Walter Hull Memorial Service

Saturday, November 27
9:30 am Visitation
10:30 am Memorial Service
at Bethel
 
Please join us for a Memorial Service celebrating the life and ministry of Dr. Walter B. Hull. Both the Visitation and the Memorial Service will be held at the church. For those who are unable to attend, please use the link below to watch the service from home.
 

Obituary

Walter Baird Hull, M.D. age 84, passed away at home surrounded by his family on Wednesday evening, November 17, 2021. As a man of faith, he met his Savior Jesus Christ face to face and is now alive in the peace, love, joy and glory of God Almighty.
 
Walter was born in Salem, Ohio on March 23, 1937, the son of Jerome and Doris (Humes) Hull. He grew up as one of nine children on the White House Fruit Farm in Canfield, Ohio, a home and family that always remained close to his heart. From there he attended Wheaton College, graduating in 1959. It was at Wheaton that he personally met Jesus Christ and accepted Him as his Lord and Savior, committing his life to Him. It was also where he met his wife, Nancy (Rutherford). They were married on August 6, 1960, in Mt. Gilead, Ohio. Walter would say that those were the two most important and best decisions he ever made.
 
Walter completed his medical degree at Baylor College of Medicine in 1963, followed by a year of internship at Hennepin County Hospital in Minneapolis and two years of military service at the Choctaw Nation Indian Hospital in Talihina, Oklahoma. He completed his residency in Obstetrics and Gynecology back at Baylor University Hospital in 1969.
 
After completing his medical training, Walter and Nancy, along with their two young daughters, Leanne and Maria, followed the Lord’s call to the mission field in the Congo where they lived and served for 25 years. Walter served as a physician first at Bibanga Hospital and then at the Christian Medical Institute of the Kasai (IMCK). While at IMCK, he also taught at the nursing school and trained medical residents, passing on his knowledge and shaping students’ lives. Walter and Nancy returned to Columbus, Ohio in 1994 when he was diagnosed with metastatic melanoma. With good medical care and the Lord’s healing touch, the melanoma was eradicated, and he went on to work for 17 years at the Ohio State University Hospital in the Obstetrics and Gynecology Department, caring for patients and training medical residents. He continued to offer his medical services to the underserved in various Columbus city clinics. Walter and his wife Nancy also made multiple short-term trips back to Africa to serve in hospitals in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Malawi, Central African Republic, and Rwanda, often taking medical residents with them to be introduced to medical care and missions in that part of the world. Walter loved his profession and had a passion for teaching. Wherever he served, he was well-respected as a physician, honored by the students and residents he mentored, and appreciated by his colleagues and patients alike.
 
Walter was first and foremost a man of faith in Jesus Christ. He was always an active member of the Church, thrived on studying God’s Word, was a man of prayer, and loved to worship God with fellow believers. His character was marked by gratitude, kindness, joy, and hope. His life and service were simply an outpouring of his life in Christ.
 
Walter was a very committed and loving husband, father, grandfather, and great-grandfather as well as son, brother, and uncle. He was intentional about making time for family, leading in faith, laughing with fun, and loving unconditionally. He was deeply loved, enjoyed, and respected by each additional generation that came along, and he is dearly missed.
 
Walter lived life to the fullest! As a lifelong learner, he was an avid reader and loved to engage in meaningful discussions. He had an infectious sense of humor with a hearty laugh and was always up for a good game. He and Nancy warmly welcomed friend and stranger alike into their home. He sought to build community and quickly turned acquaintances into lasting friendships. Truly their family extended beyond immediate relatives and stretched around the globe.
 
Walter lived an incredible life of service to God and neighbor. He touched many lives around the world, loved people well, and left a legacy of faith. Jesus was the source of that love, and Walter lived for Christ’s glory.
Walter was preceded in death by his parents Jerome and Doris Humes Hull, brothers Woodrow (Jane), Herbert, and Edward and sisters Donna (Spencer) Balcomb and Mary Ellen (Jack) Russell and sister-in-law Suzanne Hull.
 
He is survived by his wife of 61 years, Nancy, his daughters Leanne (Luke) Turk and Maria (Brad) Festen, his grandchildren Benjamin Turk, Christina (Matthew) Prechter, Kylie Festen, Robert Turk, and Timothy Turk, and his great-grandson Immanuel Prechter. He is also survived by his brothers Jerome, Franklin (Kathy), and David (Phyllis), his sister-in-law Ruth Hull, and many nieces, nephews and cousins.
 
Visitation will be at Bethel Presbyterian Church, 1735 Bethel Rd, Columbus, Ohio on November 27, 2021 from 9:30-10:30 a.m. followed by a memorial service at 10:30 a.m.
 
The graveside service will be at Canfield Cemetery, 315 East Main St. Canfield, Ohio on Monday, November 29, 2021 at 11:00 am.
 
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to:
Medical Benevolence Foundation
PO Box 96877
Washington D.C., 20090
Memo: IMCK Endowment Fund https://imck.org
 

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Who Do You Say i am?

Fall 2021 Sermon Series
August 22 – October 31, 2021
 
One day Jesus asked his disciples a question, “Who do people say that I am?” Soon after, He followed up that question with a more important one, “But who do you say that I am?”
 

