Build up the body of Christ. Support the Pentecost Offering.

Today in the Mission Yearbook

PC(USA) congregation and partners work to build a home for all God’s creatures

 

Members and friends of First Presbyterian Church in Mount Pleasant, Iowa, share their journey toward opening the county’s only animal shelter

June 30, 2023

Cyndy Danielson, left and Kathy Nellor are All God’s Creatures board members.

Henry County, the home of First Presbyterian Church in Mount Pleasant, Iowa, lacks an animal shelter — but not for long.

Community partners both inside and outside the church are working on what they call “Mission Pawsible,” the campaign to build All God’s Creatures, which when it opens will accommodate about 12 dogs and 50 cats, have medical exam space and quarantine areas, dedicated rooms for training, house a trap-neuter-release program for stray cats and kittens, and more.

All God’s Creatures board members Cyndy Danielson, Kathy Nellor and Kate Ridinger were happy to discuss the campaign recently, which is on its way to its $1.7 million goal. A building has been purchased and an executive director has been hired, although there’s currently no timetable for the opening of All God’s Creatures, which is a commission of First Presbyterian Church and one of the ways the church lives out its Matthew 25 ministry to build congregational vitality.

A kitten plays in the facility that will soon become All God’s Creatures Animal Shelter in Mt. Pleasant, Iowa. (Photos by Rich Copley/Presbyterian Mission Agency)

“I am a relatively new member of this congregation,” said Nellor, a former bank examiner who three years ago was helping her husband through a brain tumor and “was not being fed” at the church she was attending at the time. “I looked at the people who had reached out to me sincerely with a word or a hug or a plate of cookies, and I realized the vast majority were from this church. That said to me that this church isn’t just reading Matthew 25 — they’re demonstrating it. As fine a pastor as Trey is,” she said, referring to FPC’s pastor, the Rev. Trey Hegar, “it’s the masses of the congregation that can make a huge difference.”

The idea for All God’s Children began during a Bible study when members took a virtual stroll around the neighborhood and asked, “Who is my neighbor,” according to Danielson, who chairs the board and is a retired judge. “The [Mount Pleasant Correctional Facility] is several blocks away,” Danielson noted, which caught members’ attention and their imagination.

A $300,000 bequest by a couple “put us into a building, which took us further than we had anticipated,” Danielson said. “Our goal became getting a building and refitting it to our purposes and using it to meet the needs of people and animals.”

Samson, a dog owned by the Rev. Trey Hegar, interacts with incarcerated individuals at the Mt. Pleasant Correctional Facility.

Nellor describes the mission as “connecting hands and paws of all God’s creatures in Henry County to make a happier and healthier community.”

“We have to let people know there are people we really want to connect with, and the prison was one of those populations,” Ridinger said of the minimum-security facility, which will be featured in an upcoming Presbyterian News Service story. “All God’s Creatures has done research on other prisons” including “what are the pitfalls, so we go in with the best knowledge possible. There are fewer cat and kitten programs, and so that’s where we look to start.”

One idea is to relaunch a program inside the prison that enables incarcerated individuals to help train and handle dogs to make them more adoptable to the public.

“I loved that it was a younger person [Ridinger] who asked me to join the board,” Nellor said. “It made all the difference. It’s fun to see the interaction with younger members on our board.”

“A lot of people might want to be involved, but they don’t know how,” Danielson said. “They might say, ‘I know nothing about dogs.’ You ask them what they like doing and you find out they have all sorts of very good backgrounds you can build on.”

“Make sure you look into your community to find out what their skills are,” said Danielson, who attends St. Michael’s Episcopal Church, “and find congregations that can build on that as well.”

Nellor speaks of the board as a CARE team, an acronym for Creators, Advancers, Refiners and Executors. An organization needs all four, Nellor said — people who are visionary and have good ideas, those who can take steps to advance those ideas, people who are detail oriented, and those who can carry out the plan. “You can’t have a successful project without those four aspects,” Nellor said.

Mike Ferguson, Editor, Presbyterian News Service

Today’s Focus: All God’s creatures animal shelter

Let us join in prayer for:

PC(USA) Agencies’ Staff
Shelley Gardner, Chaplain, Board of National Mission, Presbyterian Foundation
Kevin Garvey, Funds Development Specialist, Presbyterian Foundation

Let us pray

Merciful Lord, forgive us for not listening for not hearing the voices of the oppressed and suffering. May your love guide us in joining our brothers and sisters for transformation, bringing glory and honor to you. Amen.