Connect with us

Spotlight

Welcome to Our New Accountant!

Published

on

We are pleased to welcome Rhonda Hoekstra as our new accountant at the national office. She replaces Ryan Mills, who, after assisting us immeasurably during a critically important transitional accounting stage, is returning to his accounting consulting business. Rhonda has nearly 30 years of accounting experience with 13 of those years using Dynamics GP, the accounting program used by Open Bible Churches.  

Brian Ehlers, secretary/treasurer for Open Bible Churches, said, โ€œWe are thankful to have Rhonda joining our team. We believe God has called her here for such a time as this. Her experience and dedication will be a real asset as we move forward into Godโ€™s best for Open Bible Churches.โ€ 

Rhonda gave her heart to the Lord at the Open Bible church in Austin, Minnesota, attended Open Bible youth camps, and attended Open Bible College for a year. She lived in Arizona and Minnesota before recently moving back to the Des Moines area. 

โ€œI am excited and honored to be joining the Open Bible team,โ€ she said. โ€œIt is so amazing how God works. A few months ago my husband and I were in the area [of the national office], and I asked him to drive up to the building. I went down memory lane with him recalling the time I was in school, which used to be right by the office. Little did I know that I would be working here.โ€  

Rhonda is a mother of two and grandma of nine. She lives with her husband, Lee, in Ankeny, Iowa.  

Spotlight

No Prayer Forgotten: The 60-Year Journey to Find Her Brotherย 

Published

on

Ruth Brauer spent decades wondering about the brother she never got to know. Born with Down Syndrome in the 1960s, heโ€™d been sent away with little explanation, and she was discouraged from asking questions. After years of dead ends, a series of connections only God could have orchestrated led to the reunion sheโ€™d been praying for. Sixty years after his birth, Ruth finally saw her brother for the first time.  

It was March 1960. Ruth was about to turn seven when her baby brother was born on March 8th at Iowa Methodist Hospital. The excitement of finally having a brother to join her and her three sisters quickly turned to confusion as she was unable to meet him. Later, she learned he had Down Syndrome and that doctors had advised her parents to place him in a care facility at the nearby Woodward State Hospital.  

The very first picture Ruth received of her brother, Alan.

โ€œBack in the sixties, thatโ€™s just what you did,โ€ Ruth shared. โ€œBut I know it tore my parents apart.โ€ 

Questions about Alan were shut down. Ruth didnโ€™t know where he was or even his exact birth date. 

โ€œI always wondered about him, but Iโ€™d get in trouble when I asked.โ€ 

Even without knowing him, Ruth had always felt drawn to him. That compassion shaped much of her life. After being invited to Journey Church in 2016 by a friend, Ruth was especially moved by the churchโ€™s outreach events for children with special needs. As a barber, her favorite clients were those with special needs, and she also volunteered for years with the Des Moines Special Olympics. 

Thatโ€™s where the first breakthrough came.  

One day, she struck up a deeper conversation with a fellow volunteer named Ray. He mentioned he had worked at Woodward State Hospital starting in 1959. Ruthโ€™s attention snapped into focus. 

โ€œMy brother was there in 1960! His name was Alan Politsch.โ€ 

Rayโ€™s reaction was immediate. His eyes widened and he began to walk away. 

โ€œWaitโ€”what did I say?โ€ Ruth called after him. 

I had my hand on the table, and suddenly he was holding it.

โ€œIโ€™m not allowed to talk to you,โ€ he replied. โ€œYour parents banned me from talking to you.โ€ 

Still, she pressed him for one thing: a birthdate. 

โ€œPlease, my parents are gone. I just want to find my brother.โ€ 

Before the day ended, Ray quietly gave her the month and day. It was enough to start, but not enough to get through the wall of privacy protections. Every group home she contacted turned her away. 

Alan at a prom for young people with special needs.

Years passed. 

Then another door openedโ€”this time at a food pantry. Ruth shared her story with a volunteer named Bob, who offered to connect her with someone in the state department.  

โ€œThey may not even call you,โ€ he warned.  

But they did.  

The woman on the phone didnโ€™t give her name, but simply said, โ€œBob said I needed to hear your story.โ€ Ruth told her everything she knew: names, dates, places, family history. Weeks later, the phone rang again.  

