The Oakbridge. Thrilled to Be an Uncle From Pastor Jim. Blood and Gratitude. Inside this issue: OAKRIDGE COMMUNITY CHURCH. From Pastor Jim 1-2

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1 OAKRIDGE COMMUNITY CHURCH The Oakbridge March 2015 Volume 8, Issue 6 Thrilled to Be an Uncle From Pastor Jim I have the privilege of being an uncle to some very special nieces and nephews, as well as a granduncle to their equally-special children. Among them is my niece Marcie Peck with her husband Jeff, who are parents to Riley and Sophie. Riley just finished his second bout with Hodgkin lymphoma. Toward the end of this last round of treatment, Riley s parents put up a couple of posts on his Caring Bridge site that I found to be particularly meaningful and helpful for us in understanding what people experience as they or their loved ones face life-threatening challenges. So, with their permission, I thought I would share their posts with you. Blood and Gratitude By Marcie Peck Feb 4, 2015 8:47 p.m. Hodgkin lymphoma is a blood cancer. Although it appears as a solid tumor in the glands (found in the neck, chest, armpit or groin), lymphoma is a blood cancer that develops in the lymph nodes of the lymphatic system. When someone has lymphoma, lots of abnormal lymphoid, or lymphoma, cells are produced within a particular lymph node. In patients with Hodgkin lymphoma the cancer cells cluster in the lymph nodes and form tumors. These can also spill into the blood stream and spread the cancer around the body, including to other lymph nodes." (https:// leukaemialymphomaresearch.org) A few days ago I sat in the outpatient clinic watching Riley skillfully playing Marvel Superheroes on the PS3 while attached to yet another IV, this one delivering blood - his third transfusion in two months - to combat anemia. Riley s anemia is tracked primarily through blood tests, but the doctors also watch his colorless complexion, fast heart rate and exhaustion level all results of being knocked down by four rounds of chemo. Over the years, we ve become experts at understanding IVs, the size of the bag, hydration rates, how to navigate hallways and elevators with these clumsy machines, and most importantly, how to silence the beeping at 3:00 a.m. But blood transfusions are different than regular IVs much slower and strikingly personal. While he defeats the bad guys on the screen, I attempt to work on a client report, but it s hard to take my eyes off the bag of dark, thick, red liquid dangling above us. Thousands of Americans donate blood every year. You know the drill. A healthy adult takes time out of his/her busy schedule, experiences mild pain and maybe some lightheadedness, and gives, with the hope that this donation will benefit someone in real medical need. It s beautiful in its simplicity. We never know the donor s name, age, gender, race, level of education or zip code. Our political viewpoints may clash and our faiths may be radically different. (Continued on page 2) Inside this issue: From Pastor Jim 1-2 News From the Hess Family 3-4 March Bible Reading 4 Youth News 5 The Birth of a Church 6 March Calendar 7 March Birthdays 8

