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Stories of how an individual's life has been impacted by the
programs, initiatives and activities of the General Assembly Mission Council
Ciera Minor - Through chaos toward transformation
National Presbyterian College Scholarship helps former foster
child pursue her vocation
Martelle, Ia. (July 23, 2009) - Throughout Ciera Minor's young
life, role reversals have been the rule rather than the exception.
Prior to entering
into the foster care system, Minor was raised in an unstable household where
both parents were addicted to drugs and alcohol and were rarely at
home. A mere child herself, Minor became parent to her three younger
siblings.
"Being the oldest, I took it upon myself to take care of
them," said Minor. "I pretty much did everything a mom would
do, except there was one difference. I was eight."
Because she was already functioning in that capacity, the young
student also knew from an early age that she would one day be a
teacher. "I have wanted to teach my entire life," she said,
"as far back as I can remember playing school with my sisters."
Eventually adopted into a loving family here, Minor and her
siblings followed their new mother into the sanctuary of nearby First
Presbyterian Church of Mount Vernon, Iowa. "That first day at
church, I gave Ciera and each of her siblings children's Bibles,"
recalled the church's former pastor, the Rev. Emory Gillespie.
"Her new mother called me that afternoon and said that the children had
spent the rest of the afternoon in the hayloft of the barn, reading the
stories out loud to each other."
Encouraged and affirmed in her vocational choice both at church
and at home -- as well as in her high school -- Minor hungrily pursued her
own growth through education. "From the beginning, Ciera has been
enthusiastic, making her way into church leadership," Gillespie
said. "She planned a mission trip to El Salvador. She did
puppet ministry every Sunday morning. She made dinners for our
committee meetings. She was a shining student in confirmation class,
creating projects for the Children's Hospital. She preached sermons on
youth Sunday. Before our very eyes, she has transformed from a young
girl reeling from the chaos of foster care into a young woman who is
confident, loving and kind."
Those very qualities are already recognized by the young
children who seem always to surround Minor. "I know how to talk
with kids and make them want to learn," she said. "Kids need
to know that learning is really a privilege and that they have been given an
opportunity to get an education which a lot of children in this world would
only dream of getting."
Minor's prophetic words have since become her own reality, as
the 18-year-old's dream of attending college to become a third grade teacher
has come true, thanks in part to an award from the National Presbyterian College Scholarship (NPCS)
program. NPCS, a program offered through Financial Aid for Studies, a ministry of the Office of Vocation, offers need-based scholarship
assistance to students preparing to enter as full-time incoming freshmen in
one of the participating colleges related to the Presbyterian Church
(U.S.A.). In August, Minor will be attending Coe College, a fifteen minute drive from her home.
"It means so much that I could get a Presbyterian
scholarship," she said. "I'm really excited about going to
Coe. It'll be something different, even though it's so close to home,
which is probably a good thing since I'm a little nervous, too."
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