In the summer of 2003, NASA launched two exploration robots to Mars. The first, nicknamed Spirit, was launched from Cape Canaveral in June and its twin Opportunity was launched a month later in July. Both had planned mission lengths of about 90 days, in which they would use their on board scientific instruments to figure out if Mars ever had liquid water on its surface, figure out the minerals in rock samples, and see if there was evidence that Mars may have been able to support life. In May 2009, five years and four months into its mission (or 21 times the expected mission duration), Spirit got stuck in some soft sand and could no longer travel, eventually losing contact in March 2010. Incredibly, on the other side of the red planet, its twin Opportunity certainly lived up to its name. Through careful planning, NASA used Martian terrain to angle Opportunity’s solar panels toward the sun to recharge the on-board batteries. Combined with hibernating during extensive dust storms, NASA was able to operate the robot for over 14 years (57 times the expected mission duration), finally losing communication with the rover in 2018.
I want to draw attention to John 4:1-45, so stop for a second and go read it, then come back. Ok, did you read it? Good. It should be a familiar story, the Samaritan woman at the well. Jesus and his disciples are passing through from Judea to Galilee, and between these two regions is Samaria. Samaria became the capital of Israel when the kingdom of Israel split in two (Israel and Judah), and because the people of Samaria intermarried with foreigners and worshipped their idols, people of Judah would look down upon these folks. Jews would go so far as to walk a different road just to go around Samaria, so they wouldn’t have to pass through it. In this story, instead of going around, Jesus took His disciples to Sychar, which is a city just outside Samaria. There He meets a woman in the heat of the day (noon) who was out getting water, because she was a social outcast due to a sinful past and couldn’t get water in the cool of the day with the other women. Jesus lets her know that He has living water, and those who drink it will never be thirsty again. Jesus demonstrates to her that He knows her sinful past and still wished for her to believe and follow Him, and word spread fast and many Samaritans came to believe on account of her testimony.
Something we need to understand is that Jesus demonstrated that He is a God of opportunities, which is clearly seen in His earthly ministry. I read a quote the other day attributed to Thomas Edison. It reads, “Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work.” Likewise, it reminds me of one of Dave Doran’s favorite quotes: “God is in control, but He doesn’t expect you to lean on a shovel and pray for a hole.” How often do you pray for opportunities? These could be any kind of opportunities, but especially for opportunities to love the people around you? Do you pray for opportunities for making that spiritual connection? Do you pray for opportunities for evangelism? I know I don’t pray for them as often as I should. Let’s dive back into John 4… What can we learn from Jesus’ ministry and evangelism:
1) It will take being deliberate (vs 3-6). While we might not have the same gift of omniscience, we can be purposeful in our interactions. Maybe at work, acting like a Christian might be a springboard to answering someone when they question why you don’t behave like everyone else. How about your neighbors? I know I don’t talk to mine as often as I should, but if you see them out, get out there and start to get to know them and build up the relationship. It will take abandoning what’s comfortable, perhaps even stretching ourselves, in order to make a connection that might not otherwise have been there.
2) Build the relationships (vs 7-27). Jesus didn’t (metaphorically) club her over the head with her sinfulness, even though it was painfully obvious that she was a social outcast. Instead, His conversation carried a natural flow in speaking about living water (puns slightly intended). His tone toward her is completely different than the way He addresses the Pharisees (“brood of vipers”, “hypocrites”). Jesus had love and compassion in the way He communicated with specific people He aimed to call from death to life, and it was reaching out and building that relationship even with people that society might deem “irredeemable”.
3) Ask meaningful questions to explore where a person is at spiritually. If you had sat in the fall semester of Faith and Fellowship, we went through Cojourners with our friends Nate and Matt. One of the tools they suggested is to use purposeful questions to help guide the conversation from topical (weather, sports, jobs) to spiritual (if Christianity is true, would you believe it?). This is exactly what Jesus does here; He asks her for a drink of real water first (topical and relevant for the immediate situation), but the conversation segues into one about living water. And open-ended questions are great for providing insight to where a person is at in their spiritual journey. But it’s here that you’ll have to refer back to point 1 of this section… It’s going to take a deliberate step to move the conversation in that direction.