โ€œHi, this is Michelle,โ€ the voice said. โ€œIโ€™m Alanโ€™s guardian.โ€ 

Tears falling, Ruth began to speak. 

โ€œI donโ€™t want to take anything from you. I just want to know heโ€™s okayโ€ฆ maybe see a picture. And someday, maybe meet him.โ€ 

As she spoke, Ruthโ€™s phone began to ping. Michelle was sending photos. 

The call came in 2021, but it would take almost two years to build enough trust for a visit.  

In August of 2023, Ruth was invited to a staff meeting at Alanโ€™s care facility. As she sat in the room with nine other employees staring at her, Michelle walked into the room, Alan beside her, and guided him to the seat right next to Ruth.  

I always felt like he was close by,โ€ Ruth said. โ€œI just didnโ€™t know he was five miles away my whole life.

โ€œHe kept looking at me, nodding, with this little crooked smile,โ€ Ruth said. โ€œI had my hand on the table, and suddenly he was holding it.โ€ 

A nurse watching over video spoke up: โ€œHe knows youโ€™re his sister.โ€ 

The bond was immediate and mutual. 

โ€œI always felt like he was close by,โ€ Ruth said. โ€œI just didnโ€™t know he was five miles away my whole life.โ€ 

Alan at his 66th birthday party.

Since that day, theyโ€™ve spent birthdays and holidays together. 

โ€œHeโ€™s the best,โ€ she said. โ€œHe fits right under my armโ€”heโ€™s tiny. He loves Santa, the color red, Coke, and sunglasses.โ€ 

But the reunion has come with weight, too. Now 66, Alanโ€™s health is declining, and Ruth has been asked to help plan his funeral. 

โ€œI just found him,โ€ she said. โ€œAnd now Iโ€™m helping plan his funeralโ€ฆ But he’s mine. He’s my baby brother. The one I waited for when I was seven.โ€ 

Looking back, Ruth continues to uncover the fingerprints of God. Ray, the man who first gave her Alanโ€™s birthdate, later shared that he had cared for Alan during his first sixteen years at the hospital. 

What are the odds? 

When asked what this journey has taught her, Ruth doesnโ€™t hesitate: 

โ€œPatience, persistence, prayer, and people.โ€ Thatโ€™s what it took to find her brother, and itโ€™s what the Lord provided along the way.  

Some stories donโ€™t unfold quickly. Many of them take time, and itโ€™s only later that we realize how God was working in our waiting. Ruthโ€™s story serves as a reminder that no prayer is forgotten, no relationship is beyond reach, and that even in life’s chapters that feel long or uneventful, God is still writing.  


About the Author

Hannah Bemis currently serves as the editor and director of Message of the Open Bible. She always wanted to do too many things when she grew up, and God has been kind enough to let her do most of them in different seasons. After seasons of mothering, teaching, writing, and staff pastoring, Hannahโ€™s most recent adventure is planting and pastoring College Street Church in Newberg, Oregon, with her husband, Jordan. After Jesus and all her favorite people, she spends the remainder of her passion on pizza and dark chocolate in equal measure. 

Continue Reading

Spotlight

My Grace Is Sufficient

Published

on

โ€œMy grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weaknessโ€ (2 Corinthians 12:9 NIV).

There is a quiet invitation woven through these words โ€“ an invitation into constant, total dependence on God. We often imagine maturity as having our act together, managing our lives with unshakable strength. But in Godโ€™s kingdom, maturity looks nothing like self-reliance. It looks like surrender.

… in Godโ€™s kingdom, maturity looks nothing like self-reliance. It looks like surrender.

Just as valleys are watered with rain and become fruitful while lofty mountains remain dry, so it is with our hearts. The low places โ€“ the humbling, honest valleys โ€“ are where Godโ€™s grace pools and grows us. The heights of self-confidence, the illusions that weโ€™ve got everything under control, stay barren.

The Hall Perrine Building where all Sarah’s cancer treatments and appointments took place.

