Young Adult Friends Section Meeting Retreat Report

Young Adult Friends (YAFs, ages 18-35) serve a vital role in the health of the Quaker community. They carry the weighty responsibility of the future of Quakerism. They provide a bridge for Junior Friends to step into the larger Meeting. They bring energy and vibrance to gatherings. They steward what it means to be a Quaker.

Hosting opportunities for YAFs to be with one another builds a collective identity of Quakerism for this generation and becomes a foundation for what Quakerism will become. It also offers YAFs opportunities to engage with people going through similar experiences and learn to navigate those challenges from a place of inner light.

YAFs from across the Section of the Americas (SOA) were blessed with a unique and historic opportunity which was made possible by the Friends World Committee for Consultation (FWCC). In March, 18 YAFs from Canada, the United States, Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador, Costa Rica, Peru, and Bolivia gathered in Scottsdale, Arizona for three days leading up to the SOA Annual Section Meeting. This gathering was the first of its kind, and was inspired by the spirit of connection sparked at the YAF Gathering prior to the World Plenary last August. It marked a powerful moment of cross-cultural fellowship and spiritual deepening among young Friends.

YAFs were grounded in their shared belief of honoring the light within each of us while celebrating the unique facets of our local, regional, and national expressions of our faith. The first activity together was to establish the following intentions to aid the navigation of this diversity.

  • To learn and respect the differences between our cultures and worship / Para aprender y respetar las diferencias entre nuestras culturas y adoración
  • Speak on behalf of yourself – use ‘I’ statements / Habla en nombre de ti mismo – usa declaraciones ‘Yo’
  • Seek unity in our diversity / Buscar unidad en nuestra diversidad
  • We’re learning from God through each other / Estamos aprendiendo de Dios el uno a través del otro
  • Every experience is unique and valued / Cada experiencia es única y valorada
  • Enjoy being in each other’s presence / Disfruta de estar en presencia del otro
  • In building trust with one another, we learn how to share our light / Al construir confianza entre nosotros, aprendemos a compartir nuestra luz

YAFs deepened their spiritual bonds through a rich tapestry of shared experiences. Throughout the gathering, YAFs stepped into roles of leadership by guiding workshops, facilitating worship, and greeting the day together on peaceful sunrise hikes. A memorable excursion to the Desert Botanical Garden, led by two gracious friends from Phoenix Monthly Meeting, offered a space for reflection and connection with the natural world. With open hearts and willing hands, YAFs also gave back to the Phoenix Meeting community, providing much-needed yard care for its smaller, aging congregation. YAFs led the entire community in worship on the final day of the Section Meeting—an experience many described as spiritually moving and left a lasting impression on all who were present.

What young Friends do now shapes the future of Quakerism. Opportunities for YAFs to connect amongst themselves are crucial for the discernment of their identity and emboldens the brilliance of Quakerism for generations to come. This event is just one instance of the commitment that FWCC has in supporting YAFs around the world to honor their presence, engagement, and visibility.

Inspired by the depth of connection and shared spirit they experienced, YAFs left the gathering with a renewed commitment to strengthening their bonds and expanding their presence within the wider Quaker community across the Section of the Americas. While this may have been the first event of its kind, it is clear it will not be the last. The seeds planted in Scottsdale are already taking root, and are nurturing a growing movement of young Friends ready to walk together in faith, friendship, and service.

Meg Cody

FWCC-COAL Report on Working with Right Sharing of World Resources

by Karen Gregorio de Calderon, Coordinator for COAL-FWCC

Right Sharing of World Resources (RSWR), a Quaker nonprofit, came to Guatemala from May 23-29, 2022 to investigate the potential for doing projects in Latin America and using Guatemala as a pilot project. For FWCC-COAL, it was beneficial for us to be a part of the working process for this visit because one of our objectives is to work on joint projects with a community improvement focus with Quaker organizations that wish to do this work in Latin American countries.

