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Announcements

Guest Speaker, Beth Musser, June 26, 2011
Posted by: admin on 06/19/2011 03:59 PM (Read: )
Beth Musser will be speaking about her missionary trip to Alaska to help with the Iditarod Dog Sled Race.
Bible Dinner Club
Posted by: admin on 06/03/2011 08:44 PM (Read: )
The Bible Dinner Club meets the first Thursday of every month at the home of Bob and Shirley Steele at six p.m. This includes a pot luck dinner and random studying of the Bible. Participants discuss whatever scripture is on their hearts that evening.
Current News
Posted by: admin on 11/16/2009 04:23 PM (Read: )
NEWSFLASH!!!

On November 12, Pastor Gloria Rhudy received notification that
Woodlawn UMC received an Accessibility Grant from the Holston
Conference in the amount of $500 for the purpose of providing handicap
access to the church. The church applied for this grant to help with
the expense involved in adding a handicapp accessible bathroom to the
main level of the church. Gaye W. King, Associate Director of
Connectional Ministries, sent the notification and the check with her
blessing as the church endeavors to assist our physically impaired
members and guests. Woodlawn UMC is in the process of receiving bids
from different builders and continues to add to the capital campaign
set aside for this purpose.


NEWSFLASH!!! Our beloved Harriett Trausneck was presented an award! Scroll down this page to see what it was!!!

NEWSFLASH!!! A new baby has been brought into the world--Evangeline Kate (Eve) at 8 lbs., 20 inches to Lauren and Scott Gunnell-Beck. See the picture below.




The youth helps every month on the 3rd Sat. with the food pantry. Every Sunday that we are at Woodlawn the youth are going to help pack boxes.

Check out the Facebook site for the Youth and the Young Adults by selecting the Facebook Menu Item. The church is also on Facebook.

Scroll down the home page to view the Article about Wilma Foreman that was in the Oct. 11, 2010 issue of THE CALL.

Woodlawn United Methodist Church

church


The church is located on Woodlawn Road in the lovely little village of Woodlawn, Virginia.

The pastor is Rev. Gloria Rhudy.

The congregation is small but loving and caring. They welcome visitors with open arms and affection. If you are looking for a church home, this is an excellent choice.

Sunday School is at 10 a.m.
Sunday Worship Service is at 11 a.m.


A dedication to Sue Hall:

In Recognition
Of Sue Hall
For Her Special Service

On behalf of the entire Woodlawn United Methodist Church family we would like to thank you for having the God-given vision to see that a seemingly impossible task could be accomplished.
We thank God for your unique vision and steadfast faith that encouraged all of us in this endeavor.
Your commitment is hereby recognized and we wish to show this small symbol of our appreciation as we see that the vision of a fully-handicapped restroom on the main level of our church structure has been realized.
On this day of our Lord, October 2, 2011, we present this token of our appreciation to you and look forward to many more years of working with you in service to our Lord.













This is a copy of what Wilma Foreman Foreman wrote 10 years ago after 911. Her daughter, Amanda, was only four years old and in pre-school.
THE LITTLE GIRL’S SONG
September eleventh, two thousand and one
The world was struck
My heart fell to the bottom of the earth
No hope no peace
Only grief
What would I do
The world was gone at least the world I knew
I went to bed and covered my head
The next morning what did I hear?
It was not a bomb
It was not fear
My little girl was singing
I could not believe the glorious sound
I found peace in my little girl’s voice
I examined my heart and this is what I found
That Jesus would never forsake us now
I felt a since of relief
As the little girl’s voice did repeat
Jesus loves me this I know
For the bible tells me so
So fellow Americans take your peace
In this little girl’s song
Sigh your relief
God is in control
So find your faith
Let a little child’s song light your face

Jesus loves us
So we must be strong
And his hand will guide us
As we go on.


Gooch Harmon's Obituary




|
Gleaves "Gooch" Howard Harmon, Jr.
(February 1, 1928 - December 25, 2010)


Gleaves "Gooch" Howard Harmon, Jr., Age 82, of Woodlawn, VA died Saturday, Dec. 25, 2010 at his home.

Mr. Harmon was born Feb. 1, 1928 in Carroll County to Gleaves Howard and Birdie Farmer Harmon.

He is survived by his wife, Uda Hill Harmon of the home; daughters and sons-in-law, Sherry & Eric Herman, Amy and Ricky Nelson and son, Thomas G. Harmon all of Woodlawn, VA; sisters and brother-in-law, Mary G. Uden, Pensacola, FL, Linda H. Bobbitt, Woodlawn, VA, Anita H. & Harry King, Gulf Shores, AL; brother & sister-in-law, Jim & Barbara Harmon, Galax, VA; grandhildren, Tori Shae Harmon, Garrett William Nelson, Ruston Harmon Nelson and Ian Chandler Herman. Several nieces & nephews also survive.