2 Thrilled to Be An Uncle (Continued from page 1) Yet, watching the infusion flow into my son s veins, I m struck with the selflessness of the gift. I wish I could look into this donor s eyes, grasp their hand and say, Thank you. What you did mattered. Holly, our physician s assistant, calls transfused blood GoJuice for cancer kids. Within hours, Riley s cheeks pink up, his energy improves and his heart rate calms. This blood will speed his recovery. There s another blood transfusion that has sustained not just Riley but our whole family. Two thousand years ago, Christ, the perfect donor, hung on a cross. He shed much more than a unit of blood so that I could live really live, not anemically, in fear or desperation, but free and forgiven, healing the complete brokenness that was me. I am changed because of the life in that blood. My command is this: Love each other as I have loved you. Greater love has no one than this: to lay down one s life for one s friends. John 15:12-13 Riley and our whole family is entering a season of hopeful recovery. To be honest, we are dog tired. A bit shell shocked. And in a wobbling fashion, searching for normal again. On Monday, February 9, Riley will have his end-oftreatment PET scan. If it is clear, he will officially be in remission and will aim to go back to school (part time) in March. We plan to slip away for a brief family vacation before that important chapter begins. Thank you for your prayers, your encouragement and your crazy big hearts of love for our family. If we haven t sent you a note or looked you in the eye to express our gratitude, we have wanted to. Know that your kindness has been the hands and heart of God ministering to us these past few months. With love and thanks, Marcie Clean and Sober By Jeff Peck Feb 12, 2015 10:16 p.m. Yesterday the docs spoke the three little letters every family wants to hear--ned, no evidence of disease. Riley's PET scan is clean! Except for the often difficult port access procedure, we nearly yawned through Monday's PET scan, which will now serve as the baseline for all scans Riley must have for the next five years. To be truthful, this is a mixed moment for our family. We are ready to celebrate, but also rest. We are overwhelmed at the outpouring of care, generosity and God's faithfulness to us during the last six months. But, we still have a port surgery in front of us, school reintegration, bodily fitness to restore and a life scheduled with scans stretching out for years. In the final scenes of Tolkien's Lord of the Rings, the four hero Hobbits return to their beloved homes in the Shire. They are changed. The adventures and suffering are written in their faces. While their friends carry on with their lives in the normal fashion they exchange knowing glances and sober toasts. They are bound by their experience and wondering how to fit in again after seeing so much darkness. They have matured and carry themselves with confident humility. But the questions they ask center on "What now?" That's us and most families that experience lifethreatening diseases. You have helped carry our family through our second bout with cancer. It is the best way to fight through such things, and we will never have enough ways or occasions to thank each person who reached out to us. Riley's energy is returning, although his spirit appears to be way ahead of his body. At his prodding, he dared mom to race to the stop sign this week while out on a walk, but ran out of steam long before finishing the short sprint. That's O.K. We love that he wants to try and, with eating and a return to soccer, we expect to see an active boy who turns 12 later this month. Twelve. We get to celebrate that, too.

3 Greg and Melanie Hess serve with SOAR International (Service and Outreach Alaska to Russia) which is located in Kenai, Alaska. The SOAR organization ministers through local evangelical churches located in Russia. Oakridge has been involved with both the Stuff-A-Stocking distribution and the Abkhazia Backpack Project. The following is the February 2015 newsletter from the Hess family written in the context of what you would have experienced had you been with them on two recent trips to Russia. Stuff-A-Stocking Adventure After traveling to Ryazan, Russia, you have arrived with the SOAR team just in time to celebrate the Russian Orthodox Christmas by distributing stockings to orphanage children! News from the Hess Family Trying to shake off the jet-lag, you help to fill the stockings with the treats and essentials sponsored by donors from the U.S. After a couple of days, you have started to pick up the routine: Hauling boxes, setting up the puppet stage, settling in to have fun with the kids during the Gospel presentation, and savoring the joy that comes when the stockings are handed out. In some orphanages, the kids may even put on a program for you! However, some visits are not so routine and are a little more sobering, such as the visit to the orphanage for invalids. Here you brought some small gifts to children like this bed-ridden 16 or 17 year old girl. Does spending 2 months this summer with Russian teenage orphans that live in a church-run transition home appeal to you? Or are you a Bible college student needing to fulfill a ministry internship requirement? Join a team of SOAR staff and college interns to teach life skills and give spiritual guidance through this exciting opportunity! Abkhazia Adventure You ve joined the SOAR men (Dick, Greg, and G.J.) who flew from Moscow to Sochi, continuing into Abkhazia. The Sochi church has already stuffed bags full of gifts, and you are surprised to learn that the Sochi congregation matched the gifts from SOAR donors. So instead of 150 gift bags and Bibles you now have 300 to distribute in Abkhazia! Waiting in the line of cars to go through the border, you feel apprehensive entering a country where there is still potential for political upheaval and fighting. However, accompanied by Pastor Ivan from the Sochi church, you have a trustworthy guide who is well respected. Over the next few days, he will take you across the entire country of Abkhazia to visit five of the eight evangelical churches that exist in in this war-torn land. (Continued on page 4)

