Praising
God for 10 years of God’s love
and
grace shown through the gifts of
Walk
to Emmaus and Chrysalis
March 12, 2005
A History of the
Mountain
Top
Community
A
History of the
Mountain Top
Community
The
Mountain Top
Community traces its roots back to 1980 when several Bethlehem
residents—and members of Wesley UMC—attended Cursillo weekends
sponsored by the Episcopal and Moravian Churches. Among those
Cursillistas are present-day Mountain Toppers Carolyn Miller, Judy
Kehler, Dr. Don Follmer, as well as the late John and Helen Garihan,
and others.
These
brothers
and sisters in Christ were so excited about their eye-opening
experience—and wanted so much to expand on the vision of empowering lay
people to be more active in their local churches—that they sought to
start a Walk to Emmaus Community in Eastern Pennsylvania.
They got together with other Cursillistas from Lancaster
County and in
the Levittown
area, where other United Methodists—including Bob and Janet Rugg,
Charlie and Tanya Evans, Bob and Rola Pope—and others had experienced
this marvelous gift. After much planning, the first Eastern
Pennsylvania (now Crossroads) Walk to Emmaus was held in at
Gretna Glen camp in March, 1984, with Mark Foltz and Tanya Evans as Lay
Directors.
In the following years,
two
sets of weekends were held each year (with a hiatus between #1 and #2
and #5 and #6). Weekends #2-9 were held at Kirby House in Mountain Top,
PA, and all subsequent weekends at Camp
Innabah in Spring
City, PA. Hundreds of
pilgrims from all over Eastern PA attended in
the weekends that followed—from Lancaster
to the west to Levittown to the south and
Allentown/Bethlehem/Easton to the north.
Lives were changed. Small groups and local
gatherings kept
spiritual batteries fully charged. Lay people and clergy were
recharged. Spiritual strongholds were broken. Churches were enlivened.
Many of lay people felt and answered the call to ordained ministry.
The fruit of Emmaus has been and is
good!
At a Bethlehem Gathering in February, 1994—after 17
sets
of E. PA weekends—God led the Emmaus pilgrims
gathered to consider starting a new Emmaus Community for the purpose of
expanding the opportunities by which people in eastern Pennsylvania
can experience Christ through the Walk to Emmaus.
After much prayer, the wheels were put in motion for
the
start of this as-yet unnamed community as Steering Committee members
applied to the International Emmaus office to start a new community.
We
set our sights on March, 1995—just one year—as the
dates for our first weekends.
For those who took part in the venture, it felt like
the
Christian church as described in the book of Acts…
Everyone was filled with awe, and many wonders and
miraculous signs were done by the apostles. All the believers were
together and had everything in common. Selling their possessions and
goods, they gave to anyone as he had need. Every day they continued to
meet together in the temple courts. They broke bread in their homes and
ate together with glad and sincere hearts, praising God and enjoying
the favor of all the people. And the Lord added to their number daily
those who were being saved. Acts 2:43-47 (NIV)
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Talk banners were needed… and gorgeous works of art
appeared. A communion set was needed…and two hand-made ceramic sets
were created. A sponsor’s cross was needed…and a stunning oak cross was
handcrafted by a community artisan. Conference room table supplies were
needed and poof—pencils and markers and scissors and
more appeared in plastic tubs! Lay Director crosses were handcrafted
and wooden agape crosses were crafted by community craftsmen.
It seemed like every day new gifts were brought
before
God—loving gifts of agape love— to start this community, which was now
to be called Mountain Top (two words!) of Northeast PA. A community
Bible was given. A three-legged stool. Weekend crosses. A community
logo by Miki Howell. Two community banners, one created by Stella
Basile and the other by the Garden State Emmaus Community.
Roger
Amerman
and the Rev. Russ Wentling were named Steering Community Chairman and
Community Spiritual Director as teams were created for the first
weekend, which would be held at Pocono Plateau, Michael Grube and Miki
Howell served as first Lay Directors, and Tom Filiatreau serving as our
liaison with the Emmaus International Office.
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The Community Cross
As the
weeks
drew close to the first weekends, however, there was a big piece
missing—a community cross—the cross that was to be the focal point of
each weekend and community event.
