Hartford City Mission Welcomes Executive Director

Feb 26, 2013 | UA News

For several years, Hartford City Mission (HCM), a participant in the Urban Alliance network, has been operating youth programs in Hartford. Their programs include Camp Noah, a Christ-centered day camp for children in Hartford that is hosted at fellow Urban Alliance network participant Glory Chapel International Cathedral, Noah After-School, a program that helps students improve homework and reading skills and learn how Jesus loves them, and Hartford YoungLife, a program that is open to teens in grades 8 through 12.

In addition to youth programs, Hartford City Mission has grown to include additional neighborhood ministries, including Women of the Vine and Vine Street Blockwatch. Because their ministries have grown so significantly over the recent years, Hartford City Mission had prayerfully discerned that they needed a full-time leader to guide their day-to-day activities and to implement ministry expansions, which include establishing new Noah After School tutoring sites, potential building plans for a private Christian school, a youth jobs program, a community developer and additional plans.

After an extensive local and national candidate search, Tom Kubiak was hired as Hartford City Mission’s first executive director. The HCM Board of Directors shared their enthusiasm about their new hire: “The board is fully united and believes that Tom is God’s person to serve in this critical new leadership role and help take the ministry to the next level of Kingdom impact.”

According to Hartford City Mission’s website, “Mr. Kubiak was raised in a Christian family in Chicago. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in Bible and Pastoral Studies from Maranatha Bible College, a Master of Divinity degree in Biblical Languages and Systematic Theology from Denver Baptist Theological Seminary and completed four years of doctoral studies with a concentration in preaching at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School.

After serving as a pastor in suburban communities for sixteen years, Tom, along with his wife Joanna, and their three children David, Leah, and Sarah, were led by God to relocate to an urban neighborhood (South Loop) in Chicago.

With God’s calling and provision they planted a church in the city where Tom served as the senior pastor, and over the last twelve years have built a healthy, culturally diverse, and growing urban ministry. He ministered to the people in their neighborhood through his church and was also involved in helping to transform their community through volunteer service with other pastors and ministries, the Chicago Police Department, Chicago Public Schools, an after-school tutoring program in a housing project, local government, an outreach to homeless veterans, and the Christian Community Development Association of which Hartford City Mission is also a member.

Sensing God’s call on their lives to move on to a new ministry challenge as their church reached mature stability, to move on to a new chapter in life after recently becoming empty-nesters, Tom and Joanna both realized that God was calling them to move on, but to continue serving marginalized people in an urban community. They were looking for a ministry that could benefit from Tom’s proven gifts for building new organizations and taking existing organizations to the next level, his deep passion for spreading the Gospel of Jesus Christ, for helping to transform urban neighborhoods, for serving marginalized folks in cities, and for championing reconciliation (people with God and people with people). It is clear that God gifted and prepared Tom for this new role at Hartford City Mission.

His calling, abilities, experience, and passion align almost perfectly with the requirements in the position description that Hartford City Mission set forth at the beginning of our search for our first executive director. The board members sensed God’s peace and were unanimous in their decision to call Tom to join our work here in Hartford.”

To learn more about Hartford City Mission, visit www.hartfordcitymission.org

The staff at Urban Alliance are familiar with Pastor Frank because he is a regular attendee to many of the trainings Urban Alliance provides on subjects like domestic violence, addressing childhood trauma, and better counseling techniques. โ€œThatโ€™s been so valuable to me to be able to bring that back, not only in my counseling but also in my teaching and preaching ministries, โ€œ shared Termine.

Pastor Frank was also one of the original members of the Micah group, a group of pastors that meets at Urban Alliance to discuss and strategize about challenging issues that face the church today. One of those earlier discussions on justice, incarceration, and returning citizens was particularly memorable. โ€œWe all lamented the fact that these men and women were coming out of prison into our churches and just kind of being thrown there,โ€ said Termine, โ€œWe could do better than this.โ€ That discussion planted the seeds that eventually led to the creation of Second Chance Churches – an opportunity for churches to provide support and mentoring to returning citizens that continues today.

When we asked Pastor Frank what he would say to another church that was unaware of Urban Alliance, he said, โ€œIf you are looking to get out in the community and make a difference in the community, Urban Alliance is a super way to do it. Weโ€™re a small church โ€ฆ we canโ€™t do everything. Urban Alliance is a pathway to get our people involved in ministries that are already doing it, doing it well, and just need extra volunteers.โ€

Pastor Frank Termineโ€™s story embodies many things we are trying to accomplish at Urban Alliance: supporting organizations in the communities they serve with training, resources, and opportunities to make a difference. Pastors and non-profit leaders face a wide range of challenges and, therefore, need a wide range of help and resources. Your support can help turn stories of struggle into stories like you find at Calvary Church.

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