GCI Caribbean mission developer Charles Fleming and his wife Carmen recently celebrated the wedding of their daughter Annie Fleming to Michael O’Donnell. The couple honeymooned in Jamaica.


GCI Caribbean mission developer Charles Fleming and his wife Carmen recently celebrated the wedding of their daughter Annie Fleming to Michael O’Donnell. The couple honeymooned in Jamaica.
Family and Christianity are the two things that mark the childhood of Jeff Broadnax, pastor of GCI congregations in Columbus and Chillicothe, Ohio and member of the GCI Generations Ministries leadership team. “I spent my formative years within 15 miles of virtually all my extended family. We saw each other at least twice a month. Family togetherness thus shaped my view of relationships. My father’s parents were devout Christians and expected their six children and all their grandchildren to be at First Church of God on Sunday mornings. Thus at an early age I found myself convinced of my need for time with God.”
Jeff grew up in Cincinnati in the house his parents still live in. “My father began listening to the Radio Church of God in the 1960s. In the mid-70s he sought out the church for a visit. We began attending the Festival of Tabernacles when I was 12 years old in 1977.” Jeff then left for Ambassador College in 1983. “After graduating on a Friday and getting married the following Monday, May 25, 1987, my wife, Karen and I spent the next three years working for WCG/GCI in Pasadena, California. Karen worked in the Spanish department and I first worked in the travel department and then as a ministerial trainee (intern) in the headquarters church.”
Jeff and Karen, who celebrated their 26th anniversary on May 25, have four children. “Our eldest, Jasmine (22), recently graduated summa cum laude from the University of Pittsburgh with a double major in psychology and sociology and a minor in criminal justice. Our second, Kristen, went home to the Lord in 1994. She would have been 19 this year. Our son, Kyle (15), is going into his sophomore year in high school and is an honor student and passionate basketball player. Our youngest, Kassidy (5), is heading into kindergarten and ready to take the world by storm.”
Jeff was ordained an elder on March 4, 1989 and served another year in Pasadena before transferring to Big Sandy, Texas. “We spent three years serving as an associate pastor in the local church and the college campus and then we transferred to the Manhattan and Westchester (county) New York congregations in 1993. We were blessed over the next 17 years to serve five GCI congregations in the greater New York City area (Manhattan, Armonk, White Plains and Middletown, New York; and Hillsdale, New Jersey). In 2010 we moved back to the Buckeye State (Ohio) and currently serve the CenterPointe (Columbus) and Voice of Hope (Chillicothe) congregations of GCI.”
Jeff attributes a lot of his spiritual growth to his parents and mentors. “My parents (Earl and Bettie Broadnax) and my wife’s parents (John and the late Judy Hunter) have been amazing examples of faithful Christians. Their love for God and willingness to grow and learn has always served as an anchor for us in our faith. I have a number of folks who have actively mentored me in transformational ways but John Halford, Joseph Tkach and the late Dr. Kermit Nelson and Harold Jackson are four men who have intentionally taught me to be more like Jesus.”
Speaking of being a pastor, Jeff said, “I absolutely love being used by God to help others learn and tell the story he is writing in their lives through Jesus. So many of us have no clue of the divine appointments he is setting up for us each day and how he wants us to use our story to help others see that he loves them, really likes them, and has God-sized plans he wants to fulfill through their lives and stories (warts and all).”
Jeff’s most memorable moment as a pastor is personal, but one he wants to share because it is something we all can learn from. “One day in August 2004, God changed forever the way I understood him and Scripture. He had convicted me and challenged me to let go of some bitterness that I was carrying. I told him that I had tried but was unable to do so on my own. I asked him to take that anger and bitterness from me, and when I verbally offered the forgiveness I was withholding and verbally let go of the bitterness I was carrying, it was like scales fell off my eyes. I was able to love in deed and not just in word because he showed me the difference in real life and in Scripture. I will never forget the moment because it was proof that God so loved ME therefore I must love him and others with his kind of love.”
Transformation is important to Jeff, not only in his own life, but also in GCI. “I enjoy being a part of an organization that knows it needed and now has been transformed by God himself. The journey I/we have taken is proof of the kind of God we serve. Our story helps me read the stories of the patriarchs, apostles and people of the parables through God’s eyes not just my own. My training, experience and lessons within GCI make the word of God come to life in real time and I love it.”