John
Garihan, a
man whose life was changed by his Cursillo experience and who had
created hundreds of wooden crosses over the years for Emmaus
pilgrims—as well as other large community crosses for other
communities—was having trouble with his offer to create the community
cross for this new Mountain Top community.
John was
suffering from emphysema and was so weak, he found it impossible to
complete the task which he so desperately wanted to complete. Then,
just a week before the first weekend, his son from Virginia
came for an unexpected visit. At Helen Garihan’s prodding, both men
went to the basement of their home.
John’s son
wasn’t a woodworker, but he was a faithful son.
So with
John
providing the guidance, and his son doing the work, the cross was
built. During the construction of the cross with his father, the son
came to know not only how to build a cross… but also the
true and life-changing meaning behind the cross!
His
life was never the same…and neither have the lives of hundreds of
pilgrims who have carried that cross ever since!
It was on
the
first weekend, at the women’s closing that the first utterance of the
now famous Schuuuuuuuuuylkill Haven was first shouted
by an enthusiastic Shirley Yenilitus…and that those new “spiritual
spectacles” were first donned by our present Community SD Ed Tucker.
The
Steering
Committee transformed itself into a new Board of Directors in 1995,
with responsibilities enthusiastically accepted to grow the community
through weekends and especially through Fourth Day training, gatherings
and small groups.
Outreach
groups,
headed by Wally Boswell, visited churches and made contacts to spread
the word about Emmaus. Small groups were formed and later given a boost
by Joe Trovato. The community was nurtured with the telephone ministry
of Frank Horn, a man who could barely speak due to a tracheotomy, but
spoke volumes to hundreds of pilgrims with his love of Christ. Many
prayer warriors undergirded all these efforts with prayer.
The Roman
Catholic Spanish Cursillo community faithfully provided living
palanca every Saturday evening through the 7th weekend. They’d
burst through the doors—guitars strumming to their wonderful Latino
beat—as pilgrims struggled to learn De Colores in Spanish…and showed
everyone how it’s really done! Before they left,
they’d sing some more Spanish songs. Then, we’d all sing Amazing Grace
together as they departed into the night.
“Palanca”
is the Cursillo term for agape, but in many ways is much richer. Like
agape, it is an act of Christian love. But more than that, palanca,
means “lever.” And so acts of sacrificial palanca would, like a lever,
be offered by our brothers and sisters others to lift up
each pilgrim closer to God. We particularly remember Angel Vasquez, who
made his weekend in the early 1960s, and his great love of Christ.
So many
team
members and pilgrims gave of themselves in so many ways for one reason:
to extend this gift of Emmaus—to change lives, and communities and
churches and workplaces for Christ…to produce good fruit!
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Mountain Top Chrysalis formed
At a Board
meeting at Pleasant Valley Presbyterian Church in the spring of 1996, a
new chapter in Mountain Top history was about to be written—the
addition of Chrysalis to the Mountain Top Community. Our mission: to
further extend the message of God’s love and grace to high school
teenagers.
A steering
committee, co-chaired by Ed Unangst and Ron McClincey, first met May 18, 1996 at Wesley UMC, Bethlehem.
(Do you see a pattern here?!) Committees
were
enthusiastically formed and members began their work, aiming for July
1997 for the first set of Flights.
By August,
the
Steering Committee had their first Chrysalis Training Session with Nashville
representative Gretchen Wilson. And by September, the site of Muhlenberg
College was
chosen and
the team formation began.
Just as
with the
Walk to Emmaus, the community prayerfully answered the call for help.
Chrysalis banners—Faith Hope and Love—were created. An extraordinary
mime communion cross was crafted by Ruth Groves. A Chrysalis banner was
given by Barry Homer of the Crossroads community. A rugged cross was
made for the nail service. Two beautiful butterfly altar crosses with
various types/shades of wood were handcrafted. A
mime communion box appeared out of nowhere…and a hand-carved nativity
scene was later added. The blessings overflowed!
One of the
amazing things about the first weekend was that the teams were
comprised of butterflies and pilgrims from five different
communities—Mountain Top…Harrisburg…Crossroads
of EPC…Delmarva…and Southern New England!
Blessings
continued to overflow as 44 caterpillars attended the first set of
weekends, coming from Mountain Top, Crossroads, and Southern
New Jersey. The New Jersey
participants later helped to give birth to the Chrysalis community of Southern
Jersey.
