
1 March 2010
Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ:
The Christian Education Department at Asia-Pacific Nazarene Theological Seminary invites you and your ministry partners to the
“Creative, Hands-on Children’s Ministry Workshop”
to be held for two weeks, 7-18 June 2010, 9 am – 3 pm. Four international children’s ministry workers will conduct the workshop with emphasis on puppetry including script writing, ventriloquism, storytelling for children, music, and much more (see attached poster). The four presenters come with years of experience ministering to children in many world areas but this is their first time in the Philippines!
Who should come? Christian school teachers and children’s workers in churches and NGOs but everyone is welcome. The event can be taken for graduate credit through APNTS as Instructional Methods & Technology for Children (3 units) or for continuing education as the workshop (4 continuing education units for the 2 weeks).
We recognize that many schools will be starting at that time and so the workshop can be registered for only 1 week (7-11 June, 2.5 CE units) or for both weeks together. The graduate course requires attendance during both weeks and will include additional reading and research beyond the workshop.
Contact Rovina Hatcher, CE Department at APNTS, at rhatcher@apnts.org or 0920-912-1715 for registration for the workshop/course. Inquire at APNTS, 02-284-3741~45, or email the Registrar, Helen Caparas, at hcaparas@apnts.org for admission requirements to the Seminary for the graduate course. APNTS admission information and application form can also be found at www.apnts.edu.ph/admissions.
Attached are a poster and the registration information sheet. The registration form can be completed on the computer and emailed to rhatcher@apnts.org. Please note a 50% discount on the workshop is given to those who have a paid registration before 25 May 2010! Full tuition and fee rates apply for the graduate course.
Kindly pass this information to your teachers and children’s workers and your colleagues.
Grace and peace,
Rovina Hatcher
CE Department Chairperson
Asia-Pacific Nazarene Theological Seminary
Ortigas Ave. Extension, Kaytikling
Taytay 1920 Rizal
CP: 0920-912-1715
In a meeting with Nazarene Compassionate Ministry (NCM represented by Rev. Ilde Detalo, Dan Balayo, Glen Loyola, and Rev. David Phillips) last February 8, 2010, the President of Visayan Forum Foundation Inc., Ma. Cecilia Flores-Oebanda expressed her desire for partnership with Asia-Pacific Nazarene Theological Seminary (APNTS represented by Dr. Robert Donahue, Dr. Lee San Young, Rovina Hatcher, Nativity Petallar, Rene Aril, and Calm Mijares) in the near future. This is given the fact that NCM is already a bonafide member of Visayan Forum (VF) after the signing of the Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) that was conducted on February 11, 2010 during APNTS chapel.
During the meeting, Dr. Robert Donahue, APNTS Step-up Coordinator asked Ms.Oebanda if APNTS could have a partnership with APNTS since the latter is a theological institution and not a non-government organization. The President of VF agreed favourably to Donahue’s suggestion. Being a partner of VF means that the beneficiary would receive funds for the purchase of 2 computer units, one printer, and LCD projector and P40,000 per quarter for IT, Life Skills trainings, and maintenance of utilities for 18 months.
The main objective of this partnership is to fight trafficking of persons in the Philippines. APNTS and NCM have been very active in the Stop Trafficking and Exploitation of People through Unlimited Potential (Step-Up) program by training trainers and out-of-school youth (OSY) since last year. APNTS has trained 165 persons (15 years old and above) in computer basics, life skills, job interview issues, and resume making.
Visayan Forum representatives expressed their desire to do further exploration with APNTS and NCM on large-scale programs in the prevention of human trafficking in the community, church, and school levels. They are so excited to do trainings and advocacy among pastors, teachers, and seminary students. While being in the campus, the APNTS representatives showed the VF representatives the fourth floor of the Nielson’s Center for Christian Education (NCEE) Building and they suggested that when the conference hall is done, they would want to conduct one of their events there. Ms. Oebanda also expressed excitement over the Alternative Learning System (ALS) sessions that will be conducted in APNTS beginning this summer. She asked if APNTS could accommodate two trafficking survivors who are currently in their halfway house in Antipolo City. The APNTS team gave her a positive response since the purpose of the ALS is to alleviate the life situation of children and youth in the community, a common cause that both VF and APNTS share.
Today both NCM and APNTS are used by God to bring about a positive change in the lives of people, not just with those who are already Christians but especially with those who have never experienced the love and grace that only Christ can give.
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APNTS Celebrates 26 years!
By Jarrett Davis
SBO Editorial Chairperson

