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5/30/2006

THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER ONLINE ENGLISH EDITION (5/30/06)

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 CARNAGE CONTINUES IN IRAQ AND AFGHANISTAN:

Soldiers in Iraq (and Afghanistan) continue to die and be maimed and the President says, “We will stay the course until we have achieved victory.” There was a sign on the highway that the President passed on his way to Arlington Cemetery yesterday that read, “Thank God of Dead soldiers?” I do not know who put the sign there, but it was a strange sign and I do not agree with it. I thank God for the soldiers who are alive and come back without wounds. I mourn the dead solders and offer my condolences to their families. I feel horrible for those soldiers who were wounded in battle and shutter to think about the soldiers who have lost limbs and who suffer from the scars of war.

President Bush vowed yesterday to honor them by "completing the mission for which they gave their lives." Our President has never served in an active military unit and so he has probably never heard the statement. “When you find yourself digging yourself in a hole, stop digging.” We have “dug ourselves in a hole” in Iraq and we need to stop digging.

We have lost 2,465 U.S. soldiers (Army, Marines, Navy Coast Guard) since war began on March 3, 2003 and significant numbers of soldiers’ lives have been lost since the famous, “Mission Accomplished” proclamation. Thousands of service members have been severely wounded. It is estimated that approximately 1 out of 10 soldiers medically evacuated from the combat zone have been evacuated for mental reasons. The social impact, alone, upon life in America will be impacted for years to come, not to mention the economic impact.

It is also estimated that 38,000 – 42,000 Iraqis have been killed and there is no telling how many have been severely wounded and how many are mentally impaired. (Statistics extracted from http://www.iraqbodycount.net/


2. HIGHLIGHTS OF THE 184TH SESSION OF THE A.M.E. CHURCH
NEW YORK ANNUAL CONFERENCE:

Since 1781, the African Methodist Episcopal Church has followed the biblical passage Ephesians 4:1. Richard Allen, founder of the AME Church, walked away in protest from an Episcopal Church Service, when he and fellow African’s were not allowed to kneel and pray at the church alter. Thus, the African Methodist Episcopal Church was born and Richard Allen established The Free African Society, which became The African Methodist Episcopal Church.

Today, religious institutions are the very foundation upon which communities flourish. The A.M.E. Church has a membership of over three million members and 8,000 churches with a strong emphasis on spiritual tradition. The Annual Conference is one of the most important spiritual and community traditions, where one church is chosen to host the conference. This year it was St Luke A.M.E. Church in Harlem.

The conference was held April 24 – 30, and the theme was Ephesians 4:1: “Walking Worthy of the Calling with Which We are Called.” Bishop Richard Franklin Norris presided over the 184th Session of the New York Annual Conference. Bishop Norris wanted the 184th Session to be the most productive and most spiritually uplifting -- the very best ever.

And productive, it was. As many faiths and denominations have grappled with how to address or prevent misconduct by the clergy, church workers, employees, the A.M.E. Church is being pro-active and for this Session, a required workshop on “Sexual Harassment and Misconduct” was held the first day. All Pastors, Ministers, Sunday School Teachers, Musicians, etc. were required to attend. The well-received workshop’s presenter was Attorney, Mortimer Lawrence.

The worship services, during the conference, were truly spiritually uplifting. From the rousing sermon delivered at the opening session by the Rev. Dr. Eugene McAshan, Pastor of Bethel, Copiague, to the closing session’s inspirational message by Bishop McKinley Young, Presiding Bishop of the 11th A.M.E. Episcopal District in Florida, the word went forth and the Good News was preached with power.

Under the leadership of Pastor Melvin E. Wilson, the St. Luke A.M.E. Congregation tries in every way to be more community oriented, more culturally and racially diverse, and to embrace the concept of “the Kingdom,” which has no ethnic and cultural boundaries.

The Tuesday evening reception in honor of Bishop and Mother Norris, held at the Alhambra Banquet Hall, exemplified this concept. Bishop Norris was presented with his portrait, painted in his likeness by St. Luke A.M.E. member, Mary Syvanto.

Another special touch was added to the reception by the performance of singer, Vanessa Shaw, who appeared on Broadway in “Timbuktu,” “Raisin,” and “The Tap Dance Kid,” and is currently touring in “Welcome Home Marian Anderson.” Ms. Shaw’s superb performance enhanced the ambiance of an elegant and memorable evening.

On Friday night, a capacity crowd at St. Luke was filled with exuberance as the Youth worshiped in drama, dance, and music. Singing to the Glory of God, the New York Annual Conference Youth Choir’s rendition of “Let Everything That Has Breath” was riveting and electrifying. The Conference brought an abundance of youth to the church, but not a first for St. Luke.

In and around New York City, Rev. Melvin E. Wilson’s visionary efforts to support the youth of New York City has resulted in youth outreach programs that are penetrating Harlem’s neighborhoods. Congregants and neighbors alike are experiencing “a rainbow of encouragement” for the young people of Harlem. One of the many youth programs at St. Luke is the S.A.T. Tutoring Program, which is open to all high school students.

The 184th Session of the New York Annual Conference ended on Sunday, April 30. The St. Luke A.M.E. Church Family made every effort to answer the Bishop’s call to make the session the best ever.

3. THE AME CHURCH MUST REMAIN VIGILANT ON THE ISSUES OF HIV/AIDS:

The Rev. Dr. Clyde W. Oden, Jr. reminds us that it is important for our Zion to remain vigilant concerning AIDS/ HIV and that we should have our eyeballs glued to the Television watching a magnificent AIDS/ HIV presentation, The Age of AIDS, Tuesday, May 30, 2006 at 9 p.m.
Click on frontline: coming soon: The Age of AIDS PBS

4. SOMETHING TO DO DURING SOJOURN AT THE GENERAL BOARD MEETING:

The Reverend Dr. Joe Darby shares that the Island Heritage Festival presents a 5-day celebration of 10 programs honoring the history and culture of African Americans "Gullah People" and the historic treasures of their Sea Island home. USA Today says, "James Island," called "one of the five remarkable cultural wonders of the world you should visit before it vanishes." This beautiful, Sea Island welcomes you to explore, experience and enjoy the wonders of Gullah Culture.

Those attending the General Board Meeting can get from Charleston to James Island via Spring Street crossing over the Ashley River Bridge. Travel to Folly Road, crossing over the Wappoo Bridge. McCleod Plantation is located behind the oaks on the left.

Dr. Darby has spoken with the festival organizers and is trying to arrange transportation, since James Island is a good half hour drive from the meeting site.

A Little History about the Gullah / Geechee

There really is not a single "Gullah island." Ron and Natalie Daise, two South Carolina storytellers who had a kid’s show on PBS, popularized that idea. When you get off the plane in Charleston for the General Board and Bishops Council, you will actually be in the heart of "Gullah country!" What is known as the "Gullah Geechee" culture actually covers the coastal regions and Sea Islands from Myrtle Beach, SC to Jacksonville, Florida. The islands are special, because West African slaves were concentrated there and were essentially set free when their "owners" fled their rice plantations during the Civil War. The language, customs and traditions that were preserved in the process are as close to West Africa as you can get in the continental United States, and have even spilled over to worship traditions, and especially in the AME Church in the low country of South Carolina in things like what's often called the "Charleston clap" to many of our familiar hymns.

What is sad and ironic is that "progress" is eroding the culture. For years, their habitat was undesirable because of concerns about diseases like malaria, but it has now become desirable waterfront property. As a result, many of the original residents are either being bought out by developers or forced out by rising property values and the resultant escalating property tax bills.

Many old black communities and cemeteries dating back to the 18th century are being obliterated in the process. One of America's best kept (and saddest) secrets is that Hilton Head Island in South Carolina - a word-class tourist destination, used to be an exclusively black owned and occupied island and is the site of Queen Chapel AME Church, the first AME church established in the south by Bishop Daniel Payne at the end of the Civil War. It is absolutely shameful that some black folks who have been on the island for years are now service workers for the new residents and for tourist hotels and resorts. The same thing may soon happen on other such islands and inland coastal areas, including Daufuskie Island - the real setting for Pat Conroy's writings "Conrack" and "The Water is Wide" that chronicled his time as a teacher on the island.

The James Island festival is special because James Island has an interesting history. The shots fired on Fort Sumter that began the Civil War were fired from James Island. The all black 54th Massachusetts regiment that was made famous by the movie "Glory" was posted there, fought there and left their base there for what came to be their best known and most calamitous attach on Battery Wagner. There a major battle now raging to see that the battle site on Morris Island, adjacent to James Island, does not become just another resort community instead of continuing to be "hallowed ground."

Sorry to rattle on, but I've become fascinated with the culture since coming to Charleston and discovering a solid and little known cultural link to West Africa. Dr. Alpha Bah, one of the African professors at the College of Charleston, ties the names "Gullah" and "gauche" to still existent West African tribal cultures. He also tells the compelling story of how our African ancestors were not just "caught and brought" to America, but were taken captive and made forcible immigrants because of their skills in doing things like growing rice. Since coming to the low country, I have also discovered how many elements of African language, tradition and culture that black Americans - many of whom are descended from those who came ashore in South Carolina - have integrated into our lives without knowing it. When I stood before the late Bishop Frank Madison Reid, Jr. in the Columbia Annual Conference as a member of the Class on Admissions, I either instinctually or nervously put my hands on my waist. My uncle, the late Rev. V. A. Janerette, came up behind me and quietly said, "Take your hands off your kimbo!" I did not know until I moved to the low country that "kimbo" is a West African word for the area above one's hips!

In addition to the site I sent you for the festival - http://www.islandheritagefestival.com/ - you can also find Gullah - Geechee cultural information online at http://www.penncenter.com/ and http://www.cofc.edu/avery/

Editor’s note: The American Bible Society has released the Gullah New Testament, De Nyew Testament in the Gullah language. I was surprised that I could understand so much of it. Here is John 3:16:

“Cause God lob all do people een de wol sommuch dat e gii we e onliest Son. God senwe um so dat ebrybody wa bleebe pon um ain gwine dead. Dey gwinelib faebamo.” (John 3:16, Gullah Sea Island Creole)

5. KENTUCKY CONFERENCE - LEXINGTON DISTRICT CONFERENCE CHURCH SCHOOL – CHRISTIAN EDUCATION CONVENTION, THEME: “KICKIN’ AME LOGIC”:

The Lexington District Church School and Christian Education Convention is scheduled for Friday, June 23 through Saturday, June 24, 2006. The host is St. Peter African Methodist Episcopal Church, 225 West Lexington Street, Harrodsburg, Kentucky 40330 (859) 734-9996. The Reverend Ralph Boyd Smith is the host pastor.

Friday evening worship service shall be at St. Peter, while Saturday classes will be held at the Harrodsburg High School, 441 East Lexington Street, Harrodsburg, Kentucky (859-734-8420). Classes will be available for clergy, laity and youth. Everyone is encouraged to attend and be a part of history as we share in God’s joy. In addition to receiving instruction and inspiration, this will be an opportunity for us to fellowship and worship our Lord. Let us come together and praise Him from whom all blessings flow. Attire for the convention will be casual. All youth are to dress in regular school apparel.

Accommodations have been made at the Country Hearth Inn, 105 Commercial Drive, Harrodsburg, Kentucky (859-734-2400). Single rate of $51.00 plus tax, and $59.00 plus tax for doubles. A Jacuzzi Suite for $85.00 plus tax (includes king size bed and sofa sleeper).

“The Annual Afternoon at the Apollo” will be held again this year where youths from each church can showcase their talents. Presentations by youth groups shall include one or each of the following; singing, playing of musical instruments, dramatic rendition, or a liturgical dance. Judges will be persons who have no connection with our denomination. There will be monetary prizes for the winners who will go on to represent the Lexington District at the Christian Education Leadership Congress in July.

Registration for this event is free and open to all. Lunch on Saturday will be provided for all at no cost. Each church in the district is to send or bring your assessment to the Presiding Elder to offset the cost of this meeting. Our special guest for this event is The Reverend C. Robert Finch, presiding elder in the West Tennessee Conference.

In Christian Fellowship,
Sister Susie Bates
Kentucky Conference Director of Christian Education
Reverend Ralph E. Johnson
Presiding Elder of the Kentucky Conference-Lexington District

Submitted by Exhorter Doris Coffey

6. MEMBERS OF CONGRESS HEAD HOME FOR A WEEKLONG RECESS -- AND THEY NEED TO HEAR FROM YOU ABOUT THE IMPORTANCE OF RENEWING THE VOTING RIGHTS ACT!:

May 26, 2006 -- The movement to renew the Voting Rights Act -- and H.R.9 / S.2703, the bipartisan bill to ensure that this cornerstone civil rights law is renewed and restored -- has gained considerable momentum in recent weeks. The Senate and House adjourn today for Memorial Day recess, with many senators and representatives returning to their home states until June 5. It is critical that the House and Senate quickly enact H.R.9/S.2703 when they return to Washington in June -- and it is important that they hear this from you when they are home next week!

7. THE YOUNG PEOPLE’S CORNER – YPD WEBSITE CREATED FOR CLARKSVILLE, TENNESSEE CHURCH BY A LICENTIATE:

I greet you in the matchless name of our Lord and Savior Jesus the Christ. I am asking that you take the time to visit our Young People and Children’s Division (YPD) Website.

Creating a web site was one of the goals that we set for this Conference year. We were able to meet this, and other goals.

Please browse our Website and enjoy yourselves while you are there and please remember to sign the guest book before you leave.

Click on the link, http://www.ourchurch.com/view/?pageID=277240 and have a good time in the LORD as you visit our Website.

Please keep us in your prayers as we go forth taking the Word and Will of God.

Our Church is located at 131 Edmondson Ferry Road, Clarksville, TN 37040, phone: 931.648.0881

God Bless,

Licentiate Benessa K. Perkins-Sweat
Ebenezer A.M.E Church, Clarksville, Tennessee
YPD Advisor

8. THE YOUNG PEOPLE’S CORNER - 2006 NBA SUMMER INTERNSHIP PROGRAM:
Description: Interested in working for the NBA? The National Basketball Association is interesting in hiring students for their 2006 Summer Internship Program. Students must meet the following criteria:

Class - Junior or SeniorGPA - 3.0 or aboveMajors: Communications, Marketing, Advertising, or General Business.

The internship will be located in New York City for 10-weeks beginning June 5 and ending August 11.

End Date: 6/3/2006

Concentration/Major: Business Administration, Communication Arts, Communication, Marketing

Location: Northeast (MN, NH, VT, MA, CT, RI, NY, NJ, PA) Employer: National Basketball Association (NBA) Contact: Roger D. Lord, (212-573-8548) rlord@tmsf.org

Lester Jackson

Submitted by 13TH Episcopal District Supervisor Stan McKenzie

9. EVERY WOMAN MEDITATIONS FOR INSPIRING BEAUTY IN WOMEN:

*Rev. Maxine L. Thomas,
Independent Beauty Consultant

“Embrace Peace”

“Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace, whose mind is stayed on Thee, because he trusteth in Thee.” (Isaiah 26:3)

There is so much unrest within the world today. There is the threat of national and world terrorism… the war in Iraq continues… there are drug wars and wars against the fabric of human morality. There are wars on our city streets as drive by shootings continues to claim the lives of our children. Some woman lives through world war “I stopped counting” each time she is faced with a slap, kick or punch from the man who beats her and then treats her to cards, candy and flowers.

There is unrest in our churches as pastors vent from the pulpit and pew members persist in a diet of roasted pastor as a part of their Sunday afternoon meal.

Have you ever been through one trial after another? As soon as you thought you were beginning to see the dawn of day, here comes another wind of despair or wave of disappointment.

But, God says to us in our moments of hopelessly and moments of doubt, indeed, there is peace in the valley. Sis, we are not always going to be on the mountain top; for every now and then, we are going to have some valley experiences.

It is a valley experience when the friend you trusted with all of your secrets puts your stuff out in the street. It is a valley experience when you have spent your last dime and you do not know how you are going to pay your bills. It is a valley experience when the doctor tells you there is nothing else that he/she can do for you. It is a valley experience when you find out that the man who pledged his faithfulness to you is doing all of his plowing in somebody else’ field. It is a valley experience when you have to say good-bye to the dearest one on earth to you. It is a valley experience when the child you raised up in the church goes out into the world and decides he wants to do his own thing.

The Bible says, Man that is born of a woman is but of a few day, and those are full of trouble. In this life, ye will have tribulations, but the Lord delivers us out of them all. Aren’t you glad that "trouble don’t last always"?

In the midst of your disappointment and grief, I dare you to grab a hold of God’s Word. He wants to turn your sorrow to joy. He wants to turn your midnight into day. I want to let a sister know that God will give you beauty for your ashes. God will dry all of your tears away. I dare you to, "Just praise God right now." Right now!

And, the Bible says, "God will keep you in perfect peace." This promise, however, is not without a condition. Some folk want peace, yet they continue to pursue strife. How are you going to have peace in your marriage if you are always sowing seeds of discord? When is the last time you said, Holy Ghost… I know you gave me utterance to speak in tongues… I sure ‘nough felt your power when I got my praise on Sunday morning… but Lord, I need you to give me the power to keep my mouth shut! I dare you to pursue peace in your marriage and in your relationships by asking God to give you the power to shut up!

If you want to have peace, you must learn how to meditate upon peaceful thoughts. Girlfriend, embrace God’s peace. Meditate on the Word of God. Allow God’s Word to saturate your mind, your heart, and soak out the guilt, the shame, the fear and the mistrust. Sis, you cannot stop a bird from landing on your hair, but you don’t have to let it stay there and make a nest. The next time you get a thought that tells you that you are not going to make it… that it’s all over… that nobody loves you and nobody cares, I dare you to take authority over that thought, cast it down and out, and replace it with a God thought. Sis, embrace peace!

God thoughts come easily when you have regular personal devotions… times of reading and reflecting upon the Word of God and praying to Him in secret. God thoughts are thoughts that bring peace and not distress. In a world where there is constant unrest and turmoil, my sister, God thoughts will keep you in perfect peace. Take the pressure off and put the promise on! Embrace His peace.

*Rev. Maxine L. Thomas is the Connectional Director of Ministries for Women (Dept of Church Growth and Development for the AMEC), the First Lady/Asst. Pastor at Morris Brown AME in Philadelphia, PA, the Editor of the First District Flame Newspaper, the Executive Director/Founder of Sisters Keeping the Covenant, a former TV talk show host and radio personality, a Christian author, and an Independent Beauty Consultant for Mary Kay.

Remember, “With God, nothing shall be impossible unto you.”

10. THE PASTOR’S CORNER - THE ABUNDANT LIFE – A SANCTIFIED LIFE:

Paul, a servant of Christ Jesus, called to be an apostle and set apart for the gospel of God. (Romans 1: 1)

Truly abundant living can be achieved only when one is set apart from anything that is contrary to the perfect (complete) will of God and set apart to God’s sacred purpose for one’s life.

Paul describes himself as being set apart for the gospel of God. To be set apart for God is what it means to be sanctified. To be sanctified or set apart has two dimensions. The first is descriptive of being set apart for a sacred purpose. One of the persons attending Quinn’s mid-day Bible study couldn’t make the study and called the church office to ask that a copy of the outline to be used be set apart for him to get later that afternoon. His copy was separated from the others slated for distribution that day. In the same way, God wants to separate us from all others for His special purposes.

The other dimension of being sanctified relates to being set free from sin and purified. At the same Bible study, I recognized that one of the copies of the lesson to be distributed was blurred and illegible. I separated that particular copy from the others because it was not useful in fulfilling the purpose we were attempting to achieve. In the same way, God cleanses us of sin, destructive habits and negative attitudes so we can be useful in the building of His kingdom here on earth.

We’ve often heard how Jesus prayed to the Father that we would be “in the world but not of the world.” This phrase is taken from John 17: 14-15. I often wondered what this meant and how it could be. The Holy Spirit reminded me of a trip Corlis (my wife of now nearly 33 years) and I took to Europe. While there, we traveled to Paris. Because of exposure to the French language in South Louisiana, I knew just enough French to embarrass myself and insult others. It was obvious to everyone I spoke to I wasn’t French. My dress, language, behaviors, and attitude clearly identified me as an American in France.

We are citizens of the kingdom of God “sent into the world (John 17: 18).” Jesus said, “Sanctify them by the truth; your word is truth (John 17: 17). The language of our kingdom is the word of God. “God Himself…sanctifies us through and through” (I Thessalonians 5: 23) so that our behaviors and attitudes clearly identify us as citizens of the kingdom of God. God then calls us to service in His kingdom (II Thessalonians 2: 15-16) a citizens in a foreign land.

It was at the Cross of Calvary that Jesus sanctified Himself so that we “too may be truly sanctified (John 17: 19).” Let us live our lives as set apart recipients of God’s boundless grace. “For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith – and this not from yourselves, it is the gift of God – not by works, so that no one can boast. For we are God’s workmanship, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do.” (Ephesians 2: 8-10)

Love,
Pastor James Moody
Quinn Chapel, Chicago

11. CLERGY FAMILY CONGRATULATORY NOTICE:

Morgan Kelley Thigpen, granddaughter of General Officer, the Reverend Dr. Daryl Ingram, Executive Director of The Department of Christian Education, African Methodist Episcopal Church.Morgan Kelley Thigpen, born Saturday, May 13, 2006 at 7:15 AM, weighed in at 4 pounds 1 oz. and was 17 ¾ inches long. The proud parents are Dewayne and DeNee Thigpen.

The proud grandparents are Reverend Dr. Daryl and Mrs. Patricia Ingram.

12. CLERGY FAMILY CONGRATULATORY NOTICE:

Gilbert Harper, Jr. graduated from North Carolina A &T State University in Greensboro, NC on Sat., May 13, 2006. Gilbert, Jr. is the son of Rev. Gilbert Harper, Sr., pastor of Mt. Zion A.M.E. Church in Roanoke, Virginia.

Quintessa Harper will be graduating from Patrick Henry High School in Roanoke, VA on June 15, 2006. Quintessa is also the daughter of Rev. Gilbert Harper, Sr., pastor of Mt. Zion A.M.E. Church in Roanoke, Virginia.

