Page 8A FAITH East Oregonian Friday, October 21, 2016 Ugandan oficial to share about orphanage By TAMMY MALGESINI East Oregonian A trio of Eastern Oregon residents are excited about ongoing projects at the Otino Waa Children’s Village. Scott and Kelly Zielke of Hermiston and Judy Weidert of the Athena Christian Church returned to the Ugandan orphanage this summer to deliver supplies and assist with launching a sustainable chicken farm. The project provides food for nourishment and teaching skills in caring for the chickens. Additional eggs will be sold to help sustain the program. The Zielkes learned about the needs of the village during a mission trip in 2013 with other members of the Stanield Baptist Church. Weidert also has been to the orphanage previously. The public is invited to meet Rev. Dickens Anyati, the Ugandan administrator of Otino Waa, during a pair of presentations in Stanield and Athena. Anyati, a native of Uganda, will speak Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the Stanield Baptist Church, 310 Wheeler Ave., and Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the Athena Christian Church, 458 E. Van Buren St. Anyati will focus on providing an update about the chicken farm project, which received its irst fowl in June, Scott Zielke said. Additional chickens were purchased in August after participants in the vacation Photo contributed by Scott Zielke Children from Otino Waa Children’s Village smile while interacting with area missionaries during a summer trip to Uganda. People can learn more about the orphanage and projects to promote sustainability during presen- tations Tuesday in Stanield and Wednesday in Athena. Bible school at the Herm- iston First Christian Church got on board with a “Buy a Chicken” project. The group, Zielke said, collected enough money to purchase 300 chickens, which were $2 each. In addition, Anyati will share about the vision for Otino Waa. While the purpose of his trip isn’t fundraising, people that are interested in sponsoring a child at the village can get information on how to do that. In 2002, Otino Waa founders Bob and Carol Higgins of Bend learned a rebel group called The Lord’s Resistance Army had their sights on 78 orphans — planning to abduct them near Lira, Uganda. Missionaries at the time, the couple were involved with a water project in the country. The plight of the children tugged on Carol’s heart- strings and the couple sprang to action. With the help of local leaders, they were able to rescue the kids and began taking care for their basic needs. As the year progressed, it became apparent that the children needed longterm care. In 2003, Otino Waa Children’s Village was created just outside Lira. Rather than looking for people to adopt the kids, Zielke said the mission of the orphanage is to provide them with tools to survive, thrive and become self-sufi- cient. The hope is they will become future leaders of their country. “We’re teaching the kids to ish, we’re not just giving them ish,” Zielke said. Residents of the orphanage — which now number about 300 — are divided into groups with eight kids. Serving as house moms, widows from the community care for the “family units.” For more information about the local presentations, call the Zielkes at 541-571- 8153. For more about the children’s village, visit www. otinowaa.org. ——— Contact Community Editor Tammy Malgesini at tmalgesini@eastoregonian. com or 541-564-4539 Community NEW HOPE COMMUNITY CHURCH 1350 S. Highway 395, Hermiston Sunday Worship Services English- Pastor Dave Andrus 9:00 & 10:45 am Spanish- Pastor Genaro Loredo 9:00 & 10:15 am Classes for kids during all services For more information call 541-567-8441 P eace L utheran C hurch 210 NW 9th, Pendleton ELCA Y esterday, Losty the lost of temporary caregiver talked to dog was found. The tiny, me on the phone he wept over once-muddy little dog how much he loved and missed spent a week living with my his dog. So it felt like God must permanent residents, Sammy feel when he sees us get what the Dachsund and Mushu the we love and care for back in our Pekinese, while recovering arms. It really is the best feeling from his wounds in the wild. to restore a relationship, even Felicia, a local lost dog hunter, between humans and dogs. Colin had made it her business to And when the family came to Brown ind his original home. A local the door to pick him up, Losty, Faith policeman had come to the whose real name is Cujo, house and photographed him, became airborne — bouncing hoping to match him with a local dog up and down like a pogo stick. that had gone missing. The policeman Back at the