Surrounded by a host of guests from over the Metro Manila area, Asia-Pacific Nazarene Theological Seminary celebrated the 26th anniversary of it foundation this past November 20th with games, music, and special performances. This was a two-day celebration emphasizing the history, mission, and purpose of APNTS.
The entire school came together to coordinate this memorable APNTS event. Faculty and SBO Council collaborated with the Administrative Council to invite special guests and present even some personal photo albums and memorabilia to display for celebration. Architect Eric Sanchez, General Services Manager for the school, worked late into the nights with his staff setting up tents, hanging lighting, and building the stage on which the culminating “Foundation Day” celebration would take place.
The festivities began on Thursday as the campus community celebrated “Heritage Day” with a well-choreographed chapel service as a means of remembering and celebrating the school’s history and roots. Faculty and students were challenged by Philosophy of Religion professor, Rev. Larnie Sam Tabuena as he shared a bit of APNTS’ History and ethos in a Heritage Address entitled “Blessed to be a Blessing.” Following this, faculty, staff and students shared together in an multi-cultural potluck, enjoying a global pallet of flavors and cuisines.
Friday’s “Foundation Day” event, began early in the morning with a sports festival and continued with an ongoing cultural fair, featuring booths and displays from a few of the cultures currently represented at APNTS. A “heritage booth” displayed nearly 30 years of APNTS memories, with faculty photo albums and historical archives from the library. The afternoon featured a program for community children with clowns, snacks, and games.
The culminating event, a lively “Cultural Extravaganza” brought together Community members, students, faculty, staff and alumni, for an evening of celebration and fun. Academic Dean, Dr Lee San Young comments that having a sense of honor and pride in being who we are can be the stepping stone for continuing our legacy. She adds,
We need to know who we are by knowing our history; we need to know ourselves to set the direction for our future.
Greetings from APNTS current and past Presidents:
Floyd T. Cunningham | LeBron Fairbanks | Hitoshi (Paul) and Mitsuko Fukue | John & Janice Nielson | Don Owens |
November 27, 2009s
Greetings on the 26th anniversary of APNTS,
I so wish that I were there with you celebrating this great event of our twenty-sixth anniversary.
I am tremendously proud of each of the students and faculty members that have assembled at APNTS across the years – so thankful that Dr. Donald Owens invited me to become a part of this institution in its beginning years.
The spirit of APNTS has always been “bridging cultures for Christ,” and creating a “Christ culture” that transcends the barriers of nationality and ethnicity.
Those who have come to APNTS have had the opportunity of building lifelong friendships with those from cultures. About 50 graduates of APNTS are themselves today involved in cross-cultural ministries.
In the last years we have been “building new bridges” to those who are both near and far, drawing others into the community of Christ, and finding ways of partnering with other like-minded believers.
We are fulfilling and developing programs and ministries based upon the vision of APNTS, to be a center of academic excellence and to prepare men and women for ministries in Asia, the Pacific and the world.
As we prepare men and women for other times and places, we are also striving to be right now a holiness-aspiring people of God in the particular time and place that God has put us.
God’s blessings upon you as you participate in this great event,
Floyd T. Cunningham
November 20, 2009
Dear friends and members of the APNTS community, grace and peace to you.
I greet you in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ.
I celebrate with you on Heritage Day, and wish I could join you in the chapel service. You will be blessed and challenged by Rev. Larnie Sam Tabuena’s message. I am in Argentina this weekend, preparing to speak at the graduation ceremony of the Nazarene Seminary of the Southern Cone, in Pilar, Argentina.
My wife, son, and I have great memories of our years on the APNTS campus. We learned so much from the students, faculty, staff and Christian community. Just two weeks ago, I spoke in the chapel of the Nazarene Seminary of the Americas In Costa Rica, from the APNTS scripture verse, “For there is one God, and one mediator between God and man, the person, Christ Jesus” I Timothy 2:15.
Students on the APNTS campus and the Christians with whom we worshipped in the Philippines taught us by word and by deed that the simplicity of holiness is wrapped up in the chorus I heard them sing often,
I’ll say yes, Lord, yes, to Your will and to Your way.
I’ll say yes, Lord, yes, I will trust You and obey.
When Your Spirit speaks to me,
With my whole heart I’ll agree,
And my answer will be yes, Lord, yes.
May God’s grace and abundant blessings be yours on this special day in the life of Asia Pacific Nazarene Theological Seminary.
Gratefully,
E. LeBron Fairbanks
Education Commissioner, Church of the Nazarene,
APNTS president, 1984-1989.
November 17, 2009
