Send As SMS

3/29/2006

THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER ONLINE ENGLISH EDITION (3/29/06)

Bishop Gregory G. M. Ingram - Chair, Commission on Publications
The Reverend Dr. Johnny Barbour, Jr., Publisher
The Reverend Dr. Calvin H. Sydnor III, Editor


1. GENERAL OFFICERS’ RETREAT:

The Editor and his fellow General Officers will be attending the General Officers’ Retreat this weekend. Please keep the General Officers and their families in your prayers.

2. THOUGHTS FOR THE DAY:

“Not to know is bad; not to wish to know is worse.”
(African Proverb)

“Impossibilities are merely things which we have not yet learned.”
(Charles W. Chestnutt)

3. SUPERB CLERGY OPPORTUNITY - PASSING THE MANTLE CLERGY LEADERSHIP INSTITUTE (PTM):

The faculty and staff of the Center for Religion and Civic Culture at USC cordially invite you to apply for a position in the pilot year of our program on African American Church Leadership. Passing the Mantle Clergy Leadership Institute (PTM) is a church leadership program funded by The James Irvine Foundation designed to develop the leadership skills of African American clergy and lay leaders.

The program objectives include developing skills in civic engagement, community and economic development, leadership development, church management, and community organizing. Renowned USC scholars and leading church practitioners will address these issues and engage students. PTM also offers program participants the opportunity to be mentored by nationally recognized church leaders. Rev. Dr. J. Alfred Smith, The Rev. Dr. James Lawson, the Rev. Dr. Velma Union, the Rev. George Regas, and Dr. Lula Ballton have agreed to serve as mentors to program participants. The Reverend Dr. Cecil L. Murray is one of the leaders of this program A.

PTM program will run from June 1 to November 30, 2006 and will consist of eight full days of lectures and seminars held on the USC campus. The program is open to full-time pastors and lay leaders who minister to congregations of approximately 250-500 people. Clergy and lay leaders who are engaged in civic programs, community development or other related projects will be given special attention. While applicants with Bachelor’s degrees or higher are encouraged to apply, all outstanding applications will be considered.

PTM graduates will receive a USC Certificate and a stipend of one thousand dollars ($1000.00) at the completion of the program.

Please complete and send the enclosed application by April 10th to:

Passing the Mantle Clergy Leadership Institute
USC Center for Religion and Civic Culture
835 West 34th Street, Suite 106
Los Angeles, CA 90089-0751

If you have any questions, please call Rev. Mark E. Whitlock, Program Director, at (213) 740-8562 or 949.955-0014

Editor’s Note: I hope that many of our ministers will take advantage of this outstanding opportunity.

4. BISHOP RICHARDSON REPORTS THAT SCAMS AGAINST AME CHURCHES ARE STILL ACTIVE:

Please take note; this is the scam using my name is still on-going. A recent victim the Reverend Sonia Beaty. Her experience follows the modus operandi that has been reported in the online and print editions of The Christian Recorder. Reverend Beaty sent was money she had worked two weeks that she earned at a part-time job. She was too anxious to be helpful to my alleged ‘niece,’ Diane Williams and me

I told the officers working on the case the someone should check out these cell numbers given to her and to the other victims in dastardly fraud. The thieves are using Washington, DC area codes.

The problem is, these crooks are getting good at it, and they are getting bolder. I would think that there ought to be, and probably is, a security photo of the person who retrieves the money from the wire transfer service.

Please pass on the warning to pastors who may not be subscribed to either the online or the print edition of The Christian Recorder.

Bishop Adam Jefferson Richardson

5. THE REVEREND SONIA BEATY’S ACCOUNT OF HER EXPERIENCE WITH THIEVES WHO CONNED HER OUT OF HER MONEY:

I am the pastor of Wesley Chapel AME Church in San Marcos, Texas.

On March 19, 2006, I received a call from a man who identified himself as the Rev. Charles Davis, pastor of Bethel AME Church in Philadelphia. He told me he was sending me a member by the name of Diane Williams who would arrive with her letter of transfer. He further stated that:

- she is the niece of Bishop Richardson
- she is a pianist and organist
- she would be working for HUD as a loan officer in Austin, TX
- she would be residing in San Marcos, TX

He gave me the following cell phone numbers

- Diane William (202) 286-1472
- Rev. Charles Davis (202) 716 5819
- Bishop Richardson (202) 374 6219

He then put another male on the phone who identified himself as Bishop Richardson and confirmed what I had been told and explained that Diane Williams was en route to Texas as we were speaking.

About two-three hours later, I contacted Diane and told her who I was and explained to her what had been told to me. She told me she had had a little accident. She said she had tried to miss some debris in the road and forgetting about the trailer, she hit the guard rail. "But we're ok," she said. "Who are ‘we,’" I asked. She then told me that she had four children with her and that her husband had died from colon cancer six months ago. She assured me that everyone was OK and that the mechanics told that she would be back on the road in a few minutes.

About nine o'clock that evening I called her back to check on her progress. She did not answer immediately, but called right back stating that she was getting her daughter out of the bathtub. She further stated that they had gotten a hotel (in Vicksburg, Mississippi) because the part she needed for the car was not available until Monday morning.

Monday morning about nine o'clock she started calling my cell and leaving messages marked urgent. I called her back and she (she sounded very distraught and teary)said she had given the mechanic all the money she had and that she needed another $525 dollars to get her car out. She stated that she had a check for $22,500 and could not get it cashed until she got to Texas. She also stated that one of the mechanics had told her to leave him the check and he would make sure she got her money back in a couple of weeks. Of course, I told her I did not recommend that she do that. I agreed to help her. The mechanic got on the phone and assured me that he had contacted the bank and that the check she had was a valid check. Then we proceed to arrange to get the money to the mechanic shop.

I went to Wal-Mart and sent $675 ($525 for the car and $125 for gas and food for the kids) the cost to send the money was $45.84. Information from the receipt:

Date---3/20/06
Time---9:15 AM
Receiver Information---William Bryson
Test Question---Receiver's Middle Name
Answer---Anthony
Reference #---06366705

The Rev. Sonia Beaty
Wesley Chapel AME Church
San Marcos, Texas

6. THE SAVE DARFUR COALITION WILL SPONSOR A RALLY TO STOP GENOCIDE IN THE SUDAN:

The Save Darfur Coalition will sponsor a Rally to “Stop Genocide in the Sudan” on Sunday, Apr. 30, 2006 from 2:00 PM to 4:00 PM on the National Mall (between 3rd and 4th Streets, in front of the Capitol) in Washington, DC.

One of the leaders of the Save Darfur Coalition is the Reverend Dr. Gloria White-Hammond, a pediatrician who is also co-pastor of Bethel AME Church in Boston, MA. As part of the Save Darfur Coalition, Dr. White-Hammond is also serving as the National Chairwoman of the Million Voices for Darfur Campaign. She is featured on the Genocide Prevention Podcast at http://www.darfur.org/home.php. More information can also be found at http://www.savedarfur.org/rally.

Thank you, very much for your attention to this matter.

Dr. Donna L. Gilton

7. LETTER TO THE EDITOR:

I could not resist responding to your "conversion" at Uncle Tell's and Aunt Virginia's in Piney River, Virginia.

I on the other hand was in rural South Carolina in a place called Pageland. My grandparents, who reared me, would take our summer vacation there because my grandfather was from South Carolina. It too was a summer revival for all of the young people of the church who had not been saved and had to go to the mourner's bench. I was Nine-years-old, if I remember correctly.

It was Wednesday probably because by weekend. We were on our way to another city. I think someone pulled me up or I was just tired of kneeling. It was many years later before I really met the Lord

(Name withheld by request)

8. AROUND THE AME CHURCH:

- Supervisor Stan McKenzie Visited West Tennessee WMS tribute

The Thirteenth Episcopal District Supervisor, Brother Stan McKenzie shares his visit the West Tennessee WMS, led by Sister Gwendolyn Dilihunt, who put in a surprise tribute entitled, "Hats Off to You, Sister Marilyn Halfacre." The tribute was held at New Tyler AME Church in Memphis. New Tyler was PACKED!

Tributes were made by former District President, former Conference Presidents, and to the Conference YPD Directors (current and past). Tributes were also paid to the Reverend Dr. Kenneth Robinson, pastor of St. Andrew AME Church and to Presiding Elder Finch who was absent attending a funeral. Sister Willie Ann Madison spoke on behalf of Presiding Elder Finch, friends of the family, and the 13th Episcopal District leadership.

Supervisor McKenzie said, “What a sight, they did it up BIG TIME. Gifts were presented and the event shows that the West Tennessee Conference really appreciated and loved Sister Marilyn Halfacre’s leadership.”

Everyone acknowledged that the reception was outstanding. The members of New Tyler AME Church handled the catering. The food and décor was out of this world. Someone was hear to say, “My oh my, the talent we have in our churches.”

Supervisor McKenzie said, “Now Sister Halfacre can go on that cruise...then get back to Memphis and get ready to travel up and down the road as usual with her daughter, the District's President.” He went on to say, “We appreciated her leadership while in office...everything was done always in an excellent manner...reports were always on time; if not early, and always supported the District's programs 100%. What a joy it was to work with her.”

Submitted by Supervisor Stan McKenzie

- The 120th Session of the Bermuda Annual Conference

The 120th Session of the Bermuda Annual Conference of the AME Church came to a climactic end at the Fairmont Southampton Resort, with the Rt. Rev. Richard Franklin Norris, Presiding Bishop of the First Episcopal District presiding.
]The well-organized and highly-energised session was historic in that it was the first time since 1885 that the seat of the conference was not held in the sanctuary of one of the ten AME Churches on the island.
The seat of the conference was held in an amphitheatre of the hotel that was transformed from its otherwise secular nightclub façade into a more cathedral-like setting replete with a flower-bedecked altar and other symbols, and resounding to what the bishop termed, “Anointed singing and powerful preaching coupled with spirited altar calls.”

(Extracted from the Bermudian newspaper, The Royal Gazette)

9. DANIEL’S DIET - WEIGHT DOWN GEORGIA TIPS SCALES AT ANNUAL CONFERENCE:

By Stephanie and Eric Stradford

“But Daniel made up his mind not to defile himself by eating the food and wine given to them by the king. He asked the chief official for permission to eat other things instead.” Daniel 1:8, NLT


FAS2, March 24, 2006, Columbus, GA – The Reverend Dr. Miriam J. Burnett, M.D. made a house call on the 110th Southwest Georgia Annual Conference. The Medical Director for the African Methodist Episcopal Church is calling on the historic black church to “be normal.”

Until now, “normal” has meant getting by instead of living well. The doctor says that “getting by is no longer acceptable. Living longer must also mean living better.”

On an average, African Americans are twice as likely to have diabetes as Whites of similar age are. Nearly three million African Americans have diabetes. African Americans with diabetes experience kidney failure about four times more often than other diabetics. More than 77,000 African Americans died from heart disease, accounting for 27 percent of all African American deaths.

“We have some issues,” said Burnett. For example, obesity is a result of a complex variety of social, behavioral, cultural, environmental, physiological, and genetic factors. The Weight Down Georgia program launched here offered church leaders a sneak preview to a series of events promoting healing and wholeness in the historic church. The program begins the healing process by introducing healers to health needs for the body of believers. With all the advances in information technology, television, radio, newspaper and Internet, the church stands as a trusted source for critical information.

The Conference system for the African Methodist Episcopal Church presents a well-established information channel dating back to 1816 and the first General Conference in Baltimore, MD. During their Annual Conference, members of St. John AMEC, Columbus, GA advocated healing and wholeness by providing blood pressure screening, weigh-ins and critical information on historic disparities in health care. Healthy meals served to the 110th Southwest Georgia Annual Conference increased awareness of health issues stemming from nutrition and obesity.

By design, the church convenes elected delegates every four years who elect bishops. Bishops preside over Annual Conferences within their assigned Episcopal Districts. Presiding Elders conduct quarterly conferences for each local church in a Conference. Local churches convene a monthly conference to elect local officers and delegates. An effective Class Leader System at each local church completes an organizational structure to support missions and ministries for some 3.5 million beneficiaries.

“It has been well documented that spirituality and religion are key sources of strength and tenacity for African-Americans,” said Burnett. Longstanding evidence suggests a salutary effect of spiritual religious factors on health and well-being, and faith-based health promotion interventions have been on the rise in the last decade.

But, for most church folks, health disparity lies between knowing what to do and doing what needs to be done. The conference system elects the bishop, who leads by following Christ. The doctor has said that fried chicken, in fact fried anything, is killing your people. Will you be the first to lay down that fried wing? Pastor, the doctor says there is clear and present danger in those Chitterlings. Will you push away from the table that serves them? Elder, the doctor says we need you to do the Weight Down at every quarterly conference to build trust for the healing process. Will you take “Living Well” from rhetoric to reality?

Or, perhaps, theology that is more relevant is needed to integrate health screening into our wholeness. You know the story well-- Hananiah was called Shadrach. Mishael was called Meshach. Azariah was called Abednego. Daniel, perhaps a chief pastor in his own country, was called Belteshazzar.

You might recall that these were healthy and good-looking young men, well versed in every branch of learning, and gifted with knowledge and good sense. They were suited for service in the royal palace. The king assigned them a daily ration of the best food and wine from his own kitchens. They were to be trained for a three-year period and then some of them would be made his advisers in the royal court.

But, Daniel made up his mind not to defile himself by eating the food and wine given to them by the king. He asked the chief official for permission to eat other things instead. The chief official had great respect for Daniel. But, as you can imagine, he was alarmed by Daniel's suggestion. "My lord the king has ordered that you eat this food and wine," he said. "If you become pale and thin compared to the other youths your age, I am afraid the king will have me beheaded for neglecting my duties."

Daniel talked it over with the attendant who had been appointed by the chief official to look after Daniel, Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah. "Test us for ten days on a diet of vegetables and water," Daniel said. "At the end of the ten days, see how we look compared to the other young men who are eating the king's rich food. Then, you can decide whether or not to let us continue eating our diet."

So, the attendant agreed to Daniel's suggestion and tested them for ten days. At the end of the ten days, Daniel and his three friends looked healthier and better nourished than the young men who had been eating the food assigned by the king. So, after that, the attendant fed them only vegetables and water instead of the rich foods and wines.

Of course, the story does not end here. The diet meant more than maintaining a healthy weight. Ultimately, Daniel’s Diet sustained three out of four Hebrew boys through a fiery furnace and converted a Babylonian King to a new method of ruling.

10. THE ELEVENTH EPISCOPAL DISTRICT 2006 ANNUAL CONFERENCE SCHEDULE:

Florida Conference
August 26 – Sept. 1, 2006
St. James AME Church
514 S. 11th Avenue
Quincy, FL 32351
(850) 627-6382
Rev. Lee Plummer, Host Pastor
Rev. George Barkley, Host Presiding Elder
Bethel AME Church, Tallahassee – Host Site
Rev. Dr. John Green, Site Pastor

Central Conference
September 9-15, 2006
Mt. Olive AME Church
2525 W. Church Street
Orlando, FL 32805
(407) 295-6568
Rev. David Green, Host Pastor
Rev. Leroy Kennon, Host Presiding Elder

South Conference
September 23-29, 2006
Payne Chapel AME Church
801 9th Street
West Palm Beach, FL 33401
(561) 832-2035
Rev. Samuel Sullivan, Host Pastor
Rev. Raymond Heastie, Host Presiding Elder

West Coast ConferenceOctober 7-13, 2006
Mt. Zion AME Church
919 20th Street South
St. Petersburg, FL 33712
(727) 894-1393
Rev. Clarence Williams, Host Pastor
Rev. Jerome Denmark, Host Presiding Elder

East Conference
October 21-27, 2006
Greater Bethel AME Church
701 SE 43rd Street
Gainesville, FL 32641
(352) 376-8846
Rev. Dr. George L. Champion, Host Pastor
Rev. Joseph Sanchez, Host Presiding Elder

Bahamas Conference
November 8-12, 2006
Cousin McPhee Cathedral
P.O. Box CR 56028
Carmichael Road
Nassau Bahamas
(242) 361-0809
Rev. Dr. Ranford Patterson, Host Pastor
Rev. Howard Williamson, Host Presiding Elder

Post Conference Planning Meeting.
Nov. 16-18, 2006
Sandestin Golf and Beach Resort
9300 Emerald Coast Parkway West
Sandestin, FL 32550
1-800-320-8115

African Sojourn
Nov. 24-Dec. 8, 2006
Travel N Style
Florence S. James

11. ST. JAMES AME, MEMPHIS MEN HEARD THE DANGERS OF, ”WHEN GOD’S MEN ARE MISSING”:

A few toes may have been stepped on. A few people probably were upset about what was said, but the preacher didn’t preach a popular sermon, it was a sermon the people needed to hear. That was the mood for the Men’s Day program on Sunday, March 12 at St. James AME Church, Memphis, where Rev. Walter Winstead Reid Jr., is Pastor.

Men’s Day Chairperson was Dr. James C. Wade, Executive Director, Department of Church Growth and Development; Co-Chairman was Bro. Sam Williams.

Speaker for Men’s Day was Dr. Jerome Harris, Executive Director, Department of Annuity, Investments, and Insurance, who apologized in advance for preaching an unpopular sermon, but he added, “I learned a long time ago that you’ve got to get up and say what the Lord thus gives you to say; and let the chips fall where they may.”

Dr. Harris’ sermon text was taken from I Kings 19:9, “And he came thither unto a cave, and lodged there; and, behold, the word of the LORD came to him, and he said unto him. What doest thou here, Elijah?” The sermon was also taken from Ezekiel 2:1, “And he said unto me, Son of man, stand upon thy feet, and I will speak unto thee.” The subject was “When God’s Men are Missing.”

Dr. Jerome said in the mid-60s he endured a three-year long experience that he has never been able to forget. It was the age of flower power, of love children, of rebellions and revolution. It was the age of lunch counter sit-ins and of Black churches being bombed. It was also the age of a misguided and misunderstood war called, Vietnam. It was there that “I became familiar with some strange words like Saigon, DaNang, and MIA (missing in action) and then there was AWOL, absent without leave.” He explained that AWOL is a term that defines the true character and commitment of a man and how he handles adversity and conflict in his life. This term conjures up visions of desertion in the time of trouble; cowardliness in the face of challenge; and a total abandonment of one’s faith in God.

What does the Lord require of thee? Our answer must always be to do justly, to love mercifully, and to love humbly. That is what our God requires. So with that thought in mind, I’ll speak to all God’s children in general, but to the male gender of our species, in particular -- THAT man the brother, THAT man the father, I want to speak to THAT man; and more specifically I want to speak to THAT Black man, descent of Africa, sons of Allen, heirs of a rich and glorious culture –THAT man of the church, THAT man of the street, and THAT man of the in-between.

“Black Men, you are absent without leave. These times try men’s souls. There are problems on every hand, and the question that is being asked is, “Where are the men?” Even God almighty, going to and fro, up and down the earth seeking those who are willing to serve him and be obedient to his will, is asking: Where are the men?

If the men in our world today would stand up and be counted, we could fight and win the war of drugs in our streets, would could stop the violence and killings in our communities, we could restore our families and save our children if the men would stand up.

The majority of our men have sat down. Instead of speaking out, the men are choosing to be silent. We will never solve our problems and truly overcome as a race of people as long as our men are silent, absent and unresponsive. If a man is absent and unavailable to his fellow man, he is absent and unavailable to God. When we isolate and separate ourselves from each other, we are absent and separate from the love of God.

The word to the Black man today is the same word that God gave to Ezekiel, “Son of man, stand on your feet”; but the problem that we still have today, even in 2006, is the same problem that we as a people have had for more than two centuries. After more than 200 years of depravation and humiliation and inhumane treatment, our Black men have sat down and have been beaten down by a plantation philosophy in a slave-minded circumstance. So, when the question is asked, where is the Black man?

The answer is:

We’ve sat down on the seat of guilt
We’ve sat down on the stool of sham and
We’ve sat down on the bench of inferiority.
The system has taught us to hate ourselves and we have bought into that lie and we have given up and sat down.

The call of God to our people today and to our Black men in particular is critically urgent, for our Black families are in trouble. And, I can think of no better reason for the men to stand up and address the issues of our young men killing ourselves with guns and drugs and we know our girls are having babies before they have a chance to live. And, we know our wives are being abused on the job and at home and I can think of no other reason for our Black men to stand up.

Our Black men need to stand up. Get up from their seats of do-nothingness. Come forth from the seat of complacency and rise up from their hiding places of isolation and indifference. God gives us the courage to stand up. In times like these, God is speaking to the men today as he spoke to Elijah and Ezekiel and he reminding us that “I created you before I created any body else form the dark clay of Africa, I have given you a strong back that you might be able to stand up beneath the heaviest load that life can put on you. I’ve given you everything you need to stand up.” The world has taught Black men to feel that their dark skin is ugly and that your black color is a badge of shame.

Let me tell you about my dark skin; it has a pigmentation that nobody else in the world has and because of that darkness and that pigmentation, it gives the Black man a presences, a strong confident presence that makes other men afraid and intimated.

Let me tell you about my kinky hair. I’ve got strong, obedient hair. It’s so good that it will do anything that I tell it to do. I can put it somewhere in the morning and it won’t move until I come back and move it myself. That’s why every morning you ought to look in the mirror and say I love me. I'm a good-looking Black man. Stand up Black man.

And, black man, love and respect your women. A real man doesn’t beat up and abuse his woman. God gave you a woman from your side so she can walk beside you and strengthen you. Black man, stop your whining and whimpering; stop that prancing around and take that earrings out of your ear.

God has already given you everything you need.

You show me a Benjamin Franklin; I’ll show you a Benjamin Banneker
Show me Abraham Lincoln and I’ll show you Frederick Douglass
Show me Theodore Roosevelt and I’ll show you Mary McLeod Bethune
Show me a Dwight Eisenhower and I’ll show you Adam Clayton Powell
Show me a John Kenney and I’ll show you Martin Luther King, Jr.
Show me Lyndon Johnson and I’ll show you Thurgood Marshall
Show me Bill Clinton I’ll show you Vernon Jordan
Show me a George Bush and I’ll show you Colin Powell
Stand up Black man.
If it's a mountain, you can climb it
If it’s a valley, you can cross it
If it’s a burden, you can bear it
If it's a problem, we can solve it

Just stand on your feet and hear the word of the Lord. You think we are not able to do what the Lord has called us to do. Jesus said if you follow me and I will make you fishers of men. Jesus knew the men he called and he knew their qualifications. The bottom line is the question for the Christian man that is absent without leave is not whether the Lord knows you, but whether you know the Lord.

If you truly know the Lord, something should rise up in your spirit every now and then to make you ask the question, if it had not been for the Lord on my side where would I be? And you begin to remember, that it was the Lord that heard my cry; that it was the Lord that made a way out of no way, that it was the Lord that picked me up and turned me around; it was the Lord that set my feet on solid ground; it was the Lord amid the dangers, toils and snares.

So the question is asked, whom can we send? Every man that truly loves the Lord should stand up and say here am I Lord, send me. I’ll go, if I have to go by myself. I know the Lord has been good to me and brought me through a mighty long way. We ought to close your eyes and look down the backstreets of our yesterdays and remember that God has been good to us because of his goodness, mercy and grace. I’ve heard the voice of Jesus tell us to still to fight on. He promised never to leave us alone; stand up Black man and be about your father’s business.


The morning program also included the presentation of special awards to outstanding men as Rev. Reid recognized them for their commitment to St. James AME Church. The following men received a certificate of appreciation:

Dr. Wade and Brother Williams for their leadership as Chairman and Co-Chairman respectively for Men’s Day.

Robert Boyd – Church Treasurer
Julius Jennings – Stewart Board
Parker Conley – Spirit of Giving
Tyrone Spencer – Katrina Relief Effort
Joseph Martin – Bible Study
David Huggins -- Trustee Board
Lawrence Davis – Trustee Emeritus
John Shields – Steward Emeritus

In closing, Dr. Wade thanked the Pastor for allowing him to serve as Men’s Day chairperson. It was an historic moment as an AME General Officer served as the chairperson of Men’s Day. Dr. Wade added that he was honored to serve in such a vital and meaning ministry in the life of St. James AME Church. Dr. Wade praised Dr. Harris for preaching and for invading our privacy with lessons, we needed to hear.

Submitted by:
Beverly T. Goines,
Public Relations Director, St. James AME Church, Memphis
Rev. Walter Winstead Reid Jr., Pastor

12. TRAVEL WITH BISHOP AND MRS. MCKINLEY YOUNG AND MEMBERS OF THE 11TH EPISCOPAL DISTRICT OF THE AME CHURCH TO SOUTH AFRICA, LESOTHO, AND MALAWI - NOVEMBER 24 - DECEMBER 8, 2006:

Friday Nov. 24 Depart from Miami (other gateways also available); connect with South African Airways in Atlanta

Saturday Nov. 25 Arrive Cape Town, S. Africa; transfer to the luxurious Table Bay Hotel on the Victoria & Alfred Waterfront Welcome dinner

Sunday Nov. 26 Visit with 15th Episcopal District – Bishop Samuel Green, Sr.
Tour of Robben Island where Nelson Mandela was imprisoned

Monday Nov. 27 Tour of Cape Town and Table Mountain

Tuesday Nov. 28 Fly to Bloemfontein, S. Africa; transport by coach to Maseru, Lesotho And the Maseru Sun Hotel in the heart of downtown Maseru

Wednesday Nov. 29 Visit with 18th Episcopal District – Bishop Sarah Davis
Thursday Nov. 30 Day at leisure

Friday Dec. 1 Transport by coach to Bloemfontein, S. Africa; fly to Lilongwe, Malawi; Transfer to the Meridien Capital Hotel in the newer part of this busy city

Saturday Dec. 2 Visit with 20th Episcopal District – Bishop Wilfred Messiah
Sunday Dec. 3 Day at leisure

Monday Dec. 4 Fly to Johannesburg, S. Africa; transfer to the majestic Michelangelo Hotel In the vibrant Renaissance-styled Mandela Square area

Tuesday Dec. 5 Day at leisure (optional Safari and tour of Sun City)
Wednesday Dec. 6 Day at leisure (optional tour of Soweto) Farewell Dinner

Thursday Dec. 7 Depart for US
Friday Dec. 8 Arrive Home

Package includes: Round-trip airfare from US, intra-country airfares in Africa, airport transfers, land transportation in deluxe coaches, best available hotels in each city, tours as indicated (other optional tours also available), taxes and entry fees, full breakfast daily, Welcome dinner at the Table Bay Hotel in Cape Town; Farewell Dinner at the Michelangelo Hotel in Johannesburg.

Cost: $5,288 per person double occupancy; single supplement $1,632

Payment: $1,500 deposit per person is due immediately and the balance is due by August 15th

Cancellation: For details, please contact Mrs. Mavis Bush or Mrs. Florence James

Travel Insurance is available and strongly recommended to cover cancellations and emergencies

For reservations or additional information contact: Mrs. Mavis Bush (904) 355-8262 or
Mrs. Florence James (301) 390-5844

Arrangements by Travel N Style in conjunction with African Travel, Inc., Glendale, California

Email: www.florencejames@hotmail.com
AME Church - 11th Episcopal District
Southern Africa Tour
November 24 - December 8, 2006

General Terms and Conditions

PAYMENT A deposit of $1,500 per person is required as participants register - Full payment is due 75-days prior to departure

(Note: The per-person cost may increase should the group size fall below the minimum of 42-paying passengers.)

CANCELLATION more than 90 days prior to the departure, $500 of the deposit will be forfeited. 90-75 days prior to departure, the total individual deposit will be forfeited. 75-45 days prior to departure, 75% of the total tour cost will be forfeited. Less than 45-days, 100% of the total tour cost will be forfeited.

TRIP CANCELLATION INSURANCE is available and strongly recommended.

REFUNDS Will not be made for occasional missed meals, or sightseeing.

VISA/INOCULATIONS - Visa and immunization requirements vary from country to country and up-to-date information should be obtained from your local health department and consulate. Any costs associated with these items are not included in the tour costs. Anti-malarial tablets are strongly recommended.

BAGGAGE INFORMATION - Passengers will be allowed two pieces of luggage the total dimensions not to exceed 107 linear inches, total, for both pieces. One carry-on piece may also be carried free if it can be stored under the seat and its measurements do not exceed 45 inches.

AIRLINE RESPONSIBILITY CLAUSE - The carriers concerned are not to be held responsible for any act, omission or event during the time the passengers are not aboard the aircraft or conveyance. The passenger ticket shall constitute the sole contract between the airline and the passenger. Air schedules are subject to change and airfares are quoted as of Jan. 01, 2006 and are subject to increase.

RESPONSIBILITY - AFRICAN TRAVEL, Glendale, CA, TRAVEL N STYLE, Upper Marlboro, MD., outfitters, and operators of the tour and/or suppliers of services act only as agents in regard to travel, whether by plane, car or motor coach, and assume no liability for injury, damage, loss, accident, delay, war, insurrection, revolt, or other civil uprising, other military action, strikes or any Act of God occurring in either the country of origin, destination or through passage, or for any reason whatsoever, or through the acts or default of any company or persons engaged in conveying the passengers or in carrying out arrangements of the tour. They cannot accept any responsibility for losses or additional expenses due to delay or changes in air schedules or other causes. All such losses or expenses will be the responsibility of the member of the tour. The right is reserved to make minor adjustments to the itinerary and the right is reserved to cancel any tour prior to departure. The Companies may not be held responsible for any loss or damage to luggage during the tour program. The acceptance of final documents, vouchers or tickets shall be deemed to be consent to the above conditions.

DISCLOSURE - Please be aware that during your participation in a Safari tour certain risks and dangers may arise, including, but not limited to, the hazards of traveling in undeveloped areas, travel by boat, train, automobile, aircraft or other means of conveyance, the forces of nature, political unrest and accident or illness in remote regions without means of rapid evacuation or medical facilities. Also be aware and clearly understand that AFRICAN TRAVEL, INC. will not have liability regarding provision of medical care or the adequacy of any care that may be rendered. It is understood that AFRICAN TRAVEL, INC. will use their best efforts to ensure that all adequate measures are taken to avoid such occurrences. By signing the Tour Contract you are VOLUNTARILY PARTICIPATING IN THESE ACTIVITIES WITH THE KNOWLEDGE OF THE DANGERS INVOLVED AND HEREBY AGREE TO ACCEPT ANY RISKS. AS LAWFUL CONSIDERATION for the agreement with AFRICAN TRAVEL, INC. to participate in such trips and activities, you hereby agree that you will not make a claim against AFRICAN TRAVEL, INC. and their employees from all claim actions and demands that you may have for bodily injury, death or property damage arising from your participation in a tour. Acceptance of the Tour Contract will serve as the release of Liability and Assumption of Risk agreement. This agreement is binding on your heirs, legal representatives and assigns. If any portion is unenforceable, the remaining portions shall remain in full force and effect.


CREDIT CARD AUTHORIZATION FORM
BOOKING #: 26813 RES AGENT: HILDA

I, the undersigned (Print Name) ________________________________ authorize AFRICAN TRAVEL INC to charge my credit card as follows for my and/or my companion's scheduled trip:

Credit Card: (check one) MASTER CARD VISA AMEX  DISCOVER

Card #: __________________________ Expiration: _________________ (DATE)

Amount: $ _____________________ Trip Starts: _________________ (DATE)

Billing Address: _____________________________________________________
(Must match cardholder billing information)

City: ____________________________State: ________________ZIP: _________

CANCELLATION INFORMATION
Time prior to departure: Cancellation fee:
90-days or more before departure $500 per person*
90-75 days before departure total deposit per person*
75-45 days before departure 75% of the total cost*
Less than 45 days before departure 100% of tour cost*

Special events: Based on contract
*Plus charges of third parties

I have read, fully understand and agree with the Cancellation Terms listed above.

