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Rev. Bill Inglish Recipient of 2021 Marshall Award

Rev. Dr. William (Bill) Inglish was recognized for his years of ministerial excellence by the alumni of Phillips Theological Seminary with the Frank H. Marshall Award. The presentation took place during the annual “Remind & Renew” event at Phillips Theological Seminary on January 28, 2021.

Click here to watch the video presentation.

2021-02-03T14:16:46-06:00Feb 3, 2021|Clergy News|Comments Off on Rev. Bill Inglish Recipient of 2021 Marshall Award

FCC Hennessey Receives Faithful Partners Award

First Christian Church Hennessey, Oklahoma received the first “Faithful Partners Award” from Phillips Theological Seminary on January 28, 2021 during the seminary’s Remind & Renew event. It honors the 50+ years of service and giving to Phillips University and Phillips Theological Seminary.

Pictured above with the award are Dona Caulder, FCC ‘s  Pastor Ish Engle and John Peach. Click here to watch the video presentation.

2021-02-03T13:42:08-06:00Feb 3, 2021|Congregations|Comments Off on FCC Hennessey Receives Faithful Partners Award

Webinars: Caring in Crisis Tuesday Briefs

Caring In Crisis: Tuesday Briefs Webinar Series

Registration is now open for the Winter 2021 free webinar series, “Caring in Crisis: Tuesday Briefs”. It is sponsored by Catholic Charities Archdiocese of Oklahoma City, The Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) in Oklahoma, Crisis Care Ministries, Oklahoma Conference of Churches, and the Oklahoma City Community Foundation. The series of one hour webinars for leaders is scheduled for Tuesdays starting February 2, 2021, from 10:00 am – 11:00 am. Registration and details.

Faith and community leaders are facing historic challenges, testing the limits of our creativity, strength, and resilience. In this sequel to the very popular Fall 2020 “Caring for Your Congregation and Community During Crisis” webinar series, experienced specialists in disaster response, recovery, health, mental health, and congregational and family life offer their expertise to help leaders gain new skills and knowledge to face the difficult crises impacting our communities.

Webinar Titles

  • Shroud of Grief: The Cost of Cumulative Sorrow – 2/2/2021
  • The Early Days Following an Oklahoma Disaster – 2/9/2021
  • Long-Term Disaster Recovery in Oklahoma – 2/16/21
  • Alzheimer’s and Dementia: 10 Warning Signs – 2/23/21
  • Providing Support to Your Community After a Traumatic Loss – 3/2/21
  • Personal and Family Disaster Preparedness – 3/9/21
  • An Overview of Domestic Violence 3/23/21
  • What Emergency Managers Wish Faith Leaders Knew – 4/6/21
  • Increasing Your Racial Justice IQ – 4/13/21
  • The Housing and Employment Crisis – 4/20/21
  • Preventing Suicide in Faith Communities: A Conversation of Hope – 4/27/21
  • In Good Faith: Why Legal Services are Critical for Disaster Survivors – 5/4/21
  • What Faith and Community Leaders Need to Know about 211 – 5/11/21

Click here for presenter bios.

Free Webinar Series Presented By

Presenters Include Representatives From

211 of Eastern Oklahoma
American Red Cross
The Alzheimer’s Association
Catholic Charities (Archdiocese of Oklahoma City)
Crisis Care Ministries
Legal Aid Services of Oklahoma
Logan County Emergency Management
The National Suicide Prevention Resource Center
The Oklahoma Conference of the United Methodist Church
The Oklahoma Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services
The Oklahoma District Attorneys Counil
Restore Hope Ministries
The Salvation Army

Need Continuing Education?

Attendance certificates (PDF format) are available for all courses. Check with your affiliating organization for applicability.

About Registration

Register for individual sessions. Registration closes 24 hours before the session.
100 spaces available for each session.

Click here to register.

2021-02-04T11:32:07-06:00Jan 26, 2021|Clergy News|Comments Off on Webinars: Caring in Crisis Tuesday Briefs

DCEF’s Rick Reisinger to Retire

On January 11, 2021, Rick Reisinger, President of Disciples Church Extension Fund (DCEF), shared his plans with the DCEF Board and staff to retire at year’s end – December 31.

Throughout his career, he has helped DCEF successfully navigate challenges, including high interest rates in the late 70s and early 80s; the Dotcom collapse of the late 90s; the 2007-08 recession; and, the current pandemic.

