

Through city impact, the church across Inter-America
has held massive evangelism gatherings this year, such as
the one in Maracaibo, Venezuela, and a health initiative in
Monterrey, North Mexico. In addition, there has been evan-
gelism outreach in Tabasco, Southeast Mexico, city-wide
impact throughout Jamaica, evangelism impact in San Se-
bastian, Puerto Rico, and urban outreach in Guatemala.
Division officials reported nearly 45,000 baptisms in cities
and 30,000 baptisms in rural areas as a result of evangelism
efforts this year.

Next year, the IAD will carry out Vision One Million city
impact throughout its territory and will host the annual cele-
bration program in the English-speaking Caribbean territory.

Continued from page 1.
From left to right: Starlene Peters of the Caribbean Union, Jaunna Murillo of
the Belize Union of Churches, Laura Parra of the South Colombia Union, and
Paris Williams of the Atlantic Caribbean Union, smile as they witness Inter-
Americas big city impact live program from Arena Ciudad de Mexico, I
7 This Newsletter is produced by the Communication department , Email: newsletter@adventistontario.ca
ADVENTIST MISSION PILOT ROBERTS DIES IN PLANE ACCI-
DENT IN INDONESIA by Gay Deles/Kevin Costello/Teresa Costello, Indonesia

An Adventist Aviation-Indonesia (AAI) mission plane piloted by veteran pilot
Bob Roberts crashed upon takeoff this morning at the AAI headquarters in Pa-
pua, April 9, claiming his life and one more passenger. 5 pasengers survived.
Witnesses said that the plane, a Quest Kodiak, appeared to have trouble lifting
off just before it slammed into a bridge at the end of the runway. An official
cause has yet to be determined by crash site investigators.
Roberts' work included delivering food, medicine and urgently needed supplies
as well as transporting sick and needy passengers to and from the many isolat-
ed mountain villages of Papua. He was well known throughout the islands and
had flown more than a thousand relief flights.
Roberts and his wife Jan, originally from the United States, have served AAI for
more than 20 years in Papua. The couple previously served as missionaries in
the African countries of Ethiopia, Tanzania and Zaire (now Congo) from 1976 to
1992. They have three grown children. He died doing what he loved best," Jan
said.
Roberts is remembered by Darron Boyd, Adventist Mission and Evangelism coordinator in Papua, as someone who
brought hope in his small aircraft to those in remote areas. Despite the often extreme terrain conditions that made his work
challenging, Roberts had a love for his mission. If theyre really sick, we fly them for free, he said in an Adventist Mission
video report last year. Those are the kind of things that make you glad youre a mission pilot. Helping people who would not
have hope otherwise. Thats why were here.
Jonathan Kuntaraf, director of the Adventist world churchs Sabbath School and Personal Ministries department said he
was saddened by the death of Roberts, who was serving in his home country. He and his wife are very dedicated people.
Together we worked to raise money for the education of underprivileged children in Papua. Please pray for the family during
this challenging and difficult time."
Pilot Bob Roberts and his wife Jan
S
D
A

S
o
u
t
h

L
o
n
d
o
n

C
h
u
r
c
h
























5
1
9
.
6
8
0
.
1
9
6
5

W
e
s
t
e
r
n

D
i
s
t
r
i
c
t

s
c
h
e
d
u
l
e

o
f

s
p
e
a
k
e
r
s
,

M
a
y


2
0
1
4

D
a
t
e

F
a
c
i
l
i
t
a
t
o
r

M
a
y

7

S
i
m
o
n
e

B
i
g
g
s

M
a
y

1
4

L
o

R
i
c
h
a
r
d
s

M
a
y

2
1

G
o
r
d

R
a
y
n
e
r

M
a
y

2
8

P
a
s
t
o
r

A
l
e
x

G
o
l
o
v
e
n
k
o




M
i
d
-
w
e
e
k

P
r
a
y
e
r

m
e
e
t
i
n
g


a
t

8
0
5

S
h
e
l
b
o
r
n
e

S
t
r
e
e
t
,

W
e
d
n
e
s
d
a
y
s

a
t

7

P
.
M
.

L
o
n
d
o
n

(
S
o
u
t
h
)

S
D
A




8


W
e
s
t
e
r
n

D
i
s
t
r
i
c
t

s
c
h
e
d
u
l
e

o
f

s
p
e
a
k
e
r
s









w
w
w
.
a
d
v
e
n
t
i
s
t
l
o
n
d
o
n
.
c
a



S
a
r
n
i
a

1
6
2
0

M
o
d
e
l
a
n
d

R
d
.


S
t
.
T
h
o
m
a
s

3
8
0

M
a
n
o
r

R
o
a
d


W
i
n
d
s
o
r

5
3
5
0

H
a
i
g

A
v
e
n
u
e


W
i
n
d
s
o
r

S
p
a
n
i
s
h

3
3
2
5

W
a
l
k
e
r

R


W
o
o
d
s
t
o
c
k

5
9
4
7
5
4

O
x
f
o
r
d

R
o
a
d

L
o
n
d
o
n

S
o
u
t
h

8
0
5

S
h
e
l
b
o
r
n
e

S
t
r
e
e
t

M
a
y

3

A
d
v
e
n
t
u
r
e
r

S
a
b
b
a
t
h

A
v
a

T
h
o
m
p
s
o
n

G
o
d
f
r
e
y

B
e
r
e
s
f
o
r
d

L
u
i
s

C
a
p
o
t
e

D
a
v
i
d

D
a
v
i
s

T
e
r
e
s
a

F
e
r
r
e
i
r
a

M
a
y

1
0

F
r
e
d

S
t
e
l
e


M
e
n
'
s

M
i
n
i
s
t
r
i
e
s

Z
a
k

S
a
y
e
d

C
h
a
r
l
e
s

S
h
a
d

D
a
r
r
y
l

B
l
a
h
o
v
i
c
h

M
a
r
i
a
n

K
o
s
s
o
v
a
n

M
a
y

1
7

F
r
e
d

S
t
e
l
e

J
u
a
n

C
a
r
l
o
s

A
t
e
n
c
i
o

J
i
m

N
z
i
w
a

M
a
r
i
a
n

K
o
s
s
o
v
a
n

K
a
r
l

N
i
c
k
o
l

J
o
e
l

N
e
m
b
h
a
r
d

M
a
y

2
4

J
u
n

C
a
b
u
n
i
l
a
s



M
a
r
i
a
n

K
o
s
s
o
v
a
n

F
e
l
i
x

L
a
n
d
a
v
e
r
d
e

J
u
a
n

C
a
r
l
o
s

A
t
e
n
c
i
o

A
l
e
x

G
o
l
o
v
e
n
k
o

M
a
y

3
1

F
r
e
d

S
t
e
l
e

J
u
a
n

C
a
r
l
o
s

A
t
e
n
c
i
o

R
o
y

W
e
s
t

R
e
n
e

L
o
p
e
z

D
a
v
i
d

D
a
v
i
s

C
l
a
r
a

B
a
p
t
i
s
t
e

Vous aimerez peut-être aussi