4 News from the Hess Family (Continued from page 3) As you drive through the countryside, Pastor Ivan fills you in on the history of Abkhazia, pointing out an ancient Roman fort on the hillside. Early church history documents that the apostles Andrew and Simon the Zealot preached and founded a church here. Simon was killed in AD 55 by Roman legionaries, and today you can still visit the monument at his burial site. Christianity was also brought to Abkhazia by early Christians who were exiled here on the outskirts of the Roman Empire. During Soviet times, this nation on the Black Sea was a beautiful, thriving resort and agricultural area. Since the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991, conflict continues as Abkhazia seeks to be recognized as an independent nation. In many areas where neighborhoods used to stand, all that remains are piles of rubble. It is into this arena that the Evangelical churches are trying to alleviate the suffering of the Abkhazian people and establish a true witness of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Because the people are holding tightly to their traditional language, culture and identity, they have not yet allowed Islam to take root. Instead they practice a mixture of ancient paganism and Orthodox Christianity rife with superstition. Most of the pastors you will meet are from the Ukraine or Moldova and are sacrificially giving their all to minister here, some in unique ways. Don t you wish you had more time to spend here? The pastors and their wives seem so hungry to talk to someone. There are so many construction or repair projects you could take on. While visiting Abkhazia and grasping the depth of the poverty in a country with 75% unemployment, you now understand why SOAR is sending containers of humanitarian supplies to the churches. March Bible Reading 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Deuteronomy 8-10 Deuteronomy 11-13 Deuteronomy 14-16 Deuteronomy 17-20 Deuteronomy 21-23 Deuteronomy 24-27 Deuteronomy 28-29 Deuteronomy 30-31 Deuteronomy 32-34 Joshua 1-4 Joshua 5-8 Joshua 9-11 Joshua 12-15 Joshua 16-18 Joshua 19-21 Joshua 22-24 Join us this year as we go through the Bible canonically. He wrote on the tablets, like the former writing, the Ten Commandments which the LORD had spoken to you on the mountain from the midst of fire on the day of the assembly; and the LORD gave them to me. Deuteronomy 10:4 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Judges 1-2 Judges 3-5 Judges 6-7 Judges 8-9 Judges 10-12 Judges 13-15 Judges 16-18 Judges 19-21 Ruth 1 Samuel 1-3 1 Samuel 4-8 1 Samuel 9-12 1 Samuel 13-14 1 Samuel 15-17 1 Samuel 18-20

5 Youth News Submitted by Jeremy Misener W hat individuals are involved in this section of Matthew? What is going on? What is happening in this section of Matthew? Is there any dialogue? If so, who is speaking? Who are they speaking to/with? What are they saying? As we ve been working our way through the Gospel of Matthew, these are some basic questions that we have been getting into the habit of initially asking for every section of Scripture that we re covering. For most of the youth that are coming, this is the first time they have read Matthew, or any book of the Bible from beginning to end. An example of how this affects their understanding of each passage we are covering is an answer to the question of what individuals are involved in the section we are covering. I may get an answer like, There is a guy named John, and another guy named Isaiah seems to be saying something to him. This gives me an opportunity to teach them who Isaiah is, when he lived, that this is a quotation from another part of the Bible, and what significance this has on what is being communicated in this section of Matthew. It has been so exciting to watch them get more comfortable in their interaction of what is being communicated in each text, and because of this start making connections that they never would have made a few months ago. Continue to be praying that these skills in how to read and understand what is being communicated in the passages we are covering would go beyond intellectual knowledge and be used by God to transform their entire being. Arctic Blast Submitted by JoAnna Mathiowetz and Susan Mueller On February 20 22, Hannah Horejsi, Tiana Leslie with her friend Cassie, Samantha Magler and Ryan Matchinsky, along with leaders JoAnna Mathiowetz, Jeremy Misener and Susan Mueller headed up to Camp Lebanon for the annual Arctic Blast Retreat. This year s theme was Hello, My Name is.lord: (L-Love; O-Overcome; R-Restore; D-Declare). There was a lot to do in a short time! In Chapel times they listened to youth pastor and youth evangelist Micah Mac and worshipped the Lord; they entered a broomball tournament; took a nature walk on the lake (even though it was reaallly cold); played lots of carpet ball; and fellowshipped with each other. Ryan Matchinsky was even brave enough to participate in the Polar Plunge! The cold temps didn t stop them from having a good time, and more importantly having a special time with God!