The
Chrysalis
Steering Committee continued through the 2nd flight in
August, 1998. On February 19,
1999, the Mountain Top Chrysalis Board of Directors held the
first official Board meeting electing Karen McClincey as Lay Director.
The Chrysalis youth have added such a
vibrant
dimension to the Mountain Top community! In recent years, youths
have provided the Saturday “entertainment” for Emmaus weekends with
their unbridled enthusiasm and joy of the Lord. They’ve led community
Gatherings. New “Chrysalis songs” have enlivened a new community
songbook introduced in 2004. Their spirit has touched many hearts
through the years!
We’ve seen
wonderful fruit through Chrysalis, too. Many have spoken of becoming
true friends—not superficial friends— for Christ's sake. One girl
shared in a witness talk that because of the love she felt on the
weekend, she was able to avoid and overcome her suicidal tendencies.
Another girl witnessed to the fact that experiencing God's fatherly
love on the weekend helped her be more of a Godly daughter and begin
the healing between her and her dad. A boy expressed that it was his
meeting Jesus face to face on his flight which led him to pursue
full-time ministry.
The fruit
of
Chrysalis has been and is good!
As with
Emmaus,
the Chrysalis community is not just a vehicle for weekends alone.
Nurturing and small groups are essential. One way Chrysalis is helping
support its youth is with a Good Shepherding Program (started after the
7th Flight) where the youth of the Chrysalis Board strive to make
monthly contact with each of the new butterflies.
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Partnership in ministry
In 1998,
after
holding weekends in Pocono Plateau and Pine
Brook Retreat
Center, Emmaus
weekends moved to Bowman Park Campground for weekends #7-14.
Bowman
Park offered the
community an opportunity to “partner” in ministry with the campground.
In exchange for low rates for using the camp, Community members, led by
Bob Schwoyer, installed heating in the dormitories, which benefited
both the camp and the community. The community also pitched in and
helped ready the camp for summer “business” each spring. It was at
Bowman Park that an Emmaus weekend kitchen crew began—including the
famous Emmaus oatmeal we remembered from old E. PA days!—under the
leadership of Tom Seyfried. That tradition of servanthood now continues
at Kirby House.
In recent
years,
under the leadership of Doug O’Connell, the community was incorporated
as a non-profit organization. Later, weekends were moved back to Kirby
House—the place where Walk to Emmaus in Eastern Pennsylvania was
planted and bloomed to touch the lives of thousands of men and women in
both Crossroads and Mountain Top communities. We come full
circle!
Through
all the
weekends, flights, gatherings, small groups, board meetings, team
meetings, one thing has been remarkable: How God has brought together
men and women of widely different backgrounds and denominations and
worked marvelously through them to share His love and grace.
So many
Mountain
Toppers have offered themselves as “living sacrifices” so that others
can come to know the depth and breadth of God’s love, with the prayer
that lives would be changed. We are deeply appreciative
for all who have served the Lord in many different capacities through
the Mountain Top community.
Our
community—embracing both the Walk to Emmaus and Chrysalis—is made up of
United Methodists, Baptists, Lutherans, Presbyterians, Episcopalians,
Moravians, UCCers, Roman Catholics, and several independent churches.
Today, we
gather
to celebrate and marvel at what God has done. We remember beloved
servants with whom we worked side by side, and who are now cheering us
on from heaven: Rev. Charlie Evans, John and Helen Garihan, Frank and
Angie Horn, Rick Gorby, Paul Mondello, George and Arlene Tucker, Rev.
Rob Furler, Rosemarie Capra and others.
And yes,
with
great anticipation, we look forward to what God will
continue to do through His faithful servants as we continue the vision
to expanding the opportunities by which people in eastern Pennsylvania
can experience Christ through the Walk to Emmaus and Chrysalis, to the
Glory of God!