Congratulatory messages can emailed to: Revgharp2@cs.com

13. CONGRATULATIONS TO ALL:

Congratulatory Messages/Praise Reports received are compiled and posted by the Clergy Family Information Center on Friday of each week. Clergy Family Births, Graduations, Weddings and Wedding Anniversaries (25th, 30th, 40th, 50th, 60th, 75th)

14. CONGRATULATIONS FROM THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER:

The Christian Recorder staff wishes to extend our congratulatory message to all of those celebrating the blessings of God.

15. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

We announce the passing on Monday May 22, 2006 of Mrs. Mary Louise Stuart, sister of the Rev. H. Charles Farris, Presiding Elder of the Phoenix- Albuquerque District, Desert/Mountain Conference, 5th Episcopal District.

Service Arrangements for Mrs. Mary Louise Stuart:

Funeral

Friday, May 26, 2006
10:00 AM

First AME Church
1111 North 8th St.
Kansas City, KS 66101

913-371-2805 Phone

Expressions of sympathy may be sent to:

Presiding Elder and Mrs. H. Charles Farris & Family
5742 S. Quemoy Circle
Centennial, CO 80015

720-841-3127 Phone
Email: crjfarris@yahoo.com

16. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

Mr. Ellis Copeland, father of Mrs. Arleasia Redding (and father of Reverend Nathaniel Copeland, Pastor in the East Alabama Conference at Nichols Chapel A.M.E. Church, Phenix City, Alabama) went to be with the Lord on May 18, 2006. Mrs. Arleasia Redding is the spouse of the Reverend James Redding, Pastor of Hines Chapel A.M.E. Church, Dothan, Alabama.

Words of comfort may be sent to:

The Reverend and Mrs. James Redding
Post Office Box 151
Clio, Alabama 36017

(334) 397-4087

This notice is being sent on the behalf of Bishop T. Larry Kirkland, Presiding Prelate of the Ninth Episcopal District.

Submitted By:

The Reverend David E. Reddick
Presiding Elder, Dothan-Eufaula District
South Alabama Conference

Email: Sam.Surfer@centurytel.net

17. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

The passing of Mr. Charles Bennet, brother of Reverend Deloris Prioleau, pastor of Cornerstone AME Church in Washington, DC / Treasurer of the Connectional Women in Ministry.

Funeral Arrangements for Mr. Charles Bennet: Friday May 26, 2006
Wake: 10:00 AM
Funeral 11:00 AM
Ward Memorial AME Church
241 42nd Street
N.E. Washington, DC 20019

202-398-3899 Phone

Expressions of sympathy may be sent to:

The Reverend Deloris Prioleau & Family
12125 Long Ridge Lane
Bowie, MD 20715

301-464-8084 Phone

Email condolences to:
RevDeeABP@msn.com

18. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

The passing of Mrs. Sally Bennett, grandmother of the Rev. Barbara Taylor, associate minister, Cornerstone AME Church, Washington, DC.

Funeral Arrangements for Mrs. Sally Bennett:

Friday, May 26, 2006
3:00 PM

Henry Grove Baptist Church
Wadesboro, NC

Professional services entrusted to:

Smith Funeral Home
604 Salisbury Rd
Wadesboro, NC 28170

Phone: (704) 694-4121

Expressions of sympathy may be sent to:

The Rev. Barbara Taylor
11714 Critton Circle
Woodbridge, VA 22192

703-492-1268 Phone

Please remember these families in your prayers.

19. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

From: The Right Reverend Cornal Garnett Henning, SrPresiding Bishop, 8th Episcopal DistrictAfrican Methodist Episcopal Church

The Rev. Walter D. Parks, Jr., spouse of Supervisor Yvonne Henning Parks passed on Thursday morning, May 25, 2006. He is the father of Walter D. Parks, III, the Rev. Kevin E. Parks (Armintry) and Pamela Parks Bowman (Anthony), Brother-in-law of Bishop C. Garnett Henning and Presiding Elder E. Anne Byfield.

Funeral Arrangements for Rev. Walter D. Parks

Homegoing Service will be:

Visitation - Sunday 5 pm - 7 pm

(Haywood Funeral Home)

Monday, JUNE 5, 2005 at 12:00 Noon (Visitation 11:00 AM)

St. Paul A.M.E. Church
402 Edenton Street
Raleigh, North Carolina 27603

(919) 832-2709

The Rev. G. L. Edmond, Pastor.

Funeral Home:

Haywood Funeral Home
2414 S. Wilmington Street
Raleigh, North Carolina 27603

(919) 832-2835

Contact:
Supervisor Yvonne Henning Parks
418 Aqua Marine Lane
Knightdale, North Carolina 27545

(919) 261-8733 (home)

Email- Mslady3x@aol.com

Walter Parks, III
(919) 961-7404
Email: WaltP3@aol.com

The Rev. Kevin Parks
(330) 394-5875 (h)
(330) 883-6193) cell

Email: rparks2@neo.rr.com

Pamela Bowman (919) 210-7756
e-mail: Gochibears1@aol.com

Contact Information

Yvonne Parks- (919) 261-8733;
e-mail: mslady3x@aol.com
Mr. Walter Parks, USA

(919)744-4079;

Email: WaltP3@aol.com

The Rev. Kevin E. Parks
(330) 883-6193 (mobile)

Email rparks2@neo.rr.com

Pamela Bowman (919)
210 7756 Mobile
Email: Gochibears1@aol.com

Cornal Garnett Henning, Sr.
Presiding Bishop, 8th Episcopal District
Office:
2138 Saint Bernard Avenue
New Orleans, LA 70119
(504) 948-4251
Email: lanroc@aol.co

Please remember the family in your prayers

20. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT ANNOUNCEMENTS PROVIDED BY:

Bishop Carolyn Tyler Guidry, Chair
Commission on Social Action Clergy Family Information Center
Ora L. EasleyEmail: Amespouses1@aol.comPhone: (615) 837-9736Fax: (615) 833-3781Voice Mail: (615) 833-6936Cell: (615) 403-7751

21. 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

5/24/2006

THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER ONLINE ENGLISH EDITION (5/24/06)

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


Editor’s note – I will complete the article about the Georgia – North Conference and Dr. Johnny Barbour’s Ordination Message in the next issue. I hope to have the names of the person ordained before finishing the article.

1. THE GLOBAL CORNER- “IT IS ENOUGH; WE MUST SPEAK UP”:

*The Rev Motsamai Modibedi

Greetings in the matchless Name of our Lord Christ Jesus.

I am one of the persons serving in the Ecumenical Accompaniment Programme for Palestine and Israel, a programme led by the World Council of Churches. I am assigned in Jerusalem and I feel greatly honoured by the South African Council of Churches in selecting me to participate in this programme.

Allow me to share with the global members of the African Methodist Episcopal Church the unbelievable things I have experienced.

A replica of apartheid as experienced by South Africans is currently happening in this part of the globe and it is demonstrated in the relationship of the Palestinians and the State of Israel. I am here to accompany Palestinians and Israelis who are struggling to end the occupation of the Palestinian territory by Jewish settlers.

Since my arrival here, I have been consistently shocked by what I have observed.
Since Hamas won Palestinian elections, misery and hopelessness prevails and had become the order of the day for the Palestinians. Hamas has denounced Israel as a sovereign entity of United States and its allies. The United States called upon its allies to withhold funds from the Palestinians and the U.S. allies have done so by cutting off financial grants to the Palestinians. As a result, the public servants in Palestine have been without salaries for almost three months. Provision of such basic services as, security, health, education, and other services are now threatened.

The construction of the wall by Israel does not honour the United Nations’ border between Israel and Palestine. The wall, in reality, is blatantly takes land from the Palestinians. This impact negatively on Palestinians because the Palestinians who work in Israel find it difficult to go to work because of check-points and some of them find themselves completely trapped in a Bantustan type of situation by sadly denying families and relatives the right to interact with one another.

Jerusalem is now becoming a contentious issue with the emerging Jewish settlements in East Jerusalem, a Palestinian territory.

The number of Palestinian Christians has significantly decreased. I learned that many of the Christians had chosen to leave the area. People are required to carry permits like dompass, as we had to do under the old apartheid regime in South Africa. Most of them are denied access at checkpoints.

The African Methodist Episcopal Church needs to speak up loudly and forcibly against this barbaric behavior and most particularly against the United States government.

I am pleading to every member of the African Methodist Episcopal Church to become involved and raise the conscientiousness the world to this evil situation and to advocate for both Palestinians and concerned Israeli citizens.

I hope to communicate further in the near future.

I am, Sudoku

* The Rev Motsamai Modibedi is the pastor of Ebenezer A.M.E Church, Pretoria, South Africa

2. TENNESSEE PASTOR GRADUATES FROM THE PRESTIGIOUS LEADERSHIP MIDDLE TENNESSEE (LMT):

The Reverend Charlotte Ann Blake Sydnor, pastor of Shorter Chapel AME Church, Franklin, Tennessee graduated from the prestigious Leadership Middle Tennessee (LMT) program on Wednesday, May 17, 2006. Reverend Sydnor graduated with the sixth class that has gone through the program. The graduation ceremony was held at the Leow’s Vanderbilt Hotel, Nashville, Tennessee.

Leadership Middle Tennessee is a regional leadership institute that was founded in 1999 as a result of the regional partnerships initiative. The initiative was founded in 1994 under the leadership of Jerry Benefield of Nissan Corporation in direct response to the "lack of a regional agenda."

The rigorous and competitive selection to the LMT program is based upon leadership achievements and potential to contribute to the development of a region. At least one participant is selected from one of the ten counties involved in the program. Class presentations focused upon diversity, education, healthcare, housing, legislation, and transportation.

Reverend Sydnor has been the pastor of Shorter Chapel AME Church since October 2004. The Right Reverend Vashti Murphy McKenzie appointed her to Shorter Chapel.

Prior to moving to Tennessee, Reverend Sydnor pastored in the Second Episcopal District at Holly Grove AME Church in Windsor, Virginia. She received her first pastoral appointment from the Right Reverend Vinton R. Anderson.

Reverend Sydnor holds a Bachelors of Arts Degree in Sociology from Fayetteville State University (Fayetteville, North Carolina), a Master of Arts in Religious Studies from Central Baptist Seminary (Kansas City, Kansas) and a Master of Divinity Degree from Wesley Theological Seminary (Washington, DC). She graduated with honors from Fayetteville State, Central Baptist and Wesley Theological Seminary. She has taken post-graduate studies at the Baylor University School of Religion in Biblical Studies and Historical Theology and Eastern Baptist Theological Seminary in Marriage and Family.

Reverend Sydnor has held positions as, Director of the Hampton University Student Counseling Center, Chaplain of Veterans Administration Hospital in Hampton, Virginia, Director of the Wesley Foundation and Campus Ministry at Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA, and Director of the Learning Center, Paul Quinn College, 1987. She has taught at Hampton University, Chicago City College, Big Ben Community College, Anchorage Community College, Paul Quinn College and Central Texas University. She taught speech, sociology, world religions, humanities was professor of sociology

Reverend Sydnor is married to the Reverend Dr. Calvin H. Sydnor III, the 20th Editor of The Christian Recorder.

The Reverend Charlotte Sydnor's email address: chsydnor@aol.com

3. 2006 HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATION OF A REMARKABLE YOUNG A.M.E. STUDENT:

Courtenay Ruth Paris is the daughter of the Rev. Alton E. Paris and Mrs. Sara Paris of Grandview, Texas.

Miss Paris has earned a number of academic, music, and leadership distinctions during her high school career. She is the valedictorian of her Grandview High School class, president of the choir, and treasurer of the National Honor Society at Grandview High School.

In addition, she has earned the following honors: University Interscholastic League (UIL) Accounting - 1st at District, 1st at Region, 5th at State, UIL Music - Vocal Performance Solo - named "Outstanding Performer" at State (2005).

Ruth also received the Grandview High School Class Awards and was the top student in, Accounting II, Advanced Placement Biology, Concurrent Credit English IV, Choir, and Physical Education. She was also presented with the National School Choral Award.

Miss Paris sang in the American Choral Directors Association National High School Honor Choir last year in Los Angeles, California, as well as in Southwest Region Honor Choirs in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma; Little Rock, Arkansas; and St. Louis, Missouri.

Miss Paris plays piano for the worship services at Bethel A.M.E. Church, Grandview, TX, where the Rev. Joan Nickerson is the pastor. She also the worship musician for the Ascension Lutheran Church, Cleburne, Texas where the, Rev. Joseph Ardy is the pastor. She occasionally plays for Macedonia A.M.E. Church, Kaufman, TX, where her father, the Rev. Alton Paris is the pastor.

In addition to all of her other activities, Ruth also tutors high school students in math.
Miss Paris will be attending Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas where she will pursue a double major in vocal performance and accounting.

Submitted by Sara Paris

4. "MT. ZION AFRICAN METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH":

Mt. Zion A.M.E. Church, formerly located in Odenton, Maryland, has been blessed to find a new home at 911 Reece Road in Severn, Maryland.

The first worship service was held Sunday, February 26, 2006.

On April 2, 2006, the Service of Consecration was held and the Right Reverend Adam Jefferson Richardson was the chief celebrant and preacher.

The Reverend Etoria V. Goggins, the pastor of Mt. Zion A.M.E. Church, previously served on the ministerial staff at Hemingway Memorial A.M.E. Church in District Heights, Maryland under the pastorate of the Rev. Dr. William Robert Porter. Reverend Goggins was appointed to Mt. Zion in April 2005. The church has continued to grow spiritually with an increase in saved members and an abundance of talents and gifts.

Under Reverend Goggins’ leadership and vision, “Conditions are Right…It’s Harvest Time” has become the theme and mission for the church.

Sunday Church School is at 9:30 a.m. and worship services are held every Sunday at 11:00 a.m. Mt. Zion sees as its mission to minister to the local neighborhoods surrounding the Severn and Ft Meade communities.

Everyone is invited to come out and celebrate what God is doing in our midst.

For more information and directions to the church, call (410) 519-5878 or (301) 423-8266.

Those who trust in the Lord shall be as Mt. Zion, which cannot be shaken, but endures forever. Psalm 125:1

Submitted by Sister Marion Rucker

5. THE FIRST LECTURE IN A SERIES ON FAITH AND CIVIC ENGAGEMENT:

The first lecture in a series on faith and civic engagement will be held on June 1, 2006, 7:00 PM at the Lincoln Memorial United Church of Christ, 4126 Arlington Avenue, Los Angeles.

The speaker will be the Rev. Dr. J. Alfred Smith, is senior pastor of Allen Temple Baptist Church in Oakland and is author of On the Jericho Road. He is a longtime activist, whose social justice work has included the formation of Allen Temple Development Corporation, which provides housing and services for seniors. Dr. Smith is the recipient of numerous civic and humanitarian awards and has been recognized as one of Ebony Magazine’s Most Influential Black Americans.

Co-sponsors for the event are the Southern California AME Ministerial Alliance, Nehemiah Ministries Inc., the Los Angeles Metropolitan Churches, Baptist Ministers Conference, California State Progressive National Baptist Convention, Metropolitan District Association, and Fuller Theological Seminary — African American Church Studies Program.

The next public lecture, June 15, 2006, will feature Rev. Dr. Jeremiah Wright and the Rev. Earl Trent Jr. The lecture and the USC Passing the Mantle Clergy and Lay Leadership Institute are made possible by a grant from The James Irvine Foundation.

For additional information, please call the USC Center for Religion and Civic Culture at 213.740.8562 or email the Rev. Mark Whitlock at ptm@usc.edu or visit www.usc.edu/crcc.

6. “BACK PEW BUSHWHACKERS” AND “UNDERCOVER UNDERMINERS”:

*The Reverend Charles R. Watkins, Jr. B.S., M.Div.

I know that “back pew bushwhackers” and “undercover underminers” may sit anywhere in the church during the worship services. They are, not by design, seated throughout the sanctuary. They sit anywhere, from the back of the sanctuary to the front row, and even in the choir and sometimes in the pulpit.

If you were to take a poll, they would be labeled as “dutiful and faithful servants.” They are usually present whenever the church doors are open. They are the self-proclaimed “backbones” of our churches. They, as their testimony might assert, undergird all that the church is, and all that the church hopes to be. They, thank God that they can be counted on to be regular tithers. On the surface, they appear to posses all the attributes of the perfect member. They are immaculate in their outward attire and very astute in their knowledge of “how the church should operate.” How fortunate, they believe, the church is to have them as members and leaders.

However, a closer look reveals their more prominent position as “back-pew bushwhackers” and “undercover underminers.”

My description of them might not be standard words in the ecclesiastical lexicon, but I am lamentably certain that these people, all too often, are influential in many our churches. Many times, they have a hand in deciding who participates in what. They think very highly of their “expert” opinions as it relates to the worship experience. They are very vocal about what goes in the church, what musician plays, how loudly the music should be, and what hymns should be selected.

It has been my experience that these folks think that they have expertise in what color the walls of the sanctuary should be. There is very little that goes on in and around the church that these folk do not know about. There is hardly anything that happens, or does not happen in the church that they do not in some way or another influence the outcome.

The journey they are on is a mission and that mission is the very thing that sustains them. It is a responsibility, they believe, no one else can, or will take on. Certainly, they are sure, that without their input, the church and its ministries will fail. I describe them as the “back pew bushwhackers” and “undercover underminers.”

The amazing thing is that you would be hard-pressed to find out just how they achieved their positions of power and influence. It might be assumed that their power and influence was bestowed upon them in reverence to the unselfish amount of time they give to the church.

It is quite possible that their power and influence came as a result of their generous financial support of the church. Some of their influence might be inherited from their parents and influential family members who have, for generations, controlled the business of the church.

No matter how they achieve their status in the church, some of these folks function as, “back pew bushwhackers” and “undercover underminers” in the church’s mission and ministries.

Many times pastors and laity are very aware of the fact that we have among our “body of faith” folks who use their power to influence the direction of the mission and the work of the ministries the church.

Normally, one would expect that the leadership, both ministerial and lay, would not put up with the deviant behaviors of the “back pew bushwhackers” and “undercover underminers,” but too often they are tolerated and sometimes encouraged because of their financial support and because of the influence they have over so many folk in the church.

Do you remember the old school yard confrontations when someone had the courage to stand up to the school bully? Their honor was at stake and whether they lost of won, the statement they were making was, “enough was enough.” Win, lose or draw, usually, the bully would not confront that person again.

Church members have to ask, as it relates to the church, do we feel that “enough is enough?” Are we sick and tired of being “bushwhacked” and “undermined”? Have we finally decided that we have had enough of just trying to avoid confrontation? Are we tired frustrated of just trying to keep the peace? Have we had enough of the “back pew bushwhackers and undercover underminers” bad- mouthing the preachers and the ministry of the church?

I have heard Bishop Preston Warren Williams II say repeatedly, “God has a greater stake in this ministry than we do.”

I am convinced that men and women of God, who are truly called of God and know it, do not care, nor do the “back pew bushwhackers and undercover underminers” influence them.

Men and women of God understand that Christ-centered ministry is a mission from God. Men and women on a mission from God have an agenda that is far from the evil intentions and the small-minded political motivations of the “back pew bushwhackers and undercover underminers.”

Men and women of God understand that the “Great Commission” is the most important work that we can do and that no one and nothing should stand in the way of what God has called us to do.

Men and women called to do God’s work in whatever capacity, i.e., as Stewards, Trustees, Church School Superintendents, musicians, choir leaders and members truly believe that God has entrusted us with an important mission and those whom God calls, God equips.

Men and women called to do God’s work are on a divine journey and we must understand that we are traveling with God’s promise.

The time is now to confront the “back pew bushwhackers and the undercover underminers.” And, in confronting them, we must continue to love them and to pray for them. Sometimes the face-off requires that we be prepared for a “fight” and confrontation may bring out the bad before we see the good.

As we prepare for the challenge, we must continue to pray fervently. We must pray that God would continue to “prick the hearts” of those who “bushwhack” or “undermine” God’s ministry.

We who have accepted the call to serve must always remember dedicated service is a critical commitment. More importantly, we must be constantly aware of the fact that the approval we seek is not from men and women; the approval we seek, comes from God.

*The Rev. Charles R. Watkins is the pastor of Friendship A.M.E. Church, Clinton South Carolina and serves in the Greenville District under the capable leadership of Presiding Elder Jonathan Jerome Baker. The Right Reverend Preston Warren Williams, II is the presiding bishop of the Seventh Episcopal District.

7. CLERGY FAMILY CONGRATULATORY NOTICE:

Presiding Elder Kenneth Hill, Chattanooga District - East Tennessee Conference - 13th Episcopal District, Dr. Roberta Hill, and Ms. Linda James are happy to announce the upcoming marriage of their son the Rev. Kamasi K. Hill, pastor Robert Thomas AME Church in Milwaukee, Wisconsin to the Rev. Diane A. Bogues, assistant pastor Greater Institutional AME Church in Chicago, Illinois on Saturday, May 27, 2006 at Coppin Memorial AME Church in Chicago, Illinois.

8. CLERGY FAMILY CONGRATULATORY NOTICE:

Karen Green Irving, daughter of Dr. Edith Green-Altheimer and. the late Rev. Milton Green (5th District) received her B.A. in Social Work from Concordia University -Portland, OR on May 6, 2006. Karen will be entering the Master of Social Work Program at Portland State University in August.

Congratulatory email messages: Edith.Altheimer@va.gov

9. CLERGY FAMILY CONGRATULATORY NOTICE:

Timothea Johnelle Cokley, daughter of the Rev. Timothy and Mrs. Cynthia Cokley, will receive her Master of Education Degree in Elementary Education from Fayetteville State University, Fayetteville, North Carolina, on Saturday, May 13, 2006, 10:00 AM. Rev. Cokley is the pastor of Emmanuel AMEC, Columbia, S.C., Seventh Episcopal District.

Timothea is completing her third year as a second grade teacher in the Cumberland County (NC) school system. Timothea is a third generation teacher.