To our beloved APNTS family:
We send a warm greeting from Japan to you all in the name of our gracious and compassionate God! We rejoice with you as you celebrate this special Foundation Day of APNTS. We wish we could be there among you to praise the goodness of our Lord together with you.
We have heard of the recent typhoon that hit the Philippines and caused much calamity. We also learned that many neighborhood people in Kaytikling took refuge under your wing and you immediately responded to the needs of these victims of the typhoon. You have shown that you are the light of the world and the salt of the earth through this compassionate ministry. And that is what the seminary education is all about. Our compassionate God is creating men and women of compassion for those in need. But as you all know, we need to be equipped to be of meaningful use for God rather than simply feeling compassionate toward needy people. And the equipping takes time and energy and hard discipline of mind, heart and body. This makes the raison d’etre of APNTS ever more clear. God is preparing you all for the ministry of compassion in all dimensions of life. And we are extremely glad that APNTS is there to help you in such well rounded theological and ministerial concerns. Let us praise the Lord for His gracious hand upon APNTS from the beginning of its history up to the present. Our prayers and love are with you as you continue to move forward with its great mission in Asia-Pacific and beyond. May His blessings and care be upon you especially on this special day of celebration. We miss you very much.
Yours in Christ,
Hitoshi (Paul) and Mitsuko Fukue
It took great faith, for the founders of Asia-Pacific Nazarene Theological Seminary to believe that it was possible to bring people from many cultures and languages to one place and that they could live, study, and worship together in community. But they had that faith, knowing that it was possible through the working of God’s Spirit.
It took prayerful innovation for them to build such a community, for there were no books to guide them and few models for their task. But they knew that such a place could be built if it’s foundation was God’s Word.
It took faithful commitment for many through the years to maintain and strengthen what was begun . . . to celebrate differences, and live together on the basis of the faith we share . . . to be spiritually alive and educationally strong and ministerially relevant. But they were able to do so by relying on God’s Power.
Now new generations must exercise that same faith and implement that same innovation and demonstrate that same commitment. The task will still be totally dependent on God’s Spirit, God’s Word, and God’s Power. “May all who come behind us find us faithful.”
We send our warm greetings, our deep gratitude, and our heartfelt prayers as you celebrate Heritage Day and Foundation day together.
Grace and Peace,
John & Janice Nielson
November 15, 2009
Dear Colleagues and Friends of APNTS:
It is my honor and pleasure to send greetings to you at this important juncture in the life and ministry of Asia-Pacific Nazarene Seminary. Thank you for choosing this moment for reflection on what we are about in a theological enterprise that seeks to “Bridge Cultures for Christ.” I am deeply grateful for the impact that this institution is having in the Asia-Pacific region and beyond.
My admiration for your administration and faculty knows no bounds. I sense personal fulfillment and joy in knowing that the initial vision for such a theological center continues with increasing effectiveness.
May I present you with two of my favorite quotations in the context of the “full-service” mission of the Church and its work. “A person may travel seven thousand miles to communicate Christ, but it is the last thirty inches that makes the difference.” Another one, “In presenting the Gospel in its full-orbed nature, we do well to remind ourselves that a hungry person has no ears.” To build bridges, we must begin where people are. To learn…to serve…to be…that is what we are about at APNTS. The learning environment is wonderful, opportunities to serve are everywhere near at hand, and in the process we become the people of God that He desires that we be.
Recently, my heart was stirred as I learned of the devastation and suffering of our beautiful Filipino people due to the horrendous floods in the greater Manila area. But, I am also moved at the outpouring of compassion and love that the faculty, staff, and student body demonstrated in their response to the mounting needs in the area. That is Christ-likeness in its fullest expression, and in the process of learning and serving, you are discovering that building bridges must begin at home. I am proud of you…..but even more important, our Lord Jesus Christ of the “Good Samaritan” story must be very pleased indeed. May God bless your gathering with a strong sense of His presence. You are in our daily prayers.
Sincerely yours in the Mission,
Don Owens
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NOVEMBER 20, 2009
SPORTS FESTIVAL
8am – 12pm, APNTS Grounds
HERITAGE/CULTURAL FAIR
All Day, APNTS Grounds
CHILDREN’S PROGRAM
2pm-4pm, Wooten Chapel
CULTURAL EXTRAVAGANZA
6pm-8pm, APNTS Grounds
(Bands, Performers, Cultural Presentations)