—Roger
Amerman, Community Historian
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Walk to Emmaus Weekend Lay Directors
Pocono Plateau
1. Spring 1995
Michael Grube Miki
Howell
2. Fall, 1995
Tom Seyfried
Bev Westwood
3. Spring 1996
Gary
Jerebek
Pam Stauffer
Pine Brook Retreat Center
4. Fall, 1996
Virgil DeGarmo
Sue Unangst
5. Spring, 1997
Ed Unangst
Dawn Seyfried
6. Fall, 1997
Bob Schwoyer
Conni Schwoyer
Bowman Park Campground
7. Spring, 1998
Joe Trovato
Jeanne Schwoyer
8. Fall, 1998
Craig Klevenhagen
Kate Grube
9. Spring 1999
Billy Stroup
Roni DeGarmo
10. Fall, 1999
Ron Klevenhagen
Liz Romig
11. Spring 2000
Tom Firth
Renee Klevenhagen
12. Fall, 2000
Rick Carfagna
Eleanor Klevenhagen
13. Spring, 2001
Charlie Silliman
Kristin Stuby
14. Fall, 2001
Roger Galliford Sheryl Deal
St. Francis Retreat Center
15. Fall, 2002
Doug O’Connell
Janice Carfagna
Pocono Plateau
16. Fall, 2003
Ron Anthony
Susan Galliford
Kirby
House
17.
Fall, 2004
Rick Schwoyer Karen McClincey
18.
Fall, 2005
Wally Frisch
Marcia Zackavich
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Mountain Top Steering Committee 1994-1995
Roger Amerman, Chairman, Janet
Amerman, Rev.
Russ Wentling, Karen and Ron McClincey, Michael and Kate Grube, Paul
& Lisa Duffy, Wally Boswell, Tom Seyfried, Beverly & Wilbur
Westwood, Carol and Manny Cerqueria, Janice Carfagna, Virgil & Roni
DeGarmo and others who, with God’s strength and wisdom, prayed and
labored our community into existence!
Mountain Top Emmaus
Community
Lay Directors
Roger Amerman 1995-1999
Bob Basile 1999
Ron Klevenhagen 2000
Tom Seyfried 2001
Roger Galliford 2002
Doug O’Connell 2003
Karen Stonesifer 2004-2005
Mountain Top Emmaus
Community
Spiritual Directors
Rev. Russ Wentling 1995-1998
Rev. Ed Tucker 1999
Rev. Al Smith 2000
Rev. Jon Kline, 2000-2001
Rev. Judy Kehler 2001-2002
Rev. Ed Tucker 2003-2005
Help Sponsor
a Pilgrim!
Donate to
the Frank Horn Scholarship Fund
Sometimes,
community members need help with the financial obligations of
sponsorship. You can help, through the Frank Horn Scholarship Fund.
Contributions can be sent to: Mountain Top Community, c/o Faith Alive
UMC, 678 Pine St., Palmerton,
PA 18071-9768.
Please make checks payable to Mountain Top Walk to Emmaus.
Chrysalis Weekend Lay Directors
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Muhlenberg College
1. July, 1997
Ed Unangst
Susan Unangst
St. Francis Retreat Center
(boys) Mary Immaculate (girls)
2. August, 1998
Doug Russell
Jenn Hackett
St. Francis Retreat Center
3. July, 1999
No boys weekend
Jane Zotter
4. February, 2000
Manny Cerqueira
Carol Cerqueira
5. March, 2001
Roger Amerman
Shellie Russell
6. March, 2002
Tom Ebersole
Marcia Zackavitch
7. March, 2003
Darrel Deal
Karen McClincey
Kirby House
8. May, 2004
Doug Niebell
Karen Stonesifer
9. April, 2005
Todd Glassmire
Tanya Follweiler
Mountain Top Chrysalis
Steering
Committee 1996-1999
Ron & Karen McClincey, Rev. Judy
Kehler,
Rev. Rob Furler, Ed, Sue & Kelly Unangst, Dawn & Ed Fisher,
Jenn Hackett Stumer, Rick Schwoyer, Barry Homer, Jane Zotter, Charlie
& Irene Penwell, Renee & Craig Klevenhagen, Kirstin Ramsey and
Al Barnes.
Mountain Top Chrysalis
Community
Lay Directors
1999-2000
Karen McClincey
2001-2002
Ruth Groves
2002-2004
Jenn (Hackett) Stumer
Mountain Top Chrysalis
Community
Spiritual Directors
Rev. Les Groves 1999-2002
Rev. Ron McClincey 2003-2005
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