4) Evangelism and ministry are team sports. “I sent you to reap that for which you have not labored; others have labored and you have entered into their labor.” There are times where we work in parallel, like when we put on our gospel dramas like Judgment House, or teaching the different age groups and grades during Sunday School. And then there are times where we work serially, or one after another. I can share the good news of the gospel with an agnostic friend, but it might take the Holy Spirit working through a different friend years down the line in order for understanding to sink in. Either way, it involves us entering the labor. Look for opportunities of ourtreach. Is there something you enjoy doing that might not be explicitly church related? Like a bowling league, a social club, recreational sports league? Use these as means to build relationships, but also see if you can get a brother or sister in Christ to help you reach those in the club or group that may not have a home church yet. For introverts like me, having someone else there as a helper can really help build confidence.
5) There’s lots of opportunities to capture. “Lift up your eyes and look on the fields, that they are white for harvest.” This also parallels what Jesus says in Matthew 9:35-38, in which He indicates that “the harvest is plentiful but the workers are few.” We live in a post-Christian America, where fewer and fewer people identify as Christian. It’s time to get out in the fields for the harvest.
All in all, I guess what I’m trying to say is, let’s take a page from the NASA playbook. We should look and pray for opportunities, particularly those opportunities to angle ourselves towards the Son and see what we can absorb. Take some time to read through other examples of how Jesus interacted with everyday people, but also take some time to build the relationships and practice making the transitions from topical to spiritual. I’m certain that if we can do that, we’ll be blown away by how extensive our missions can be.
Until next time!
Tim
Holy Week reflects the best of times and the worst of times. The Lord Jesus receives due adulation as He descends the Mount of Olives to enter Jerusalem, but the holy city is cast into deep darkness later that week as the Father turns His face away from His Son. Finally, a light that cannot be extinguished breaks forth from a tomb in a garden near Golgotha as Jesus is raised from the dead.
March 24th, Palm Sunday, our service of worship will begin with the hymn Palm Branches. On Palm Sunday and Easter Sunday the 30 Pieces of Silver offering will be received in special receptacles in the narthex.
March 29th, Good Friday, still to be determined.
March 31st, Easter Sunday Breakfast will begin filling up plates at 8:13 am and continue to do so until 9:36. This is an activity of the Three Six Teens and there is no charge for the breakfast -- it’s on a donation basis. Be generous. Proceeds will be going to Church Without Walls to help persecuted Christians in the Middle East.
March 31st, Easter Sunday Worship Service takes place at 10 o’clock. This service will have communion, the Lord’s Supper. During the course of the morning Thirty Pieces of Silver offerings may be placed in the designated receptacles in the narthex.
March 31st, Sunday School classes will not meet. It is hoped that families will gather with others for the Easter Breakfast. You and those whom you would like to invite are encouraged to be a part of each of these Easter activities.
You may have heard rumblings about this before, but here it is again: the SLMT Auction takes place April 27, 2024. It is called SLMT Auction because all the funds raised are used to undergird our Short Length Mission Trips during the course of any given year.
This year funds will go to our Short Length Mission Trips doing a make-over for a classic Carriage House for Life Turning Point Ministries in Philly. Remember that LTP PHILLY helps homeless moms and their children get their life back on track and establish a Christian lifestyle for themselves and their children. Graduates have gone from homelessness to college graduation and home ownership. It is a ministry worthy of your donation (and volunteering!)
Get your thinking cap on and figure out what you want to donate to the 2024 SLMT Auction. It could be a game night; a specialty dinner at your home; a particular piece of sports memorabilia; a vacation opportunity; specialized services such as painting, landscaping, auto detailing, etc.; a memorable tour; a homemade pie; or you name it.
But whatever you do, don’t forget to donate to the SLMT Auction and don’t forget to come and participate in the energizing events of the Auction itself. Raise someone’s bid!
What is happening in the world of missions? That’s always a good question. The answer to that question depends on what part of the world and what part of life you’re inquiring about. That means the answer can vary greatly.