The funeral service will be held Tuesday, Dec. 28, 2010 in the Vaughan-Guynn Chapel at 3:00 PM. Burial will follow in the Woodlawn Cemetery. The family will receive friends from 11:00 AM until time for the service on Tuesday. His body will also lie in state for viewing at the funeral home from 11:00 AM until 5:00 PM on Monday, Dec. 27, 2010. Officiating ministers will be Elder Edward Bowman and the Rev. Gloria Lancaster Rhudy. Military rites willl be performed by the Hillsville VFW Post #1115. The family requests no food and in lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to the St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, 262 Danny Thomas Place, Memphis, TN 38105; to Joy Ranch, Inc., Woodlawn, VA 24381 or to the Woodlawn United Methodist Church Food Pantry.






















res


wilma


Reaching out to lonely truckers: Wytheville District lay speaker creates truck-stop CD ministry

Permission to place on this website received from:
Annette Spence
Editor, The Call
Holston Conference
United Methodist Church
Alcoa, Tenn.
(865) 293-4130
www.holston.org


By Annette Spence

Wilma Foreman (pictured at a truck stop
in Fort Chiswell, Va.) reaches out to truckers
all over the country.
WOODLAWN, Va. -- Life on the road gets lonely for long-distance truck drivers. That’s what Wilma Foreman’s husband used to tell her when he drove a regular route from his home in southwest Virginia to the west coast.

At truck stops along the way, David Foreman noticed the free CDs left by various evangelical groups. He often picked them up and brought them home for his ailing mother-in-law.

When Wilma Foreman first listened to the sermonizing CDs, she immediately noticed something: “David never brought home any women speakers,” she says. “I wasn’t sure if truck drivers would receive a message from a woman.”

Four years ago, Wilma Foreman felt a strong call to be that friendly female voice sharing the Good News with lonely truckers. Today, she has a small network of prayer partners, financial and music contributors, and truck-driving delivery men who have helped her get 10 different messages spread all over the country into 2,500 CDs.

“Wilma takes seriously the Great Commission to go into the world and preach the Gospel,” says the Rev. Gloria Rhudy, Foreman’s pastor at Woodlawn United Methodist Church. The trucker CDs were the perfect outlet for the passion that emerged soon after Foreman and her family joined the Woodlawn congregation in 2005.

“Sermons came pouring from her, and she no idea what to do with them,” Rhudy says. With encouragement from her then-pastor, the Rev. Terri Johnson Gregory, Foreman received training to become a certified lay speaker.
Going on the road
Wilma Foreman didn’t attend church as a child but her mother was a Christian who taught Christian principles to her five daughters. She was 19 and working in a diner when seeing the Rev. Billy Graham preach on TV led her to privately kneel and profess her faith to Jesus Christ. She began attending a Church of God, followed by a Missionary Baptist church, where she was baptized.

At age 23 she met David Foreman, a United Methodist, while working in a textiles factory. They married and had three children. Through years of trials, including the raising of a child with Down Syndrome and her own bout with melanoma – Foreman’s faith stayed strong, says her twin sister, Wanda Dunford.

“She never wavered,” Dunford said. “Even when she was a very small child, I remember her love for a picture our mother had, of Jesus on the cross.”

Years later, Foreman’s mother was sick with congestive heart failure when her husband began bringing home the Christian CDs discovered on his truck route from Virginia to Oklahoma, Arizona, and California.

“She never listened to the CDs, but she loved the preaching on TV,” Wilma Foreman says of her mother. “Her last days were her best days. She realized God loved her.”

Edna Golding Davis died in November 2006 at the age of 83. Her daughter preached publicly for the first time at her funeral.

After the funeral, Wilma Foreman sat down and listened to all the CDs her mother never heard – and finally knew what to do with the words that welled inside her.
“The Lord called me into ministry right then and there,” she says. “I knew that my sermons needed to go on the road.”

There was only one problem. Foreman immediately called her pastor to ask, “Do I need to be ordained to do this?” Pastor Gregory responded that anybody can share the word of God.

“She preached to her washer and dryer for years before she got up the courage to put her messages on CDs,” says Gregory, laughing. “We are very proud of Wilma and her family, too.” Gregory is now pastor at First United Methodist Church in Independence, Va.

Until she came to Woodlawn UMC, Foreman had never even seen a female pastor before. Gregory, followed by Rhudy, turned out to be her mentors.

“It was all so new to me – I had so many questions,” Foreman says. “You have to give the United Methodist Church an A-plus for that, for being so accepting of women in ministry. I was so impressed with that.”
Coming from the heart
Foreman’s first CD sermon, “God’s Unconditional Love” was about her mother and deemed too personal by her family, so Foreman never distributed it. Her second CD, “Expect the Unexpected,” was about the gift of her first child, David, who has Down Syndrome. A friend, Bobby Patterson, let Foreman use his recording studio for free. People from her church or community gave money for production costs or offered to record praise songs to go with the words.