RSWR was for many years a program of the Friends World Committee for Consultation, but has now been an independent organization for over 20 years. RSWR works with marginalized women, offering them seed capital so that they can start their own businesses and become productive women, thus changing the lives of themselves and their families. This project would bring great benefits to the people of Guatemala. 

How would work be done in Guatemala?

RSWR would work in conjunction with the COOSAJO Savings and Credit Cooperative located in Esquipulas, Chiquimula in eastern Guatemala. With this institution, the pilot project could be executed in the eastern region of the country. The staff of the Cooperative had the opportunity to learn who Quakers are worldwide and the work that Quakers do.

It is important to emphasize that the cooperative already carries out community work in the region with women, the pilot project would be a further development of their work. Two field technicians would be hired, who would form and train the women’s groups and accompany them in their training process, which is similar to RSWR’s work in Sierra Leone and India.

What activities were carried out during the visit?

  • Meetings with the management of the Guatemalan institution COOSAJO, to learn more about its work, its achievements and its values.
  • Meeting with the middle managers of the institution to share information about the projects and both organizations.
  • Meeting with the COOSAJO Board of Directors. We introduced FWCC and RSWR.
  • Meetings with leading employees of the institution: To learn about their testimony, their achievements and how the institution has been part of the change in their lives with the value of inclusion of women.
  • Field visits to the villages, where we were able to share with women who need to be taken into account and be benefited.
  • Meeting with young women leaders: to learn about the work COOSAJO has done with them, providing study scholarships, scholarships to study English, etc.

What did COAL-FWCC contribute during the RSWR visit to Guatemala?

  • Lodging
  • Food for two people.
  • General orientation on the region to be worked in (Statistical data and cultural information)
  • General information on Quakers in Guatemala, how they are organized and where they are most concentrated in the country and how Quakers work in this area.
  • Review of the information in PowerPoint and translation of the same, to present it in Spanish to the organization. Focus on the objectives with correct Spanish vocabulary.
  • Intervention in meetings, when it was necessary to make the idea of ​​RSWR clear.
  • Support in decision-making processes when help was required.
  • Clarification of ideas
  • Accompany RSWR in each planned meeting, to support them in these processes (with the language, with small translations, synthesize the information, etc.)
  • Lead and facilitate scheduled meetings, to obtain the necessary information from each group.
  • Work meetings (RSWR-FWCC-COAL) at the end of the day to draw conclusions and learn from each scheduled activity.
  • Coordinate and manage meetings with Quakers in the region
  • Coordinate visits to the churches in the region
  • Coordinate a visit to the largest Friends campus in the Region. National Friends Church.
  • And the most important thing is that due to the support that can be provided by COAL and the Quakers in the region, Guatemala is a potential country for RSWR to start a pilot project in Latin America and that could later be extended to other countries.

What benefit do local Quakers have with this project?

  • Job opportunity: One of the benefits is that they will be considered in the process of hiring field facilitators. In other words, when the call to hire people is launched, it will also be sent to the Quakers in the region so that they can apply.
  • Opportunity for the women of our churches: The women of our Friends Churches will also have the opportunity to be taken into account, to provide them with seed capital, according to the RSWR processes.

What did COAL achieve during the RSWR visit?

  • First, connecting the affiliated and non-affiliated yearly meetings.

During RSWR’s visit, representatives and leaders from our affiliated and unaffiliated Yearly Meetings were invited to a meeting. At the meeting, the work of FWCC, the work of COAL, the future plans and an invitation to work together were announced. In addition, the RSWR project was presented to them, as a fulfillment of the mission and objectives of FWCC, making our slogan a reality: Connecting friends, crossing cultures and changing lives. This meeting was fruitful; we were together in harmony sharing the love of God that unites us.

 Among attendees were:

  • Ambassadors Friends Monthly Meeting, represented by Susy Ramirez
  • Holiness Friends Yearly Meeting: With the participation of two representatives to FWCC, Teresa de Hernandez and Abner Garcia. In addition, 4 women leaders from the different churches of the yearly meeting participated.
  • National Friends Church: It was represented by its president Rigoberto Vargas and by 3 more members of one of the churches. That they are also part of the Shalom Jiréh Organization, who distributed the funds that FWCC collected, for the victims of Hurricanes Eta and Iota
  • We also achieved the participation of two disabled women entrepreneurs, who have not been supported by other organizations.
  • Total, we achieved attendance of 16 people.