Congratulations may be mailed to:

4202 Sandwood Drive
Columbia, SC 29206

or

e-mail address: ctt5@aol.com

10. CLERGY FAMILY CONGRATULATORY NOTICE:

Brittany Jonette Williams, daughter of the Rev. Wayne A. Johnson, Sr. & Mrs. Fredia A. Hanley-Johnson (President of Conn-M-SWAWO Plus PK's) graduated on Sunday, May 14, 2006 from Duke University, Durham, NC with a Bachelor's Degree in Sociology and also received her Certificate in Markets and Management.

Brittany has accepted a position as a Management Trainee with a marketing firm in Durham.

The Rev. Wayne A. Johnson, Sr., husband of Mrs. Fredia A. Hanley-Johnson will receive his Master of Divinity degree on May 20, 2006 from New Brunswick Theological Seminary, New Brunswick, New Jersey.

Congratulatory messages may be sent to:

3 Michael Court
Dover, DE 19904

Or,

e-mail at Connmswawopk@aol.com

11. CLERGY FAMILY CONGRATULATORY NOTICE:

The Reverend Adunnola O. Waterman-French proudly announces her graduation from New York Theological Seminary with a Master of Divinity Degree, as well as her ordination as an Itinerant Elder in the AME Church.

The Reverend Waterman-French is the daughter of the Reverend Millicent Waterman, former Episcopal Director of Christian Education of the Sixteenth District.

Congratulatory email messages: adiodi@rocketmail.com

12. CLERGY FAMILY CONGRATULATORY NOTICE:

Harriet Octavia Bennett, the daughter of the Rev. and Mrs. Hugh Bennett, recently graduated from the University of Oklahoma's College of Nursing, receiving recognition for exceptional performance in Clinical Nursing Practice and Student Leadership. Her father, Rev. Hugh Bennett, is the pastor of Allen Chapel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, and her mother is Cordelia Bennett, Connectional Assistant Director of Keyboards for the Music and Christian Arts Ministry of the African Methodist Episcopal Church.

Congratulatory email messages: BennettKrazylala@aol.com

13. CLERGY FAMILY CONGRATULATORY NOTICE:

Presiding Elder Willis (Hattie) Huggins, Troy Ozark District - South Alabama Conference - 9th Episcopal District proudly announce the graduation of their daughter, Sherrell Huggins, from Alabama A & M University, Cum Laude, with a B.S. in Music Education on May 11, 2006.

She is also the sister of the 9th District Minister's Spouses President - Kimberly Marshall.
Congratulatory emails can be sent to: shuggins@comcast.net.

14. CLERGY FAMILY CONGRATULATORY NOTICE:

The Rev. Glenell M. Lee-Pruitt, pastor of Solomon Chapel AME Church in Cleveland, Mississippi recently received her Doctorate of Philosophy in Social Work from Jackson State University.

Congratulatory emails can be sent to: glenell1@aol.com

15. CONGRATULATIONS TO ALL!

Congratulatory Messages/Praise Reports received are compiled and posted by the Clergy Family Information Center on Friday of each week. Clergy Family Births, Graduations, Weddings and Wedding Anniversaries (25th, 50th, 75th).

16. CONGRATULATIONS FROM THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER:

The Christian Recorder staff wishes to extend our congratulatory message to all of those celebrating the blessings of God.


17. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

We regret to inform you that the Rev. Lamar T. Ellis passed. Rev. Ellis pastored faithfully throughout the Third Episcopal District until his retirement.

Arrangements:

Services will be Thursday, May 25, 2006

viewing 10:00-11:30 a.m. Homegoing Service at 11:30 a.m.

Quinn Chapel AME Church
10998 Southland Road
Cincinnati, Ohio 45240

The Rev. Dr. Fred Wright, Pastor
Bishop Robert V. Webster, Presiding Prelate

513-825-4900 Office
513-825-5349 Fax

Burial Service will be in the Veterans Administration Cemetery in Dayton, Ohio.

Condolences may be sent to:

The Ellis Family c/o Quinn Chapel AME Church
10998 Southland Road
Cincinnati, Ohio 45240

Please keep the family in prayer.

The Rev. Dr. Taylor T. Thompson, pastor,
St. John AME Church
Third District Brotherhood
Cleveland, Ohio

18. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

The Ninth Episcopal District, the Right Reverend T. Larry Kirkland, presiding prelate

Mr. Ellis Copeland went to be with the Lord on May 18, 2006. Mr. Copeland is the father of the Reverend Nathaniel Copeland, Pastor in the East Alabama Conference at Nichols Chapel A.M.E. Church, Phenix City, AL.

Homegoing Service:

Thursday, May 25, 2006
12:00 Noon

St. Peter A.M.E Church
P. O. Box 38
Clio, AL 36017

Ph. (334) 397-2544

Trawick's Funeral Home
1048 Martin Luther King, Jr. Avenue
Ozark, AL 36017

Ph. (334) 774-8374

Messages of Comfort may be sent to:

Mrs. Willie Merle Copeland & Family
P. O. Box 236Ariton, AL 36311-0236

Ph. (334) 397-2256

Or

The Rev. & Mrs. Nathaniel Copeland
710 Rodney Street
Phenix City, AL 36869

Ph. (334) 448-3411

Please remember the family in your prayers.

19. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT ANNOUNCEMENTS PROVIDED BY:

Bishop Carolyn Tyler Guidry, Chair
Commission on Social Action Clergy Family Information Center
Ora L. EasleyEmail: Amespouses1@aol.comPhone: (615) 837-9736Fax: (615) 833-3781Voice Mail: (615) 833-6936Cell: (615) 403-7751

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

5/19/2006

THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER ONLINE ENGLISH EDITION (5/19/06)

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

Editor’s Note: Next week the Editor will report on his visit to the Atlanta-North Georgia Annual Conference Ordination Service. The Annual Conference was held at Turner Chapel AME Church, Marietta, Georgia. The Right Reverend William Phillips DeVeaux is the presiding Bishop of the Sixth Episcopal District; Dr. Pam DeVeaux is the Episcopal Supervisor.

The host pastor of the Conference was the Reverend Kenneth E. Marcus and what a host and what a facility. The host presiding elder was the Reverend David B. Rhone. The associate presiding elders were the Reverend Dr. Earle H. Ifill, the Reverend Dr. Roosevelt Morris, and the Reverend Walter E. Daniels.

The Ordination Sermon was delivered by the Reverend Dr. Johnny Barbour. Dr. Barbour said a lot of things, and I will share what he said in his sermon in next week’s article, but one thing he said to the 30 plus ministers who were ordained as Deacons and the 12 persons who were ordained elders was, “Atlanta is not ‘all of the world.’ I hope that you are willing to extend your ministry beyond Atlanta.” One more observation and I am going to stop and wait until the next issue, Dr. Barbour, in his sermon, asked how preachers can talk about how God can make a way out of no way, when they don’t trust God to make a way in their lives and feel that they must take two jobs to support their families…

MORE IN THE NEXT ISSUE…

1. THE 13TH EPISCOPAL DISTRICT ANNUAL RETREAT HAD SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE:

The 13th Episcopal District Retreat provided blessings for everyone who attended the retreat and took advantage of the resources provided by the retreat leaders. The Right Reverend Vashti Murphy McKenzie is the presiding prelate of the 13th Episcopal District; Mr. Stan McKenzie is the Episcopal Supervisor.

Those who took the time away from their busy schedules to attend the retreat were blessed by the ambience of the location, scheduled workshops, retreat sessions and the preaching. Bishop and Supervisor McKenzie provided time for retreat that allowed for rest and relaxation in the midst of active learning.

Workshop sessions included, “Getting the World Our – Marketing your WMS” lead by Therese’ Baker; “Feed the need – How to Impact the Issues of Poverty and Hunger,” Rebecca C. Wallace; “Spiritual Gifts inventory,” Amanda Johnson; “Establishing a Prison Ministry,” Loretta Matthews, “Both of You Taking Care of You, So that You Can Serve Well,” the Reverend Charlotte Blake Sydnor and the Reverend Dr. Calvin H. Sydnor III was designed for clergy couples; “Strategies for Taking Care of You,” the Reverend Calvin H. Sydnor III, designed for clergy; and “Supporting Your Partner – A Roundtable Discussion, Brenda Merritt, Facilitator, designed especially for clergy spouses.

Ms. Barbara Lancaster-Lyman was the facilitator for an early bird session entitled, “Relaxation and Aromatherapy.” The plenary session, focused upon “Servant Leadership,” was led by Dr. Mary Levi Smith, President Emerita of Kentucky State University and a Steward at St. John AME Church, Frankfort, Kentucky. Dr. Smith’s message is appended below: #24

The Thursday evening worship service sermon was delivered by the Reverend Dr. Stanley Fuller, the husband of the Reverend Dr. Ann Lightner-Fuller, pastor of Mt. Calvary African Methodist Episcopal Church, Towson, Maryland and a candidate for the bishopric.


Dr. Fuller took his text from Job 1:13-22 and entitled his sermon, “Encourage Yourself.” He asked the question. “What happens when your life or ministry seems to be a failure?” He went on to ask the preachers a question, “What do you do when your public ministry is a failure? Whether you feel down or in the midst of failure, what do you do?” The preacher asked several more questions, one of which was, “What do you say to that little voice on your shoulder that speaks negativity to you, and only you can hear it?”

The preacher went on to say, “You tell the negativity to shut up!” He gave the example in Job, when he had all of his possessions taken from him, responded, “The LORD God giveth and the LORD God taketh away, blessed be the name of the LORD.” Dr. Fuller made the point in his dialogical message that Job understood, and we should understand too, that our praise and our worship of God should never be wrapped up in our possessions and through it all, we should learn to trust in God. The preacher delivered a strong word and enjoined us to learn to encourage ourselves. God allows us to go through some things, but God gives in abundance and as God returned blessings to Job because Job was faithful, God will bless is in the midst of our failures and setbacks if we are faithful and that’s a great reason for learning to encourage ourselves in ministry. Bishop McKenzie led the congregation in a call or prayer and commitment. We all felt the presence of the Holy Spirit.

The closing sermon was the “icing on the cake.” The Reverend Dr. Ann Lightner-Fuller’s message was delivered “packed” with didache and kerygma. The message delivery was both charismatic and academic. Dr. Ann Lightner-Fuller preached a dynamic sermon entitled, “Manipulating the Blessing.” She told the story of Abram and Sarai and how God had promised Abram that he would be the father of many children, but Sarai manipulated the blessing by offering Hagar to Abram. Instead of waiting for God to fulfill God’s promise, Sarai took matters in her own hands. She wanted to help God to do God’s work and developed and alternative plan and was willing to settle for a lesser blessing. The preacher went on to say, as Sarai manipulated God’s blessings, we do the same today. We do not want to wait for God. We want the big church now and we want “the bottom line up front, without sacrifice. When we put our human limitations on God, we usually end up with a half blessing.

Dr. Lightner-Fuller delivered the sermon and her gift was letting the sermon preach itself. I am sure that every preacher felt like me, and wanted to get up and preach that sermon. The preachers and the laity were brought to their feet as she expounded on the word of God with power and commitment. We did not want to leave that place.

Bishop McKenzie extended the call to commitment and prayer and we were all spiritually filled with we all felt the Spirit of the LORD in that place.

“We didn’t want to leave, but we did.” The folks departed smiling and hugging one another because we had celebrated and experienced retreat.

2. CHRISTIAN STEWARDSHIP: THE ANCHOR FOR RURAL AND SMALL MEMBERSHIP CHURCH GROWTH:

By Doctor George R. La Sure

In today’s fast paced, technologically oriented society, we have witnessed church growth and expansion in many growing communities and, we have witnessed stagnation and decline in others. In many areas where large populations once resided, we have witnessed declines in industry and an out-migration of many to other areas of the state and country to pursue educational and employment opportunity and, advancement. With future technological advancement and information availability, it is likely that there will be continuing population shifts and detachments from areas of long time familiarity.

Today, the church is challenged, as much as it has ever been in the past, to provide for the needs of the people it serve wherever it might be located. There is nothing new about the church, except that it must make necessary adaptations and course adjustments to meet its stated goal of winning souls for Christ. As much as winning souls for Christ becomes the stated priority, there is an equal need to keep, maintain, and nurture souls for Christ beyond the point of uniting with the church.

In the case of the rural and small membership church, the greatest area for church growth is the individual member. In situations where the overall membership numbers are not likely to increase on a catastrophic scale, the most likely investment for church growth is via the individual. When persons are suitably oriented and indoctrinated in the Christian faith and, are well acquainted with African Methodism, then there is an opportunity for significant growth within the body of the congregation. Christian Stewardship does not relate to the size of a congregation but to the size of the Christian.

Christian Stewardship speaks of the individuals’ lasting commitment to Christ. The individual must first become a Christian by conversion, having been convicted by the Holy Spirit that there is a need to embrace Jesus Christ as one’s own Lord and Savior. As such, the individual commits to becoming a Christian. When this commitment is evidenced, we formally acknowledge that this individual, as a Christian, is one who professes belief in Jesus Christ and, is following the faith based on the life and teachings of Jesus. A further expansion of this definition, by the writer, would lead us to the understanding that a Christian is one of a body of believers committed to showing forth the teachings and the example of Jesus Christ, God’s only Son, Who is apart of the Godhead, consisting of the Father, the Son and, the Holy Spirit. Therefore, we might further conclude that a “Christian” is that individual who has dedicated his/her life, and has altered his/her behavior in such a way as to exemplify, as closely as possible, the identity of Jesus in his/her life, so that the completely informed and prayerful critic would encounter great difficulty in discerning a difference.

The Apostle Paul says, “Therefore, if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature: old things are passed away; behold all things are become new.” II Cor. 5.17 KJV. Christianity is indicative of a new walk that starts afresh with each day. It (Christianity) is a conscious and constant renewal of our faith in GOD Who is merciful and so filled with grace that He keeps us from falling. The Psalmist reminds us that “the earth is the Lord’s and the fullness thereof: the world, and they that dwell therein.” Psalm 24.1 KJV. Consequently, everything that we will ever come to know and embrace about this world belongs to God. As such, we must recognize that we (each of us) are only here for a short season and, the challenge that is ever before us, to become all that GOD would have us to be. Stewardship is about faithfully developing and using our gifts, talents and resources within the amount of time GOD has allotted to us. David reminds us: “As for man, his days are as grass: as a flower of the field, so he flourisheth. For the wind passeth over it, and it is gone: and the place thereof shall know it no more.” Psalm 103.15-16 KJV.

As Christian Stewards in the African Methodist Episcopal Church we must first be converted. In recent years, too much emphasis has been placed on “church membership” and not enough attention has been paid to conversion and “Christian Discipleship” We must, subsequent to conversion, engage in a program of personal growth and development, offered via Christian Education, to learn the history, the doctrine and discipline and the founding principles of African Methodism. Above all we must commit our ways to the Lord by embracing a daily diet of the Holy Spirit leading us in the understanding of God’s WORD (the Holy Bible) and, by making ourselves available to be apart of Bible Study and Church School activity.

Secondly, as Christian Stewards, we must be convicted. It is most difficult to lead where we will not go and, it is hard to teach what we do not know. In order to lead a congregation in the direction that it must go, the pastor must lead the way by providing an effective example. The congregation should be able to see a pastor who is tithing along with his/her officers. Today, more so than in the past, congregants are desirous of seeing sermons instead of just hearing sermons. Today the church is burdened, to some extent, with persons who might be labeled “counterfeit Christians” who project images of living one way, when, in fact, they are living lives that speak to something else.

In like manner, persons who desire to serve in leadership positions in the church must subscribe to all of the basic precepts of Christian Stewardship and demonstrate by their living and their giving that Christ is at the center of their lives. Conversion involves living a new life following the principles of Christian living. Christian living involves giving of our best all the time.

Finally, as Christian Stewards we must be committed to become the best possible managers of our lives. We must always be aware that GOD has given us everything and, that we will be held accountable for our stewardship over that which HE has given to us. As such, effective Christian Stewardship requires our daily presentation of ourselves (tithes, talents and treasures) as a fitting sacrifice to a Praise-worthy GOD. There is no earthly end to faithful Christian Stewardship. Jesus tells us that if we are “faithful over a few things, He will make us rulers over many things.” Mt. 25.21 KJV Therefore, we are encouraged to press on, knowing that our ultimate reward is not with humankind but with GOD.

3. THE REVEREND DR. JESSICA INGRAM TOLD THE FOLKS, “DON’T STOP PRAYING”:

By: Delanda S. Johnson
Special to the News

This was the message given by the Rev. Dr. Jessica Kendall Ingram, the Tenth District Episcopal Supervisor. The Rev. Dr. Ingram was the guest speaker in Athens, Texas at Allen Chapel AME Church for its fifth Sunday (April 30) WMS program.

Dr. Ingram expressed to the congregation that God is doing something new and wonderful in the AME Church and in the State of Texas.

She stated to the women that God is working with this State because HE has called women from all over the world to gather in Dallas, Texas August 16-19, 2006 for the International Convocation of Women. This will consist of workshops, spiritual messages from outstanding women of God and gospel recording artist Karen Clark Shears to entertain with her anointed voice from God.

As the Episcopal Supervisor proceeds to give, her scripture (Luke 8:1-8) the theme for her message was “Don’t Stop Praying” with special focus on the first verse.

Ingram explained that a parable was an earthly demonstration that in turn is a heavenly truth.

“There are those who say that when we pray, we should only pray about it once and then leave it alone. That when we pray and pray again, we are saying that we do not believe God; that we do not have faith or trust in God. They say that if we did, we would not keep praying about the something repeatedly. But Jesus in these verses is saying that we have the right to come to God over and over again until we get what we came for,” said Ingram.

Ingram stated that we are to always pray and never give up. When it seems like things are getting worse or not happening; just continue to pray.

We must be persistent in the power of prayer. Ingram noted that some like the boldness and confidence to go after what you want, but you do not want to do what it takes to get what you want.

Ingram stated to the congregation that we need to learn how to persist. This means we need to know how to struggle. To struggle means that you keep going after something and you do not stop. To struggle means that you will do whatever it take to go it. To struggle means when problems come you will find the answer. To struggle means that when roadblocks are placed in your way, you go around them.

“Young people today do not know the meaning of the word STRUGGLE. Our youth today have everything handed to them on a silver platter. We have some young people who cannot spell the word or pronounce the word STRUGGLE. Fredrick Douglass once said, “Without struggle there is no progress.” If we don’t struggle, we don’t get anything,” said Ingram.

Ingram reminded the congregation that we come from women who knew how to struggle. “We come from women who persisted in the struggle for equality. These women said that they would not give-up, shut-up, let-up, or back up. We come from women who had vision, faith, strength in knowing that God would make away out of no way. We come from women, who could not be bought, compromise, detoured, turn back, would not quit, until they got what they came for,” said Ingram.

The power of the word persistence teaches us and asks the question, “How bad do I want it? And what am I willing to do to get it?”

Ingram concluded that when you keep praying about the same things repeatedly, it does not mean that you do not trust GOD, but that you do trust God to handle all problems.

4. "KEEPING IN TOUCH MATTERS!"

*Written by Lynette Hawkins founder of Awesome Insight

More people return when follow-up happens. Effective outreach is greatly dependent on your hospitality and the way you respond to visitors when they come. Keeping in touch does matter. The more touches your congregation shares with a first-time visitor the greater the likelihood of a return visit.

Have you ever imagined what it is like to visit a church as a seeker, fill out a visitor's card but never hear another word from the church?

Recently I spoke with someone that experienced this. In fact, this seeker visited a couple of churches, filled out the visitor cards but never heard another word from those congregations. His response, "I don't plan to go back there." This can be a lesson to each of us. If you desire to increase your attendance and maintain more of your visitors, be ready to keep in touch and follow-up after a first-time visitor signs the pew visitor's card. Ministry leaders who place goals on communicating with worship guests and pledging to keep in touch, regularly, positively affects attendance and the return of visitors.

Regardless of whether your congregation is large or small, take the time to ensure you have an effective system for follow up. Here are a few ways that you can keep in touch and bring the love of Jesus Christ to those who may not yet know Him.

- Send a Letter from the Pastor. Thank visitors and invite their feedback with a pastor's letter that includes a self-addressed envelope for feedback. Ask them to tell you what they really enjoyed and what you can do better.

- Make Doorstep Visits by Ministry Leaders. Organize visits within 48-72 hours of a worship service visit. Arm leaders with welcome / information packets that include a gift from the church (i.e. homemade bread or cookies), recent issues of your newsletters and upcoming ministries.

- Mail Holiday Cards to Recent Guests. Send Mother's Day, Father's Day and Christmas cards to visitors.

- Share a Church Gift. Send a follow up gift with the church's name. Examples of gifts include ink pens, key chains, water bottles and bookmarks.
- Recruit a Diverse Volunteer Team of Callers. Get young, seasoned and mixed genders of outreach callers to call and invite guests to return. Train callers on how to invite.

- Place a Welcome Back Table in Entrance. Stock a welcome back table with invitations to small group ministries and upcoming events.

- Arm Church Office on FAQ's. Give the church receptionist, and admin team a list of frequent asked questions that first time visitors may ask when they call. A question such as "Do you have to be a member to attend?” is a good question to answer in advance.

- Personally Invite Guests to Lunch or Dinner. When possible, invite first time guests to break bread with the pastor or a lay leader.

- Send Thank You Emails. Regularly send first time guests inspiring email messages and invitation to return.

- Prepare a Script for Callers and Doorstep Visitors. Give the outreach ministry something to say. Write an easy to share message.
Keeping in touch matters!

* Written by Lynette Hawkins founder of Awesome Insight a communications initiative of Beyond Marketing Group, Inc., which provides seminars for church leaders on how to attract, reach and keep worship guests. Visit her website www.awesomeinsight.com or contact her at (888)834-7525

5. THE RIGHT REVEREND VASHTI MURPHY MCKENZIE TO BE THE WOMEN’S DAY PREACHER AT ST. MATTHEWS AME CHURCH, MIDWAY, KENTUCKY:

The Rt. Rev. Vashti Murphy McKenzie, Presiding Prelate of the 13th Episcopal District of the African Methodist Episcopal Church will be the Women’s Day preacher at St. Matthew AME Church, 114 N. Winter Street/US Highway 62, Midway Kentucky on Sunday, May 21, 2006 11:00 a.m.