The Card Holder The Travel Agent
Date: _____________________________ Date:______________________________

Print Name: ________________________ Agency: TRAVEL N STYLE___________

Signature: __________________________ Agent: Florence_____________________

Tel (Day): _________________________ Agency Tel: (301) 390-5844___________

Tel (Evening): _______________________ Agent Signature:_____________________

INSURANCE: I/We Decline: (initial) _______ IATA/CLIA #:52434141

*NOTE: Please see copy of General Terms & Conditions
1100 East Broadway, Glendale, CA 91205
® 800-421-8907 Fax: 818-507-5802 email: ati@africantravelinc.com Web: www.africantravelinc.com


13. KATRINA EVACUEES CAN VOTE IN THE UPCOMING ELECTION – ABSENTEE BALLOT – KEEP YOUR VOTE AND STAY CONNECTED:

On April 22, the citizens of New Orleans will vote for the first time since Hurricane Katrina.

New Orleans residents who are registered voters and were displaced by the hurricane are still eligible to vote in their home parish if they have not registered to vote anywhere else. We need to reach as many of these voters as soon as possible to make sure they can vote in the elections April 22.

If you are an eligible New Orleans voter or know someone who is, you can request an absentee ballot up until April 18 to vote in the primary election. You also can call the Louisiana Secretary of State Elections Division at 1-800-883-2805 or visit its website at http://www.sec.state.la.us/elections/elect-before.htm for more information about voting.

Please help us spread the word by forwarding this e-mail to your friends and family. If you know people displaced by Katrina, please let them know they have time to vote in their local election.
Deadlines to register for the upcoming elections:

- March 22, 2006 is the deadline for the April 22, 2006 Primary Election.
- April 19, 2006 is the deadline for the May 20, 2006 General Election.

Please forward this e-mail to friends and family, and let those displaced by the hurricane know they are eligible to vote in the April 22 primary election. They can get more information about voting by calling the Louisiana Secretary of State Elections Division at 1-800-883-2805 or http://www.sec.state.la.us/elections/elect-before.htm.

Thank you for helping inform displaced voters of valuable information.

Please speak out to help the survivors, mourners and victims of Gulf Coast hurricane Katrina. They need your voice! Call, write or fax your elected officials. For more information visit: KeepingThemHonest.bravehost.com to help today!

14. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

clinton@1stdistrict-ame.com
From: Bishop Richard F. Norris
1st Episcopal District


We regret to inform you of the passing of Mrs. Juanita Groover. Mrs. Groover was the mother of Rev. Gregory G. Groover, Sr., pastor of Charles Street A.M.E. Church in Roxbury, Massachusetts (New England Conference). The following information has been provided regarding funeral arrangements.

Viewing and Funeral will be held at:
Bethel A.M.E. Church
420 North Main Street
Freeport, NY 11520
Phone: 516-379-1513
Fax: 516-378-1572
Rev. Harry J. White, II, Pastor

Viewing – Monday, March 27, 2006
7:30 p.m. – 9:00 p.m.

Funeral – Tuesday, March 28, 2006
Funeral – 10:00 a.m.

Condolences may be sent to:

Rev. Gregory G. Groover, Sr. and family
466 Warren Street
Roxbury, MA 02121

Please lift up the Groover family in your prayers.

15. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

From: mrsjfoster@yahoo.com

We regretfully share news of the passing of Mrs. Ruth J. Stripling (she was 102 years old), widow of the late Presiding Elder Rev. Cornelius S. Stripling of the Georgia Conference. She went to glory on Thursday, March 23, 2006, in Savannah, Georgia. She was a member of St. Philip AME Church where the Reverend Dr. John Foster is pastor. She was an active member of the Ministers' Spouses, Widows and Widows Plus PK's Organization. She was very devoted to her church and the Savannah community.

Her family, friends, and her beloved Savannah community will miss her caring spirit. Her secret for living a long life was: "Live your life, not your age."

Sentiments of condolences may be sent to:
Sidney A. Jones Funeral Home
124 W. Park Avenue
Savannah, GA 31401
(912)234-7226

Homegoing Service will be held on Tuesday, March 28, 2006, at 11:00 a.m.:

St. Philip AME Church
613 Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard
Savannah, GA 31401
(912)233-2083

Submitted by:
Sister Shirley V. Taylor, President
Sixth Episcopal District MSWAWOPKS

16. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT ANNOUNCEMENTS PROVIDED BY:

Bishop Carolyn Tyler Guidry, Chair
Commission on Social Action Clergy Family Information Center

Mrs. Ora L. Easley - Administrator Email: Amespouses1@aol.com
(Nashville, Tennessee Contact) Phone: (615) 837-9736 Fax: (615) 833-3781
(Memphis, Tennessee Contact) (901) 578-4554 (Phone & Fax)

Please remember these families in your prayers.

17. CONDOLENCES TO THE BEREAVED FROM THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER:

The Chair of the Commission on Publications, the Right Reverend Gregory G. M. Ingram; the Publisher, the Reverend Dr. Johnny Barbour and the Editor of the Christian Recorder, the Reverend Dr. Calvin H. Sydnor III offer our condolences and prayers to those who have lost loved ones. We pray that the peace of Christ will be with you during this time of your bereavement.

THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER ONLINE ENGLISH EDITION (3/29/06)

Bishop Gregory G. M. Ingram - Chair, Commission on Publications
The Reverend Dr. Johnny Barbour, Jr., Publisher
The Reverend Dr. Calvin H. Sydnor III, Editor


1. GENERAL OFFICERS’ RETREAT:

The Editor and his fellow General Officers will be attending the General Officers’ Retreat this weekend. Please keep the General Officers and their families in your prayers.

2. THOUGHTS FOR THE DAY:

“Not to know is bad; not to wish to know is worse.”
(African Proverb)

“Impossibilities are merely things which we have not yet learned.”
(Charles W. Chestnutt)

3. SUPERB CLERGY OPPORTUNITY - PASSING THE MANTLE CLERGY LEADERSHIP INSTITUTE (PTM):

The faculty and staff of the Center for Religion and Civic Culture at USC cordially invite you to apply for a position in the pilot year of our program on African American Church Leadership. Passing the Mantle Clergy Leadership Institute (PTM) is a church leadership program funded by The James Irvine Foundation designed to develop the leadership skills of African American clergy and lay leaders.

The program objectives include developing skills in civic engagement, community and economic development, leadership development, church management, and community organizing. Renowned USC scholars and leading church practitioners will address these issues and engage students. PTM also offers program participants the opportunity to be mentored by nationally recognized church leaders. Rev. Dr. J. Alfred Smith, The Rev. Dr. James Lawson, the Rev. Dr. Velma Union, the Rev. George Regas, and Dr. Lula Ballton have agreed to serve as mentors to program participants. The Reverend Dr. Cecil L. Murray is one of the leaders of this program A.

PTM program will run from June 1 to November 30, 2006 and will consist of eight full days of lectures and seminars held on the USC campus. The program is open to full-time pastors and lay leaders who minister to congregations of approximately 250-500 people. Clergy and lay leaders who are engaged in civic programs, community development or other related projects will be given special attention. While applicants with Bachelor’s degrees or higher are encouraged to apply, all outstanding applications will be considered.

PTM graduates will receive a USC Certificate and a stipend of one thousand dollars ($1000.00) at the completion of the program.

Please complete and send the enclosed application by April 10th to:

Passing the Mantle Clergy Leadership Institute
USC Center for Religion and Civic Culture
835 West 34th Street, Suite 106
Los Angeles, CA 90089-0751

If you have any questions, please call Rev. Mark E. Whitlock, Program Director, at (213) 740-8562 or 949.955-0014

Editor’s Note: I hope that many of our ministers will take advantage of this outstanding opportunity.

4. BISHOP RICHARDSON REPORTS THAT SCAMS AGAINST AME CHURCHES ARE STILL ACTIVE:

Please take note; this is the scam using my name is still on-going. A recent victim the Reverend Sonia Beaty. Her experience follows the modus operandi that has been reported in the online and print editions of The Christian Recorder. Reverend Beaty sent was money she had worked two weeks that she earned at a part-time job. She was too anxious to be helpful to my alleged ‘niece,’ Diane Williams and me

I told the officers working on the case the someone should check out these cell numbers given to her and to the other victims in dastardly fraud. The thieves are using Washington, DC area codes.

The problem is, these crooks are getting good at it, and they are getting bolder. I would think that there ought to be, and probably is, a security photo of the person who retrieves the money from the wire transfer service.

Please pass on the warning to pastors who may not be subscribed to either the online or the print edition of The Christian Recorder.

Bishop Adam Jefferson Richardson

5. THE REVEREND SONIA BEATY’S ACCOUNT OF HER EXPERIENCE WITH THIEVES WHO CONNED HER OUT OF HER MONEY:

I am the pastor of Wesley Chapel AME Church in San Marcos, Texas.

On March 19, 2006, I received a call from a man who identified himself as the Rev. Charles Davis, pastor of Bethel AME Church in Philadelphia. He told me he was sending me a member by the name of Diane Williams who would arrive with her letter of transfer. He further stated that:

- she is the niece of Bishop Richardson
- she is a pianist and organist
- she would be working for HUD as a loan officer in Austin, TX
- she would be residing in San Marcos, TX

He gave me the following cell phone numbers

- Diane William (202) 286-1472
- Rev. Charles Davis (202) 716 5819
- Bishop Richardson (202) 374 6219

He then put another male on the phone who identified himself as Bishop Richardson and confirmed what I had been told and explained that Diane Williams was en route to Texas as we were speaking.

About two-three hours later, I contacted Diane and told her who I was and explained to her what had been told to me. She told me she had had a little accident. She said she had tried to miss some debris in the road and forgetting about the trailer, she hit the guard rail. "But we're ok," she said. "Who are ‘we,’" I asked. She then told me that she had four children with her and that her husband had died from colon cancer six months ago. She assured me that everyone was OK and that the mechanics told that she would be back on the road in a few minutes.

About nine o'clock that evening I called her back to check on her progress. She did not answer immediately, but called right back stating that she was getting her daughter out of the bathtub. She further stated that they had gotten a hotel (in Vicksburg, Mississippi) because the part she needed for the car was not available until Monday morning.

Monday morning about nine o'clock she started calling my cell and leaving messages marked urgent. I called her back and she (she sounded very distraught and teary)said she had given the mechanic all the money she had and that she needed another $525 dollars to get her car out. She stated that she had a check for $22,500 and could not get it cashed until she got to Texas. She also stated that one of the mechanics had told her to leave him the check and he would make sure she got her money back in a couple of weeks. Of course, I told her I did not recommend that she do that. I agreed to help her. The mechanic got on the phone and assured me that he had contacted the bank and that the check she had was a valid check. Then we proceed to arrange to get the money to the mechanic shop.

I went to Wal-Mart and sent $675 ($525 for the car and $125 for gas and food for the kids) the cost to send the money was $45.84. Information from the receipt:

Date---3/20/06
Time---9:15 AM
Receiver Information---William Bryson
Test Question---Receiver's Middle Name
Answer---Anthony
Reference #---06366705

The Rev. Sonia Beaty
Wesley Chapel AME Church
San Marcos, Texas

6. THE SAVE DARFUR COALITION WILL SPONSOR A RALLY TO STOP GENOCIDE IN THE SUDAN:

The Save Darfur Coalition will sponsor a Rally to “Stop Genocide in the Sudan” on Sunday, Apr. 30, 2006 from 2:00 PM to 4:00 PM on the National Mall (between 3rd and 4th Streets, in front of the Capitol) in Washington, DC.

One of the leaders of the Save Darfur Coalition is the Reverend Dr. Gloria White-Hammond, a pediatrician who is also co-pastor of Bethel AME Church in Boston, MA. As part of the Save Darfur Coalition, Dr. White-Hammond is also serving as the National Chairwoman of the Million Voices for Darfur Campaign. She is featured on the Genocide Prevention Podcast at http://www.darfur.org/home.php. More information can also be found at http://www.savedarfur.org/rally.

Thank you, very much for your attention to this matter.

Dr. Donna L. Gilton

7. LETTER TO THE EDITOR:

I could not resist responding to your "conversion" at Uncle Tell's and Aunt Virginia's in Piney River, Virginia.

I on the other hand was in rural South Carolina in a place called Pageland. My grandparents, who reared me, would take our summer vacation there because my grandfather was from South Carolina. It too was a summer revival for all of the young people of the church who had not been saved and had to go to the mourner's bench. I was Nine-years-old, if I remember correctly.

It was Wednesday probably because by weekend. We were on our way to another city. I think someone pulled me up or I was just tired of kneeling. It was many years later before I really met the Lord

(Name withheld by request)

8. AROUND THE AME CHURCH:

- Supervisor Stan McKenzie Visited West Tennessee WMS tribute

The Thirteenth Episcopal District Supervisor, Brother Stan McKenzie shares his visit the West Tennessee WMS, led by Sister Gwendolyn Dilihunt, who put in a surprise tribute entitled, "Hats Off to You, Sister Marilyn Halfacre." The tribute was held at New Tyler AME Church in Memphis. New Tyler was PACKED!

Tributes were made by former District President, former Conference Presidents, and to the Conference YPD Directors (current and past). Tributes were also paid to the Reverend Dr. Kenneth Robinson, pastor of St. Andrew AME Church and to Presiding Elder Finch who was absent attending a funeral. Sister Willie Ann Madison spoke on behalf of Presiding Elder Finch, friends of the family, and the 13th Episcopal District leadership.

Supervisor McKenzie said, “What a sight, they did it up BIG TIME. Gifts were presented and the event shows that the West Tennessee Conference really appreciated and loved Sister Marilyn Halfacre’s leadership.”

Everyone acknowledged that the reception was outstanding. The members of New Tyler AME Church handled the catering. The food and décor was out of this world. Someone was hear to say, “My oh my, the talent we have in our churches.”

Supervisor McKenzie said, “Now Sister Halfacre can go on that cruise...then get back to Memphis and get ready to travel up and down the road as usual with her daughter, the District's President.” He went on to say, “We appreciated her leadership while in office...everything was done always in an excellent manner...reports were always on time; if not early, and always supported the District's programs 100%. What a joy it was to work with her.”

Submitted by Supervisor Stan McKenzie

- The 120th Session of the Bermuda Annual Conference

The 120th Session of the Bermuda Annual Conference of the AME Church came to a climactic end at the Fairmont Southampton Resort, with the Rt. Rev. Richard Franklin Norris, Presiding Bishop of the First Episcopal District presiding.
]The well-organized and highly-energised session was historic in that it was the first time since 1885 that the seat of the conference was not held in the sanctuary of one of the ten AME Churches on the island.
The seat of the conference was held in an amphitheatre of the hotel that was transformed from its otherwise secular nightclub façade into a more cathedral-like setting replete with a flower-bedecked altar and other symbols, and resounding to what the bishop termed, “Anointed singing and powerful preaching coupled with spirited altar calls.”

(Extracted from the Bermudian newspaper, The Royal Gazette)

9. DANIEL’S DIET - WEIGHT DOWN GEORGIA TIPS SCALES AT ANNUAL CONFERENCE:

By Stephanie and Eric Stradford

“But Daniel made up his mind not to defile himself by eating the food and wine given to them by the king. He asked the chief official for permission to eat other things instead.” Daniel 1:8, NLT


FAS2, March 24, 2006, Columbus, GA – The Reverend Dr. Miriam J. Burnett, M.D. made a house call on the 110th Southwest Georgia Annual Conference. The Medical Director for the African Methodist Episcopal Church is calling on the historic black church to “be normal.”

Until now, “normal” has meant getting by instead of living well. The doctor says that “getting by is no longer acceptable. Living longer must also mean living better.”

On an average, African Americans are twice as likely to have diabetes as Whites of similar age are. Nearly three million African Americans have diabetes. African Americans with diabetes experience kidney failure about four times more often than other diabetics. More than 77,000 African Americans died from heart disease, accounting for 27 percent of all African American deaths.

“We have some issues,” said Burnett. For example, obesity is a result of a complex variety of social, behavioral, cultural, environmental, physiological, and genetic factors. The Weight Down Georgia program launched here offered church leaders a sneak preview to a series of events promoting healing and wholeness in the historic church. The program begins the healing process by introducing healers to health needs for the body of believers. With all the advances in information technology, television, radio, newspaper and Internet, the church stands as a trusted source for critical information.

The Conference system for the African Methodist Episcopal Church presents a well-established information channel dating back to 1816 and the first General Conference in Baltimore, MD. During their Annual Conference, members of St. John AMEC, Columbus, GA advocated healing and wholeness by providing blood pressure screening, weigh-ins and critical information on historic disparities in health care. Healthy meals served to the 110th Southwest Georgia Annual Conference increased awareness of health issues stemming from nutrition and obesity.

By design, the church convenes elected delegates every four years who elect bishops. Bishops preside over Annual Conferences within their assigned Episcopal Districts. Presiding Elders conduct quarterly conferences for each local church in a Conference. Local churches convene a monthly conference to elect local officers and delegates. An effective Class Leader System at each local church completes an organizational structure to support missions and ministries for some 3.5 million beneficiaries.

“It has been well documented that spirituality and religion are key sources of strength and tenacity for African-Americans,” said Burnett. Longstanding evidence suggests a salutary effect of spiritual religious factors on health and well-being, and faith-based health promotion interventions have been on the rise in the last decade.

But, for most church folks, health disparity lies between knowing what to do and doing what needs to be done. The conference system elects the bishop, who leads by following Christ. The doctor has said that fried chicken, in fact fried anything, is killing your people. Will you be the first to lay down that fried wing? Pastor, the doctor says there is clear and present danger in those Chitterlings. Will you push away from the table that serves them? Elder, the doctor says we need you to do the Weight Down at every quarterly conference to build trust for the healing process. Will you take “Living Well” from rhetoric to reality?

Or, perhaps, theology that is more relevant is needed to integrate health screening into our wholeness. You know the story well-- Hananiah was called Shadrach. Mishael was called Meshach. Azariah was called Abednego. Daniel, perhaps a chief pastor in his own country, was called Belteshazzar.

You might recall that these were healthy and good-looking young men, well versed in every branch of learning, and gifted with knowledge and good sense. They were suited for service in the royal palace. The king assigned them a daily ration of the best food and wine from his own kitchens. They were to be trained for a three-year period and then some of them would be made his advisers in the royal court.

But, Daniel made up his mind not to defile himself by eating the food and wine given to them by the king. He asked the chief official for permission to eat other things instead. The chief official had great respect for Daniel. But, as you can imagine, he was alarmed by Daniel's suggestion. "My lord the king has ordered that you eat this food and wine," he said. "If you become pale and thin compared to the other youths your age, I am afraid the king will have me beheaded for neglecting my duties."

Daniel talked it over with the attendant who had been appointed by the chief official to look after Daniel, Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah. "Test us for ten days on a diet of vegetables and water," Daniel said. "At the end of the ten days, see how we look compared to the other young men who are eating the king's rich food. Then, you can decide whether or not to let us continue eating our diet."

So, the attendant agreed to Daniel's suggestion and tested them for ten days. At the end of the ten days, Daniel and his three friends looked healthier and better nourished than the young men who had been eating the food assigned by the king. So, after that, the attendant fed them only vegetables and water instead of the rich foods and wines.

Of course, the story does not end here. The diet meant more than maintaining a healthy weight. Ultimately, Daniel’s Diet sustained three out of four Hebrew boys through a fiery furnace and converted a Babylonian King to a new method of ruling.

10. THE ELEVENTH EPISCOPAL DISTRICT 2006 ANNUAL CONFERENCE SCHEDULE:

Florida Conference
August 26 – Sept. 1, 2006
St. James AME Church
514 S. 11th Avenue
Quincy, FL 32351
(850) 627-6382
Rev. Lee Plummer, Host Pastor
Rev. George Barkley, Host Presiding Elder
Bethel AME Church, Tallahassee – Host Site
Rev. Dr. John Green, Site Pastor

Central Conference
September 9-15, 2006
Mt. Olive AME Church
2525 W. Church Street
Orlando, FL 32805
(407) 295-6568
Rev. David Green, Host Pastor
Rev. Leroy Kennon, Host Presiding Elder

South Conference
September 23-29, 2006
Payne Chapel AME Church
801 9th Street
West Palm Beach, FL 33401
(561) 832-2035
Rev. Samuel Sullivan, Host Pastor
Rev. Raymond Heastie, Host Presiding Elder

West Coast ConferenceOctober 7-13, 2006
Mt. Zion AME Church
919 20th Street South
St. Petersburg, FL 33712
(727) 894-1393
Rev. Clarence Williams, Host Pastor
Rev. Jerome Denmark, Host Presiding Elder

East Conference
October 21-27, 2006
Greater Bethel AME Church
701 SE 43rd Street
Gainesville, FL 32641
(352) 376-8846
Rev. Dr. George L. Champion, Host Pastor
Rev. Joseph Sanchez, Host Presiding Elder

Bahamas Conference
November 8-12, 2006
Cousin McPhee Cathedral
P.O. Box CR 56028
Carmichael Road
Nassau Bahamas
(242) 361-0809
Rev. Dr. Ranford Patterson, Host Pastor
Rev. Howard Williamson, Host Presiding Elder

Post Conference Planning Meeting.
Nov. 16-18, 2006
Sandestin Golf and Beach Resort
9300 Emerald Coast Parkway West
Sandestin, FL 32550
1-800-320-8115

African Sojourn
Nov. 24-Dec. 8, 2006
Travel N Style
Florence S. James

11. ST. JAMES AME, MEMPHIS MEN HEARD THE DANGERS OF, ”WHEN GOD’S MEN ARE MISSING”:

A few toes may have been stepped on. A few people probably were upset about what was said, but the preacher didn’t preach a popular sermon, it was a sermon the people needed to hear. That was the mood for the Men’s Day program on Sunday, March 12 at St. James AME Church, Memphis, where Rev. Walter Winstead Reid Jr., is Pastor.

Men’s Day Chairperson was Dr. James C. Wade, Executive Director, Department of Church Growth and Development; Co-Chairman was Bro. Sam Williams.

Speaker for Men’s Day was Dr. Jerome Harris, Executive Director, Department of Annuity, Investments, and Insurance, who apologized in advance for preaching an unpopular sermon, but he added, “I learned a long time ago that you’ve got to get up and say what the Lord thus gives you to say; and let the chips fall where they may.”

Dr. Harris’ sermon text was taken from I Kings 19:9, “And he came thither unto a cave, and lodged there; and, behold, the word of the LORD came to him, and he said unto him. What doest thou here, Elijah?” The sermon was also taken from Ezekiel 2:1, “And he said unto me, Son of man, stand upon thy feet, and I will speak unto thee.” The subject was “When God’s Men are Missing.”

Dr. Jerome said in the mid-60s he endured a three-year long experience that he has never been able to forget. It was the age of flower power, of love children, of rebellions and revolution. It was the age of lunch counter sit-ins and of Black churches being bombed. It was also the age of a misguided and misunderstood war called, Vietnam. It was there that “I became familiar with some strange words like Saigon, DaNang, and MIA (missing in action) and then there was AWOL, absent without leave.” He explained that AWOL is a term that defines the true character and commitment of a man and how he handles adversity and conflict in his life. This term conjures up visions of desertion in the time of trouble; cowardliness in the face of challenge; and a total abandonment of one’s faith in God.

What does the Lord require of thee? Our answer must always be to do justly, to love mercifully, and to love humbly. That is what our God requires. So with that thought in mind, I’ll speak to all God’s children in general, but to the male gender of our species, in particular -- THAT man the brother, THAT man the father, I want to speak to THAT man; and more specifically I want to speak to THAT Black man, descent of Africa, sons of Allen, heirs of a rich and glorious culture –THAT man of the church, THAT man of the street, and THAT man of the in-between.

“Black Men, you are absent without leave. These times try men’s souls. There are problems on every hand, and the question that is being asked is, “Where are the men?” Even God almighty, going to and fro, up and down the earth seeking those who are willing to serve him and be obedient to his will, is asking: Where are the men?

If the men in our world today would stand up and be counted, we could fight and win the war of drugs in our streets, would could stop the violence and killings in our communities, we could restore our families and save our children if the men would stand up.

The majority of our men have sat down. Instead of speaking out, the men are choosing to be silent. We will never solve our problems and truly overcome as a race of people as long as our men are silent, absent and unresponsive. If a man is absent and unavailable to his fellow man, he is absent and unavailable to God. When we isolate and separate ourselves from each other, we are absent and separate from the love of God.

The word to the Black man today is the same word that God gave to Ezekiel, “Son of man, stand on your feet”; but the problem that we still have today, even in 2006, is the same problem that we as a people have had for more than two centuries. After more than 200 years of depravation and humiliation and inhumane treatment, our Black men have sat down and have been beaten down by a plantation philosophy in a slave-minded circumstance. So, when the question is asked, where is the Black man?

The answer is:

We’ve sat down on the seat of guilt
We’ve sat down on the stool of sham and
We’ve sat down on the bench of inferiority.
The system has taught us to hate ourselves and we have bought into that lie and we have given up and sat down.

The call of God to our people today and to our Black men in particular is critically urgent, for our Black families are in trouble. And, I can think of no better reason for the men to stand up and address the issues of our young men killing ourselves with guns and drugs and we know our girls are having babies before they have a chance to live. And, we know our wives are being abused on the job and at home and I can think of no other reason for our Black men to stand up.

Our Black men need to stand up. Get up from their seats of do-nothingness. Come forth from the seat of complacency and rise up from their hiding places of isolation and indifference. God gives us the courage to stand up. In times like these, God is speaking to the men today as he spoke to Elijah and Ezekiel and he reminding us that “I created you before I created any body else form the dark clay of Africa, I have given you a strong back that you might be able to stand up beneath the heaviest load that life can put on you. I’ve given you everything you need to stand up.” The world has taught Black men to feel that their dark skin is ugly and that your black color is a badge of shame.

Let me tell you about my dark skin; it has a pigmentation that nobody else in the world has and because of that darkness and that pigmentation, it gives the Black man a presences, a strong confident presence that makes other men afraid and intimated.

Let me tell you about my kinky hair. I’ve got strong, obedient hair. It’s so good that it will do anything that I tell it to do. I can put it somewhere in the morning and it won’t move until I come back and move it myself. That’s why every morning you ought to look in the mirror and say I love me. I'm a good-looking Black man. Stand up Black man.

And, black man, love and respect your women. A real man doesn’t beat up and abuse his woman. God gave you a woman from your side so she can walk beside you and strengthen you. Black man, stop your whining and whimpering; stop that prancing around and take that earrings out of your ear.

God has already given you everything you need.

You show me a Benjamin Franklin; I’ll show you a Benjamin Banneker
Show me Abraham Lincoln and I’ll show you Frederick Douglass
Show me Theodore Roosevelt and I’ll show you Mary McLeod Bethune
Show me a Dwight Eisenhower and I’ll show you Adam Clayton Powell
Show me a John Kenney and I’ll show you Martin Luther King, Jr.
Show me Lyndon Johnson and I’ll show you Thurgood Marshall
Show me Bill Clinton I’ll show you Vernon Jordan
Show me a George Bush and I’ll show you Colin Powell
Stand up Black man.
If it's a mountain, you can climb it
If it’s a valley, you can cross it
If it’s a burden, you can bear it
If it's a problem, we can solve it

Just stand on your feet and hear the word of the Lord. You think we are not able to do what the Lord has called us to do. Jesus said if you follow me and I will make you fishers of men. Jesus knew the men he called and he knew their qualifications. The bottom line is the question for the Christian man that is absent without leave is not whether the Lord knows you, but whether you know the Lord.

If you truly know the Lord, something should rise up in your spirit every now and then to make you ask the question, if it had not been for the Lord on my side where would I be? And you begin to remember, that it was the Lord that heard my cry; that it was the Lord that made a way out of no way, that it was the Lord that picked me up and turned me around; it was the Lord that set my feet on solid ground; it was the Lord amid the dangers, toils and snares.

So the question is asked, whom can we send? Every man that truly loves the Lord should stand up and say here am I Lord, send me. I’ll go, if I have to go by myself. I know the Lord has been good to me and brought me through a mighty long way. We ought to close your eyes and look down the backstreets of our yesterdays and remember that God has been good to us because of his goodness, mercy and grace. I’ve heard the voice of Jesus tell us to still to fight on. He promised never to leave us alone; stand up Black man and be about your father’s business.


The morning program also included the presentation of special awards to outstanding men as Rev. Reid recognized them for their commitment to St. James AME Church. The following men received a certificate of appreciation:

Dr. Wade and Brother Williams for their leadership as Chairman and Co-Chairman respectively for Men’s Day.

Robert Boyd – Church Treasurer
Julius Jennings – Stewart Board
Parker Conley – Spirit of Giving
Tyrone Spencer – Katrina Relief Effort
Joseph Martin – Bible Study
David Huggins -- Trustee Board
Lawrence Davis – Trustee Emeritus
John Shields – Steward Emeritus

In closing, Dr. Wade thanked the Pastor for allowing him to serve as Men’s Day chairperson. It was an historic moment as an AME General Officer served as the chairperson of Men’s Day. Dr. Wade added that he was honored to serve in such a vital and meaning ministry in the life of St. James AME Church. Dr. Wade praised Dr. Harris for preaching and for invading our privacy with lessons, we needed to hear.

Submitted by:
Beverly T. Goines,
Public Relations Director, St. James AME Church, Memphis
Rev. Walter Winstead Reid Jr., Pastor

12. TRAVEL WITH BISHOP AND MRS. MCKINLEY YOUNG AND MEMBERS OF THE 11TH EPISCOPAL DISTRICT OF THE AME CHURCH TO SOUTH AFRICA, LESOTHO, AND MALAWI - NOVEMBER 24 - DECEMBER 8, 2006:

Friday Nov. 24 Depart from Miami (other gateways also available); connect with South African Airways in Atlanta

Saturday Nov. 25 Arrive Cape Town, S. Africa; transfer to the luxurious Table Bay Hotel on the Victoria & Alfred Waterfront Welcome dinner

Sunday Nov. 26 Visit with 15th Episcopal District – Bishop Samuel Green, Sr.
Tour of Robben Island where Nelson Mandela was imprisoned

Monday Nov. 27 Tour of Cape Town and Table Mountain

Tuesday Nov. 28 Fly to Bloemfontein, S. Africa; transport by coach to Maseru, Lesotho And the Maseru Sun Hotel in the heart of downtown Maseru

Wednesday Nov. 29 Visit with 18th Episcopal District – Bishop Sarah Davis
Thursday Nov. 30 Day at leisure

Friday Dec. 1 Transport by coach to Bloemfontein, S. Africa; fly to Lilongwe, Malawi; Transfer to the Meridien Capital Hotel in the newer part of this busy city

Saturday Dec. 2 Visit with 20th Episcopal District – Bishop Wilfred Messiah
Sunday Dec. 3 Day at leisure

Monday Dec. 4 Fly to Johannesburg, S. Africa; transfer to the majestic Michelangelo Hotel In the vibrant Renaissance-styled Mandela Square area

Tuesday Dec. 5 Day at leisure (optional Safari and tour of Sun City)
Wednesday Dec. 6 Day at leisure (optional tour of Soweto) Farewell Dinner

Thursday Dec. 7 Depart for US
Friday Dec. 8 Arrive Home

Package includes: Round-trip airfare from US, intra-country airfares in Africa, airport transfers, land transportation in deluxe coaches, best available hotels in each city, tours as indicated (other optional tours also available), taxes and entry fees, full breakfast daily, Welcome dinner at the Table Bay Hotel in Cape Town; Farewell Dinner at the Michelangelo Hotel in Johannesburg.

Cost: $5,288 per person double occupancy; single supplement $1,632

Payment: $1,500 deposit per person is due immediately and the balance is due by August 15th

Cancellation: For details, please contact Mrs. Mavis Bush or Mrs. Florence James

Travel Insurance is available and strongly recommended to cover cancellations and emergencies

For reservations or additional information contact: Mrs. Mavis Bush (904) 355-8262 or
Mrs. Florence James (301) 390-5844

Arrangements by Travel N Style in conjunction with African Travel, Inc., Glendale, California

Email: www.florencejames@hotmail.com
AME Church - 11th Episcopal District
Southern Africa Tour
November 24 - December 8, 2006

General Terms and Conditions

PAYMENT A deposit of $1,500 per person is required as participants register - Full payment is due 75-days prior to departure

(Note: The per-person cost may increase should the group size fall below the minimum of 42-paying passengers.)

