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Learning from the best: Veteran missionaries Hobert<br />

and Marguerite Howard teach a session at Passport.<br />

Missionary<br />

Candidates Earn<br />

Passport to Missions<br />

World Missions Ministries hosts sixth<br />

annual Passport training event.<br />

IPHC missionary candidates earned their “Passport<br />

to Missions” May 14-25 on the campus of Holmes Bible<br />

College in Greenville, S.C. Sponsored by World Missions<br />

Ministries, Passport is an annual training program that<br />

prepares missionary candidates for their assignments<br />

overseas and local church leaders to support missions<br />

in the United States.<br />

According to WMM Assistant Director Dr. Harold<br />

Dalton, this year’s Passport class consists of 26<br />

missionary candidates and 15 pastors and missions<br />

directors who are “serious” about missions.<br />

“We feel like it is a superb experience for people<br />

who are interested in missions—not just superficially<br />

interested, but interested to the point that they’re<br />

thinking about committing their lives to it,” says Dalton.<br />

Passport teachers include veteran IPHC<br />

missionaries, who share their inspiring testimonies<br />

along with practical advice for working in the field.<br />

Passport also provides the opportunity for<br />

candidates to interact with other cultures. During<br />

week one, students had dinner at a traditional Indian<br />

restaurant in Greenville. Members of the local Indian<br />

community spoke to them about the food and culture.<br />

They rounded out the evening with a visit to a local<br />

Hindu temple, where the priest answered questions<br />

about Hindu faith.<br />

“For missionary candidates who want to learn about<br />

missions to an Indian culture, what better way than to<br />

meet people who are actually Hindus that are following<br />

that religion in the United States?” says Dalton.<br />

He adds that a similar outing to a Middle Eastern<br />

restaurant and a local Muslim mosque is planned for<br />

the second week.<br />

For more information about Passport to Missions,<br />

please contact World Missions Ministries at 1-888-474-<br />

2966 or wmissions@iphc.org.<br />

10 August 2012 | iphc.org/experience<br />

Southwestern Christian<br />

University Experiences<br />

Transitions<br />

School adds MATS degree and names a new dean.<br />

Southwestern Christian University has announced a new<br />

degree and new leadership.<br />

The Graduate School has been approved to offer a Master<br />

of Arts in theological studies, with courses set to begin this<br />

fall. Classes will be offered on both the Bethany and Tulsa<br />

Dr. Spencer<br />

Ledbetter<br />

campuses, as well as at Emmanuel College in Franklin Springs, Ga., and online.<br />

The Graduate School will continue to offer the Master of Ministry degree for<br />

those seeking a more practical education. The offering of the M.A.T.S. is the first<br />

visible step toward having a full-fledged seminary in which to train ministers in<br />

the IPHC.<br />

In addition, Dr. Tramel announced his resignation as dean of the Graduate<br />

School. Dr. Tramel will return to the classroom as a full-time teacher in<br />

graduate and undergraduate classes, as well as resume his lifelong calling as<br />

an evangelist.<br />

The university has appointed Dr. Spencer Ledbetter as the new dean of<br />

the School of Adult and Graduate Studies, bringing two decades of academic<br />

excellence to the leadership of the rapidly expanding school.<br />

“Dr. Ledbetter has the highest academic credentials, the strongest<br />

commitment to biblical truth, a passionate zest for ministry, and the added<br />

gift of resonating with all people. I am excited about the future of the Graduate<br />

School under his leadership,” said Tramel.<br />

IPHC Launches Global<br />

<strong>Church</strong> Planting<br />

Initiative<br />

EVUSA and World Missions partner<br />

with DCPI to build healthy churches.<br />

<strong>Church</strong> planting has long been a significant<br />

part of the IPHC’s genetic makeup. This year, IPHC<br />

leaders have launched a global initiative to expand<br />

ministry and build healthy churches around the<br />

world.<br />

The key to this initiative is a strategic<br />

partnership with Dynamic <strong>Church</strong> Planting<br />

<strong>International</strong> (DCPI), a training organization based<br />

out of San Diego, Calif. This year, Evangelism USA<br />

hosted regional training events to educate and<br />

train potential church planters and conference<br />

leaders. In addition, World Missions Ministries<br />

hosted<br />

DCPI<br />

training for<br />

key leaders<br />

in other<br />

countries.<br />

“The<br />

thing<br />

I’m most<br />

EVUSA Executive Director Rev. Chris<br />

Thompson at DCPI training in North<br />

Carolina.<br />

excited<br />

about is<br />

that DCPI will provide<br />

training and insight into<br />

what God is doing today<br />

and desires to do in the<br />

future, no matter where<br />

we are in our ministry<br />

journey,” said Rev. Stacy<br />

Hilliard, director of <strong>Church</strong><br />

Multiplication Ministries.<br />

Presiding Bishop Doug<br />

Beacham said church<br />

planting is vital to the<br />

IPHC’s future, and DCPI<br />

is a key factor in providing<br />

quality training to our<br />

leaders across the globe.<br />

“All of our conferences,<br />

regardless of size and<br />

scope, can benefit from<br />

DCPI by learning how<br />

to reach the cultures<br />

around them. And this<br />

is something we must<br />

do—reach the multiplied<br />

cultural groups that<br />

have become part of the<br />

American landscape,”<br />

Beacham said.<br />

To learn more, contact<br />

EVUSA at evusainfo@iphc.<br />

org or (405) 792-7150.

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