The Theme for Woman’s Day is, “Vessels for the Masters Use” taken from II Timothy 2:21.

The Reverend Sherry J. Miller is the pastor of St. Matthew AME Church, Midway.

6. HOUSTON CITY COUNCILMAN MICHAEL BERRY AND UNITED STATES STATE DEPARTMENT CULTURE AMBASSADOR AND ORIGINAL MEMBER OF THE SUPREMES MARY WILSON VISIT HOUSTON AREA SCHOOLS:

Houston City Councilman Michael Berry visited Houston area schools with Mary Wilson, an original member of one of the most successful female singing groups in recording history – The Supremes.

During their visit, Ms. Wilson presented her “Dare to Dream” Program. In her “Dare to Dream” Program, Ms. Wilson encourages kids to focus on their goals and persist until they are successful, telling the story of how she and two girlfriends rose from the Brewster housing projects of Detroit to become Cinderellas of the 1960’s rock & roll scene.

Ms. Wilson encouraged students at Westbury High School, Yates High School and Cullen Middle School never to give up. Ms. Wilson’s visit has been made possible through the generosity of HEB Grocery & Affordable Health Care.

While in Houston, Ms. Wilson also attended a fundraiser as special guest for District 146 State Representative Elect Borris Miles at the River Oaks home of Reggie Van Lee. Ms. Wilson’s entire trip was coordinated by Councilman Berry’s Senior Aide Carl Davis who is a lay leader from the 10th Episcopal district and active member of Wesley AME Church under the leadership of the Rev. Leo Griffin.

7. THE GLOBAL CORNER - THE ST. JAMES MARIENTAL, REPUBLIC OF NAMIBIA, TRUST OPEN FUNDRAISING LETTER:

Caring for the Old, Orphans & Vulnerable Children Reaching down to pull up; Reaching out to pull in Reaching in to pull out; Reaching up to pull together Donations for the St. James Soup Kitchens

We greet you in the wonderful name of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. This missive is a connectional appeal to the extended AME family to consider a financial donation to the St. James Soup Kitchen in the Namibia Annual Conference of the 15th Episcopal District.

The St. James Trust, a non-profit welfare organization, was organised on May 1, 2004, with the Hon. Marlene Mungunda (Minister of Gender Equality and Child Welfare) serving as Patron, to serve the needy community (orphans and vulnerable children and old-aged person) of Mariental.

Winter is with us, and in addition to the blankets we have been distributing to this needy section of our society, the St. James Soup Kitchen currently serves 3 warm meals per week. This missive serves to inform you that we plan to increase these meals to 5 meals a week during the winter season starting June 1st, 2006, and we would kindly request you to consider a financial donation $150 (US) in favour of the St. James Trust. Kindly make out cheque to St. James AME Church.

With our warm regards,

The Rev. Willem Simon Hanse, St. James Trust Chairperson
P O Box 78,
Mariental,
Republic of Namibia,
Tel/Fax 063-24 2754
Tel. 061-22 9938 Fax. 061-23 16 26
stjamesmariental@yahoo.com

Trustees: Minister Marlene Mungunda, MP (Patron), Willem Simon Hanse (Chairperson), Anna Katrina Kooper (Vice Chairperson), Cornelia A Witbooi (Administrative Secretary), Launa Isaack (Financial Secretary), Hendrik F Links (Director), Jonas Dreyer, Morris Isaack, Gert Johannes Kooper, Annalise Isaack

8. THE GLOBAL CORNER – ZAMBIAN DEACONESS KILLED BY AUTO ON THE WAY TO THE HOSPITAL:

The Copperbelt West District of the South West Zambia Conference of the 17th Episcopal District regretfully announces the passing on of Deaconess Belita Mwansa of Allen Temple African Methodist Episcopal Church in Mufulira on Thursday 11th May 2006. The Rt. Rev. Paul J M Kawimbe is the presiding bishop; the Rev Jeremiah Mwenyo is the pastor and the Rev Mfula Peter Mwenya is the Presiding Elder.

Deaconess (Mama) Belita Mwansa aged 77 years old was hit and died on the spot by a fast moving vehicle of Sandvik Zambia Limited. She was crossing the highway from Chibolya Township to Kamuchanga Hospital to visit some AME Church members when she met her death. Deaconess Mwansa is one of the longest serving deaconesses in the South West Zambia Conference. Earlier in the day, she had attended the WMS weekly meeting where she strongly encouraged the women to be supportive to, avoid loose talk and get busy with God's work for night cometh when no one worketh.

Funeral gathering was shifted from her residence where she was staying alone to Allen Temple AME Church in order to accommodate a huge number of mourners from within and outside the Copperbelt West PE District. Funeral service took place yesterday Sunday 14th May 2006 12:00 pm after the morning worship service. The Presiding Elder of Copperbelt West District Rev M. P. P. Mwenya led the funeral and burial ceremony, which was preceded by the postmortem to determine the cause of death. Hundreds of mourners as well as several pastors within and outside of the AME Church attended the burial service up to Chatulinga Central cemetery where Deaconess Mwansa was put to rest. She was given a veterans send-off in accordance with the Zambian culture and tradition. Funeral and burial traditions in Zambia, Africa and the US are very different.

May Her Soul Rest in Peace.


Submitted by:
Rev Royd Mwandu- Senior Pastor
St. Thomas AME Church
Chingola, Zambia

9. EVERY WOMAN - MEDITATIONS FOR INSPIRING BEAUTY IN WOMEN:

By the Rev. Maxine L. Thomas,
Independent Beauty Consultant

“A Miracle Set On Changing Your Life”

“The same came to Jesus by night, and said unto Him, Rabbi, we know that Thou art a teacher come from God: for no man can do these miracles that thou doest, except God be with him.” (John 3:2)

And so, Nicodemus, a ruler of the Jews, who was also a Pharisee, came to Jesus by night. Have you ever come to Jesus by night…at a time when you knew nobody else was studying you and when you knew you could just have a talk in private with the Master? If the truth were told, there are too many nosy Christians. Always in your business… and trying to make it their business to know everybody else’s business. Sis, there are some times in our lives when we have to get away from the crowd, get into the privacy of our prayer closet and seek God in prayer.

And, the Bible says that Nicodemus said unto Jesus, Rabbi (teacher), we know that you are a teacher come from God. Who knows that you are come from God? I know other folk know that you are a member of Greater Bethel, that you are a member in good standing in the North Dakota Club, and that you are a loyal lay leader. But, does anybody know that you are come from God?

Girlfriend, somebody ought to know that you are come from God besides you.

When you are come from God, you are marked for change. You cannot be born again without a change coming into your life. The Bible says, “Therefore, if any man be in Christ, he us a new creature: old things are passed away; behold all things are become new.” (II Corinthians 5:17) A songwriter said, “What a wonderful change in my life has been wrought, since Jesus came into my heart.”

Jesus’ life was marked by change. Everything that Jesus touched and wherever He trod was marked for change. When He came on the scene, change took place. His teachings made a difference because they were God’s holy and divine messages to a dying world. And so it is that Jesus went about healing those who were sick and giving sight to the blind. He unstopped deaf ears and set loose stammering tongues. He fed the multitudes, walked on the water, and even raised the dead. We serve a living Savior and He is still making a difference in the world today!

Sister, aren’t you glad to be from God… to have had your sins washed away and to have the healing and regenerating power of God living on the inside of you! Did you know that you have the Miracle Worker living on the inside of you? Woman of God, you are filled with miraculous power. The day that you asked Jesus to come into your heart, a miracle was born inside of you. When you "got saved," it was a miracle!

When you open your mouth, a miracle ought to take place! I dare you to stand on the authority of God’s Word, stretch out in the Holy Ghost, and command the devil to loose your finances… to loose your child who is strung out on drugs… to loose your health! I dare you to speak a miracle every time you open your mouth. Woman of faith and victory, I dare you to walk in your miracle… to live in your miracle. I dare you to be the miracle that God created you to be.

And the Bible says, no man can do these miracles except God be with him. Don’t think that you are going any place on your own. You need God to go with you and before you, to stand near you and ever to care for you. God wants to lead you to your destiny of miracles. Now come on Sis, grab a hold of your miracle, and don’t let go!

Rev. Maxine L. Thomas is the Connectional Director of Ministries for Women (Dept. of Church Growth and Development, AMEC), the Assistant Pastor at Morris Brown AME in Philadelphia, PA, Editor of the First District Flame Newspaper, Director and Founder of Sisters Keeping the Covenant, and an Independent Beauty Consultant for Mary Kay. She is available to bring an “every woman” Seminar to your area or church. Call her at 215-763-4707. To order Mary Kay’s fine products and/or to learn more about the “Mary Kay Opportunity,” visit Rev. Maxine’s website at www.marykay.com/Magnificentmaxi. Remember, “With God, nothing shall be impossible unto you.”

10. UNITED METHODIST CHURCHES, MEMBERS ENCOURAGED PREPARING FOR AND TAKING BIRD FLU PRECAUTIONS:

May 15, 2006 News media contact: Linda Bloom * (646) 3693759* New York {287}

NOTE: A photograph and audio is available at http://umns.umc.org.
By Linda Bloom*

NEW YORK (UMNS) - At a time when the U.S. government is drafting plans on how it would deal with a massive outbreak of bird flu or another virulent strain of influenza, United Methodists can prepare themselves as well.

Kathy Griffith, staff member with the United Methodist Board of Global Ministries, believes the denomination can encourage preventive measures against a flu pandemic and use churches or church-related facilities as centers of care and treatment where outbreaks occur. "We're all over the world, in many different situations, with hearts to serve," she told United Methodist News Service in a May interview.

Fear over a large-scale outbreak of what has been called bird flu or avian flu prompted the Bush administration to make such public health preparations as stockpiling vaccines and anti-flu medications and creating a pandemic flu plan. A draft of the plan, released May 3, forecasts massive disruptions in everyday life if such an outbreak occurred.

Influenza "A" viruses are usually found in birds but more than 200 confirmed cases of human infection have been reported since 1997, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Symptoms in humans can range from fever or a cough to eye infections to pneumonia and other life-threatening complications.
The current outbreak in Asia and Europe of the H5N1 avian influenza virus has led to deaths in more than half of the people infected, mostly children and young adults, the CDC has reported. However, it is not known if all cases have been reported.

The big concern, according to the CDC, is that the H5N1 virus will change and allow for easy human-to-human transmission. In such a case, a pandemic could occur. "Because these viruses do not commonly infect humans, there is little or no immune protection against them in the human population," the CDC says.

Since December 2003, animal H5N1 cases have been reported in a large number of countries in Africa, East Asia and the Pacific, Europe and Eurasia, South Asia and the Near East.

The World Health Organization in Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Thailand, Vietnam, Azerbaijan, Turkey, Egypt and Iraq has reported human cases.

Part of the prevention effort has to do with adjusting living situations that make animal-to-human or human-to-human virus transmission easier. Griffith, who has trained community health workers in Central Asia, attended a course on behavior change in Thailand in January. Such change, she learned, can be slow in coming.

In central Asia, for example, animals routinely sleep in the kitchen - a room where childbirth also takes place. And in both Asia and Africa, Griffith pointed out "people are far more community-oriented than in the West" and live together in close quarters.

Griffith noted that while church communities can help respond to a bird flu crisis, their members need to remember they are equally at risk.

Prevention strategies for virus transmission include following basic hygiene measures, such as vigorous hand washing and taking precautions when handling eggs and raw chicken. If handled and cooked properly, poultry and eggs pose no threat for transmission, according to the CDC. The United States has had a ban on importing poultry from countries affected by avian flu viruses since 2004.
Griffith suggested that eggs should be fresh, washed on the outside and cooked well. Before and after handling raw poultry and eggs, wash hands with soap and warm water for at least 20 seconds, the CDC recommends. Cutting boards and utensils also need to be cleaned with soap and hot water.

"If you've been to a bazaar where you buy chickens, wash your shoes," Griffith said. "It's these market and preparation issues and cooking issues that are very real in a developing country and could be real here (in the United States)."
In church settings in countries where bird flu has surfaced, members can offer another type of greeting aside from shaking hands or hugging. Ways should be found to limit physical contact during the sharing of communion and the passing of offering plates, attendance registers and other items should be discouraged.

Churches and church-related facilities should provide ample soap, hand sanitizer, tissues and trash receptacles for visitors, members and staff. Trashcans with used tissues should be handled using glove and mask precautions and trash should be burned regularly.

Water fountains can be shut off and toys and nursery equipment sanitized on a regular basis. If needed, the nursery, day care and children's Sunday school should be closed.

Information is crucial to the prevention and spread of disease and church facilities can be used as distribution centers for such information. Churches also can provide space for vaccinations and treatments.

Pastoral care visits to infected patients also require precautions, such as the use of masks and gloves. Church communities can assist affected families by running errands, providing meals or offering other services.

If the bird flu became prevalent enough in an area to cause a ban on large-group gatherings, congregations could divide into smaller groups, Griffith said. Outdoor worship also may be an option.

Progress can be made against avian flu, according to the U.S. Agency for International Development. Vietnam, for example, which has had more confirmed human cases and deaths than any other country - 93 cases and 42 deaths between 2003 and 2005 - has had no confirmed human cases since November 2005.

*Bloom is a United Methodist News Service news writer based in New York.

News media contact: Linda Bloom, New York, (646) 369-3759 or newsdesk@umcom.org.

Used by permission. Article reprinted from UMNS All News
UMNS-ALL-NEWS@UMCGROUPEMAIL.ORG; on behalf of; NewsDesk NewsDesk@UMCOM.ORG

11. THE REVEREND MICHAEL W. WATERS SELECTED TO BE CRAVEN-WILSON GRADUATE FELLOW INTERN:

The Reverend Michael W. Waters will join the staff of the Office of the Chaplain starting June 2006/ August 2006 as the Craven-Wilson Graduate Fellow Intern. Michael is a 2002 and 2006 graduate of Southern Methodist University, earning a B.A. degree in political science and religious studies with a minor in history and a M.Div., cum laude, from the Perkins School of Theology, respectively.

Michael is an Itinerant Elder in the African Methodist Episcopal (AME) Church and is the senior pastor of Greater Allen Temple AME Church in Grand Prairie, Texas.

Reverend Water’s wife, Yulise, is an SMU alum and a third-year law student at the Dedman School of Law at SMU. They are expecting their first child September 2006.

Congratulatory messages may be sent to Reverend Water at mwaters@smu.edu

12. CLERGY FAMILY CONGRATULATORY NOTICE:

The Reverend David W. Green, Sr., Pastor of Mt. Olive AMEC in Orlando, Florida, Central Conference, 11th Episcopal District is graduating May 13, 2006, from United Seminary, Dayton, Ohio with a Doctor of Ministry Degree. Dr. Green's dissertation was entitled "Developing a Ministry to Address Inner Life Issues in the African Methodist Episcopal Church."Reverend David Green is the Brother of the Reverend Dr. Henry E. Green, Jr., Pastor of Mt. Hermon AMEC, Miami Gardens, FL, the Reverend Dr. John F. Green, Pastor of Bethel AMEC, Tallahassee, FL and Bishop Samuel L. Green, Sr., 15th Episcopal District.

13. CLERGY FAMILY CONGRATULATORY NOTICE:

15th Episcopal District

Cape Annual Conference - Graduation Announcements It is with joy unspeakable that we share the following:

The A.M.E. Church in the 15th Episcopal District, especially the Cape Annual Conference, wishes to congratulate and salute the following ministers who received their Baccalaureus Artium (Honours) Degree from the University of the Western Cape, Cape Town, South Africa:

The Rev. Jerome C. Gordon

The Rev. Albert Pieterse

The Rev. Adam J. Carelse

The Rev. Andrew B. G. Lewin

The Rev. William C. Legolie

The Rev. Quinton Liebenberg

The Rev. Shane Appollis

The Rev. Harry Claasen

The Rev. Johannes F. Carnow

Congratulatory messages may be emailed to revjcgordon@telkonsa.net

14. CLERGY FAMILY CONGRATULATORY NOTICE:

The Reverend and Mrs. Albert D. Tyson, III, Pastor and First Lady of Saint Stephen African Methodist Episcopal Church, Chicago, IL., proudly announce the graduation of their daughter, Annjeanette Marie Tyson (1st VP, Connectional YPD), from Wilberforce University, with a B.A. in Mass Media/Communication, Cum Laude, on Saturday, May 6, 2006.

Annjeanette is the granddaughter of Rev. & Mrs. A. D. Tyson, Jr. and Mr. & Mrs. Jules Greene. Congratulatory notices can be sent to:

Ms. Annjeanette Marie Tyson
10605 South Wood Street
Chicago, IL 60643

Email: dauht@aol.com

15. CLERGY FAMILY CONGRATULATORY NOTICE:

Jorie Nicole Lawson, daughter of the Rev. Dennis D. Lawson, pastor of St. Peter AMEC, Clarksville, Tennessee, and the late Judith R. Lawson graduated from Middle Tennessee State University on Saturday, May 6, 2006 with a major in Criminal Justice and minor in Psychology.

Jorie's intent is to enroll in law school concentrating in family law. Jorie is also the granddaughter of Mrs. Mary White and Rev. Donald White, pastor of St. Phillips AMEC, Nashville, Tennessee.

Email congratulations may be sent to ALPHALAWS@aol.com

16. CLERGY FAMILY CONGRATULATORY NOTICE:

Nikki Giovon Thomas, daughter of the Rev. Anthony Thomas, pastor of Salem AME Church, Nashville, TN and the late Mrs. Delores Anderson

Thomas graduated on May 11, 2006, from Alabama A & M with a Masters Degree.

17. CLERGY FAMILY CONGRATULATORY NOTICE:

Camelia Rebecca Brown, daughter of the Rev. and Mrs. Ronnie Brown, of Laurel Hill AME Church in Davis Station, SC - Central Conference, graduated on May 6, 2006, from Winthrop University in Rock Hill, South Carolina with a Bachelor of Science Degree in Education and a minor in Mathematics.

Camelia will begin her teaching career at Hand Middle School in Columbia, SC in August. Congratulations and best wishes can be emailed to: Gmabelbrown@aol.com

18. CLERGY FAMILY CONGRATULATORY NOTICE:

The Rev. & Mrs. Ralph (Kia) Brown are celebrating the birth of their new baby girl - Miss Naci Kiara Brown. She was born on April 24, 2006, and weighed in at 5 lbs. 12 ozs. and 18 inches long. Rev. Brown is the pastor of St. James AME Church - Summerton, SC in the Central Conference, 7th Episcopal District.

Congratulations and best wishes may be sent to: Post Office Box 411Vance, SC 29163

(803) 492-8454
Email: K_frierson@yahoo.com

19. CLERGY FAMILY CONGRATULATORY NOTICE:

The Rev. Jennifer Tinsley, Pastor of Bethel A.M.E., Logansport, Indiana, Indiana Conference, 4th Episcopal District, received her Master of Divinity Degree on Tuesday, May 9, 2006 from McCormick Theological Seminary in Chicago, Illinois.

Congratulations and best wishes can be emailed to: joy4ever72@sbcglobal.net

20. CLERGY FAMILY CONGRATULATORY NOTICE:

On May 6, 2006, Sammie L. Gordon, Jr., son of the Rev. & Mrs. Sammie L. (Hester) Gordon, Sr. received the degree of Master of Education Administration. Rev. Sammie L. Gordon, Sr. is the pastor of Mt. Moriah A.M.E. Church, Sandy Run, SC in the Central Conference of the 7th Episcopal District.

21. CLERGY FAMILY CONGRATULATORY NOTICE:

Terrance Linel Green, the son of proud parents, Vikki Green and Oscar Green, Jr. and proud grandparents Presiding Elder Delano Bowman and the Rev. Juanita Bowman, North District, Michigan Conference, 4th Episcopal District, is a candidate for the degree of Bachelor of Arts in Biology Education, Magna Cum Laude, at the Commencement Convocation to be held on Sunday, the fourteenth of May, Kentucky State University, Frankfort, Kentucky.

Congratulatory messages may be sent to: 19422 AlbanyDetroit, Michigan 48234

Or emailed to: terrancegreen2003@yahoo.com

22. CONGRATULATIONS TO ALL!

Congratulatory Messages/Praise Reports received are compiled and posted by the Clergy Family Information Center on Friday of each week. Clergy Family Births, Graduations, Weddings and Wedding Anniversaries (25th, 50th, 75th).

23. CONGRATULATIONS FROM THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER:

The Christian Recorder staff wishes to extend our congratulatory message to all of those celebrating the blessings of God.

24. PRESIDENT EMERITA OF KENTUCKY STATE UNIVERSITY SPEAKS AT 13TH EPISCOPAL DISTRICT WMS, CLERGY & CLERGY SPOUSES RETREAT:

*Dr. Mary Levi Smith

“Servant Leadership”

The following message was delivered by Dr. Mary Levi Smith, President of Kentucky State University, Frankfort, Kentucky

Good afternoon to each of you. I greet you in the name of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. I am very pleased to be here today. I thank all who planned this retreat, and for your kind invitation to speak to you this afternoon on the topic of “Servant Leadership.”

This is a great topic. Some may think that the words “servant” and “leadership” are incompatible or incongruent. By this I mean some think these words do not really go together. I hope by the time I take my seat, you will agree with me that these words work well together. Thus, they are compatible.

In the thinking of some people, especially in the people in church, one is either a servant OR a leader. I suspect that people, who think this way, have not really studied the Bible. These are church people who base their beliefs primarily on what the preacher says each Sunday. These are persons who do not read the Bible for themselves and are dependent on what others tell them about the word of God. I am still trying to understand this type of thinking.

Nevertheless, I am here today to tell you that where Christ is concerned, the words “leader” and “servant” fit perfectly. A true leader is indeed a servant to those who have needs.