6 The Birth of the Church Submitted by Jonathan Leslie O ur next adult Sunday School series will focus on the history of the early church from the end of the book of Acts to Constantine becoming emperor of the Roman Empire. We will begin the series on April 12, just after Easter, and continue until June 24, before taking our two-month break to focus on community prayer. Studying the history of anything can be hard for some of us, including your teacher! Therefore, to make it easier to understand and hopefully more interesting, we will center each lesson around an historical person of the time to help us understand the events of the day with an emphasis on how they fit into God s overall plan to build His church. Why study church history? Here are seven reasons that Pastor Tim Challies gives: 1. God Tells Us So - The Bible continually exhorts believers to search out and remember the past. For inquire, please, of bygone ages, and consider what the fathers have searched out. For we are but of yesterday and know nothing, for our days on earth are a shadow. Will they not teach you and tell you and utter words out of their understanding? (Job 8:8-10) 2. To Understand Today - It shows us that we are not too far different from so many of our brothers and sisters in days past and helps us avoid sins and mistakes they may have made. 3. To Understand Tomorrow - When we understand where our current trends are taking us, we can react to avoid heading down paths that have been shown to be ruinous. 4. To Understand Providence - When we study the past, we can see many of the ways in which God has been at work, which should spur us to greater love and appreciation of God and give us greater confidence in His promises. 5. To Understand Error - When we visit the past we can see how error has arisen in the church and we can see which errors have already arisen and have been decided by a consensus of the church. 6. To Understand People - We can learn much not just from history, but from specific people who lived in a period of history. 7. To Understand Endurance - As we see how men and women have persevered throughout the history of the church, we are strengthened with endurance, knowing that we, too, shall be witnesses to Christ s return when that great day finally arrives.

March 2015 7 SUN MON TUE WED THU FRI SAT 6 7 8 DAYLIGHT SAVINGS TIME 1 BEGINS 1:45 p.m. - Good Samaritan Svc. 4:30 p.m. - DeCaro 15 22 4:30 p.m. - DeCaro 29 2 3 9 6:30 p.m. - Elders & Deacons Meeting 16 5:00 p.m. - Elders Meeting 7:00 p.m. - Worship Team Practice 4 10 11 17 18 23 24 25 30 31 9:00 a.m. - Prayer Time 6:30 p.m. - Connecting in Prayer 6:30 p.m. - Youth Meeting 7:30 p.m. - Women s Bible Study 9:00 a.m. - Prayer Time 6:30 p.m. - Connecting in Prayer 6:30 p.m. - Youth Meeting 7:30 p.m. - Women s Bible Study 9:00 a.m. - Prayer Time 6:30 p.m. - Connecting in Prayer 6:30 p.m. - Youth Meeting 7:30 p.m. - Women s Bible Study 9:00 a.m. - Prayer Time 6:30 p.m. - Connecting in Prayer 6:30 p.m. - Youth Meeting 7:30 p.m. - Women s Bible Study 5 6:30 p.m. - Butler 7:00 p.m. - Larson 12 6:30 p.m. - Butler 7:00 p.m. - Larson 19 6:30 p.m. - Butler 7:00 p.m. - Larson 26 1:30 p.m. - Grand Oaks 6:30 p.m. - Butler 7:00 p.m. - Larson 13 9:00 a.m. 5:00 p.m. Elders Retreat 14 20 21 27 28 10:00 a.m. - Piecemakers Sewing Saturday 9:00 a.m. - Worship Team Practice Rejoice greatly, O daughter of Zion! Shout, O daughter of Jerusalem! Behold, your King is coming to you; He is just and having salvation, Lowly and riding on a donkey, A colt, the foal of a donkey. Zechariah 9:9

8 March Birthdays March 3 - Dan Parker March 4 - Jonathan Leslie March 5 - Kayla Utecht March 9 - Victor Mancia March 25 - Susan Mueller March 27 - Tiana Leslie March 28 - Vicki Patten OCC Vision The vision of Oakridge Community Church is to spread a joyful passion for the absolute, eternal supremacy of Jesus Christ in all things, to all peoples. OAKRIDGE COMMUNITY CHURCH 610 County Road 5 Stillwater, MN 55082 Phone: 651-439-4882 E-mail: churchoffice@oakridgecommunity.org OCC Mission The mission of Oakridge Community Church is to glorify God by delighting in, declaring and displaying the gospel of Jesus Christ. We re on the Web! www.oakridgecommunity.org