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    WriterKarinWriterKarinA daughter, wife, mom, and fundraiser who loves words and working at Messiah Village. Away from the office, I enjoy cooking, the symphony, r...

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  • 28 Jul
    NateTheTech

    From Here to Alaska

    NateTheTech

    Two people from our community here at Messiah Village, Mel Miller (Construction Services) and Carl Ginder (VP of Planning) spend some time away from work volunteering with LightShine Ministries. Over the past couple of years they have been going to Alaska to do some of their work. Their work has been highlighted in the Mount Joy – Elizabethtown Merchandiser. Below is the article or you can check it out here.

    Organization’s Efforts Shine To Alaska And Minnesota

    By Krista Hurley July 28th 2010

    Each year, LightShine Ministries provides a number of volunteer opportunities to individuals of various ages and skill levels. The organization, which is based in Mount Joy, focuses on meeting a host of different needs in Alaskan towns while also working, at times, with ministries in the contiguous states.

    Recently, four teams of volunteers did their parts to make a difference in the areas of Eagle, Seldovia, and Globe Creek Camp in Alaska. Volunteers also offered their services at a retreat center in Minnesota. All who take part in LightShine’s trips are responsible for funding their own trip, and recent trip participants noted that they are thankful for the generous support they received.

    Larry Newell helped to lead a five-member team as it worked in Eagle as a follow-up to last year’s disaster relief team. In four days, they helped to construct a church by building the walls and setting the roof trusses. “It was great,” Newell recalled. “We worked our tails off, but we had a great time.”

    A six-member team, led by Mel Miller, traveled to Globe Creek Camp to provide their services. “It’s a Christian camp that’s being built for summer and winter camp activity,” Miller explained. Three years ago, the only structure at the camp was a partially finished lodge. Since then, teams from LightShine and other ministries have helped to build two cabins, finish the lodge, and more. The recent team met its goal of constructing a utility building, complete with fresh water tanks, water heaters, a generator, and a furnace.

    Mel and Carl in Alaska - Photo by Krista Hurley

    Mel and Carl in Alaska - Photo by Krista Hurley

    The Globe Creek and Eagle teams then united for the final week of their respective trips, during which they helped out at a retreat center in Seldovia. Last year, a team had started to construct a lodge. This year, the group continued this work by finishing the roof, building a loft and a stairway, closing the gable ends, and more.

    With the number of trips that LightShine plans to Alaska each year, it is no secret that the teams make a difference in the towns in which they work. While the organization was able to make a difference without a van of its own, director Tom Denlinger knew that a vehicle would be helpful for the transportation of teams and materials.

    Recently, Lancaster County resident George Calder donated a van, and a local repair shop performed maintenance on the vehicle. A team from LCBC volunteered to drive the van, a trailer, and a donated sound system from Lancaster County to Alaska. According to team member Bob Bender, the nearly 5,000-mile trip spanned four days filled with spectacular sights. “My favorite part was probably going through British Columbia through the Rockies,” Bender said. “We saw nine black bear in British Columbia. We saw elk, caribou, moose, (and) mountain sheep,” he recalled.

    The fourth team stayed a bit closer to home, working at a retreat center in Minnesota. According to team member Jerry Polizzi, the center will eventually be available to host pastoral retreats. Last year, LightShine’s father-son team cleared land on the property, and this year’s four-man team built a chapel at the retreat center.

    “There are still a few more trips coming up this year,” Polizzi noted, explaining that anyone who is willing to work, regardless of age or skill level, is welcome to sign up. He explained that participants do more than physical labor, as they also build relationships with residents of Alaska by encouraging them, listening to their stories, and more.

    More information about the upcoming trips or about LightShine Ministries may be found at www.lightshineministries.org.

    Photo By Krista Hurley

    Photo By Krista Hurley

    27 Jul
    WordNerd

    Sour Cherries, Sweet Memories

    WordNerd

    WordNerd's cherry pie

    WordNerd's cherry pie

    Residents of Messiah Village may recognize this picture from our in-house TV channel 78. This is a photo of a sour cherry pie I made earlier this summer. People who know me well know that I come from a long line of uninterested cooks. When my mother passed away, she left, not a recipe book, but an address book full of caterers’ and bakers’ phone numbers. So, when I am occasionally inspired to do something in my kitchen other than walk through it to the backyard, I take photos.