We find in the Bible many examples of people who were great leaders, and who were also servants of the Lord.

In the Old Testament, the word servant is a term applied to the patriarchs such as Moses, Joshua, and David, the prophets and others. Moses tried every excuse he could find to avoid being the one to lead the children of Israel out of bondage in Egypt. He said he was slow of speech and slow of tongue. The Lord knew better for we find in Acts 7:22 that “Moses was learned in all of the wisdom of the Egyptians, and was mighty in words and in deeds.” He was perfect for the job, but he was just like some of us when asked to serve. He did not want to do it. The Lord had great plans for Moses and the Children of Israel and did not take “no” for an answer.

So, in spite of the complaining and bickering of the Children of Israel, with the Lord’s help, Moses was successful in leading them out of slavery in Egypt. He did not make it to the Promised Land, but he provided the leadership that established them as an independent nation.

As their leader he had to tolerate the complaining, and their repeated disobedience of God’s instructions and laws. He was forced to put the needs of the children of Israel before his own. When they complained about the manner that came from above, he was the one who went to the Lord on their behalf. As we all know he became angry with them many times, but he continued the work that he was assigned by God. He therefore was a servant of the Lord who was sent to lead.

Then there were Samuel, David, Shadrach, Meshach, Abednego, Daniel and many others who referred to themselves as “servants of the Lord”. We also find in the New Testament that Jesus, himself, Paul and Timothy used the term servant in reference to themselves. So, it seems to me that that our goal in this life should be to become a servant of the Lord.

We are all shaped for serving God. Job, speaking to the Lord, said, “Your hands shaped me and made me.” Of course, we were all shaped to serve God. (Job 10: 8)

God formed every living creature on this earth with a special area of expertise. Some animals run, some hop, some swim, some burrow, and some fly. Each has a particular role to play, based on the way they were shaped by God. The same is true for humans. Each of us was uniquely designed to do certain things.

Before a building is constructed, the architect will ask, “What is the purpose of this building? How will it be used?” The intended function of the building always determines the form. Therefore, before God created each of us, he decided what role He wanted us to play on earth. He decided how he wanted us to serve Him, and then He shaped us for those tasks. Each of us is the way we are because we were made for a specific ministry.

Maybe you still do not believe me. The Bible says, “We are God’s workmanship created in Christ Jesus to do good works (Eph. 2:10). We are not assembly-line products who are mass-produced without thought. Each of us is “custom designed,” one of a kind, and an original masterpiece.

David praised God for this incredible attention to detail in making him. “You made all the delicate, inner parts of my body, and knot me together in my mother’s womb. Thank you for making me so wonderfully complex. Your workmanship is marvelous (Psalms 139:13). This means that no one else on earth will be able to play the role God planned for each of us. What I am saying to you today is “each of us is equipped to make a unique service to the Body of Christ.

Service begins in the mind. It does not occur without recognition of a need. There must be somebody who has a need to which we can respond. So we must first recognize that there is a need. To be a servant of God requires a mental shift or a change in one’s thinking from self to others.

God is more interested in why we do something rather than in what we do. In other words, what is your motive? Is it to be able to say, “You know I have to go in my closet to find clothes for…she didn’t have a thing to wear. And those kids were just running around half naked.” A word of warning for those who serve for the wrong reason. (Read II Chronicle 25:2) where King Amaziah lost God’s favor because “he did what was right in the sight of the Lord, yet not with a true heart.

For servant leadership, we must think like a servant. In Numbers 14:24 says “My servant Caleb thinks differently and follows me completely.” We must think of ourselves as Christ Jesus thought of himself.

I have three points that I want to share with you regarding servants:

1) Servants think more about others than about themselves. The focus should be on others rather than on us. When we stop focusing on our own needs, we become aware of the needs of those around us. This is what it means to “lose your life” – forgetting yourself in service to others. Read Philippians 2:4, which says, “Look not every man on his own things, but every man also on the needs of others.” Jesus took on the role of a servant when he came to earth in the form of a human”

2) Real servants do not try to use God for their purposes. They let God use them for His purposes. Unfortunately, a lot of our service is often self-serving. We serve to get others to like us, to be admired, or to achieve our own goals. This is called, manipulation. It has no place in the church. Some try to use service as a bargaining tool with God. Can you imagine this? This is bold. I know you know what I am talking about. Some may say, “Lord if you will get me out of this jam, and Lord I know I did wrong, but if you will just get me out of this mess so nobody else will know, I promise to visit the sick, and help clean the church without complaining.” Wrong approach!

I repeat, do not try to use God for your purposes. Let God use you for His service.

3) Servants think about their work, and not about what others are doing.

A true servant does not compare, criticize, or compete with other servants or ministries. They are too busy doing the work God has given them.

Competition between God’s servants is illogical for many reasons: a) we are all on the same team; b) our goal is to make God look good, not ourselves; c) we have been given different assignments; d) We are all uniquely shaped.

There is no place for petty jealously between servants. When a person is busy serving, there is no time to be critical of others. Any time spent criticizing others is time that could be spent ministering to those who need your assistance.

Remember how Martha complained to Jesus about Mary not helping with the work? Well, when Martha did this, she lost her servant’s heart. Real servants do not complain of unfairness. They also do not have pity-parties, and definitely do not resent those who are not serving. Real servants just keep on serving.

It is not our job to evaluate God’s other servants. It also is not our job to defend ourselves against criticism. It is very difficult to hear criticism and not respond, especially when we have worked hard and done the best we can. We need not worry about the critics. Some time it is these persons who are trying to upset those who are working. Just keep in mind the Lord will handle these persons. Don’t waste your time explaining anything to them. We are not serving to please them. Our goal is to please the Lord.

4) Servants think of ministry as an opportunity and not an obligation.
They enjoy helping people, meeting their needs and doing ministry. They serve the Lord with gladness and joy. Why do they serve with gladness and joy? It is very simple. They serve because they love the Lord, and they are grateful for his grace.
They know that serving is the highest use of one’s life. They also know that God has promised a reward. What is that reward? In John 12:26 Jesus promised, “If any man serves me, let him follow me; and where I am, there shall also my servant be: If any man serves me, him will my Father honor.”

Don’t you wonder why more people are not willing to serve? Don’t we all want to be honored by God?

I have given you enough to think about regarding servants. But this is only part of today’s topic. What then is a leader? More specifically, what is a leader in the church? Is it someone who tells everybody else what to do while he or she sits back, observes, and critiques what others have done? I don’t think so.

The word leader may simply be defined, as one who leads. There are many books that have been written about leadership. It is defined as the process of influencing one or more persons in a positive way so that goals and objectives are accomplished. Each of the biblical leaders that I mentioned influenced others in a positive way, and so can each of us.

There are three basic styles of leadership.

The first style is recognized as authoritarian. An authoritative leader is one who controls completely. There is little input from the group. This person directs the activities of group members and monitors them very closely.

The second type of leader is labeled as democratic. This leader seeks input from subordinates and involves them in setting objectives and developing procedures. This leader’s power comes from the people she or he leads. This leader does not push ideas or methods down the group’s throat.

The third type of leader is identified as Laissez-faire. This leader does not interfere with the activities of the group. This leader remains in contact with the group, but does not monitor it. So, the group can do pretty much what it wants.
These three leadership styles are related to the personality, work ethics, and commitment of the leader.

Let us look at these leadership styles as they relate to the church. The authoritarian leader already knows what is to be done, how it is to be done, when it is to be done, and who is expected to do the job.

Example: The choir has been asked to sing on Easter Sunday. The authoritarian choir director selects the music to be sung without input from choir members. The director decides who will do the solo part, and what choir members will wear. In other words, there is no input from the group.

The democratic leader will discuss the goals to be accomplished, but will not say how they are to be accomplished. Example: The mass choir is expected to sing on Easter Sunday. The choir director asks the members what songs will be appropriate for Easter Sunday. The members respond and the music is selected based on the discussion regarding the songs that the majority think are appropriate. The choir members and director reach a consensus on the music and the attire.

The Laissez-faire leader will meet with the choir, and inform members that the choir has been requested to sing on Easter. The Director tells choir members to pick out whatever they want to sing and what ever they want to wear. The director may ask if everybody knows the songs. If the answer is yes, there is no rehearsal. Members are told the time they are to come to sing on Easter Sunday.

You can pretty much tell which of these three leaders is more likely to be successful. In the church, Servant Leadership requires more than doing the minimum amount of work. We must remember that some people are not good leaders. But, each one of us can help lead others to Christ through the Godly service that we provide. God gave us different gifts. We should use them for the glory of God.

We were made for a mission and as followers of Christ; we must continue what Jesus started. Jesus calls us not only to come to Him, but also to go for Him. If we are members of God’s family, our mission is mandatory and that is to help draw other to Him. To ignore this mission is disobedience. God holds us responsible for the unbelievers who live around us. Ezekiel 3:18 says, “You must warn them so they may live. If you do not speak out to warn the wicked to stop their evil ways, they will die in their sin. But I will hold you responsible for their death.” End of quote.

If your neighbor had cancer or AIDS and you knew the cure, it would be criminal to withhold that lifesaving information. It is even worse to keep secret the way to forgiveness, purpose, peace and eternal life. We have the greatest news in the world, and sharing it is the greatest service we can provide to anyone. So be the servant leader that Christ called you to be.

In order to provide this service to others will require you to abandon your personal agenda for your life. You cannot just tack it on to all the other things you would like to do with your life. It seems sometimes that we have time for everything in our lives, except what Christ has instructed us to do.

You must say what Jesus said. “Father … I want your will to be done, not mine.” We must yield our rights, expectations, dreams, plans, and ambitions to Him. Stop praying selfish prayers such as “God bless what I want to do!” Instead, ask God to help you do what “He” wants you to do.

Now, do not get me wrong. I am not suggesting that anyone quit his or her jobs to become a full time evangelist. God wants us to share the good news wherever we are. As a student, mother, teacher, sales clerk, manager, or whatever you do for a living, look for the people that God places in your path with whom you can share God’s love.

In closing, I leave you with this thought. If you give to the Lord a thimble of service to others, you will receive a thimble of blessings. If you give the Lord a bucket of service, you will receive a bucket of blessings in return. But, if you give to the Lord a barrel of service, in return you will receive a barrel of blessings. So how much service will you provide to the Lord? A thimble, a bucket, or a barrel?

May God bless each of you. Thank you for your attention.

* Dr. Mary Levi Smith is President Emerita of Kentucky State University and a Steward at St. John AME Church, Frankfort, Kentucky

25. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

From: shooks@ameritech.net
The Rev. Sammy L. Hooks, Presiding Elder South District - Illinois Conference Sister Myriel L. Johnson, the wife of our Former Presiding Elder, Rev. Ivan J. Johnson of the South District, Illinois Conference, 4th Episcopal District passed.

Funeral service arrangements for Sister Myriel L. Johnson:

Wednesday May 17, 2006
12:00 Noon

St. Paul A.M.E. Church
1130 South 16th Street
Springfield, Illinois 62703

Pastor, the Rev. Gary McCants
(217) 522-4796 Phone

Professional services entrusted to:

Bisch & Son Funeral Home
506 East Allen
Springfield, Illinois 62703

(217) 544-5424 Phone
(217) 544-4717 Fax

Condolences and expressions of sympathy may be sent to:

The Rev. Ivan J. Johnson & family
1921 Greentree Road
Springfield, IL 62703

Please remember the Johnson family in your prayers.

26. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

From: WMS CARE 2000

It is with sincere regret that I inform you of the passing of Mrs. Vanessa VanHoose, Life Member; and Past Connectional 1st Vice President, WMS-AMEC. Mrs. VanHoose was the widow of the Rev. M. H. VanHoose.

Funeral Arrangements for Mrs. VanHoose:

Tuesday, May 23, 2006
Wake: 10:00 a.m.
Funeral Service: 11:00 a.m.

Charles Street A.M.E. Church
551 Warren Street
Roxbury, MA 02121

(617) 442-7770

Services entrusted to:

Davis Funeral Home
89 Walnut Avenue
Roxbury, MA 02119

(617) 427-0828

Expressions of condolence may be sent to her daughter:

Mrs. Marjorie Eure
194 Morse Street
Sharon, MA 02067

(617) 784-3231

Please remember the family in your prayers.

B. P. Lowe
From: WMS CARE 2000@aol.com

(H) (617) 442-3755
Fax: (617) 442-5068

27. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

We regret to announce the passing of Brother William Collins of Washington, North Carolina, grandfather of the Rev. Mila Cooper, whose husband is the Rev. Gerald Cooper, pastor of St. James AME Church, 8401 Cedar Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio 44103

The funeral will be held on Monday, May 22, 2006 in North Carolina.

Condolences may be sent to:

The Reverends Gerald and Mila Cooper
11008 Reservoir Place Drive
Cleveland, OH 44104

216-751-5477

Or email to mpc4dst@yahoo.com .

28. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

Regretfully announce the passing of the Reverend William Johnson, retired pastor of the Dayton District, South Ohio Conference, the Third Episcopal District. Reverend Johnson last pastored Upshaw AME, Dayton and Allen Chapel AME, Portsmouth, Ohio.

Arrangements:

Homegoing Service
Sunday, May 21, 2006, 4 p.m.

Bethel AME Church
700 Mulberry Street
Lockland, OH 45215

513-761-3208 phone
513-761-8086 fax

The Rev. John McCants, Host Pastor

Condolences may be sent to:

The Johnson Family
820 Read Bud Drive
Cincinnati, OH 45229

513-221-2727

Please keep the family in your prayers.

Respectfully Submitted:
The Rev. Dr. Taylor T. Thompson,
St. John AME Church,
Cleveland, Ohio
Third District Brotherhood
216-214-6886

29. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT ANNOUNCEMENTS PROVIDED BY:

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

Sister Ora L. Easley
Email: Amespouses1@aol.com

Phone: (615) 837-9736
Fax: (615) 833-3781
Voice Mail: (615) 833-6936
Cell: (615) 403-7751

30. 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

5/12/2006

THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER ONLINE ENGLISH EDITION (5/12/06)

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. EDITORIAL – A QUESTION: “HOW ARE STEWARDS CONFIRMED?”:

This editorial was precipitated by a conversation I had with Dr. Johnny Barbour the publisher for the AME Sunday School Union.

He asked me a question, “How are Stewards confirmed?” I thought to myself, “That’s an easy question.”

Before I could answer, he asked me another question, “Who do the Stewards belong to; do they belong to the pastor?” My mind started working and I thought, “Both questions are easy, I don’t need The Discipline, I can just respond with what I have observed these last couple of years.”

I responded confidently, “The pastor nominates persons to serve on the Steward Board and the Quarterly Conference confirms the Stewards nominated by the pastor.” I thought to myself, “That was a great answer.”

Dr. Barbour pressed the point further. He asked. “But how were they confirmed?”

I responded, “The presiding elder confirms them.” Again, I thought, “Easy answer.”

Dr. Barbour obviously, not satisfied with my answer, asked, “How does the presiding elder do that?”

I responded recalling my recollection and said, “The presiding elder confirms those persons by having them to stand and saying something, like, “I hereby confirm you to be stewards …” with an admonition for them to serve well and to work harmoniously with their pastor.

I could see on Dr. Barbour’s face a smile and the look of, “I gotcha.”

Dr. Barbour asked, “But how are they confirmed and what does confirmation mean? He went on to give an analogy and asked, “Now that President Bush has nominated Air Force General Michael Hayden to be the head of the CIA, does that mean that Vice President Cheney can with some nice ceremonial words, say, ‘I confirm you,’ or does something else have to happen?”

Before I could answer, Dr. Barbour answered his own question and went on to say, “Congress has to vote on the President’s nomination. And, that is my point, confirmation means, and vote! To confirm the Stewards, the people at the quarterly conference have to vote. The presiding elder cannot confirm the Stewards with some ceremonial words and some kind of blessing. A vote has to be taken to confirm the stewards. The members of the church have to be involved.”
Now, intellectually I knew that confirmation meant, vote, but I missed the parameters of the definition when Dr. Barbour asked me the question.

Trying to dig myself out of the hole I had put myself in, I went on to share with him that I have seen presiding elders somewhere confirm Stewards with a nice ceremony and I had even heard a presiding elder somewhere say, “The Steward Board belong to and works for the pastor. They have to support the pastor’s program.”

Dr. Barbour agreed that he knew that attitude prevails among some presiding elders today because that was the way they were taught.

We both agreed that if a steward or a steward board supported a pastor’s unethical program, the steward or board of stewards would be derelict.

We continued the discussion, as more itinerant elders should do, and opened The Discipline for an engaging exchange of observations.

Stewards are nominated by the pastor, and are confirmed, and that means, to be voted upon, by the members of the Quarterly Conference.

The Discipline says that the Quarterly Conference “shall confirm them or, reject them. If some or all of the stewards that the pastor nominates are rejected, the pastor has to come back with a revised list of names.

The Stewards are not the pastor’s “yes persons.” The pastor cannot summarily dismiss stewards because the pastor feels that a steward is not in agreement with the pastor’s program. “Stewards are accountable to the Quarterly Conference of their circuit or station, which shall have the power to remove them when they fail or refuse to do their duties.” The Discipline goes on to state, “Pastors can suspend a steward in the interim of the Quarterly Conference if the steward fails to discharge his or her duties.” But the vacancy has to be filled at the next Quarterly Conference. The confirmation process has to take place. The members of the Quarterly Conference have to vote, that is, to confirm or reject, the pastor's recommendation. The stewards belong to the church.

The stewards should work harmoniously with the pastor, but must always remember that they are the congregation’s and the pastor's representative and a strong spiritual component of the local society.

The qualifications of the Stewards require them to be of solid piety, know and love the Word of God, the African Methodist Episcopal Church doctrine, and The Doctrine and Discipline of the African Methodist Episcopal Church. He or she must be fruitful and of good nature or acquired ability to transact the spiritual and temporal business of the church.

We ended our conversation agreeing that the Church needs to be more intentional in its training of middle management and the laity needs to understand that they have significant input into the steward confirmation process.

The intent of The Discipline for the Steward Board confirmation process is not a “rubber-stamp” procedure, but a collegial process that involves the presiding elder, the pastor, the laity and ultimately, the presiding bishop.

2. A NOTE FROM THE EDITOR:

The Editor is attending the 13th Episcopal District Retreat for WMS/Clergy/Clergy Souses in Lexington, Kentucky. The Editor and the Reverend Charlotte Sydnor are leading the dual-clergy spouses retreat. The Editor is also leading the ministers’ retreat.

The Right Reverend Vashti Murphy McKenzie is the Presiding Prelate of the Thirteenth Episcopal District. Mr. Stan McKenzie is the Episcopal Supervisor.

3. PICK UP THE CURRENT ISSUES JET AND EBONY MAGAZINES:

Pick up the current issues of Jet and Ebony Magazines. I understand that they contain great coverage of the AME Church. I am going out to get my issues shortly.

4. CORRECTION:

The May 8, 2006 edition of The Christian Recorder Online reported, The Reverend Orlando McCauley, Jr, as being from the 15th Episcopal District.

Bishop S. L. Green caught the error and informed us that the Reverend Orlando McCauley, Jr. is from the 14th District He earned Dual degrees: a Master of Divinity/ Master of Christian Education.

5. CHRISTIAN METHODIST EPISCOPAL (CME) CHURCHES VICTIMIZED BY UGLY SCAM:

I am Mary McKinney. My husband is Pastor R. C. McKinney of Williams Memorial CME of Ft. Lauderdale, FL. My intention of writing to you about the recent event of fraud, of which my husband and I are victims, is to warn other pastors and members of the CME Church. I pray that you will take this as an opportunity for The Christian Index to give front cover warning to deliver a message to persons like myself who without prejudice try to do good. You may already be aware of the scam being perpetrated against members of the church because as the crime was being committed my husband became aware that other members of the church had been approached and knew of the scam but did nothing to warn others.

I don’t want anyone, especially God fearing Christians, to experience the feeling of violation that comes with being scammed. Even though I feel stupid for allowing someone to take advantage of me, the people who investigate money wire fraud have assured me and by the FBI (to whom I have reported the scam) that scammers are smarter than the average person is because they live, breathe and operate without a conscious in order to survive. The profile of a scammer is also to present situations that might appear to provide us with advantages, benefits and opportunities for remuneration.

Having been raised in Miami, FL, I have become accustomed to being on alert for the many and varied scams that are perpetrated because South Florida is known as a haven for scam artists. Of course, in hindsight, all the signs for scam were there but they “got me” anyway. I hope to give as many details as possible so that anyone reading the story will recognize the story or some variation of it should it happen to them.

Two weeks ago, someone telephoned my husband at the church claiming to be Pastor Charles Davis of Miles Metropolitan in Washington, DC. When my husband returned his call he claimed to have a member, Diane Williams, who was being transferred by her job at HUD to our area and wanted to ensure that she be relocated to our congregation. The man claimed also to be (at the time) driving for Bishop Charles Helton and allowed my husband to speak to someone claiming to be and sounding like Bishop Helton. The claim was that Diane Williams and her four children under the age of 12 would be driving by car from Washington to Florida that day. In addition, Ms. Williams was said to have recently lost her husband and was starting over in Florida. My husband was on his way to Florida Spring Convocation and left with me the cell number given as that of Diane Williams.

Later that Friday evening, about 11:30 PM, I was awakened by a tearfully desperate phone call from the so-called Diane Williams claiming to be stranded with her children in Georgia as a result of having been in an accident. She claimed that neither she nor the children sustained serious injuries but that her car was not drivable. This person claimed that the mechanic did not tell her before he made the repair that the company would only accept cash. She only had $225 of the $775.00 she owed and the company would not accept a check. The kind mechanic, who was identified as Michael Murphy / Waters (Mike), was unwilling, as his boss recommend, allowing her to sign over the $22,000.00 check from HUD to pay for the repairs. I was appalled that his boss would ask such a thing and horrified for her that in her delicate condition she might be willing to do so.