When asked what he would like others to know about him that they may or may not know, Jeff said, “That even after 26 years in the ministry, I am still coming to grips with God’s destiny for my life. I am so excited about what’s ahead because I feel God has placed gifts inside me that I haven’t even begun to unwrap in his grace yet. I am soooooo ready!”
Jeff shares that he gets his passion from Luke 4/Isaiah 61. “God has placed in my heart a burden to let him use me to help others discover their destiny in Christ and know that he wants to use every part of their lives. It doesn’t matter if one is incarcerated or incorporated, harassed, helpless or helpful, wise or washed up, Jesus has plans for us all. He wants us to not just find freedom but to experience jubilee in him!”
When does Jeff feel closest to God? “When I read Scripture because I know God is telling every story to me for a purpose. Everything is there to show me something about how he thinks, loves and operates in the lives of people. There are also times when I know his presence through music.”
GCI district pastor David Weber reports that GCI pastor John Kehn in Scottsbluff, Nebraska, underwent surgery this week to have some tumors removed from his neck. Though benign the tumors were pushing up against vital areas in his neck. We are thanking God that the surgery was successful. Please pray for John’s complete and rapid recovery.
Cards may be sent to:
John and Linda Kehn 1150 R Street Gering, NE 69341-2431Ross Jutsum, leader of State of the Heart music ministry and his wife Tammy are pleased to announce the birth of their first grandchild, granddaughter Grace Victoria McAnnally-Linz.
Grace was born to Heidi (Jutsum) and her husband Ryan McAnnally-Linz on July 21, weighing 7 lbs 2 oz.
Grace and her parents are doing well.
Here is a video of an interview with Jason and Julie Frantz discussing Jason’s experience with the GCI-USA Pastoral Internship Program, leading to his installation as the senior pastor of the GCI congregation in Kansas City, Missouri.
This video is found on YouTube at http://youtu.be/zJLmY4PyWCU.
Ray Meyer and his wife Carol recently celebrated Ray’s retirement after 40 years serving as a GCI pastor and several years as a district pastor. GCI’s Kansas City, Missouri church, where Ray last pastored, hosted the celebration, which included church members and Ray and Carol’s family. Congratulations and thanks to Ray and Carol! Here are pictures from the celebration:
GCI Canada recently held its week-long Silver Meadows Camp. Over 100 campers and staff participated. The campers included 27 children who participated in a VBS program based on the life of the apostle Paul. Camp chaplain Leigh Smithson (standing in the picture below) played the role of Paul, speaking to the campers from his tent where he worked to support himself while he preached the gospel in the city of Athens.
During camp, Sabrina Shaeffers of the Edmonton congregation was baptized by her pastor Bob Millman and Silver Meadows Camp chaplain Leigh Smithson. Sabrina’s mother, Valerie Shaeffers, was present for the baptism. She noted that camp has made a huge contribution to her daughter’s spiritual development.
According to GCI-Canada director, Gary Moore, Jennifer Pasanen “did a marvellous job” serving as director of Silver Meadows Camp. “She handled the responsibility with grace, good humor and wisdom.”
Many years ago, Tom Smith who pastors GCI congregations in Pittsburgh and Indiana, Pennsylvania, found himself hurrying to his first Saturday evening meal at Ambassador College when he heard a young lady named Pam call out to him. She had been invited to supper at the Walkers who were church members. Mr. Walker said, “I thought you would bring a date. How about him?” Tom shares, “Right then I was running towards them. Pam asked, ‘Want a home-cooked meal with me?’ I accepted and the rest is history.”
Tom and Pam started dating and as Tom notes, “My best friend throughout college became my wife.” Tom and Pam have been married for 42 years and have three daughters, Tonya, Carrie and Katie; and one son, Brandon.
Growing up in Bristol, Tennessee, Tom attended a Southern Baptist church most of his young life. “I was fascinated with the children’s church choir and grew up involved with their youth programs. I helped with the VBS each summer, was a leader of the youth (over 100), was involved in the Royal Ambassadors (similar to Boy Scouts), assisted the preteen choirs and served at the senior care home ministry during the 11:00 am Sunday service (it meant going to the 8:30 am service). I had a church girlfriend and life seemed sweet. UNTIL… we went to Radio Church of God. My former ‘church life’ as I knew it ended.”
