Rosella Ruth Wiens Regier, 88, passed away peacefully on May
31, 2022. She was born December 2, 1933, the 12th of 13 children of Henry W.
and Anna Enns Wiens.
Her first years were spent on the family 80-acre farm
southeast of Inman, Kansas. The
depression had taken its toll. But
Rosella grew up in a family where the mantra seemed to go something like
this: ?Times are hard. Winter is coming. Economize.
Scrimp. Save. Work hard.
Help each other. And have fun
doing it all!?
Rosella graduated from High School at Central Kansas Bible
Academy in Hutchinson. From an early age
she wanted to be a teacher. She took on
her first teaching job at the rural Turkey Creek School near Inman in
1956. After graduating from Bethel
College in North Newton, Kansas in 1958, her public school teaching took her to
classrooms in Indiana and Mississippi as well as Newton and Walton in Kansas.
In 1957 Rosella married Harold Regier. Together, they spent the ?60s in Gulfport,
Mississippi, in a mission-service assignment working in an African-American
setting. There she was involved with a
variety of ministries, including the role of Summer Bible School superintendent
supervising volunteers who taught as many as 1,000 students in summer
sessions. Other involvements included
teaching youth in winter Bible classes, helping create a community library,
facilitating a ?Fresh Air? program, teaching Head Start, and finally teaching
public school the first year of school integration in Mississippi when racial
tensions were running high.
While in Mississippi, Rosella became the mother of two
children: Steven Douglas in 1965 and
Sharon Janelle in 1967. Returning to
Newton, Kansas in 1970, Rosella concentrated on family life, soon balancing
this with returning to the classroom. In
the Newton system, she taught at Northridge, Suncrest, and Walton.
Rosella?s love for teaching and of children led her from the
public school classroom to the Christian nurture of children in the church
setting. In 1984, she was invited to
become the Director of Children?s Ministry for the General Conference Mennonite
Church. In this role Rosella led teacher
workshops and provided congregational resources for children?s Christian
education across the United States and Canada.
In 1990 the Anabaptist Curriculum Publishing Council invited
Rosella to be the Executive Director of a new children?s curriculum for six
Anabaptist denominations. The project,
developing and publishing the new curriculum, ?Jubilee: God?s Good News,? was a two-year rotation of
Biblical studies designed for four levels:
early childhood, primary, middlers, and Junior youth. The curriculum was used from 1994 to 2006, a
long life for Sunday School curricula.
Retiring in 1999, Rosella continued her Christian Education
career as a Presenter and Workshop Leader for the national body of the Church
of the Brethren, based in Elgin, Illinois.
For three more years she traveled to congregations and districts across
the United States with sermons, workshops, and seminars on the general theme of
the care and Christian nurture of children.
In retirement, Rosella stayed very active in local church
and community leadership. Church
leadership included such roles as church moderator, chair of the 50th
anniversary celebrations planning committee for Faith Mennonite Church,
president of mission circle, member of church council. At the district level she served as member of
the Western District Conference ?Vision 2012? steering committee and prayer
partner coordinator. For more than 10
years she served as facilitator of a sexual abuse women?s support group. In 2009 she was selected as one of three
Newton woman honored as ?Woman of the Year.?
A significant role during retirement years has also been
that of a grandmother. Rosella nurtured
a relationship with grandchildren that was reminiscent of her life?s career of
nurturing children in both public school and church settings. Her grandchildren in her retirement years
were her pride and joy!
In 2009 Rosella suffered a devastating stroke that left her
with acute aphasia. Robbed of words to
communicate her thoughts she painted some 250 pictures to tell her
stories. Then with stories cast into an
?aphasia-friendly reading? format she was able to articulate a few words to
participate in a co-reader technique that enabled her to tell some of her own
stories. This gave her much
satisfaction, making it possible for a pre-stroke story-teller to be a
post-stroke story-teller!
Rosella was preceded in death by her parents, H.W. and Anna Enns Wiens, and her siblings
Nick, Leonard, Simon, Adolph, Eva (Ruben Wedel), Mary (Bill Goossen), Esther
(Walt Juhnke),
Anna Grace Wiens, and four siblings who died in
infancy. Survivors include her husband,
Harold, son Steve (Marilyn), daughter Sharon, grandchildren Madeline Regier,
Drake Regier, and Claire Schultz.
Memorial service will be 4:00 p.m., Saturday, June 4, 2022
at Faith Mennonite Church in Newton, Kansas. Private family interment will take
place at a later date.
Memorials can be made to ?Spring Forth,? a Sunday School
curriculum, or Kidron-Bethel Village.
Contributions can be mailed to Faith Mennonite Church, 2100 N. Anderson
Ave., Newton, KS 67114.