Being a Christian man himself with a wife and small children, the mechanic thought of what he would want someone to do for his family in a similar situation. It was late, the children were fretful and after the ordeal she had been through, he decided to give her back the $225 she had given him to allow Ms. Williams to stay in a local motel overnight and to work out the details of how to pay for the car in the morning. He asked me and I obligingly offered her words of comfort and assurance that everything would work. The scenario I have painted is what I took with me to bed that night. A mother stranded with four small children in the middle of the night in a small town without the means for providing for them.

On Saturday morning, I was awakened from a deep sleep with a proposition from Mike (whose last name the night before was Murphy) that his company would accept a money gram through Wal-Mart and asked if I could wire the money through a Wal-Mart location near my home. He pointed out a Wal-Mart near my home. His boss was now on his case for not having the money for the repair in the register and was threatening to fire him for being a “do-gooder” in helping out this Christian woman. As the pastor’s wife (who was helping a prospective member of the congregation who was said to have worked in Bishop Gilmore’s Conference as a trained pianist and organist), I agreed to wire the money from my personal bank account. He wanted to know how long it would take me to get to the Wal-Mart. Although most of our churches have procedures in place to protect the issuance of benevolent funds (which when I called the chairperson of my Steward Board he reminded me) most of us with compassionate hearts have little to protect our hearts against perpetrators of fraud. I called my husband at his meeting and left word about all that had happened and to ask for advice on how to handle this situation.

By the time I arrived at Wal-Mart the cashier at customer service said that Mike had already called several times and had already given her the information needed to complete the money gram transfer. In fact, he was on the phone and wanted to speak with me. Mike was very cordial and desperate to get the transaction completed so that he wouldn’t be fired. He kept both the cashier and me busy on the phone as the transfer was transacted. Mike (whose last name this morning is Waters) informed me that he had already allowed Diane Williams and her children to be on their way. Any mild form of resistance or questions I raised were met with satisfactory answers. Having completed what I thought was a good deed I returned home.

Shortly after arriving, I was greeted with another phone call from Mike saying that the cashier had misspelled his name on the money gram and that he could not make access. This is the making of the second scam. Mike’s supervisor and the owner of the mechanic’s shop are now involved. The supervisor is now trying to protect Mike from the owner, who is livid, and threatening to send the Highway Patrol after Diane Williams for non-payment. In desperation, I am asked to return to Wal-Mart to re-send the money gram in the correct name of Mikal Waters.

By now, my husband has received my message and is sharing the story with Pastor Gary Collins. Before he can finish the story Pastor Collins has heard the story before and warns my husband that there is no Diane Williams and that the persons he spoke with (Pastor Davis and Bishop Helton) were imposters.

Of course, by the time my husband can warn me I have wired another $775 to the scammers.
The people at Money gram say that the scammers use places like Wal-Mart and Albertsons because the store doesn’t train them on the characteristics of scams. The FBI reports that scammers habitually use the tactics I have reported to overcome obstacles people present. I am sharing some of them here so others can be aware.

- Calling while you are asleep so that you can’t think clearly
- Presenting you with situations which may be beneficial to you
- Presenting opportunities for remuneration of anything you might lose
- Keeping you distracted with much talk
- Using many Christian phrases which engage you as partners in Christ
- Providing you with alternatives to any resistance you might offer
- Directing you (even gently) of actions you can take to help them solve a dilemma
- Keeping you so busy that you do not take time to follow your instincts.

Editor’s note: Reprint permission granted by the Reverend Dr. Kenneth Jones, Editor, The Christian Index, the Official Publication of The Christian Methodist Episcopal Church. This article above was published in the April 2006 print edition of The Christian Index.

6. 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

7. AME PASTOR, THE REVEREND DR. EDWARD SCOTT TAPPED AS INTERIM DEAN OF MARY BALDWIN COLLEGE:

By Dawn Medley 5/8/2006

Already a consummate civic servant, professor, and local pastor, Edward Scott will soon add the responsibilities of interim dean of Mary Baldwin College to his repertoire. Scott, in his 16th year of service at MBC, will officially assume the post July 1, while a committee conducts a national search for a permanent replacement for outgoing dean of the college and vice president for academic affairs Jeffrey L. Buller. Scott was named assistant dean of the college in 2005. As he did then, he will also continue to serve the college as associate professor of philosophy, although his course load will be significantly reduced, Scott said. “I want to provoke students into a sense of discovery. Discovery of the world is intimately related to self-discovery,” he said in a recent interview. Scott is active in the local community. He serves as pastor at Allen Chapel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Staunton and on the city’s school board. He is involved in community events, including the annual Martin Luther King Day march, historic preservation at Fairview Cemetery, and service on the board of trustees of the American Shakespeare Center.
Scott earned his bachelor’s degree at Slippery Rock State College in Pennsylvania, and his master’s and Ph.D. at Duquesne University in Pittsburgh. Prior to coming to Mary Baldwin in 1990, Scott taught at Monmouth College, a small liberal arts college in Illinois.

Used by permission of Dawn Medley, Mary Baldwin College

8. THE DIRECTOR OF AFRICAN AMERICAN AND MULTICULTURAL STUDENT ENGAGEMENT POSITION AVAILABLE AT MARY BALDWIN COLLEGE:

The Director of African American and Multicultural Student Engagement will implement and facilitate retention programming designed to promote the social, cultural, and educational development of students of color. The Director will be responsible for identifying the needs and concerns of historically under-represented students, serve as their ombudsman and mentor and work collaboratively with faculty and administrators to establish programs that address the celebration of diversity, mentorship, leadership and civic engagement. As a member of the Student Affairs team and in accordance with departmental and institutional mission and planning, the Director will provide leadership for inclusive excellence and overall student learning. The Director will give student staff and event supervision and support, advise a variety of minority student organizations and performing/ creative arts groups, coordinate Office communication, assist the Office of Admissions with minority student recruitment. The Director of African American and Multicultural Student Engagement will report to the Associate Vice President for Student Affairs.

Qualifications: Candidates must have excellent communication skills, the ability to work with students, parents, faculty, staff, and a wide variety of community organizations. Candidates must have an understanding of the issues of students of color on a predominantly white college campus and a demonstrated commitment to multicultural programs, services and organizations and to the empowerment of young women. Candidates must have strong organizational skills with an expertise in event marketing, program design and evaluation, and service-learning. The ideal candidate should possess skills in conflict resolution, crisis intervention, diversity training, and budget management and be able to exercise independent judgment, innovative thinking and creativity. Candidates who are Bi-lingual in English and another language and who possess an appreciation and/or expertise in the creative arts will be strongly considered. Experience in a small residential liberal arts college environment is preferred. A Master's degree in Student Personnel, Counseling, Higher Education Administration, Social Work, Ethnic Studies or a related field is preferred but candidates with a bachelor's degree and associated work experience will be considered.

Mary Baldwin College is an equal opportunity employer and supports diversity among its staff and faculty. To be assured full consideration send a letter of application, resume and three letters of recommendation to:

Andrea Cornett-Scott,
Email: ascott@mbc.edu
Associate Vice President for Student Affairs,
Mary Baldwin College

9. THE GLOBAL CORNER - THE 2006 EIGHTEENTH EPISCOPAL DISTRICT CHRISTIAN EDUCATION EMPOWERMENT CONFERENCE, MOEDING COLLEGE, OTSE, BOTSWANA:

The Right Reverend Sarah F. Davis,
Presiding Prelate of 18th District

The 18th Episcopal District met for its Mid-Year and Christian Education Empowerment Conference at Moeding College in Otse, Botswana this year and had as its Conference theme, “Empowering the Church to Walk and Talk like Jesus.” This year’s conference was especially exciting with the presence of special guests Bishop Wilfred J. Messiah of the 20th Episcopal District; Dr. George Flowers, Secretary-Treasurer - Department of Global Witness and Ministry, AMEC; and Dr. Daryl Ingram, Secretary-Treasurer, Department of Christian Education, AMEC.

There were three significant “first ever” moments at this year’s Christian Education Empowerment Conference. Two of which, were the preludes to the opening of the Conference (1) Council of Scribes Translation Summit I and (2) the RAYAC Retreat. On Sunday, April 23rd the Scribes of the 18th District gathered at the Cumberland Hotel, Lobatse, to continue their work of translating portions of the 2004 Discipline in each of the four predominate languages of the District: Portuguese, Sesotho, Seswati and Setswana. The Scribes began working in their respective countries on April 17th and gathered at the Cumberland to continue their work and to discuss interpretation issues. The results of their translations for part-one of this project was presented to Bishop Sarah on Tuesday evening at the close of Summit I. January 2008 is the target date for publication of the translations of the Discipline and other teaching and training materials to be provided to members throughout the 18th District.

On Tuesday, the first RAYAC Retreat of the District was held under the leadership of Episcopal President Derrick Khumalo. Visitors from the 19th District RAYAC came and made the Retreat an even greater success.

The Lay Organization led by Episcopal President L. B. Monyake, held its meeting on Wednesday, prior to the official opening of the conference Wednesday evening at 7hr00. The Opening Worship and Communion Service started on a high note as Bishop Wilfred Messiah brought everyone to their feet as he preached from the topic: “Jesus Hangs Around Long Enough!”

Each morning from 06hr30 to 07hr30 Evangelist M. Qhobela led the more than 100 prayer warriors in Early Morning Prayer Call. The Moeding Chapel was packed and truly filled with the presence of God as prayers were sent up in all the different language but the same Spirit. Bishop Sarah joined us each morning and always had words of encouragement for everyone.

“Hiding the Word in Our Hearts” Bible Study time was well attended as Bishop Sarah led the study on “A Disordered Mind.” She emphasized that for Christians to walk and talk like Jesus, they must move away from disordered minds and think with the mind of Christ.

Dr. Daryl Ingram addressed “Christian Education: The Key to Church Empowerment” during Plenary Session I. During Plenary Session II on Friday, Dr. George Flowers spoke on “Global Mission and its Role in Empowering the Church.” Both presentations were informative and were received with much enthusiasm by the participants.

There were 15 Workshops with 10 different topics. The facilitators of the workshops did outstanding jobs and provided handouts in each of the sessions. Workshop presenters were Bishop Wilfred Messiah, Dr. Daryl Ingram, Dr. George Flowers, Presiding Elder Mpho Moruakgomo, Presiding Elder Solomon J. Nxumalo, Reverend Jose Luis Sevene, Reverend B. S. Ntshangase, Evangelist M. Qhobela, Brother Mario T. Masuku, Dr. Ncamsile Ntiwane, Sister Goodness Thwala, and Sister P. J. Molomo. The workshop topics included topics on “HIV/AIDS and the Role of the Church”; “Our Identity – Who Are We?”; “The Call” to Ministry; “Serving God and Others”; Developing Prayer Ministry in the Local Church”; “Developing Effective Young Adult Ministries”; “The General Departments of the Church”; “The Characteristics of the Servant Mind”; “Effective Leadership in the Church”; and “Developing the Mind of Christ.”

Our hour of power preachers, Reverend B. S. Ntshangase (Swaziland Annual Conference) and Reverend Beauty Lekone (Botswana Annual Conference) continued to take the conference higher as they preached sermons causing the congregation to look within themselves. On Thursday night, Dr. Daryl Ingram very effectively and powerfully reminded us during the RAYAC led service, that we must be “Faithful, Available and Teachable (FAT) Christians.’ After this service, we were sure we had experienced the last of the mountain top experiences to be had at the Conference. We were wrong!

The third “first ever” moment was to take us even higher than we had ever been in three days. Friday night’s “first” 18th District Music Competition featured the conference choirs from each country save for Mozambique. Botswana took the first place trophy with Swaziland and Lesotho following respectively with second and third places. The adjudicators for the competitions were Dr. Daryl Ingram, Dr. George Flowers, Supervisor Claytie Davis, Jr., and Mr. Maplogonolo, Moeding College’s Director of Music. Mr. Maplogonolo is also the National Director of College Music Competitions for the country of Botswana. The choirs were all excellent as evidenced by the judges who took more than 45 minutes to come back with the results.

The closing service on Saturday offered each of us a closing challenge to “Walk and Talk like Jesus” as Presiding Elder Reverend Mpho Moruakgomo preached from the Conference theme and Scripture, Luke 24:13-25. Bishop Sarah following the worship service made two pastoral appointments in the Botswana Annual Conference. Additionally, Presiding Elder Mpho Moruakgomo was moved from the Hukuntsi District to the Lobatse District and Reverend Judge Tlhage was promoted to the position of presiding elder and assigned to the Hukuntsi District. Presiding Elder Tlhage fills the Presiding Elder position vacated by Reverend Ada Mereyabone who is no longer with the A.M.E. Church.

Truly, this was the Conference of all conferences in the 18th District. We thank all our guests and facilitators for all their support, presentations and devoting their time and skills to the Empowerment Conference. Our Director of Christian Education, Presiding Elder Albert Thwala says, “You haven’t seen nothing yet! Just wait until next year when the 2007 Christian Education Empowerment Conference convenes in Swaziland!”

To God be the Glory.

Brother Bafana Mtshali
Reporter and CEEC Team Member

10. RECENT PASTORAL APPOINTMENTS IN THE 13TH EPISCOPAL DISTRICT:

- The Reverend William W. Easley, Jr. from New Tyler AME, Memphis to Bethel AME Church, Chattanooga, TN

- The Reverend Charlene Boone from Warren Chapel, Chattanooga, TN to New Tyler AME Church, Memphis, TN

- The Reverend Terance L. Mayes, Sr. from Bethel AME Chattanooga to Warren Chapel AME, Chattanooga

11. THE GLOBAL CORNER - AME PASTOR IS A PART OF THE SOUTH AFRICAN DELEGATION GOING TO PALESTINE AND ISRAEL:

An AME pastor is a part of a delegation of three South Africans going to Palestine and Israel.

The three are Ms Duduzile Mahlangu of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Southern Africa (ELCSA), Fr. Jonathan Londt of the Anglican Church and Rev. Motsamai Johannes Modibedi of the African Methodist Episcopal Church (AME Church).

They left the shores of South Africa on Wednesday, May 3rd, 2006, to join other Ecumenical Accompaniers from the world in a World Council of Churches’ Ecumenical Accompaniment in Palestine and Israeli (EAPPI) for a period of three months. For three months, they will be sharing their lives with the people of the two nations, as part of encouraging peaceful solutions to the political conflicts of the two countries in the Middle East.

Rev. Modibedi is an itinerant elder of our denomination, currently serving Ebenezer AME Church in the Mangena Mokone Conference of the 19th Episcopal District. He is currently the representative of the 19th Episcopal District and the deputy secretary of the Global Development Council [GDC]. Since the administration of Bishop Adam Richardson Jr., he has functioned as the Ecumenical Officer, representing the 19th Episcopal District in the ecumenical family of churches in South Africa. This function also launched him to represent the Church, alongside the Episcopal Leadership of the District, whenever the South African Church Leaders met with the Head of State and his Ministers. In South Africa, Rev. Modibebdi intensely involved in the ecumenical movement and currently holds the position of being the Vice-Chairperson of the SA Council of Churches in the Gauteng Province.

He has been selected among a number of people who expressed their willingness to join the programme. As a result of his selection, he was taken into a training process, which would enable him to function as an Ecumenical Accompanier (EA) in Palestine and Israeli. Obviously, the choice he made is a risky one when a consideration of the political climate in the two countries is made. For that reason, he has been briefed and is currently in Jerusalem undergoing another briefing regarding the possible risks of participating in the programme and living among warring societies. Meanwhile, insurances to cover him while there have been taken.

The SA Council of Churches plays a critical role in this global ecumenical programme, especially in the area of propagating reconciliation and peace among the people in conflict-ridden countries. It is through this global programme we share the experiences of both our past history and the progress of reconciliatory programmes of our country. From South Africa, no less than fifteen church people have been to the two countries through this programme, since 2004.

To uphold him, his family and congregation, especially at this time, in prayers is not robbery.

Submitted by:

The Rev. Teboho G. Klaas
The National Director: Health Programme
South African Council of Churches
9th Floor, Khotso House, 62 Marshall Street
P.O. Box 62098, Marshalltown, 2107
Tel.: +27 (0)11 241 7811/2
Fax: +27 (0)11 492 1448/9
Mobile: +27 (0)82 412 2960
Email: tgk@sacc.org.za

12. THE GLOBAL CORNER: MISSIVE FROM THE REVEREND TEBOHO G. KLAAS:

Dear friends and sisters

Earlier in the day, I wrote a piece in relation to the outcome of the just end trial of the former Deputy President of South Africa, Mr. Jacob Zuma. My specific reference to this outcome was more on the fact that five to six witnesses in defence of Mr. Zuma were ministers in our denomination. Unfortunately, I experienced technological failures as I received reports that indicated that the email could not go through to you.

I am now sending to you a statement that Mr. Zuma has since issued at a Media Conference which was a live broadcast in one of the South African TV stations, e-TV, today (midday). This happened less than a day Mr. Zuma was acquitted, found not to be guilty, on the day our country celebrated the tenth anniversary since the national parliament approved the first ever-democratic constitution of South Africa.

The judge of the Supreme Court, which delivered the verdict, Mr. Justice Willem van der Merwe, deserves to be congratulated for the manner he handled the proceedings of the court for 29 days, culminating yesterday. Many, including the complainant, a 31-year-old young women living with HIV, received his judgment. His judgment was also balanced, comprehensive and all rounded up in that, even though he did not find Mr. Zuma guilty, he strongly spoke to the consensual sex of Mr. Zuma as unacceptable for a man with a regular partner, who did so with a women half his age and was unprotected. In the same vein, he spoke strongly to the young women who falsely accused people for having raped her when they did not. It is in this regard that the ministers of our denomination who testified in defence were involved.

While the trial was proceeding, many of our members asked questions regarding the participation of our ministers in the case. Many expressed their disgust at their participation. However, the Judge van der Merwe did not find a problem with this because it helped him arrive at decision regarding the matter before him. He, in fact, repeatedly mentioned in various ways that the witness provided by the ministers was honest and acceptable.

For those who do not know, the complainant was a member of our church. I learned from my father in ministry that he married her parents in the early 70s and baptized her. In 1995, after her return from exile, she was admitted to ministry and made allegations that she was raped while at the R.R. Wright Theological Seminary. In fact, she alleged further that the Seminary Boarding Master, the Rev. Oupa Matlhabe, raped her while she was experiencing bouts of epilepsy; as result, she got pregnant and aborted the five months pregnancy. How she knew it was the Rev. Matlhabe, she told the court, the fetus looked like him, according to her mother.

These and some of the allegations she made were apparently contained also in her memoirs that she was intending to publish. if she got a guilty verdict against Mr. Zuma, it is likely that she would go ahead to publish the memoirs and it would contain these and other allegations she made against the colleagues she related to while at the seminary and in the church. None of the allegations she made against the ministers were ever tested in any forum of the church, except for those against Mr. Zuma.

Sadly, the verdict did not go according to how she thought. However, perhaps from an armed chair I say this, but I still believe that there remains a deep and great need to continue to minister to her need. This is what Rev. Matlhabe and another witness had spoken to in their court testimonies. The Judge has spoken to this, too.

My prayers accompany my colleagues and their families, who have been through this difficult time.

Kind regards.

Rev. Teboho G. Klaas
Pastor of W. M. Ndlazi Memorial Temple (Diepkloof, Soweto)
Germiston District (East Conference, 19th Episcopal District)
National Director: Health Programme
The South African Council of Churches

13. THE GLOBAL CORNER - MEDIA STATEMENT BY ANC DEPUTY PRESIDENT JACOB ZUMA ON HIS ACQUITTAL BY THE JOHANNESBURG HIGH COURT :

9/5/2006 02:56:17 PM

Yesterday, the day on which I was pronounced innocent, we celebrated the 10th year anniversary of our Constitution, adopted by the Constitutional Assembly of the Republic of South Africa on the 8th of May 1996. In the document, we codified our choices, values, aspirations, hopes and fears.

As we rejoice on this anniversary, it is incumbent upon all of us, to renew our patriotic obligation to obey, observe, uphold and maintain this Constitution, that sustains the very freedom and democracy that we all so cherish.

On the 6th of December 2005, when I was charged with rape, I expressed in a media statement my appreciation of the fact that the matter would be brought before court, as I viewed it as the appropriate forum for me to respond to the allegations.

I also proclaimed my innocence, and expressed the hope that everyone would respect the judicial process, and my Constitutional right to be presumed innocent, and that they would desist from trying this matter in the court of public opinion. From the very beginning of the trial, my legal team and I resolved to do all that was necessary to ensure my Constitutional right as an accused person to a fair trial.

Accordingly, we applied for the recusal of the then presiding judge, Judge President Bernard Ngoepe, whom I continue to hold in high regard. We appreciate the decision of Judge President Ngoepe and later also the honourable Judge Jeremiah Shongwe to recuse themselves. They did so in respect of the principle that not only must the Constitutional right of an accused to a fair trial be upheld, but the accused and society as a whole, should perceive and believe, that such a trial is going to be fair.

In keeping with my public pledge, I respected the judicial process, authority and system. I did not interfere with the investigation of the allegations, the evidence that was led against me or with any of the witnesses that were brought to testify against me.
I respected the Constitutional right of the National Prosecuting Authority to exercise its duties without fear, favour or prejudice.

Yesterday, as we celebrated 10 years of our Constitution, an independent High Court of our country found me innocent. There can be no doubt that Judge Willem van der Merwe acted independently, and applied the law impartially and without fear, favour or prejudice. I thank him for the fair and just manner in which he presided over this case, and the general decorum he maintained in the courtroom, which made adversaries work together amicably.

With regards to HIV and AIDS, I have advocated for prevention, care, treatment and support in various forums over the years. I shall continue to do so, both as Deputy President of the ANC and as an ordinary citizen.

I would like to underline that the crucial struggle against HIV and AIDS continues in our country. As in any war, if one soldier or commander falters, it does not mean that the whole army has been defeated, or that it should abandon the war.

Our country has one of the most comprehensive programmes of HIV and AIDS prevention, treatment, support and research, and I am proud to have been associated with it during my tenure in government.

For my part, I have periodically determined my HIV status and I shall continue to take the necessary measures to protect myself.