Tom was a junior in high school when his dad started studying The Plain Truth and the Ambassador College Correspondence Course. “We were invited to attend the Radio Church of God in Asheville, North Carolina three hours away! Dad didn’t ask me to go with him. But to his surprise, I was up and dressed at 5:30 am on Saturday and asked him, ‘Can I drive?’ He smiled and said ‘Yes’.”
When it came time to apply for college, Tom applied and was accepted to the University of Tennessee Knoxville College of Architecture. But his dad wanted him to consider Ambassador College. “I had no interest but was sure they would not accept me, so I applied to appease my dad, thinking he might be more willing then to help me go to UT. It turned out that I was the first of seven young people accepted from the Asheville church.”
Tom attended Ambassador College in Big Sandy, Texas from 1966 to 1970. “I thoroughly enjoyed the college atmosphere and social life and travel opportunities. I went to Pasadena on three bus trips, including one that stopped by the Grand Canyon. I also visited Bricket Wood on the way to the first archaeological dig in 1969.”
Early on Tom was told he was not going into the ministry. “I was glad, since that was not my desire. Buck Hammer offered me a job in buildings and grounds on the Big Sandy campus. I took him up on it, asked Pam to go with me, built a home and had two children. In 1977 I remember telling Pam, ‘God has been good to us: new home, two children and a good job!’” That was the year Ambassador College Big Sandy closed, disrupting the life of the young family. “I went into sales with Motorola Radio and was three to four nights a week on the road. We sold our house and moved to Shreveport, Louisiana. Pam’s mother died and her father moved in with us (he was 61 with Alzheimer’s). Life got a bit bumpy then, but with God at the helm and Pam at my side, we plowed on.”
A year later Buck Hammer asked Tom to move back to Big Sandy and be his assistant until Buck retired. “We moved to Gladewater, Texas and became active in the Big Sandy church again: In-home Bible studies, game nights, helping seniors, youth leadership, Boys Club, choir, etc. Life was once again good; very good.” Then in1979 Tom was ordained. He talked to God about this new chapter in his life, “In 1970, they said I wasn’t going to be in the ministry! But since they aren’t paying me as a local elder, I guess it’s alright.”
Tom said he had the “wonderful opportunity to learn from Norvel Pyle, Hal Baird, James Duke, Don Ward and Burk McNair. For the next five years my ministerial training was superior to anything I could imagine. And oh yes, I can’t forget 12 years with Lynn Torrance (how’s that for colorful training?).”
In November, 1982, Tom was hired to assist Burk McNair in Big Sandy and Tyler, Texas. “Pam was never paid, but I certainly could not have done it without her. She has the gift of mercy and it spills over with all she meets. Everyone who knows Pam likes her. Even her name means ‘sweet thing.’ By this time our third child was six months old. We moved to Hawkins and I worked eight-hour shifts in the church office on the Ambassador College grounds. Life was good! Then in the spring of 1982 our son was run over by a van on a Y.O.U. track event. No worries, he was playing soccer within six months! (Do you see a trend here? LIFE IS GOOD! then WHAM!!!)”
God knew what he was doing when he called Tom to pastoral ministry. Tom has served many people for many years. What does he love most about pastoring? “Helping people come from conflict to resolution, whether with themselves or others.” Tom loves it when people have their “Aha moment,” when coming to understand their relationship with God.
When asked about a most memorable time, Tom talked about a camp experience. “In 1999 I was a counselor at a Release Time Bible Camp. One of my campers (age 11) shared what God and camp had done for him. His father was not a believer the previous year; he was abusive to his family and a drunkard. The camper had prayed for his daddy to believe Jesus and that week at camp he was glad to announce that his father was a sober camp worker and a believer!”
Tom was quick to point out that God is not done with him yet. “In August 2013, I will go bi-vocational, still serving as pastor with our retirement, but also working elsewhere to supplement our income, possibly as a chaplain.”
In addition to pastoring, Tom is passionate about writing. “I thoroughly enjoyed working with the Good News Grapevine, though that was more editing than writing. I plan to write a book about my experience in Christianity. I also enjoy working with preteens, camp, church (children’s sermons), etc. I was delighted to assist with the junior camp program we started in 2002.”
When asked when he feels closest to God, Tom said, “When I seek quiet time, at our home, in the backyard or in the woods. This quiet time often includes music; I love hymns, old and new.”
GCI Generations Ministries recently announced that M25:40 Missions has been chartered as a GenMin mission organization. This organization, led by Mary and Cliff Snyder, is based in Cheyenne, Wyoming. Mary and Cliff are experienced missionaries who have conducted mission trips to Ethiopia.