All attendees were pleased and grateful for having been invited to the meeting and expressed their desire to be taken into account in the process of this project or others that we can work together as a region and as a church through FWCC.

What potential do we have after the RSWR visit to develop other projects with the Guatemalan institution COOSAJO for the benefit of local Quakers and society in general?

  • The institution has community development programs, with established processes.
  • Provide entrepreneurship training
  • They carry out projects to take care of the environment
  • They design training processes according to the needs of the projects to be worked on.
  • Provide scholarships to people with limited resources.
  • They have an agreement with the US embassy for young people who want to study English in a free program. This with the purpose of curbing migration, since Chiquimula is a department bordering Honduras and El Salvador vulnerable to the formation of migrant caravans. There are many bilingual youth who benefited from these programs.
  • Recruit new interpreter volunteers who already have command of the English language and who serve as interpreters among the international cooperatives.

Conclusions:

  • FWCC has the opportunity to start a closer relationship with this institution and manage benefits that are possible for our Quaker community. In this way, achieve that the yearly meetings have something in common and gradually break down the communication barrier between them.
  • An important point to emphasize is that the yearly meetings are interested in working together on projects for the benefit of the community.

[Translation by Diane Zappas and Robin Mohr]

Strengthening our Community of Friends: Visit to the Yearly Meetings of Bolivia

Pastor Gualberto Torrez and his congregation in one of their churches in the Andes region.

By Karen Gregorio de Calderon, Coordinator of Latin American Programs

 

In the month of January, God allowed us the privilege of making a visit to the affiliated yearly meetings of Bolivia, with the objective of strengthening our community and sharing the love of God that unites us. It was a wonderful experience to be able to greet the brothers of the different congregations to share with them, in the worship services and multiple scheduled activities, in which we were able to live together in harmony, worship our Lord Jesus Christ, share our cultures and our common heritage. We thank God for this privilege and for what it will allow us to continue doing in the near future with each of the Meetings. We are sure that God will direct the plans for the growth and expansion of his work.


I traveled with Raúl Pérez, member of the Executive Committee of FWCC-Section of the Americas and member of El Salvador Yearly Meeting and Robin Mohr, Executive Secretary for the Section of the Americas. We had the opportunity to visit the yearly meeting annual sessions of INELA Bolivia, the Bolivian Union Friends and the Central Friends yearly meetings.


We particularly want to thank Pr. Gualberto Torrez, of the Iglesia Evangelica Union Boliviana Amigos for his support and taking us to visit some of the rural churches of their yearly meeting.
We also had the opportunity to visit with Friends of Central Yearly Meeting. It was a blessing to share the message of God’s word and participate in the worship services. We thank its president Armando Mamani and the Congregation for the organization of the activities and their development.

