2018 Camp Meeting Brochure May 2018 | Page 8

•••••••••••••••••••••••••• SPEAKERS Karl Haffner is the senior pastor of Kettering Church, Kettering, Ohio. He also works with the Kettering Health Network in the Spiritual Mission department. He is the founding pastor of North Creek Christian Fellowship, Bothell, Washington and The Church of Acts, Walla Walla, Washington. He has two bachelor’s degrees, Theology and Business, from Walla Walla College, an MBA from Pacific Lutheran University, a master of divinity and doctor of phi- losophy from Andrews University. Haffner is also author of several books and has written hundreds of articles pub- lished in many different journals. He is amazed daily by God’s acceptance and is committed to communicating that grace to others. Haffner is married to Cherié and they have two daughters, Lindsey and Claire. Sung Kwon has served as the director of the North American Division Adventist Community Services since 2001 and is an ordained minister of the Seventh-day Ad- ventist Church having served in Ohio and Allegheny East Conferences. He served as the executive director of the Good Neighbor House, an ACS agency in Dayton, Ohio, for eight years. He was the president and vice president of the North American Association of Community Services Directors during that time. He had the privilege of planting a Korean congregation and serving as its interim pastor in Dayton. He has served on the board of the National Volun- tary Organizations Active in Disasters, the Maryland Association of Nonprofit Orga- nizations, National Interfaith Coalition of Aging, and National Mass Care Council. He grew up with Buddhist and Catholic family beliefs and was baptized as a Seventh-day Adventist in 1991. Norman McNulty is a board-certified neurologist practicing in Lawrenceburg, Tennessee. He is a native of Portland, Tennessee and graduated from Highland Acad- emy in 1996. He also graduated from Southern Adventist University with a bachelor of science in Biochemistry in 2000 and then from Loma Linda University, School of Medicine, in 2004. Prior to starting his neurology practice in Lawrenceburg, Dr. McNulty served for two years as a missionary at the Adven