Grace is not just Godโ€™s favor; it is His love set in motion toward us. When Paul begged God to remove the thorn in his life, God didnโ€™t take it away. He gave Paul something far more powerful: grace. Sometimes relief comes by His removing the burden, but sometimes God strengthens the shoulders that carry it.

This past year, Iโ€™ve walked through my own valleys in ways I could never have anticipated. An abnormal mammogram led to surgery, which revealed breast cancer. By Godโ€™s miraculous hand, the tumor was removed completely, with clear margins and no spread although the tumor was dangerously close to my lymph nodes โ€“ a reminder of Godโ€™s perfect timing, protection, and faithfulness.

But the challenges didnโ€™t end there. Amid cancer treatment, autoimmune flare-ups, and the toll on my body, I experienced alarming numbness on the left side of my face, suddenly losing strength in my left arm and leg. A trip to the ER revealed a nearly blocked right carotid artery, a tear likely caused by a fall Iโ€™d taken months prior, and a blood clot that could have caused a massive stroke.

Sarah and her kids praying for the day ahead.

Yet in the middle of chaos as we prepared for worst case scenarios, Godโ€™s grace showed up. Within a day of their being detected, scans revealed that both the clot and tear were gone. Every doctor involved was astonished. I was walking, speaking, and moving with minimal effects โ€“ a miracle too clear to dismiss.

In these moments, Iโ€™ve learned that we donโ€™t truly trust Godโ€™s grace until we first admit we are insufficient. Itโ€™s easier to believe in grace for the past or the future. But grace for this moment, right here, in the pressing reality of fear, pain, and uncertainty, requires a present-tense, radical faith.

God didnโ€™t just supplement my strength; He became my strength. He reminded me that the thorn doesnโ€™t defeat us; it becomes the doorway through which His glory steps in. My  husband, family, friends, and the countless prayers lifted on my behalf became vessels of Godโ€™s love, reminding me that what looks like an ending is often where He does His best work.

… the thorn doesnโ€™t defeat us; it becomes the doorway through which His glory steps in.

Through lingering numbness and nerve pain in my face (Trigeminal neuralgia), vision issues in my left eye, and the exhaustion of hospital stays and oncology appointments, God has been teaching me to release my grip on self-sufficiency. Every test, every scan, every unknown has been a lesson in dependence, a sacred invitation to rest fully in Him. He meets us in both the dramatic and the mundane.

The ribbon display showing all who are fighting cancer together at Sarah’s hospital.

As we face uncertainty and continue to navigate treatments, recoveries, and the unknown, the same promise remains: His grace is sufficient. His power is made perfect in weakness. My valleys have become fertile soil, and in surrendering, Iโ€™ve discovered strength I never possessed alone.

To anyone reading this, let this be a challenge and an encouragement: donโ€™t wait for the mountains to feel secure. Step into your valley. Admit your insufficiency. Rest in grace. Let Godโ€™s power carry you through the moments you cannot handle on your own. Because in the valleys, in the weakness, God is not just present โ€“ He is gloriously, powerfully enough.


About the Author

Sarah Holsapple serves on staff at her church in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, as the Creative & Spiritual Development Director. She serves alongside her husband of almost twenty years, Harris, who is the lead pastor at First Open Bible. Sarah has been teaching and preaching for several years. Sheโ€™s passionate about discipleship and womenโ€™s ministry and served as the Regional Womenโ€™s Director for Open Bible Central Region. One of her favorite things in life is being a mom to her two incredible children, Hudson and Lynnley Jo. 

The last several years for Sarah have been the hardest of her life. She truly knows the depths of heartbreak and what it feels like to wrestle through healing. She has seen God move in miraculous ways and has experienced great comfort in knowing that we serve a faithful God. Sarah feels great joy in sharing encouragement from the word of God, seeing lives changed and people set free!

Continue Reading

Spotlight

Friendship Across Cultures, Faith Across Tables

Published

on

My wife, Leona, was at an eye exam, and I was waiting in the lobby when a good-looking couple walked in. Thinking they were Hispanic, I greeted them in Spanish. With a look of surprise, they responded that they didnโ€™t understand. Noticing their accent, I asked what language they spoke. โ€œArabic,โ€ they replied. They were from Cairo, Egypt.