Raúl Pérez, member of El Salvador Yearly Meeting and member of the Executive Committee of FWCC Americas, shared the experience of Central American yearly meetings with missionary work in Nicaragua and Cambodia.
In the Aymara culture, “Apthapi” is the name of the Aymara celebration in which food and knowledge are shared. It is derived from the verb apthapiña, which means to bring. The celebration attendees bring food to share with the group. We thank the sisters of Unión Boliviana and their churches in the Andes region for this wonderful experience.
Attendees at the INELA Bolivia Yearly Meeting.
Sharing experiences with Northwest YM Friends: Daniel Cammack, David Thomas, Roy Lujan, Ken Comfort.
Sharing with the leaders of the Amigos Central Yearly Meeting, at the Villa Victoria church.
Sharing with the leaders of the Amigos Central Yearly Meeting, at the Villa Victoria church.
Sharing with: Edwin and María Girón. They were also part of a panel presentation about modern approaches to missionary work.
Visit to Escobar-Uria Friends Church
Pleasant moments with the sisters of UFINELA. (INELA Women’s Union) during lunch, during the activities of the yearly meeting.
With the South American members of the Traveling Ministry Corps In the first row: Jhoana Ramos (INELA Peru), Robin Mohr (Executive Secretary of CMCA) Karen Gregorio de Calderón (Coordinator for Latin America of CMCA-COAL) Carmen Rosa Paye (Bolivian Friends Union) In the back row: Jhimmy Roque (INELA Bolivia) and Juan Daniel Mamani (INELA Bolivia). Thank you for your service to our community of Friends!
Youth Leadership of Bolivian Friends: One of the main objectives of the visit to Bolivia was to share with the young leaders of the affiliated meetings. We were able to meet and share with around 25 young people from Amigos Central, Unión Boliviana Amigos and INELA Bolivia. We had the opportunity to share the vision and mission of FWCC, future plans and projects, and share ideas of plans that we can work on together.
The FWCC-COAL deeply thanks the local arrangements committee, who did an excellent job coordinating travel to the different Annual Meeting. They include: Jhoana Ramos, member of the Section’s Nominating Committee, (INELA Peru), Milena Villca, FWCC Executive Committee (Union Boliviana Amigos), Carmen Rosa Paye, (Bolivian Friends Union), Timoteo Choque and family (INELA-Bolivia), Agustina Callejas and family, (INELA Bolivia) Ruben Maydana (INELA Bolivia), and Florentino Ramos and family (INELA Peru). We appreciate and value their support.

Hurricane Relief Efforts

The impacts from hurricanes ETA and IOTA continue to affect our Central American neighbors, particularly in Nicaragua, Honduras, and Guatemala. Friends locally have been very active in relief efforts, though they are limited by funds.

FWCC has been raising money to pass along to the Yearly Meetings doing this on-the-ground work. As of mid-January, FWCC has raised over $4,500 for Friends in Central America, in addition to other ongoing fundraising efforts in the United States. We are extremely grateful for those of you who have felt able to support this work!

We continue to pray for those in Nicaragua, Honduras and Guatemala who are are still suffering. May God also sustain our brothers and sisters who continue to bring aid and assistance to those in need. More detail about the relief efforts is as follows:

In Guatemala

Embajadores (Ambassadors) Friends Monthly Meeting in Chiquimula and Friend Elder Morales (a current member of the Section’s Finance Committee) have been assisting a group of families, most of whom are Quakers.
The Chaplain Team of Holiness Yearly Meeting of Friends is working with Friends from the National Yearly Meeting to bring food, clothing, mattresses, etc. to families in need.
Shalom Jireh (NGO) and FM Vida: This is a well established ministry including a radio station that has been organizing the purchase and distribution of articles for the victims. They work through a network of local church leaders and transportation volunteers who have been working to organize a fair distribution of food, clothing, etc. to at least 200 families.
Junta Nacional Amigos: This national yearly meeting is working through its regional superintendents at two points in the most affected zone.

In Honduras

Junta Nacional Amigos de Honduras: YM president Arody Ruiz and the pastoral teams in District 8 are located in the most affected zone of Honduras and have been working tirelessly. At the beginning of December they placed an order for new beds to be manufactured, to provide along with other needs.
Hno. Bernabé and Maria Felix Sánchez: (Pastors, First Friends Church, Santa Rosa de Copan) These Friends have been working on providing stoves and work tools so that people can continue their basic tasks, cook their own food and begin to earn money again.

In Nicaragua

We are receiving news of the victims in Nicaragua via El Salvador Yearly Meeting, which includes one of the Salvadoran missionary families, Doris Guardado (former FWCC Regional Coordinator) and Alcides Mejia, who continue ministering to their neighbors, despite the storm and looting damage to their home.

If you are able to give financially to support this ongoing work, you can send a check made out to FWCC Americas with Central American Disaster Relief in the memo. To make an immediate online donation, click here and choose Central American Disaster Relief.