CANCELLATION more than 90 days prior to the departure, $500 of the deposit will be forfeited. 90-75 days prior to departure, the total individual deposit will be forfeited. 75-45 days prior to departure, 75% of the total tour cost will be forfeited. Less than 45-days, 100% of the total tour cost will be forfeited.

TRIP CANCELLATION INSURANCE is available and strongly recommended.

REFUNDS Will not be made for occasional missed meals, or sightseeing.

VISA/INOCULATIONS - Visa and immunization requirements vary from country to country and up-to-date information should be obtained from your local health department and consulate. Any costs associated with these items are not included in the tour costs. Anti-malarial tablets are strongly recommended.

BAGGAGE INFORMATION - Passengers will be allowed two pieces of luggage the total dimensions not to exceed 107 linear inches, total, for both pieces. One carry-on piece may also be carried free if it can be stored under the seat and its measurements do not exceed 45 inches.

AIRLINE RESPONSIBILITY CLAUSE - The carriers concerned are not to be held responsible for any act, omission or event during the time the passengers are not aboard the aircraft or conveyance. The passenger ticket shall constitute the sole contract between the airline and the passenger. Air schedules are subject to change and airfares are quoted as of Jan. 01, 2006 and are subject to increase.

RESPONSIBILITY - AFRICAN TRAVEL, Glendale, CA, TRAVEL N STYLE, Upper Marlboro, MD., outfitters, and operators of the tour and/or suppliers of services act only as agents in regard to travel, whether by plane, car or motor coach, and assume no liability for injury, damage, loss, accident, delay, war, insurrection, revolt, or other civil uprising, other military action, strikes or any Act of God occurring in either the country of origin, destination or through passage, or for any reason whatsoever, or through the acts or default of any company or persons engaged in conveying the passengers or in carrying out arrangements of the tour. They cannot accept any responsibility for losses or additional expenses due to delay or changes in air schedules or other causes. All such losses or expenses will be the responsibility of the member of the tour. The right is reserved to make minor adjustments to the itinerary and the right is reserved to cancel any tour prior to departure. The Companies may not be held responsible for any loss or damage to luggage during the tour program. The acceptance of final documents, vouchers or tickets shall be deemed to be consent to the above conditions.

DISCLOSURE - Please be aware that during your participation in a Safari tour certain risks and dangers may arise, including, but not limited to, the hazards of traveling in undeveloped areas, travel by boat, train, automobile, aircraft or other means of conveyance, the forces of nature, political unrest and accident or illness in remote regions without means of rapid evacuation or medical facilities. Also be aware and clearly understand that AFRICAN TRAVEL, INC. will not have liability regarding provision of medical care or the adequacy of any care that may be rendered. It is understood that AFRICAN TRAVEL, INC. will use their best efforts to ensure that all adequate measures are taken to avoid such occurrences. By signing the Tour Contract you are VOLUNTARILY PARTICIPATING IN THESE ACTIVITIES WITH THE KNOWLEDGE OF THE DANGERS INVOLVED AND HEREBY AGREE TO ACCEPT ANY RISKS. AS LAWFUL CONSIDERATION for the agreement with AFRICAN TRAVEL, INC. to participate in such trips and activities, you hereby agree that you will not make a claim against AFRICAN TRAVEL, INC. and their employees from all claim actions and demands that you may have for bodily injury, death or property damage arising from your participation in a tour. Acceptance of the Tour Contract will serve as the release of Liability and Assumption of Risk agreement. This agreement is binding on your heirs, legal representatives and assigns. If any portion is unenforceable, the remaining portions shall remain in full force and effect.


CREDIT CARD AUTHORIZATION FORM
BOOKING #: 26813 RES AGENT: HILDA

I, the undersigned (Print Name) ________________________________ authorize AFRICAN TRAVEL INC to charge my credit card as follows for my and/or my companion's scheduled trip:

Credit Card: (check one) MASTER CARD VISA AMEX  DISCOVER

Card #: __________________________ Expiration: _________________ (DATE)

Amount: $ _____________________ Trip Starts: _________________ (DATE)

Billing Address: _____________________________________________________
(Must match cardholder billing information)

City: ____________________________State: ________________ZIP: _________

CANCELLATION INFORMATION
Time prior to departure: Cancellation fee:
90-days or more before departure $500 per person*
90-75 days before departure total deposit per person*
75-45 days before departure 75% of the total cost*
Less than 45 days before departure 100% of tour cost*

Special events: Based on contract
*Plus charges of third parties

I have read, fully understand and agree with the Cancellation Terms listed above.

The Card Holder The Travel Agent
Date: _____________________________ Date:______________________________

Print Name: ________________________ Agency: TRAVEL N STYLE___________

Signature: __________________________ Agent: Florence_____________________

Tel (Day): _________________________ Agency Tel: (301) 390-5844___________

Tel (Evening): _______________________ Agent Signature:_____________________

INSURANCE: I/We Decline: (initial) _______ IATA/CLIA #:52434141

*NOTE: Please see copy of General Terms & Conditions
1100 East Broadway, Glendale, CA 91205
® 800-421-8907 Fax: 818-507-5802 email: ati@africantravelinc.com Web: www.africantravelinc.com


13. KATRINA EVACUEES CAN VOTE IN THE UPCOMING ELECTION – ABSENTEE BALLOT – KEEP YOUR VOTE AND STAY CONNECTED:

On April 22, the citizens of New Orleans will vote for the first time since Hurricane Katrina.

New Orleans residents who are registered voters and were displaced by the hurricane are still eligible to vote in their home parish if they have not registered to vote anywhere else. We need to reach as many of these voters as soon as possible to make sure they can vote in the elections April 22.

If you are an eligible New Orleans voter or know someone who is, you can request an absentee ballot up until April 18 to vote in the primary election. You also can call the Louisiana Secretary of State Elections Division at 1-800-883-2805 or visit its website at http://www.sec.state.la.us/elections/elect-before.htm for more information about voting.

Please help us spread the word by forwarding this e-mail to your friends and family. If you know people displaced by Katrina, please let them know they have time to vote in their local election.
Deadlines to register for the upcoming elections:

- March 22, 2006 is the deadline for the April 22, 2006 Primary Election.
- April 19, 2006 is the deadline for the May 20, 2006 General Election.

Please forward this e-mail to friends and family, and let those displaced by the hurricane know they are eligible to vote in the April 22 primary election. They can get more information about voting by calling the Louisiana Secretary of State Elections Division at 1-800-883-2805 or http://www.sec.state.la.us/elections/elect-before.htm.

Thank you for helping inform displaced voters of valuable information.

Please speak out to help the survivors, mourners and victims of Gulf Coast hurricane Katrina. They need your voice! Call, write or fax your elected officials. For more information visit: KeepingThemHonest.bravehost.com to help today!

14. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

clinton@1stdistrict-ame.com
From: Bishop Richard F. Norris
1st Episcopal District


We regret to inform you of the passing of Mrs. Juanita Groover. Mrs. Groover was the mother of Rev. Gregory G. Groover, Sr., pastor of Charles Street A.M.E. Church in Roxbury, Massachusetts (New England Conference). The following information has been provided regarding funeral arrangements.

Viewing and Funeral will be held at:
Bethel A.M.E. Church
420 North Main Street
Freeport, NY 11520
Phone: 516-379-1513
Fax: 516-378-1572
Rev. Harry J. White, II, Pastor

Viewing – Monday, March 27, 2006
7:30 p.m. – 9:00 p.m.

Funeral – Tuesday, March 28, 2006
Funeral – 10:00 a.m.

Condolences may be sent to:

Rev. Gregory G. Groover, Sr. and family
466 Warren Street
Roxbury, MA 02121

Please lift up the Groover family in your prayers.

15. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

From: mrsjfoster@yahoo.com

We regretfully share news of the passing of Mrs. Ruth J. Stripling (she was 102 years old), widow of the late Presiding Elder Rev. Cornelius S. Stripling of the Georgia Conference. She went to glory on Thursday, March 23, 2006, in Savannah, Georgia. She was a member of St. Philip AME Church where the Reverend Dr. John Foster is pastor. She was an active member of the Ministers' Spouses, Widows and Widows Plus PK's Organization. She was very devoted to her church and the Savannah community.

Her family, friends, and her beloved Savannah community will miss her caring spirit. Her secret for living a long life was: "Live your life, not your age."

Sentiments of condolences may be sent to:
Sidney A. Jones Funeral Home
124 W. Park Avenue
Savannah, GA 31401
(912)234-7226

Homegoing Service will be held on Tuesday, March 28, 2006, at 11:00 a.m.:

St. Philip AME Church
613 Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard
Savannah, GA 31401
(912)233-2083

Submitted by:
Sister Shirley V. Taylor, President
Sixth Episcopal District MSWAWOPKS

16. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT ANNOUNCEMENTS PROVIDED BY:

Bishop Carolyn Tyler Guidry, Chair
Commission on Social Action Clergy Family Information Center

Mrs. Ora L. Easley - Administrator Email: Amespouses1@aol.com
(Nashville, Tennessee Contact) Phone: (615) 837-9736 Fax: (615) 833-3781
(Memphis, Tennessee Contact) (901) 578-4554 (Phone & Fax)

Please remember these families in your prayers.

17. CONDOLENCES TO THE BEREAVED FROM THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER:

The Chair of the Commission on Publications, the Right Reverend Gregory G. M. Ingram; the Publisher, the Reverend Dr. Johnny Barbour and the Editor of the Christian Recorder, the Reverend Dr. Calvin H. Sydnor III offer our condolences and prayers to those who have lost loved ones. We pray that the peace of Christ will be with you during this time of your bereavement.

3/24/2006

THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER ONLINE ENGLISH EDITION (3/24/06)

Bishop Gregory G. M. Ingram - Chair, Commission on Publications
The Reverend Dr. Johnny Barbour, Jr., Publisher
The Reverend Dr. Calvin H. Sydnor III, Editor

1. A RESPONSE TO ARTICLE ABOUT DEBT-FREE LIVING:

America's heavy personal debt is being scrutinized a lot these days. The
Oprah Winfrey Show is currently doing a series on it called "Debt Diet."

Finally, people are beginning to realize that there is more to it than just being smart enough to know how to sign your name. You gotta pay for that stuff you buy! And only in recent days (years) have we begun to understand the intricacies of interest and how it can pile up in unexpected ways. They're surely "out to get us," aren't they? Or, are we out to get ourselves?

I remember when being debt-free was what everyone was striving for. It was a great "sin" to owe anyone anything and a matter of pride NOT to owe anyone anything at all. Remember the song, "God Bless the Child Who's Got His Own"?

Then came those cute little plastic cards - so convenient! Just sign your name and you can have anything you want - Not need, WANT! Now, ever since, it has become "the American way." Sign now, pay later, pay never, whatever. I've got the latest gadget, the latest jeans, the latest shoes, the latest furnishings, the latest ... everything!

Maybe I'll pay and maybe I won't. I owe so much I do not really care any more. Seems like I will NEVER be able to pay it all anyway. Oh, well, maybe I'll make that $10 minimum payment. That's not much and it will keep the bill collectors away from my door. I'll mail the check on my way out to do some more non-essential shopping. Gotta have the latest iPOD, you know.

And so, it goes. I sure hope this person never needs to buy a car or a home or anything that's really important because that credit rating is shot by now, possibly beyond repair!

Editor’s Note: Step 1 to getting out of debt is to get rid of credit cards; or at least get them under control where you pay the balance each month and if you can do that, you can get rid of the credit cards altogether.

2. WORDS FROM THE EDITOR:

- Kudos to two ministers who are serving our Zion

I was sitting in my Dentist’s office last week and picked up the October 2005 edition of Ebony Magazine and to my pleasure I flipped the pages and there was an article entitled, “Spreading the Word on Campus.”

The Article featured two university chaplains who are Itinerant Elders in the African Methodist Episcopal Church.

The Reverend Deborah K. Blanks is the associate dean of religious life at Princeton University and is currently a lieutenant commander in the U. S. Naval Reserves.

The Reverend Sakena De Young-Scaggs is the associate Protestant university chaplain at Brown University.

- My experience on the Moaners’ Bench

Each summer, I used to visit my Uncle Tell and Aunt Virginia in Piney River, (now Arrington) Virginia. They were members of St. Mary’s Baptist Church. Uncle Tell was referred to as, “Deacon Motley.” Aunt Virginia, who was called, “Ginst” by her friends, sang in the choir.

St. Mary's Baptist Church had its revival every summer. Revival time was a big event in that part of rural Virginia. The revival was important because it was a time when folks could get saved. It was an important time in the religious life of the people because, all during the year, as a rule, folks couldn’t just join church when the invitation was given after morning worship. Maybe if a person came on their Christian experience they could, but not those who had not been baptized.

The non-baptized had to go on the moaners' bench and that happened in the summer during the revival. The moaners' bench was the front bench and you moaned and moaned until you got filled with the Holy Ghost. Then you jumped up and started shouting and then the deacons and sisters would take control and when you finished shouting the church went into a holy uproar because another soul had been saved.

I went on the moaners' bench in about 1952. I stayed on that moaners' bench from Monday through Friday. The pastor decided that we needed another week of revival. By Tuesday of the next week, I was tired of moaning and someone pulled me up or I got up, deciding that I had gotten the Holy Ghost. They sang and fanned me and told me that I was saved. My Aunt Virginia probably had not gone beyond the fifth grade, but she was a wise and perceptive woman. The next morning, she looked at me strangely to see if a real “Holy Ghost-change” had come over me because I hadn't really gotten up shouting like some of the others. It felt to me as if someone pulled me up, and I wasn’t going to sit back down. They fanned me and told me that I was saved and I figured that I would take their word for it. I was saved. Another young boy and I got up about the same time. I must have responded to her look and questions appropriately because she decided that I was saved and she started shouting right there in the kitchen.

Later, when my Uncle Tell came home from work, Aunt Virginia shared her investigation about my really being saved with him and he was ecstatic that I was saved.

That evening, I got to sit center section, on the front row with those who had been saved and watched those who were still on the moaners’ bench.

Several days later, I was on my way back home to Newark, NJ, saved and filled with the Holy Ghost.

- Psalm 23 for Ministers

The LORD is my Chief Pastor and Shepherd, I shall not want.
He gives me peace, when chaos is all around me.
He reminds me to pray, before I speak in anger.
He restores my sanity, even in the midst of conflict.
He guides my decisions that I might honor Him in all that I do.

Even though I face absurd amounts of pastoral responsibilities, unreasonable demands upon my time, telephone calls late at night and early in the morning, unrealistic deadlines, long unproductive board meetings, untimely quarterly conferences, complaining members, demands of the presiding elder and bishop, spiritually uplifting annual conferences but post-annual conference depression and disappointment, demand for money and offerings I do not have, people who fail to do what they promise to do, "lukewarm" members, not enough money, more money requests for connectional projects from a financially exhausted congregation, increasingly more family responsibilities, declining offerings, budget cutbacks, gossiping members, gossiping clergy, frustration at not being able to do what I expect of myself, connectional responsibilities, not enough time in the day, … I won't give up, for You are with me.

Your presence, peace and power, will see me through.
You raise me up, even when the bishop fails to give me a larger appointment.
You claim me as your own, even when my members complain about me.
Your Peace and love are better than a bigger salary or a larger church.
Your plan for salvation is better than the church's retirement plan, and when it's all said and done, I'll be laboring for you all the days of my life!

Calvin H. Sydnor III

3. THE 25TH CONNECTIONAL CHRISTIAN EDUCATION AND YOUTH CONGRESS:

The 25th Connectional Christian Education and Youth Congress will be held July 2 – 7, 2006 at the Coronado Springs Resort, Walt Disney World in Lake Bena Vista, Florida. The Congress will have great teaching, outstanding preaching, certification training, faith formation training and spiritual enrichment will be the emphases.

Lodging information: Coronado Springs Resort

Room rate: $99 per night for single/double
$15 per additional person (18 years and older)

For Reservations, call 407.939-1020. Ask for the 25th Connectional Christian Education Congress rate.

Registration Fees

Early Registration (June 1, 2006 and before):

Youth - $115 and up
Adult - $125 and up

On-site Registration (After June 1, 2006)

All - $150.00

For more information and to obtain the Registration Form visit: http://www.ameced.com/home.shtml

4. SEXUAL HARASSMENT IS NOT JUST A ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH ISSUE:

Clergy and Laity, Sexual Harassment in Ministry is not only an issue in the Catholic Church. Unfortunately, it is an ever-growing concern in all denominations. As clergy, it is important that we understand how to protect ourselves and our memberships from the damaging effects of harassment. In this upcoming workshop entitled "Crossing the Sacred”, we will examine this serious topic. Please register to attend.

Be blessed in all you say and do.
Rev. Charmayne G. Davis
Quinn Chapel AME Church

5. CROSSING THE SACRED: ADDRESSING SEXUAL HARASSMENT IN THE MINISTRY:

When: Thursday, March 30, 2006
9:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.

Where: Quinn Chapel AME Church 1901 W. Muhammad Ali Blvd. Louisville, 502-583-0324

Workshop Description:
This skills-developing workshop will address the issues of sexual harassment, as they are experienced within faith-based settings. This training will focus on clergy perpetrated sexual harassment but will also address how clergy and lay leaders can respond to sexual harassment complaints within the church. Topics will include defining sexual harassment, examining the impact of harassment on victims and faith communities, supporting the people who have been victimized (including examining why it is that they respond the way they typically do), and challenging people who harass. This training will also explore community responses and what faith based communities can do to address sexual harassment, including how to create an environment that is safe for victims to report their experiences and how to prevent sexual harassment.

Presenters:

Rus Ervin Funk, MSW, is the Research and Prevention Specialist at The Center for Women and Families, whose mission is to engage individuals and community in the elimination of domestic violence, sexual violence, and economic hardship through service, education and advocacy. Rus has been working in the field since 1983 and has published numerous articles, chapters and books. His latest book is Reaching Men: Strategies for Preventing Sexist Attitudes, Behavior and Violence (2006) by JistLife Publishing.

The Rev. Nancy Troy is the Associate for Social Welfare Ministries/Executive Director of the Presbyterian Health, Education and Welfare Association (PHEWA). She works at the national offices of the Presbyterian Church (USA) in Louisville, KY. Her office is responsible for resourcing and supporting professionals and volunteers who work in the areas of community ministries: addictions, domestic violence, HIV/AIDS, reproductive health, chaplains and pastoral care, child advocacy, etc… She has worked in training and organizational development, at the Center for Women and Families, and co-pastored with her husband, Rev. Bruce Tjaden.

Event Sponsors: Center for Women and Families, Quinn Chapel AME Church, Kent School of Social Work – Continuing Education, Women's Center at Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary, St. Matthews Pastoral Counseling Center, and The Temple.

Registration Fee: $50

Registration Contact:
Amy Cappiccie (502)852-4769 accapp01@gwise.louisville.edu
Rus Funk (502)581-7271 rus.funk@cwfempower.org

6. SLAM DUNK FOR THE TYLER DISTRICT:

By: Delanda S. Johnson

As we reach the halfway point before the Annual Conference in September, the Tenacious Tyler District Conference started and ended with a Slam Dunk. As you see this was not only the NCAA College basketball March Madness, but also it was the Tenacious Tyler District March Madness.

On Saturday, March 18, in Tyler, Texas at Ebenezer AME Church, all parts of this organization came together to discuss business, finance, and most of all to give Praise to the LORD.

Rev. Betty O’Neal, Pastor of the Moore Station Circuit near Athens, brought the morning message. Due to the lost of her younger brother, Rev. O’Neal fired up the congregation with a powerful solo entitled, “Fix Me.”

Coming from Ephesians 5:27, Rev. O’Neal’s theme “Worthy of Not; He’s Coming Back” dealt with the key word Apportionment. “Not faith, not hope, not trust, not belief, or praise, but Apportionment this is to remind us of who we are as AMEs,” said O’Neal.

O’Neal stated that we needed to keep in mind who we are, now that we have the power to pray our way out of any situation; now that when praises go up; blessings come down.

“I thank God that I am not what I use to be, but Jesus died that I might be saved and my name; I don’t know about your name, but my name will be in the Book of Life. I may not look like much, but God know that I’ve been washed in the blood of the Lamb,” said O’Neal.

Rev. O’Neal wanted to let the Tyler District AMEs know that as AMEs;

A: don’t stand for just abstinence or apportionment, but we are Anointed.

M: don’t stand for just Methodist or money, but stands for means, mighty, and Master.

E: don’t stand for just Episcopal or enslaved, but stands for endurance, eternal, everlasting.

We are the chosen. We are in this for the long run. If we would only believe that all things are possible through GOD; remember that we have to finish the work of the one who sent us, and know that we need to always be READY to serve the LORD,” said O’Neal.

Later that afternoon, Presiding Elder Ervin conducted his general business session of the conference. The meeting consisted of presentations from The Jenkins Agency, Arlington, Texas; Above & Beyond Services, Inc., Jacksonville, Texas; and a special presentation from Rev. J. H. Holmes & Rev. Alton Paris. Both Ministers expressed to the conference now that Tyler District now has its own website, www.amec-tyler-district.net. This website consists of news events, information about Tyler District Pastors and their church locations, upcoming events, etc.

The approximate cost for the website is $1000, which was donated by Rev. Holmes and Rev. Alton Paris.

7. ALLEN CHAPEL HELD ITS SECOND ANNUAL “LOCK-IN”:

Allen Chapel A.M.E. Church of Asbury Park, NJ conducted its second annual overnight “Lock-In” (Friday, February 24th to Saturday, February 25th) for boys ages 10 to 16 years old. The “Lock-In”, encouraged as an alternative to being Locked Up, was sponsored by the men of Allen Chapel as part of the Men’s Focus Month, also a program for observance of Black History Month (February 2006).

According to the Rev. Gerald Bailey, Pastor of Allen Chapel, many of our youth are growing up without the love and leadership of a father. In most cases, their fathers are incarcerated, drug addicted, gang banging, or absent due to general irresponsibility and negligence. These youngsters become “our boys”. Several boys who attended this 2nd Annual “Lock-In” were also participants last year.

“This year’s “Lock-In” was much more of collaboration with the community,” said Rev. Gerald Bailey. Assistant City Manager, Mr. James Farmularo, warmly greeted the 19 youth attending. Lt. George Corbin, Asbury Park Police Department, shared his story of growing up in Asbury Park and how positive male role models shaped his life. A martial arts demonstration, coordinated by Professor Thomas Mack, Sr., a 7th degree black belt title-holder, was presented. Mrs. Susan Maynard, Executive Director of the Westside Community Center, donated table games. Major Jeffery Bassett of the Salvation Army provided sleeping cots and conducted a presentation on “Spirituality”. Rounding out the educational segment, Rev. Bailey taught a class on “HIV, Abstinence and Sexuality.”

In support of the annual “Lock-In,” members of the Allen Chapel congregation donated pizza and soda, constructed a ping-pong table and assisted in the preparation of Saturday morning breakfast.

As a token of appreciation, New Jersey Nets basketball team uniforms were given to all the young participants.

8. CHECK OUT THIS WEBSITE:

http://community-2.webtv.net/SmittyJHS/htmlh3BcenterCASAIR/


9. NEW RESEARCH CONFIRMS VIVID DIVERSITY OF ECUMENICAL MOVEMENT:

The vivid diversity of the ecumenical movement has been highlighted in new research, published by the World Council of Churches (WCC) this month that confirms the continued growth of the fellowship of churches.

A product of the research, A Handbook of Churches and Councils: Profiles of Ecumenical Relationships provides the first comprehensive overview of the state of the world’s ecumenical organizations, the main global Christian bodies and their member churches.

The result of intensive consultation with churches in all regions, the book contains articles and data on virtually all the major ecclesial traditions and groupings of churches that exist within Christianity, as well as a detailed analysis of regional and national councils and fellowships of churches. Along with a presentation of more than 150 Christian bodies and councils of churches, the book provides statistical information and a brief history and description of each of the 348 member churches, which form the WCC. Included also are lists of member churches of all Christian world communions, regional ecumenical organizations, national councils of churches, and other regional and sub-regional church bodies.

Among the major findings of the project is that WCC member churches now span over 520,000 parishes and local congregations in 150 countries, are served by upwards of 490,000 clergy, and encompass as many as 590 million faithful worldwide.

According to Hubert van Beek, a specialist on Christian trends and former programme executive for ecumenical relations at the WCC, the project provides the reader with "a concise overview of the main ecclesial traditions that make up contemporary Christianity". More than a record, however, the book also offers a solid basis for reflection about the state of the world’s churches and the future of the ecumenical movement in the 21st century, he emphasizes. "The Handbook demonstrates concretely the outreach of the ecumenical movement and serves to remind us that its ownership rests not only with WCC but with all the partners, and ultimately with God."

The Handbook of Churches and Councils: Profiles of Ecumenical Relationships is published in English only, and can be ordered online from WCC Publications.

February 2006, 638 pp., ISBN 2-8254-1480-8 Price: Sfr.55.00, US$43.00, £24.00, €36.50

More information is available on the WCC Publications web page:
http://wcc-coe.org/wcc/news/pubs/index-e.html

10. DEFENDING DIVERSITY? - “ALONG THE COLOR LINE”:

Dr. Manning Marable

In January 2006, a group of African-American students at the University of Michigan filed a complaint with the U.S. Department of Education’s Office of Civil Rights, charging widespread discrimination. The University of Michigan black students, calling themselves the “Coalition for Action Against Racism and Discrimination,” assert that blacks “are recruited to graduate and undergraduate programs . . . to inflate enrollment numbers but are not given enough academic counseling or financial support to allow them to graduate.”

The complaint charges that many black graduate students “are abused and demoralized, told they are not Ph.D. material” and are advised to leave the university after completing their M.A. degrees. What’s their evidence? In academic year 2004-2005, the black enrollment in U-M graduate programs was 7.5 percent. However, only 4 percent of all Ph.D.s produced were African Americans.

There’s growing statistical evidence that the landmark Grutter v. Bollinger Supreme Court decision of 2003 that upheld affirmative action as “the law of the land,” but also significantly narrowed and restricted its application, has had a negative impact on black access and opportunity in higher education. At UCLA, for example, only 2.3 percent of the 2005 undergraduate admission offers went to black students, the lowest percentage since California voters outlawed affirmative action in 1996. At the University of California at Berkeley, only 2.9 percent of its 2005 freshman class was black. Even University of California President Robert Dynes has stated, “The trend of declining admissions and enrollment of African Americans at UC, particularly at our most selective campuses, represents a crisis.”

Liberal educators have responded to this wholesale dismantling of thousands of minority-based scholarships and affirmative action enforcement by seeking shelter under the ambiguous rubric of “diversity.” On March 8, 2006, in a major address at Columbia University, Brown University President Ruth Simmons outlined a new framework for talking about both “diversity” and affirmative action enforcement in higher education. An African American scholar, Simmons acknowledged that “racial discrimination” and racial stigmatization remains a fundamental problem in U.S. society. Blacks remain underrepresented within the faculty, administrative staff, and student populations. Simmons staunchly defended race-sensitive affirmative action for college admissions. But, she also made a key distinction between “affirmative action,” which she described as “what happens outside of the university” to ensure access, and “diversity,” which occurs “within the university.”

President Simmons defined diversity as being “about a variety of inputs, and the greater the number the better,” reflecting a spectrum of differences in gender, nationality, ethnicity, sexual orientation, and even ideological viewpoints in a campus community. She observed, “One’s cultural heritage is but one asset of the total diversity each of us represents.” Therefore, the task of the university was to nurture programs and a curriculum that fully represented a scholarly and critical representation of that multicultural diversity within human societies. However, Simmons sharply disagreed with the notion that diversity meant racially or gender separate programs, such as women-only “safe spaces” for discussions about gender-related issues, or blacks-only cultural centers.

“Diversity does not play homage to vanity,” Simmons warned. She sharply criticized gender, sexual, and/or racial groups that voluntarily created programs that were strictly identity-based. Universities “must insist upon the values of integration” and inclusion, Simmons emphasized. For example, within Brown University’s ideologically liberal campus, Simmons explained, she had even allocated a president’s fund to support politically conservative speakers.

Simmons’s new “defense of diversity” merits serious and critical discussion among educators. Politically, it may represent a strategic repositioning among liberal elites, who now recognize that in the aftermath of the Grutter v. Bollinger decision that affirmative action policies will inevitably disappear. Simmons and other liberal university presidents apparently have decided that a color-blind diversity that emphasizes ideological and social pluralism and strong civil liberties commitment while rejecting “exclusivity,” can be successfully defended politically and intellectually.

Two issues deeply trouble me about this new definition of “defending diversity.” First, it is ahistorical: the “differences” that separate black Americans from the majority of white Americans aren’t matters of choice, but a product of enslavement, segregation, and “ghettoization.” The under-representation of blacks in colleges is the historical consequence of centuries of deliberate exclusion. Dismantling institutional white privilege requires “race-conscious” solutions. Affirmative action enforcement must extend beyond the “boundaries” of a university, into the policies and practices of how staff, faculty and administrators are hired.

The larger problem, however, is the university’s relationship to the larger external community. “Diversity” ought to mandate a vigorous and mutually productive partnership between colleges and historically-disadvantaged black and brown populations, especially in urban neighborhoods. Mentorship programs with urban high schools, and service-learning educational programs, can be effective ways for colleges to enrich their own values.

Universities need to establish and fund educational efforts inside prisons, working directly to enhance the lives and opportunities of society’s most disadvantaged groups. Any defense of “diversity” that does not directly challenge structural racism will do little in the end to heal the nation’s continuing racial divide.

11. “BUT AS FOR ME AND MY HOUSE, WE WILL SERVE THE LORD”:

Dr. Michael C. Carson

Joshua 24:15

It is very important that one understands just in whom he/she believes in. There are many gods seeking our approval and embrace.

The Christian is called upon to make his/her credo statement in many situations, be it in the department store, “on mountain high or valley low.” One’s affirmation of faith always begins with “I believe.”

The Christian proclaims, “I believe in God the Father Almighty and in Jesus Christ his only begotten Son.” This is not something just to say on Sunday. When we remember all the times God has delivered, blessed, forgiven, healed, and challenged us it should be easy for us to say, “I believe in God.”

When we exclaim, “Yes, I believe in God,” we must have had some prior experience with God. This also means that God has proven God's Self worthy of our proclamation.

Through the years, God without a doubt has established a rich and wonderful record of accomplishment with every one of us. In light of what God has done, is doing, and promises to do for us, who would not want to declare his or her belief in God?

Every day we are challenged to make sure that our “walk matches up with our talk.” It has been stated, “Actions speak louder than words.” We can say that we believe in God, but if we fail to live out the message of salvation-so what? If we do not actively seek-out and embrace those God-given opportunities to be a blessing to others-so what?

Sure, we can say that we believe in God, but if we are not actively trying to discharge our responsibilities at church, home, work, wherever, are we really placing all of our trust in God? By proclaiming, that we believe in God also dictates that we must non-verbally back up our verbal exclamation.

Joshua makes it very plain for us to understand. We must choose which god we will serve. Will we serve the God of our salvation or other gods offering short-term pleasure but always paying long-term grief?

Let us encourage others each day to, “Love the Lord God with all of our heart, soul, and mind.” Also, let us encourage our brothers and sisters to “Love our neighbor as we love ourselves.”

Let us serve the Lord with our verbal testimony and even more so with our “sweat-equity testimony.” Yes, we must actively let others know in whom we say we believe in. Your testimony could mean the difference between life and death. It is surprising just how many people follow you. In light of this, one of the most ever-lasting gifts you can offer anyone is that of a relationship with God.

Peace with Justice, Be Blessed Real Good, and Attend Worship.

