Pathfinders Serve Communities in Meaningful Ways

August 30, 2021

Pathfinders in the Upper Columbia Conference have been assisting in their communities during the COVID-19 pandemic.

By Makena Horton

UCC Communications Coordinator


The COVID-19 pandemic has created multiple unprecedented circumstances. While some are unable to serve the surrounding areas during this time, Pathfinders in the Upper Columbia Conference have been hard at work assisting in their communities.

 

Richie Brower, UCC associate director of club ministries, shared that the pandemic has come with its ups and downs for Pathfinder ministry. “The Pandemic has been the best and worst of times for our Club Ministries program,” says Brower. With the ever-changing safety protocols of the past year, many clubs chose to shut down. This decreased participation in conference events by 66 percent.

 

However, while some were deterred by fear and the chaos, some of the clubs and staff felt God calling them to minister to their communities during these changing times. They began asking the question, “What can we do to serve our community in meaningful ways?”

 

One Pathfinder club that asked that very poignant question is the Walla Walla University Church Torchbearer Pathfinders. They have been very active in their community during this pandemic, and during the Christmas season, the Torchbearers worked to help package a very large number of meals for holiday distribution at the Walla Walla University Church.

 

During this time, a previously-founded collaboration between Club Ministries and Adventist Community Services blossomed into a partnership, earning the name HopeBuilders. Whether it be in response to natural disasters or impacting housing instability, HopeBuilders connects organizations with young people and adult volunteers to their community’s needs.

 

Their website, www.hope-builders.com, highlights the mission and collaborative projects in progress, including their Malden projects, which have been spearheaded by the Spangle Wheatland Coyotes Pathfinders.

 

When Malden was hit by the Pine Creek fire in September 2020, only 20 of the 120 structures in the town were standing when the smoke cleared. HopeBuilders worked with the Pathfinders to help the town of Malden get back on its feet. The projects they worked on included designing a new park, presenting the new park design to the Malden Town Council, building clothing racks for their donation center, refurbishing lawn mowers for the community members and leading multiple beautification projects around the small town.

 

In addition to this, the Pathfinders made pre-cut, pre-drilled garden boxes which have been shared in Malden and Deary, Idaho. They also launched the Blazing Grains Granola line by implementing an online store on the HopeBuilders website. The nine flavors of granola available for order raise funds for Malden and other communities in need.

 

To learn more about the HopeBuilders collaboration, shop the Blazing Grains Granola line, or read about the projects currently being taken on by the Pathfinders, visit www.hope-builders.com.

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