Difference between revisions of "Bethesda Home, KS"

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==Background==
 
==Background==
In the early 1940's, [[Richard Edwin Burson|Richard Burson]] was a Baptist pastor in [[Kansas]], and about 1943 had started editing a devotional called [[The Word devotional|The Word]]. While attending a bible college in Salina, [[Kansas]], and was doing odd jobs for the locals, he was cleaning out a woman's attic when he discovered an archive of "Help and Food" magazines, that he initially thought were cookbooks, and asked if he could take them, which introduced him to the open brethren, with the eventual help of the Littlefield family via [[Waltericks Publishers]] of Kansas City.
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In the early 1940's, [[Richard Edwin Burson|Richard Burson]] was a Baptist pastor in [[Kansas]], and about 1943 had started editing a devotional called [[The Word devotional|The Word]]. While attending a bible college in Salina, [[Kansas]], and was doing odd jobs for the locals, he was cleaning out a woman's attic when he discovered an archive of "Help and Food" magazines, that he initially thought were cookbooks, and asked if he could take them, which introduced him to the open brethren, with the eventual help of the Littlefield family via [[Walterick Publishers]] of Kansas City.
  
This eventually led to the start of [[Hutchinson Gospel Chapel, KS|Hutchinson Gospel Chapel]] where he eventually landed, in the mid-1940's, and he was also the primary founder of [[Kansas Bible Camp]] in 1946. And the magazine he edited grew to include many Brethren writers during its tenure thru minimally 1953, both regional authors as well as globally known.
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This eventually led to the start of [[Hutchinson Gospel Chapel, KS|Hutchinson Gospel Chapel]] where he eventually landed, in the mid-1940's, and he was also the primary founder of [[Kansas Bible Camp]] in 1946. And the magazine he edited grew to include many Brethren writers during its tenure thru minimally 1953, both regional authors as well as globally known.
  
 
==Bethesda Home==
 
==Bethesda Home==

Revision as of 06:21, 25 November 2020

Background

In the early 1940's, Richard Burson was a Baptist pastor in Kansas, and about 1943 had started editing a devotional called The Word. While attending a bible college in Salina, Kansas, and was doing odd jobs for the locals, he was cleaning out a woman's attic when he discovered an archive of "Help and Food" magazines, that he initially thought were cookbooks, and asked if he could take them, which introduced him to the open brethren, with the eventual help of the Littlefield family via Walterick Publishers of Kansas City.

This eventually led to the start of Hutchinson Gospel Chapel where he eventually landed, in the mid-1940's, and he was also the primary founder of Kansas Bible Camp in 1946. And the magazine he edited grew to include many Brethren writers during its tenure thru minimally 1953, both regional authors as well as globally known.

Bethesda Home

Around 1966, Richard Burson felt that the Lord was calling him to develop a home for retired assembly missionaries that would be in Nickerson, Kansas, just five miles from Kansas Bible Camp. The burden was that there were many workers retiring from the field to find their spiritual gifts not as highly sought, and the idea was to utilize their knowledge of the Word, evangelistic fervor, and seasoned input to influence the campers and staffers, while perhaps bringing a sense of purpose for the retirees. He settled on the name "Bethesda" as it referenced "healing at the pool".

He formed a small corporation, and a few of the Lord's people assisted in providing funds towards purchasing a spacious three-story house near the gradeschool in Nickerson. Golda Pope, a young married nurse from Concordia, Kansas was encouraged towards the idea, as was likely George Easter, who was in the midst of planting an assembly in his home in nearby Salina, which would eventually become Sunset Bible Chapel, and possibly Stanley & Edith Bloom, who had strong ties to the camp and assembly.

The house purchase did not materialize, however it was purchased by a large family, and one of the children, as a young man, Thomas Stafford, would eventually be led to Christ after a period of rebellion thru outreach efforts of individuals at Hutchinson Gospel Chapel, and was in fellowship there in the 1980's.

Richard then used the funds to purchase a small tract of land outside of Nickerson, with the intent on building a structure, and had a listing the 1966 Waltericks Assembly Address Book with a P.O. Box for the upcoming Bethesda Home. However, the idea did not materialize, and so Richard focused the remainder of his life in the growing children's work at Kansas Bible Camp, as well as a popular itinerant preacher in assemblies all throughout the Midwest, until his homegoing in 1976.

Sources

  • phone interviews with Golda Pope & Stephen Burson on 11-23-2020