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Greetings,
Hopefully
your February is going well. In this Wesley Foundation Update we will
be looking at the accomplishments of U of I Wesley Foundation Alumni,
the work of the students at the Wesley Foundation at Iowa State
University, accounts from people involved with the Wesley Foundation at
the University of Northern Iowa, and an inspirational story about two
students who are active in a Wesley Foundation in Florida.
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University of Iowa
Wesley Foundation Celebrates the
Accomplishments of Three Alums
Three alumni of the Wesley
Foundation at the
University of
Iowa have distinguished themselves this month. The Iliff School of
Theology named Courtney Ball Outstanding Young Alumnus. Courtney
graduated from the University of Iowa and
participated in the Wesley Foundation's Peer Ministry Program. Anna Blaedel and Eric
Swanson will both be ordained
elders this June and received into their respective annual conferences
as full
members. Anna and Eric submitted
their answers to the ordination questions, the Board of Ordained
Ministry
examined them, and they were affirmed as ready to be ordained as Elders
in the
United Methodist Church. Anna will
be ordained in the Iowa Annual Conference and Eric in the Great Rivers
Annual
Conference. Anna currently serves
as pastor in Osage, Iowa, and Eric serves at First United Methodist
Church in
Peoria, IL. They both participated
in the Wesley Foundation's Peer Ministry Program. The Wesley Foundation
at the University of Iowa is pleased
for these three individuals and celebrate their leadership in the life
of the
church.
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Iowa State University
The Wesley
Foundation at Iowa State recently held
a Prayer
Vigil for those suffering from and working to relieve the devastation of
the
earthquake in Haiti. Seeking to "give hands and feet to their prayers"
the
students decided to commit their next "Supermarket Stakeout" to provide
components of United Methodist Committee on Relief "health kits".
The students, aware of a need
to keep other
projects in our
hearts and minds, decided to also collect non-perishable food items for
the
Mid-Iowa Community Action food pantry at the same "Supermarket
Stakeout".
Then, after learning a member of our community of faith is planning a
trip to
the Philippines and collecting vitamins for women and children there,
this
third project was added to the list of items people were asked to
donate.
Since the Supermarket Stakeout
took place just prior to "press
time" we
don't have amounts to share, but the Supermarket Stakeout, and the
learning
process which went into planning and carrying it out, were extremely
valuable.
A team of Wesley Students from
ISU also
participated in a
"College Connection" trip to Walnut Hills UMC where they shared their
college
and campus ministry experiences with the Sr. High youth group. The
following is what a student said about this experience
''On Wednesday, January 27th, some members of the Collegiate
United
Methodist Church and Wesley Foundation visited the high school youth
group at Walnut Hills Methodist Church as part of our College
Connections outreach initiative. There we shared our experiences as
members of the Wesley Foundation, explaining what a Wesley Foundation is
and what it does. We had a great time with the group and look forward
to visiting other churches in the future. If you would be interested in
having us visit you, please contact Campus Pastor
Jim Shirbroun at jim@cwames.org.''
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University of
Northern Iowa
Here are accounts from two people
involved in the Wesley Foundation at the University of Northern Iowa.
Tom Early, an Episcopal Peer Minister said,
"Especially
in the bleak mid-winter we find ourselves in now, I've found Wesley to
be an ever-open sanctuary. The people and good times make Wesley a
place where everybody LOVES your name! I've enjoyed blending our
ministries and growing here. In the closing months of the school year, I
look forward to working with fun people on serious goals. (And if
you're) (
I was)seeking a
place where faith, fellowship, and
spirituality abound, all I can say is I've found it here at Wesley(and I bet you
will
too)."
Kristin Gaffney is Pres of
our Community Council. She stated,
''Being part of
the Wesley Foundation has done so
much for me. It has provided me with great friends, a sense of
community, and many great service opportunities. When I first came to
UNI, the Wesley Foundation was the 1st place I felt comfortable. I have
also become more outgoing! I used to be the shy girl who never said a
word. I am now very active in making decisions through this
organization!
The Wesley
Foundation has played a huge role in
making my college experience as great as it has been. I will also take
away the experiences and knowledge I have received and be able to use
them later on in life.''
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Kidney
donation leaves two students closer to God
Larry Macke
Amanda Sentz (right) and Noel Hutchinson share a
lighthearted moment
before kidney transplant surgery in May. Sentz donated a kidney to
Hutchinson. The two met through their involvement with the Wesley
Foundation at Florida State University. A UMNS photo courtesy of Amanda
Sentz.