โ€œI was just there!โ€ I exclaimed. We introduced ourselves, and when they asked about my trip, I explained that I had gone to teach at INSTE Global Bible College. As we talked, we discovered common groundโ€”Youssef and Fatima are both college professors, and Leona and I also work in higher education.

When the conversation turned to food, my Italian rootsโ€”revealed by my surnameโ€”caught their interest. I asked them what their favorite Italian dish was. โ€œWe love eggplant parmesan,โ€ they answered.

Dr. Nick Venditti with Open Bible missionary Andy Wagler during a trip to Egypt.

โ€œWould you come to our house for dinner if I made that?โ€ I asked. They gladly accepted. When Leonaโ€™s appointment ended, we compared calendars and set a date to host Youssef, Fatima, and their four sons.

At home we talked about what to do with our dog Barney. Living in a townhome, we couldn’t put him outside. Knowing that Muslims traditionally view dogs as unclean, we decided to banish Barney to our finished basement during the visit.

Before dinner, we explained our custom of thanking God for our food. They understood, appreciating that we blessed them also in our prayer. Conversation flowed easily as we shared the meal. Afterward, the younger boys, full of energy, spotted the basement stairs. Leona explained about Barney, assuring Fatima that he was friendly. With her permission, the boys bounded downstairs to play with one very happy dog. The older boys preferred the TV room to watch football, while we lingered at the table with Youssef and Fatima, enjoying the chance to connect as fellow educators. Our first dinner together was a success.

As Fatima and Leona washed the dishes, the conversation was salted with quotes from the Koran and the Bible…

That Thanksgiving, we invited the family back to share in a traditional holiday meal. Barney had a sleepover at Leonaโ€™s sisterโ€™s house this time. We set the table for a 1:00 p.m. feast, but our guests were delayed returning from Wisconsin and arrived closer to 5:00. Once gathered, we enjoyed another rich time together.

Barney Venditti

Leona and Fatima washed dishes side by side, as Youssef and I chatted in the living room. All four boys bundled into the TV room to watch sports. Later, gathered by the fireplace, Youssef asked, โ€œDoes the Bible talk about the end of the world?โ€ He was genuinely interested in comparing Christian and Muslim viewpoints on the end times. We had a very interesting conversation that evening! It was 11:00 p.m. when six-year-old Ahmed sleepily stumbled from the TV room, asking, โ€œCan we go home now?โ€ Shortly thereafter, we said good night to our guests with gratitude for another memorable evening.

Months later, Youssef and Fatima invited us to their home for the Muslim celebration of Eid, marking the close of Ramadan. Fatima had prepared the traditional feast of Egyptian dishes. We arrived in time to count down to sunset, and then the banquet began. As Fatima and Leona washed the dishes, the conversation was salted with quotes from the Koran and the Bible as Fatima explained Eid. The rest of the evening was filled with relaxing conversation, along with plans to get together for the Fourth of July.

Friendship and food opened doors for evangelism.

Our last gathering was at Christmas. Once again, we shared a meal, meaningful conversation, and plenty of laughter. Wanting to give them New Testaments in a respectful way, we sought guidance from friends experienced in ministry to Muslims. Following their advice, we wrapped the books beautifully, adding a heartfelt note expressing our joy in their friendship. We presented the gifts as they left that evening. Though we havenโ€™t heard from them since, we often remember Youssef, Fatima, and their boys in prayer. Friendship and food opened doors for evangelism.  We learned that sensitivity to cultural and religious differences keeps those doors open, and above all, we were reminded to live out 1 Peter 3:15: โ€œAlways be prepared to give an answer to everyone who asks you to give the reason for the hope that you have. But do this with gentleness and respect…โ€ (NIV).


About the Authors

Leona K. Venditti, EdD, and Nicholas A Venditti, PhD, met in Madrid, Spain. In 1982, Leona was sent by Open Bibleโ€™s Department of Global Missions to start a training program which has since grown into INSTE Global Bible College. It has expanded to more than forty countries and eighteen languages. Together, the Vendittis continue to โ€œmake disciples and develop leadersโ€ both nationally and globally as they mentor many cross-cultural followers of Jesus. 

Continue Reading

Follow Us

Subscribe to the Message