Dr. Michael C. Carson, Pastor
Union Memorial African Methodist Episcopal Church
Benton Harbor, Michigan
He may be contacted at (765) 434-1701

12. THE PASTOR’S CORNER - STANDING ON THE PROMISES:

37Turn my eyes away from worthless things; preserve my life according to your word. 38Fulfill your promise to your servant, so that you may be feared. 41May your unfailing love come to me, O Lord, your salvation according to your promise. (Psalm 119: 37, 38, 41)


The psalmist tells us we are to turn away from the worthless things around us and look to that which preserves our lives and brings reverence for God – the promises of God (vv. 37-38). They are the expression of God’s unfailing love for us (v. 41). The fulfillment God’s promises requires trust in God (Joshua 3: 11-17). The promises of God are a declaration that God will do (Genesis 12: 1-3) or refrain from doing (Genesis 9: 8-11) something specified. His promises are a declaration that gives the person to whom it is made a right to expect or to claim the performance of God regarding a specified act (Joshua 1: 1-5). They are (Joshua 6: 1-5) grounds for expecting success, improvement, or excellence in life.

Benefits of God’s Promises
There are benefits derived from God’s promises that extend beyond the content of the promises themselves:

1. Joshua 22: 1-5 – God’s promises move God’s people forward into the purpose God has for their lives. The fulfillment of one promise by God leads to the need to obey God in His commands so God can bring into our lives the fulfillment of God’s next promise. After the Israelites successfully conquered the Promised Land, God commanded them to go to their land, share the treasures claimed through their victories with others, and obey His commands. We’ve all observed persons who seem to go from victory to victory to victory. Each success leads to another promise with its corresponding command, which when obeyed leads to further success and more promises that include more commands, and so on. Its God’s way of propelling us forward into the purpose God has for our lives.

Promise + Command + Fulfillment + Promise + Command + Fulfillment = Purpose

2. Romans 4: 16-17 – God’s promises place us in God’s grace. We receive God’s promises by faith in God. Although God’s commands require our obedience and trust in God, there is nothing we can do to deserve, earn, or pay for the promises fulfilled by God. Nor is there anything we can do to fulfill those promises for ourselves. God alone has the absolute power to fulfill His word of promise. So it is through the unmerited favor of the One who “calls things that are not as though they were” that we enjoy the blessing He brings into our lives.

3. Acts 13: 32-33 – When fulfilled in our lives, the promises become good news in our lives and in the lives of others. When God sent His only Son, Jesus Christ into this world so He would pay the price for our sins, God fulfilled the promises made to our Hebrew ancestors. The fulfillment of the promised Messiah has now become our “Good News.” Good news that provides insight into God's future plan. Good news that expresses God’s intentions toward His people. God news that we share with others.

During the two weeks that lead to Palm Sunday, March 26, 2006 through April 8, 2006, the members of Quinn Chapel and readers of the Pastor’s Corner are invited to participate in fast, abstaining from all forms of secular media. The goal is to turn away from the worthless things around us and look to that which preserves our lives and brings reverence for God – the promises of God. The details of this fast will be distributed in another correspondence. By focusing on God’s word for two weeks, we can experience the expression of God’s unfailing love for us and soak our souls in God’s grounds for expecting success, improvement, and excellence in life. These are the promises of God.

Pastor James M. Moody, Sr. Quinn Chapel AME ChurchChicago, Illinois 60616www.quinnchicago.org

13. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

From: amebrann512@aol.com
12th Episcopal District Administrative Office
Richard Allen Chappelle, Sr., Presiding Bishop

The passing of The Reverend E.W. Dawkins, former Pastor of Vernon AME Tulsa, OK, Allen Chapel AME (Oklahoma City) and numerous other churches.

Funeral Services:
Saturday, March 25, 2006
10:00 A.M.
Vernon AME Church
311 N. Greenwood
Tulsa, OK 74120
Phone Number (918) 587-1428

The Dawkins family may be contacted at:
The home of Mary Alexander (daughter)
8267 No. 127th East Avenue
Owasso, OK 74119
Phone Number: (918) 274-4522

Services entrusted to:
Biglow Funeral Directors Inc.
1414 North Norfolk
Tulsa, OK 74106
Phone Number (918) 592-2233
Fax Number (918) 592-2236

14. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

Mrs. Elmira Newsom Brown, WMS Life Member and Widow of Presiding Elder (Retired) James Jefferson Brown passed away Sunday, March 19, 2006, at her home.

Funeral Services/Celebration of Her Life:

Monday, March 27, 2006
1:00 PM
Visitors Chapel AME Church
319 Church Street
Hot Springs, AR 71901
Phone Number: (501) 623-6873

Services entrusted to:

Brandon Mortuary
905 Pleasant Street
Hot Springs, AR 71901
Phone Number: (501) 623-1223
Fax Number: (501) 337-4580

Please remember these families in your prayers.

15. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

From: Bishop T. Larry Kirkland

Mr. Ronald Hunter went home to be with the Lord. He is the brother of Rev. Bruce W. Hunter, Pastor of St. James A.M.E. Church, Avondale, Birmingham, AL.

Eastside Funeral Home
5523 First Avenue, N
Birmingham, AL 35212

Funeral Service:
Saturday, March 25, 2006
1:00 P.M.
Zion Springs Baptist Church
528 41st St. N
Birmingham, AL 35222

Messages may be sent to:

Mrs. Ocie Hunter
909 47th Place, S
Birmingham, AL 35222

16. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT ANNOUNCEMENTS PROVIDED BY:

Bishop Carolyn Tyler Guidry, Chair
Commission on Social Action Clergy Family Information Center

Mrs. Ora L. Easley - Administrator Email: Amespouses1@aol.com
(Nashville, Tennessee Contact) Phone: (615) 837-9736 Fax: (615) 833-3781
(Memphis, Tennessee Contact) (901) 578-4554 (Phone & Fax)

Please remember these families in your prayers.

17. CONDOLENCES TO THE BEREAVED FROM THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER:

The Chair of the Commission on Publications, the Right Reverend Gregory G. M. Ingram; the Publisher, the Reverend Dr. Johnny Barbour and the Editor of the Christian Recorder, the Reverend Dr. Calvin H. Sydnor III offer our condolences and prayers to those who have lost loved ones. We pray that the peace of Christ will be with you during this time of your bereavement.

3/21/2006

THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER ONLINE ENGLISH EDITION (3/21/06)

Bishop Gregory G. M. Ingram - Chair, Commission on Publications
The Reverend Dr. Johnny Barbour, Jr., Publisher
The Reverend Dr. Calvin H. Sydnor III, Editor

1. PRESIDENT ELLEN JOHNSON SIRLEAF, LIBERIAN PRESIDENT AND MEMBERS OF CONGRESS COMMENDED THE WORK OF THE AFRICAN METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH:

President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf's address before the Joint Session of Congress on March 15 was truly historic.

In a reception following the address, she praised the work of the African Methodist Episcopal Church. Members of Congress who spoke also commended the work of the AME Church.

Bishop Adam Jefferson Richardson attended the events.

Ambassador Bismarck Myrick
University Lecturer in International Affairs Former United States Ambassador:
Republic of Liberia
Kingdom of Lesotho
1200 Mill Run, Chesapeake, VA 23322

2. LIBERIA (CON’T):

Liberia has an unemployment rate of over 80% according to some of the information that was provided upon our arrival to Liberia. Monrovia is a bustling city. Time and again, people would say, “You should have seen this city and this country before the war.” The remnants of the violence in the country was evident everywhere. Young men with one or no limbs were a common site. The basic utilities such as potable water and electricity were not available. Hotels, business establishments, and those who could afford it, used generators to provide electricity. Poverty was evident everywhere.

The country is poor, but there is something about Liberia that transcends its poverty. The people are industrious. Children were selling candy, sweet drinks and other goods. People were selling bread, other food items, and were engaged in commerce, a real live market economy. The people, from children to adults were entrepreneurs. And, it helped me to understand how Africans can come to this America and open businesses and become successful entrepreneurs. The official data says that the unemployment rate is over 80%, but that does not mean that the people are not working. On the contrary, the people are working. Monrovia is bursting with activity and entrepreneurial activity.


In spite of their poverty, they have not lost hope. The African Methodist Episcopal Church is a vibrant presence, making a significant difference, and is an anchor in the community. Eliza Turner AME Church and AME University provide leadership for people of Monrovia. Eliza Turner AME Church is an institution in itself and to see the activities taking place in and around that church is encouraging and mind-boggling.

One of the impressions I received was an appreciation of AME worship. I traveled across the ocean to Liberia and found myself in one way, in a foreign country far from home, but in another way, it was like being in back in the United States because of the connectedness of the African Methodist Episcopal Church and especially the connectedness of the worship service. The call to worship, the Doxology, the Decalogue and other AME liturgy provided spiritual comfort and caused my spirit to be uplifted. The poverty disturbed me and my spirit was unsettled, but when I participated and shared in worship, my spirit was uplifted and I could feel the presence of God in Christ. When the choir sang in their dialect, I was engaged in worship and felt as if I could understand everything they were singing. Tears came to my eyes as I recalled and felt the ravages of slavery and injustice for the people, some of whom may have been my ancestors who were torn from this country and transported to a strange land far across the ocean. It was an eerie feeling hearing songs sung by the Susan Gross AME Church choir singing in a strange tongue that sounded familiar to me. Whether I understood the language or not, I certainly understood the spiritual message.

The brothers and sisters from the United States, preachers and laity, young and old – from the First, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Seventh, Eighth, and Thirteenth Episcopal Districts were there. The young people in the entourage from the United States were the granddaughter of Mrs. Jamesina Evans and the teenage daughter of Bishop and Supervisor Daniels.

The worship was global and yet we were one in worship and praise. We were one in training as Dr. Jeffrey Leath, Dr. Ellis Washington, Dr. Ronnie Brailsford, and Dr. George Flowers shared in a discussion on pastoral leadership. The ministers from the 14th Episcopal District were active in their listening and in their participation during the discussion period.

Many of the American clergy participated in the various worship services. Reverend Wayne Johnson, pastor of Mt. Zion AME Church, Dover, Delaware played the keyboard and sang his heart out. He organized a mass choir and they sang as if they were a choir from one of the large cities in the United States. The Eliza Turner choir and their musicians were awesome. They sounded just like Nashville, which is known as “Music City U.S.A.” I always enjoyed the times at the General Conference when the folks from Africa would gather on the stage and sing one of the African hymns. The choirs in Liberia sounded like what we hear at our annual conferences. They can sway and the folks can sing! Dr. Hearst “from the First” raised and sang the hymn, “I trust in God.” Presiding Elder Henrietta Scott Fullard preached a dynamic sermon entitled, “There is a Greater Power with us than with Him.”

A recurring theme spoken by several speakers throughout the week of the celebration was, “Don’t eat the seeds because if you eat the seeds, you will never have a harvest.”

All of the bishops preached – Bishops Bryant, Henning, Norris, McKenzie, and Grady. Bishop Daniels and Supervisor Daniels were the ultimate hosts.

And, let me mention Bishop Grady, who Bishop Daniels repeatedly referred to as “Retired, but not tired.” I found out that Bishop Grady was a college football scholarship recipient. I did not know that, but just watching him walk all over the place and through the airport, I saw a swagger of the football player. He walks with a swagger. He walked like an athlete and as the rest of us got tired, he seemed to get more energy. He may be retired, “but Bishop Grady is not tired.”

- To Be Continued.

3. DEBT-FREE AND PROSPEROUS LIVING – A BIBLICALLY BASED HOME STUDY COURSE:

This program is a “must have” material

Too many people are too far in debt. Too many of us consumers and are undisciplined when it comes to handling our finances.

Credit card debt is crippling so many families. Uncontrolled debt bogs us down and can throw us into an emotional tailspin. Many of us are hostages of home equity loans and other financial ploys that rip off our money and enslave our minds.

Driving a new car might give us status and bring us praise when we drive up in a new “ride,” but automobiles depreciate and new “rides” depreciate more. New car payments can squeeze the financial life out of us and bad financial decisions can asphyxiate us. Some of us need to discipline our lives and get out of debt; we need to be emancipated from the slavery of debt and lack of discipline.

Something to remember – “a car depreciates, real estate property appreciates.” If you had to choose, purchase that which appreciates – property.

Many of our churches conduct stewardship workshops and many of our bishops and pastors are concerned about the indebtedness of many of our members. When responsible preachers share about stewardship, what they teach involves much more than what we give in the offering plate. Stewardship represents knowing why we give, but more importantly how we, as stewards, manage the blessings that God provides. The question that we need to answer is how do we manage the talents that God has given us? Will we be cast off into darkness and have what we did not use appropriately taken away from us? On the other hand, will be hear God’s voice affirming our stewardship with the proclamation, “Well done, good and faithful servant…”

Debt-free living is a theme espoused by many responsible leaders. The world-renown Christian author, John Cummuta has done a great deal of research and has aired many commercials about being debt-free and growing our yield through what the Lord has provided.

Several years ago, GKM Product Development, headed by the Reverend Gary Moss, collaborated with John Cummuta and produced a biblically-based series for the African Methodist Episcopal Church and it is a wonderful product and has “seeds that should be planted” in every home and church.

I reviewed the audio and 2-book series and discovered that there are some things I need to do in my life to make better use of the gifts and resources that God has given to my family and me. I would recommend that every Pastor order this wonderful resource to keep as a resource for the member of their congregation. One section, addresses the issue of “How Bad it Really is to use Credit Cards.” An example is given, that if you carry four credit cards averaging 17 percent interest and they have a combined outstanding balance of $5,200. If you paid only the minimum monthly payment of (usually two percent of the outstanding balances or $10 minimum payment), it would take you 40 years and 8 months to pay them all off and your payments would total $16,990 over those four decades. The study course shares the steps to debt-free living and encourages the reader to start building a nest egg for living a higher quality of life and to prepare for retirement. Bishop Brookins is reported to have remarked, “Don’t let poverty and old age meet at the same time.”

There are only 1900 of the initial publication remaining. A second publication is scheduled for the summer of 2006.

The cost of the Stewardship Series is reasonable. Contact Customer Service at GKM, Inc, 368 Bluff City Boulevard, Elgin, IL 60120 or call 800.741-3395. Email: info@GKMpackagingdist.com

4. IRAQ - THREE YEARS LATER:

Voices of some Iraqis

An Iraqi said, "Three years after the American invasion of Iraq, I have only one wish," he went on to say, "I do not want democracy, food, electricity and water. I just do not want to die."

Another Iraqi said, "We've been waiting for years for true democracy to come, a democracy that makes everybody live and work together with respect and love. But here it is: a democracy with maximum chaos…"

“People no longer believed that helping Iraq was foremost on the U.S. agenda during the invasion.”

"The U.S. has won a tremendous strategic victory," which has come increasingly at the expense of Iraq.”

It is reported in the media that the war and its aftermath have so far cost the United States about $250 billion dollars.

Iraq remains the largest U.S. government reconstruction effort since the Marshall Plan following World War II.

5. CONTRAST THE IRAQ SITUATION WITH THE PLIGHT OF BLACK BOYS AND MEN IN AMERICA:

Black men in the United States face a far more dire situation than is portrayed by common employment and education statistics, a flurry of new scholarly studies warn, and it has worsened in recent years…(The New York Times, 3/20/06)

Black men without jobs are on the increase.

Incarceration rates climbed in the 1990's and reached historic highs in the past few years.

In 1995, sixteen percent of black men in their 20's who did not attend college were in jail or prison; by 2004, twenty-one percent were incarcerated.

By their mid-30's, 6 in 10 black men who had dropped out of school had spent time in prison.

In inner cities across the country, more than half of all black men still do not finish high school, said Gary Orfield, an education expert at Harvard and editor of "Dropouts in America" (Harvard Education Press, 2004).

Black men are more likely to be incarcerated and given longer prison sentences.

The war in Iraq has cost the United States about $250 billion. I wonder how many billions of dollars is being spent to correct the plight of black men in America? The answer is, “Not nearly the amount we have spent in Iraq.”

The dire situation with black men is epidemic and catastrophic and the nation is not concerned. The American attitude is “Lock ‘em up!”

6. NEWS FROM AROUND THE AME CHURCH:

Reference the State of Alabama passing a pardon for Rosa Parks.

"Why would brave people like this need to get a pardon from anyone? Someone needs to tell them that we treated you wrong,” the Rev. Joseph Rembert, pastor of St. Paul AME Church, said Monday. “I want my grandson to know what she did.”


7. THE INTERDENOMINATIONAL THEOLOGICAL CENTER DELIVERS DISTANCE EDUCATION MASTER OF DIVINITY PROGRAM IN SAVANNAH, GEORGIA:

A historical milestone in ministerial education has been accomplished in the Sixth Episcopal District of the African Methodist Episcopal Church. On February 25, 2006, seventeen (17) Masters of Divinity students received instruction in two classes (Missiology and New Testament) from the Interdenominational Theological Center in Atlanta, Georgia - using an internet-based distance education facility located at St. Philip AME Church in Savannah, Georgia. This achievement is unprecedented, not only within the 6th Episcopal District but also in the entire AME connection. The internet-based distance education enables ministerial students to take courses from ITC wherever the technological infrastructure is available. Using distance-learning technology, students are able to eliminate the travel expense and time related to on-site graduate degree education. M.Div. students who live in Savannah could incur over 180,000 miles of travel plus associated costs over a four-year period in pursuit of the seminary degree.

“We are extremely proud of the effort put forth by both the ITC administrators/ faculty and the Sixth Episcopal District ministers and students to make this happen,” says Bishop William P. DeVeaux, Presiding Bishop of the Sixth Episcopal District. “Dr. Dan Stevenson and Dr. John Foster have worked very hard to make this dream become a reality.”

The 6th District supported this program through seed funding of technology infrastructure equipment. The funding was instrumental in enabling a quick start-up for the project.

Rev. Dr. Dan Stevenson – Pastor of Trinity/Fountain AME Church in Savannah, GA – and serves as Project Director says, “This has been my dream for several decades, to bring accredited theological education to the Savannah area. God has truly brought together the right people, institutions, and infrastructure to allow this program to become a reality. In addition to the ITC Masters of Divinity program, we have also partnered with St. Leo University of St. Leo, Florida. A non-traditional under-graduate program offering degrees in Religion and Human Research Management (classes are held at Trinity-Fountain A.M.E. Church twice weekly) for those ministers who do not meet the basic requirements for admission into ITC” Dr. Stevenson (ITC ’85) is the key liaison administrator between ITC Atlanta and the students in Savannah. Dr. Stevenson also stated, “The program would not have been possible without the support and help of Bishop DeVeaux and the technological expertise of Dr. Foster.”

Rev. Dr. John Foster (ITC ’03) – Pastor of St. Philip AME Church in Savannah, Georgia, is also an electrical engineer with an earned Bachelor of Science, Masters of Science, and Ph.D. degrees. Dr. Foster says, “We are excited about working with the students and the setup of the necessary infrastructure.” As the host site, St. Philip provides T1 internet access (1,500,000 bits per second uplink and downlink speeds) in addition to the audio/video teleconferencing equipment. The facility enables real-time voice/data/video links between Atlanta and Savannah, Georgia.

The ITC Distance Learning program is being supported through a four-year curriculum offering, i.e., all necessary courses for the M.Div. degree will be sequentially offered. The faculty-approved course offering is vital for the success of the program. Dr. Michael Battle – President of ITC – says.

“The Distance Learning initiative is one of the most exciting programs in academic evolution. I applaud the faculty for their vision in supporting the program.” Due to the interactive nature of the Distance Learning Program, it has already been approved by the Association for Theological Schools (ATS). The Distance Learning Program is being offered in Savannah, Georgia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and Miami, Florida. The Savannah site hosts the largest number of

This program is adaptable to be replicated at other locations. “There is no reason why we can’t put programs like this across the Connection,” states Dr. Stevenson. “We can really make a difference in our offering of ministerial education.”

Congratulations to the ITC, 6th Episcopal District AME Church and Savannah, Georgia!

8. BISHOP BRYANT PREACHES AT GRANT A.M.E. CHURCH IN WATTS MARCH 26; ADDRESS HIGHLIGHTS EVENTS LEADING UP TO THE 2006 MEN IN THE FAITH CONFERENCE:

LOS ANGELES — (March 20, 2006) — The Rt. Rev. John R. Bryant will be the keynote speaker at Grant A.M.E. Church on Sunday, March 26, 2006, at 11 a.m.

“Bishop Bryant is a preacher par excellence and an extraordinary leader above reproach,” said the Rev. Leslie R. White, pastor of Grant for 11 years.

“Before being elected Bishop in 1988, Bryant shepherded congregations in Massachusetts and Maryland and earned a reputation as an anointed preacher and adept leader,” White continued. “He is definitely a ‘man of faith’ other men can emulate.”

Bryant’s address highlights the events leading to the 11th Annual Men in the Faith Conference April 9-13, when guest preacher Bishop Samuel L. Green of the 15th Episcopal District (South Africa) and guest teacher Rev. Dr. Mark Tyler, pastor of Bethel A.M.E. Church in West Chester, Pa., address the congregation.

Other conference activities include:

Men in Prayer – Fridays March 24 and 31 at 6:30 p.m. led by Grant members Matthew Bodden, Dexter Moon and Tony Robinson. The hour-long sessions focus on “Praying Effectively.”

Men’s Night Out – Tuesday, March 28 at 7:30 p.m. More than 65 men and their families will watch the Los Angeles Clippers take-on the defending national champion San Antonio Spurs at the Staples Center, in what may be a NBA playoff preview.

Men in Harmony – The Men in the Faith Conference Choir rehearses Wednesdays March 22 and 29, and April 5 at 7 p.m., under the direction of the renowned Theresa Jones-Bailey, who has toured internationally with the likes of Chaka Khan and Queen Latifah.

Men in Worship – Bishop Green, who set the 2005 Men’s Conference ablaze with his anointed messages, preaches on Sunday, April 9, at 8 a.m. and 11 a.m., and again Monday – Thursday, April 10-13, at 7:30 p.m. nightly.

Men in Study – Rev. Tyler leads thought-provoking, men-focused workshops Monday – Thursday, April 10-13, at 6:30 p.m. nightly.

These events come on the heels of a successful February Men in the Faith Fish Fry of red snapper and catfish dinners – fries, hush puppies, cole slaw, potato salad, bread, dessert and beverage – that sold out in only three hours.

Bryant’s divine appointment at Grant on Sunday is one of many in the in the past several weeks. In February, he led a delegation of missionary-minded ministers in a weeklong expedition to Zambia in southeastern Africa.

On March 10, Bryant was at First A.M.E. Church in Los Angeles for the International Day of Prayer: 12 hours of fervent prayers, liturgical dance, and praise and worship organized by the Women’s Missionary Society. Last week, he presided over the Fifth Episcopal District Mid-Year convocation, a weeklong gathering of more than 1,200 preachers and parishioners focusing on the spiritual development of the region.

Bryant is neither a stranger to Grant, the second-largest A.M.E. Church in the 14-state region over which he presides. Bryant officiated White’s wedding last August, when White and his lovely bride, Renee, renewed their vows on their 25th wedding anniversary.

Bryant was also one of the featured preachers during the 2005 Men in the Faith Conference.

Bryant’s wife, Rev. Cecilia Williams Bryant, Episcopal Supervisor of the Women’s Missionary Society and an outstanding preacher in her own right, keynoted the 11 a.m. worship service in mid-December.

About Grant A.M.E. Church
The second-largest A.M.E. Church west of the Mississippi is located at 10435 South Central Avenue, Los Angeles, California 90002, and is celebrating its 100th year of service to the Watts community. Worship services are heard on the radio each Sunday morning at 6 a.m. on KJLH 102.3 FM. Join us for worship on Sundays at 8 a.m. and 11 a.m. and for Sunday School at 9:30 a.m. Wednesday Hour of Power begins at 11:30 a.m. and Thursday night Soul Food starts at 6 pm. All are welcome; admission is free. For driving directions or for more information visit www.GrantAMEChurch.org or contact the Church office at 323-564-1151.

Submitted by the Rev. Kevin T. Taylor

9. TWO GRANT MEMBERS HONORED BY THE LONG BEACH ALUMNI CHAPTER OF ZETA PHI BETA SORORITY:

LOS ANGELES — (March 20, 2006) — Carolyn Daniels and Sharolyn Gailliard, both of Grant A.M.E. Church in Watts, were recently honored by the Long Beach Alumni Chapter of Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Inc., for their dedicated service to the organization and community.

Daniels was named “Distinguished Zeta” and Gailliard was named “Zeta of the Year” by the Sigma Eta Zeta Chapter on the occasion of its fifth annual R.O.O.T.S. — Remembering Our Oath to Sisterhood — Celebration.

Nearly 200 persons attended the opulent affair at The Grand in Long Beach, themed “From Grains of Sand…To Pearls of Wisdom,” including the International Grand Basileus (president) Barbara C. Moore. The Rev. Leslie R. White and a large contingent of Grant members attended.

“We are so proud of Sis. Daniels and Sister Gailliard,” White said, beaming with pride. “We pray that the Lord will continue to bless them as they honor Christ in their sorority, on their jobs, here at Grant and in all of their endeavors.”

A golden life member and president of the Lambda Pi Zeta chapter, Daniels is a supervisor at St. Francis Medical Center in Lynwood. She is devoted wife of more than 20 years and loving mother of two daughters, and volunteers extensively with the American Red Cross, American Lung Association, Sickle Cell Disease Foundation and the March of Dimes, among many others.

Gailliard is a graduate of California State University, Dominguez Hills, and is an employee of the Los Angeles Superior Court. A charter member of the Sigma Eta Zeta Chapter, she is equally as involved at Grant where she is a member of the Steward Board, Voices for Christ Choir, Women’s Missionary Society, and is the Director of the Young People’s Division. After chairing the Youth Conference for the past several years, in January she chaired the 11th Annual Women in the Faith Sisters’ Conference with continued success.

Other 2006 R.O.O.T.S. Celebration honorees were:

- “Undergraduate of the Year,” Zeta Keri Premmer, a senior broadcasting journalism major at California State University, Long Beach

- Science/Technology Honoree, Nkiru Ogamba, an expert Aerospace Corporation engineer

- Business Honorees, Zetas Gia Neil and La Sonya Gibbs-Seamster, co-owners of Color Me Mine, a paint-your-own ceramics studio on Corona

- Education Honoree, Zeta Patrice Countz, a sixth grade teacher at Vanguard Middle School in Compton

- Community Honoree, Corlotta Adams, a director/producer/comedian/playwright and NAACP Theater Award-nominated actress.

Each recipient received a keepsake plaque or trophy, as well as commendations from the Board of Supervisors of Los Angeles County and their respective municipality.

Besides a delicious meal, attendees were also favored with musical selections by jazz band Scenic Root; poetry by Xross Roads Entertainment artists barzini and Dragon Fly; an inspiring address by Carolyn Tillman, special assistant to the superintendent of the San Bernardino Public Schools; door prizes and a raffle of a diamond tennis bracelet valued at $500.

About Grant A.M.E. Church
The second-largest A.M.E. Church west of the Mississippi is located at 10435 South Central Avenue, Los Angeles, California 90002, and is celebrating its 100th year of service to the Watts community. Worship services are heard on the radio each Sunday morning at 6 a.m. on KJLH 102.3 FM. Join us for worship on Sundays at 8 a.m. and 11 a.m. and for Sunday School at 9:30 a.m. Wednesday Hour of Power begins at 11:30 a.m. and Thursday night Soul Food starts at 6 pm. All are welcome; admission is free. For driving directions or for more information visit www.GrantAMEChurch.org or contact the Church office at 323-564-1151.

About Sigma Eta Zeta Chapter of Zeta Phi Beta Sorority
Chartered in Long Beach, California on April 12, 2001, by 10 remarkable women, the chapter has grown not only in size, but also in the depth of services provided to the community. Today, the chapter has approximately 20 active members and provides a wide range of community service programs including the annual R.O.O.T.S. Celebration, Tassels for Teens Bike-a-thon & Fitness Walk, A to Z mentoring program; individual development seminars; and youth outreach. Visit http://www.longbeachzetas.com/ for more information.

Submitted by the Rev. Kevin T. Taylor

10. THIRTEENTH EPISCOPAL DISTRICT ELEMENTARY SCHOOL PRINCIPAL HONORED IN THE NATION’S CAPITAL:

Patrice Renea Bolton Shipp, Principal of Delano Elementary School in Memphis, Tennessee, has been nationally recognized by the U.S. Department of Education for helping her students, teachers, and staff, meet the national standards mandated by the No Child Left Behind Act.

Under Principal Shipp's leadership, Delano was nominated for the award in 2004 by the Chief Education Officer of the Tennessee Department of Education. The U.S. Department of Education officially announced Delano being awarded this prestigious honor on September 23, 2005. Principal Shipp and Irene Gibbons, a teacher at Delano, were honored during a National Recognition Ceremony at our Nation's Capital on November 10-11, 2005, where they received a plaque and a flag signifying their No Child Left Behind – Blue Ribbon School status.

Shipp was selected to serve on a critical issues panel and delivered a presentation on Delano's academic success. Shipp explained during her presentation how Delano was able to rank in the top 10 percent in the state and the manner that her teachers and staff provided the momentum for students to succeed. She stressed Delano’s commitment to high-quality teaching, and emphasized that successful students are competent, knowledgeable, thoughtful, caring, principled, self-disciplined, and intrinsically motivated. She stressed the importance of parental involvement and discipline as a major aspect of learning. She commends the parents for being involved with their children's education. In her final comment, she stated students learn to differentiate good and poor classroom practices and establish class norms for student success. The school’s motto is, "Delano Optional School is Where Learning is not Optional."

The No Child Left Behind-Blue Ribbon Schools Program is based on adequate yearly progress (AYP) for three consecutive years. The program honors public and private K-12 schools that are either academically superior in their states or that demonstrate dramatic gains in student achievement. Delano Elementary, a predominately African-American school for grades K-6 with more than 40 percent of its students from disadvantaged backgrounds, was recognized for NCLB TCAP scoring in the top 10 percent on state assessments for the past 3 years. In 2005, students NCLB TCAP scoring results were 100 percent proficient in Reading and Language Arts, and 98 percent proficient in Math.

Out of 114,000 public and private schools in the nation, only 295 schools were named No Child Left Behind – Blue Ribbon Schools for 2005. This prestigious award was given to only four schools in the state of Tennessee and Delano was the only school to receive the award in Memphis.

Delano Optional School has been instrumental in Shipp’s education and career. Shipp, a former student at Delano Elementary, received her Bachelor of Science in Elementary Education in 1990 from the University of Memphis. She received a Masters in Education in Educational Leadership: Administration and Supervision in 1993 from the University of Mississippi in Oxford. Shipp received her first teaching assignment to Delano Elementary in 1990. In 1995, she was assigned to Graves Elementary, where she taught for one year. In 1996, Shipp was appointed Assistant Principal at Oakshire Elementary. In 2002, Shipp was assigned Principal at Delano Elementary. After 16 years in the Memphis City School system, Shipp’s hard work, dedication, and superior leadership abilities have truly paid off.

Patrice R. Bolton Shipp is a member of Greater Payne Chapel A.M.E. Church in Memphis, Tennessee in the North Memphis District, under the pastoral leadership of the Rev. Quinten L. Smith, Sr. The Reverend Dr. C. Robert Finch is the Presiding Elder of the North Memphis District, and the Right Reverend Vashti Murphy McKenzie is the Presiding Prelate of the 13th Episcopal District.

11. KNOXVILLE COLLEGE OFFERS AN OPPORTUNITY TO NEEDY STUDENTS:

Historically black Knoxville College, in East Tennessee, has reduced its tuition from $5,000 to $1,400 per student including room, board, and books!All you need is $600 for the enrollment deposit and $800 can be paid in four monthly installments of $200 each. The program is funded by corporate sponsors and guarantees a college education where students graduate debt free. Enrollment requirements include a high school diploma and a 2.0/4.0 scale. If your student has below a 2.0, but you know they are college material, they may be considered if they can provide three letters of recommendation. For educators who will support their potential. All interested students must immediately contact the admissions office at Knoxville College by dialing 1-800-743-5669 or by applying on line at:http://www.knoxvillecollege.edu/

12. 100 HISTORICAL AFRICAN AMERICAN WOMEN:

Discover “100 Historical African-American Women”, a multi-media presentation produced by author Charles Street of Atlanta, Georgia. This historical presentation remembers our African-American female pioneers of yesteryear in the 21st century. Street highlights Black women in the following areas: art, athletics, aviation, business, civil rights, entertainment, education, journalism, law, politics, medicine, religion, writers & authors, and pioneers.