Amanda Sentz prayed with a classmate needing a kidney donation at the
Wesley Foundation campus ministry at Florida State University. The
senior also knew she had the same blood type as Noel Hutchinson, and
could see the graduate student becoming weaker. But considering giving a
part of herself to someone else was not an
easy decision, particularly with her parents struggling to support her
in a decision that involved health risks. Meanwhile, unaware hope was so
close, Hutchinson would not lose
faith, even as three potential donors from among her family and friends
were disqualified.
"At times it was hard," she admitted, "especially when things
weren't
necessarily looking so good." What the two women prayed for - and in
the end what both received -
was the strength, step by step, to take a leap of faith.
Genetic Disorder
Hutchinson, 23, a second-year graduate student, was
diagnosed three
years ago with a rare, recessive genetic disorder that causes the slow
breakdown of the kidney filtering system, leading to end-stage renal
failure. It was the same condition that resulted in her mother donating a
kidney to her brother seven years earlier.

Sentz and Hutchinson together
at annual Christmas party
at Wesley Foundation in
this 2006 file photo. |
Her condition was a periodic topic of concern and prayer
within the
Wesley congregation of students as it became more pronounced, most
prominently in terms of fatigue.
The Rev. Vance Rains, pastor at the Wesley Foundation, recalled
Hutchinson's efforts to manage the condition through diet and
medication. By June 2008, the need for a transplant had become clear, he
said.
"So we began to pray on that," he said.Hutchinson, also, would turn to
God. "One thing I've always sought through all of
this, is regardless of
result, was that his will would be done, and that he would receive the
glory for that," she said. "Just putting my faith that in the end,
things are going to work out in the way that he has planned, and just
being open to him and praying and seeking his face through it all."
When
Sentz approached her a year ago offering to help, Hutchinson
said she felt "a surreal excitement. ... When I found out she was the
same
blood type, I just kind of knew it was going to work out."
Finding Strength
Sentz had Hutchinson as a group leader during her
freshman year, and
so she had always known of the illness.
When she found out she was the same blood type after overhearing that
Hutchinson, too, was A-positive, Sentz tucked the fact away in her
mind.
As other potential donors dropped out, Sentz approached Hutchinson
with an offer to help.
"Decisions like this have to come from
within. God put it on Amanda's
heart, and she went and had herself tested," Rains said. That was only
the first step. "It would have gotten a little overwhelming if I didn't
take it step
by step," Sentz said. "I figured, I'm just going to fill out the
paperwork, and that's step one. I do this, and if it works, we'll move
on."
Her parents, like Hutchinson. might have opted for the term "surreal"
in describing the situation. Many parents take great pride in seeing
their children perform acts of service, but most draw the line at
choices that involve health risks.
The Sentzes struggled to
support Amanda, a reaction that was
difficult for a daughter who always felt complete support in all
endeavors. She felt their love, however, and recognized that they, too,
would need to process this little by little. "With them it was like,
'Don't worry, I'm just filling out the
paperwork,' " she recalled. "Then they started telling their friends and
noticing things on TV about kidney donations, and their friends would
tell them stories about people they know and how great it was. They
didn't get to the point of, 'We're so happy you're doing this,' but
rather, 'We're proud of you ... but still worried.'" By then, Sentz had
made her decision.
"I feel like we're supposed to love people as Christians, to do
anything we can to help our brothers and sisters. I just thought, well,
why wouldn't I, if she's in need? I feel like Christ would have, Christ
would give anything for us, so why shouldn't I have given this for her?"
Giving Thanks
The transplant occurred in May. Sentz spent a week in the
hospital and another week or two
recuperating before she was back to her regular routine. She needs to
avoid contact sports and certain medications, and she has a few minor
souvenir incisions, but she's doing as well as she ever has. "It's
pretty much back to normal, just like I was before," she said
recently.Not completely the same. Sentz, 21, said she has grown
spiritually. "I definitely know during the process I had to rely on God
to just
heal us both, because it was such a big procedure," she said. "And
everything, especially with Noel, we just had to trust that God was
going to help the kidney to take, that he was going to be in the
situation."
Hutchinson's journey since the operation has been a little rockier,
including a hospitalization for treatment of persistent fever. But now,
she said, she is back in full swing at school.
"Kidney disease
makes people anemic, and so I was always so tired,
but with a functioning kidney my energy level is just through the roof
in comparison," she says. "I feel so blessed and grateful."
Hutchinson, also, said she has grown in her faith.
"God has the ability where he uses everything for his glory, and we
from a human point of view think that it's a bad situation," she said.
"But there's always room for him to receive glory in it and there's
always room for something to happen positive out of it. It's been really
neat learning this."
*Macke is a freelance writer based in Vero Beach, Fla.
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