APNTS “Bridges Cultures” to Bring Medical Help to Surrounding Communities.
by Jarrett Davis
SBO Editorial Chairperson

Since its inception the motto of APNTS has been “bridging cultures for Christ,” believing that great things can be done as cultures partner together in Christ. Perhaps this past November 2th and 3th epitomized that mindset as medical mission teams from Susanville, California and Kiev, Ukraine converged on the APNTS campus, to partner with the school’s Student Body Organization (SBO) and the Supervised Ministry Class, in order to bring free medical care, pharmaceuticals, and pastoral counseling services to the surrounding communities of APNTS.
This event is a part of the continuing commitment and partnership of APNTS with its surrounding communities. Most patients seen in the medical mission came from “Rowenas,” a low-income community located just behind the APNTS compound, on the banks of the creek that flows through the school’s campus.
The SBO council organized the mission, sorting medications and setting up a temporary clinic and pharmacy in “Nazareth Hall,” located on the APNTS Campus. SBO Academic Chair Abby Galzote recalls the intriguing experience of doing “three-way” translation. One of the medical doctors on the mission team spoke only Ukrainian and many of the patients coming to the medial mission spoke only Tagalog, it was Galzote’s job to translate the patient’s Tagalog into English, so that it could be retranslated into Ukrainian and then returned as the doctor responded.
Steven Jones, a medical technician and one of the team’s leaders found the two-day project to be a moving experience. In the process of working together with APNTS faculty and students, he was brought deeply into the midst of the lives of the people living in the community.
Perhaps the timing for such an event could not have been more appropriate. The Rowenas community was strongly affected by Typhoon Ondoy (International Name: Ketsana) only one month prior to this event. The community experienced the loss of many homes and several lives in the storm. Understanding this, the SBO Council members intended for this event to meet the “holistic” concerns of the surrounding communities, not only addressing their medical concerns and bringing physical wellness, but also providing a chance to talk, build relationships, and bring mental and spiritual healing as well.
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2009:First Semester Graduates
With the close of first semester
three students are at the end of their Master of Divinity studies
and are launching into the ministries to which God has called them.