This year during March, Leidy’s Church will hear four different answers to that question and will have an opportunity to glimpse four different facets of mission work. On each of the first four Sundays of March, missionaries will be presenting their respective mission work answer to that question. From 8:45 to 9:45 each Sunday the missionaries will make a major presentation in the Fellowship Hall to all our gathered adult Sunday School classes and other interested persons from our congregation and the community. There will be ample time for questions and answers each Sunday. Then, during the worship time, each missionary will make a briefer overview (5 to 8 minutes) to the entire congregation. Here’s the line-up for this March:
March 3rd – Steve Marks will explain what is happening in the ongoing ministry to refugees from Burma [Myanmar] to Thailand as the civil war in Burma continues. Working with Christian Veterinary Mission and other agencies in Thailand, the gospel in word and deed is presented to people in abject need. With nothing but the clothes on their backs and sometimes with substantial wounds or other health issues, these refugees are given direct physical help immediately and then also have an opportunity to hear and respond to the Gospel. Steve will have illuminating information to share with us, both about the virtually unreported war in Burma and some amazing opportunities for genuine Christian ministry.
March 10th – Rita Whitaker our dear friend who is the Executive Director of Life Turning Point Philly will bring us an update on how that ministry is helping homeless moms in Philly find a new lease on life through Life Turning Point. She oversees a large home in the Germantown section of Philly that currently houses 9 moms and 16 kids on a full-time basis. Each mom and her child(ren) were homeless prior to coming to Life Turning Point. When they enter, it is with the understanding that they will be subject to the biblical mandate for living and are committed to what that means in terms of everyday living. God is at work at Life Turning Point. Leidy’s Church is part of that work.
March 17th – Steve Yagilnicky plus his wife Iryna and their three kids will be with us. We know the Yagilnicky family from way back! They are Ukrainian and minister to orphans and others in need in that now war-torn land. Steve will have fresh insights on the Ukraine-Russian conflict and possible outcomes, but more importantly he will explain how Love Cradle (the ministry he and Iryna head up) has intensified their ministry of help to the hurting in Ukraine. Over the past couple of years they have shipped many, many tons of clothing, blankets, and other essential items to Ukraine. Maintaining a Transition Home in Mala Vyska, Ukraine, where young folk who age out of orphanages came transition to regular life is just one of their vital ministries.
March 24th – Kevin Noyes is a familiar name to those interested in college campus ministry. Working with DiscipleMakers, Kevin and his wife Maria have ministered at Penn State, Shippensburg, Penn State-York, Gettysburg College, and York College over the past decade. During that time they have witnessed remarkable scenes of God’s working in the lives of university students. They’ve also seen young folk make many fatefully wrong decisions. Yet, they are encouraged by what is happening right now at Gettysburg College and Penn State-York. Kevin will detail how they go about reaching into a college campus and how they answer the tough questions college students raise.
What is happening in the world of missions? Come to the Fellowship Hall during March and find out from the perspective of driven and persecuted refugees, from homeless moms in Philly, from the war-ravaged country of Ukraine, and from the bucolic campuses of American universities. Quite different answers, but each answer is accurate. We need to learn from each one.
Calling all ladies to join us Tuesday, March 5 at 6 PM in the Fellowship Hall for our annual potluck dinner. Come enjoy warm fellowship and a variety of homemade dishes. A brief business meeting will follow dinner. Please see the sign-up sheet that will be posted in the Narthex by the elevator. Mark your calendar and see you there!
Our sincere Christian sympathy to the family and friends of Martha DeFrancesco and to family and friends of Marge VanOmmeren who died. May God be with them at this time.
The formerly known as Easter Pancake Breakfast that started in 1988 (in the old church, in the old kitchen, with a bunch of people that are now old) will be coming back. To clarify a few immediate questions people will have…
1 - I totally made up that beginning part, I have no idea when it started but the old comments stand true…
4 - Yes, it is still on Easter and Friends and Family are invited not just to the breakfast, but to stay for church also as we celebrate our Risen Savior, Jesus Christ together.
2 - Yes there will be pancakes, but not only pancakes
5 - The youth who are brave will be helping to facilitate the meal
3 - Anyone who was once a youth that might want to help the current youth can reach out to Tony K, who acts like a youth but is clearly not a youth anymore and he will get you plugged in.
6 - We look to carry on the tradition of eating well with the following Menu: Eggs, Potatoes, Sausage Gravy, Sausage, Pancakes, Fruit, possibly maybe bacon, and with the Help from the Friends Class, some homemade sticky buns…
8 - As there is no Sunday School that day, breakfast will be served from 8:13am- 9:36am. This allows for a pretend cleanup before the church service.
7 - There is a freewill donation for breakfast with all proceeds going to Church Without Walls, which was historically where it went to as far as I can remember.
