At the 2026 OSL Auction, Tina Ferris shared a testimony with those gathered about the difference Our Savior Lutheran makes in the lives of students. Tina has been a member of OSL since 2009, and has served many years on the auction planning committee. Her testimony highlights how OSL helps students and families find a more abundant life in Christ as we teach the Christian faith, promote academic excellence, and raise up leaders for a lifetime of Christian witness.
Good evening OSL friends and family,
First, I want to say thank you, thank you for being here tonight, thank you for supporting this school, and thank you for believing in Christian education. Our family has experienced firsthand what a blessing this school truly is, and I’d love to share a little of that story with you tonight.
A few years ago, our grandson Deeghan came to live with us. He was getting ready to enter 8th grade. By that time in his young life, he had already moved from school to school. With every move, something else seemed to slip. His confidence, stability, friendships, and eventually his grades. By the time he came to us, he was struggling academically and emotionally. School had become something he endured, not something he enjoyed. His grades reflected that. He was failing several classes, and I think even more concerning, he was beginning to fail to believe in himself.
As grandparents, we worried. We prayed. We wondered how to help him regain his footing, not just academically, but spiritually and personally. We knew he needed structure. He needed encouragement. He needed to be seen. Most of all, he needed hope.
That’s when Our Savior Lutheran School opened its doors to him.
From the very beginning, something felt different. This wasn’t just a school accepting a new student. This was a community welcoming a child. The teachers didn’t see a transcript filled with low grades; they saw potential. They didn’t see a troubled academic record, they saw a young man who needed guidance, patience and belief.
And they gave him exactly that.
They challenged him but also supported him. They held him accountable, but they also extended grace. They prayed with him and for him. They created an environment where he felt safe enough to try again.
Slowly, we began to see changes.
He started coming home talking about what he was learning. He built friendships. He developed relationships with teachers who truly cared about his success. Not just as a student, but as a person. His confidence began to grow. And when confidence grows, effort follows.
During the school year, the young man who had been failing classes made the honor roll.
That didn’t happen because he suddenly became a different child. It happened because he was placed in an environment that nurtured who God created him to be. It happened because this school lives out its mission. It happened because teachers here go above and beyond job descriptions. It happened because faith is not just something mentioned, it’s woven into every lesson, every interaction, every correction, and every celebration.
There is a verse that I often thought on for Deeghan through that school year. In Jeremiah 29:11, God says, “For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the Lord, “plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.”
Christian education isn’t just about academics. It’s about identity. It’s about reminding a child that they are fearfully and wonderfully made. It’s about giving them the tools to succeed while grounding them in truth. It’s about showing grace while teaching responsibility.
For Deeghan, tis school was more than a place to attend classes. It was a turning point. It restored his confidence. It strengthened his faith. It changed the trajectory of his academic journey.
And I believe there are many stories like his in this room tonight.
That’s why events like this matter so much, when you bid tonight, when you donate, when you support this school, you are not just funding textbooks and technology or improvements to the building. You are investing in the children. You are investing in second chances. You are investing in stories that are still being written.
Our family will forever be grateful for the year Deeghan spent here. It was truly a blessing; one we prayed for and one that God answered through this school community.
So, from the bottom of our hearts, thank you. Thank you to the teachers who pour into students daily. Thank you to the administrators who lead with vision and faith. Thank you to the families who continue to build this community. And thank you to each person here tonight who continues to make this school possible.
Because of you, children like our grandson don’t just get an education… They get hope.
Thank you and God bless.
We are very happy you are here spending this time with us today. At this season of the year, time becomes very precious to us. It seems we have so many things we want to do to get ready for Christmas. We as women often feel that it’s up to us to plan Christmases that will be perfect for our families and friends.

