Tuesday, July 29, 2008
Thursday, June 26, 2008
Update on Alex Hallett #2
Good morning!
This morning we received word from Pastor Eric, that Alex went home at 3am after a successful surgery. So Pam and I went over to visit Alex and family around 10am. I am very happy to inform our church family that Alex is in good spirits and, to my surprise, walked out of his room on crutches!!! Our God is truly an awesome God who hears the prayers of His people. Alex even showed me that he could put some weight on his leg. Please continue to pray for him and his family along with Troy and the youth group. God will make great things happen, even in situations like this.
God Bless!
Pastor Dewey
This morning we received word from Pastor Eric, that Alex went home at 3am after a successful surgery. So Pam and I went over to visit Alex and family around 10am. I am very happy to inform our church family that Alex is in good spirits and, to my surprise, walked out of his room on crutches!!! Our God is truly an awesome God who hears the prayers of His people. Alex even showed me that he could put some weight on his leg. Please continue to pray for him and his family along with Troy and the youth group. God will make great things happen, even in situations like this.
God Bless!
Pastor Dewey
Up-date on Alex Hallett
As many of you know Alex Hallett was injured in a water-skiing accident yesterday afternoon at the church youth group water-skiing event at Lucky Peak. He was taken to the hospital via ambulance and required some internal sutchers (sp?) and external stitching as well. He was very fortunate as the cuts from the propeller of the boat missed some key parts in his leg that would have made matters much more difficult.
As it was, he was able to get sewn up and dismissed from the hospital to go home with nurse Mom, Amy at 3:00 AM Thursday morning.
Please pray for Alex and his family.
Pastor Ron
As it was, he was able to get sewn up and dismissed from the hospital to go home with nurse Mom, Amy at 3:00 AM Thursday morning.
Please pray for Alex and his family.
Pastor Ron
Wednesday, June 25, 2008
Pictures from the Baptism Service
We have some new pictures from the baptism service in April. Check it out on the 'pictures & video' page at http://www.kunanaz.com/pics.baptismapril2008.htm
Friday, February 01, 2008
Driveway Delivery

Nazarene Communications Network Story:
Driveway delivery
Norwood, Ohio
Wednesday, January 30, 2008
Norwood, Ohio
Wednesday, January 30, 2008
In his first year as pastor of the Norwood, Ohio, Church of the Nazarene, Timothy Brooks was preparing to drive to church and give his Sunday morning sermon. However, his daughter Mackenzie Nichole Brooks had another plan. The Cincinnati Enquirer tells the story:
Hours after doctors assured Charryse Brooks she was in false labor early Sunday morning, she proved them wrong—in her Norwood, Ohio, driveway.“It was wild,” said her husband, Timothy Brooks, 26.Today (Tuesday, January 29), they brought home daughter Mackenzie Nichole Brooks, their four-pound, three-ounce strawberry-blonde bundle of beauty.“It’s still very surreal,” said Charryse Brooks, 25.
Charryse Brooks and her husband went to Good Samaritan Hospital at 2 A.M. Sunday after she complained of agonizing labor pains.Because Charryse Brooks was in her eighth month of pregnancy—her first—and not due until February 22, she was unsure what to expect. So was her husband who was concentrating on the sermon he was to give later that day.
“All along, I was thinking ‘Whatever happens, please don’t let the baby be born Sunday morning. Not Sunday morning,’” the preacher said.Hospital workers suggested his wife was experiencing false labor and told her to go home.Her husband decided to sleep in to be refreshed for the sermon. Then, he looked over to see his wife “in excruciating pain.”They called their doctor. After they mentioned that they’d just returned from the hospital with a false labor diagnosis, their doctor told her to take two aspirin and relax.“Less than 30 minutes from then, the baby was born,” the preacher said.
Charryse Brooks was wearing, because of her pregnant belly, her husband’s sweat pants. He was able to get socks, a bathrobe and coat—but no shoes—on his wife to waddle her down the front steps toward the car.“She said, ‘I feel like I have to push,’” he said, quoting his wife. “I said, ‘Ooooooh no, don’t push. Don’t do that.’” Her contractions were one minute apart and getting stronger.“I got out to the car and they were just so painful I couldn’t even get the (car) door open,” the new mom said.Her husband was trying to unlock the car door but when he looked at his wife, he knew something was wrong.“She looked at me, right in the eye, so calmly, too. She said, ‘Tim, the baby’s here,’” the preacher said.“I said, ‘What do you mean?’ And she reached down.”The baby had entered the world.“She was in the crotch of my jogging pants,” he said.“It was just so fast,” the new mom said. “It was like ‘Boom!’”Frantic, the father held the baby through the pants to prevent it from falling farther down a pant leg. Then, he decided to act.“I went inside to get towels and, of course, I got yelled at for using the good ones,” he said.
The child was extricated in a delicate balancing act. With his left hand, Brooks quickly pulled the pants down while his right hand swooped in to swaddle his daughter in the good towels.He then took the baby and his wife, still attached by the umbilical cord, to the hospital.“We’ve got to keep life lively,” he joked. “We can’t do anything normally.”
Sunday was a special date for the family for reasons other than the birth of their first child. It also was the 10th anniversary of their first date in Milwaukee and the one-year anniversary of him becoming pastor at the Norwood Church of the Nazarene.His congregants had to do without a sermon Sunday because of the newborn.“They just went ahead and sang,” the new dad said.
Now, their daughter will always have a great story to tell.“You know that party game where everyone tells something interesting about yourself?” her dad asked. “Well, she’s always going to win that game.”
--Timothy Brooks, The Enquirer
Thursday, January 03, 2008
Fellowship: What is it?

I remember hearing the term fellowship defined as two persons in a ship choosing to row in the same direction. In the Greek text the word κοινωνια (koinonia) is translated in the English text with a variety of word choices such as fellowship, participation, communion, contribution, sharing and etcetera. Why so many English words for one Greek word? The Greek word desires to communicate an idea that takes different English words to convey its meaning when it is used in different contexts. I believe the key ideas conveyed in this word are essential to a Christian having a healthy relationship with God and His Church. Let me take a shot at teaching this idea… Κοινωνια (koinonia) is active participation in multiple relationships. It is sharing all of life without withholding oneself from anyone in the family. It is contributing in every area of another’s need. It is communing in one spirit with a community of one’s choice. The Apostle John writes: “We proclaim to you what we have seen and heard, so that you also may have fellowship with us. And our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son, Jesus Christ (1 John 1:3). Christianity is Κοινωνια (koinonia) with God the Father, Son and Holy Spirit. God is fellowshipping with you, participating in the relationship with you, communing with you, sharing all good things with you! Christianity is also Κοινωνια (koinonia) with a local church. We are privileged to choose to actively fellowship, participate, commune, contribute and share with one another as a local family of God.
P.S. I used to think fellowship was another word for a potluck after church.
P.S. I used to think fellowship was another word for a potluck after church.
Monday, November 12, 2007
How to Communicate?
We in the church office are always trying to figure out how to best get the word out on upcoming events. What do you think? Are the tools that we use now adequate? Should we develop a weekly email newsletter? Should we mail out a monthly newsletter? Give us your opinion...
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