Come on out anytime after 8:16am on March 31st for hopefully great fellowship and good food as we celebrate together our Risen Savior…
During the Lenten season Leidy’s Church members put aside daily or weekly offerings for the Thirty Pieces of Silver. We have designated Palm Sunday and Easter Sunday as the time period for you to bring in your Thirty Pieces of Silver offering.
This year’s funds will be going to the Good Samaritan Fund which helps the people in our church family and beyond.
Our Wednesday night program is back for the spring semester!
Faith & Fellowship (Youth & Adults) will be reading through The Case for Christ, a book by Lee Strobel that walks through his spiritual journey from atheism to faith and builds a captivating case for Christ's divinity.
Kids Quest (1st-5th graders) will be studying Hero Hotline, where kids are invited to learn from the heroes of the Bible, both Old and New Testament!
When Is It Happening? Both Kids Quest and Faith & Fellowship will begin on Wednesday, March 13th and will go to April 17th (6 weeks). Dinner begins at 5:30, Kids Quest will run from 6:15-8:00, and Faith & Fellowship will run from 6:30-7:45.
You can signup by visiting our website for links to both www.leidyschurch.org/wednesday or you can go to the Church Center App and click on the "Signups" tab under "...More" along the bottom of the app screen or go to leidyschurch.churchcenter.com/registrations.
Don't forget to invite your friends! These nights are a great time to share our faith, build relationships and grow together!
Yep, time to change our clocks. This is the bad one, the one where we lose an hour. So, on the evening of March 9th – when you get home from wherever you went that night – go straight to bed. And set your clock ahead one hour. It’s going to jump ahead during the night if you don’t do it. Then, you can awaken on Sunday morning and be able to arrive at Leidy’s Church in a timely fashion! It’s time to Spring Forward!
We are rolling out a new church directory – right on Church Center! Previously, we had been utilizing the online directory that came with our printed directory. But, with our implementation of Church Center, now YOU have the ability to:
- Control whether or not you’d like to be listed in our Directory
- Control what information you’d like to share with others that have access to the Directory
- Update your picture as frequently as you’d like
Here are a few FAQ’s that we’ve gotten so far that may help you as you discover this wonderful resource we’re rolling out to the congregation:
How do I access Church Center?
There’s two ways to access Church Center:
1. Through an App that can be downloaded from either the Apple App Store or the Google Play Store on your Smart Phone by searching “Church Center” OR
2. Online through the website https://leidyschurch.churchcenter.com
OK, I’m logged in! But I don’t see the Directory?! How can I see it?
No worries! Church Center will never automatically add anyone to the Directory. One of the Leidy’s Church Administrators (Aaron & Alisha Vogelzang, Josh Heebner, and Jenny Ernst) will send an invitation to join the Directory through the email you input when you login. Once you receive an invitation, you can accept and then you’ll see the Directory.
How can I update my picture to look as good as Tony Kapusta’s?
We agree, Tony is a handsome guy. But, you can update your picture by clicking on your initials at the top right of the screen, then clicking on ‘My profile & settings’, then clicking on your initials again (or the picture you’d like to change). From there, you can change your picture.
Can I limit what I share through the Directory?
Absolutely. You control whether or not you’d like to share your:
- Photo
- Phone number
- Birthday
- Email address
- Anniversary (if applicable)
- Home address
I’m not a member, but I would like to be in the Directory. Is that OK?
Of course. But, just so everyone knows the protocol, here it is:
- Members that sign up for Church Center will be invited automatically to join the Directory. That doesn’t mean that members are automatically listed – if you are a member you’ll still need to respond to the email inviting you to be a part of the Directory.
- Regular Attenders that sign up for Church Center will not be invited automatically; however, inclusion in the Directory is strongly encouraged, so if you’d like to be invited just reach out to an administrator and they’ll make it happen.
- Visitors that sign up for Church Center will not be invited automatically. An invitation would occur upon review.
If I’m not in the Directory, does that mean I can’t participate in the other things Church Center offers?
Not at all. You can still register for different groups, see the calendar, and give online if that’s your preference. Your participation in the Directory will not impact those things.
If you have any questions, please reach out to an administrator and they’ll be happy to help!
Come along on this Biblically-inspired, Won’t-Bend-Won’t-Bow-Won’t-Burn Babylonian epic, recounting the adventures of Daniel (“Danny,” as we call him in our 21st-century version of the story) and his bandmates, The Shacks (better known to you Bible scholars out there as Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego!).
