Skip to main content
The Danbury Review



Submit Pictures

Thies bestowed Concordia Nebraska's Servant Leadership Award

    SEWARD, NE - During Homecoming weekend, the Concordia Alumni Association honors alumni and friends for their outstanding service and accomplishments. The Servant Leadership Award is presented to an alumnus or friend of Concordia Nebraska serving in or retired from a local or global mission field or ministry demonstrating servant leadership to the church and world.
    On paper, Gary Thies' title is currently "missionary and support advocate and mission development counselor" which means he serves as a specialist advocate for missionaries and mission projects through Mission Central in Mapleton. But, Thies prefers to simply be referred to as "Old Missionary Gary."
    His story in missionary service has lots of twists and turns, so it's best to start at the beginning. Thies has traveled to more than 75 foreign countries and mission fields since 1965. He has presented mission programs and travel lecture projects in more than 1,250 cities. He has traveled to mainland China to explore mission possibilities, visited West Africa to explore opportunities in Ghana, Togo and Cote D'Ivore, traveled to Russia, Siberia, Kazakstan and Kyrgyzstan to visit and film mission work being done there, and visited Thailand, Philippines, New Guinea, Guatemala, Venezuela, Jamaica, Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Vietnam, Cambodia, Macau and Hong Kong to film, teach and interview. He has served as a mission presenter in congregations and settings across the United States and is the former chair of the The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod (LCMS) Board for Mission Services.
    Thies has a background in banking, real estate and insurance, having served in a variety of roles before being selected in 1994 as the first deployed mission development counselor for the LCMS. In that role, Thies worked fervently to support the work of the church at large and missionaries with a lot of prayer, a lot of grit and determination, a simple desk and one lone file cabinet in his basement. But, he quickly outgrew that space. In 2003, Gary and his wife Maxine purchased a group of farm buildings across the road from their home outside of Mapleton. That cluster of buildings on five acres in an Iowa cornfield became Mission Central, the largest mission-supporting agency in The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod. The space includes offices, a worship center, mission museum, fellowship hall, lodging space for guests, a Creation Theater and more.
    "This 'not normal' location and agency has one specific vision: mission education and raising the awareness of the mission of Jesus Christ in the world," said Thies.
    Marked by a large, lighted sign and flanked by Wayside Chapel, Mission Central is located two miles east of Mapleton, 45 miles southeast of Sioux City and 85 miles northeast of Omaha. Each year, Mission Central welcomes thousands of visitors, from missionaries and their families to members of supporting congregations and others. They all come to tour the space, pray for the mission work being done and provide support for missionaries across the globe.
    Thies calls Mission Central "a miracle in the middle of a cornfield."
    In 2023, Rev. Steve Schulz installed as assistant director of Mission Central. Thies and Schulz visit churches, schools and other interested supporters, encouraging them to pray for and to financially support mission projects and missionaries. Today, Mission Central is operated by more than 100 volunteers who are spread across the Midwest.
    "God sent 20 volunteer secretaries that type in their homes. Five pilots have donated their planes and their efforts to fly me to various locations, where I have now spoken in more than 1,700 congregations in the United States and Canada," he said. "Currently in the 26 file cabinets in Mission Central's offices, we are working with 9,000 individual families and 1,100 individual congregations. Last year, 118 furloughing missionaries and their family members stayed overnight at Mission Central from all over the world. This past year 50 bus loads of visitors came to visit, and the five groups of volunteer cooks provided 59 groups of people delicious dinners, all at no cost, as the food is all donated by the LWML and the meat by area farmers."
    Mission Central began as a collaboration with then-named LCMS World Mission. After 2010, Mission Central became part of LCMS Mission Advancement, and as such it helps to sustain the Synod's 100-plus missionaries with the support of the LCMS area and districts such as Nebraska, Iowa West, Kansas, South Dakota and others. Each year, Mission Central facilitates millions of dollars to send and keep missionaries in the field.
    Thies has received the "Christus Vivit Award" from Concordia Seminary in St. Louis, Missouri and was awarded "Doctor of Humane Letters" from Concordia University, St. Paul, Minnesota, in 2012. Active in his community, he has served as secretary and treasurer of the Fisher-Whiting Memorial Library since its founding in 1969. He has had various roles with the Mapleton Chamber of Commerce, served with a local Boy Scout Troop and served with the local rotary club. He is a member of St. Matthew Lutheran Church in Mapleton where he was past president and former director of education. He has served as a Bible class teacher for 35 years. He has also been active in a variety of county and state-level organizations.
    Although a long and winding path led Thies to his current service, he said he wouldn't trade it for anything.
    "What a joy it is to be a vital part of LCMS mission advancement and to share the exciting stories of our Synods missionaries and their eternally significant work," he said.
    During Homecoming and Alumni Reunion Weekend, Concordia University, Nebraska joyfully celebrates alumni and friends whose faith-filled service, leadership and achievements inspire the Concordia community and beyond.
    Concordia University, Nebraska, founded in 1894, is a fully accredited, coeducational university of The Lutheran Church--Missouri Synod located in Seward, Nebraska, which currently serves more than 1,700 students. Concordia offers more than 100 undergraduate, graduate and professional programs in an excellent academic and Christ-centered community that equips men and women for lives of learning, service and leadership in the church and world. For more information, visit cune.edu.