Through DCEF, Reisinger lives out his faith and love for the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) by finding innovative ways to meet the financial needs of new and existing congregations and other ministries so they may thrive. Under his leadership DCEF remains focused, not on the past, but on the future of its ministry partners.

2021-01-25T15:55:52-06:00Jan 25, 2021|Regional News|Comments Off on DCEF’s Rick Reisinger to Retire

Four Local DOC Churches Awarded Grants for Meals

Hope is More Than a Meal – Grants Provide Warm Meals for Local Homebound Elderly

The Oklahoma City Community Foundation has awarded $3,200 to the following Disciples of Christ churches that provide home-delivered meals in central Oklahoma:

  • Crown Heights Christian Church
  • New Covenant Christian Church
  • Nicoma Park Christian Church
  • Western Oaks Christian Church

This winter, the Oklahoma City Community Foundation is helping provide warm meals to homebound elderly citizens by awarding $51,600 in grants to 40 area churches and organizations that prepare and deliver mobile meals through Meals on Wheels Oklahoma City. In addition, the Foundation is awarding $5,000 each to Meals on Wheels of Norman and Edmond Mobile Meals to support seniors in their areas.

“This year has been challenging for most of us, but it has been particularly difficult for homebound seniors, who rely on services that provide access to health care, nutrition, recreation and interaction with others,” said Nancy B. Anthony, Oklahoma City Community Foundation president. “We are grateful for our donors, who give the resources to support essential care for the most vulnerable among us.”

Since 2008, the Oklahoma City Community Foundation has distributed more than $450,000 in support of mobile meals programs in central Oklahoma. According to Meals on Wheels of Oklahoma City, one in 12 senior citizens in Oklahoma County lives in poverty, and nearly 16,000 lack consistent access to enough food for an active, healthy life. Through the mobile meals programs in Oklahoma City, Norman and Edmond, home-delivered meals are available to all seniors age 60 and older who are unable to leave their homes without assistance or prepare meals due to health limitations regardless of income.

In 2020, Meals on Wheels Oklahoma City volunteers provided nutritious meals, wellness checks and meaningful contact for nearly 1,400 homebound senior citizens living in central Oklahoma who are unable to prepare their own meals.

“Senior hunger has unfortunately been a major issue in Oklahoma County for years, and the coronavirus pandemic has made it even worse,” said Chris Lambert, director of Meals on Wheels Oklahoma City. “Since March, we’ve added nearly 700 seniors to Meals on Wheels, and our meal deliveries have doubled to more than 16,000 meals each month. The generosity shown by the Oklahoma City Community Foundation and our community allows us to bring hope to so many who are isolated from their friends, family and neighbors, and lets them know someone cares. Hope is more than a meal.”

About the Oklahoma City Community Foundation

Founded in 1969, the Oklahoma City Community Foundation is a 501(c)(3) public charity that works with donors to create charitable funds that will benefit our community both now and in the future. Learn more about the Oklahoma City Community Foundation.

2021-01-25T15:45:31-06:00Jan 25, 2021|Congregations|Comments Off on Four Local DOC Churches Awarded Grants for Meals

Faith Community Nurses’ Association Virtual Conference

Registration Underway for Faith Community Nurses’ Conference

The 14th Annual Faith Community Nurses’ Association Virtual Conference “Finding Peace Through Spiritual Self Care” will be held March 5, 2021. The conference will educate the Faith Community Nurse and church leaders to

  • define serenity for spiritual self-care of the faith community nurse,
  • list three spiritual practices that could be used to help find peace, reduce anxiety, develop acceptance of own limitations, and increase own trust in God,
  • discuss how prayer, quiet time, nature, and intimacy with scripture increase inner peace and decrease anxiety,
  • and identify positive habits to develop increased trust in God and thereby enhance personal serenity.

The message of John 14: ” Let not your hearts be troubled, neither let them be afraid” will guide the day. This virtual conference will provide spiritual practices needed to guide nurses and health ministers interested in spiritual self-care.

Online registration is available only through Survey Monkey

Registration for the one-day for the FCNA OK Member is $55 for payments received before 2/7/2021. Non FCNA OK Member $80 for payments received before 2/7/2021.

Clergy $60 for payments received before 2/7/2021.