Communications Task List for December 2018-April 2019

The following are opportunities for volunteer service with FWCC Section of the Americas. If you are interested in working on any of the following, please email Robin Mohr, Executive Secretary.

Project: Section Meeting

  • Work with Ian Joyce of August Communications to promote the Section Meeting registration campaign on social media, including Facebook, Twitter and other platforms as agreed. Planning period: December 2018, Active phase: January and February 2019
  • Be a Section Meeting journalist! Write daily reflections for social media during the Section Meeting, interview other participants, take photos, and post daily to Facebook, Twitter and other platforms as agreed. To be compiled into the e-newsletter by Heather Gosse. Active phase: March 20-24, 2019

Project: Traveling Ministry Corps

  • Edit existing video footage from a 90-minute panel presentation in English into 30 second-2 minute snapshots to post to social media and our website to explain what the Traveling Ministry Corps is. Timeframe: one time project
  • Interview TMC members in English or Spanish during their training and the Section Meeting and edit to create 1-3 minute profiles to be posted on our website or other media to encourage invitations. Active phase March 18-24, editing March 24-31.
  • Interview people from an existing list of Friends from meetings that received a TMC visit in 2017 or 2018 and edit to create 1-3 minute videos or 100 word articles and promotional segments for our website and social media. Timeframe: Ongoing and multiple opportunities.

Project: Representative Engagement

  • Recruit initial members for the Communications Resource Group, establish group communication protocols. Timeframe: Initial phase, December 2018-March 2019, then annual opportunities.
  • Interview Representatives at the Section Meeting on topics like “Why FWCC matters to me”, “How I became a Rep”, and “What I wish I had known when I started” and use these interviews to write e-news articles up to 250 words, or record and edit video segments of 30 seconds – 3 minutes. Active phase March 20-24, editing March 24-31.
  • Design a poster-sized calendar of yearly meetings in the Section of the Americas, similar to COAL YM posters. Deadlines: Design March 1, 2019, printed by March 15, 2019, for distribution at Section Meeting.
  • Collect stories from each region in the Section regarding local FWCC activities for enewsletter, social media and website. Timeframe: Ongoing and multiple opportunities.

Project: World Quaker Day

  • Design 2019 flyer for WQD in English and Spanish. Deadlines: Design by March 1, 2019, printed by March 15, 2019.
  • Follow up on World Quaker Day posts from 2018 to expand on stories from worldquakerday.org. Contact people or groups who posted, ask more about the experience and what they learned from it or what difference it made, then edit to create newsletter stories, social media posts, and potentially a fundraising appeal. Timeframe: Multiple opportunities, April 2019-September 2019.

A Tax-Saving Way to Support FWCC

Gathering of Friends from the 2025 Section Meeting

If you are 70½ years old or older, you can take advantage of a simple way to support FWCC and reduce your taxable income at the same time, even if you don’t itemize your deductions on your tax return.

At the end of 2015, legislation was enacted making the “IRA Charitable Rollover” a permanent gift option. With this strategy you can give to FWCC or other qualified charities directly from your IRA without having to pay income tax on the distribution. This is especially important now that the standard deduction has doubled, since many older taxpayers will no longer benefit from itemizing their deductions, including charitable contributions.

If you have not taken your required minimum distribution for the year, an IRA charitable rollover gift can satisfy all or part of that requirement. You can designate the distribution to one organization or split it between several, and these transfers generate neither taxable income nor a tax deduction, so you realize a tax benefit even if you are using the standard deduction.

One catch: to make an IRA charitable rollover gift you must be at least 70 ½, and you must arrange with your IRA custodian or financial institution to make the gift directly to FWCC or another charity—you cannot first take the distribution from your IRA and then distribute the proceeds yourself. If you are interested in knowing more and/or would like to take advantage of this strategy for giving to FWCC, please contact Robin Mohr at robinm@fwccamericas.org to discuss the simple steps involved.

