HOME blank WEB EDITORIAL blank EVENTS CALENDAR
Gleaner Online
search
go
Gleaner Cover
current issue
past issues
sunset calculator
go
Enter your five-digit ZIP code
North Pacific Union Conference
GLEANER
5709 N. 20th St.
Ridgefield, WA 98642
360-857-7043

Copyright © 2010 NPUC
All rights reserved.

Website published by Manage Everything. Copyright © 2003-2010 MCM Design Studio, LLC.
All rights reserved. Patent pending.
blank
Re·birth
(re-burth) n. A Revival or Renaissance

June Smith loves to help others and is involved with a number of organizations. For example, she helps with several outreach activities for the military since she grew up in a military family and experienced firsthand the sacrifice that our country's soldiers have made. She is a member of Voices for Veterans, an organization to assist homeless veterans living far from family and society, and takes part in their annual "Stand Down." This event provides clothing, food, sleeping bags, boots, advice on benefits and the impromptu haircut for the 100 or so displaced vets who typically attend. And with each interaction, June gives a warm touch and a smile, seeing her father and brother in each of their faces. She also belongs to the Veterans of Foreign Wars and the American Legion.

A lifetime member of the American Rifle Association, which supports educating others in gun safety, June is a crack shot who once put a bullet through a penny—without a scope.

June is also an active member of the Sequim Guild for Childrens' Hospital, attending monthly meetings and volunteering for fundraisers. This organization holds a special place in her heart because when June's young son, David, needed 14 surgeries, and she didn't have health insurance, the guild helped her, charging only 50 cents per visit.

June Ellwanger Smith is also an active member of the Sequim Church and a bright light to all she meets. But for most of her life, she felt as out of step with her church as the vets did with their world.

Raised in the church, June attended Auburn Adventist Academy for three years, graduating in 1949. She met wonderful friends like Dorothy Parrish, Ruthe Ogden, Eleanor Wells and Sarah Heckendorn, but while she connected easily with other students, she couldn't seem to connect with her church.

After academy, June worked in the tailor shop at Whidbey Island's Naval Base. When a handsome young Marine entered the shop one day, it wasn't long before they were dating and then she and Chuck were married. Since her new husband had no interest in religion, she bid the church of her childhood goodbye.

By 1978, June and Chuck were divorced, their four kids grown, and she had moved to Sequim with her new husband, Robert,* an ordained Anglican-Catholic priest. He and June started St. Anselm's, a church they would nurture for the next 14 years.

In early 2006, June, now a widow, noticed ads in local store windows and the newspaper for It Is Written's Revelation Speaks Peace. She decided to attend.

On the first night of the seminar, she crossed a Seventh-day Adventist Church threshold for the first time in 57 years. She wondered if she'd find warm hearts or cold shoulders once the members knew how long she'd been absent. More importantly, would she find God's presence there?

In the foyer, warm smiles and enthusiastic handshakes calmed her fears. In the sanctuary, sweet, heavenly music touched a chord deep within her soul. In the presentation, Revelation's prophecies and promises were revealed in the light of God's love and mercy. Her mind awakened to an amazing realization—the church of her childhood had been reborn into a church of hope!

Fittingly, Justin Lyons, pastor, baptized June into the Sequim church family in June 2006. Her longtime friends from Auburn Academy who'd faithfully kept in touch over the decades were there to celebrate her rebirth.

Now when June crosses the church threshold on Sabbath mornings, she knows she belongs. When children are part of the worship service, whether reading, singing, or playing an instrument, she especially feels God's presence. But her greatest joy has been returning to a church that found its focus through a vital relationship with Christ the Savior. For her, the connection is now real.

* Not his real name.

Maureen Dowling, Sequim Church communication leader, writes from Sequim, Washington.
share your thoughts
Click image to
view enlargement:
See Following Caption.
At a recent Stand Down event, two Voices for Veterans volunteers and Second World War Marine veterans assist some more recent vets with the registration process so they can receive the assistance they need.
See Following Caption.
The church June and her husband started in Sequim.
See Following Caption.
June Ellwanger as a senior at Auburn Academy, class of '49.
See Following Caption.
June volunteers for the Childrens' Hospital Guild as a way to pay back the help they gave her and David during his 14 surgeries.
See Following Caption.
June Ellwanger Smith was reborn in June 2006, baptized by Justin Lyons, Sequim Church pastor.
See Following Caption.
June Smith at church with some of the kids she loves to see participate in church service.