    My love of sour cherries goes way back. When I lived in Maryland, a friend and I spent every summer Saturday in a pick-your-own field at Larriland Farms. We would pick buckets and buckets of sour cherries, and my friend would make containers of sour cherry jam.

    Longing for that flavor again when I moved to PA, I tried the less labor intensive endeavor of pie making, made even less labor intensive with two invaluable tools: the chef’s grade cherry pitter and Pillsbury pre-made pie crusts. The cherry pitter lay to rest an earlier monstrously tedious process of poking pits out of cherries with a shortened drinking straw. The Pillsbury pie crusts made the whole thing possible because, in the words of fellow blogger, KBiz, “I can’t be bothered” making pie crusts from scratch.

    The pie in the photo represents two recent upgrades to my pie making process. This is the first pie made with the new pie plate my husband got me for my birthday. The golden sheen on the crust? You can thank my mother. A few years ago, we were having one of those lazy Sunday morning phone conversations. I told her I was making a pie and needed to remember to separate an egg so I could brush the crust with egg whites. “You should use the whole egg on the crust,” she corrected. “Because that’s how you did your pies?” I snarked to the backseat pie maker on the other end of the phone. “Food Network. Paula Deen. I saw it on TV,” she replied. And she was right. It did look better.

    Have you surprised anyone with your culinary prowess lately? Consider showcasing your talents at the Messiah Village Chili Cookoff on Friday, September 10! Or, if you view cooking as a spectator sport, stay tuned for more information on Messiah Village’s Chef Face-Off, happening this fall.

    23 Jul
    NateTheTech

    Friday Fun – Garden Wandering

    NateTheTech

    I was out taking pictures the other day for an upcoming article in Village Life and I happened upon the most peaceful deer I had ever seen. I asked the deer if i could take a picture with him. He said yes.

    If we used this picture in Village Life, how would you caption it???

    This deer hangs around the gardens quite a bit. Have you seen him? Have you ever had you picture taken with this deer?

    20 Jul
    PRGuruKristen

    Gardening for Life

    PRGuruKristen

    7-08 Campus Beauty (3)B

    Recently, I enjoyed spending an hour walking through our vegetable gardens with a few of our resident gardeners. Mary Klaus, a reporter from the Patriot News, was here to write a story on community gardening. It was fun to interact with a few of the 25+ vegetable gardeners we have on campus. I enjoyed seeing each person share what they had grown with the reporter as she snapped pictures of each person on a very hot and humid afternoon. There were zucchini, peppers, tomatoes, parsnips, cucumbers, and much more! A few of the gardeners even had grown flowers to help beautify the area for all to enjoy.

     Jerry and Carolyn Rutherford who head up the Garden Committee, invited the group into their home after the tour for some cold water and to continue the conversation. The gardeners told the reporter about the composting that is done and picked up by the grounds crew and how the water that is used to water the gardens is collected from Spring Run into a cistern. We talked about canning, freezing, and storing vegetables to last all winter and even into the next spring. It was obvious from the conversation that each person has enjoyed gardening for most of their life. After moving to Messiah Village they were able to continue that tradition with a little help from the grounds crew who till the ground each fall and spring. The planting, weeding, and watering are the responsibility of each gardener who is given a plot of the garden each spring from the Garden Committee.

     It was really nice to hear about the generosity of our gardeners who share the produce they have grown with other residents. One gardener has a table outside of his apartment that is a “free” table for anyone who passes by. It doesn’t take long for his vegetables to be snatched up by other residents who live in his hallway.

     I have grown in my appreciation for the work and joy of gardening from my husband who has grown a vegetable garden the last three summers. He loves it and enjoys spending many hours caring for it. I can see how it would be hard to give up gardening once it is in your blood. I’m so thankful that at Messiah Village residents do not need to give up gardening of vegetables or flowers after they move-in and make Messiah Village their home!

    Gardening is about enjoying the smell of things growing in the soil, getting dirty without feeling guilty, and generally taking the time to soak up a little peace and serenity.  ~Lindley Karstens

    16 Jul
    NateTheTech

    Friday Fun – Blast from the past

    NateTheTech

    If you didn’t know that Messiah Village hasn’t always been located in Mechanicsburg, PA. We used to be located in downtown Harrisburg, PA. Well back in 1978 after transforming part of 80+acres of land into a burgeoning community, we moved from Paxton Street to Mt. Allen Drive.