David Foreman took his wife’s sermons out on his company’s route, asking truck stop managers if he could leave 10 to 15 CDs near ATMs, public telephones, or in the occasional onsite chapel. His request was rarely denied.

“Some of these truck stops are rough places where ladies of the night hang out,” David Foreman says. “I struck up a lot of conversations with people and found out there was a lot of need for these CDs.”

When Wilma Foreman started talking about her new ministry at her factory job, her co-worker and friend Shirley Templeton committed to praying with her.

“It really sounded like a wonderful idea,” said Templeton, whose sister and co-worker Katey Cochran also became a prayer partner. “We pray for every person who picks up a CD, and not for the message to just stop there, but to have a rippling effect.”

As the CDs disappeared along David Foreman’s route, he replaced them with his wife’s latest message on return trips. Just before he developed health problems and lost his driving job, a second delivery person was enlisted: David Coe, whose work took him in a different direction through the Carolinas, Kentucky, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, and Pennsylvania.
Like Foreman, Coe also found it easy to get permission to place the CDs at trucks stops along the way.

“By the time I would take a shower and get something to eat, the CDs I left an hour ago were already gone,” says Coe. “I think it’s the way Wilma comes across. It’s like she’s talking straight at you. You know it’s coming from the heart.”

“The CDs are so prayed for, so anointed when they go out,” says the shy lay speaker, who doesn’t see her ministry as a one-woman show but as a group effort. “When the donations come in, I know it’s time to make another CD. Just this week I received $200.” The 11th CD is already in the works.

With the support of her church, community, and co-workers, Foreman now has the equipment at home to do most of the production and packaging of the CDs herself. Her lay speaking ministry has expanded, too. She often assists her pastor at Woodlawn and has preached at churches in the Wytheville District. Her CDs – especially the Christmas messages – are sometimes followed by personal thank-you notes from grateful listeners.

“When you think about women and truck drivers, you might be surprised they would even listen to me,” says Foreman, age 47. “But Jesus would have died for just one person. If one person is led to Jesus Christ through this ministry, then it’s all worth it.”

David Foreman and David Coe, on the other hand, say they are not surprised that truckers can find warmth and hope in the wise words of a woman from Woodlawn.

“I did a lot of praying out on the road when I was a trucker,” Foreman says. “The scales, the weather, trying to get back home to your family, the schedule, the DOT [department of transportation] … it’s a stressful life.”

“It is a stressful life,” Coe confirms. “You’ve living and working in a tug-of-war between the government, the customer, and the company. A lot of truckers may not live the Christian life, but they believe in God. My part in this ministry is easy, but I’m glad to be doing it.”







There is a link to a video about Wilma's Ministry at the bottom of the Menu selections.






Harriet Trausneck Receives Award

Rev. Charles A. Hutchins, vice president for development and church relations at the Holston United Methodist Home for Children in Greeneville, TN, was a special guest and he delivered the message at Woodlawn United Methodist Church Sunday, October 24. He presented a special framed certificate to Harriet Trausneck of Woodlawn, seen at right, "for her many years of service and dedication" to the Children's Home. She has promoted the "fifth Sunday" offering, which has contributed hundreds of dollars to the Home over the years. Rev. Hutchins also delivered the message that same morning at Shiloh United Methodist Church. Both churches are pastored by the Rev. Gloria Rhudy.
harriett


Photo by Don Trausneck

HARRIET D. TRAUSNECK July 15, 1917 - February 23, 2012

BIOGRAPHY
Harriet D. Trausneck, 94, of Woodlawn, VA passed away on Thursday, February 23, 2012 at Twin County Regional Hospital.

She was preceded in death by her husband, Herbert R. Trausneck; parents, Albert F. and Harriet Bjorkman Dietz; granddaughter, Janette M. Cutting; brother, William B. Dietz.

She is survived by a daughter, Nancy Orr of Vicksburg, Mississippi; son, Donald A. Trausneck of Woodlawn; grandchildren and spouse, Donna J. and Wilson Harvey, and James M. DeGruchy; great grandchildren, B.J. Ruschewski, Ashleigh M. Ruschewski, Ian K. DeGruchy, Joshua A. Cutting, and Jordan F. Cutting.

Funeral service will be held on Monday, February 27, 2012 at 11:00 AM at Woodlawn United Methodist Church with Rev. Gloria Rhudy officiating. The family will receive friends at the church on Sunday, February 26, 2012 from 6:00 until 8:00 PM. Vaughan-Guynn-McGrady Chapel is serving the family.

harriet


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