The Ohio Independent Baptist, May/June 1994

Serving Ohio State Representative Larry Fetzer 884 Knebworth Ct Westerville. OH 43081 61 4-523-3666 Church Pew Padding • Add Comfort and Beauty to O ld Pe,.,vs • On-Site Installation • 15 Year Guarantee • Stays in Place . . . Will Not Sli p or Slide Like a Loose Cushion • !\'early 50 Colors of Fabric Call 1-800-232-1822 The American Pew Padding Co. 676 E. Sixth Ave. Lancaster , Ohio 43130 RUPP AGENCY, INC. Specializing in church property & liability insurance, with over 1,300 churches insured statewide • Church • Life • Auto • Health • Home • Disability • Bu iness • Annuities 1357 We t Lane Avenue Columbus, OH 43221 Call toll-free: 1-800-282-9258 or 614-486-59 11 Contact Ben Rupp First Baptist Christian School FACULTY NEEDED • Spanish/Other • Secondary English For more inf ormalion and application send resume to Ralph C. Duffy, Administrator 11400 LaGrange Rd ., PO Box 929 Elyria. OH 44036 216-458-5185 Christ--Honoring Piano Course 2 Play hymns first lesson. For free catalog send self-addressed stamped envelope to Mary Jo Moore Dept. 0 , 286 Poland Ave. Struthers , OH 44471 On The Road To Recovery D eElda and Nancy Payton's advice to the few remaining member of the First Bapti t Church of Twin burg was for the church to go on mi sion status and call a fellow ABWE-USA mi sionary as pastor. Today the Paytons themselves are leading the way to recovery for Twinsburg. On December 12, the church voted to align with AB WE and to call the veteran ABWE missionaries to assist their northeastern Ohio church. "Basically we start anew," says DeElda, "with three families and three ingle . It's church planting with a building already there." Since the firs t of February, the group, with help from Grace Baptist of Westlake, bas been renovating the church interior, putting in 8-hour days remodeling, painting, installing new carpet, window coverings and lighting . They ask readers' help in locating used 12-foot pews, preferably padded. Easter Sunday brought a record attendance of 31. "What we need now is a salvation breakthrough, " said DeElda, " omeone comj ng to Christ and follow– ing through with baptism, to get u really excited." The church is planning a full month of celebrating their 35th anniversary in May, with Norm Nicklas of ABWE– USA, Paul Schenck, founding pastor, and Larry Fetzer. Church D~ign (?$ Master Planning MARK D. JO~. NA 6'201 Acres Qoad Ollawe Lake. Ml 49?h7 Phone~ Fax (313) &Sa-1119 AQCHITECTUQE + PLANNING 24 YEAQe> EXPEQIENCE o far $32, 141 .83 has been recei ved for lhe 1994 Brotherly Love Offering for the RBF insurance fund . l11ere remains a very complex account on which we do not as yet know our responsi– bi lity. When we have all the information to settle this large c laim, we will be able to give you a full report. Cedarville College News C edarville Department of Engineering students took first place in the Eaton Student Booth Compe tition of the International SAE Congress in Detroit in March. Their exhibit displayed the extracurricular activities with which the engineering students are involved. Student teams currently are preparing for the Aero-Design competition at Wright– Patterson Air Force Base in May, the Supermileage competition in Kalamazoo, Michigan, in June, and the Saturn HEV (Hybrid Electric Vehicle) competition in June in Detroit. The Cedarville College forensics team took the state title for the fifth consecu– tive year as it hosted the 1994 Ohio Forensics Association Varsity Tourna– ment February 18- 19 on the college campus. Over 120 students from 12 Ohio colleges and universities participated in the speech competition. Cedarville's closest competitor was the Miami University team, which is coached by a Cedarv ille graduate . In third and fourth place were The Ohio State Universi ty and Ohio Univers ity. Contributing to Cedarville' s win were points earned by Cedarville' s first year forensics competi– tors in the novice tournament held two weeks earlier at Ohio State . Dr. David Robey, a socia te professor of communi– cation arts, is coach and director of the foren sics program. Under the direction of Missionary Internship Service (MIS), 15 groups are preparing to serve abroad this summer. Singing teams will go to Australia, Brazil and England. Two nursing teams will go to the Cen tral African Republic, and two teams will travel to Hungary to teach Engli h as a second language. Puppet teams will minis ter in Chile and South Africa, while an engineering team will design and build an electrical control system for ELWA, a Christian radio talion in Monrovia, Liberia. Germany and the Ukraine are the destinations for two ministry teams, and a sign language team will minister in a camp for the deaf in Jamaica. Two basketball teams will go-a men's team to The Philippines and a women's team to Portugal. MIS has been se11ding teams to foreign fields since 1971.

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