How a Gift Annuity Can Benefit You and FWCC

Many Friends have expressed a desire to increase their financial support of FWCC but are uncertain whether they can afford to make a large gift. A gift annuity through the Mennonite Foundation or Friends Fiduciary Corporation is a great way to help the FWCC Section of the Americas while also securing your own financial future. It’s a gift that provides you with payments for life and frees you from managing funds that you intend to eventually give away. FWCC uses Friends Fiduciary Corporation and the Mennonite Foundation to administer these kinds of planned charitable gifts.

Here’s how a gift annuity works:

You make a gift to the Mennonite Foundation or Friends Fiduciary Corporation designated for FWCC.  You can give cash or marketable securities, including highly appreciated stock. In return, you receive fixed payments for the rest of your life. You can choose to receive the payments for your own lifetime, jointly with your spouse, or even name someone else to receive the payments. The amount you receive depends on your age when you make the gift, and also when you begin the income stream. For example, a 70-year-old would receive payments of 5.6% of the gift amount each year. You receive an immediate charitable income tax deduction for a portion of your gift, and then part of each of your annuity payments is tax free—until you reach your projected life expectancy.

Here’s how it benefits FWCC:

FWCC is delighted to receive funds through a gift annuity. We receive the part of your gift that is left after your death. Gift annuities allow us to anticipate future donations and plan accordingly. After ensuring your financial future, your gift continues as a legacy that ensures our future.

How to learn more:

We’re here to help you decide whether this is a giving strategy that is right for you. We’ll show you exactly what annuity rate and tax savings you would receive if you give a gift, and help you understand what planned giving strategy might benefit you the most.

To request a gift annuity application or for more information, contact:

Robin Mohr of Friends World Committee for Consultation at (215) 241-7157

Gift Annuities Fact Sheet

Introducing the 2018 Traveling Ministry Corps – Spanish speakers!

The Traveling Ministry Corps has named five new members from Central and South America, and they are preparing to serve your meeting or church. In January, the new cohort will meet in the City of Coroico, Bolivia for training.

Get to know each of them, and invite them to share with your Yearly or Monthly meeting. Remember that it does not have to be a large event but a time to share fellowship and the word of God.

Betriz

My name is Beatriz Apaza. I am a member of INELA Bolivia Yearly Meeting. I have had opportunities to serve in missions, first within the Unión Jeventud Evangèlica Los Amigos in Bolivia. Currently, I am volunteering at the Friends International Bilingual Center, a new project that aims to promote teaching based on Quaker principles in service of church and society as a whole. The search for the will and purposes of God led me to meditate on Faith, Hope and Love (1 Corinthians 13) as eternal principles that allow us to transform our way of seeing and understanding things, being guided by the Spirit Holy to be convinced of the Love of God as the greatest gift that man can have without deserving it.

“Let your dreams be bigger than your fears and let your actions be stronger than your words”

Oscar

My name is Oscar Eduardo Rodriguez Merino. I am 22 years old and I am a member of El Salvador Yearly Meeting. Since I was born, my parents instilled in me values ​​of brotherhood and holiness that helped me to grow as a Christian and as a person in society. I am the son of a pastor. I love working with young people. My passion is to give my whole life to the one who loved me on the cross of Calvary, to surrender in adoration. I am Vice President of the Youth Society Friendly Ambassadors in my country, and member of the district board; Serve, the blessed Jesus said! I am very excited to visit and meet more Friends.

Elvis

My name is Elvis Ivan Calderon Morales. I am 21 years old and I am from the Yearly Meeting Embajadores Amigos of Chiquimula, Guatemala. I am an industrial engineering student, and currently serving as the secretary of the council and president of the youth society of my church. I like to play soccer, to play the guitar; I like to serve, to help people. I am very happy to be part of the FWCC Traveling Ministry Corps and I hope to share with many Friends of the Americas.

Yulieed

My name is Yulieed, I am 20 years old and I belong to the Friends Church of Ciudad Victoria, where I attend regularly with all my family. I am a third year Civil Engineering student and what I most enjoy doing is taking care of my large collection of cacti and succulents, and attending the university where I study. I love to run in the afternoon and be in contact with nature. I am very happy to participate in the Traveling Ministry Corps and in to share my testimony with various Friends around the Americas.