Call or check online for rates after 2/7/21.

FCNA OK is approved as a provider of continuing nursing education by the Kansas State Board of Nursing. This course is approved for 6.25 contact hours applicable for APRN, RN, LPN, or LMHT relicensure. Kansas State Board of Nursing provider number LT0298-0316, KAR 60-7-107 (b)(3)(C).

For registration and brochure, see the FCNA website downloads page or register online through Survey Monkey and pay by https://www.PayPal.me/FCNAOK or contact [email protected].

2021-01-25T15:24:55-06:00Jan 25, 2021|Clergy News|Comments Off on Faith Community Nurses’ Association Virtual Conference

Imagine God’s Limitless Love: Message from GMP Terri Hord Owens

January 14, 2021 – Imagine God’s Limitless Love

Dear Disciples:

Here at the beginning of a new year, there is no doubt that our church – as much of the rest of the world – is in a wilderness season. We find ourselves wandering, longing for the comfort of what we once knew and wondering what the future holds.

I believe that this moment, like all wilderness moments, holds great opportunity for us, if we are brave enough to imagine what might be. I want to invite you to imagine with me.

Several intertwining crises present themselves in this moment, each with a particular opportunity: The pandemic, which has caused the cancellation of our General Assembly and forced so many churches out of their buildings, provides an opportunity to re-envision what church looks like in all expressions and to explore what it means to be a church sent out. The racial justice reckoning happening across the United States gives us an opportunity to revisit our commitment to be a pro-reconciling/anti-racist church; that is, to be the church we say we are.

The economic crisis, in which the wealth gap is widening and leaving many without access to resources, gives us an opportunity to discern how we will love and serve our neighbors, even as we work toward a more just economy for all. The political unrest in the context of American democracy gives us an opportunity to explore what it means to be witnesses to the story of Jesus in a time of such division and change. And the ever-present crisis of climate change provides an opportunity to reaffirm our call to care for God’s good creation, even as we confess and repent our participation in its destruction.

In this moment, then, our calling is clear. As a movement for wholeness in a fragmented world, we are called to imagine a church that bears witness to God’s limitless love. We will need to act with courage. We will need to give ourselves permission to change, to let go of processes and structures and practices that don’t serve us well any longer. We will need to let go of fear – the fear of what might happen if we do change, and the fear of the unknown future.

I’d like to share with you some ways we can live into this calling this year by focusing on four key areas: covenant, story, tools, and practice.

Covenant: The Governance Committee of the General Board is doing some important work exploring what it means to live in covenant. They’ve been reflecting on the theological foundations of our governing documents, reviewing possible revisions to the Design, and reexamining how we make decisions and how we speak as a church. As we prepare to hear more about this work later this year, I hope you will pray for those who are discerning a way forward, and for your congregation as it lives in covenant with the whole church.

Story: It is time for us to shape a new narrative for ourselves, particularly in terms of what we see when we imagine ourselves an anti-racist church. Establishing common values and practices lived out in individual contexts will help us shape a vision of a shared future. Every day we must tell our story, share the good news, and make decisions that hold us accountable to be the church we say we are. In the coming months, I will be sharing ideas and inviting others into conversation with me, as together we imagine our new story. Please make sure you’re signed up for my Dear Disciples newsletter and follow Disciples social media so you won’t miss these opportunities to imagine with me.

Tools: There are some new tools already in the works that will help us do ministry together. I hope you have heard about Alex, a new Disciples database that will eventually replace the yearbook. It will provide a real-time directory and help us track churchwide data trends and help our regional and general expressions support congregations more effectively. New communication tools are being developed as well; you can now sign up for email newsletters that bring you the news you want, whether that’s updates on justice efforts, messages from me, news from the whole church, or resources particularly for pastors. In addition, increased collaboration among regional and general ministries are helping us work in covenant with one another. Building relationships across the church, across laity and clergy, and across generations will be key to infusing our church with new energy as we all share our gifts in ministry. You can learn more about Alex at www.disciples.org, where you can also sign up for newsletters and connect with ministries across the church.