Time to Gobble Up Some Turkey

    St. Mary's in Mapleton will host their annual turkey supper, catered by Staley's, on Sunday, October 19th from 4:00 - 6:30 p.m. Cost is $12 per meal. The event will feature only carry-outs and in-town delivery.
    To pick up carry out - the line will form on the west side of Heisler Street by the church.
    For delivery (in Mapleton only), call 882-1780.
    Tickets are available at the banks in Mapleton and in Danbury and at Hometown Variety in Mapleton.


Veteran Appreciation at Cord Memorial Library

    Calling ALL veterans, their families, and Veteran friends! Cord Memorial Library wants to honor all veterans with an open house to show their unending gratitude. Veterans gave up their personal lives for the sake of the country, and they deserve accolades. Cord Memorial Library agrees.
    ALL Veterans are cordially invited to Cord Memorial Library in Danbury for refreshments and conversation on Wednesday, October 22nd from 2:00 until 4:00 p.m. There will also be a door prize.
    Have a deceased family member who was a veteran? Not a veteran but would love to come and tell our loyal veterans how much you appreciate all they have done? Join the library staff to honor loved ones and personally thank vets for their service.


Pies Galore at Danbury Catholic School

    Danbury Catholic School was transformed into an apple pie factory on Saturday as St. Mary's Danbury parishioners and other Christians made 635 pies. They also sold 350 packages of pie crusts.
    To the left, Braxton Boysen helps place recently folded boxes in the stacks which would be used for the finished pies.


Fall Cleanup This Weekend

    Danbury's Fall cleanup will be held on October 17th and 18th. Expect to take your unwanted items to the green shed on Second Street on those days. Times were not available as of this printing.
    For more information, contact Jennie at City Hall at 883-2431.


Operation Thank a Vet

    Veteran's Day is November 11. We remember those who have served our country.
    In the November 5th issue we will run a list of veterans who have served our country. These veterans will be still living (Memorial Day is to


Log in to read more

Bingo at Cord Memorial

    Come and play Bingo at Cord Memorial Library in Danbury on October 29th from 2 to 4 PM. Bring a non-perishable item for each game you want to play.


Dark Tales of Poe at Fisher Whiting Library

    Discover the Dark Tales of Edgar Allan Poe! The Fisher Whiting Memorial Library in Mapleton invites the public to a special presentation by storyteller Darrin Crow on Friday, October 17th at 1:30 p.m. Join us as Darrin


Log in to read more

Danbury Review Special Peace Edition - August 14, 1919

    Gilbert Mohrhauser from Hartford, SD, and his family stopped in over the weekend to deliver a very delicate newspaper, the August 14, 1919 issue called the Peace Edition. In it are pictures of people from


Log in to read more

Iowa Crop Progress and Condition Report

October 6 - 12, 2025

    DES MOINES, Iowa (Oct. 13, 2025) – Iowa Secretary of Agriculture Mike Naig commented on the Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship's weekly weather summary released today. Information


Log in to read more

Weather Summary

Provided by Justin Glisan, Ph.D., State Climatologist, Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship
    While not as warm as the previous week, temperatures across Iowa remained four to six degrees above normal, with a


Log in to read more

Danbury Review Online

No account yet? Subscribers to the print edition of The Danbury Review are automatically eligible for a free account. Register and your account will be activated as soon as your information is verified.

If you are not already a subscriber, you may subscribe to the online edition for $10 per year. If you wish to subscribe to the print edition and the online edition, the fee is $22 per year for Woodbury, Monona, Ida, and Crawford counties, and $28 per year for the rest of the United States. Payment can be sent to the following address:

 The Danbury Review
 PO Box 207
 Danbury, IA 51019

Register for your account online and we will activate it as soon as payment is received.



If you like our mostly ad-free site, please consider a donation.