Archive for the 'Tell Us About Your Ministry' Category

Amy Buggle Tells Us About Her Ministry

Wednesday, October 10th, 2007

Name: Amy Buggle
Email: dlcnl@att.net
Phone number: 904-387-0370

Comment: I have started a ministry through the Methodist and Presbyterian church that provides child care for children, birth to 22 years, that have disabilities and/or medical problems in an inclusion setting.    

 

DLC Nurse & Learn, Inc. “Where Anything is Possible” 

Mission Statement - DLC Nurse & Learn provides year round education and therapies to children with severe disabilities, giving them and their families the opportunity for self-sufficiency and hope for the future. 

Explanation of Services - We serve students ages birth to 22 years of age. Children ages birth to 6 may attend our full day and preschool inclusion program and students ages 3 - 22 can attend before/after school for educational activities, therapy, and medical care. Any child with a disability or medical problem that prevents them from attending regular day care or other developmental preschools is eligible for our services. Our children have a variety of diagnoses including Arthrogriposis, Tuberous Sclerosis, Taisacs disease, Cerebral Palsy, Down Syndrome and Seizure Disorders which cause multiple disabilities. In addition, many require nursing care for medications, tracheostomy care and gastrostomy tube feedings. We are located on the Westside, but serve children all over Jacksonville and North East Florida. 

Philosophy - DLC Nurse & Learn is a special education school dedicated to meeting all the needs of special needs children in a Christian, loving atmosphere. Our program is based upon the idea that children with handicaps are children first and their potential is ours to discover. We strive to help each child reach this potential by providing normalized activities geared toward individual skill levels. We believe this is best done when therapies are incorporated into daily activities. At DLC, our attitude gives your child the opportunity to say “Yes, I can!” 

Vision - Our vision is to serve all children in Jacksonville that need our services, regardless of their families’ ability to pay. In the future we hope to have DLC programs in all areas of Jacksonville to be more accessible to all children with special needs.             

    

 

Tell Us About Your Ministry

Wednesday, August 22nd, 2007

Colleen Brennan of Comfort Prints (www.comfortprints.com) writes: 

Our site straightforwardly addresses the needs of the disability community by giving them the comfort and love of the Lord in the situations in life that are hard to face in their own strength.  The customers who come to our site usually need comfort and hope to face life.  We have many testimonies of people from hospitals and people with disabilities who are home bound who constantly tell us the pictures they purchased give them a visual, tangible view of the Lord being with them.  Sometimes they feel that the outside world does not understand the hardships they face and they feel isolated and alone.  I myself am on disability and have to work from home.  I know what the struggles of being disabled can be.  

Visit the site at www.comfortprints.com to learn more.   

Meet Friendship Unlimited

Monday, July 2nd, 2007

Friendship who? Friendship Unlimited! We’re the other “Friendship” ministry group, the one you don’t know about – yet. The following Scripture verse, Acts 4:13 in our brochure describes the essence of who we are: “When they saw the courage of Peter and John and realized that they were unschooled, ordinary men, they were astonished and they took note that these men had been with Jesus.” (NIV) (Italics added for emphasis.) This, almost 2,000-year old verse rings true today, in our ministry.

Dave Morsch and I lead a ministry for developmentally challenged adults at Northport Baptist Church on Long Island (New York). As the disciples, Peter and John, we also are two ordinary, unschooled people. (We are unschooled in disability education.) Additionally, God has blessed us by allowing us to use our own disabilities to have a greater understanding and compassion for our ministry friends.

Dave and I were called by God to volunteer, 12 and 10 years ago, respectively, to fulfill His plan for our lives. Three years ago, we were named missionaries to this population. The following is our mission statement: Our mission is to love and train our friends with disabilities in the truth of the Gospel and to equip them for ministry. We desire to instill sound teaching and godly competence so that they might share God’s love and power with each other, the Body of Christ and the lost..

Our great hope is to see that no one with disabilities be left out of church and community through these Christ-centered programs:      

 

  • A weekly adult special ed. Sunday school.
  • A weekly small group (Cell-Life) outreach to group homes (on a rotating basis).
  • A yearly disability awareness weekend.
  • Special events.
  • “The Extra Mile”, a personal and family helps ministry.
  • “Special Touch”, a hospital visitation ministry.
  • “Safehaven”, a special needs family support ministry, meeting twice a month.
  • “Open Heart”, a support group for families living with autism (in the formation stage).
     

We also publish a quarterly newsletter – for, to and by the able-disabled called “Friends for Heaven’s Sake”. If you would like to receive a free subscription, please e-mail us at pastor@nbc.org with your name and address.

Running these programs could not be accomplished without our staff of faithful, dedicated and godly volunteers including our pastor, Mike O’Connor. These programs have afforded all of us many wonderful and lasting relationships with special people who love and accept us with God’s unconditional love. The feeling is mutual!

New York is not a place very open to hearing the Gospel. Bringing the Good News to those who are shut in (and therefore shut out) can be a daunting objective here. Our ministry growth is slow. Our Sunday school for example usually numbers between 12 and 20 (including volunteers). But our church is expanding and soon we will be moving into a new and larger classroom. (One of our students said about our current crowded “kitchen” classroom, “We’re like sardines; it’s like riding the subway to the Bronx). Other future plans include: A respite/socialization program called HUG (His Unlimited Grace), a one-on-one buddy program and a mental illness support ministry.