Junichi Nakade with his wife, Mari, is returning to Japan. He says that his life at APNTS was full of trials and when he tried to overcome by his own strength, he was always in panic. “God is faithful; God was always with me,” said Junichi. “I will never forget what God taught me at APNTS. I was encouraged by God showing His love through you (the APNTS community).” Junichi plans to serve God through the Church of the Nazarene in Japan.
During the final chapel of the semester, Marc J. Katalbas reflected on his time at APNTS, telling of the overwhelming realization of how much God loves him. He was freed from preconceived ideas that were inconsistent with Christian faith by belief and he learned how much he still needs to learn. “APNTS as a community has become a part of me and I will treasure you. It was here I experienced God’s presence and how God works.” Marc plans to return with his wife, Lillian Ruth, and his son Marc William, to his province of Negros in the Philippines to minister in the Church of the Nazarene.
Brian Woolery senses a global call to ministry through “the equipping of the saints for the work of ministry.” He challenged his fellow students not to be distracted by anything but to “give your heart fully to the Lord. Even though we leave a place that is comfortable, God’s faithfulness is greater still.” Brian and Julie (2009 M.A. Religious Education graduate) and their son Justin will return to the U.S. to reconnect with family while they await their next assignment.
written by Professor Beverly Gruver

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Isaiah 58:10
and if you spend yourselves in behalf of the hungry
and satisfy the needs of the oppressed,
then your light will rise in the darkness,
and your night will become like the noonday.
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Romans 12:9-13
9Love must be sincere. Hate what is evil; cling to what is good.
10Be devoted to one another in brotherly love.
Honor one another above yourselves.
11Never be lacking in zeal, but keep your spiritual fervor, serving the Lord.
12Be joyful in hope, patient in affliction, faithful in prayer.
13Share with God’s people who are in need. Practice hospitality.
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Therefore, whoever humbles himself like this child is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven.
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Genesis 9:12-16 12
And God said, “This is the sign of the covenant I am making between me and you
and every living creature with you, a covenant for all generations to come:
13 I have set my rainbow in the clouds,
and it will be the sign of the covenant between me and the earth.
14 Whenever I bring clouds over the earth and the rainbow appears in the clouds,
15 I will remember my covenant between me and you
and all living creatures of every kind.
Never again will the waters become a flood to destroy all life. 16
Whenever the rainbow appears in the clouds,
I will see it and remember the everlasting covenant between God
and all living creatures of every kind on the earth.”
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5 Your love, O LORD, reaches to the heavens,

your faithfulness to the skies.

6 Your righteousness is like the mighty mountains,

your justice like the great deep.

O LORD, you preserve both man and beast.

7 How priceless is your unfailing love!

find refuge in the shadow of your wings.