Finally, practice: Grounded in spiritual growth and development, we begin with love, letting love lead us into action testifying to the church we say we are. Our faith practices help us understand that love: We share communion at the Lord’s Table as an expression of God’s expansive welcome. We practice baptism and proclaim that we walk in new life. We study and share the ancient stories that point to a new world. We pray together, a practice that reminds us that we are not alone, that we are created and loved by God. We serve our neighbors, acknowledging that we are connected to each other and that we are called to live not for ourselves but for the sake of the world. I hope, as we move into this new year, that you will stay connected to your local congregation, and that you will embrace the practices of our faith that give you life.

Church, we are called to imagine a new world. We are called to imagine God’s reign fully come, and to discern how we can participate in making it so. We call ourselves Disciples of Christ, a movement for wholeness in a fragmented world. It is time for us to be the church we say we are: to seize the opportunity of this wilderness moment and to move forward with courage, permission to change, and freedom from fear, to imagine a church that bears witness to God’s limitless love.

I’m glad to be in ministry with you.

Rev. Teresa “Terri” Hord Owens
General Minister and President

2021-01-14T10:19:28-06:00Jan 14, 2021|Regional News|Comments Off on Imagine God’s Limitless Love: Message from GMP Terri Hord Owens

Worship at Home! Livestream or Recorded Worship Services

Are you looking for a digital worship service?  You are in the right place! Many of our churches livestream their worship services via Facebook, Youtube, and offer a replay their worship services.  What a great way to worship from home.  Many congregations that use Youtube can be found in the “channels” section of the Region’s Youtube Channel.

We may not all be in the same room, but we can still gather together in the name of Jesus and worship as one. “For where two or three gather in my name, there am I with them.” Matthew 18:20

We will continue to add churches to this list.

Central Christian Church Enid

Community Christian Church Ponca City

Crown Heights Christian Church Oklahoma City

Disciples Christian Church Bartlesville

East Sixth Street Christian Church

First Christian Church Chickasha

First Christian Church Cushing

First Christian Church Cyril

First Christian Church Edmond

First Christian Church El Reno

First Christian Church Midwest City

First Christian Church Norman

First Christian Church Oklahoma City

First Christian Church Stillwater

First Christian Church Tahlequah

First Christian Church Thomas

First Christian Church Woodward

Forest Park Christian Church Tulsa

Harvard Avenue Christian Church

Southern Hills Christian Church Edmond

Waukomis Christian Church

Weatherford Federated Church

West Point Christian Church Yukon

Western Oaks Christian Church Oklahoma City

Woodlands Christian Church Ponca City

2021-06-16T13:26:30-05:00Dec 10, 2020|Livestream Church|1 Comment

Regional Staff Travel Update

Regional Staff to Continue Working Remotely (updated 12/09/20)

On the recommendation of the Region’s Personnel Committee, the Executive Committee of the Regional Board decided it would be best for the Regional Staff to continue to work remotely until the end of 2020. UPDATE: The Executive Committee will meet on January 21, 2021 to determine the 2021 staff travel policy.

The office phones are being managed through technology or by contacting the Regional Ministers directly on their cell phones.

The Executive Committee, also on the commendation of Personnel, determined that it would be best for the Regional Ministers to NOT TRAVEL around the region for worship or large gatherings through December 31, 2020, unless there is a consistent decline in new cases for fourteen days or a vaccine or a miracle. They will continue to be present in worships or large gatherings by Zoom or other social media platforms.

2020-12-09T11:28:02-06:00Dec 9, 2020|Regional News|Comments Off on Regional Staff Travel Update

2020 Christmas Offering Resources

What is the Christmas Offering?

Gifts to the Christmas offering support the work of the Oklahoma Region. It sustains the life of the church by connecting, empowering and equipping Disciples of Christ to love and serve like Jesus. (Received December 13th and 20th)

100% of your gift supports Oklahoma Regional Ministries

Even during this long season of COVID we continue to –

Connect congregations and clergy to each other

Gather Disciples virtually in camps, conferences and assemblies.

Nurture those called to vocational ministry.

Assist churches in calling new ministers.

Participate in the global mission of the church.

Respond to disasters in Oklahoma with dollars and resources.

Walk with those in conflict.

Lead the church to address racism.

Inspire leaders to experiment and create.

Witness to the power of God to make ALL things new.

Click here for Advent Wreath Videos

Bulletin Insert

Download Insert

2020-11-28T09:52:43-06:00Nov 27, 2020|Regional News|Comments Off on 2020 Christmas Offering Resources
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