I am reminded of a verse and the refrain of an old Christian hymn written in 1924 by Kittie L. Suffield entitled, “Little is Much” (When God is in It). It was inspired by Matthew 14:20 (the loaves and the fishes).

 

“Does the place you’re called to labor 

Seem too small and little known? 

It is great if God is in it, 

And He’ll not forget His own.” 

 

“Little is much when God is in it! 

Labor “not for wealth and fame. 

There’s a crown and you can win it, 

If you go in Jesus’ Name.” 

 

Submitted by:

Roberta Lowenthal

Co-Director, Friendship Unlimited Ministries

Publisher, “Friends for Heaven’s Sake” newsletter

June 2007

 

Special Needs Ministry Celebration Sunday

Thursday, April 19th, 2007

The May 2007 issue of our Connections newsletter gives details of Celebration Sunday at Pentecostal House of God, Detroit Michigan. Click below to see a copy of the printed program from the event.

Celebration_Sunday_PHG.pdf 

Tuesday, November 21st, 2006

Crossroads_Pics.pdf

Crossroads Celebrates First Respite Success

Monday, November 20th, 2006

By Harmony Hensley, Special Needs Team Leader

On Friday September 29th, 2006, Crossroads Community Church, Cincinnati, Ohio, celebrated their first Respite Event for families of children with special needs. Crossroads Special Needs Team planned a huge respite Pajama Party, and invited the entire Special Needs community.

Members of the special needs team began planning the event three months earlier. They thought through the entire experience and tailored the event to meet the needs of families that would be invited. The team realized that many parents of special kids are statistically more likely experience financial strain and would not be able to afford a night out. The organizers decided to contact about 200 restaurants, seeking discounts for the night of the event. The goal was to have a list of 20 vendors that would offer special discounts for the parents. God provided, the community responded, and 22 vendors agreed to participate. Ten restaurants offered “blanket” discounts to anyone presenting a certificate showing they were part of the Respite Event. Twelve other restaurants donated gift cards, or dinner certificates. Three pizza companies donated a total of 70 pizzas to feed kids and volunteers for the evening. The team also compiled a list of things that were happening in the city including movie times, and art gallery openings.

The planning team realized that many of the kids that would be attending would have profound special needs, including some who would be considered “medically fragile”. A team of doctors and nurses recruited and volunteered to come and staff the event. The medical team, a huge blessing to the families, met parents at the registration table. It was wonderful to go room to room throughout the night seeing medically trained volunteers administering medications, and doing G-tube feedings. Having doctors and nurses on hand gave parents peace, knowing their kids would be in good hands for the evening.

The event went from 5:30 - 9:30 PM in order to ensure that parents had ample time to go to dinner, take in a movie, or go shopping. When parents arrived there was a team of volunteers to meet them curbside to and help them unload and get inside. After registration, parents were escorted to their kid’s rooms for the evening. Then they were walked back to the entryway where they met Parents working the “Parents Resource Booth”. There they learned about the Community Group for Parents of Children with Special Needs, as well as other services available within the community. They were then walked to the “Concierge” booth where they were briefed on events and restaurant offers for the evenings. Then the parents were off for a night on the town.

Kids were divided by age group and were each paired with a volunteer who was their buddy for the evening. Even the siblings of the special needs kids got a buddy for the evening to make them feel loved. The kids began their Pajama party with a pizza picnic with their new friends. Once the pizza was gone, kids were greeted by surprise guests Mr. Red (Mascot, Cincinnati Reds Baseball Team) and Caleb Miller (Linebacker, NFL Cincinnati Bengals). Each child got their picture taken with the celebrities and received an autographed cover from Sports Illustrated, featuring Caleb Miller. The kids were beyond thrilled! One little girl made a very special connection with Mr. Red. She was nonverbal and communicated through gesturing. Mr. Red is not allowed to speak while he is in costume, and communicates through gesturing as well. The little girl was so excited and intrigued by this mystery person who spoke her language. She followed him around the entire evening. Once he changed out of his costume, Mr. Red was visibly moved by his interaction with the little girl.

Once they met the celebrity guests the party really took off. The kids rotated between a music station, where they listened to a live band, to an art station, where they made fabric pajama people, and then wrapped up the evening with a Movie Marathon!

At the close of the evening, a team of greeters gathered to welcome the parents coming to pick up their children. The parents were escorted to their children’s rooms and then brought back to the Concierge Booth were they received a flower to cap the evening off.

One hundred and two kids attended the first ever Respite Event, with 56 of them having special needs. Of the total attending, only 13 were from Crossroads, with the remainder being kids who have never been to the church before! Many of the families learned of the event from the local news, where the outreach was featured twice in the weeks leading up to the event. (see www.wcpo.com - 9 On Your Kids Side Stories) There were 130 volunteers who staffed the event with some who drove two hours to volunteer at the event.

Parents were tearful as they left that night. Many of them hugged volunteers, shared their tearful stories, and thanked everyone for the break. It was very clear that these families where in need of the love of Jesus and Respite spoke that to them that Friday night. God moved in huge ways that night, and lives were changed, both in the families and the volunteers that served.