8 They feast on the abundance of your house;

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APNTS evacuees – 092609
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APNTS provides refuge and care for flood evacuees
About 10 a.m. on Saturday, Sept. 26 (Manila time), a torrential rain hit the campus of Asia-Pacific Nazarene Theological Seminary (APNTS) and its environs. Within six hours about 14 inches of rain fell from Typhoon Ketsana (called Ondoy by locals). Quickly, the small Kaytikling Creek that runs through the middle of the campus flooded and overflowed its banks for the first time in more than 26 years.
People began to pour into the seminary seeking shelter. By Saturday night 289 people had registered and were housed in buildings on the APNTS campus. Most of these were from the Rowena informal settlers community that lived on the two sides of the creek adjacent to APNTS. APNTS had already been ministering to this informal settlers community in various ways over the previous years.
At least two children from the community lost their lives in the flood. Professors and students on campus responded effectively to the immediate crisis.
Two areas on the APNTS campus provided housing Saturday and Sunday nights. The APNTS community prepared Sunday morning breakfast for the evacuees and provided other food throughout the day. The Student Body Organization collected dry clothing from students and faculty. One student, a medical technician, treated the minor cuts and scrapes of about 150 persons. Nazarene Compassionate Ministries (NCM) had stored some Crisis Care Kits on campus, and these were distributed.
Water pipes on campus broke. Clean drinking water had to be purchased for both the evacuees and the campus residents. It became difficult to purchase food at nearby markets. The great number of evacuees on campus and lack of water taxed campus facilities. One student volunteer from Burma cleaned the restrooms using rain water. The 300 evacuees stayed on campus until Monday morning, when the municipal government was able to relocate them.
When the water receded, much mud and contamination was left behind, creating a massive clean-up job. Various walls along the perimeter of the campus and within the seminary collapsed, and further rains on Monday threatened more landslides. Not until Monday afternoon was General Services Manager Eric Sanchez able to leave his own home in Marikina, which was flooded waist-high, to inspect the damages on campus. On Monday, students and faculty cleaned the chapel in the middle of campus, which was saturated knee-deep with mud.
The typhoon hit APNTS at the end of its Reading and Research Week; many of the students and several of the faculty were in Baguio, a city to the north, attending the wedding of an APNTS instructor. Major roads to and from the campus were flooded and delayed the return of the students and professors to the campus.
Please pray for:
– Beverly Gruver and Floyd Cunningham contributed to this report.
“Tools that Teach” provided hands-on learning for teachers and pastors of the Central Visayas District, Philippines. Rev. Jun Montecastro, chairperson, and the SDMI board invited Luz (Lilian) Tambongco, a MA-Religious Education student at Asia-Pacific Nazarene Theological Seminary or APNTS to conduct a teacher enrichment workshop at Visayan Nazarene Bible College, Cebu City last February 7-8, 2009. Lilian entitled the workshop “Tools that Teach” with sessions covering motivation, “1001 Ways of Teaching”, basic lesson planning, using recyclable materials to create teaching tools using what is available for visuals and object lessons.
Thirty-one participants, grouped together by their churches, worked to develop lesson plans, create visual aids from materials ready-at-hand, and make group presentations of their work during the sessions. Comments from the participants indicated the value of the workshop through becoming aware of the need to target the heart of the learners, the ease of using common things, and the need for other Sunday school teachers to benefit from such a workshop. Rev. Jun Montecastro expressed a desire to conduct a follow-up workshop with Mrs. Tambongco this summer.
Mrs. Tambongco developed this workshop as a project for Instructional Design, a course taught at APNTS in the Curriculum & Instruction concentration of the MA-Religious Education degree. Luz was also a member of the team of Curriculum & Instruction students who designed and wrote a preschool Bible curriculum, “Growing in God Through Love and Obedience” that is soon to be published.
In the midst of preparations at Asia-Pacific Nazarene Theological Seminary for celebrating our 25th anniversary, we also joined the world-wide celebration of the Centennial of the Church of the Nazarene. Chapel services during the month of October focused attention on the Centennial Celebration of the Church of the Nazarene through featured videos of the church, music through the century, and a challenge to go forward to carry the message of holiness onward. For one quarter of that century, APNTS has been a garden behind walls at Kaytikling corner in Taytay, Rizal. We ponder the limited impact the seminary seems to have made outside those walls, and are seeking ways to intentionally build bridges into the surrounding communities.
Dr. Geneva Silvernail, the Centennial Celebration Coordinator for the Asia-Pacific Region, was the keynote speaker on October 2. Using the backdrop of the big tent in Pilot Point, Texas, she portrayed an outside observer from the town who watched the northerners and southerners gather and unite under the banner of the perfect love of God “shed abroad in their hearts” as they formed the Pentecostal Church of the Nazarene. As her character began to be transformed through watching the power of God at work, so we also felt the transforming work of God in our hearts.
Rev. Jason Hallig challenged us from the book of Habakkuk to cry out to God in his message on October 7. October 9th brought the emphasis from the contribution of the Church of the Nazarene in Korea with the Korean Fellowship group leading the worship, Rev. Kim Byoung Gi teaching us to experience the Korean prayer emphasis, followed by a message toward the future by Prof. Kwon Dong Hwan.
The voice on October 14 was from the 62 years of history of the Church of the Nazarene in the Philippines. Music was in the general tradition of earlier Nazarene congregational singing including the rousing singing of “Wonderful Grace of Jesus.” Dr. Angelito Agbuya-long time pastor of Angeles City Church of the Nazarene, District Superintendent of the Metro Luzon District, former president of Luzon Nazarene Bible College, head of the Angeles Church school, and adjunct professor of APNTS-challenged us to firmly maintain our mission of holiness without compromise while we seek to adapt the message to our ever changing context in the 21st century.