church last week, had no luck. But Felicia’s “dogged” a work party had been quickly resilience had traced a whisper and a organized when news of typhoons photo on lost and found pages to a dog coming to the Oregon coast that looked like Losty. galvanized us. We knew that the tree The dog had been visiting with his limbs leaning over our neighbor’s yard mom from Eugene, who had come to needed to be removed before large leave the dog with her sons while she winds made them misbehave. Randy lew to Texas. Somehow Losty had Yates, our church council president, escaped, and some strange ancient and Joe Taylor, our treasurer who homing instinct made him travel the brought some of his farm workers, quarter mile to the street near me Donna, John, Phyllis and Kurt, came where he was found mud-wrapped and to take off the risky branches and lea-bitten. trim the trees to safe and manageable It’s strange how your heart is size. They did a yeoman’s work that captured so quickly and easily by dogs day and like a grand machine tamed and cats. It was bittersweet to call his the trees and made them safe for our family and talk to them. But when the neighbors. It was perfect timing before adult son who had been given the role the weekend weather, which would, I believe, have cracked a roof or two. Our Sunday was a little light in attendance; the work had taken its toll on some muscles and contorting sinews — and some were suffering from a little sickness with the change of nature’s moods as well. Visiting pianist Sarah Carlson came down from Hermiston to play for us. But the intimate presence and a prayerful restfulness illed the church. I preached that Sunday about persistence — persistence in praying, persistence in wanting. We used the text from Luke about the woman who kept nagging a judge who neither feared God nor man until she got what she wanted, and we used the text from the Old Testament about God struggling with Jacob until Jacob actually made God submit to him and bless him. Strange texts that speak something about the power God has given us in our relationship with him. Our father wants us to struggle for what we want. We are God’s children and this is our place to tend and protect. We are sons and daughters of heaven. ■ Pastor Colin Brown of Boardman’s Good Shepherd Lutheran Church on Locust Road. ~Come and be at Peace ~ on 1290 KUMA noon each Sunday pendletonfaithcenter.org F IRST C HRISTIAN C HURCH Seventh-Day Adventist Church 9:30 Sunday Worship 9:30 am am Sunday Worship 10:30 am Fellowship Refreshments 10:30 am 11:00 am Sunday School & Adult Class (D ISCIPLES OF C HRIST ) 215 N MAIN • PENDLETON Sunday Worship: 10:40a Bible Class: 9:30a Offi ce 276-5358 M-F, 8:30-12:30 WWW.FCCPENDLETON.ORG Community Presbyterian Church 14 Martin Drive, Umatilla, OR 922-3250 Worship: 10 AM Sunday School at 11:30 Saturday Services Pendleton 1401 SW Goodwin Place 276-0882 Sabbath School 9:20 am Worship Service 10:45 am Grace Baptist Church 555 SW 11th, Hermiston 567-9497 Nursery provided for all services Sunday School - 9:30 AM Worship - 10:45 AM 6:00 pm Wed Prayer & Worship - 7:00 PM “Proclaiming God’s word, growing in God’s grace” St. Johns Episcopal Church 585 SW Birch, Pilot Rock, OR 97868 (541) 443-2500 prbconline.blogspot.com Sunday School: 9:30 am Worship Service: 10:45 am Kids’ Club: 6:00 pm Wednesday Services: Youth Group: 7:00 pm OPEN HEARTS – OPEN DOOR www.graceandmercylutheran.org Sunday Worship 9:00 a.m. Sunday School 10:00 a.m. (Nursery Provided) Fellowship, Refreshments & Sunday School Check Out our Facebook Page or Website for More Information 541-289-4535 Tom Inch, Pastor Grace and Mercy Lutheran Church, ELCA 164 E. Main St. / P.O. Box 1108 Hermiston, Oregon 97838 FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH -Presbyterian Church (USA)- 201 SW Dorion Ave. Pendleton Service of Worship - 10:00 am Children’s Sunday School - 10:20 am Fellowship - 11:00 am www.pendletonpresbyterian.com Open Hearted... Open Minded Join Us On Our Journey With Jesus. Scripture, Tradition and Reason Family service 9am Sunday N.E. Gladys Ave & 7th, Hermiston Fr. Dan Lediard, Priest. PH: 567-6672 We are an all inclusive Church who welcomes all. Redeemer Episcopal Church 241 SE Second St. Pendleton (541)276-3809 www.pendletonepiscopal.org Sunday Holy Communion 9:00 a.m. Wednesday Holy Communion Noon Weekly Adults Spiritual Life Group All Are Welcome Come meet Jesus at PENDLETON BAPTIST CHURCH 3202 SW Nye Ave Pendleton, OR 541-276-7590 Sunday Morning Worship 11:00 AM Sunday Bible Classes 9:45 AM Sunday Youth Group 6:00 PM Mon. Community Women’s Study 9:30 AM & 6 PM Awana Kids Club (K-6th