This celebration of black history has been acclaimed by Dr. Merchuria Williams, President of the Georgia Association of Educators, as “exceptional because it records both legendary figures and those with little notoriety. It is from the voices that are usually heard in the annuals of our history and those we know so well in this presentation that we learn with focus and determination.”

Book “100 Historical African-American Women” for black history month in February or women’s history month in March. This interactive event is for all people of all races and all ages and can be presented for your organization or school by calling Mr. Street at (770) 256-4034. After experiencing this walk through history, individuals will learn about women such as Sadie Alexander, the first black woman to graduate with a Bachelor of Science, Master’s in Economics, Ph.D. in Economics, and a Jurist Doctorate degree or perhaps one will be enlightened by Charlotte Spears Bass, the first black woman to run for the vice president of the United States.

Look out for 100 Historical African-American Women, the book, by Charles Street at local bookstores available in spring 2006. Discover the amazing extraordinary contributions of ordinary women. Contact us today by calling 770-256-4034.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Charles Street
3131 North Druid Hills Road
Suite 7107
Decatur, Georgia 30033

(770) 256-4034
Web site: http://www.100haaw.com/
E-mail: info@100haaw.com

13. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

We regret to inform you of the passing of Rev. Leon Gipson. He was a former pastor and Presiding Elder in the New Brunswick District, New Jersey Annual Conference of the First Episcopal District.

The following information has been provided regarding funeral arrangements.

Viewing will be held Thursday, March 16, 2006

Viewing - 6:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m.

Funeral will be held Friday, March 17, 2006

Funeral - 11:00 a.m.Viewing and Funeral will be held at:

Mount Zion A.M.E. Church
135 Perry Street
Trenton, NJ 0868

Rev. J. Stanley Justice, PastorPhone: 609-695-4475Fax: 609-394-2808

Bishop Richard F. Norris, Eulogist

Condolences may be sent to:

Mrs. Charlotte Gipson
1100 Parkside Ave.
Trenton, NJ 08638

or

Mt. Zion A.M.E. Church - see abovePlease remember the entire Gipson family in your prayers.


14. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

We regret to inform you of the passing of Mrs. Elizabeth Davis. She was the mother of Rev. Lugenure Jones, pastor at Ekklesia A.M.E. Church (Philadelphia District, Philadelphia Conference) and widow of the late Rev. Frank R. Davis, former pastor in the First Episcopal District.

The following information has been provided regarding funeral arrangements.

Viewing and Funeral will be held Sunday, March 19, 2006 at:

Mother Bethel A.M.E. Church
419 Richard Allen Ave.
Philadelphia, PA 19147
The Rev. Jeffrey N. Leath, Pastor

Phone: 215-925-0616Fax: 215-925-1402

The Rev. John Ragin, Eulogist
Former Presiding Elder of the New Brunswick District

Viewing - 5:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m.

Funeral - 7:00 p.m.

Condolences may be sent to:

The Rev. Lugenure Jones and family
7227 E. Walnut Lane
Philadelphia, PA 19138

or

Mother Bethel A.M.E. Church - see abovePlease keep the entire Jones family in your prayers.

15. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

We regret to inform you of the passing of Mr. Bennie Houston. He was the brother-in-law of Presiding Elder Charles Drummer (Wilmington District, Delaware Annual Conference).

The following information has been provided regarding funeral arrangements.

Funeral will be held Saturday, March 18, 2006 at:

Owens Temple First Christ Holiness Church
4011 Rockdell Street
Savannah, GA 31405

Phone: 912-443-9003

Funeral - 1:00 p.m.

Funeral Home:

Williams and Williams Funeral Home
1012 E. Gwinnett Street
Savannah, GA 31401

Phone: 912-234-1634

Condolences may be sent to:

Rev. & Mrs. Charles Drummer
404 Walker Road
Dover, DE 19904-2850

Or to:

Owens Temple First Christ Holiness Church - see above

Or to:

Williams and Williams Funeral Home - see above

Please keep the entire Drummer family in your prayers.

16. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

From: amebrann512@aol.com
The 12th Episcopal District Administrative Offices
Richard Allen Chappelle, Sr., Presiding Bishop

Mrs. Lillian Brewster, the mother of the Reverend Angela Brewster Piggee, Pastor of St. James AME Church, Texarkana, Arkansas (12th Episcopal District AMEC) passed on Thursday, March 16, 8:00 AM.

Funeral Arrangements:
Tuesday, March 21st.
1:00 PM
Lonoke Baptist Church
1814 Lonoke Avenue
Texarkana, AR

Services entrusted to:
Haynes Mortuary Incorporated
7238 West 7th Street
Texarkana, TX 75501
903-838-6000 (Phone)
903-838-0111 (Fax)

Condolences may be sent to:
Reverend Angela Brewster Piggee
St. James AME Church
938 Ash Street
Texarkana, AR 75502

Please remember Reverend Angela Piggee and her family in your prayers.

17. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

FROM: clinton@1stdistrict-ame.com
Bishop Richard F. Norris
1st Episcopal District

Homegoing Services for Rev. Clarence Bass

We regret to inform you of the passing of Rev. Clarence Bass. He was a founding member of Saint James A.M.E. Church in Utica, New York (Western New York Conference).

Rev. Bass was 102 years old when he passed away and leaves a wife of 74 years of marriage. The following information has been provided regarding funeral arrangements.

Viewing and Funeral will be held Tuesday, March 21, 2006 at:

Hope AME Zion Church
751 South Street
Utica, New York 13502

The Rev. Lawrence Lucas, Pastor
Phone: 315-732-0536

Viewing – 12 noon – 1:00 p.m.
Funeral – 1:00 p.m.

Services are entrusted to:

Revel’s T/Gibson Funeral Services
144 Eagle Street
Utica, New York 13502

Condolences may be sent to:

Mrs. Eula Bass
30 Parkside Ct.
Utica, New York 13501

Please remember the family in your prayers.

18. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT ANNOUNCEMENTS PROVIDED BY:

Bishop Carolyn Tyler Guidry, Chair
Commission on Social Action Clergy Family Information Center

Mrs. Ora L. Easley - Administrator Email: Amespouses1@aol.com
(Nashville, Tennessee Contact) Phone: (615) 837-9736 Fax: (615) 833-3781
(Memphis, Tennessee Contact) (901) 578-4554 (Phone & Fax)

Please remember these families in your prayers.

19. CONDOLENCES TO THE BEREAVED FROM THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER:

The Chair of the Commission on Publications, the Right Reverend Gregory G. M. Ingram; the Publisher, the Reverend Dr. Johnny Barbour and the Editor of the Christian Recorder, the Reverend Dr. Calvin H. Sydnor III offer our condolences and prayers to those who have lost loved ones. We pray that the peace of Christ will be with you during this time of your bereavement.

20. WITH SO MUCH HEAVINESS IN THE NEWS, LET US TAKE A MOMENT TO LAUGH:

A WARNING ABOUT THIS e-mail virus. Even the most advanced programs from Norton or McAfee cannot take care of this one. It appears to affect those who were born prior to 1965.

Symptoms:

1. Causes you to send the same e-mail twice. done that!

2. Causes you to send a blank e-mail! that too!

3. Causes you to send e-mail to the wrong person. yep!

4. Causes you to send it back to the person who sent it to you. who me?

5. Causes you to forget to attach the attachment. well darn!

6. Causes you to hit "SEND" before you've finished. oh no - not again!

7. Causes you to hit "DELETE" instead of "SEND." and I just hate that!

8. Causes you to hit "SEND" when you should "DELETE."

Oh No!

IT IS CALLED THE "C-NILE VIRUS."

3/15/2006

THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER ONLINE ENGLISH EDITION (3/15/06)

Bishop Gregory G. M. Ingram - Chair, Commission on Publications
The Reverend Dr. Johnny Barbour, Jr., Publisher
The Reverend Dr. Calvin H. Sydnor III, Editor

1. BREAKING NEWS:

- News received from Dr. Levi Zangai, President of AME University

A US $75,000 grant was approved for Howard University-AME University Partnership to establish the Departments of Sciences, Mathematics and Technology at AMEU.

The Right Reverend David R. Daniels, Presiding Bishop of the 14th Episcopal District commends Dr. Zangai and is excited about the AMEU partnership with Howard University.

2. 2006 CONNECTIONAL YOUTH CONGRESS:

Mark your calendars. The AME Church Connectional Youth Congress will be held in Orlando Florida July 1-7, 2006 at the Walt Disney World Resort. Make your reservations, raise funds so that your youth can participate in a great event and have fun and enjoy the Florida Sunshine. Do not let your young people miss this event.


3. EDITOR’S COMMENTS:

- Iraq is not heading towards civil War. Iraq is in a civil war. Webster’s Dictionary defines “civil war” as a war between different sections or parties of the same country or nation. “If it looks like a duck, walks like a duck, quacks like a duck, you call it a duck.” Two or more parties of the same country fighting and killing each other is civil war, and the President saying that the event in Iraq is not a civil war is nonsense.

Escalating murder and sectarian retribution since the Feb. 22 bombing of a Shiite shrine in the city of Samarra has the death toll since the bombing of the Shiite shrine in the city of Samarra near 1,000. Over eighty Sunni bodies have been found and it is believed they were executed as retribution for the Shiite shine bombing.

The U.S. policy in Iraq is best described as, the ugly American policy: “Create the mess, then stand back and watch the slaughter.” (Quote from the book, The Agony and the Glory by S. Othello Coleman, Sr.)

- More about Liberia visit in the next issue. We are working hard trying to be caught up.

4. BOOK SIGNING FOR THE BOOK, “MESSAGES FROM ABOVE”:

“MESSAGES FROM ABOVE” by: Kristen C. Simpson

The book signing will be held every Sunday in March.

At: Ebenezer A.M.E Church
7707 Allentown Road
Fort Washington, Maryland 20744
Location: -Narthex-

After both, 7:45 a.m. and 11:15 a.m. worship services.

For all who desire to purchase a first copy or additional copies, I ask for your presence, love and support. I also invite all to come and worship with the Ebenezer A.M.E church family!

I thank you in advance.

May God continue to bless and keep you.

In His Love,

Kristen C. Simpson

5. GORDON PARKS ATTENDED AN AME CHURCH AS A CHILD:

Noted photographer and filmmaker Gordon Parks grew up in the AME Church. He attended the AME Church in Fort Scott, Kansas.

6. BISHOP VASHTI MURPHY MCKENZIE’S TEN WOMANIST COMMANDMENTS FOR CLERGY:

1. Thou shall not compromise your femininity for the sake of the pulpit.
2. Thou shall not be intimidated by those who question your call and your right to be a woman and a minister.
3. Thou shall be wise in establishing personal relationships within the congregation.
4. Thou shall not be a superwoman.
5. Thou shall be a sister to your sister in the ministry.
6. Thou shall have African American men as brothers.
7. Be assertive, fair and firm.
8. Thou shall not oppress others.
9. Thou shall be a role model.
10. Thou shall not take thyself too seriously.

Extracted from article in BlackPlanet.com - The World is Yours dated February 27, 2006


7. FOR THE LATEST AND MOST EP-TO-DATE NEWS ABOUT THEOLOGICAL EDUCATION:

http://www.intrust.org/magazine/index.cfm?CFID=2282531&CFTOKEN=63724873

8. FRIENDS AND FAMILY DAY AT JOHNSON CHAPEL:

Johnson Chapel African Methodist Episcopal Church will hold its Friends and Family Day on Sunday, March 19, 2006 at the 10:45 am Service.

Elder Roger R. Wade, Pastor of the Normandie Avenue Seventh-day Adventist Church will be our guest speaker. There will be a Fellowship Dinner served at the conclusion of the Worship Service.

Johnson Chapel is located at 1306 West Second Street (at the corner of 2nd and Bristol Street), Santa Ana, California 92703; telephone (714) 972-8983

The Reverend Michael Barta is the pastor of Johnson Chapel.

9. THE THIRD ANNUAL “BE GOOD TO WOMEN DAY”:

- Wednesday, March 15, a National Day of Prayer

Who: Brad Sanders, host of the nationally syndicated radio Show “On the Phone with Ti-Rone,” along with Rev. Dr. Clyde W. Oden Jr., Rev. Ronald Wright, Bishop Noel Jones, Pastor Dion Evans, Dr. Darryl Rowe, Nubian Psychological Group; Jan-na Borders, U.S. Dept of Health and Human Services; Dr. Ro, Ro Gear; Tony Wafford, Patty Howell, Marriage Education Institute; Marjorie B. Lewis, Center for Community Excellence and Social Justice; Jeannetta Million, Nisa Islam Muhammad, Wedded Bliss Foundation, Clarence Shuler, Building Lasting Relationships, Joyce A. Thomas, U.S. Dept. of Healthy Marriage Initiative, Marvin and Jeannette Charles, D.A.D.S.; Carlis Williams, African American Healthy Marriage Initiative; Ernasta Wright, The Green Foundation; Donna Richardson Joyner, along with other leaders from religious, community and national organizations who are committed to a national movement to honor, respect and support women.

What: The third annual “Be Good to Women Day.” This day will be commemorated by a national day of prayer for women. Our goal is for people all over America to take time out to pray for women. There will be different topics of prayer for each of the day’s 24 hours. A list of the topics that have been suggested to us has been included. We are encouraging men in particular, but all people on this special day, to focus on the women in their lives in a loving and nurturing way.

When: Wednesday, March 15th, 2006 - 7:00 p.m.

Where: Bryant Temple AME Church
2525 W. Vernon Avenue (4th Ave & Vernon)
Los Angeles, CA 90008

WHY: When we degrade or devalue women we debase ourselves. This mentality leads to abandonment, exploitation, abuse and violence. Being kind and loving to women is more than a temporary “feel good” moment. It is about holding ourselves to a higher standard and changing the way we think of women. We must change the paradigm if we are to improve the quality of life for all people. We must always treat women as the blessed inspired force in our universe that they were created to be.

Submitted by Denise Loulendo, Bryant Temple

10. OPPORTUNITIES FOR YOUNG PEOPLE:

- Emma Bowen Foundation: Candidates for 2006 Placements

We are conducting our spring recruitment for summer 2006 internship opportunities throughout the United States. If you know students who are eligible (see requirements below), please have them complete the attached application and appropriately send either the East Coast or West Coast office.

Here are the details: The Emma Bowen Foundation is recruiting minority high school students (juniors, seniors) and college freshman for several PAID summer internships at media (television, radio, cable) companies throughout the United States.

The internships will start summer 2006 and last throughout their college years. Eligible candidates must have at least a 3.0 GPA, plan or attend a 4-year college, and have an interest in the media. Selected students will be paid an hourly salary and earn matching scholarship dollars to help pay for college expenses.

The Emma L. Bowen Foundation is a partnership of media companies (ABC, CBS, NBC, FOX, Comcast, Discovery, ESPN, C-SPAN, Lifetime, Time Warner, Clear Channel Communications, etc.) whose primary mission is to "change the face of the media industry" through direct work experience and professional development. Since our inception in 1989, we have placed hundreds of high school and college students in media internships.

Please visit our website at:
www.emmabowenfoundation.com

11. SCHOOL OF THE PROPHETS REVIVAL FOR THE KENTUCKY CONFERENCE - LEXINGTON DISTRICT:

The School of the Prophets Revival for Kentucky Annual Conference will be held at Quinn Chapel AME Church, Lexington, Kentucky, Monday, May 22, 2006 at 7:00 p.m. Each Church in the Conference is asked to have their choir members to sing in a Combined Kentucky Annual Conference Choir for the event.

12. EXPRESSION OF GRATITUDE FROM BISHOP AND MRS. E. EARL MCCLOUD, JR.:

"The Right Reverend and Mrs. E. Earl McCloud, Jr. (Attorney Patricia Russell-McCloud) are thankful for your prayers and other expressions during Supervisor McCloud's recovery from surgery. Please know that we are eternally grateful. Her recovery is progressing slowly but well. There is not a need to continue to send flowers or other expressions at this time. Thank you again for what you have done."

The Right Reverend E. Earl McCloud, Jr., Presiding BishopAfrican Methodist Episcopal ChurchOffice of Ecumenical & Urban AffairsEndorsing AgentP.O. Box 310043Atlanta, GA 31131-0043(770) 458-7220 - Office (404) 277-3833 - Cell (404) 691-1092 - Fax

13. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

From: Bishop Richard F. Norris

We regret to inform you of the passing of Mrs. Katherine Blackwell. She was the mother of Rev. Daniel Blackwell, pastor of St. Thomas AME Church in Newark, New Jersey (Newark District of the New Jersey Conference).

The following information has been provided regarding funeral arrangements.

Viewing was held Friday, March 10, 2006
Viewing - 6:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m.

Funeral was held Saturday, March 11, 2006
Viewing and Funeral was held at:

First Baptist Church
5 Hilton Avenue
Vauxhall, New Jersey 07088

The Rev. Dr. Marion J. Franklin, Jr. Pastor

Phone: 908-687-3414
Fax: 908-687-0019

Condolences may still be sent to:

The Rev. Daniel Blackwell
864 Valley Street, Apt. 4
Vauxhall, New Jersey 07088

Please remember the entire Blackwell family in your prayers.

14. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT ANNOUNCEMENTS PROVIDED BY:

Bishop Carolyn Tyler Guidry, Chair
Commission on Social Action Clergy Family Information Center

Mrs. Ora L. Easley - Administrator Email: Amespouses1@aol.com
(Nashville, Tennessee Contact) Phone: (615) 837-9736 Fax: (615) 833-3781
(Memphis, Tennessee Contact) (901) 578-4554 (Phone & Fax)

Please remember these families in your prayers.

15. CONDOLENCES TO THE BEREAVED FROM THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER:

The Chair of the Commission on Publications, the Right Reverend Gregory G. M. Ingram; the Publisher, the Reverend Dr. Johnny Barbour and the Editor of the Christian Recorder, the Reverend Dr. Calvin H. Sydnor III offer our condolences and prayers to those who have lost loved ones. We pray that the peace of Christ will be with you during this time of your bereavement.

3/8/2006

THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER ONLINE ENGLISH EDITION (3/8/06)

Bishop Gregory G. M. Ingram - Chair, Commission on Publications
The Reverend Dr. Johnny Barbour, Jr., Publisher
The Reverend Dr. Calvin H. Sydnor III, Editor


1. A MODEL FOR PUBLIC PRAYER:

This is one model for prayer. There are four key elements in prayer, which are easy to remember by the acronym, ACTS - C: Adoration, Confession, Thanksgiving, Supplication, and Closing

But, first and foremost, corporate or public prayer in worship services should always be, “We,” and not, “I”, i.e., “LORD, WE ask Your blessings upon…” not, “LORD, I ask your blessings upon…”

“I” is certainly acceptable, and preferable in personal, private prayer.

Adoration:
This is a prayer in which you express awe and love for God and reflect on God’s attributes and works, i.e., “O Lord, our God, how excellent is your name in all of the earth…” Adoration involves praise and worship (the acknowledgment of God's power and goodness. In this form of prayer, we honor, exalt, esteem, bless, and magnify the Name of the God as we reflect upon God’s goodness, grace, holiness, mercy, love, might, power, and dominion. In praise, we rejoice in God, align ourselves in obedience to God, and express all that we have discovered God to be.

Confession:
We all have sinned and we ask God to forgive us. We acknowledge that our sins violate God’s holiness and hinder our relationship with God, and we repent of our sins. “LORD, forgive us of our sins that we have committed…” We acknowledge our sins and thank God for God’s forgiveness and cleansing.

Thanksgiving
Thanksgiving is expressing gratitude to God for God’s abundant blessings, i.e., “Our God, we thank you for your many blessings.…" We gratefully acknowledge what God has done, is doing, and will continue to do in our lives on every level.

Supplication
Supplication is simply intercessory prayer in which we pray for others.

Closing
The closing can be a brief word of adoration or thanksgiving that affirms our love for the One who loved us first and we acknowledge that we want to be a part of the Kingdom even after death, i.e., “LORD, when this life is over, we want to hear Your welcome voice say, ‘Well done, good and faithful servant…”

2. A WORD FROM THE EDITOR:

I am going to interrupt my coverage of my trip to Liberia to answer an important question that was raised to me about why some of our episcopal leadership has mandated pastors to work on growing their congregations and to also introduce Dr. Levi B. Zangai, President of African Methodist University, Monrovia, Liberia, West Africa, and share his inaugural address.

First, here is my response to the question about some of our bishops’ mandate to pastors to grow their congregations.

I believe that the intent of some of our episcopal leadership to mandate that pastors work intentionally to increase their memberships in their local churches does not have to do with raising more money, but to encourage pastors to grow their congregations. I cannot speak for the bishops, but I believe that many of them are disturbed about pastors staying at churches, collecting salaries and not being concerned about evangelism (church growth).

Pastors complain about decreasing memberships without a planned strategy for increasing membership. We all know pastors across the Connection who have been at their churches for a number of years without little evidence of church growth.

Many churches have stopped having Sunday afternoon programs, cut out youth programs, and now practice combining special programs into Sunday morning worship services.

I have heard several bishops lament that they could not understand how a pastor could be satisfied with, say, 10 members and not go out to “beat the bushes” and grow the congregation.

Many of our local churches needs growth and many, if not all, of the bishops are trying to "light a fire” under complacent pastors and laity. Pastors and laity need to work together to grow congregations, for, as the saying goes, “Alone, we can do little; together, we can do much.”

Using the analogy of the shepherd and the sheep, the pastor is the “shepherd” and the congregations are the sheep. Shepherds care for, and lead the sheep. It is not the shepherd that grows the flock; it is the mating of the sheep that grows and increase the flock. Shepherd leads and protects the flock.

If shepherds and the sheep do their jobs, the sheep are protected, the flock increases, and everyone benefits.

3. MEET THE PRESIDENT OF AFRICAN METHODIST EPISCOPAL UNIVERSITY IN MONROVIA, LIBERIA:

My name is Levi B. Zangai. I am currently the President of the African Methodist Episcopal University (AMEU) in Monrovia, Liberia. AMEU is a coeducational tertiary institution supported by the African Methodist Episcopal Church.

I have twenty years of experience in education and international development, including experience as a former Minister of Education, former Minister of State for Peacekeeping, and Associate Professor of Public Administration and Political Science at the University of Liberia.

Additionally, I served as the Minister of Education and Consultant with UNECA and as a consultant for UNICEF. I co-authored a report on the Rehabilitation and Reintegration of Liberia’s Child Soldiers and Empowering Liberia’s Civil Society Organizations.
During my tenure as Minister of Education, I organized a 50-member team of education professionals from the public, private and civil society sectors, and with the support of donors such as UNICEF, UNESCO, UNDP, and NGO’s, I initiated and completed Liberia’s post-war “Basic Education and Training Sector Reconstruction Program”, 1995-2000 volumes I and II.

This rehabilitation and reconstruction program (project number LIT/95/002/A/01/13) was submitted to the United Nations agencies and other donors as the first comprehensive post-war assessment in the country.

As an integral part of the education reconstruction program, I also established a broad-based, Inter-Agency Consultative Group with a Task Force on Prioritizing Girls’ Education and Women’s Empowerment. As Minister of Education, not only did I provide leadership and oversight for all the school systems in the country, I also chaired the inter-agency UN/NGO Education Sub-Committee on Liberia and coordinated its activities. I represented Liberia at several UN conferences, e.g., in Copenhagen, Paris, Geneva, and Dakar.

I have an extensive network of African and international contacts which I am deploying to rebuild The AME–University; see my work at http://www.theperspective.org/prospectsforpeace.html.

I was a Fulbright Scholar at the University of Southern California (USC, 1979-82) and a faculty member in (a) USC’s School of Public Administration (1983), (b) California State University, Northridge (Pan-African Studies Department), (c) Vista University, Department of Public Administration and Political Science (Pretoria, South Africa), and (d) University of Liberia, College of Business and Public Administration.
I earned my Ph.D. and MPA degrees in Public Administration and International Development from the University of Southern California. I hold both BA and MA degrees in Political Science from Furman University and the University of San Francisco, respectively.

I taught at the University of Liberia for five years (1984-1989) in the College of Business and Public Administration as Associate Professor and Acting Chairman of the Department of Public Administration.

Sincerely,

President Levi B. Zangai, Ph.D.

4. INDUCTION REMARKS GIVEN BY THE THEN PRESIDENT-ELECT LEVI B. ZANGAI, PH.D., THE SECOND PRESIDENT OF AME UNIVERSITY:

The Induction Ceremony was held on February 24, 2006 at the Eliza Turner Memorial AME Church, Camp Johnson Road, Monrovia, Liberia

Order of Protocol:

Her Excellency, Dr. Ellen Johnson-Sheriff, President, Republic of Liberia;

Rt. Rev. Dr. David R. Daniels, Jr., Presiding Bishop of the 14th Episcopal District, African Methodist Episcopal Church and Chairman of the Board of Trustees, African Methodist Episcopal University;

Supervisor Irene M. Daniels, Episcopal Supervisor, 14th Episcopal District;

Vice Chairman and Distinguished Members of the AMEU Board of Trustees;

The Rt. Rev. Dr. John Richard Bryant, Presiding Bishop of the 5th Episcopal District, African Methodist Episcopal Church;

The Rt. Rev. Dr. C. Garnett Henning, Presiding Bishop of the 8th Episcopal District, African Methodist Episcopal Church;

The Rt. Rev. Dr. Richard Franklin Norris, Presiding Bishop of the 1st Episcopal District, African Methodist Episcopal Church;

The Rt. Rev. Dr. Zedekiah LaZett Grady, Retired Bishop of the African Methodist Episcopal Church;

The Rev. Dr. George F. Flowers, Executive Secretary, Global Witness & Ministry,
African Methodist Episcopal Church;

The Rev. Dr. Calvin H. Sydnor, Editor, Christian Recorder, African Methodist Episcopal Church;

The Honorable Members of the National Legislature;

The Chief Justice and Associate Justices of the Honorable Supreme Court of Liberia;

Members of the Cabinet and Government Officials;

Prelates and Members of the Clergy;

Presidents and Representatives of Universities, Colleges and other Institutions of Higher Education;

The International Community represented by the United Nations Mission in Liberia (UNMIL), Diplomatic Missions, and Humanitarian Relief Organizations;

Honored Overseas Guests;

Distinguished Invitees,

Parents, Guardians, and Family Members of the Student Body;

Distinguished Faculty, Staff and Students;
All other Protocol observed.

Inaugural Speech

On behalf of my wife, Atim George, our family and me, I would like to, first of all, express our sincere thanks and appreciation to the Chairman, the Rt. Rev. Dr. David R. Daniels, Jr., and Members of the Board of Trustees of the African Methodist Episcopal University for appointing me as the Second President of the AME University.

God being our helper, we hope to make a positive contribution to the human resource development of the 14th Episcopal District, which includes Benin, Cote d’ Ivoire, Ghana, Liberia, Nigeria, Sierra Leone and Togo.

For the peace, human security, limited social services and employment opportunities that the Liberian people now enjoy, I must also register our deepest appreciation to the international community and humanitarian relief organizations, including the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), United Nations Mission in Liberia (UNMIL), other UN Agencies, the United States of America, the Federal Republic of Nigeria and the European Union, among others. As a result of the international community’s proactive leadership in peace-keeping and peace-building in Liberia, we have gathered here in peace without fear of the plundering, looting, raping, killing and destruction perpetrated by all the former fighting forces during Liberia’s 14 years of war.

In this respect, may we stand for a moment of silence to honor the memories of all those 250,000 or more people who have lost their lives in Liberia’s wars and in its struggles for inclusion and good governance, since the founding of Liberia, more than 150 years ago.

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Board of Trustees, Distinguished Guests, we are pleased to report that although many war-related challenges are still with us, the AME University remains undaunted in its pursuit of excellence.

We are presently engaging in national and international partnerships with donors’ support to rehabilitate the Jordan College of Agriculture in collaboration with Langston University.

The African Methodist Episcopal University was established to provide higher education for students from all member countries of the 14th Episcopal District. Over the years, however, the ever-increasing student enrollment has overwhelmed the university’s present facilities, faculty, staff and other resources. Additionally, during the course of Liberia’s 14-year civil war, the university’s infrastructure and facilities were severely damaged and looted repeatedly. Therefore, we currently need to rebuild our infrastructure and institutional capacity to accommodate the post-war influx of qualified young women and men who desire to enroll in the institution. Liberia’s illiteracy rate is of 80% places a huge responsibility on both public and private educational institutions to expand learning facilities and educational opportunities for all of Liberia’s youths, who now constitute 60-70% of the population. And yet, the AME University is being forced to turn away qualified students due to limited infrastructure and faculty. Moreover, there has been a massive brain drain in the country due to the civil crisis. This has further exacerbated the grave need for improved and effective learning facilities in the country. Hence, learning institutions in post-war Liberia, including the AME University, are opting for the expansion of their facilities, infrastructure, faculty and staff, to accommodate more qualified students. In turn, it has intensified the need for international partnerships and additional resources from the government and development partners for the universities.

During the 14-years of war, when the nation-wide fighting entered the city of Monrovia, the University was massively looted repeatedly. Amidst all of its trials and hardships, the AME University has remained the only institution of higher education in Liberia that has kept its doors opened continuously and consistently since 1997.

The AME University now has the second largest enrollment of any university in Liberia. The 2005-2006 first semester enrollment was 2,585. Seventy six percent of the University’s students are in the Business College, 21% in the Liberal Arts, and 3% in the Bryant Theological Seminary. Female students comprise only 36% of the student body; we are determined to increase female enrollment to at least 50%. We expect to enroll more than 2,500 students next academic year.

Special Programs

As a way of creating and sustaining a healthy environment for the University, the other AME institutions and the surrounding community, as well as sensitizing the students and the community on the importance of environmental well being, AMEU has established a monthly Environment Day Program. AMEU Environment Day is also meant to be an educational event, providing opportunities for lectures, seminars workshops, symposiums and community projects on preserving the environmental health of the 14th Episcopal District of the AME Church. The Environment Day activities involve the University itself, Monrovia College & Industrial Training School, F. M. Reid Elementary & Junior High School, Susan Brooks Elementary & Junior High School, the Eliza Turner AME Church and the surrounding community. Some of our Environment Day Keynote Speakers include Her Excellency Dr. Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, President, Republic of Liberia and former Assistant Administrator for UNDP/RBA; Ambassador Donald E. Booth, US Ambassador to Liberia; Mr. Jordan D. Ryan, Deputy Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General, Dr. Wilbur Thomas, the USAID Director; Honorable Ophelia Hoff-Saytumah, Mayor of Monrovia; Mr. Ben Donnie of UNDP; Dr. Fodee Kromah, Executive Director of the Environmental Protection Agency and Dr. Eugene A. Nyarko, WHO Resident Representative, among others.

AMEU’s Partnerships for Collaboration

AME University continues to pursue opportunities for partnerships with donor agencies and other educational institutions in providing, among other services, community outreach programs in tandem with its academic programs. We are grateful to the US Government for the partnership and support network that now exists between the AME University and the U.S. Embassy Public Affairs Section, and the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) through implementing organizations such as Development Alternatives, Inc. (DAI) and the Liberian Community Infrastructure Program (LCIP).

In this respect, distinguished ladies and gentlemen, we are pleased to report that through the initiatives of the Rt. Rev. Dr. David R. Daniels, Jr., Development Alternatives awarded a USAID-funded Grant to the African Methodist Episcopal University, in the total amount of US $992,269.00. The bulk of this grant is now being used as follows:

a. to reconstruct the Hatcher-Henning-Norris building, the AME University’s main academic building, including the construction of a new auditorium, offices and sanitary facilities; and
b. to reconstruct additional classrooms that will provide over 2,000 students’ access to higher education.

