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Armenian Church To Have Heat This Winter

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  • Armenian Church To Have Heat This Winter

    ARMENIAN CHURCH TO HAVE HEAT THIS WINTER

    NCN News - Nazarene Communications Network
    Sept 13 2012

    As summer draws to a close, a Nazarene church in northern Armenia can
    look toward winter without its former dread thanks to a Nazarene
    Compassionate Ministries project that supplied the 40-person
    congregation with the means to heat their church.

    Winter is always severe in the mountainous area of Akhuran. The
    area sits at 865 meters altitude (nearly 3,000 feet), and sometimes
    reaching -40 Fahrenheit in the winter, said Seyran Vardanyan, pastor
    of the Nazarene church, in an email. In fact, last winter was the
    coldest in 12 years.

    The church, which was first organized in 2003 with four people,
    met in an unfinished building without a roof or floors. Two Work and
    Witness teams finished the construction that year.

    To decrease heating expenses, the church would plan all their weekly
    activities during the two- to three-hour worship gathering on Sunday
    mornings. This way they could leave the church unheated the rest of
    the week when no one was there.

    This hasn't worked well because the building's wood- and cow
    dung-burning stove fills the church with smoke. As a result, the
    people could only tolerate remaining inside the church for the Sunday
    morning worship service, and not for the usual Sunday School classes
    or kids clubs.

    The rest of each week, the church rooms were icy, which put its
    furniture, musical instruments, and electronic audio equipment at risk.

    Firewood is not cheap in Armenia. In rural areas, families struggle
    to find permanent jobs, and thus to afford wood to heat their homes,
    Vardanyan wrote.

    "Even families that can afford to buy wood normally only burn it
    in the morning and in the evening," he said. "[The] same economic
    challenge is affecting the pastors of the churches as well. Many
    pastors are bi-vocational; struggle to find permanent jobs."

    To help, NCM began to sponsor the heating expenses for the Nazarene
    church. As a result, the church doesn't have to conserve firewood and
    can scatter church activities throughout the week, which means they
    can avoid the eye-watering build-up of smoke. A more consistently warm
    church is also better for the sound equipment and musical instruments.

    "Without NCM support for heating during the winter we would not
    only face large utility bills, but would also have to involve more
    people-resources to solve issues related to the absence of heating,"
    Vardanyan wrote.

    NCM is also providing heating fuel to Nazarene pastors, including
    Vardanyan, and one of the most economically challenged families to
    whom the church actively ministers.

    "This winter we decided to help one family that was facing a very
    difficult economic situation," Vardanyan said. "Provided support was
    just right to help them get to the point where the head of the family
    was able to find employment and was able to take care of his family
    for the rest of the winter."

    http://www.ncnnews.org/nphweb/html/ncn/article.jsp?sid=10000008&id=10011736

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