Rev. Lane Loman
Lane Loman is a native of Greensboro, NC. He has been lead pastor of churches in North Carolina, Tennessee, Georgia, and Indiana. Lane has served in The Evangelical Methodist Church, The Church of the Nazarene, The Friends Church and The Free Methodist Church. Lane is associated with the Southeastern Evangelistic Group, and a Francis Asbury Society Endorsed Speaker. He is an ordained elder and tenured evangelist with The Church of the Nazarene. Having served in pastoral ministry for 23 years, Lane has now traveled 34 years in itinerant revival ministry speaking and singing in 15 denominations and 50 different denominational and independent camp meetings.
Lane also produces The Lights of Spiritual Guidance, a weekly 30-minute radio program started in 1937 by his father, the late Dr. J. Harold Loman. The program is heard over a network of 15 stations in Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, North Carolina, and Ohio.
Lane is a graduate of Atlanta Christian College with a degree in Christian Education. He also studied Evangelism in the Local Church at Scarritt Graduate Center, Nashville, TN, and holds a Master of Arts in Religion and Spiritual Formation degree from Northwest Nazarene University. Lane has recorded 15 song albums and authored three books; "The Fruit Still Falls From The Tree”, “The Fruit Is Still Falling”, and “Road Moments - Memories of Living Life Out of a Suitcase.”
Lane’s wife, Gretchen, is a native of Bedford, Indiana. When travel logistics permit, she travels and sings with Lane in revival ministry. Gretchen also serves as the secretary for Loman Ministries and assists in the production of ministry product.
Lane and Gretchen have three sons and eight grandchildren.
Rev. Rex Bullock
He has continually sought ways to make the Gospel message relevant by using the tools of modern communication. While still in college he began a career in radio broadcasting. He has been the radio voice on Dayspring and PowerSurge each day for 40 years. Today, DAY Media (formerly Dayspring Ministries), which he founded in 1977, is responsible for radio broadcasting, as well as resourcing and equipping hundreds of churches and mission organizations with the latest innovative technologies. DAY Media trains pastors and church leaders how to tell The Story in a relevant way to their communities.
Rex is a story teller, drawing on a lifetime of experiences around the world. He uses vivid first person accounts to tweak the imagination of his audiences, but he always brings people to the power of Jesus Christ. Almost every week he is teaching and resourcing leaders around the world. He is currently working in such countries as Haiti, The Philippines, India, China and a number of countries in Africa.
Rex and his wife LaWanda are the parents of two sons and a daughter. They have 7 grandchildren and live in the beautiful Pacific Northwest region of the U.S.
Pianist, Vocalist and Worship Leader
Tab Beechler 
The purchase remained a secret until the evening it was delivered. It was a sacred moment that will forever be etched on the concaves of my mind. Moved beyond words, I found myself sitting on the bench, starring at the keys in disbelief. My very own piano. It was all I could do to hold back the tears as my heart exploded with gratitude. All I could whisper was "thank you God." The piano proved to be a wise purchase as countless hours were spent sharpening and developing my skills.
My talent remained hidden until one summer afternoon when our youth pastor overheard me playing in the basement of our church. Shock and amazement came over his face as he discovered my nine year old fingers dancing across the keys of a Kimball upright. Instantly, I was drafted to play a Sunday night special. A month later, in front of an unsuspecting congregation, I found myself beating out a spirited medley of carefully selected Bible School songs. The response was overwhelming. This led to more specials and opportunities of service. It was during this season of my life that I found Jesus. On June 8, 1983, I accepted Him as Lord and Savior, receiving from Him value, meaning and purpose. Little did I know that He would use my talent to connect people with Himself and each other.
Soon my talent became more public as I entered our annual fifth grade talent show at school. Somehow, I managed to medley "Nine to Five," Bobby Sue," and "Amazing Grace." The performance drew a thunderous applause and landed a position playing for our sixth grade choir. Church and school became outlets where my talent could be utilized to glorify God and edify others. While church provided me with a nurturing atmosphere of love and acceptance, school became a battle ground where I dodged a constant round of poisonous darts fired from slanderous arsons, reminding me daily that being a boy and playing piano was not cool. I remember begging my sixth grade teachers to let me practice piano during recess to avoid the rejection I faced on the playground. But what could've been destructive, God used for good.
At the age of fifteen, my calling became more specific as I accepted a position playing piano for the Gospel Crusaders. This was my first exposure to Southern Gospel Music. Sadly, after forty years of ministering the opted for retirement. (I still think they hired me just to carry in that heavy equipment.)- ha! Soon after, I joined the Goodnews Quartet. More performances followed. Then, the Northmen, a brand new group with aspirations of spreading God's word to a larger audience, asked me to join their cause and I accepted. In the spring of 1990 we were thrilled to be the opening group at a Phipps Gospel Sing in Warsaw, Indiana. After the concert, as I was ready to walk out the door, the promoter caught me, escorted me to the stage and personally introduced me to the Perrys, one of three professional groups that had performed that night. They had recently lost their pianist and hearing me play felt confident I could fill the void.
However, it would require me to relocate to Dahlonega, Georgia. Throwing all caution to the wind, I accepted the offer. Taking down my name and number they assured a future call with details. Two weeks went by without a word. Convinced that it wasn't God's will, I gave up. I remember sitting on a John Deere in the middle of a field cultivating corn when I saw my mom pull up in our pick-up truck bearing the news that the Perrys had called wanting me to come. Answering the call, I packed my bags and left the comforts of home to join this full-time ministry. Although short-lived, my time with the Perrys was an enriching experience, challenging me musically and spiritually. After an arduous six months I came home, went back with the Northmen and began working for a local implement dealer. By this time I was experiencing feelings of failure, thinking that getting back with a full-time group would satisfy my search for significance. I was wrong.
I'll never forget the young man who approached me one evening after a concert. His enthusiasm for the Lord was absolutely infectious as he showered me with encouraging words of affirmation. Uninhibitedly, he embraced me, then walked away. I stood speechless, knowing that in some way, I had just experienced Jesus. Before my head hit the pillow that night I asked the Lord to "give me what that guy has, cause I don't have it." The next morning I opened my Bible and for the first time began to read Matthew.
From that day on, my life was never the same as I would seek to know and experience God through the revelation of His word. Shortly after deciding to leave the Northmen, a strange thing happened, I started receiving concert invitations. Though I was green and inexperienced, I obediently fulfilled the obligations knowing that God doesn't always call the equipped, but He will equip the called. As my faith grew and matured, so did the music ministry. I soon found myself writing songs, making recordings and traveling every weekend. With each concert rich in scripture and personal testimony, I saw God encourage, challenge and strengthen audiences week after week. In 2001, the purchase of a home presented a new set of responsibilities and obligations. By July 2003, God called me out of the field and into a time of reflection and rest I now call my "Season of Selah."
God revealed issues in my life that required counseling. Through that ten month process I gained a proper perspective of God and my role as His child. Refreshed, I enter into this new season of ministry with confidence, trusting Him for the extraordinary.