    Here’s a picture of us moving in to the new Messiah Village.

     Ryder truck unloads at Messiah Village

    15 Jul
    ClownCollector

    Pets and other animals I have known and loved

    ClownCollector

    It is my opinion that we humans are a combination of many things but most of all heredity and environment. Having said that I think I must have been born loving animals. It comes both from my heredity and my environment. Many of my descendants and all three of my children are or were animal lovers.
    I have had many pets in my life particularly during the years I had  children growing up. Some I wouldn’t have chosen. There have been the usual dogs and cats and one parakeet. Others included hamsters, guinea pigs, a bunny, a white rat (that was definitely not my idea) and  white mice. I would like to tell you about a few special ones.
    My first memory of a beloved pet was a little dog named Sandy that I never actually saw.

    Sandy

    Sandy

    But I did see a picture of her and remember my mother telling me that she was supposed to be my little dog. It seems someone in the family took it upon themselves to find Sandy a new home before I came along, thinking it was a favor to my mother. I don’t think she ever saw it that way. There was a long time after that we didn’t have any pets,  until I was about 12 or so. Then came a cat named Ytag, because she was found in a Ytag truck.

    The important thing about her was we had her for a  long time. Once she somehow cut her foot and left bloody paw prints all over the place. It was the morning of a school day and I refused to go to school until she was found and fixed. After much searching we did find her and my mother treated her cut and she got better. I was just so beside myself because I didn’t know where she was or what was going to happen to her. She later presented us with two kittens Tommy and Jerry. I honestly can’t remember what happened to any of them. It’ been a long  time since I was twelve. A really long time. Then a few years later I dragged home a puppy and persuaded my parents we just had to keep him. He was a little black and white pup who looked like Snoopy and we did keep him and named him Buttons. He was still with my family when I left home. Later when I came home to visit and was pregnant with my first child, Buttons wound have nothing to do with me. This broke my heart as we had been so close. He was my dog and I loved him and things were never the same after that.

    It was another dry period in the pet department for me. But later on we took in a stray collie that must have been abused and was terribly frightened. Then still later after many changes in my life we moved to California and enter Tigger the dog I never got over. I wasn’t looking to get a dog, my hands were pretty full with three kids, no family around and very little money coming in. But the place we lived in was in San Diego and the landlord ask me if we would take this dog as it had belonged to a sailor who was shipped out and just left him. My first impression of Tigger was he was the ugliest dog I had ever seen. He turned out to be the best pet I ever had.

    Tigger

    Tigger

    He looked like he might be part Boxer and to this day I  still have a soft spot in my heart for dogs that look like him.  He was tan and white and his face was a little longer than a real boxer. He was smart, loyal, protective and just the best dog ever. He could be spiteful and when he was he took it out on my books (I still have a chewed up cook book) and my daughters dolls. But all in all he was wonderful. I could go outside and call my daughter who was about five then and he would pop up and I knew just where she was as he was always with her protecting her.
    When I had to drive anywhere he would go along and I felt safe because he was so protective of us. He came back to Pennsylvania with us and remained an important part of our family. When he finally did leave us the entire family walked around crying for a long time after. Above all the pets I have ever had he is the one that lives on in my heart the most. Words just can’t do justice to what a wonderful pet, friend and companion he was.

    There have  been more dogs and cats since him and I loved each and every one of them.
    We presently have two cats Squirt and Ebony and being an empty nester they have become my babies. Squirt is ten now and is a twenty pound tiger cat and pretty lazy.

    Ebony

    Ebony is five and a beautiful black and white tuxedo cat. I love then so much and can’t imagine life without them. It is so interesting at this point in my life without the distractions of kids or a job to really watch them and see the different personalities.

    Squirt & Ebony

    Squirt & Ebony

    Squirt has attitude and thinks he is the boss. He tries to see how far he can push us at times. Ebony is sensitive and pouts when she don’t get enough attention. Our  veterinarian says “they have us well trained” and I guess she’s right.

    There have also been a few pets of friends and relatives that have tugged at my heart stings in a special way. Mandy, a friends dog,  Warlock,

    Warlock

    Warlock

    my parents black great Dane a wonderful and noble animal and Sheba,  the dog of my step daughter and the sweetest dog  who I really grew to love. So if you know me or meet me you will have known a great animal lover and now you have gotten to know a little about some of the animals that made me love them.

