Faith
- Faith
-
-
Enough food to go around
Although the number of new families has tapered off a bit, Rita Suttmiller said new families have been coming since the beginning of the year.
-
Taking care of ‘the most vulnerable’
Local churches have been purchasing frozen meals through Food Share America to replace the lost Friday meals since November. The collaboration has been ongoing since Wheatheart Nutrition, due to budget cuts from Department of Human Service, had to halt its senior nutrition program on Fridays.
-
Building a house on a rock
The youth group attracts students from Enid High School, Timberlake, Oklahoma Bible Academy, Pond Creek-Hunter and Kremlin-Hillsdale schools.
-
Community of Believers brings churches together
Carl Roberts, pastor at Harvest Time Worship Center and director of Community of Believers, said Community of Believers brings churches together from across Enid.
-
Healing ‘hurts, habits and hang-ups’
Celebrate Recovery will begin at 5 p.m. April 11 with an informal meal. At 6 there will be group worship time, and at 7 groups split up. At 8 everyone gathers for coffee and dessert. Celebrate Recovery is a program for a large variety of issues faced in life.
-
K-Life: Building relationships through Christ
K-Life, has brought together 53 children from churches around Enid. Clay Carson, area director for Enid K-Life, said the goal of the chapter is to help kids build relationships with other kids through Christ.
-
God’s and Grandma’s way of saving money
Enid and area residents are flocking to Financial Peace University, a 13-week course on finances developed by syndicated radio and television financial counselor Dave Ramsey, who says he teaches “God’s and Grandma’s way” of saving money.
-
Cowboy church: Come as you are
Thursday nights at Winter Livestock, Pastor Dan O’Daniel speaks to as many as 350 — more depending on who’s singing — during Chisholm Trail Cowboy Church’s services.
-
St. Matthew’s forges a new path
“Our hope is to build a labyrinth and prayer garden outside. We are in the process of building a permanent labyrinth. We have some designs from (Oklahoma State University) horticulture design students. It will be a meditation garden. It is our dream.” — Paula Nightengale, St. Matthew’s church member and trained labyrinth facilitator.
-
CrossWalk serious ‘about being inclusive’
“We have an emphasis on service as opposed to doctrine. It’s much more important to feed the hungry than to believe any certain doctrine, doing what Jesus said, not just believing certain things about Jesus.” — the Rev. J.F. Wickey
- More Faith Headlines
-


