| June 6, 2010 | to | June 12, 2010 |
Do you own a hammer? Join us for a week at Mountain T.O.P.! (The Tennessee Outreach Project) Call Emalie for details. 615-403-8455
| June 6, 2010 | to | June 12, 2010 |
Do you own a hammer? Join us for a week at Mountain T.O.P.! (The Tennessee Outreach Project) Call Emalie for details. 615-403-8455
| March 26, 2010 5:00 pm | to | March 27, 2010 7:30 am |
Come help Hickory Bend make Room In The Inn! We have a few more Room In The Inn events this season.
Come help us make beds, serve supper, pass out lingerie, or play games.
We need to train a few more innkeepers. Have you considered spending the night with us? We would like to expand our ministry to an additional week next season. In order to do this we need a few more innkeepers. Your primary responsibilities are to . . . well . . . to sleep! Could you spend one night with our homeless guests? If Hickory Bend could train a few more inkeepers, we could double the blessings. If you have any questions about the responsibilities of an inkeeper, call Judy at 615-754-4482, or Emalie at 615-403-8455.
Only two more nights this season:
February 26, 2010
March 26, 2010
| February 7, 2010 | ||
| 12:00 pm | to | 2:00 pm |
You can’t watch the Super Bowl Hungry!
Let the UMYF provide you with a hearty meal so that you can enjoy every moment of this once in a lifetime (or 44th in a lifetime) event! Have the party chefs at UMYF make your lunch for you. Join us in the fellowship hall for pregame celebration, or take your food to go. Either way, you will enjoy the game so much more, if you don’t have to stop to satisfy your hunger.
All the proceeds go toward youth missions. (Don’t you want to get rid of us for a week this summer?)
Thursday morning, nine days after the first earthquake rumbled through Haiti, a rescue crew pulled a seven year old and his older sister out of the rubble of a school. This tiny child held his arms up to an American fireman who lifted him through the dust and the ruins. Strong arms lifted this tiny child gently into the first fresh air he had breathed in nine days. The fireman held this little boy high in the air, but he reached down to hug the neck of his rescuer, and then he threw his arms open and looked up to the sky, smiling from ear to ear, as if to show God and everyone in the crowd that he was alive and well! Then he hugged the fireman again. The fireman was a huge man, looming like a giant above the crowd, smiling and crying, holding this tiny child as if he were as light as a twig. Two insights struck me as I wastched this amazing scene unfold on my television, so far fromthe dust and ashes. more…