For this grant, the University has trained 750 demobilized former combatants in basic literacy and numeracy. Additionally, 64 former combatants of the Disarmament, Demobilization, Rehabilitation and Reintegration Program are currently enrolled at the AME University.

We are also developing institutional partnerships with US institutions, including:

- The AME Service and Development Agency (AME-SADA);
- The University of South Carolina;
- Langston University;
- Southern University and A&M College Systems;
- Florida Memorial University and Medgar Evers College of the City University of New York, among others.

In a similar vein, we hosted an American Fulbright Professor, Dr. Wenda Bauchspies, who conducted two workshops on “Qualitative Research” and “Women Studies Program” at the AME University in March 2005. The aim of the latter workshop is to establish a Women’s Studies Program at AME University. For these workshops, the US Embassy through its Office of Public Affairs awarded the University a grant of US $895.00 to provide meals and office supplies.

Looking Ahead

As already noted, the AME University opened with programs in three colleges initially. There are plans to rebuild and operate the University’s Jordan Agriculture College in partnership with Langston University and the AME Service and Development Agency (SADA).

The Teachers Training, Science, Law and Medical Colleges are in the Master Plan. There is also a project to establish this year an Information and Communication Technology Center at the University in partnership with the Universal Aide Society and the Shepherds of Good Hope of Ottawa, Canada.

Given Liberia’s unemployment rate of 85%, including a distressingly high rate of unemployment among recent university graduates, the AME University is developing a new approach in collaboration with Southern University on job placement for its graduates. We plan to enter into memoranda of understanding with various business institutions and other relevant organizations to offer internships, on the job training opportunities and job placement for our students and graduates.

The Office of the Vice President for Academic Affairs chairs a joint AMEU and Liberia Opportunities Industrial Center (LOIC) Technical Committee on Agriculture & Information Technology. LOIC was founded by the late Rev. Leon Sullivan of the United States. This committee is establishing a joint Associate Degree Program by AMEU and LOIC in Agriculture and Information & Communication Technology.

To summarize and conclude, our vision and post-war development agenda for the AME University include:

- Establishing institutional partnerships for collaboration with other universities, foundations, corporations, donor agencies, civil society organizations, and non-governmental organizations:

- Establishing faculty and student exchanges; faculty, staff and infrastructure development, research development; community service learning programs, internships and job placement; and curriculum development leading to joint degree programs;

- Setting up Departments of the Sciences, Mathematics, Information & Communication Technology, and the Colleges of Medicine and Law;

- Creating scholarships earmarked for women students, and providing the means to enhance women’s opportunities and empowerment at AMEU;

- Developing the infrastructure and faculty of the Bryant Theological Seminary;

- Reconstructing and equipping AMEU’s Library with a V-SAT/Internet facility to enable students and faculty to participate in distance learning and to gain access to other institutions’ educational resources;

- Strengthening AMEU’s teaching, research and community service capacities, and widening access to higher education in post-war Liberia and in the 14th District;

- Constructing a University gym with faculty and student centers, and buying two buses for the Sports and Athletics Programs; and

- Establishing an AMEU Foundation/Endowment Fund through an Annual Fundraising Campaign to restore and expand the University’s institutional capacity.

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Board of Trustees, distinguished Ladies and Gentlemen, we realize that this is an ambitious development agenda, but we are persuaded that your prayers, partnerships and confidence in us with your continuous support are critical to our success.

As Liberia emerges from 14 years of civil war to peace-building, reconstruction and democracy, the rebuilding of its educational institutions is crucial. If the Universities are to play their vital role in educating and empowering the future leaders and workforce of a peaceful society, then, like Liberia itself, they too need partnerships and support for reconstruction.

I thank you for your attention.

President Levi B. Zangai

5. THE NINTH EPISCOPAL DISTRICT MID YEAR CONVOCATION:

The Ninth Episcopal District Mid Year Convocation will be held March 17 & 18, 2006 at
Payne Chapel AME Church, Birmingham, Alabama.

The Reverend Dr. A. B. Sutton, Pastor of 6th Avenue Baptist Church, will be the preacher on Friday night (March 17th).

Submitted by K. S. Stew

6. ST. LUKE A.M.E. CHURCH TO HOST THE 184TH SESSION OF THE NEW YORK ANNUAL CONFERENCE APRIL 24-30, 2006:

St. Luke A.M.E. Church is honored to host the 184th Session of the New York Annual Conference April 24-30, 2006 under the leadership of our Presiding Prelate, Bishop Richard Franklin Norris and our Episcopal Supervisor, Mother Mary Ann Norris. We are especially excited about the Annual Conference coming to St. Luke Church because it has been TWENTY YEARS since St. Luke has served as hosts of the Annual Conference. We thank Bishop Norris and the Annual Conference for entrusting us with this awesome responsibility.

This missive is intended to give you all the information you need as you prepare for your attendance at the New York Annual Conference. If there is anything else you might want or need to know, please do not hesitate to contact us.

Daily Venues for the Annual Conference

Monday, April 24, 2006 - EVANGELIST’S DAY
St. Luke A.M.E. Church
1872 Amsterdam Avenue (corner of 153rd Street)
New York, NY


Tuesday, April 25, 2006 - MISSIONARY ANNUAL DAY
Salem United Methodist Church
2290 Adam Clayton Powell Boulevard (7th Avenue, corner of 129th Street)
New York, NY

Welcome Reception for Bishop Richard and Mother Mary Ann Norris
6:30- 8:30 p.m.

The Alhambra Ballroom
2116 Adam Clayton Powell Blvd. (7th Avenue, corner of 126th Street)
New York, NY

All Pastors, Ministers and Delegates Invited
(Hors D’oeuvres Will Be Served)

Wednesday, April 26, 2006 - OPENING DAY
8:00 a.m. Roll Call and 10:00 a.m. Worship Service Only
Salem United Methodist Church
2290 Adam Clayton Powell Boulevard (7th Avenue, corner of 129th Street)
New York, NY

Lunch, Afternoon Business Session, Dinner and Holy Communion Service
St. Luke A.M.E. Church
1872 Amsterdam Avenue (corner of 153rd Street)
New York, NY

Thursday, April 27 - Saturday, April 29, 2006

All business sessions and worship services of the conference will be held at St. Luke A.M.E. Church

Saturday, April 29, 2006 - Y.P.D. ANNUAL DAY
Hosted By Metropolitan A.M.E. Church
58 West 135th Street
New York, NY 10037
Rev. Darnell Montgomery, Pastor

Sunday, April 30, 2006 - 2:00 P.M. CHURCH SCHOOL & 3:00 P.M. CLOSING SESSION

Greater Allen Cathedral
110-31 Merrick Blvd.
Jamaica, NY 11433
Rev. Dr. Floyd H. Flake, Pastor

HOTEL INFORMATION
Conference Hotel
New York LaGuardia Airport Marriott
102-05 Ditmars Boulevard
East Elmhurst, NY 11369

Rate - $135 per night plus taxes. Must present NYS Sales Tax Exemption Form at check-in.
Reservations must be made by April 3, 2006

(718) 565-8900

Rooms blocked in the name of “New York Annual Conference”

VENDORS
Vendor space will be available Monday at St. Luke, Tuesday at Salem and Wednesday - Saturday at St. Luke.

Please contact Sis. Clara Malone at 212-491-4301 or at ItsAWrap42@yahoo.com for prices and information.

20TH ANNIVERSARY COMMEMORATIVE PUBLICATION

You should have received under separate cover information on the Commemorative Publication and the Contract. Please respond by March 15, 2006. Contract attached.

Finally, all Pastors, Spouses and Ministers of the Conference can sign up to receive a “complimentary” facial provided by one of the members of St. Luke Church. Facials will be provided from Wednesday afternoon through Friday afternoon at our Administrative Building located at 1854 Amsterdam Avenue (corner of 152nd Street). Reservations must be made. Please call the church office at 212-870-1349 by Friday, April 21 to schedule your appointment.

We are doing our best to prepare for your arrival. “You’ve been away far too long!” If you have any comments or questions, please do not hesitate to contact us at (212) 870-1349 or by email at stlukeamec@aol.com. May God bless you.

The Rev. Melvin E. Wilson
Pastor

7. THE 2006 GENERAL BOARD AND BISHOP’S COUNCIL, CHARLESTON, SOUTH CAROLINA:

The official dates for the 2006 General Board and Bishops’ Council are June 25-29, 2006. The Meetings will be held at the Charleston Area Convention Center.

General Board Hotels:
Embassy Suites Hotel Airport - Convention Center
5055 International Boulevard
North Charleston, SC 29418
(843) 747-1882
Group Rate: $129 Single/Double - $139 Triple - $149 Quad

Residence Inn Charleston Airport
5035 International Boulevard
North Charleston, SC 29414
(843) 266-3434
Group Rate: $129

Hilton Garden Inn Charleston Airport
5265 International Boulevard
North Charleston, SC 29418
(843) 308-9330
Group Rate: $109

Holiday Inn Charleston Airport
& Convention Center
5264 International Boulevard
North Charleston, SC 29418
(843) 576-0300
Group Rate: $109

Be sure to mention AME to get the group rate

8. COLUMBIA CITY COUNCIL UNITED WITH THE SEVENTH EPISCOPAL DISTRICT’S GOOD SHEPHERD MINISTRY:

Columbia, SC – Tuesday morning March 7th at 8:30 am the city of Columbia’s Mayor Bob Coble, along with City Council Members E.W. Cromartie II, Tameika Isaac Devine, Daniel J. Rickenmann and City Manager Charles Austin came together with the Right Reverend Bishop Preston Warren Williams, II and one hundred AME pastors of South Carolina’s Good Shepherd Ministry. Bishop Williams is the leader of the Good Shepherd Ministry, which represents a large constituency of African-Americans throughout the state of South Carolina. In an effort to keep the lines of communication open between the two entities, the Columbia City Council and Good Shepherd Ministry reaffirmed their commitments to each other as well as to Columbia’s civic communities, which they serve.

Reverend Norvel Goff of Reid Chapel AME Church opened the meeting, speaking of the importance for both city government and clergy alike to serve their respective communities with the highest level of honor and integrity. Councilman Cromartie added how pleased the City Council was to share positive dialogue with the Good Shepherd Ministry, which they regard as fellow stewards of Columbia and partners in keeping “unity in the communities”. Councilwoman Devine touched on the Renaissance Foundation and Bethel Restoration projects in Columbia, and thanked Bishop Williams for his diligent work with city government in seeing that these and other projects are developed from inception to fruition. Councilman Rickenmann echoed his colleagues, calling for progressive partnership, community unity, and adding that his office doors were always open.

Mayor Bob Coble addressed the Good Shepherd pastors, affirming the importance of “every person and every area of Columbia.” He stated, “Everyone deserves the same high level of respect and commitment from city government.” Mayor Coble spoke of Allen University as a “jewel to the city of Columbia”, and acknowledged the many benefits related to the development of the academic communities located in that area of downtown Columbia. The Mayor then noted that he has served as Columbia’s Chair of the annual UNCF education drive and further asserted that religious conventions are the number one draw for Columbia’s tourist economy. In closing, he offered his ongoing support of Bishop Williams, Dr. Charles Young, the President of Allen University, and the Good Shepherd Ministry as they continue to work hard for the future of Columbia.

The final speaker was The Right Reverend Bishop Preston Warren Williams II, who stated, “It is our responsibility to make sure all of these programs and partnerships work for the benefit of all persons of the city of Columbia, regardless of race, color and class.” Bishop Williams thanked everyone for attending this meeting and promised another to ensure continued open lines of communication.

Submitted by: Benjamin HarrisonPublic Relations Director7th District AME ChurchTel 803.935.0500
Fax 803.935.0830HarrisonAMEMedia@aol.com

9. BISHOP MCKENZIE TO SPEAK AT THE UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA:

Bishop Vashti Murphy McKenzie will speak at 7 p.m. March 23 at the University of South Carolina. She will deliver the Ninth Annual Robert Smalls Lecture in African-American Studies in the Russell House ballroom. Her talk is open to the public.

Bishop McKenzie will discuss "Leadership and Values in Times of Crisis: Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow." A book signing and reception are planned after her talk.

Bishop McKenzie was named bishop in 2000, and, in 2004, she again made history when she became the first woman to be named the titular head of the AME Church as the President of its Council of Bishops. From 2000 to 2004 she was chief pastor of the 18th Episcopal district in Southeast Africa, serving the people of Lesotho, Swaziland, Botswana and Mozambique.

For more information, call USC's African American Studies Program at 803-777-7248. For information about USC's African American Studies Program, visit the Web site: www.cas.sc.edu/afra/.

10. REORGANIZATION OF THE WMS AT ALLEN CHAPEL, ATHENS, TEXAS:

By: Delanda S. Johnson
Special to the News

With the change from Northeast Texas Conference to now the North Texas Conference, Allen Chapel AME Church WMS in Athens are reconstructing their department.
As part of the new Tyler District, Allen Chapel AME WMS (Women’s Missionary Society) are focusing on a bigger and brighter future in their community and as a part of the Tyler District.

On Sunday, March 5, newly elected President Marva Jo Barker and members from Allen Chapel and one member from their sister church Johnson Chapel/Malakoff met with Conference and District WMS/YMI members from Dallas.

A member of Allen Chapel since 1957, Mrs. Barker stated that even though this was only their second meeting, Allen Chapel’s WMS goals are to enhance each woman’s spiritual growth. This means to share with themselves and others the saving grace of Jesus Christ.

“The responsibilities for the members of Allen Chapel and Johnson Chapel WMS are to witness, educate, stewardship, give support to our YPD (Young People Department), etc., to work toward peace and justice in the community, and to have a better relationship with Jesus Christ,” said Barker.

“One of Allen Chapel WMS project for this year is to adopt a senior person once a month whereas a basket of goodies will be given to them. This will let them know that they are not forgotten,” said Sis. Gina Hunter.

Speakers for the evening were Sister Jackie Ross-Roy, third Vice President for the Tyler District, Sister Lisa Dale, third Vice President for the North Texas Conference, Sister Romella Jones, Member-At-Large North Texas Conference all affiliated with the Women’s Missionary Society. Each lady spoke on the duties of the WMS, Official Officers of the North Texas Conference (WMS), duties of local WMS and their officers, Constitution/By-laws of the WMS, the relationship between the WMS and YWI, how to establish a YWI (Young Women’s Initiative), etc.

Sister Gloria Glaspie said, “I want to stand and thank all three of you for the beautiful way this meeting has been conducted. Things have changed so much and you’ve given us information that we need. Thank you again.”

The evening concluded with Allen Chapel WMS making plans for their fifth Sunday (April 30) Mission Program.

The speaker will be Episcopal Supervisor Rev. Dr. Jessica Kendall Ingram.

For more information, call the Rev. Mark Jackson at 903-675-2425 or 972-576-3299.

11. ST. PAUL AME CHURCH, VERSAILLES, KENTUCKY OBSERVES ITS 158TH ANNIVERSARY:

158th Church Anniversary "Revive and Renew" Mini-Revival will be held at St. Paul A.M.E. Church, 215 Douglas Avenue, Versailles, Kentucky beginning Wednesday, March 8 through Friday, March 10, 2006 at 7:00 p.m. The evangelist will be the Rev. Donald Townsend, pastor of Polk Memorial Baptist Church, Mortonsville, KY.

Sunday, March 12, 2006, St. Paul will observe its 158th Church Anniversary during the morning worship service at 11:00 a.m. Rev. Donald Townsend will be the guest preacher.

Please join us for these worship opportunities.

The Rev. James E. Smith, Pastor

12. MEDGAR EVERS COLLEGE (CUNY) ANNOUNCES THE SHABAZZ CONVERSATIONS: A SOCIAL JUSTICE SERIES IN CELEBRATION OF WOMEN’S HISTORY MONTH:

On Friday, March 24, 2006 Medgar Evers College, The Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture and The International Cross-Cultural Black Women’s Studies Institute will celebrate Women’s History Month with The Shabazz Conversations: A Social Justice Series. This event will be held at 7:00 p.m. in the Schomburg Center located on 515 Malcolm X Boulevard, New York (Entrance at 135th Street).

Co-hosted by Dr. Andrée-Nicola McLaughlin, The Dr. Betty Shabazz Distinguished Chair in Social Justice at Medgar Evers College, CUNY and Ilyasah Shabazz, daughter of Malcolm X and Betty Shabazz and the author of the book “Growing Up X,” this forum and reception pays tribute to the legacies of Rosa Parks, Coretta Scott King, and Dr. Betty Shabazz. Special guests include poet Jayne Cortez, Transit Workers Union leader Roger Toussaint, and Dillard University scholar Jerry W. Ward, Jr.

Performances will feature The Imani Singers of Medgar Evers College, The Imani Dance & Drum Ensemble, The Medgar Evers College Drama Club, The Steppers, and a performance of J. E. Franklin's A Hip Hop Aesop.
For more information, visit www.schomburg.org or call (212) 491-2229 or (718) 270-5051.

Christopher Hundley
Public Affairs Writer
Division of Institutional Advancement
Medgar Evers College
1650 Bedford Avenue
Brooklyn, NY 11225
P: 718-270-6926
F: 718-270-6912
chundley@mec.cuny.edu

13. MEDGAR EVERS COLLEGE HOSTS THE THIRD ANNUAL NATIONAL SOCIAL WORK MONTH CONFERENCE, MARCH 17TH, 2006:

A Conference will be held Friday, March 17th, 8:00 a.m. at 1650 Bedford Avenue, Brooklyn, NY. Guest speakers will include The Honorable Dr. Guillermo Linares, Commissioner, NYC Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs; Dr. Paul Kurzman, Dean, Hunter College School of Social Work, CUNY; Michele Cahill, Senior Counselor, Education Policy, NYC Department of Education; and Mwatu Nubian, Director, Special Projects, Community Services, NYC Department of Aging.

Representatives from the arenas of social work, education, human services, and human rights will be on hand to celebrate the contributions of social workers, as well as to explore opportunities for collaboration to fulfill the College's mission to meet the educational and social needs of Central Brooklyn. Focusing on three of New York City’s most vulnerable populations-youth, immigrants and the senior citizens-this year’s program will bring together experts in the fields of youth services, substance abuse, gerontology and immigrant services in collaboration with representatives from NYC Department of Education, and will include participation of over 125 young people from High Schools in the Borough of Brooklyn. For further information on the conference, to pre-register or to become involved with recruitment activities or serve as a fieldwork education or service-learning site, please contact Dr. Eda F. Harris-Hastick at (718) 270-4853.

About The Annual National Social Work Month Conference

The Annual National Social Work Month Conference brings together representatives from Medgar Evers College administration, faculty, staff and students as well as guests from the social work profession, health, mental health, education, human services, human rights and political arenas, for a gathering of partners and supporters in celebration of National Social Work Month at Medgar Evers College, CUNY. Former special guest speakers included : United States Congressman Edolphus “Ed” Towns; NYC Deputy Mayor for Legal Affairs Carol Robles-Roman; Kings County District Attorney Charles “Joe” Hynes; NYC Department of Aging Commissioner Ed Mendes-Santiago; NYC Department of Heath Promotion/Chemical Dependency Deputy Commissioner Martha Adams Sullivan; Deputy Brooklyn Borough President Yvonne Graham; NYC Administration for Children’s Services (ACS) Deputy Commissioner Jennifer Jones Austin, Esq.; New York Congregational Services, President/CEO, Celia Zuckerman.

14. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

The Rev. James Arthur Pendleton, retired Itinerant elder of the Central Alabama Conference 9th Episcopal District, age 100 (Date of Birth 12/25/1905), passed on Wednesday, March 1, 2006.

Reverend Pendleton pastored several churches throughout the Central Conference for more than 50 years. He was a faithful member of Samuel Chapel A.M.E. Church, Prichard (Mobile) Alabama.

Funeral services will be held Saturday, March 11, 2006 - 12 Noon at Samuel Chapel A.M.E. Church, Prichard (Mobile) Alabama. The Rev. W. E. Marshall is the pastor.

Arrangements are being handled by

Christian Benevolent Funeral Home
201 N. Hamilton Street
Mobile, AL 36603

Telephone: 251-432-6528

Messages can be sent to his grandchildren at the address listed below. Messages may be sent to Darrell Pendleton, Karen Lomax, Kimberly Pendleton, Kevin Pendleton, and/or Michael Pendleton at, 326 Bella St., Prichard, AL 36610.

15. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT ANNOUNCEMENTS PROVIDED BY:

Bishop Carolyn Tyler Guidry, Chair
Commission on Social Action Clergy Family Information Center

Mrs. Ora L. Easley - Administrator Email: Amespouses1@aol.com
(Nashville, Tennessee Contact) Phone: (615) 837-9736 Fax: (615) 833-3781
(Memphis, Tennessee Contact) (901) 578-4554 (Phone & Fax)

Please remember these families in your prayers.

16. CONDOLENCES TO THE BEREAVED FROM THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER:

The Chair of the Commission on Publications, the Right Reverend Gregory G. M. Ingram; the Publisher, the Reverend Dr. Johnny Barbour and the Editor of the Christian Recorder, the Reverend Dr. Calvin H. Sydnor III offer our condolences and prayers to those who have lost loved ones. We pray that the peace of Christ will be with you during this time of your bereavement.

3/6/2006

THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER ONLINE ENGLISH EDITION (3/6/06)

Bishop Gregory G. M. Ingram - Chair, Commission on Publications
The Reverend Dr. Johnny Barbour, Jr., Publisher
The Reverend Dr. Calvin H. Sydnor III, Editor

1. THE TENTH ANNUAL JOINT INSTITUTE FOR MINISTERS (JIM) WILL CONVENE IN SHREVEPORT, LOUISIANA APRIL 17 – 20, 2006:

The Tenth Annual Joint Institute for Ministers (JIM) comprised of the
Eight (Mississippi and Louisiana), Tenth (Texas), and Twelfth (Arkansas and Oklahoma) Episcopal Districts of the African Methodist Episcopal Church will be held this year in the Eighth Episcopal District, Clarion Hotel in Shreveport, Louisiana on April 17-20,2006.

Do you remember the Ninth Joint Institute for Ministers hosted by the Twelfth Episcopal District at the Holiday Inn Select in Little Rock, Arkansas on April 12 –14, 2005? The Right Reverend Richard Allen Chappelle, Sr., served as Host and Institute Treasurer. The Right Reverend Cornal Garnett Henning, Sr., Chairperson- Institute Dean, the Right Reverend Gregory G. M. Ingram- Co-Chairperson, Dr. Eugene Brannon, Host Presiding Elder and Reverend Ricky H. Hicks, Host Pastor.

The theme selected by the Bishops “Recommitting the Church to the Struggle for Justice” laid the framework for an empowering institute.

Bishop Chappelle and Dr. Barbara Jean Chappelle and the Tall, Talented, Tough, Terrific Twelfth Episcopal District rolled out the red carpet and hosted with charm and warmth.
The Institute opened with fire as Rev. Shirley Spencer, Pastor of Greater Shady Grove of Wilmar, Arkansas preached with conviction from Isaiah 6:1-8 and II Chronicles 7:14 with the subject “Now is the Time to Act.”

Dr. C. T. Vivian of Atlanta Georgia and Presiding Elder E. Anne Henning-Byfield of Indiana Conference of the 4th Episcopal District of the AME Church were the workshop presenters. Dr. C. T. Vivian, an empowering Institute presenter pricked the members’ consciousness by reminding them “Why the Church must be committed to the Struggle for Justice. Presiding Elder E. Anne Henning-Byfield challenged them to “Recognize, Repent, Recommit and Respond to the cause of Justice” and they were reminded of the importance of justice within and without this great AME Zion. A question and answer period followed each presentation. Exciting feedback was exchanged between all parties.

Dr. Cora McHenry, President of Shorter College, our AME College in North Little Rock, Arkansas brought greetings and great news of the wonderful things going on at Shorter College.

The Rt. Reverend Samuel L. Green, Presiding Prelate of the 15th Episcopal District took the Institute to another level of spiritual enlightenment as he informed of the “Danger of being Anointed” from I Samuel 16: 13-23 and Luke 4: 14-19.

The Institute was graced by the presence of General Officers-Drs. Johnny Barbour, Clement Fugh, Daryl Ingram, Calvin Sydnor and Connectional Officer-Dr. John Q. Owens.

The Reverends, Kurbe Newsome and Lanell Ross of the 12th Episcopal District led the institute on Wednesday morning as they offered up first fruits of prayer and meditation and the Reverends, Betty Claiborne and Kenneth Harrell of the 8th Episcopal District started the Thursday morning session with fresh manner of prayer and meditation.

The Reverend Martin Odom of the 8th District instructed the Institute on “Biblical School of Justice and the Reverend Kenneth Harrell of the 8th District exhorted everyone to “Keep on Rolling.”

Presiding Elder E. Anne Henning-Byfield blessed everyone’s spirit with a dynamic message “Injustice is not the end of the Story” taken from Job 42: 10-17.

Reverend Reginald Henderson, Pastor of Shiloh Baptist Church of North Little Rock Arkansas reminded the group that the church was Christ agenda, should be our agenda as he preached the Ecumenical Worship Service with fervor and compassion from the subject, “An Unfinished Agenda”, text taken from Luke 4:14-19.

The Institute’s Freedom and Justice Tour began with a visit to the William J. Clinton Presidential Library and Museum, the tour led us to historic Shorter College, Central High School and culminated at Rufus K. Young A.M.E. Church where the Rev. Kevin Washington of the 8th Episcopal District redirected us with his prolific message, “Focus on New Things,” taken from Mark 2:18-22.

Rufus K. Young A.M.E. Church prepared a soulful feast and blessed us in an extraordinary manner.

The music for praise and worship rendered by the institute musicians, especially Mr. Labaron Mizer, the Spirit of the Twelfth, R. K. Young, and Shiloh Baptist Church Choirs made hearts happy and souls rejoice because all of the participants enhanced the worship experiences with melodious songs of Zion and other offerings.

The message of “Re-committing the Church to the Struggle for Justice” by the Rt. Reverend C. Garnett Henning, Sr., the Presiding Prelate of the 8th Episcopal District and Dean of this historic 9th Joint Institute for Ministers was electrifying.

Mrs. Ann Gilkey, Public Relations Director for the Twelfth Episcopal District, presented Bishop Cornal Henning with a photo album of all the activities starting with day one of the institute.

The Ninth Annual Joint Institute for Ministers was a refreshing, renewing, empowering experience, and the Episcopal leaders, Presiding Prelates Henning and Chappelle were congratulated on their excellent leadership.

Bishop Richard Allen Chappelle, Dr. Barbara Jean Chappelle and the 12th Episcopal District Family received kudos for the fine way in which they hosted this year’s Joint Institute for Ministers.

The preached Word, workshops, and presenters amplified the theme and focus of this year’s Joint Institute for Ministers, and this year’s 362 pre-registrants, 22 on-site registrants, and especially the 243 on-site participants were equipped with the tools to re-commit the church to the struggle for justice.

We are all looking forward to seeing all of you at the Tenth Joint Institute for Ministers in April.

Article submitted by: Mrs. Ann Gilkey, 12th District Public Relations Director
The Rev. Charles Frost, 12th District Secretaries Coordinator

2. LIBERIA (PART 2):

- Background

Liberia is a little larger than Tennessee and is located in West Africa. It is about six-thousand miles from the U.S. Mainland. Liberia is bordered on the southwest by the Atlantic Ocean, and surrounded by Guinea, Sierra Leone, and Côte d'Ivoire (pronounced, cwoatie-vua). The American Colonization Society (ACS), made up of Quakers, who opposed slavery and slaveholders, who opposed freedom for blacks and felt that freed blacks should be repatriated to Africa, formed Liberia. The first blacks were repatriated to Liberia in 1822 and we saw the place where those repatriated blacks arrived in what is now, Monrovia. The American repatriates were known as Americo-Liberians.

Liberia experienced challenges from its beginning. Malaria and yellow fever, attacks from their neighbors, and internal conflicts. In recent years, Liberia has been plagued with civil war and unrest since 1979.

Liberia’s current President is Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, who is the first elected female head of state on the continent of Africa. Many of us had the opportunity to meet President Johnson Sirleaf and she was a gracious lady.

Eliza Turner AME Church is a large structure and the largest AME Church in Liberia. The sanctuary holds about 600 - 800 worshippers. It is a large church. The Reverend G. Keah Wakia is the pastor. Other pastors include the Reverends William Henry Heard, T. Ebenezer Ward, Dunmore Clarke, Frank Madison Reid, Jr., Fred Lucas, Jr., Frank Madison Reid, III, Anna R. Walker, and David R. Daniels. Other pastors served with distinction.

Next to Eliza Turner is the African Methodist University (AMEU). Bishop C. Garnett Henning, Sr., the 112th elected and consecrated bishop of the African Methodist Episcopal Church and the 26th bishop of the 14th Episcopal District founded AMEU. It was Bishop Henning’s desire to transform Monrovia College and Industrial Training School into a four-year degree granting institution, which became a reality in 1995. Bishop Henning, who had asked the church to send him to the 14th Episcopal District, established AMEU, as he said, “As an act of faith.” AMEU is the second largest university in Liberia. Presently, the AME University offers undergraduate programs in three colleges, the Bryant Theological Seminary, the College of Business and Public Administration and the College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences. With an enrollment of over 2600 students, AME University is the largest AME institution of higher learning.

The President of AME University is Dr. Levi B. Zangai. The first President of AME University was Dr. Louise York, who had also served as the President of Monrovia College.

The Bryant School of Ministries was founded and established on April 10, 1992 by the then Reverend David R. Daniels, Jr., pastor of Eliza Turner Memorial AME Church. The vision for the school was the result of the Right Reverend John R. Bryant and the Reverend Dr. Cecelia Williams Bryant’s desire to provide theological education for the pastors in the Liberia Annual Conference.

- The Celebration began

We arrived on Sunday evening and got settled late Sunday night and early, early Monday morning. It was after midnight before some of us went to our rooms. Monday was a rest day for the folks who traveled to Liberia from the United States.

The first worship service that we attended was held at Eliza Turner Memorial AME Church on Tuesday evening, February 21st. The Reverend (now Doctor, as he was awarded a Doctor of Divinity Degree later in the week) Ronnie Brailsford was concluding a three-day revival. The church was full, the choir sang and the music sounded very American. The sermon was a fire-setter. It was a hot night. The fans in the ceiling of the sanctuary struggled to provide a breeze and the breeze the fans provided was welcome; for without the breeze provided by the fans, it would have been a long, hot night…

(TO BE CONTINUED)

3. TENNESSEE ANNUAL CONFERENCE MINISTER PROMOTED:

Albert Strawther, a Lebanon native and an A.M.E. preacher, was promoted from captain to lieutenant colonel on Wednesday, March 1, 2006. He was head of the Tennessee State Highway Patrol’s driver education unit.

The second in command was labeled as being highly qualified for executive staff position by Kroll Government Services, a national consulting firm that performed his background check.

Additionally, he is a licensed Funeral Director and co-owner of Strawther and White Funeral Home in Gallatin, Tennessee

4. BRYANT TEMPLE A.M.E CHURCH WILL HOST NATIONAL WOMEN AND GIRLS HIV/AIDS AWARENESS DAY AND THE 3rd ANNUAL "WOMEN'S HEALTH AWARENESS FAIR":

Bryant Temple A.M.E Church, Los Angeles, along with the Youth and Young Adults from Audubon Middle School and Crenshaw High School will host National Women And Girls HIV/Aids Awareness Day and the 3rd Annual "Women's Health Awareness Fair"

Date/Time: FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 2006, 4 p.m. – 6 p.m.:
National Women and Girls HIV/AIDS Awareness Day

Activities will include discussion panel, a concert, as well as a special presentation.

SATURDAY, MARCH 11, 2006, 10 a.m. – 3 p.m.:

The 3rd Annual Women's Health Awareness Fair will feature free health screenings, counseling, referrals and health awareness - rapid HIV testing, diabetes, hypertension, nutrition and more!