grade) Wed Men’s Study 6 PM MOPS meeting the 1st Thur of the Month 6 PM First United Methodist Church Pendleton/Hermiston Pope canonizes Argentina’s ‘gaucho priest’ VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope Francis canonized Argentina’s “gaucho priest” Sunday, bestowing sainthood on the poncho-wearing pastor with whom the irst Argentine pope shares many similarities, from a taste for mate tea to a dedication to bringing the ministry to even the most isolated people. Francis honored Jose Gabriel del Rosario Brochero along with six others in a Mass before a crowd of 80,000 in St. Peter’s Square, saying the new saints, “thanks to prayer, had generous and steadfast hearts.” “The saints are men and women who enter fully into the mystery of prayer. Men and women who struggle with prayer, letting the Holy Spirit pray and struggle in them,” the pope said. Also made into saints were two Italian priests, Lodovico Pavoni and Alfonso Maria Fusco, French martyr Salomone Leclercq, French nun Elis- abeth of the Trinity, Spanish bishop Manuel Gonzalez Garcia and Mexican layman Jose Sanchez del Rio. Born in 1849 in the province of Cordoba, Brochero was one of the most famous Catholics in the Argen- tina of Francis’ youth. He died in 1914 after living for years with leprosy that he was said to have contracted from one of his faithful. Brochero was beatiied in 2013, after Pope Benedict XVI signed off on a miracle attributed to his interces- sion. Francis moved Brochero closer to sainthood soon after being elected pope, and cleared him for sainthood earlier this year. At the time of Brochero’s beatiica- tion, Francis wrote a letter to Argen- tina’s bishops praising Brochero for having had the “smell of his sheep.” Worshiping God Loving People 108 S. Main • 276-9569 Sunday Worship 10:30 am Sr. Pastor, Ray O’Grady Join us Sundays BOARDMAN’S LIMEY PASTOR Losty is found and the trees are made safe Faith Center Church FAITH LUTHERAN CHURCH in Mission for Christ LCMC Bible Study.........9:00 AM Sunday Worship......10:30 AM 352 SE 2nd Street, Pendleton Sunday Worship 9am 541-276-2616 Worship Broadcast on KUMA 1290 @ 11am 191 E. Gladys Ave,Hermiston Sunday Worship 11am 541-567-3002 Worship Livestream at herfumc.com Open Hearts, Open Minds, Open Doors Rev. Dr. Jim Pierce, pastor Red Lion Hotel ( Oregon Trail Room ) www.faithpendleton.org FIRST SERVICE 8:30 AM SECOND SERVICE 10:30 AM 712 SW 27 TH ST. 541-276-1894 www.fcogpendleton.com AP Photo/Andrew Medichini The tapestry of Argentina’s “gaucho priest” Jose Gabriel del Rosario Brochero hangs from the facade of St. Peter’s Basilica prior to the start of a Canonization Mass celebrated by Pope Francis in St. Peter’s Square, at the Vatican, Sunday. The pope canonized Brochero on Sunday along with six others in one of the inal big Masses of his Holy Year of Mercy. That’s a phrase Francis has frequently used to describe his ideal pastor: one who accompanies his lock, walking with them through life’s ups and downs. “He never stayed in the parish ofice. He got on his mule and went out to ind people like a priest of the street — to the point of getting leprosy,” Francis wrote. A papal biographer, Austen Ivereigh, says Brochero exempliies Francis’ idea of a priest. Among the parallels shared by the two Argentines is Brochero’s spirituality, which is deeply rooted in the Jesuit spiritual exercises dear to Francis. Francis, who like Brochero adores his mate tea, has exhorted his pastors to travel to far-lung peripheries to minister to the poor, as Brochero did on his trusty mule Malacara. Argentinians, many waving lags, made the journey themselves to Rome to see Brochero elevated to saint- hood, including Argentine President Mauricio Macri and his wife. “Our saint, he took all that he had off in order to go ahead and in order to help people, in particular the poor ones, especially in the middle of mountains,” said Patricia Elena Zabala, from Villa Gobernador Galvez in Argentina. “He went there with a mule. That’s why he’s represented riding a mule, going along villages and helping people.” Sunday Worship 10:00am Wednesday Bible Study 6:00pm Youth Classes: Nursery - 6th grade Sun & Wed Jr & Sr High Discipleship Program Wed Overcomer’s Outreach Tuesday at 6:00pm - Annex A Christ-centered, 12-Step Recovery Support Group Pastor Sharon Miller 401 Northgate, Pendleton 541-278-8082 www.livingwordcc.com BAHA’I FAITH “The Unity of All Mankind” Pendleton Baha’i Center at 1015 SE Court Place Devotions Sundays @ 11:00am; Everyone invited! (541) 276-9360 visit us at www.pendletonbahais.org To share your worship times call Terri Briggs 541-278-2678