Our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ gave the great Commission to “go and make disciples of all nations…” A number of Lutheran churches in the 1970’s had a unique opportunity to do exactly that by sharing the Good News of Jesus with Hmong immigrants. Our Savior, Lansing, is reflecting on 47 years of Hmong Ministry that saw 389 souls baptized into Christ. It is a remarkable chapter in this congregation’s history and the history of the Lutheran Church in the United States which demonstrates the power of the Gospel to transcend language and culture as it reaches people with the Gospel.
During the Vietnam War (1965-1973), the U.S. military was aided by a local ethnic group called the Hmong, who lived in the mountains of Laos, Vietnam, and Thailand. The Hmong were a freedom loving people who were fighting against the communist takeover of these countries. They fled persecution from the Chinese in the 18th and 19th centuries and maintained their unique language, culture, and identity. They are a people without a homeland. In the 1960’s, tens of thousands of Hmong men were recruited by the CIA for their secret operations in Laos. Others assisted the American military in Vietnam, guiding soldiers through the thick jungles, interpreting, and infiltrating the Viet Cong. They were known to be courageous and loyal. When the U.S. withdrew from Vietnam, the communists retaliated against the Hmong by trying to kill them. Many families fled across the border into Thailand by swimming across the Mekong River, often under gunfire. Several of them lost family members there in the river. Those who survived were gathered into refugee camps before being sent to the United States. The U.S. gave veteran status to the Hmong who assisted in the Vietnam War and the Secret War in Laos, and allowed their families to settle in America. Refugee agencies and immigrant ministries prepared themselves for the arrival of 30,000 Hmong in 1978. This is when the Lutherans stepped up in a big way.
Churches like Our Savior in Lansing prayerfully considered helping the Hmong resettle in the United States. At Our Savior, a ministry team was formed to welcome the Hmong at the Detroit airport as they arrived on American soil. The team was led by a teacher in the school, Mr. Richard Hackbarth. They helped the refugees find initial housing, get jobs, and fill out the paperwork. Their children were welcomed as students in Our Savior Lutheran School. The language barrier was significant, and most Hmong families had never left their village before that point. With patience, love, and commitment, the Lutherans in Lansing welcomed and assisted these families. The first family in 1978 was the Nao Lu Lee family. They were followed by several others. Those who came to faith in Christ were baptized, renouncing their animist religion, sometimes over a dozen at a time.
A Christian Hmong interpreter named Zhong Houa Yang came from Pennsylvania to Lansing to assist with Hmong ministry at Our Savior. He helped Pastor Bickel share the Christian faith with the Hmong, young and old, and by 1984, around 100 Hmong had been baptized at Our Savior by Pastor Bickel. Zhong Houa Yang received theological training first through the Lay Training Institute in Wisconsin and then through Concordia Theological Seminary in Ft. Wayne, and was ordained in 1993. He served as the Hmong pastor at Our Savior until 2004 when Lang Yang, a vicar serving at St. Michael’s, Richville, MI, took charge of the Hmong Ministry at Our Savior.
for the Tuscola County Sherriff Department, the Civil Air Patrol, and U.S. Army Reserve. He holds degrees and certifications in numerous fields, including law, criminal justice, education, an M.Div. and D.Min. As a tireless missionary, Pastor Yang drew Hmong members to Our Savior from across the state of Michigan, worshipping first in the Bickel Chapel and then, when they outgrew that space, in the Music Room. At one point, 30-50 people were worshipping each week, with a Bible Study, youth group, choir, and children’s ministries. They held monthly Hmong potlucks and Egg Roll Sundays twice a year. Hundreds of Egg Rolls were fried up early on a Sunday morning and sold in all the services as a fundraiser for Hmong ministry. The number of Hmong immigrants arriving in the U.S. slowed down to a trickle, and the Hmong ministry began serving the 2nd and 3rd generation of Hmong-Americans.
Our Savior sent a mission team of 18 people to serve our ministry partners in Middelburg, South Africa, June 26 – July 8, 2025. It was an amazing opportunity to work alongside and encourage our ministry partners in Middelburg. It was a trip filled with God-sightings! Joining Jesus on His mission, this team visited our partner church, the school, preschool, and orphanage in Middelburg, and the seminary in Pretoria. They sang, danced, played, and put on several ministry events including a VBS, a Feeding Program, and a Day of Serving.

I am forever changed by this trip and still think about our South Africa people every day. When I reflect back on our mission to South Africa this past July, I struggle with narrowing it down to one thing that stood out because there were so many ways in which I could see God at work. However, I am so thankful that I was given the honor and privilege to travel on this mission trip. Then I think about how wonderful it was to work alongside all of the others that went – what a blessing to be able to work with such an amazing team. Most importantly, I was able to see firsthand how God is working in and through the people of Middleburg, South Africa.
those meals otherwise. There were three areas where we worked – the garden, the kitchen, and the play yard. I was excited to participate and help in any way that I could and was fortunate to be in the play yard where I met a little girl. I ended up playing with her for most of the time I was there. She was the happiest little girl there and wore a smile the entire time. We played a lot of different games and for a bit we were separated playing with different people. When she saw me again she loudly exclaimed, “My friend, there you are!” and wrapped her arms around me for a hug. I was so touched by her calling me her friend. We had just spent a morning together and we weren’t even speaking the same language, but I was her friend. It was a wonderful witness to me and reminded me how Jesus sees me, too. I am His friend. The people of Middelburg and especially Doornkop are my friends.
Shine. Jesus shines through everything. It was such a blessing to witness Him working and shining through our friends in South Africa and to be able to learn and work alongside them to spread His love. St. Peter Christian College (school), Caring Friends, and Amajuba Children’s Home reflect His light in so many amazing ways. I saw His magnificent creation on the safari radiate His glory. Yes, Jesus even shined through 66 hours of travel due to a missed connection flight and unexpected layovers. 

scripture and music combine, there is unity.
Hello, I’m Pastor Chris. I was born in 1995, started high school in 2009, graduated from high school in 2013, graduated from college in 2017, had my year of vicarage cut short by COVID-19, learned what ‘Zoom’ was, graduated from Seminary in 2021, and was called to serve here at Our Savior in July of 2021. My birth year does a few things: It tells you how old I am, and it pigeonholes me into a category talked about by many different social scientists.
Coming upon an unconscious man in a store would be a shock to anyone. But would you know how to help? CPR stands for cardiopulmonary resuscitation. It can help save a life during cardiac arrest, when the heart stops beating or beats ineffectively. All Lutheran school and early childhood teachers and staff undergo CPR training on a regular basis.
training and sprang into action. While Carly notified emergency and Target employees, Courtney began performing CPR until paramedics arrived. The man, who was in his late-20’s or early 30’s, received medical attention and survived.