Where: 2525 W. Vernon Ave. [Los Angeles] corner of 4th Ave. and Vernon
(Bryant Temple AME Church lot)

Admission: FREE

Our Goal: To address significant health issues affecting women in our community by providing education and free screenings. Free screenings could save the life of women. Education and early detection are key factors to preventive health care. Our primary focus is HIV/AIDS education and testing.

Massages, beauty products, skin care and other fun activities are planned.

5. 20TH EPISCOPAL DISTRICT - ZIMBABWE, MALAWI, TANZANIA & UGANDA:

The Rt. Rev. Wilfred Jacobus Messiah - Presiding Bishop
Mrs. Carol Isabella Messiah - Episcopal Supervisor

20th District Church Growth & Evangelism Easter Revival
Bulawayo City Hall - Bulawayo, Zimbabwe
April 9th - 16th, 2006
Host Pastor - The Rev. E. B. Ginya
Episcopal District Director - Church Growth & Evangelism
Host Church - Gumtree AME Church - Bulawayo

20th District Midyear & Board of Christian Education Congress
Agst Buildings - Lilongwe, Malawi
May 3rd - 7th, 2006
Host Pastor - The Rev. Norah Tchuwa
Host Church - Bethel AME Church

Third Session - Malawi North Annual Conference
August 2nd - 6th, 2006
Kavura AME Church - Ekwendeni
The Rev. Gift Chavula - Host Pastor
The Rev Laston Gumbo - Host Presiding Elder

Third Session - Malawi Central Annual Conference
August 9th - 13th, 2006
Mtendele AME Church - Mzimba
The Rev. Jonathon Theu - Host Pastor
The Rev. J. Theu - Host Presiding Elder

Second Session - Malawi South Annual Conference
August 16th - 20th, 2006
Matawale AME Church - Zomba
Pastor J. J. Joshua - Host Pastor
The Rev. Kitson Chiswe - Host Presiding Elder

Third Session - Southwest Zimbabwe Annual Conference
August 23rd - 27th, 2006
Victoria Falls AME Church - Victoria Falls
The Rev. Africa Jubane - Host Pastor
The Rev. Phillip Gava - Host Presiding Elder

Third Session - Northeast Zimbabwe Annual Conference
August 30th - September 3, 2006
Matema AME Church - Nyanga
The Rev. Frederick Matsaru - Host Pastor
The Rev. F. Matsaru - Host Presiding Elder

Second Session - Central Zimbabwe Annual Conference
September 6th - 10th, 2006
Allen Chapel AME Church - Kadoma
The Rev. William Kansapato - Host Pastor
The Rev. Isaac Manda - Host Presiding Elder

Second Session - Tanzania Annual Conference
September 13th - 17th, 2006
Mbeya AME Church - Kusango
The Rev. Wilson Ngulube - Host Pastor
The Rev. W. Ngulube - Host Presiding Elder

Second Session - Uganda Annual Conference
October 18th - 22nd, 2006
Kampala AME Church - Kampala
The Rev. Abert Mugyimba - Host Pastor
The Rev. Nicodemus Munyarugyendo - Host Presiding Elder

Mid-Quadrennium Convocation
December 1st - 3rd, 2006
Lilongwe, Malawi

All Are Welcomed To Attend. For Further Information You Can email THE Right Reverend Wilfred Messiah at wjmessiah2004@yahoo.com or Supervisor Carol Messiah at supervisormessiah@telkomsa.net

6. BE CAREFUL AND PROTECT YOUR HOTEL ROOM CARD KEYS:

The Washington Post reports that many hotel room cards have your personal information. Each card has your 16-digit credit number, a date, a person's name and the name of a bank. Your room card-key functions exactly like a credit card, allowing the carrier to pay for merchandise at any store or market where customers do their own swiping.

7. “DO YOU TALK TOO MUCH?”:

“Do you talk too much?” this was the question asked on Sunday, February 26 at Johnson Chapel AME Church/Malakoff for its Annual Lay Program.

The Reverend Mark Jackson graduated in 1997 with a Master of Divinity and was the former Dean of the Chapel at Paul Quinn College; former pastor of St. James in Terrell, Texas, and is presently the senior pastor of Allen Chapel AME Church in Athens, Texas.

Rev. Mark Jackson’s Black History presentation focused upon the notion that there is a time to speak and a time to listen. Rev. Jackson explored the theme and asked the question, “Do you talk too much?” He took his text from Proverbs 18:21; Matthew 12:36; and James 1:19. He said, “People pray, pray, and pray but oftentimes bring harm by what they say.”

“With this question, “Do you talk too much?” there are times when things should not be said and we should know when to be quiet,” said Jackson. Jackson stated that when we are talking there are times when we do not even know what we are saying. People do not realize that the words coming out of our mouths have a negative or positive reaction on others.

Words often have an impact on families, finances, even on us. Words have an effect on everything that we do.

Jackson said, “The tongue holds power - you have to build yourself, your church, your family up; you must know that wherever you are God is there also and can build up anything into greatness.”

“One thing that we as people must realize is that we should “Walk by faith and not by sight,” said Jackson.

People today must know that they live by the words, which are spoken. If the word is “possible,” then people should know by faith that anything is possible. If the word is “healing,” then people should know that God is a Healer. There is no need for us to have our heads hung low, but we should hold our heads high and know that God is an awesome God.

The congregation was moved by the strong message given by Rev. Jackson and expressed their thankfulness and praise for a favorable way in which he closed out Black History Month.

Now, ask yourself that question, “Do you talk too much?” What is your answer?

Submitted by Delanda S. Johnson

8. A MESSAGE FROM TAVIS SMILEY:

At the close of the 2005 State of the Black Union in Atlanta, we invited the public to weigh in on the most challenging issues facing Black America. I am happy to report that because of the huge response, we now have a document that outlines how individuals, groups, communities and the body politic can move forward to make this nation better. When we make Black America better, we make all of America better. We all want an America as good as its promise.The Covenant book is made up of 10 chapters on the issues identified by the public. They include economic disparity, health, education and environmental justice. While the completion of the book marks the end of one journey, it is in many ways the first step for those who want to move forward toward real progress in improving Black communities.

The Covenant

COVENANT I
Securing the Right to Healthcare and Well-Being

COVENANT II
Establishing a System of Public Education in which All Children Achieve at high levels and reach their full potential

COVENANT III
Correcting the System of Unequal Justice

COVENANT IV
Fostering Accountable Community-Centered Policing

COVENANT V
Ensuring Broad Access to Affordable Neighborhoods that Connect to Opportunity

COVENANT VI
Claiming Our Democracy

COVENANT VII
Strengthening Our Rural Roots

COVENANT VIII
Accessing Good Jobs, Wealth and Economic Prosperity

COVENANT IX
Assuring Environmental Justice for All

COVENANT X
Closing the Racial Digital Divide

www.covenantwithblackamerica.com

9. CLERGY FAMILY CONGRATULATORY ANNOUNCEMENT:

Hello AME Family!

Wanted to make you aware of a big decision I have made.

I am gong to Seminary in the fall in preparation of the full ordination process for ministry in the African Methodist Episcopal Church. I will preach my Trial Sermon on Sunday, March 26 -- 4 p.m. at the church.

I solicit your continued prayers, and if you are able, I would love to have you come share in the day.

God bless,
Morgan

Morgan DixonDuPage AME Church4300 Yackley AvenueLisle, IL 60532630-969-9800630-969-9807 faxwww.DuPageAMEC.orgThe Rev. Dr. James F. Miller, Pastor

Editor’s note: Great decision! Congratulations! Please keep The Christian Recorder updated as you progress in your theological studies.

10. CLERGY FAMILY CONGRATULATORY ANNOUNCEMENT:

We are proud to announce the birth of Keith, Jr. son of Rev. Keith Links and Mrs. Karmen Links of Trinity AME Church, Touwsriver, Cape Town in the 15th Episcopal District, Cape Annual Conference, South Africa.

Keith, Jr. was born on March 1, 2006, at 00h40 am, weighing in at 2.8kg.
Rev Keith Links was present at the hospital.
Truly, this is a time of "joy and thanksgiving." Keith L. B. Links


19. CLERGY FAMILY CONGRATULATORY ANNOUNCEMENTS PROVIDED BY:

Bishop Carolyn Tyler Guidry, Chair
Commission on Social Action Clergy Family Information Center

Mrs. Ora L. Easley - Administrator Email: Amespouses1@aol.com
(Nashville, Tennessee Contact) Phone: (615) 837-9736 Fax: (615) 833-3781
(Memphis, Tennessee Contact) (901) 578-4554 (Phone & Fax)

20. CONGRATULATION FROM THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER:

The staff of The Christian Recorder congratulates and shares your joy.

3/1/2006

THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER ONLINE ENGLISH EDITION (3/1/06)

Bishop Gregory G. M. Ingram - Chair, Commission on Publications
The Reverend Dr. Johnny Barbour, Jr., Publisher
The Reverend Dr. Calvin H. Sydnor III, Editor

1. A WORD FROM THE EDITOR:

I returned from Monrovia, Liberia on Monday evening and have been trying to get caught up in all of the work I couldn’t do in Liberia. Like some of you, I seem to get caught in “catch-22” situations. If I carry my laptop, I cannot get a connection. I leave my laptop home because I am sure that I will not be able to get an Internet connection and find out that I can get an Internet connection. I left my laptop at home when I went to Liberia and was told after I got there, that getting an Internet connection was possible. Well, I am glad that I did not take my laptop, even though the hotel apparently had Internet connection because the electrical connectivity is different from the U.S. system and I blew up my small coffee pot. I would have really been peeved if I had blown up my laptop, so I am glad that I didn’t take a chance with my laptop.

I have a lot to write, about the events in Liberia, and plan to get started immediately. I want to get this online edition out so that I can be caught up. Some of the bereavement notices are dated, but we want to honor those who have served our Zion and so we are publishing the notices received from AME Spouses (Sister Ora Easley) during my absence in this issue of The Christian Recorder Online.

- Liberia (Introduction - Part 1)

The trip from Nashville to Monrovia was long, but not as long as the trip to South Africa because the air itinerary to Liberia took us to Brussels for a long layover and then on to Monrovia with a stopover in Freetown, Sierra Leone. We met up with delegations from the First, Fifth, Seventh, and Eighth Episcopal Districts. When we arrived in Monrovia, The Right Reverend David R. Daniels and representatives of the 14th Episcopal District met us, along with the Right Reverend Vashti Murphy McKenzie and Supervisor Stan McKenzie who had arrived several days before our arrival.

We traveled to Eliza Turner African Methodist Episcopal Church in Monrovia where we were fed a delicious meal (More will be written about Eliza Turner AME later). Among the dishes served were potato greens, which are the leaves that grow on the potato plants. I thought they were collard greens cooked with potatoes. I never knew that you could eat the greens leaves from the potato plants. Potato greens taste similar to spinach. After the meal, we were taken to our hotels.

The Right Reverends John R. Bryant, who arrived later (Fifth Episcopal District), C. Garnett Henning (Eighth Episcopal District and the founder of AME University), Richard F. Norris (First Episcopal District), and Zedekiah L. Grady (“Retired, but not tired,” as Bishop Daniels repeatedly introduced him), along with Bishop Daniels, were the Episcopal leaders for the 14th Episcopal District and AME University celebration. On the flight with us from Brussels was the 14th Episcopal Supervisor Irene Daniels, General Officers George Flowers, Executive Director of the Global Witness and Ministry, Calvin H. Sydnor III, Editor of The Christian Recorder, Carl Hunter (Retired) and Connectional Officer, Mrs. Jamesina Evans, President of the Women’s Missionary Society. Bishop Daniels’ daughter and Mrs. Jamesina Evans’ Granddaughter also arrived on the same flight with us.

Let me say here, that the presiding elders and pastors who traveled with their bishops were indeed impressive and gave me the felling that we have some great presiding elders and pastors leading our congregations. Bishop Daniels called and spoke with the Right Reverend Philip R. Cousin, Sr., Senior Bishop of the AME Church, who remarked, after hearing who was present that it sounded to him as if we were holding a small General Conference in Liberia.

U.S. mainland Presiding Elders Herbert Eaddy, Henrietta Scott Fullard, William C. Lett, Winton Hill, George Tyler, Otis Lewis, Booker Guyton, George Franklin Holt, Sr., and Kenneth Brown, along with about thirty pastors were a part of the delegation attending this historic event. (I hope that I did not miss any of the Presiding Elders.)

The next morning we got up and were taken to Eliza Turner AME Church and AME University for a full worship experience and the dedication of the main building of AME University. It’s a real university with over 2600 students…

(More about the Liberia AME University Celebration in the Next Issue.)

Editor’s note: I have received a number of requests for a copy of the sermon I preached in Birmingham. I have appended the sermon below the bereavement notices at number 21 of this issue.

2. LETTER TO THE EDITOR:

Dr. Sydnor

I hope and pray that you publish this letter to the Christian Recorder.

It is from the Mozambique Annual Conference of the 18th Episcopal District under the leadership of Bishop Sarah F. Davis.

We have just had our Empowerment teaching program, which was held in the two Presiding Elders Districts, namely Beira and Maputo.

The great joy that was seen in the face of the Mozambicans was smiling faces and a voice of appreciation and thanksgiving to Bishop Davis and Dr. Dickerson, for making it possible to us to have Bibles.

You did not see how happy were the people from the youngest to the eldest person of the conference.

All the members of this Conference will and share the word of God together.

Therefore, we will not let this opportunity go without saying, “Thank You, Dr. Dickerson for the efforts that you did to this people of God.”

May God richly bless you in your ministry.

The Rev. Jose Luis Sevene

3. KATRINA RELIEF MISSION:

We invite you to join the following on a Katrina Relief Mission

- The Board of Rabbis of Southern California
- The Jewish Community Relations Committee of The Jewish Federation of Greater Los Angeles
- Grant A.M.E. Church
- The Southern California A.M.E. Ministerial Alliance

When: Sunday April 23-Friday April 28, 2006

Where: Gulfport, MS

What: Rebuilding houses destroyed by Hurricane Katrina

Cost: $100 plus airfare for each participant

Soon after Passover and Easter, we will travel to one of the hard-hit cities on the Gulf Coast to help rebuild a destroyed community. Working with the Westminster Presbyterian Church in Gulfport, MS, we will clean, rebuild, and most importantly, bring hope to an area that desperately needs it. We will eat together, work together, and learn together—and together, make a difference.

If you are in good health, able, and willing to work, we hope you will join us.

For more information, please contact:

Sari Laufer, Board of Rabbis, at: 323-761-8601 slaufer@jewishla.org
Cheryl Baylark, Grant A.M.E., at 323-564-1151 aadcd@grantamechurch.org

Financial:

We are asking for a personal commitment of $100 plus the cost of travel to and from New Orleans. All other costs, including food, lodging, supplies, and ground transportation, will be paid by the sponsoring organizations.

We do not want to turn anyone away for financial need. If the cost is prohibitive, please contact your sponsoring synagogue, church or organization.

If you are interested in participating, please contact Sari Laufer (323-761-8601 or slaufer@jewishla.org). We will send you a short application form, to be returned with your payment of $100.

Logistics:

1) FLIGHTS: Each participant will be responsible for his/her own travel, allowing him/her to decide on times and preferred airlines. We suggest that everyone plan to arrive in either New Orleans or Gulfport as early as possible on Sunday, April 23. American, Continental, United, and US Airways all offer flights that meet our schedule, and will return you to Los Angeles in plenty of time for Shabbat (Jewish Sabbath). We estimate the cost of flights to be around $300-$350.

We will be renting vans, and will coordinate travel from the airport to the work site as the project progresses.

2) LODGING: With a strong recommendation from Hillel International (worldwide Jewish student organization on college campuses), we are partnering with the Westminster Presbyterian Church in Gulfport, MS. Hillel had a wonderful learning experience working with them, and we look forward to a similar experience.

Please be advised that these are not luxurious accommodations.

The church operates a tent facility to house volunteers—participants are encouraged to bring AeroBeds, sleeping bags, ground pads, etc. There are shower facilities onsite with hot water. As the time approaches, we will provide a detailed packing list.

3) FOOD: As part of our arrangement with Westminster Presbyterian Church, we will have the use of their kitchen facilities for the entire week. Vegetarian food will be provided for every meal, and kosher packaged foods will be available as needed.

Work:

While there is no way to be certain about the exact work we will be doing, we can guarantee that it will be difficult, physical labor. Good physical health and a willingness to work hard are prerequisites for this trip. Prior experience is not.

If you are previously skilled or experienced in building, roofing, etc, that is wonderful! If not, we will be receiving training and supervisor from skilled laborers in the area.

Learning:

As a service-learning trip, we will participate in daily sessions with our rabbis, ministers, teachers and leaders. Together, through text study, prayer, and discussion we will learn about the Jewish commitment to social justice, and our religious obligations for making trips like these.

If you are in good health, able, and willing to work, we hope you will join us for this important Mission. For more information, please contact:

Sari Laufer, Board of Rabbis, at:
323-761-8601 slaufer@jewishla.org

Cheryl Baylark, Grant A.M.E., at:
323-564-1151 aadcd@grantamechurch.org

4. THE GLOBAL CORNER - REPORT TO THE PRESIDING BISHOP OF THE 20TH EPISCOPAL DISTRICT:

I hereby inform you that there are new churches in Kiboga District, Uganda where I used to pastor.

I managed to invite the President of Uganda Conference Mr. Rumbidzayi and the President of WMS/YPD Mrs. Dianah on the December 17, 2005 where they managed to come and teach the Doctrine and Discipline of African Methodist Episcopal Church and encouraged people to join the church.

These are the churches and members waiting for your approval.

1. Ntunda Church has fifty (50) members.
2. Ntunda II Church has thirty (30) members.
3. Kazo Church has thirty (30) members.
4. Kigangazi Church has forty (47) members.

The congregation needs:

1. We need a music and sound system, which can invite many people and this becomes our advantage by feeding them the word of God.
2. We need bibles of Luganda.
3. We need uniforms.I remain yours, Pastor Munezero Innocent

Submitted by the Right Reverend Wilfred J. Messiah

5. HOTEL INFORMATION CONCERNING THE 2006 GENERAL BOARD AND BISHOP’S COUNCIL THAT WILL BE HELD JUNE 25-28, 2006 IN CHARLESTON, SOUTH CAROLINA:

The Meetings will be held at the Charleston Area Convention Center.

General Board Hotels:

Embassy Suites Hotel Airport - Convention Center
5055 International Boulevard
North Charleston, SC 29418
(843) 747-1882
Group Rate: $129 Single/Double - $139 Triple - $149 Quad

Residence Inn Charleston Airport
5035 International Boulevard
North Charleston, SC 29414
(843) 266-3434
Group Rate: $129

Hilton Garden Inn Charleston Airport
5265 International Boulevard
North Charleston, SC 29418
(843) 308-9330
Group Rate: $109

Holiday Inn Charleston Airport
& Convention Center
5264 International Boulevard
North Charleston, SC 29418
(843) 576-0300
Group Rate: $109

Be sure to mention AME to get the group rate.

6. ARKANSAS CONFERENCE REVIVAL CARAVAN:

The Arkansas Conference of the African Methodist Episcopal Churches (Little Rock-North Little Rock-Fort Smith Districts) announces its “First Spring Revival Caravan.”

The Revival will be held March 3 to April 16, 2006 in Little Rock and North Little Rock Churches.

The dates and preachers are:

March 17, 2006 - Saint Andrew AME Church, Little Rock. The speaker will be the Rev. James Thomas, pastor of Bethel AME Church in North Little Rock.

April 7, 2006 - Mt. Nebo AME Church, Little Rock. The speaker will be the Rev. Randolph Martin, pastor of Union A.M.E. Church in Little Rock.

April 14, 2006 - Good Friday, Union AME Church, Little Rock. The speaker will be the Rev. Beverly White, pastor of Mount Nebo AME Church in Little Rock (North Little Rock District)

April 16, 2006 - Early Easter Sunrise Service will be held at Bethel AME Church, Little Rock. The speaker will be the Rt. Reverend Richard Allen Chappelle Sr., Presiding Prelate of the 12th Episcopal District. The service will begin at 6:30 a.m.

Each Friday night, worship services will begin at 7:00 p.m. Music will be provided by various church choirs. Testimonies and Praise Dancers will be featured at each service.

7. THE KENTUCKY LAY ORGANIZATION IS PROVIDING BUS TRANSPORTATION TO THE 13TH DISTRICT MID YEAR CONVOCATION:

The Kentucky Conference Lay Organization is again sponsoring a chartered bus from Miller Transportation ride to the 13th District Lay Organization meeting on March 11, 2006 to Lee Chapel AME Church in Nashville, TN. The donation per person is either $26.00 for the 47-passenger bus or $24.00 for the 55-passenger bus.

We have also invited the West Kentucky Conference to join us on this trip, so the seating is on a first come basis. The bus will leave from Historic Saint Paul, Lexington at 5:15 am and will stop at the Park and Ride if needed to pickup additional passengers along the Bluegrass Parkway.

To secure your seating on the bus we will need a $10.00 deposit as soon as possible with the reminder of the amount to be turned in no later than Sunday, March 5, 2006. These dates could change upon the final signing of the contract with Miller Transportation.

We will be traveling to Lee Chapel AME Church, 1732 Scovel Street, Nashville, TN 37208. The meeting will start at 9:00 am CST. As long as we can stay on schedule, we should be able to depart from Nashville no later than 3:00 p.m. CST to arrive back in Lexington no later than 5:00 pm EST.

This was a very successful trip last year and we are hoping to do the same this year, but we need the support from the membership of the Kentucky Conference Laity. If you have never been to a 13th District Lay meeting, here is your opportunity.

Please mail all payments to 1059 Redwood Dr, Lexington, KY 40511 and all checks should be made out to the Kentucky Conference Lay Organization.


Yours in Christian Service

Priscilla Sullivan, President
Kentucky Conference Lay Organization
Website: http://www.kylay.com/
Email: kylay@iglou.com

8. THE 13TH EPISCOPAL DISTRICT MID YEAR CONVOCATION WOMEN IN MINISTRY PRAYER BREAKFAST:

The Women in Ministry Prayer Breakfast will be held on March 18, 2006 at 8:00 a.m. at the Country Hearth Inn, Columbia, Tennessee.

The speaker will be the Rev. Cassandra Young Marcus, Assistant Pastor, Turner Chapel AME Church, Marietta, Georgia. The breakfast theme, Praying through the Struggle.”

This is what the Lord Almighty says: Call for the wailing women; send for the most skillful. Let them come quickly and wail till our eyes overflow with tears and water streams from our eyelids. The sound of wailing is heard from Zion: “We are so ruined and our shame is great!” Now, hear the word of the Lord; open your ears to the words of His mouth. Jeremiah 9:17-20 NIV (paraphrased)

Everyone is welcome and invited to attend the breakfast, Donation: $20.00.

The Right Reverend Vashti Murphy McKenzie is the Presiding Prelate of the 13th Episcopal District.

9. SIXTH EPISCOPAL DISTRICT 2005-2006 DISTRICT CALENDAR:

SOUTH GEORGIA ANNUAL CONFERENCE
March 7-10, 2006
Nelson Chapel A.M.E. Church
640 Hall Street
Bainbridge, Georgia 31718
(229) 246-0493
The Rev. John Thomas, Sr., Host Pastor
The Rev. Harvey R. Williamson, Host Presiding Elder

SOUTHWEST GEORGIA CONFERENCE
March 21-24, 2006
Saint John A.M.E. Church
2980 Steam Mill Road
Columbus, Georgia 31907
(706) 682-6944
The Rev. Dr. Debora F. Grant, Host Pastor
The Rev. Dr. M. Sven Karl Colquitt, Host Presiding Elder

GEORGIA CONFERENCE
April 4-7, 2006
Greater Mount Zion A.M.E. Church
1085 State Street
Waycross, Georgia 31501
(912) 283-3683
The Rev. Abrahm Frazier, Sr., Host Pastor
The Rev. J. B. Robinson, Host Presiding Elder

AUGUSTA GEORGIA CONFERENCE
April 18-21, 2006
Ward Chapel A.M.E. Church
1814 Fifteenth Street
Augusta, Georgia 30901
(706) 733-0746
The Rev. Richard Allen Smith, Host Pastor
The Rev. Ella M. Samuels, Host Presiding Elder

MACON GEORGIA CONFERENCE
May 2-5, 2006
Greater Turner Tabernacle A.M.E. Church
1104 Third Street
Macon, Georgia 31208
(478) 743-4932
The Rev. Richard A. Yancey, Host Pastor
The Rev. Alan H. Wicker, Host Presiding Elder

ATLANTA NORTH GEORGIA CONFERENCE
May 16-19, 2006
Turner Chapel A.M.E. Church
492 N. Marietta Parkway
Marietta, Georgia 30060
(770) 422-6791
The Rev. Kenneth E. Marcus, Host Pastor
The Rev. David B. Rhone, Host Presiding Elder

POST-PLANNING MEETING
May 25-27, 2006
Saint James A.M.E. Church
102 Sixth Avenue
Columbus, Georgia 31901
(706) 322-8043
The Rev. Scottie Swinney, Host Pastor
The Rev. Dr. M. Sven “Karl” Colquitt, Host Presiding Elder

10. NEWS FROM THE SIXTH EPISCOPAL DISTRICT:

The Rev. Dr. Dickerson, AME Historiographer and Editor of The A.M.E. Church Review was one of the guest preachers' during our opening worship service Thursday night for our Founder's Day celebration in Savannah, GA. at Saint Philip Monumental AME Church. The Reverend George A. Moore, Jr., host pastor. His sermon topic was, “Are we building Babel's or Bethels?” Powerful message.

The Rev. Ernest Davis Jr. Pastor of Bethel AME Church Albany, GA. was the noonday preacher on Friday; Sermon Topic: “What do you do when the going gets tough?”

Rev. Frederick D. Sherrod, lll, Friday night preacher: Topic: “It's time for the AME Church to come back home.”

Rev. Tiate Carson, from the 10th Episcopal District was our closing preacher on Saturday. Subject: “You have to keep playing by the rules.”

Submitted by the Reverend B. L. Francis

11. SISTERS KEEPING THE COVENANT:

I greet you with the love, joy, and peace of the Lord Jesus Christ.

Indeed, it is a pleasure to announce the upcoming Women’s General Assembly 2006 “AND SHE SHALL BE BLESSED” which will hail in Dover, Delaware at the Sheraton Dover Hotel on Friday, August 25-26, 2006, and in Charleston, SC at the Embassy Suites Hotel on Friday, October 27-28, 2006.

Both of these explosive events for women will feature dynamic preaching, anointed workshops, the anointed dance ministry of The Daughters of Shabach of Baltimore, MD, the inspiring music ministry of The Eastern Shore Mass Choir, Recording Artist Rev. Carolyn Brailsford, and the “one and only,” Jazz Saxophonist Tony Smith.

Women’s General Assembly 2006 provides an opportunity for women to receive healing, restoration and revival, as we pursue abundant and victorious Christian living. We are expecting God to heal minds, bodies, and spirits; inspire purpose; restore marriages and family relations; nurture women in the Word of God; and empower women to fulfill their destiny.

This glorious event is sponsored by SISTERS KEEPING THE COVENANT with the Rev. Maxine L. Thomas, First Lady/Assistant Pastor of Morris Brown AME Church and the Rev. Dr. Henrietta S. Fullard, Presiding Elder of the Jamaica Long Island District of the AME Church. They will, with a team of other dynamic speakers, present conferences for women both nationally and internationally.

If you are a pastor, or community or civic leader, we encourage you to share the news of this upcoming conference with those who are members of your church, business, or association. We encourage all to share the news of this dynamic and life-changing event with as many women as you meet.

If you would like to plan a bus trip or to be of help in some other way, please contact Rev. Maxine L. Thomas at 610-583-1175. Thank you for your prayers and support.

Submitted by the Rev. Maxine L. Thomas

12. ONE-YEAR ANNIVERSARY OF GENESIS AME CHURCH:

It brings me great joy to send this announcement of the One Year Anniversary of Genesis AME Church, located in Fairfield, California

We are honored to have as our guest speaker for this joyous occasion the Rev. Dr. Harold R. Mayberry the pastor of First AME Church, Oakland, California. We invite all of you from across the AME Connection and would be honored to have you join us for this celebration on March 26, 2006 at 3:30 p.m. A repast will be served beginning at 1:00 p.m.

It is said that the first year in life is the most important and we thank God for blessing us thus far in this journey. And, we are looking forward to many years to come in serving our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ in the Fairfield/Suisun Community.

Please contact me directly at (510) 860-9500 to RSVP. If you are unable to attend and would like to sow a seed into the Genesis Ministry please feel free to do so before March 26th and we will acknowledge your gift during our celebration.

Yours in Christ,

The Rev. Cubie Finley, III

13. EARTH DAY SUNDAY:

Praising the beauty of God's creation is an essential part of our ongoing faith journey and worship experience and each year we dedicate one Sunday to lift up creation stewardship as a focus through an Earth Day celebration. Each year, the National Council of Churches' Eco-Justice Working Group focuses on a particular environmental theme and highlights a number of ways individuals and congregations can celebrate and protect God's creation. We hope these ideas inspire further thoughts, conversations, and actions in answering God's call to be faithful stewards of creation.

Through the Eye of a Hurricane: Rebuilding Just Communities (2006)
- Resource (.pdf version) including information on Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, basics on environmental justice and our lifestyle choices, sermon starter, bulletin insert, adult study and youth education ideas.
Sacred Oceans and Seas: (2005)
- Resource (.pdf version) including basics on oceans and seas, sermon starter, adult study and youth education ideas.

- Sample liturgy / Call to Worship Bulletin Insert
- Ideas for personal, congregational and community action.

Life-Giving Breath of God: Protecting Precious Air Resources (2004)

- Resource (.pdf version) including Sermon Starter and general information on air issues.

- Call to Worship Bulletin Insert

- Opportunities to Take Action

Waters of Life: Enough for All (2003)
- Reflections on the importance of fresh water
- Sermon Starters
- Call to Worship
- Links and Resources
- Opportunities to Take Action
- Water Facts
- Full Earth Day Sunday Resource. You will need Adobe Acrobat Reader to view it. Click here to download Acrobat Reader for free.)
- Earth Day Sunday Bulletin Insert. You will need Adobe Acrobat Reader to view it. Click here to download Acrobat Reader for free.

Caring for God's Creation: Making the World Safe for Children (2002)
- Brochure: Raising Children Toxic-Free
- School Environmental Protection Act
- Worship Resources
- Earth Day Sunday Bulletin Insert. You will need Adobe Acrobat Reader to view it. Click here to download Acrobat Reader for free.

Witnessing to the Resurrection: God's Caring for Creation (2001)
- Worship Resources
- Sermon Starters
- Brochure with worship resources and sermon notes (version 1 and version 2). You will need Adobe Acrobat Reader to view them. Click here to download Acrobat Reader free.
- Resource List
- Information about Global Warming
- Interfaith Climate Change Campaign

Good Stewards of God's Gift of Energy (2000)
- Worship materials (view either as an .html webpage file or a .pdf text/printable file. If you choose .pdf, you will need Adobe Acrobat Reader to view it. Click here to download Acrobat Reader for free.)
- Sermon Notes
- Earth Day 2000 brochure (view either as an .html webpage file or a .pdf text/printable file. If you choose .pdf, you will need Adobe Acrobat Reader to view it. Click here to download Acrobat Reader free.)
- Bulletin Insert
- Resource List
- Information about clean cars and clean energy
- Information about the Energy Stewardship Congregation Program
- Suggested messages to Senators and President about clean energy agenda

Sustainable Living (1999)
- Worship Suggestions
- Sermon Notes
- Earth Day Sunday Resource. Includes worship suggestions and sermon notes and additional information. This is a .pdf file and you will need Adobe Acrobat Reader to view it. Click here to download Acrobat Reader free.)

Editor’s note: Check out all of the links in the article above. There is a wealth of materials and sermon helps. You will miss a lot of “great stuff” if you fail to check out the links.