    13 Jul
    Pathways4Learning

    Guessing Games…a Real “Pathways Challenge”!

    Pathways4Learning

    Do you enjoy “guessing games”?  Well, it seems that most of us do even if we won’t admit it!  From childhood through older adult years, we play everything from “I Spy” to “Charades” to “Pictionary”!  And many of us enjoy TV shows such as “Jeopardy”.  On a more personal note, most of us can probably recall games we played at family reunions and gatherings when we guessed how many peanuts or beans were in a large jar…and sometimes, we even won a prize!


    My father loved guessing more than anyone I’ve ever known.  Every day he would come up with more new questions!  When we got home from school, he couldn’t wait to quiz us about current news events, what kind of wild animal he had seen, or who had stopped by the farm that day.  We didn’t receive any prizes, but we certainly laughed and enjoyed those special times.

    Did you know that the Pathways Institute for Lifelong Learning® held its first ever “Pathways Challenge” on May 28, 2010?  This event was the ultimate “guessing game”.  Everyone had loads of fun and forgot about their worries for the day!


    So if you enjoy learning new things and guessing for fun, please consider signing up for some of the fascinating new Pathways classes this fall…and treat yourself to an enjoyable “challenge”!  To learn more, check out the Pathways Institute website at:  www.thepathwaysinstitute.org or call 717-591-7213.  We look forward to hearing from you soon!

    12 Jul
    MVpresident

    Representing!

    MVpresident

    Today I am still representing the Village at the Brethren in Christ Church General Conference at Messiah College that started on Friday and will end this evening. Every two years about 400 delegates from North America meet to be inspired and do the business of the Church.

    conference

    We at the Village exist because of the vision and efforts of Brethren In Christ members. Two things particularly stand out from the Conference: (1) A report that touched me deeply was that the Zimbabwe BIC Church gave $1,000 to help the people of Haiti. Zimbabwe is one of the poorest countries in the world, so for them to give to others is truly generous. (2) Last night Pastor Woody Dalton of the Harrisburg BIC Church talked about how God desires diversity. Woody outlined the demographic transition that is coming to America, including Central PA. He made it clear that we need to learn to worship, live and work in a multi-cultural and multi-ethnic community. I was challenged to think how we at the Village can be a more inviting multi-cultural and multi-ethnic workplace. And, how can we begin to embrace more residents and clients from a variety of cultures and ethnic backgrounds.

    9 Jul
    NateTheTech

    Friday Fun – Video Fun with Volunteers

    NateTheTech

    Just a few short weeks back, Messiah Village held a big celebration to honor all our volunteers. Some of our employees composed a little ditty and sang it to all our volunteers.  Live…in person…with gobs of people watching. Nothing to be nervous about at all… Except the dreaded video camera that caught the whole thing…

    Click on picture for Video

    Click on the picture for video

    8 Jul
    TeeTutor

    PA Governor Visits Area School for Budget Signing

    TeeTutor

    Yes, as of noon on Tuesday, July 6, the Pennsylvania State Budget was signed by Gov. Ed Rendell.  Since the signing was to occur at the nearby Elmwood Elementary School in Mechanicsburg, we went to that event. It was scheduled in the cafeteria and my husband and I were the first to be seated. Then cameras began to arrive and finally there were 14 television and newspaper cameras. Several photographers went to the table and took close pictures of the document page that the governor would sign.

    A young girl sitting in front of us was dressed in red, white and blue with a head dress that had two red, white and blue stars.  After a couple of hundred people arrived some teachers escorted a group of about 50 students from first through fifth grade who sat on the floor in front of the table where the signing would occur. Next Gov. Rendell was introduced by the Superintendent of the Mechanicsburg School District. The governor said that Elmwood School was a symbol of the progress that has been made via special educational funding. The PSSA testing this past year indicated the 80% of Elmwood students are on or above grade level. Mathematics scores had improved more than reading scores but the existing reading scores were already above mathematics scores.

    The governor said, “After the intense debate and tough choices we had to make to craft this budget, I’m gratified that the General Assembly and I could agree that continued investment in education is tremendously important to Pennsylvania’s kids and an investment in the commonwealth’s future,”

    After the budget was signed the governor asked students a few questions and when the student who answered was correct the governor gave him or her a pen with the state symbol on it. The governor stayed for awhile and had his picture taken with some students.

    It was an interesting event to occur in our nearby school.

    PA Bud 001 (9)