Jonatan

My name is Jonatan Mamani, I am from La Paz,  Bolivia, and a member of the INELA Bolivia Yearly Meeting. Since I was a child I have been blessed to be part of the Friends Church and to participate in all of its activities. In the last four years I have been integrating the youth board of UJELAB (Union of Evangelical Youth Friends of Bolivia), visiting rural and some urban churches, and sharing with young people the teachings of the Word of God. All this has been a great experience that the Lord has allowed me to live. Now, as part of the leaders traveling in the CMCA ministry, I have much more to thank God for.

Virginia

My name is Maria Virginia Jalire Pisque. I am 24 years old. I am a member of the Evangelical Friends Church of La Paz, Bolivia. Since I was little I was raised in the Christian life by my parents and grandfather, and I received the call of God at age 15. God has shown me great wonders along the way, showing me my talent in praise, in the solidarity of being able to raise many people internally. I work with people in rural areas, giving help and offering support with the profession of nurse and pharmacist by profession that God proposed. I am now about to finish the career of physiotherapy kinesiology. I believe God showed me these careers so I can help people with limited resources and I feel satisfied because I can talk about the word of God in hospitals.

Introducing the Traveling Ministry Corps

Julie Peyton headshot
Debbie Humphries headshot

Debbie Humphries

Prophetic ministry

Prophetic listening

Unwritten rules of unprogrammed Quakerism

Spiritual wrestling practices for Quakers

Deepening worship

Debbie Humphries grew up Mormon and came to Quakerism in the early 1990s.  Since then she has been a member of Ithaca (NY) Monthly Meeting, Charleston (WV) Monthly Meeting; and currently Hartford (CT) Monthly Meeting. She  is currently clerk of the Ministry and Counsel Committee of New England Yearly Meeting. Debbie teaches at the Yale School of Public Health and conducts research on public health nutrition and community health, both in the US and internationally.

Emily Provance headshot

Emily Provance

Discernment

Courage

Leadings & Concerns

Supporting ministry

Technology & algorithms in relation to social justice

Spiritual gifts & spiritual authority

Emily Provance is a member of Fifteenth Street Monthly Meeting in New York Yearly Meeting. She is engaged in vari-ous spiritual accompaniment and social media-based minis-tries, and she travels with a minute from her monthly and year-ly meetings. Emily brings workshops and discussions for all ages on a variety of topics in Quaker faith and practice, and she seeks to connect particularly with Friends who may be feeling called into ministry. She tutors children in reading.

Julie Peyton headshot

Julie Peyton

Science & faith

Bible & Quaker faith

Prophetic ministry

Evangelicals & Quakers

Julie Peyton is a member of West Hills Friends in Portland, OR, where she clerks the EarthCare Committee, and in the past has served as presiding clerk and recording clerk. In Northwest Yearly Meeting, she has served on the Epis-tle Committee, Nominating, and as an FWCC rep. She cares deeply about a core belief of Friends: that we all have access to the same Spirit, the Spirit who was there at the beginning of creation, and the Spirit that gave forth the Scriptures; thus we can listen together and be led together. She teaches chemistry at the college level.

Chuck Schobert headshot

Chuck Schobert

Traveling Across Branches of Quakerism

Prophetic Ministry

Convergent Friends

Spiritual Deepening

Chuck Schobert is a member of Madison (WI) Monthly Meeting, an unprogrammed congregation within Northern Yearly Meeting. Active in his monthly and yearly meeting, he also clerks an FWCC committee that engages Friends about the work of FWCC. In his ministry, God has called him to travel across the diverse branches of Friends, listen-ing with his heart, seeking common ground and the joy of spiritual transformation. He works as a veterinarian.

Click below to download a printable flyer of these biographies:

Traveling Ministry Corps Prepares

“We send them forth on wings of love”: The FWCC Traveling Ministry Corps.

by Chuck Schobert, Member of the 2016-17 Traveling Ministry Corps.