14. THE PASTOR’S CORNER - FAN THE FLAME – SERVANT LEADERSHIP:

24And the Lord’s servant must not quarrel; instead, he must be kind to everyone, able to teach, not resentful. 25Those who oppose him he must gently instruct, in the hope that God will grant them repentance leading them to a knowledge of the truth… (II Timothy 2: 24-25)

As we end our series, “Fan the Flame,” we see that God has called us to fan into flame the gift of His Spirit in us through power, love, self-discipline, focus, faith, strength, endurance, and sanctification. All of this, God does in us, so we might be empowered to be His servants, leading others to a knowledge of the truth. God empowers us to be servant leaders. God, through the apostle Paul, describes the temperament of His servant leaders as those who must not quarrel, must be kind to everyone, able to teach, not resentful; those who gently instruct and lead others to a knowledge of the truth.

Jesus informs (Matthew 20: 25-26) us that the greatest level of leadership is to be achieved through the greatest level of service, “whoever wants to become great among you must be your servant.” Yes! The level of leadership I attain in my marriage, family, in my church, on my job, in my community is tied to the level of service I am willing to render to others.
James Berkley, in his book “Leadership Handbook of Management & Administration”, lists five levels of servant leadership: position, permission, production, people development, and personhood. The teaching and life of Jesus demonstrate these five levels of servant leadership.

POSITION – Matthew 20: 20-28
Jesus describes leaders who lead because they have been given a certain title. Their influence is based on the title or formal authority they hold. In the family it could be demonstrated through phrases as, “because I said so,” or “You're my wife/husband, so you ought to,” or “I'm the man in this family, so you're to submit to me.” In businesses, organizations or churches leadership based on position may rely on territorial rights, protocol, tradition, and organization charts. These are negative only when they become the basis for authority and influence. They're not a substitute for leadership skills. When I asked a study group about this kind of leadership they commented that it doesn't work because people usually go right back to doing whatever they were doing when the leader isn't looking. Are you just “The Boss”, or are you “A Leader?”

PERMISSION - Matthew 4: 18-22
We encounter a greater level of empowerment at the next level of leadership, “permission.” As Jesus was walking by the Sea of Galilee, He asked four men to simply, “Come, follow me,” and they did. At this level of leadership people follow because they want to. It’s about inspiring people to work with you even when they don't have to. People know that you truly care about the family, congregation, organization, or community. This leader develops relationships and donates time, energy, and focuses toward the followers’ needs and desires. There is an old saying that goes, “People don't care how much you know, until they know how much you care!”

PRODUCTION – Matthew 4: 23-25
At this third level of empowerment, people follow because of what the leader has done for the organization. Jesus demonstrated an effective ministry of teaching, preaching, and healing. Good things begin to happen as a result of the leadership. Goals begin to be realized, and results are positive. People do not come together just to get together – they come together to accomplish a real purpose (to get things done). Every one wants to be on the winning team. People follow because people pay close attention to what we produce.

PEOPLE DEVELOPMENT - Matthew 5: 1-2
People follow because of what you have contributed toward their development. After demonstrating His ability to teach, preach, and heal, Jesus “sat down. His disciples came to Him, and He began to teach them.” A leader is not great because of his or her power, but because of his or her ability to empower others. We are to lead others and develop them to be the best that God has called them to be. Your family, church, business, or organization may not have the most people, the most money, and may not be the most popular – but that will not stop you from being the most excellent through the power of Almighty God! Workers’ responsibility is doing the work themselves; leader’s responsibility is to develop others to do the work excellently (Matthew 10: 1-5). True leader are recognized because their people always demonstrate superior performances.

PERSONHOOD - Matthew 16: 13-16
People follow because of who you are and what you represent. After traveling for several months with Jesus, Peter now knew Jesus’ true identity. The presence of God in Jesus’ life defined His identity, as God the Father revealed Himself through Jesus. After we have progressed through the first four levels, leaders are recognized through an effective track record, and persons know what they are able to do. We are known by the fruit we have produced. Truly effective leaders are able to look back over various places in their lives and see how God has used them to accomplish His kingdom work here on earth, and see how God has used them to bring out the best in others – compelling others to follow them – not because they're the boss, but because they are leaders.
God empowers us to be servant leaders. The greatest level of leadership is to be achieved through the greatest level of service, “whoever wants to become great among you must be your servant.”

(Special thanks to Rev. Joseph Cousin, Bethel AME Church, Ann Arbor, Michigan for presenting the James Berkley concepts to the members of the Chicago Annual Conference of the AME Church.)

Pastor James M. Moody, Sr.
Quinn Chapel AME Church, Chicago, Illinois
www.quinnchicago.org

15. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

From: clinton@1stdistrict-ame.com

We regret to inform you of the passing of Rev. John Walker. He was an Itinerant Elder at AME Union Church. The following information has been provided regarding funeral arrangements.

Viewing and Services will be held Friday, February 24, 2006
Viewing - 9:00 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. Funeral - 11:00 a.m.

AME Union A.M.E. Church
1600 West Jefferson Street
Philadelphia, PA 19121

The Rev. Kenneth Mitchem, Pastor
Phone: 215-765-5868
Fax: 215-765-6935

Eulogist: Rev. Martha A. Lang
Pastor at Mount Tabor A.M.E. Church, Philadelphia

Condolences may be sent to:
Mrs. Olivia Walker
720 North 66th Street
Philadelphia, PA 19151

Phone: 215-871-7765

Please remember the entire Walker family in your prayers.

16. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

From The Right Reverend T. Larry Kirkland, Presiding Bishop

Mr. Andres Joseph Underwood, son of Rev. & Mrs. Zachary Watkins went to be with the Lord on Tuesday, February 21, 2006. Rev. Watkins is pastor of Allen Chapel A.M.E. Church, Woodlawn, Birmingham, AL.

The homegoing celebration is Saturday, February 25, 2006, 12 Noon at Harmony Street Baptist church. Scott-McPherson Funeral Home directing.

Messages may be sent to:

Rev. & Mrs. Zachary Watkins
548 42nd Place, North
Birmingham, AL 35222

Please remember the family in your prayers.

17. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

Received from: harrison@global.co.za

It is with deep regret that the Tantsi Family announces the passing of Dabulamanzi Zechariah Tantsi, the son of the late Rev. James Yapi Hogarth and Ntombikabani Tantsi. His Grandfather the late Rev. J. Z. Tantsi was one of the founding ministers of the AME church in South Africa together in 1896 with the Rev. Mangena Maake Mokone. His uncle, the late Rev. Nimrod Boyce Tantsi was a pastor in the AME church.

Brother Tansti was born on July 16, 1928 and passed on February 24, 2006. A memorial service will be held in his honor on Thursday, March 2, 2006 at Ebenezer AME church in Atteridgeville, Pretoria, South Africa at 12 noon.

The funeral service will be on the Friday (March 3, 2006) at Ebenezer AME church in Atteridgeville, Pretoria, South Africa from 7:30 am.

He was a faithful member of the AME Church and of the Lay Organization.

Please remember the Tantsi family in your prayers.

18. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

Deaconess Cather Mae Inkton, the mother of the Reverend Shirley Inkton Bowers, pastor of Holly Grove AME Church, North Little Rock, Arkansas, passed on Sunday, February 26, 2006.

Arrangements for Deaconess Cather Mae Inkton are as follows:
Funeral Services
Friday, March 3, 2006
11:00 a.m. at the Ministers' Institute
1329 Front Street
Eudora, AR 71640

Services are entrusted to:
Dillard Funeral Home
137 Front Street
Eudora, AR 71640
(870) 355-4888 (Phone)

Rev. Bowers and her family may be contacted in Little Rock at (501) 626-0632.

Condolences may be sent to:
Reverend Shirley Inkton Bowers
Holly Grove AME Church
7954 Old Jacksonville Hwy
North Little Rock, AR 72117

Please keep the family in your prayers now and in the days ahead.

Sisterly,
Anita Brannon

19. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT ANNOUNCEMENTS PROVIDED BY:

Bishop Carolyn Tyler Guidry, Chair
Commission on Social Action Clergy Family Information Center

Mrs. Ora L. Easley - Administrator Email: Amespouses1@aol.com
(Nashville, Tennessee Contact) Phone: (615) 837-9736 Fax: (615) 833-3781
(Memphis, Tennessee Contact) (901) 578-4554 (Phone & Fax)

Please remember these families in your prayers.

20. CONDOLENCES TO THE BEREAVED FROM THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER:

The Chair of the Commission on Publications, the Right Reverend Gregory G. M. Ingram; the Publisher, the Reverend Dr. Johnny Barbour and the Editor of the Christian Recorder, the Reverend Dr. Calvin H. Sydnor III offer our condolences and prayers to those who have lost loved ones. We pray that the peace of Christ will be with you during this time of your bereavement.

21. SERMON THE EDITOR PREACHED AT THE EVANGELISM CONFERENCE IN BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA IN JULY:

“Sometimes there is no Rain in the Land!”
I Kings 17:1-7

So, he went and did according to the word of the LORD; he went and dwelt by the brook Cherith that is east of the Jordan. And, the ravens brought him bread and meat in the morning, and bread and meat in the evening; and he drank from the brook. And, after a while, the brook dried up, because there was no rain in the land.
I Kings 17:5 – 7

Introduction

When we do what God calls us to do as a part of the body of Christ, conflict is almost always a possibility. Obedience is in conflict with disobedience; righteousness is in conflict with sin; and good is in conflict with evil. So, men and women of God have always experienced conflict.
Obedient prophets have never been popular. Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, Daniel, Hosea, Joel, Amos, Obadiah, Jonah, Micah, Nahum, Habakkuk, Zephaniah, Haggai, Zechariah, Malachi, Stephen, Paul, Timothy, Richard Allen, Martin Luther King, Jr.; all of them were unpopular.
They were unpopular because people reject God’s word and people don’t want to hear the truth. Many of us don’t want to hear the truth. Let me give you an example.

Illustration: Look at your neighbor and say, while squinting your eyes a little bit and say, "You look like you have gained weight."

Preachers are tempted to tell people what they want to hear.

Illustration: Now look at your neighbor and tell them, “You look like you have lost weight. Have you been working out?”

Ministry is conflict.

Do we tell people the truth or do we compromise ministry by telling people what they want to hear? We are called upon to be committed to God’s agenda. And, sometimes, God’s agenda is in conflict with man’s agenda.

Jesus tells us to love everybody, but we only want to love those we like and those who agree with our points of view. Jesus commands us to, “…love your neighbor as yourself." The translation of that part of the Summary of the Law commands us to, "be open to God's call for you and me to go to hell."

You might be offended to hear that God would tell you such a thing, but that is precisely what the gospel calls us to do!

- Hell is where the poor are trapped in places of indifference.
- It is the back section of a psychiatric ward.
- Hell is a dingy downtown jail where frightened human beings cower.
- It's the crowded slum where teenage unwed mothers give birth to unwanted babies.
- Hell is in the hospital corridor when parents are told that their child has an incurable disease.
- Hell is when you have to have a drink before eleven o'clock in the morning.
- It's when you have cheated, stolen or lied and been caught and you feel worthless.
- Hell is crack houses and where drug addicts nod and live.
- Hell is where the presence of Christ is so badly needed.
- Hell is the world where we are called to care for others.
- Hell is finding out that you tested positive for the HIV Virus.
- It’s when you find out that your children are using illegal drugs.
- Hell is the call for preachers and leaders to love members who don’t love them.

The "Great Commission" does not tell the world to come to us. It does not tell us to go to the "good people." It tells us to "go to ALL of the world." "Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit."

A problem with the church is that we focus and affirm the good and tell the bad to "go to hell." Perhaps we need to re-focus our concern and attention to the bad people and tell our good people to "go to Hell." Hell is where people are hurting. We need to go to Hell and bring hurting people back to God!"

The prophet in our text, Elijah, was a man of God who stayed in trouble because he went to Hell and spoke the words that the LORD told him to speak. Ahab and Jezebel were Elijah’s Hell!
Hell is conflict.
- People do not want to hear that what they are doing is wrong!
- People do not want to hear that they are disobedient!
- People do not want to hear that they are sinners!
Preachers and biblical teachers must hear the word of the LORD and speak the word of the LORD!
God often speaks in a “small still voice,” but God also speaks with the suddenness of lightening and with the frightening precision of booming thunder. However God speaks, we must hear and speak the Word of the LORD!

And, when we speak God's word, we must be courageous because sometimes the word of the LORD has to be spoken to a disobedient and rebellious people. Elijah told Ahab:
"As the Lord God of Israel lives, before whom I stand, there shall not be dew nor rain these years, except at my word."

History calls Elijah the “chief of the prophets” but Ahab called him the “troubler of Israel.” The teaching moment here is that “it is not what people call you; it’s what you answer to.”
Elijah had the power of healing in his body, and he knew how to pray. In his time of trouble, he could pray in the words of the Negro spiritual,

“It’s me, it’s me, it’s me O LORD, standing in the need of prayer.”

And so powerful were Elijah's prayers that one day he prayed down fire from heaven and on the same day, 450 prophets of Baal were destroyed (I Kings 18:20 – 40). On another occasion, he prayed and the widow’s son was raised back to life. (I Kings 17:22)

God told Elijah to tell Ahab that rain would be withheld from Israel for three years because Ahab and Jezebel had set up the most godless government in Israel. Ahab had dedicated a temple to Baal, the Canaanite god of storm and rain, and Jezebel gathered to herself an army of false prophets.

Sometimes the rain will stop falling in our lives because of our disobedience to the Word of God.
Sometimes disobedience comes into our lives because we let the fires on our altars go out; we do not keep the fires burning.

Illustration: Take a moment to think about your call to ministry and the excitement that you had. You - and I too - had a watershed of excitement. Ask yourself, “Has the rain stop falling?” Am I in a spiritual drought?

The drought came to Israel and the land became dry, and not only was the land dry, but a drought had already taken place in the spiritual order of the nation. Like the land, the spiritual foundation of the nation itself was dry.

Whenever a nation, a church, or an individual forgets the words of the Psalmist,
“Happy is the nation whose God is the Lord! happy the people he has chosen to be his own!”

- That nation will become dry.
- When a denomination loses its spiritual direction, that denomination will become dry.
- When local churches lose their focus upon ministry and kingdom building, they become dry
- When Jesus ceases to be “the center of our joy,” our spiritual lives and focus for ministry, becomes dry.
- When ministers neglect the teachings and the workings of the Holy Spirit in their lives, their ministry becomes dry.

Elijah spoke the truth to Ahab, but Ahab did not want to hear the truth and he responded with vengeance.

The LORD told Elijah to into hiding at the Cherith Brook. Though the brook was a hiding place, it was not a holding place. It was just a temporary shelter for the prophet to be re-energized. The land was experiencing a drought, but God made provisions for the Elijah. As God made provisions for Elijah, God will provide for us.

A lot of preachers need to find a holding place, and like Elijah, need to find a place to be re-energized; where God can feed them. The old folks used to say,
"Go out and have a little talk with Jesus, tell Him all about your troubles and He will make everything alright!"

When you give your best and know that you have done your best, God will provide a hiding place. The Bible reminds us that,

- David found shelter from Saul at Engedi.
- Queen Esther found refuge in the courage to say, "If I perish I perish.”
- Elijah, a little later on, found refuge under a juniper tree.
- Jesus found refuge in Gethsemane.
- Mary Magdalene, Joanna and Mary found a temporary refuge in the empty tomb.
- John found refuge on the Isle of Patmos.
- Martin Luther took refuge in the castle of Wartburg.
And, sometimes, God provides refuge in unusual and strange places.
- Dr. Martin Luther King found a hiding place in the Birmingham Jail where he wrote his famous letter.

In times of trial, we can find a hiding place and can proclaim with David,
“The Lord is my shepherd I shall not want. God prepares a table before me in the presence of mine enemies. God anoints my head with oil and my cup overflows.”

When God provides for us, God gives us all that we need. Not only did God provide a hiding place, but God also put food on the table. God sent the ravens to bring him meat and bread both morning and night. God can use anything!

Illustration: The raven is a symbol of death and disaster. It is known as the “messenger of misery. “ It was the “messenger of misery” that God sent to sustain Elijah.

The teaching point is that God is always in control and God uses whatever God needs to redeem us. A deeper lesson: In the midst of human failure, God can depend upon the creatures that crawl upon the face of the earth.

Illustrations:
- When the people did not believe Noah when he told them that rain was coming, the animals booked passage on the Ark.

- Balaam’s disobedience blinded him so that he could not see the messenger of God, but God used Balaam’s donkey to see and speak the needed word to Balaam.

- Jonah disobeyed God but God sent a fish point him in the direction to Nineveh so that he could preach a revival.

- Darius had Daniel thrown into the Lion’s den, but God had already worked out an agreement for leniency with the lions and Daniel spent a peaceful evening sleeping in a lion’s den.

It can be a dangerous thing to take your blessings for granted. Just because you have a babbling brook of self-contentment today doesn’t mean that your brook will flow tomorrow.
We need to be reminded that we should give thanks in all things. Whatever you have, God gave it to you and you should thank God for it. We should never forget the biblical record’s reminder that, "The LORD God giveth and the LORD God can take it away. Blessed be the name of the LORD."

Illustration: Remember the Parable of the Talents in Matthew 25. “The kingdom of heaven will be like a man who entrusted his property to his slaves. To one he gave five talents, to another two talents, and the third he gave one talent. When he came back, he settled the accounts and to the two slaves who had made good use of their talents he said, “Well done good and faithful servant, you have been faithful over a few things and I will make you ruler over many.” To the slave who misused his talent he gave the scathing words, “Take the talent from him…”

We must not forget that God who made the brook can dry up the brook. The text says, “But after a while the brook dried up, because there was no rain in the land.

As Elijah's brook dried up, our brooks, if they have not already, will dry up from time to time. The brook can dry up for all of us. The question and the challenge is, what do you do when the brook dries up?

- Whenever you lose that which gives meaning and importance to your life, your brook has dried up!
- Whenever that which you are counting and depending on fails to satisfy you, your brook has dried up.
- Whenever you can no longer find the thing that puts a smile on your face and joy in your soul, your brook has dried up!
- When your assets turn to liabilities, your book has dried up!
- When a husband and a wife are no longer on speaking terms, their brook has dried up!
- When you lose joy in your home, your brook has dried up.
- When you come to church Sunday after Sunday and you sing the songs of Zion, but don’t have any melody in your soul, your brook has dried up!
- When your prayers become rote and repetitious your brook has dried up!
- When worship becomes mundane, your brook has dried up!
- When you know within yourself that you are putting on “an outside show or shallow worship, your brook has dried up.
- When a preacher loses the joy and excitement of sermon preparation, his or her brook has dried up!
- When you come to church for the Holy Spirit and find that Satan is in charge, your brook has dried up!

The brook will dry up!

Churches have lost focus and people are searching for spiritual meaning. There is a mean-spiritedness that is pervasive and potentially destructive. Many in our Zion, both clergy and laity, are struggling to find sustained spiritual focus. The nation is at war; young men and women are dying and being maimed. People are losing their jobs and more people will lose their jobs. Inflation is at its worst in five years. People are standing in the unemployment lines. Homelessness is not being eradicated. Marriages are failing at an astronomical rate.
I come to tell you, when your brook dries up, “Don’t be afraid and don’t panic!”
When you find yourself lying awake at night and can’t sleep, don’t count sheep, talk to the Shepherd! You can’t chase away your sorrows singing the blues.

- If Moses had panicked, the children of Israel would have never made it to the Promised Land. - If Joshua has panicked, he would not have won the battle of Jericho.
- If David had panicked he would not have fought Goliath.
- If Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego had panicked they would not have walked in, and survived the fiery furnace.
- If Job had panicked, he would not have declared, “All the days of my appointed time, I will wait until my change comes.”
- If Paul and Silas had panicked, they would not have had that prayer meeting in the Philippian jail.
- If Jesus had panicked, he would not have gone to the cross and said, “Father forgive them, for they know not what they do.”
- If Jesus had panicked, he would not have said, “It is finished.”
- If Jesus had panicked, he would not have said, “Father, into your hands, I commit my spirit.”
Don’t panic! Sometimes the brook has to dry up to let you know that God is still in charge.
If you don’t believe God is in charge…
- Ask Moses if God can’t make a highway through the ocean.
- Ask Isaiah if God can make the wilderness burst forth with water and bring forth streams in the desert!
- Ask David about the “river and the streams whereof shall make glad the City of God and about the still waters."
- Ask the newly-weds at Cana, if God can turn water into wine!
- Ask the woman at the well about Jesus being the Living Water.
- Ask the Women with the Issue of Blood if a touch of the Master can heal.

Sometimes your brook dries up to let you know that God is still in control.
When your brook dries up, listen to God -
When Elijah’s brook dried up, God sent him on a journey to Zarephath where God told him that he would find a poor widow woman who didn’t have much in the way of material things, but she had a great faith and trust in God. God used that widow woman as an instrument of God’s power for Elijah’s deliverance. Here was a woman that had used up her last “food stamps.” She has a son to care for, a few sticks for the fire, a handful of meal, and a little cruse of oil. Hardly the substance of a blessing! But, where would the preachers be if it were not for the widow women.

When the brook dries up, God makes provisions for us – and sometimes in the most unlikely places. The Brook dries up and mercy is provided in a different venue.

I believe that our brooks dry up to increase our dependence on God. If you never had any dried up brooks, you cannot tell what the LORD has done for you. Some of us like the easy road but we need to be reminded that it is in the valleys that we grow:

Sometimes life seems hard to bear;
full of sorrow, trouble, and woe
It's then I have to remember
That it's in the valleys I grow.

If I always stayed on the mountaintop
And never experienced pain,
I would never appreciate God's love
And would be living in vain.

I have so much to learn
And my growth is very slow,
Sometimes I need the mountaintop,
But it's in the valleys I grow.

I do not always understand
Why things happen as they do,
But I am very sure of one thing.
My Lord will see me through.

My little valleys are nothing
When I picture Christ on the cross
He went through the valley of death;
His victory was Satan's loss.

Forgive me Lord, for complaining
When I'm feeling so very low.
Just give me a gentle reminder
That it's in the valleys I grow.

Continue to strengthen me, Lord
And use my life each day
To share your love with others
And help them find their way.

Thank you for valleys, Lord
For this one thing I know
The mountain tops are glorious
But it's in the valleys I grow!

When you grow in the valley you can sing, “How I got over. My soul looks back and wonders, how I got over.”

When your brook dries up, proclaim God’s power in your situation! You can proclaim, “The Lord will make a way somehow, if beneath the cross I bow” and shout with C. A. Tindley, “…The storm is passing over, Hallelujah!”

Andrae Crouch said it well:

I’ve had many tears and sorrow;
I’ve had questions for tomorrow;
There’re been times I didn’t know
Right from wrong:
But in every situation
God gave blessed consolation
That my trials come to only make me strong.

I thank God for the mountains,
And I thank him for the valleys;
I thank Him for the storms he brought me through;
For if I’d never had a problem,
I wouldn’t know that God could solve them.
I’d never know what faith in God could do.

Through it all, through it all
Oh I’ve learned to trust in Jesus.
I’ve learned to trust in God.
Through it all, through it all
Oh I’ve learned to depend upon His Word.

THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER ONLINE ENGLISH EDITION (2/15/06)

Bishop Gregory G. M. Ingram - Chair, Commission on Publications
The Reverend Dr. Johnny Barbour, Jr., Publisher
The Reverend Dr. Calvin H. Sydnor III, Editor


The Editor has returned from Liberia, has a lot of information to share, and will do so in the next couple of issues. Bishop David R. Daniels and Episcopal Supervisor Irene Daniels and the members of the 14th Episcopal District were gracious hosts. Monrovia, Liberia was the place to be!

1. THOUGHT FOR THE DAY:

"Excellence is an art won by training and habituation. We do not act rightly because we have virtue or excellence, but we rather have those because we have acted rightly. We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act but a habit." –Aristotle

2. 2006 SIXTEENTH EPISCOPAL DISTRICT SCHEDULE OF ANNUAL CONFERENCES:

The Right Reverend Carolyn Tyler Guidry, Presiding Bishop

March 8—12, 2006--Dominican Republic –77th Session
Impacto De Vida AME Church
La Ramona, Dominican Republic
Rev. Abraham Rodriguez, Host Pastor/Presiding Elder
Rev. Jaime Coplin Shephard, Co-Host, Presiding Elder


March 15--19, 2006—Windward Islands --77th Session
Christ AME Church
Mission Road, Freeport
Trinidad, W.I.
Rev. Susan Ramoutar-Burnley, Host Pastor
Rev. Wayne Anthony, Host Presiding Elder (Trinidad/Tobago)
Rev. Anthony Parris, Co-Host Presiding Elder (Barbados/Grenada)



March 22—26, 2006---Guyana/Suriname—83rd Session
Wright Temple AME Church
401 Pineapple Street
East Ruimveldt Housing Scheme
Georgetown, Guyana
Rev. Uklyn A. Hendricks, Host Pastor
Rev. Andrew C. Morris Grant, Host Presiding Elder


April 6—9, 2006 – Haiti---94th Session
St Paul AME Church
Port-au-Prince, Haiti
Rev. Gabriel Chery, Host Pastor
Rev. Jean Emmanuel Ducasse, Host Presiding Elder*
Rev. Joel Mehu, Chair P.E. Committee
Rev. Joel Maurice, Member P.E. Committee
Mrs. Elvire Y. Douglas, Sec. P.E. Committee



April 19—23, 2006—Virgin Islands---86th Session

St. Luke AME Church
Kingshill, St. Croix
U.S. Virgin Islands
Rev. Louis A.C. Davis, P.E., Host Pastor


April 26—30, 2006 London/ Holland –40th Session

Richard Allen A.M.E. Church
London, England
Rev. Rudolph U. Aaron, P.E., Host Pastor


May 10—14, 2006—94th Session
Chapel of Christ our Redeemer A.M.E. Church
15 Swallowfield Road
Kingston 5, Jamaica
Rev. Clarence O. Turpin, Host Pastor
Rev. Lebert A. Dawkins, Host Presiding Elder
Rev. Barrington Lawrence, Co-Host Presiding Elder

Episcopal District & Missionary Planning Meeting
Barbados/Grenada District
Host: Anthony Parris, P.E./ Pastor
Sealy Memorial AME Church
Collymore Rock, St. Michael, Barbados

*Deceased


3. 2006 SCHEDULED DISTRICT CONFERENCES FOR THE FOURTH EPISCOPAL DISTRICT:

Canada
PE Cory Millben-
May 4-6-Grant - Toronto
(Held in London, Ontario)-416-690-5169

Chicago - Milwaukee-
PE Louis Toney-
Apr. 21-22-J. W. James - Maywood-708-681-4628

Chicago - St. Paul/Minneapolis-
PE Alphonse Reff-
Apr. 6-8-Payne - Waterloo-319-233-8189

Chicago - North
PE Clarence Robinson-
Apr. 20-21-Carey Tercentenary - Chgo
-773-762-6600

Chicago - South
PE Thomas Hughes-
Apr. 19-21 -Celia Gregg - Calumet City-708-730-9602

Illinois - North
PE Tyson Parks-
Apr. 27-28-Gaines Chapel - East Moline-309-755-8708

Illinois - South
PE Sammy Hooks-Apr.
19-21-Parks Chapel - Centerville-618-271-8521

Indiana - North
PE Leonard Williams-
Apr. 6-8-St. Luke - East Chicago-219-397-1626

Indiana - South-
PE E. Anne Henning Byfield-
Mar. 30 - Apr. 1-Bethel - Richmond
(Meeting held at Lee's Inn)-765-362-7241

Michigan - North
PE Delano Bowman-
Apr. 26-28-Bethel - Ann Arbor-734-663-3800

Michigan - South
PE Norman Osborne-
April 17-19-Mt. Zion - Battle Creek-269-962-8907

4th District Ministers' Retreat –
May 16-18 - Camp Baber, Cassopolis, MI -
Contact District Office 773-373-6587

4. ANNOUNCEMENT:

Due to the health challenges of Pastor Anne Brooks, the congregation of Ruby Memorial AME Church has now united with Emmanuel Temple AME Church at
562 N.. Leclaire St., Chicago, IL 60644.

A great appreciation celebration is planned to commemorate Pastor Ann’s 25 years of Ministerial Service and 75th Birthday to be held Saturday, October 28, 2006.

Save-the-date and join us to praise god for her years of dedicated service.

For further info. please contact:
Shirley Ross (daughter)
Telephone: 773-540-2118

5. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

Mrs. Ida Lightfoot died. She is the mother of Rev. Carrie Nobles, Pastor in the New York Annual Conference, 1st Episcopal District, Mrs Glenda Lightfoot and Rev. Deborah Lightfoot Oates, Pastor, Bethel Seymour, Indiana Annual Conference. The funeral is Friday, February 17, 2006 at 12 noon at Allen Chapel AME Church, 632 E. 11th Street, Indianapolis, Indiana. The viewing will begin at 10 am. The fax number for the church is 317-638-4936. Condolences can be sent to Rev. Deborah Lightfoot Oates at 4743 Lincoln Road, Indianapolis, IN 46228 . 317-387-9533.

Masakane

Presiding Elder E. Anne Henning Byfield
South District, Indiana Annual Conference
Fourth Episcopal District, AME Church

6. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

from: norwedac@yahoo.com
Dear Sisters and Brothers of the Connection:

Presiding Elder James D. Holmes lost his brother John D. Holmes on February 15, 2006, at St. Frances Hospital, Memphis, Tennessee.

Funeral Services will be Saturday, February 18, 2006

11:00 a.m.
Union Grove M. B. Church
905 Ayers St.
Memphis, Tennessee 38107
901-524-0722

High Point Funeral Chapel
3788 Summer Ave.
Memphis, Tennessee 38122
901-454-5795
In Charge

Rev. James D. Holmes may be reached at
3665 Summerwood Lane
Olive Branch, Mississippi 38654
662-890-5865
email condolences: rjdh@centurytel.net

Please remember the Holmes family in your prayers.
Thank-you and May God Bless You All

7. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

From: AsburyChapel@13thame-wky.org
It is with deep sorrow that we inform the church body of the home going of Bro. Jeremiah Harris. He was the great nephew of the Reverend Frank Price, Pastor of St. Paul African Methodist Episcopal Church, Owensboro, KY and the nephew of Brother Wendell Harris, licentiate, St. John African Methodist Episcopal Church, Louisville, KY.

Viewing:
February 20, 2006 – 6 to 9 pm
G.C. Williams Funeral Home
1935 W. Broadway
Louisville, KY
(502) 772-3123

Services:
February 21, 2006 – 11:00 am
King Solomon
1620 Anderson Street
Louisville, KY
(502) 584-8984

Please remember the family in your prayers.



8. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

Mr. Reginald Gifford, brother of Mrs. Cheryl Spencer, wife of Reverend Samson T. Spencer, Pastor of Metropolitan A.M.E. Church in Mobile, AL (Ninth Episcopal District) passed this week in New Orleans, LA.

Funeral service will be Monday, February 20, 2006, at 11:00 A.M. at Richardson Funeral Home in New Orleans, LA.

Messages may be sent to:
Mrs. Cheryl Spencer
P. O. Box 2365
Mobile, AL 36652

A. Vandegrift for Bishop Kirkland

Please remember the family in your prayers.

9. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT ANNOUNCEMENTS PROVIDED BY:

Bishop Carolyn Tyler Guidry, Chair
Commission on Social Action Clergy Family Information Center

Mrs. Ora L. Easley - Administrator Email: Amespouses1@aol.com
(Nashville, Tennessee Contact) Phone: (615) 837-9736 Fax: (615) 833-3781
(Memphis, Tennessee Contact) (901) 578-4554 (Phone & Fax)

Please remember these families in your prayers.

10. CONDOLENCES TO THE BEREAVED FROM THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER:

The Chair of the Commission on Publications, the Right Reverend Gregory G. M. Ingram; the Publisher, the Reverend Dr. Johnny Barbour and the Editor of the Christian Recorder, the Reverend Dr. Calvin H. Sydnor III offer our condolences and prayers to those who have lost loved ones. We pray that the peace of Christ will be with you during this time of your bereavement.