October 16 Sam Tamayo and his group led worship with a blend of the old and the new-all with a focus on bringing our praise to God. Rev. Rovina Hatcher gave the challenge to rethink our strategies to be intergenerational in reaching our world.

Missions professor and director of the Donald Owens School of World Mission presented the Board of Trustees mandate for making APNTS the premier mission training center for the Church of the Nazarene and reviewed the steps that have been taken thus far in making that a reality. He prayed for us all that we would most of all have a passion for God that would translate into a passion to bring the message of Jesus to a needy world-a plentiful harvest needing workers.
The month long celebration concluded with seminary President, Dr. Floyd T. Cunningham, reviewing some of the important moments in Nazarene history with a focus on those who looked at their world with eyes of compassion and hearts filled with God’s perfect love that transforms. He challenged us to inclusivity and the responsibility of having Christ as our vision at Kaytikling corner and beyond.


-by Mrs. Beverly Gruver
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Chapel message delivered on December 11th, 2008 by Dr. Jason Hallig
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Chapel message delivered on December 9th, 2008 by visiting professor Dr. Fletcher Tink
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Dr Tink for six years has served as adjunct professor of Urban and Compassionate Ministries at the Nazarene Theological Seminary, and for four years as the Executive Director for the Bresee Institute for Metro Ministries, a training institution for those seeking or serving in the urban environment.
He has served in urban community development for the Peace Corps in Brasilia, Brazil and as a church planter in pioneer areas of Bolivia. He has taught formal accredited courses in 31 nations for such institutions as Azusa Pacific University, Fuller Seminary, Eastern Nazarene College, Indiana Wesleyan University, Messiah College, European Nazarene Bible College, Alliance Theological Seminary (in Manila), Washington Bible College (DC), and Eastern Mennonite University and MidAmerican Nazarene University and SENDAS (in Costa Rica) He teaches in three languages. All told, he has ministered in, or travelled through 95 countries writing about “signs of the Kingdom” in many of these.
Dr. Tink has pastored in Washington, DC. Minneapolis, Kansas City, Los Angeles, and La Paz and Santa Cruz, Bolivia. He has served as a consultant to World Vision, Pew Foundation, Urban Ventures, and to various denominational boards and committees. He has written extensively on urban and compassionate ministry issues in Christianity Today, Missiology, Holiness Today, Ministry and numerous other magazines and journals.
He is married to Dr Joyce Tombran-Tink, a molecular biologist currently serving as visiting professor at Yale University. They are parents of four children, Kayla Bosworth, Melody Steiner, Amber and Ryan, and have 6 grandchildren.
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Chapel message delivered on December 4th, 2008 by adjunct professor Dr. Resurreccion Reyes.
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Dr. Resurreccion Reyes is a Christian Eduacation Consultant and Freelance Teacher & Lecturer. She has been an adjunct professor at APNTS in Christian Education since 1989 and an Academic Consultant since 1993. She is currently a Bishop at Christian Church Fellowship International Church.
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Chapel message delivered on November 28th, 2008 by professor Dr. Mitchel Modine
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