There were seven of us. Four North Americans and three Bolivians. Evangelical and unprogrammed worship styles. Different languages. Cultures. Social attitudes. We spent just over two FULL days together learning about each other’s spiritual journey’s, sharing worship “styles”, singing, trading experiences of traveling in the Quaker ministry, the joys and the pitfalls. We were the inaugural “class” of the Traveling Ministry Corps of the Friends World Committee for Consultation, Section of the America’s (FWCC-SOA). Despite this time together, we all knew the actual training would be in our travels, with God as our teacher.

We had three trainers, and two elders holding us in prayer (one of whom was NYM’s Susan Greenler). The work went prayerfully deep and God was with us throughout. As we grew closer, I felt God becoming nearer. We were often moved to tears, especially when we talked about the divisions among Friends. Those wounds. Our wounds. And yet, much hope……….embracing the opportunities, the possibilities of our common ground to explore what Friends can do as a prophetic people to bridge those divisions. We came to realize that by crossing our own Quaker divisions, we can take that healing knowledge out into a broken world and “be patterns, be examples”. No one pretended THAT would be easy! These Friends are living their faith into action. And I love them all, these sisters and brothers, even though we don’t agree on every thing. In a broken world, our allies in healing will not always be “like us”.

tmc-560x420
The seven ministers. Clockwise from lower left: Julie Peyton, Northwest Yearly Meeting; Augustina Callejas, National Evangelical Friends Church INELA-Bolivia; Emily Provance, New York Yearly Meeting; Debbie Humphries, New England Yearly Meeting: Estefany Vargas, INELA-Bolivia; Hector Castro, INELA-Bolivia; Chuck Schobert, Northern Yearly Meeting.

The FWCC Section of the America’s plans to make the Traveling Ministry Corps its major focus in 2017. Rather than organize large meetings requiring many Friends to travel great distances at great expense of money and cost to the environment from airplane travel, the intent is to send out ministers by twos, a minister and an elder as companion, to visit or connect with churches and meeting in the Section over the next five years. After a year, our group will meet again in community, to learn from each other and help train the next “class” of the Traveling Ministry Corps, which we hope to be primarily young adult Friends, if that is God’s will.

Immediately following the training, the biannual Section of the America’s meeting began. This rich time was chock full of plenary talks, worship, singing, committee work, good food and fellowship. In the midst of this meeting, the body held a blessing for the seven ministers. We sat in a ring together in the center of the auditorium, full of Friends in worship. The Clerk of the Section spoke of sending the ministers off from the “ring of fire” and shared his image that we were embarking in “little boats” to carry out the work God gives us. At this point, he invited the rest of the Friends, 100 or so, to lay hands on us and asked people approaching the growing circle to continue to lay hands on the people in front of them, forming concentric circles of humans, holding the seven ministers like a woven basket of concentric human circles, holding our little circle of seven in prayer.

The circle of seven ministers surrounded by concentric circles of Friends for the blessing as we are sent out to do God’s work.

A beautiful blessing, writing by Susan Greenler, was read. We continued in silent prayer for several minutes. The circles created a spiritual, human well that was filled with the Living Water of God and love from our friends. I can’t say exactly what happened, but I was changed. Transformed? The quote from the journal of George Fox came to me: “All things were new, and all the creation gave another smell unto me than before, beyond what words can utter”. So I end with Susan’s blessing and the query that came to me after the blessing: “What just happened?”

 

BLESSING FOR TRAVELING MINISTRY CORPS

God of compassion,
God of love,
With Christ’s light, and with God’s love,
We send forth these seven traveling ministers, Part of our world community of Friends.

We send them forth on wings of love,
To share the Gospel ministry as they are called and led. As part of our beloved community.

We hold them tenderly in our hearts.
May they be graced with light and love
As they go forth – open vessels, giving and receiving.

May they be open, vulnerable, protected.
Building bridges of faith,
Opening us all to the power of God’s love and Christ’s spirit.

Blessed be.

—Susan Greenler