by Andrew Samuels | May 22, 2020 | Uncategorized
Greetings, Pastors! I hope you are all doing well and staying (mostly) sane, by the grace of the Lord! The SDB Missionary Society has a continuing education committee (CEC), and one of its roles is to seek to participate in the education of our churches regarding...
by Carl Greene | May 22, 2020 | Conference News, General Council, Uncategorized
In this time of Covid-19 coziness and transitions what better way to spend the weekend than in a virtual world with the General Council members. Pastor Steve Osborn, CO, Ericessen Cooper, NY, Andrew Camenga, PA, Dr Ralph Macintosh, CA, and myself, Patti Wethington, MI...
by Carl Greene | May 20, 2020 | Church Development, Church News, Conference News, General Council, SDB Exec Blog, SDB News, Uncategorized, USA (GA) - SDB Church of Southeast Atlanta
Here is an exciting update written by Dr. Barry Dailey, Pastor of the SE Atlanta SDB Church (SEA), providing a picture of how God is at work in and through one of our local SDB churches participating in the SDB Church Revitalization Grant program. The year started as...
by Carl Greene | May 13, 2020 | SDB Exec Blog, Uncategorized
Few of us honestly answer the question “How are you?”. In fact, many of us wonder if the question is worth being asked. Personally, those three words make me squeamish—especially when I am the one routinely asking the three-word question. After all, am I really...
by Carl Greene | May 6, 2020 | SDB Exec Blog, Uncategorized
Do you remember May 1992? It fell in the year when the Ford Taurus surpassed the Honda Accord as the top-selling passenger car in the United States[1] and Ranch Dressing became the most popular topping for salad[2]. May is the specific month that the Space Shuttle...
by Carl Greene | Apr 29, 2020 | Church Development, SDB Exec Blog, Uncategorized
True or False: Before 2012, the number one purchaser of kale used it for non-food purposes. Granted, for you kale naysayers, it still not fit for human consumption. This factoid is actually true—probably. Based on some fact checking by NPR, it appears as though...
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