Service & Evangelism

John Calvin Visitor Center 
Welcomes You!

Whether you feel God's call to service in music, mission, teaching, prayer, visitation, or youth work, there is a place and a purpose for you at John Calvin! 

  

Live Your Purpose!  

 


Interested In Becoming 

A Member of John Calvin?

Next       C.L.A.S.S. 101 - September 21, 4:00 pm - 7:30 pm

 

Most people live their entire lives without every knowing "WHY?". They exist year after year with no idea why they are here or God's purpose for their lives. The most basic question a person can ask is, "What is the meaning of life?". 


C.L.A.S.S. 101 (Christian Life And Service Seminar) will help you learn about John Calvin Presbyterian Church, understand the basics of the gospel, learn about our Purpose-Driven model of ministry, and help you begin to live your purpose! 


C.L.A.S.S. 101 is held 4 times a year on a Sunday evening. A meal is provided and child-care is available if needed. Interested?  E-mail:  Brenda Hutzler.

 

Let us help you determine your purpose--

for all of us are gifted by God with skills

 to use in His service. 

 

 

 

Discover 

Your

Purpose

at

John Calvin


Would you like to follow Him and make a difference in San Antonio and the world? We invite you to get involved in one of the many mission/ denominational programs JCPC supports:

Watch your dollars go to work in support of ministries for the elderly, sick, and poor, both locally and internationally in such places as Mexico, India, and Guatemala

Outreach & Missions

 

 


Why Go To Guatemala?

I have been asked this same question after each of my three trips.  The first time I said because I was asked to assist.  This seemed to be the best answer that I had. Things changed after the second trip.  I went to a small Presbyterian Church in the Boca Costa region.  This is in the south west of Guatemala not far from either the Mexico border or the Pacific Ocean.    A  rustic  village  on the  side of a very steep hill.  We went to put a ceramic tile floor down in the church.  The church  was six years old and still had a dirt floor.  This was to be a work trip and I went there to use my brawn.       I expected  hard work  and long days.  What  I got was  something entirely different.      Oh yeah we worked hard and the days sure seemed long.     However that is not  what struck me most.  Each day we would show up at the work site and each day there would be more children than the day before.  Then there were the curious adults wondering what a bunch of US citizens were doing at this church buried in the Guatemalan jungle.  Now I do not speak Spanish so communicating was a challenge.  There are the universal forms of communication that work even in the jungle.  Take a smile and share it and it comes back 10 fold.  Say good morning (Buenas Dias) and have a stranger look at you, smile and say good morning back.  Take the time to throw a ball around with an eight-year old who has never seen a football.  See how eager he is to learn to throw a spiral.  Watch him try and try again.  Have him come up to you and gesture how do I do this?  See his mother and or father (both of whom were working with us on the floor or feeding us) smile as their child makes a new friend.  I could go on and on but I think you should be able to get the picture. 

This year we returned to this small village again on a work trip.  We set in

motion the building of a Youth Bible Study Hall.  The work was hard and the

weather was hot and muggy.  It was the rainy season so it rained every day.

As we worked each morning we felt the humidity rise as fast as the heat. 

Because of the remote location and the difficulty getting in and out we had

to quit work before the rain started or we would have been stranded.

This resulted in not as much getting accomplished as we had hoped. 

At most of the work sites I have been at, both on mission work and on

commercial work, this would have resulted in disappointment.  Here at

Elim Presbyterian Church the result was just the opposite.  Appreciation

was the order of the day.  The Elders thanked us for our efforts and

promised that the work would be completed. I don’t know if you caught it or

not but this was the start of a “Youth” Bible Hall.  The same kids we played

with and made friends with two years ago are now involved in Bible study. 

Several of them read aloud from the Bible at a presentation they put on to

welcome us.  These were the kids that two years ago were not going to school

and now here they are reading out loud and in public.  This year my answer to that question is in the faces of changed children and in the words of grateful parents and proud church elders.  Guatemala has touched my heart and made me a better person because of it.  This is why I do mission work.  I always get more out of it than I put in.  Please read some of the history of Guatemala and you will understand why I go back. 

A strong need exists to support the Committee for Evangelical Service and Support of the Maya Quiche (CESSMAQ).  I gratefully belong to the Mission Presbytery Guatemala Partnership Team.  This partnership is chaired by Rev. Rob Mueler of Devine Redeemer Church and is comprised of members that have been on mission trips to Guatemala.  We all share the same passion to support this effort and invite you to become a part of it.  May God bless you as he has me and open your eyes as he has mine.  Find a way to support mission work.  If that leads you to Guatemala and the Guatemala Partnership Team, know that you will be welcomed with open arms here and in Guatemala.  If your support is in a different direction also know that your efforts will be as deeply appreciated by those that you help.

 

 

 

Give thanks to the Lord, for he is good; his love endures forever.  Psalm 106:1