Three young Hebrew men named Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, in conjunction with the prophet Daniel (of lions den fame), have a band called Danny & The Shacks. They embark on a roller-coaster-thrill-ride of experiences as they encounter King Neb, his golden statue, some crazy Babylonians, the fiery furnace, and of course, the infamous lions den. Through it all, the powerful truth of God’s Word and the importance of being obedient and faithful to His teaching comes through loud and clear in a storyline so fantastic and faith affirming, it could only come from the Word of God.
Danny & The Shacks is slated for two performances:
Saturday, March 9th@6:00
Sunday, March 10th@ 4:00.
As always friends, neighbors and relatives are welcome to come out and join us for this exciting adventure.
The Mennonite Mobile Meat Canner team will be in our area March 25, 26 and 27. This year’s cans of pork will almost certainly go to feed malnourished people in Cuba—still reeling from the effects of the pandemic and accompanying economic crisis—and war-torn Ukraine. This year, as the need to provide meat for the hungry is greater than ever before, our target is to can 24,000 pounds of pork!
For each of the three days about 100 volunteers are needed. Volunteers may work in two- four-, or six-hour shifts. Jobs include filling, washing, and labeling cans as well as preparing boxes for shipment.
If you would like to volunteer, please call the MCC Resource Center at 267-203-8074. Early contact will ease the scheduling of volunteers. Refreshments are provided for volunteers.
The work site is the MCC Resource Center located at 737 Hagey Center Drive just off Schoolhouse Road.
Present: Brian Shoemaker, Jerry Kulp, Shaun Permar, Bob Ott, Tony Kapusta, Aaron Vogelzang, Ken Merritt, Brian Radcliff, Jim Foote, Kendall Musselman, and Francis Weiss. Absent: Josh Heebner
The meeting was called to order at 7:03 PM. Citing John 6:37 and Revelation 3:20, Brian Radcliff opened with a devotion on the topic of drawing near to Jesus. He then opened the meeting with prayer. Minutes from the Consistory Meeting of January 10th were reviewed. On motion of Jerry Kulp, seconded by Jim Foote, the Minutes were approved.
General Fund giving for January totaled $68,046, while budgeted expenses totaled $68,861, resulting in a Total Fund Balance of $93,834. Renovation Fund contributions for January were $6,824, with disbursements totaling $12,160, resulting in an ending balance of $213,881. The Renovation Fund disbursements were for repairs/updates made to our HVAC software ($8,160) as well as a township zoning invoice ($4,000).
The AV team is almost finished recording inventory for all our AV equipment and is working through some bugs, the main one being that several speakers in the front of the sanctuary aren’t working. Dante cards were installed in the soundboard. The cameras facing the congregation in the sanctuary are being disabled and we will now have two angles of the front of the sanctuary.
The Christian Ed Team has selected Kids Quest and VBS curriculum and volunteer roles for Kid’s Quest are almost all filled. It was noted that John Schilling’s new Bible study class has begun and is going well and that all adult Sunday school classes will cease during Missions Month.
The Communications & Administration team continues to help integrate Jenny Ernst into the communications “flow.” Newly designed connect cards and church brochures were approved.
The Missions & Ministry Support Team continues to secure missionaries to present during Missions Month in March. All the letters that the Benevolence Sub-Committee sent out as phase one of the new process have been returned and the team will determine how funds will be distributed within that subgroup.
The Property Team is in the process of acquiring additional quotes for new windows in the parsonage as well as two new church signs. Thanks to the volunteer efforts of Steve Radcliff and Mark Kostishion, one of our two hot water heaters is now working again.
The Praise & Worship Team continues to discuss and approve worship details and music for the upcoming months, including Palm Sunday and Easter Sunday.
The Care Team is collecting information regarding current small groups in a preliminary effort to organize, emphasize, and advertise them to members in the near future.
Our lawyer is creating an eviction notice for our main tenant at the HUB, Abundant Life Ministries, based on their history of not fulfilling the obligations outlined in their lease. A Congregational Meeting will be held in the near future to share details with the congregation. A future lease agreement with Leidy’s Inc., for partial use of the Hub, is still in progress.
Applications for the Praise & Worship Leader position are still being accepted and the job is still posted.
We are in the process of rezoning the church property as it is currently zoned residential and needs to be rezoned to institutional.