As I testified in court, under oath, I am HIV negative, having undergone an HIV test in March this year. I wish to state categorically and place on record that I erred in having unprotected sex. I should have known better and I should have acted with greater caution and responsibility. For this, I unconditionally apologise to all the people of this country.

I reiterate the call I had made to the youth of our country over the years, to heed the prevention messages, while also supporting those living with the virus, and fight the stigma attached to it.

I wish to emphasis as well today, that I remain unwavering in my commitment to the struggle against gender-based violence, in line with the vision and policies of my organisation, the African National Congress. It is unfortunate that my honest responses given under oath to a court of law, as an accused person, were taken out of context and presented in a distorted form to the court of public opinion, as policy statements to burning issues that confront our society.

Further, I wish to stress that the Complainant in my erstwhile case should in no way be vilified or condemned. She deserves to lead a fruitful and harmonious life, as a citizen of this country, protected by our Constitution, regardless of what we think could have been the motives for her actions.

We also need to extend our hand of friendship to the women and organisations that demonstrated against me, for they are our partners in a common struggle. I hope that they will accept the ruling of the court, as they continue in our collective and correct struggle against the abuse of women and children.

Ladies and gentlemen of the media, the ANC incorporates in its ranks all South Africans irrespective of race, ethnicity, religion or gender. In 1912, the founders of our organisation sought to unite the African people with the slogan “Mzulu, Msuthu, Mxhosa hlanganani’’, calling all language groups to unite. Since then, the ANC evolved into a non-racial and non-sexist, colourful in its diversity.

Our people remain true to these ideals, as seen even outside the courtroom during the trial, where they came in their thousands from all corners of the country, from Limpopo to the Eastern Cape, KwaZulu-Natal to North West. We shall continue to uphold these principles and will reject any attempts from any quarter, and for whatever reason, to manufacture ethnic divisions in our ranks.

One of the objectives of our struggle for liberation was to ensure that we enshrine in our Constitution the freedom of expression and the freedom of the media, and I confirm my complete support for these freedoms.

It is however unfortunate that the freedom of expression has been used as an instrument to assassinate characters, and pre-judge judicial processes. I have endured volumes of media venom before and during the trial. At times, I wonder if these were the freedoms we fought for and sacrificed our lives for.

Our Constitution states that everyone has inherent dignity and the right to have his or her dignity, respected and protected.

The media is an important part of our democracy, and it needs to act independently and not be used to perpetuate political agendas. I trust that this important institution will rise to the challenges and standards it so generously sets for others.

Further, now that I have been found not guilty, I sincerely hope that the media will respect the Court judgment and honour the provisions of the Constitution. We need to concentrate on working together constructively to meet the many socio-economic challenges facing our country.

The trial has been a trying period for my family, friends, comrades and supporters. I particularly want to thank my wonderful children, all members of my family and the entire Zuma clan, led by amakhosi from Impendle and Nkandla, who steadfastly believed in my innocence, and who with great fortitude, withstood the vile and vicious attacks on my integrity.

I was greatly humbled by the scores of people who turned out each day at court and others who demonstrated their support in various ways. I was strengthened by the faith they had in me, and the manner in which they stood by me during one of the most difficult moments in my life.

I also take this opportunity to acknowledge the support I received from members of my beloved organisation, the ANC and members of the ANC Women’s League and those of SANCO and SASCO.

I want to single out for special mention the South African Communist Party, Cosatu, the ANC Youth League, the Young Communist League, Cosas and others in the Progressive Youth Alliance, the Mkhonto Wesizwe Military Veterans Association as well as the Friends of Jacob Zuma Trust.

I am deeply grateful for the support I received from various religious denominations, traditional leaders as well as the arts and entertainment sector and many individual citizens. All these organisations and individuals stood by the principle of the presumption of innocence in our jurisprudence.

I want to extend my special gratitude to my legal team, Advocate Kemp J Kemp, SC, Advocate Jerome Brauns, SC, Advocate Thandanani Mbongwa and my attorney Michael Hulley for the sterling manner in which they conducted my Defence. I also wish to express my deep-felt gratitude to the witnesses who testified for the Defence. I extend good wishes to the prosecution team, led by Advocate Charin de Beer.

In keeping with my December 6th statement, I have communicated with the Secretary General of the ANC about my resumption of duties and participation in the leading structures of the ANC – the National Executive Committee, the National Working Committee, the Officials meetings and the National Deployment Committee.

For the record, I would like to state categorically, to correct certain often-repeated distortions, that my life of struggle was never motivated by seeking glorification. As I have done, throughout my life, I shall continue to serve my organisation and my people in whatever capacity they deem fit. In the ANC, we have no other interest than that of the people for whom, and with whom we have struggled.

I thank you for your time.

From: http://www.friendsofjz.co.za/showarticle.asp?id=121

14. SUPER SOULFEST CELEBRATION TO BE HELD IN BERMUDA:

Join Bishop Richard F. Norris & Mother Mary Norris as they travel to the beautiful island of Bermuda for Five Power Packed days of Preaching, Teaching, Music & Fellowship featuring some of the World’s most gifted Preachers, Teachers & Gospel Artists.

Activities will include inspirational Workshops & Worship, a Gospel Praisefest, special Sessions for men & women, youth worship and a Power Breakfast for Church & Government Leaders. Exciting Leisure Time Events include a Midnight Gospel Cruise, Gospel Comedy, The Richard F. Norris Golf Classic, Deep Sea Fishing, Discovery Zone Fun Camp for Kids (5-12 years old), Youth & Young Adult Events and more!

Packages including airfare, 5 Nights Accommodation at the luxurious Fairmont Hamilton Princess Hotel and Registration for as low as $950 pp Double Occupancy

For more information, visit us online at http://www.bermudasoulfest.com/.For reservations, contact the Rev. Wassetta Moses at (610) 485-7823.

Rates are per person based on double occupancy, are subject to availability and include all applicable hotel taxes and gratuities, prepaid government taxes and fees of up to $86.00, September 11 Security Fees of up to $10.00, and Passenger Facility Charges up to $18.00 per person. Price is based on departure from New York (JFK). Prices from other cities and hotels are available. Please inquire for additional details and information. Rates for triple and quad occupancy are available upon request. A deposit of $250 per person is due at time of booking. Reservations and deposits must be received no later than August 2, 2006 and are based on availability.

15. ALLEN UNIVERSITY CONFERS HONORARY DEGREE UPON 21-YEAR-OLD FARRAH GRAY; THE YOUNGEST PERSON CONFERRED AN HONORARY DOCTORATE IN HBCU HISTORY:

On April 29th, 2006, Allen University conferred an Honorary Doctorate degree of Humane Letters to Farrah Gray in recognition of Dr. Gray's ingenious economic mind and distinguished commitment to the development of values such as leadership, integrity and scholarship. Recently Dr. Gray was also named as one of the most influential Black men in America by the National Urban League's Urban Influence Magazine.

Columbia, SC (PRWEB) May 4, 2006 -- On April 29th, 2006, Allen University conferred an Honorary Doctorate degree of Humane Letters to Farrah Gray in recognition of Dr. Gray's ingenious economic mind and distinguished commitment to the development of values such as leadership, integrity and scholarship. Recently Dr. Gray was also named as one of the most influential Black men in America by the National Urban League's Urban Influence Magazine.

“We wanted to pay homage to Mr. Gray’s contribution to education and his dedication to utilizing his skills to open doors for persons who desire to go into business,” says Allen University’s President, Dr. Charles E. Young.Dr. Gray began his entrepreneurial, personal and civic development as a stellar young citizen at six years old. He sold his own hand-painted rocks as bookends and homemade body lotion door-to-door. At age seven, he was carrying business cards reading “21st Century CEO.” At eight, Gray became co-founder of Urban Neighborhood Enterprise Economic Club (U.N.E.E.C.) on Chicago’s Southside. U.N.E.E.C. was the forerunner of New Early Entrepreneur Wonders (NE2W), the flagship organization he opened on Wall Street.

NE2W enlisted, educated and engaged “at-risk” youth by creating and developing legal ways for them to acquire additional income. Gray is the youngest person to have an office on Wall Street.Between the ages of 12 and 16 years old, Dr. Gray founded and operated business ventures that included KIDZTEL pre-paid phone cards, the One Stop Mail Boxes & More franchise and The Teenscope “Youth AM/FM” interactive teen talk show, Gray was also Executive Producer of a comedy show on the Las Vegas Strip and owner of Farr-Out Foods, “Way-Out Food with a Twist,” aimed at young people with the company’s first Strawberry-Vanilla syrup product. Farr-Out Foods “Foodfulooza” generated orders exceeding $1.5 million. As a pre-teen, Gray reached 12 million listeners and viewers every Saturday night as co-host of “Backstage Live,” a syndicated television and radio simulcast in Las Vegas. Gray’s inspirational spirit and grounded personality sparked speaking requests from organizations around the country. According to Naples Daily News, “Farrah Gray touched them in a way few speakers can.” Dr. Gray's sense of social responsibility motivated him to create the non-profit organization, The Farrah Gray Foundation. Among other programs and initiatives, his foundation focuses on inner city community-based entrepreneurship education and provides scholarship & grant assistance for students from at-risk backgrounds to attend HBCU's (Historically Black Colleges and Universities). Dr. Gray donates his honorariums from speaking engagements (which can be upwards of $15,000) and the proceeds of his book to his foundation in what he refers to as his “self-imposed” youth tax. Dr. Gray’s work did not remain under the radar-screen for long. He was given a three-year term on the Board of Directors of United Way of Southern Nevada at the age of 15 and also became the youngest member of the Board of Advisors for the Las Vegas Chamber of Commerce. Dr. Gray was also the youngest member of the “African-American Leadership” Roundtable where President Bush and the Director of the White House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives invited him to visit them.

Dr. Gray is also the spokesperson for the National Coalition for Homeless and the National Marrow Donor Program.In December 2005, First Premiere Bank and Diamond Financial Products unveiled its newest debit card, The Farrah Gray Prepaid MasterCard, which features Dr. Gray’s likeness on it. The “goFarr” card is designed to increase financial freedom and financial literacy.

Dr. Gray is also the Co-Chair of Relational Brokers Alliance Consultancy (RBA). In addition, he has consulted with JP Morgan Chase and the U.S. Department of Commerce Minority Development Agency. Also, The Farrah Gray Foundation is in partnership with the Kauffmann Foundation, launching entrepreneurship programs in inner-city schools across the country.

Dr. Gray is the author of Reallionaire which was nominated by NBC & Publishers Weekly Quill Awards in the category of "Health/Self-Improvement." His book appeared on the Amazon and Barnes & Noble’s Best-sellers lists two weeks before its international release. Reallionaire was also named as the #1 Best-selling Nonfiction Paperback book in the August 2005 Issue of Essence Magazine. Gray’s book and his journey to succeed against the odds have become required reading and part of classroom study from elementary school to entrepreneurship departments on college campuses. Former President Bill Clinton, Pierre Sutton, Stedman Graham, Jack Canfield and Mark Victor Hansen have endorsed Reallionaire. Gray is also a contributing author to Chicken Soup for the African-American Soul.

Dr. Gray’s honors include Keys to the Cities of Dallas, Shreveport, and Cincinnati. He has received Proclamations from the Governors of Illinois and Nevada, the Mayors of Chicago, Las Vegas and New Orleans and Clark County Nevada Commissioners. Dr. Gray’s Awards include The National Urban League Whitney M Young Jr. Entrepreneurship Award, The Indiana Black Expo (IBE) Hoosier Lottery Entrepreneur Award for 2005, The Alabama A&M Students In Free Enterprise (SIFE) Award, The Davidson College Love of Learning Lifetime Educational Achievement Award, Central State Award Appreciation for contributions made in the area of entrepreneurship, NV Magazine Vision Award and the American Red Cross Award of Appreciation.

Raised in the projects on Chicago’s Southside, Dr. Gray defied the odds and became a self-made millionaire by the age of 14. Dr. Gray is one of the great business minds and icons of his generation. At the age of 21, he has achieved more than many achieve in a lifetime. In his rise from poverty to national and international prominence as an entrepreneurial icon and pre-eminent power speaker, he has inspired millions around the world.

About Allen University

Founded in 1870 by the African Methodist Episcopal (AME) Church, Allen University is the first institution of higher education in South Carolina founded by African Americans for the express purpose of educating African Americans. It is a Christian Liberal Arts institution of higher education and has a distinguished history, rich in the tradition of promoting spiritual growth and preparing men and women to become productive leaders in an ever-changing society.

Media Contact:Dr. Marcia WynnAssistant to the PresidentAllen UniversityMadeline GoldsteinDirector of Public RelationsFarrah Gray FoundationTelephone- 212.859.5028

16. QUINN CHAPEL AME, PARIS, TENNESSEE STEWARD NAMED WAL-MART TEACHER OF THE YEAR:

On behalf of our congregation, I wish to offer congratulations to Mrs. Wanda Todd of Quinn Chapel AME Church in Paris, TN for being named the Wal-Mart Teacher of the Year for Henry County, TN! A Steward in Quinn Chapel and member of the Tones of Joy Choir, we are proud of her and join her colleagues in saluting her for this well deserved award. Along with a Certificate and a shirt, she won a $100 gift card to get supplies for her class, with a $1,000 award for Harrelson Elementary School where she teaches. Again, Congratulations!

Kenneth J. Golphin, Pastor

17. MINISTRIES OF ST. JOHN AFRICAN METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH TEAMING UP TO MAKE THINGS HAPPEN IN GALLUP, NEW MEXICO:

In preparation for the 85th Year Church Anniversary of Howard Chapel A.M.E. Church, Gallup, New Mexico, St. John A.M.E. Church, Kansas City, Missouri engaged in an outreach that both churches would never forget. “We are grateful that our friends, family, community and church were able to assist us with this effort,” said Ms. Helen Smith, President of the Edna Mae Rivers Women’s Missionary Society and Steward Pro-Tem of St. John A.M.E., Kansas City.

The Rev. Eraina M. Aseme, the Senior Pastor of St. John was invited to preach at Howard Chapel A.M.E. Church, Gallup, New Mexico to help celebrate the 85th Church Anniversary. The total church membership for Howard Chapel is five members. The pastor is the Rev. Shiame Okunor. Rev. Okunor is a dedicated servant of God who has an awesome ministry at Howard Chapel in reaching out into the community especially on Second Sunday. The church’s ministry gives out food to the homeless. At times meals are cooked and served to the attendees after the worship service. The Rev. Charles H. Farris is the Presiding Elder of the Desert Mountain Conference

The city of Gallup has a large population of Native Americans that reside in the city and on the Indian Reservation.

When Pastor Aseme received the call from Rev. Okunor, she immediately asked her to send her the written church history.

Reverend Okunor asked God to give her a message to help the people in Gallup. In her preparation, Rev. Aseme prayed and fasted for God to move in Gallup during the celebration. It was put in her spirit to ask the ministries of St. John to gather 2000 articles of clothing.

The Edna Mae Rivers WMS, Youth Explorers Workshop, Men’s Ministry and Health Ministry from St. John responded and supported the outreach effort.

The cost to ship the clothes and health kits was $600.00. A private donor donated the shipping cost. We used the United States Post Office and Greyhound Bus Lines to deliver the clothing. Also, these items were shipped prior to the arrival of Rev. Aseme in Gallup, New Mexico for the celebration.

The first day of the celebration, December 10, 2005 took place at the Holiday Inn in Gallup in their spacious banquet room. Over 100 people attended; the crowd was primarily Native Americans from all different tribes. In addition, the Rev. John Hill pastor of Grant A.M.E. Church in Albuquerque, NM and members drove 2-1/2 hours from Albuquerque to join the celebration on Saturday. The Rev. Aseme gave a soul-stirring message at the banquet and several people came to her afterwards to ask for special prayer.

Then on Sunday, December 11, 2005, God moved mightily again. Howard Chapel began to swell with people from all-over the surrounding area. The choir loft had to be utilized due to the record- breaking crowd; it was standing room only.

Again, Rev. Aseme preached a soul-stirring message and the invitation to discipleship was offered by the preacher of the hour. The Spirit of God moved and 30 Native Americans give their lives to Jesus Christ along with the conversions; 15 persons joined Howard Chapel. And over 50 persons responded for special prayer.

God is continuing to work miracles in our Zion. Never doubt that a ministry cannot be done when God is placed first,” stated the Rev. Eraina M. Aseme.

The Right Reverend John R. Bryant, Presiding Prelate of the Fifth Episcopal District and Rev. Dr. Cecelia Williams Bryant the Episcopal Supervisor have encouraged the ministries of both the Reverend Okunor and Reverend Aseme. The Reverend Donna F. Roberson is the Presiding Elder of the Northwest Missouri Conference of the Kansas City South District.

18. FIRST ANNUAL CHRISTIAN DEBUTANTE-MASTER COMMISSION DEDICATION:

You are cordially invited to attend the 1st Annual Christian Debutante-Master Commission Dedication Ceremony at St. John African Methodist Episcopal Church, 708 15th Street North, Birmingham, Alabama on Sunday, May 14, 2006 at 3:00 p.m.

Our Honorees will be Master Kevin Hatcher, Master Clarence Reynolds, and Debutante JaSan Rumph.

Come and witness as these young adults dedicate their lives to a higher Christian Service in the African Methodist Episcopal Church.

The speaker for the occasion will be Ms. Gina Redmond, NBC Channel 13 News Anchor.

The Right Rev. T. Larry Kirkland, Presiding Bishop
Mrs. Mary Kirkland, Supervisor
Ms. Alicia Hill, Episcopal DMC Commissioner
The Rev. James A. Rumph, Pastor
Mrs. Tanya G. Morris, Local DMC Consultant

19. THE PASTOR’S CORNER - THE ABUNDANT LIFE – A YIELDED LIFE:

Therefore do not let sin reign in your mortal body so that you obey its evil desires. Do not offer the parts of your body to sin, as instruments of wickedness, but rather offer yourselves to God, as those who have been brought from death to life; and offer the parts of your body to Him as instruments of righteousness. (Romans 6: 12-13)

The Apostle Paul calls us to acknowledge a yielded life as the means to living life to the full. God directs us to choose to yield our lives to Him. Paul tells us to “offer ourselves to God…” (Romans 6: 13). To offer is to yield (Romans 6: 16). To yield is to give one’s self over to something or someone. We’re reminded whatever we yield to we become servants of that person or thing. Perhaps it’s time to YIELD - Stop, look, listen, and consider what I’m doing. To what am I yielding in life?

WHAT IS A YIELDED LIFE?

What We Focus On – Colossians 3: 1-4 tells us the yielded life is what we now focus on. We are to become in experience what we already are by God’s saving grace. To yield is to set our hearts and minds on spiritual things (v. 1-2) – set my sights on the things of God and focus on Him. To say I won’t think about a pink elephant is to ensure that I will. To think about a beautiful tiger in the wild will redirect my attention and pink elephants won’t come to mind. By focusing on the things of God through taking in the word, praying, and enjoying positive entertainment, He fills my thoughts and heart. As He fills my thoughts and heart, He pushes other things out of focus and out of my life. To get your mind and heart off of something, set them on something else.

When Practice Conforms to Privilege – I John 3: 6-7 tells us the practices of our lives are to conform to our position of privilege. Christ traded places with us on the cross (II Corinthians 5: 21). Our lifestyle is to reflect the righteousness we received from Him. The lifestyle of the believer (I John 3: 6) who “lives in Him” (keeps God’s commands) will be obedient and yielding to God. The believer who does what is right (I John 3: 7) reflects the righteousness of Christ. Sometimes this requires starting new habits or practices. During the Lenten Season, many of the readers of “The Pastor’s Corner” participated in the “Comfort Food Fast” or the “Secular Media Fast.” Those who participated, broke old eating habits, eliminated unhealthy viewing and took in healthy foods, Christian and family oriented viewing, and additional Bible reading. You can start new practices or habits that conform to your new identity. Don’t wait to “feel like doing it!” “Just do it!”

Christ’s life lived through me. Colossians 1: 27 tells us of God’s choice to make Christ known in us. The believer is made a new creation and we no longer live for ourselves but for Christ who died and was raised again. Christ now lives in us and our lives are to proclaim Christ. In a suburb south of Chicago, a group of believers purchased a nightclub. As unusual as this sounds, it was all for the glory of God. They quickly went about converting the establishment to a sanctuary for the worship of God. Today the place once used as a “watering hole” is now a place from which “rivers of living water flow.” The same holds true for believers. We are made new creations to the glory of God. God then uses our lives for the spread of His loving gospel. This is one of God’s ways of bringing others to Christ.

Finally, every believer MUST choose. We can choose to offer ourselves to sin and experience defeat in life (Romans 6: 13). Or, we can choose to offer ourselves to God by faith and enjoy the abundant life.

Prayer: “Lord, to what am I yielding in life? Please touch me that I would offer myself to you in every way. I choose you Father. I choose to live life abundantly. In Jesus Christ’s name, I pray. Amen.”

Pastor James Moody
Quinn Chapel, Chicago

20. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

From: The Office of the Second Episcopal DistrictBishop Adam Jefferson Richardson, Presiding Bishop.

The Rev. Leon B. Hall, Pastor of Bethel AMEC, Easton, MD, passed on May 3, 2006. Funeral Services will be held on Friday, May 12, 2006

St. John AME Church
545 E. Bute Street,
Norfolk, Virginia

Viewing - 10:00 AM-12:00 noon

Service - 12:00 noon

Send condolences to:

St. John AME Church
545 E. Bute Street
Norfolk, Virginia 23513

Saturday, May 13, 2006

Easton High School
723 Mecklenburg Ave.
Easton, Maryland

Viewing - 10:00 AM-12:00 noon

Service - 12:00 noon

Professional services entrusted to:

Henry's Funeral Home
510 Washington Street
Cambridge, Maryland 21613

In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to:

The Harriet Tubman Organization, Inc.
424 Race Street,
Cambridge, Maryland

or

Town of Easton-Frederick Douglass Coalition (Fred's Army)
P.O. Box 876,
Easton, Maryland 21601

Send cards to:

Mrs. Theona Hall (wife of Rev. Hall)
5904 Castle Haven Road
Cambridge, Maryland 21613

21. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

Mrs. Mary Frances Mills Washington, mother of the Reverend Dr. Lee P. Washington, pastor of Reid Temple AME Church, Glenn Dale, MD passed.

