mission

By Kathy L. Gilbert
Feb. 28, 2017 | UMNS
Art unlocked Ndume Olatushani’s mind when his
mission

Disrupting the cradle-to-prison pipeline

JP Bohanan

children

Open Hearts. Open Minds. Open Doors.

JP Bohanan

Johannes Baun (from left), Rose Saffa and Mohamed Nabieu, who were helped at the Child Rescue Center, are giving back the help they received by working at the center. The rescue center was founded to care for children impoverished by the 1991-2002 Sierra Leone civil war. Photo by Phileas Jusu, UMNS.

Photo by Phileas Jusu, UMNS
Johannes Baun (from left), Rose Saffa and Mohamed Nabieu, who were
mission

Rescuing Children

JP Bohanan
action-church

Habitat (3 of 3)

JP Bohanan

A woman holds a baby while seated among refugees at the United Methodist Church ATC/Nukkai in Jalingo, Nigeria. United Methodist churches in Nigeria are serving as refugee camps for people displaced after attacks on villages in Lau, a local government area in Taraba State in Northern Nigeria. Photo by the Rev. Ande I. Emmanuel, UMNS.

Photo by the Rev. Ande I. Emmanuel, UMNS
A woman holds a baby while seated among
mission

Churches welcoming refugees in Nigeria

JP Bohanan
action-church

Habitat Day (2 of 3)

JP Bohanan
action-church

Habitat day (1 of 3)

JP Bohanan

St. Paul United Methodist Church is recognized for its rich history, but also is seeing growth and renewed influence in Dallas. Photo by Sam Hodges, UMNS.

By Sam Hodges
Feb. 16, 2017 | DALLAS (UMNS)
St. Paul United Methodist Church is 144 years
mission

Historic Church MAKING History

JP Bohanan

Mission Central is working on a joint partnership with Goode Elementary and Communities in Schools Site
mission

Computer Ministry

JP Bohanan

Missionaries Lourdes Vazquez (left) and Roberto Pozo lead the Caraballo Mission, an outreach of San Antonio Methodist Church in San Antonio de Rio Blanco, Cuba. Photo by Mike DuBose, UMNS.
Missionaries Lourdes Vazquez (left) and Roberto Pozo lead the Caraballo Mission, an outreach of San Antonio

mission

Church Growth in Cuba

JP Bohanan

During World War II and the German occupation of Norway, Trondheim Methodist Church’s loft was used as a secret synagogue for the local Jewish community. The church’s pastor and lay leader made the decision at great personal risk. Photo courtesy of Ole-Einar Andersen.

By Karl Anders Ellingsen
Jan. 31, 2017 | TRONDHEIM, Norway (UMNS)
The Trondheim United Methodist Church — which
mission

Norwegian Church housed secret synagogue during Nazi occupation

JP Bohanan