M25:40 has three primary areas of focus in partnering with local churches to spread the gospel of Jesus Christ:
For additional information, email Mary Snyder at msnyder72003@yahoo.com.
Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,
I believe that God heals. Healing was a significant part of Jesus’ ministry. It is one of the gifts of the Spirit mentioned by Paul in 1 Corinthians 12. Sadly, the Spirit’s “gifts of healing” (v. 9) have often been corrupted and distorted by opportunists and charlatans. We need to be careful.
I recall watching a 1991 ABC Primetime Live television program that exposed as fake the “healing” ministries of Robert Tilton, E.V. Grant and Larry Lea. One of the practices exposed was leg-lengthening. The evangelist would “diagnose” the person’s physical problems as related to one leg being shorter than the other, then ask God to lengthen the shorter leg. Lo and behold—before our very eyes—the shorter leg would began to grow. Wow!! Except that, as the program showed, this was just an old carnival trick masquerading as a miraculous healing.
The first time I experienced this trick, it was performed on me by my chiropractor as a joke. He had me sit in a chair and firmly grasped my legs and then held them together to reveal that one leg was two inches longer than the other. I marveled at how quickly he healed my leg by pulling and talking to my legs. I knew there was some kind of trick to this. I had been to medical doctors on a couple of previous occasions with sprained ankles and sprained knees. I’d had x-rays and MRIs and I knew that my one leg was not two inches shorter than the other. So I said, “Okay Doctor, show me the trick.” He quickly explained that it was an old trick used at carnivals. The more you practice it, the better you become at duping unsuspecting people.
There are plenty of videos that expose this practice. In one, former faith healer Mark Haville discusses his use of fakery and hypnotic manipulation (http://youtu.be/BCohlCPSLlo). Another shows two examples of the leg-lengthening hoax (http://www.godtube.com/watch/?v=JC229FNU).
Over the years, I have met quite a few people who had been deceived by this hoax. I marvel that so large a number of people needing their legs lengthened did not sound an alarm in medical circles (actually, most people’s legs are slightly unequal in length, a condition that generally produces no significant physical ill effects).
The Primetime Live program showed that bogus leg-lengthening was only the tip of an iceberg of fraud. The investigative reporters examined every aspect of the three ministries, using hidden cameras and multiple interviews with experts and witnesses. They even examined the ministries’ trash bins and dumpsters, finding thousands of prayer requests that had been discarded (after removing the donations, of course). What masqueraded as Christian ministry was shown to be a racket that was making millions of dollars a year by preying on gullible people.
Why am I bringing this up? Because, although the three fake ministries were exposed, the use of their fraudulent practices continues, and leg-lengthening is having a revival. It is not my purpose to publicly expose those who practice these things; nor is my intent to call into question their sincerity. Some people who use these tricks believe they are performing genuine miracles. However, others know it is a fraud.
Whatever the motive, such practices have no place in GCI’s ministry. As elders, we pray for the sick. While praying we often anoint the sick person with oil and lay hands on them to signify God’s healing presence. However, we need to be aware of the potential pitfall in developing a ministry focused on “miraculous healings.” What may seem to be spectacular demonstrations of God’s power can open the door to profound disillusionment, turning people away from Christ and his gospel.
The gospel proclaims that God has healed our relationship with him and reconciled us to himself. We can begin to live in that new life in relationship with him beginning today. He will one day make everything new and wipe away every tear. That’s the reality. However, for now we have only temporary and partial signs of this coming hope. We have only the “deposit” (down payment, pledge or earnest) of his renewing and transforming Holy Spirit (Ephesians 1:14; 2 Corinthians 1:22; 5:5). While God does grant signs, they remain just that—signs. And God grants such signs in ways that are not predictable or controllable by us. God remains wisely sovereign over how and when he distributes extraordinary signs and does not simply hand them over to us to dispense. That being said, we can remain open to the Spirit’s working “as he wills” (1 Corinthians 12:11).
Jesus is truth personified and he is the one who sets us free. He is our healer who sends his Spirit to work when, where and how he sees fit—for his glory and our benefit. So though we do well to pray in his name for people to be healed, it is wrong to represent him with street magic and old carnival tricks, even if some foolishly think they can advance his reputation by doing so.
Your brother in Christ,
Joseph Tkach