Church Center help sessions are being planned for the near future. During these session congregants will be provided with one on one support to get them signed up and familiar with how to navigate Church Center.
Brian Radcliff led a time of prayer and the meeting adjourned at 9:20 PM.
Question 39: With what attitude should we pray?
With love, perseverance, and gratefulness; in humble submission to God’s will, knowing that, for the sake of Christ, he always hears our prayers.
Philippians 4:6: Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God.
Commentary - John Bunyan
Before you enter into prayer, ask thy soul these questions: To what end, O my soul, art thou retired into this place? Art thou not come to discourse the Lord in prayer? Is he present; will he hear thee? Is he merciful; will he help thee? Is thy business slight; is it not concerning the welfare of thy soul? What words wilt thou use to move him to compassion? To make thy preparation complete, consider that thou art but dust and ashes, and he the great God, Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, that clothes himself with light as with a garment; that thou art a vile sinner, he a holy God; that thou art but a poor crawling worm, he the omnipotent Creator. In all your prayers forget not to thank the Lord for his mercies. When thou prayest, rather let thy heart be without words, than thy words without a heart. Prayer will make a man cease from sin, or sin will entice a man to cease from prayer.
Thabiti Anyabwile
Hypocritical prayer is an oxymoron; hypocrisy and prayer just don’t go together. Anything that we properly call prayer should be divorced from hypocrisy. The Lord teaches us this in the Gospels when he talks about those who pray for an audience; for them prayer is a show. And if you’ve been praying any length of time, you know that you don’t need an audience for your prayers to be a show. Sometimes we’re watching ourselves pray. We’re admiring the eloquence of our appeal. We like the turn of phrase. So our prayer can go from being an act of communion with God to a demonstration of pride.
But real prayer is an expression of love. Real prayer is an expression of perseverance. It’s an expression of gratefulness.
Why love? Because in prayer we’re communing with God the Father, God the Son, God the Holy Spirit. We’re praying to the Father in the name of the Son through the Spirit. And in the act of prayer, we’re meant to enjoy them and to get to know them and to commune with them. How can prayer be communion without love?
In prayer there should also be perseverance, steadfastness, pressing in, continuously knocking at the door. This perseverance is necessary to prevail against our flesh. Our flesh wars against the spirit. And, boy, I tell you, when we pray, don’t we sometimes experience a wandering, distracting mind? When we pray, don’t we sometimes experience our frailty, our weakness, our fatigue? I’ve fallen asleep praying just as our Lord’s apostles did in the garden of Gethsemane. So we need perseverance, and we need that pressing into the things of God, that pushing out the distractions of the world, that crucifying of the flesh, again, that we might have this fuller communion with the Lord.
Finally, prayer ought to be an expression of gratitude. Let us count the blessings of the Lord. Let us mark his providences. Let us observe the divine interruptions that have broken into our lives, such that we might receive not only Christ but everything in Christ, and receive and experience it in surprising ways, in opportune times, in times later than we had hoped for or expected. The divine interruptions of God, which are blessings and distributions of his kindness to us, ought to cultivate gratitude in us. Our prayers ought to express that gratitude so that we’re conscious of the kindness and goodness of the Lord.
Even when we can’t trace God’s hand, as the saying goes, we can trust his heart because we know God is good, and we’re grateful for his goodness. That spurs us on in our prayer and perseverance, and it turns us again in love toward Christ our Savior, God our Father, and the Spirit our Comforter.
LeRoy Gehman, George Frueh, Mark Kostishion, Karl Ernst
1 Dorothy Lahl, Doug Lindner, Rodney Shoemaker
2 Harvey Shoemaker
3 Diane Gehman, Brandon Kehs
4 Juliana Kapusta
5 Oaklie Hager
6 Gina Shoemaker
7 Isaac Kehs
8 Brad Peck, Graham Vogelzang
9 Irv Kulp, Iryna Yagilnicky
10 Cassy Olszyk, Rick Kehs, Ken Peck, Thelma Spitzkopf, Tony Wilwert
11 Phoenix Smith
12 Shaelyn Mahoney, Ruth Niederhaus
13 Barb Gehman, Charlie Kretschmer
14 Vangie Niederhaus, Clinton Radcliff
15 Emma Coale, Laurie Plank
16 Sherman Focht, Marlene Hughes
17 Meghann Permar
6 John & Fern Vasey
8 Roger & Patti Jones
10 Dennis & Bonnie Doran