I have always been fascinated with those two questions.  But I think there is a very important question that we must ask of Jesus in return.  It is flipping the same question on Jesus to gain a knowledge of His take or understanding of us.  The follow up question I believe we need to ask Jesus is, “Who Do You (Jesus), Say i am?” 

The Bible has a lot to say about who we are and whose we are.  This Fall, we invite you to walk with us as we explore this important question and celebrate amazing life-giving insights.  For many of us, we allow the culture, our experiences, our size, our skin color, our financial status, our jobs, our possessions, our families, and our careers to define us.  Come see yourself from His heart.

 
– Dr. Jerry Kasberg (Senior Pastor)

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Rev. Jack Watson Celebration of Life

Saturday, October 2, 2021 
Bethel Sanctuary
10:00 am
 
Please join us for a Celebration of Life Service for Rev. Jack Watson, our longtime pastor, fellow minister, mentor, leader, teacher, servant and friend. Jack was the Senior Pastor of Bethel for 30 years, followed by our Pastor Emeritus, and will be greatly missed by the Bethel community.
 

Watch the Service

 

Rev. Jack Watson

 

John “Jack” Allan Watson, 82 of Columbus, Ohio passed from this life on July 27th due to complications from pneumonia. 

Jack was born June 26, 1938, in Detroit, Michigan. As a young boy, he was to discover his life-long hobby as an amateur magician after seeing Harry Blackstone perform on stage. He delighted in mystifying his friends, family, and later for his children’s classrooms and grandchildren. He never divulged his magic secrets. 

It was 1956 as a freshman at Wheaton College that Jack met Mary Strawbridge, a sophomore; they were thrown together to teach Sunday school for an inner-city church on the South Side of Chicago. Jack was smitten with Mary, her smile, her earnest Christian faith, and those beautiful brown eyes, “I’ll never love blue eyes again.” They married in June 1960. 

After the wedding, Jack attended Wheaton Graduate School while Mary taught school, then the pair headed to Princeton Theological Seminary where Jack earned his Master of Divinity. Next, Jack and Mary moved to Kentland, Indiana, where Jack was pastor at First Presbyterian Church. The first three Watson boys were born in quick succession in the tiny county hospital in Brook, Indiana- Paul, Stephen, and Mark. 

From Indiana, the Watson family embarked on a grand adventure to Aberdeen, Scotland where Jack earned his Masters of Theology degree, and Mary actively adjusted to life as a Scottish mum with three small boys. 

In 1970 they began a fruitful thirty-year call at Bethel Presbyterian Church in Columbus, Ohio. In 1975 they welcomed the fourth and final Watson boy, Philip. During his time of leadership at Bethel, Jack instituted the Bethel Bible Study Series that led more than 150 people in serious Bible study and saw Bethel receive more than 700 members. The family traveled on mission trips that included Guatemala, Morocco, Haiti, and Greece. 

In June 2003 the congregation they held so dear, Bethel Presbyterian Church, grandly celebrated Jack’s retirement after thirty years of service and named him Pastor Emeritus. Over the years Paul, Mark, and Phil married and another generation of Watson children arrived, showing Jack, “Our boys are all so different, with their lovely wives and our grandchildren, I can truly say that God loves variety.” 

Jack was a devoted scholar; his most treasured subject was the life and works of Christian author C.S. Lewis. A proud Scot he was often sporting his Watson tartan tie and a wistful smile always appeared when bagpipes played. His faithfulness to serving God continued in retirement, serving as dean of Ohio Central Bible College. 

Jack is survived by his wife Mary, sister Margaret Ann Dewit, sons Stephen, Mark, and Philip, daughter in laws Leah and Kaitlin, and grandchildren Abigail, Matthew, Benjamin, Clara, Mara, Vivian, and Nathanael. He was preceded in death by his son Paul and granddaughter Grace. 

“I believe in Christianity as I believe that the sun has risen: not only because I see it, but because by it I see everything else.” C.S. Lewis Of all the memories and legacies Jack leaves behind, he will be most remembered for his steadfast faith and love for it was the foundation for his every breath. 


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The Weary World Rejoices

Advent Sermon Series 2020
November 29 – Dec 27
 
In light of 2020 and the recent Thanksgiving restrictions, how can we possibly enjoy Christmas this year? Do we have the energy or the emotional bandwidth to celebrate? Where might we find the strength and excitement to lean into this season? I am reminded of a line from one of my favorite Christmas carols, O Holy
Night. It goes something like this… “A thrill of hope, the weary world rejoices, for yonder breaks a new and glorious morn.”
A thrill of Hope… That’s what we need, that will make our hearts rejoice! A famous theologian once said, “joy is found in where you put your hope.” Biblical Hope is a confident assurance in what you can count on. It is centered on what is coming. It knows that what lies ahead is infinitely better than what one is presently experiencing.
 
Christmas is the dawning of a new and glorious morn! A day that reminds us we can count on the salvation that is brought by Jesus Christ. We can be assured that the future brings a new heaven, a new earth, and a new and eternal life! It is why the angels at Christmas announced the promise of “Good News of Great Joy.” So, in the Sundays of Advent, we are going to find JOY in the midst of our weariness, in the midst of a seemingly blue Christmas, as they did 200 years ago.

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