The homecoming arrangements:

Celebration of Endless Life -

Mary Frances Mills Washington

Thursday, May 11, 2006,
Wake: 7:00 pm - 8:00 pm

Friday, May 12, 2006,
Wake: 10:00 am - 11:00 am

Friday, May 12, 2006,
11:00 am Celebration of Endless Life

Robinson AME Church
416 Cemetery Road
Grasonville, MD 21638

(410) 827-7556 or (410) 827-9888

Condolences may be sent to:

The Rev. Dr. Lee P. Washington
Reid Temple AME Church
11400 Glenn Dale Blvd
Glenn Dale, MD 20769

301-352-0320

22. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

The Passing of the mother of the Reverend Anthony Watson, Mt. Olive AME Church, Wilmington, NC.

Condolences may be sent to:

The Reverend Anthony Watson
Mt. Olive AME Church
1001 South 7th Street
Wilmington, NC 28401

910-763-3955

23. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

From: The Sixth Episcopal District, Bishop William P. DeVeaux, Presiding Prelate; Dr. Pam DeVeaux, Episcopal Supervisor; Mrs. Helen Strickland, Southwest Conference President

Ms. Patricia Ann Davenport, the beloved sister, of the Reverend D. D. Davenport, passed on Friday, May 5, 2006 in Jefferson, Georgia. Rev. Davenport is the pastor of Allen Chapel A.M.E. Church in Americus.

Funeral Services:

Wednesday, May 10, 2006 11:00 a.m.

Paradise A.M.E. Church in Jefferson at 431 Martin Luther King Street, Jefferson, GA 30549 The Reverend Sharon McDaniel-Miller, Pastor

Phone: 706-367-9049

Condolences may be sent to:

The Rev. and Mrs. D. D. Davenport
Post Office Box 7524
Tifton, Georgia 31793

24. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

From The Ninth Episcopal District, the Right Reverend T. Larry Kirkland, Presiding Prelate

The Reverend Craig Smiley went to be with the Lord on Wednesday, May 3, 2006. Reverend Smiley is the father of the Reverend Glenn E. Smilley, Sr. the pastor of Mt. Zion A.M.E. Church in Muscle Shoalsin, Alabama in the Birmingham-Florence District in the Ninth Episcopal District.

Memorial Service

Wednesday, May 10, 2006. 12:00 Noon

Trinity Christian Methodist Episcopal Church
3013 Huntsville Road,
NorthBirmingham, AL 35207

In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made in his memory to:

Miles College Athletic Department
5313 Myron Massey Blvd.
Fairfield, AL 35064

Arrington Funeral Home, Inc
520 Cotton Avenue, SW
Birmingham, AL 35211

25. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

From: j.l.wharton@att.net

The Rev. Edwina Witherspoon, Bethel AME Church, Baltimore, Maryland lost her oldest son, Gary Dion Fenwick on last week. The memorial will take place on: Thursday, May 11, 2006 Bethel AME Church 1300 Druid Hill Avenue, Baltimore. MD 21217, 10:30 AM -11:00 AM.

Family Sharing

11:00 AM Memorial Service
Dr. Frank M. Reid III, pastor

Loving expressions can be sent to:

The Rev. Edwina Witherspoon
3207 Dorithian Road
Baltimore, Maryland 21215

410-225-3830 (home)
443-804-8252 (cell)

The Rev. Dr. Joan L. Wharton

Please remember these families in your prayers.

26. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

We regret to inform you of the passing of Reverend Bertha S. Wright. She was the pastor of Saint James A.M.E. Church in New York City (New York Conference, Manhattan District).

The following information has been provided regarding funeral arrangements.

Viewing - Sunday, May 14, 2006

3:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.

Saint James A.M.E. Church
2010 Fifth Avenue
New York, New York 10035


Funeral - Monday, May 15, 2006

Funeral - 10:00 a.m.

First AME Church (Bethel)
54-60 West 132nd Street
New York, New York 10037

The Reverend Henry A. Belin lll, Pastor

Phone: 212-862-0100
Fax: 212-694-1323

Bishop Richard F. Norris, Eulogist

Interment - Calverton National Cemetery, Calverton, NY

Condolences may be sent to the Rev. Bertha Wright's husband, the Reverend George Wright and her daughter, Ms. Mary R. Wright c/o First AME Church (Bethel) at the above address.

Please remember the Wright family in your prayers.

27. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

The Office of the 12th Episcopal District
The Right Reverend Richard Allen Chappelle, Sr., Presiding Bishop

Mrs. Willie M. Nash, the mother of the Reverend Thurman Nash, the pastor of Riverview A.M.E. Church, North Little Rock, Arkansas passed at 2:00 am on Wednesday, May 10th.

Funeral Services for Mrs. Willie Mae Nash will be held on Monday, May 15, 2006, 11:00 a.m. at Bethel A.M.E. Church, Little Rock, AR.

Arrangements have been entrusted to Premier Funeral Home, 1518 South Battery Street, Little Rock, AR

(501) 376-4800.

Please keep the Nash family in your prayers.

Anita Brannon

28. 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.

29. 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.

5/8/2006

THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER ONLINE ENGLISH EDITION (5/8/06)

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. EDITORIAL - MORRIS BROWN HAS A PLAN AND IS ON THE ROAD TO RECOVERY AND IN THE MIDST OF ALL OF THE NEGATIVITY, THERE ARE SOME POSITIVE OBSERVATIONS:

In the midst of all the bad things that have happened with Morris Brown College, there are still some positive observations that can be extracted or gleaned from all of the negativity surrounding MBC.

First, the African Methodist Episcopal Church has not given up on MBC. The leadership of the Church is coming together and strategizing on how best to resurrect this great institution.

We have all experienced failure of one kind or another and in those situations, we knew that we could “give in and give up,” or we could “pick ourselves up and do what we had to do in order to move on.”

Wilberforce University had a setback and with prayer and commitment, the University regained its accreditation and today under President Floyd Flake, the University is operating in the black.

Morris Brown College can rebound and again, be a viable institution. Bishop William Phillips DeVeaux, Sr., and his senior management team have developed a new strategic plan for the college that has identified business leadership as its core area for its courses of studies. Teacher education will be added as another core after the institution regains its accreditation. Morris Brown College hopes to regain its accreditation by 2009.

Second, the Most Reverend Philip R. Cousin Sr, Senior Bishop of the AME Church; the Right Reverend Gregory G. M. Ingram, President of the Council of Bishops; the Right Reverend Richard Allen Chappelle, President, the General Board; and the Right Reverend William Phillips DeVeaux, Sr., Presiding Prelate of the Sixth Episcopal District have come together as one to resolve the issues of Morris Brown College. The positive that will come out of that is that the issues will be resolved. AMEs can resolve any issue that we set our minds to resolve.

Another positive comes to my mind, is that in all of the events surrounding Morris Brown College, not one bishop or member of the clergy of the African Methodist Episcopal Church has been implicated in the mismanagement of Morris Brown College funds; not even one!

Now, that might sound like an oxymoron when we speak about “clergy and mismanagement of funds” in the same sentence and celebrate the fact that the two did not “collide.” We celebrate that the two did not collide because we live in a world where some clergy members in other denominations have been unscrupulous or careless in their management or mismanagement of funds. We live in a culture where folks, especially AMEs, spend a lot of energy speculating about who might be taking what. The finances at Morris Brown College have been scrutinized “to the last penny” and our bishops and clergy associated with that institution have not been implicated in any of the scandalous behavior at MBC. That should give us all cause to celebrate and to reconsider our casual conversations about our leaders and who might be taking what.

Ezekiel tells us that “those bones can live” and I believe that Ezekiel 37 is relevant to Morris Brown College. We just need to put God’s Spirit within us and in all that we do and God will restore Morris Brown College to an even greater status then the college has ever known.

2. THOUGHT FOR THE DAY –”TODAY I WILL FEEL ONE THING AT A TIME!”:

You cannot love if you hate.
You will not receive if you are not willing to give.
You cannot build if you want to tear down.
You cannot progress while you are in opposition.
You cannot understand if you are not willing to listen.

It is impossible to create if you participate in destruction.
You cannot come together with anyone about anything as long as you believe in separation.

It is simply impossible for two things to occupy the same space in your heart and mind at the same time.

Submitted by the Reverend Dr. James Russell, Presiding Elder of the Winston-Salem/Greenville District, Carolina Region of the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church (CME).

3. TURNER THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY CONTINUES THE PROUD TRADITION:

On Saturday, May 13, 2006 at 10:00 am, Turner Theological Seminary along with the Constituent Seminaries of the Interdenominational Theological Center conveyed degrees to the graduating class of 2006. The commencement exercises were held in the Martin Luther King Jr. International Chapel on the campus of Morehouse College.

The following theologians received their degrees cheered on by a great crowd of witnesses.

The Reverend Joseph Baker- 6th - Master of Divinity, concentration in Psychology of Religion Pastoral Care

The Reverend Shenard Barnes-7th - Dual: Master of Divinity/Master of Christian Education

Joanne Bedford- 6th – Dual: Master of Divinity/Master of Christian Education

The Reverend Cantrelle Cooke- 6th- Master of Divinity concentration in Psychology of Religion Pastoral Care

The Reverend Tynisha Drennon-1st- Dual: Master of Divinity, concentration in Urban Theological Education/Master of Christian Education

Judith Ann Gardner-1st- Master of Divinity, concentration in Homiletics

The Reverend Linda Gattis -6th—Master of Divinity

The Reverend Lillie Hall- 11th- Master of Divinity, concentration in Theology

The Eddie Harris, Jr.-11th- Master of Divinity concentration in Homiletics

The Reverend Wilbert Harris-7th-Master of Divinity

The Reverend Kecia Lewis-8th- Master of Divinity, concentrations in Homiletics and New Testament

The Reverend Orlando McCauley, Jr, -14th-Dual: Master of Divinity/ Master of Christian Education

The Reverend Janice McCray,-6th- Master of Divinity, concentration in Homiletics

Eddy Moise, Jr, - 11th- Master of Divinity

The Reverend Frank Pearson-7th- Master of Divinity

The Reverend Vandy Simmons-6th- Master of Divinity concentration in World Religion

The Reverend Vivian Smith-Fountain-11th- Master of Divinity

The Reverend Norris Walters-6th- Master of Divinity

The Reverend Seena Washington-11th Master of Divinity

The Reverend Cory Watts-8th- Master of Divinity concentration in Hebrew Bible

The Reverend Hayward White, Jr,-6th- Master of Divinity, concentration in
Homiletics

The Reverend Carlton Taylor- 11th - Doctor of Ministry

The Reverend Maurice Buford- - Doctor of Ministry

The following graduates received special accolades for service and academics from the Interdenominational Theological Center:

The Issac R. Clark Preaching Award
- The Reverend Kecia A. Lewis
- The Reverend Hayward White, Jr.

The Anne Wimberly and Johnathan Jackson award for Graduating Seniors in the Discipline of Christian Education with Academic Excellence
- The Reverend Tynisha C. Drennon

United Negro College Fund Scholarships

- The Reverend Tynisha C. Drennon
- Joanne Bedford

The International Society of Theta Phi (Theological Honor Society)

- The Reverend Tynisha C. Drennon
- Eddy Moise, Jr.

Superlative List Cumulative GPA of 3.5-4.0

- The Reverend Tynisha C. Drennon
- Eddy Moise

The following individuals received awards from Turner Theological Seminary as presented by Dr. Daniel W. Jacobs President/Dean of Turner during a splendid luncheon held in their honor at the Paschal’s restaurant at Castleberry Hill.

The Bishop John Hurst Adams Award – given to a student with an academic average of 3.0 or above who has demonstrated exceptional leadership ability in the area of family life with special concern for the Black male.

- The Reverend Cory Watts

The James H. Clark Memorial Preaching Honor Award- given to seniors and middlers who have shown the most progress in Homiletics

- The Reverend Shenard Barnes

The E. D. Curry Memorial Award- given to an AME senior who ahs contributed significantly to the ecumenical cooperation of campus while maintaining a 3.0 grade point average.

- The Reverend Seena Washington,
- Joann Bedford

The Dean’s Award- given to the M.Div. candidate with the highest cumulative GPA and a commitment to pastoral ministry.

- Eddy Moise, Jr.

The Bishop William Alfred Fountain, Sr. and the William Alfred Fountain, Jr for Academic Excellence Award- given to a senior who have a 3.0 average or above and demonstrates exceptional ability in Christian Education.

- The Reverend Janice McCray

The Daniel Lott Jacobs Award is given to a student of Turner Theological Seminary who has achieved a high academic average and demonstrated exceptional leadership ability.

- The Reverend Hayward White, Jr.

The John A. Middleton Memorial Award-given to a student having achieved a high academic record at Turner Theological Seminary.

The Bishop Frederick Hilborn Talbot Award is given to a student of Turner Theological Seminary who has achieved a high academic average above 3.0 and who has contributed significantly contributed to the promotion of Turner Theological Seminary.

- The Reverend Kecia A. Lewis
- Eddie Harris, Jr.

The Bishop William R. Wilkes Memorial Award-given to a member of the senior class of Turner Theological Seminary who have high academic achievements, have contributed significantly to the life of the seminary community and have demonstrated leadership and responsibility in matters of financial obligation, personal adjustment and Christian growth.

- The Reverend Orlando McCauley, Jr.

During the luncheon, the graduates were welcomed into the Turner Alumni Association by President, the Reverend Ammie Davis Miller, Chaplain, U. S. Navy, who presented them with a gift on behalf of the Alumni and their personal association membership cards.

Salutations to the class of 2006, job well done. Now go forth and do the work of ministry to the glory of God the Creator as Turner sends you in the proud tradition “For a prepared ministry”.

Submitted by the Reverend Kecia A. Lewis
Eighth Episcopal District
Class of 2006.

4. THE CHAPLAINS’ CORNER – CHAPLAIN DAVID R. BROWN’S ANNUAL REPORT:

To Bishop Adam Jefferson Richardson:

Greetings in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ!

To God be the glory! It has been an outstanding year of ministry. By His grace and mercy, I am pleased to offer this eleventh report to the Virginia Annual Conference as a Navy Chaplain representing the African Methodist Episcopal Church. I praise God for the love and support that I continually receive from my family, my wife, Rayne, son, Jonathan, and daughter, Joanna. They are truly “the wind beneath my wings” and I am blessed to have them in my life.

Here is a synopsis of the ministry over the past conference year:

Present Assignment

In July of last year, I concluded my tour of duty at Naval Station Norfolk and reported to the USS BATAAN (LHD-5). The BATAAN is a multi-purpose amphibious assault ship and it’s primary function is to transport United States Marines, their aircraft, vehicles and other equipment to an area of operations for off-load and employment (war fighting). I serve as the Protestant Chaplain and Division Officer, with primary responsibility of providing for the pastoral care needs of over 3,000 Sailors, Marines and family members.

The BATAAN got underway in July of last year in order to conduct PANAMAX-05, which stands for Panama Exercise 2005. PANAMAX is a multi-national exercise tailored to the defense of the Panama Canal involving armed forces from Argentina, Chile, Colombia, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Honduras, Panama, Peru and the United States and observers from Mexico, Canada, El Salvador, Uruguay, France and Costa Rica. The BATAAN served as the host command and control platform for the multinational force conducting the exercise.

In order to accommodate our guest from Latin America, Roman Catholic Mass as well as the Evening Prayer at Sea was also conducted in Spanish.

Community Relations Projects (Comrel) **

The BATAAN Command Religious Ministry Directorate (CRMD) conducted three COMREL Projects, all which enjoyed avid support from the crew. A community relations project is public works done by Sailors on behalf local communities or foreign countries. Projects can range from site visitation to construction and renovation.

The first project was conducted at the Live Oak Park in Ingleside, TX. While the ship was moored at Naval Station Ingleside, the CRMD enlisted ten volunteers to go to the park and clear thick vines from Oak trees. The City of Ingleside as well as the local residents adjacent to the park was very appreciative of our efforts.

A dual COMREL was conducted on the island of Curacao, Netherlands Antilles. The project, dubbed, “Extreme Makeover: Curacao Edition”, consisted of two worksites. The first was the home of Mrs. Ilva Rosa, as single mother of five, and the other was Radolphus College, a Catholic School. Seventy-five Sailors from the ship were split between the work sites.

BATAAN Sailors donated $2000.00 in support of the home renovation site. The following was accomplished at the home site: ** New exterior and interior paint, redwood-stained doors and trim, construction of steps and two benches (redwood-stained), installation of horizontal blinds for each window, new kitchen table and matching chairs, 20-piece place setting, new bathroom shower curtain, new toilet seat cover and floor mats, four new mattresses (bunk beds, children) and one mattress cover (Mrs. Rosa's bed), new sheets, pillows and pillow cases. Additionally, $500 dollars was donated to cover Mrs. Rosa's past due (3 months) water and electric bills. Each family member received a BATAAN ball cap with his or her name on the back embroidered in gold.

The following was accomplished at the school site: Sailors painted the exterior of an entire school gymnasium, the dimensions of which were 42' x 78' with the height of 20'. A smaller addition to the gymnasium (45' x 20' and 10' high) was painted as well.

Hurricane Katrina Relief

After spending five weeks at sea, the BATAAN was heading home from Ingleside, TX when we received orders to remain in the Gulf of Mexico to provide relief support in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. Once the storm passed through New Orleans, BATAAN was “on station” providing immediate support to the relief effort. On the first day alone, our helicopters rescued 300 stranded citizens from the rooftops of their homes. BATAAN provided additional relief support in the form of distilled water, blankets, and medical evacuations.

During our last week in the area, I was privileged to lead a group of sixty sailors on a relief project in Biloxi, MS. We were tasked with cleaning out a seafood warehouse, which had been damaged by the storm. The warehouse, which covered about five acres in space, was flooded with three inches of water and mud. Once the mud was cleared, the warehouse was converted into a Salvation Army Distribution Center. Returning residents would now be able to come to the center to receive life’s necessities such as clothes, water, food, blankets, etc.

Local Ministry

Being assigned to the BATAAN allows me to be an active participant within the local church. My family and I are affiliate members of Lee’s Chapel AME Church in Chesapeake, where the Rev. Horace B. Cross is the pastor. As my schedule permits, Pastor Cross allows me to participate in the Young People’s Department as well as preach on fourth Sundays

I have also had the privilege of preaching at the following congregations:

- New St. John’s AME Church in Virginia Beach, VA. The pastor is the Rev. E. H. Terrell, Jr. (Church Anniversary)

- First Trinity AME Church in Chesapeake, VA. The pastor is the Rev. Ira K. McMillan, Sr. (Church Anniversary)

- St. John’s AME Church in Roanoke, VA. The pastor is the Rev. Quentin White. (Palm Sunday/Men’s Day)

Scholarships

Praise God! This is the fourth year that my wife and I have been able to offer a scholarship to a deserving seminary student at Payne Theological Seminary. The scholarship we have established is called the Ministry Opportunities Fund, which is awarded to the seminarian who has the highest grade point average at the end of their first year of studies. At the first chapel service in September, I am planning to present this year’s scholarship in the amount of $3000.00.

My wife and I have also established a scholarship at the Proctor School of Theology at Virginia Union University. The name of the scholarship is the Rev. Julia W. McCargo Memorial Scholarship for Women in Ministry. The scholarship is awarded to the top female student who possesses the highest grade point average after her first year of studies. This year’s award is projected to be in the amount of $4000.00.

Conclusion

In summary, it has been another outstanding year in ministry. However, this will be my last report in person at the Virginia Annual Conference while stationed aboard the BATAAN. At this time next year, I will be on a six-month deployment with the ship, most likely in support of the Global War on Terrorism. I solicit your prayers for my family while I am away and for a safe return home.

To God be the glory!

Respectfully submitted,
D. R. BROWN
Lieutenant Commander, U. S. Navy
Chaplain Corps

Editor’s note: Chaplain David Brown is an Itinerant Elder and a member of the Virginia Annual Conference. Like the Editor, he is a product of Ebenezer AME Church, Rahway, New Jersey.

5. THE GLOBAL CORNER - NAMAYO INITIATIVE: A JOINT PRAYER AND HEALING CONVOCATION OF THE 5TH AND 17TH EPISCOPAL DISTRICTS:

The Right Reverend John R. Bryant
The Right Reverend Paul Kawimbe
Episcopal Supervisor, the Reverend Dr. Cecelia Williams Bryant
Episcopal Supervisor Yvonne Kawimbe

“Now may the God of peace Himself sanctify you completely; and may your whole spirit, soul, and body preserved blameless at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ.”
(I Thessalonians 5:23)

Where do I begin to tell this story?

One-hundred-seventeen (117) women convened in Atlanta Georgia to begin a journey of a lifetime. We met with Episcopal Supervisor Rev. Cecelia Williams Bryant where we received the five Principals of the NaMayo Co-Journey.

a. Submission: I humble myself under the Authority of the Vision and those who govern its implementation.

b. Silence: I strengthen my interior prayer life with at least two thirty-minute seasons of solitude unto the Lord.

c. Resilience: in wisdom, I guide myself to be emotionally and physically strong and flexible.

d. Simplicity: I am unencumbered by excess, attachments or materialistic thinking.

e. Compassion: I extend the LOVE and Grace of GOD to all persons, in all circumstances. I do not allow pride to manipulate my behavior or my attitude. “I Judge Not”

We arrived in Lusaka, Zambia on Saturday Afternoon to a most gracious welcome of song and dance from a delegation of Zambian women along with Supervisor Yvonne Kawimbe.

The Rev. Dr. Cecelia Bryant declared Palm Sunday as NAMAYO SUNDAY. We begin the day with a Prayer of Thanksgiving, Prayer for the Blessing of the Women and Prayer for God’s Spirit over NaMayo. She also shared with us that the NaMayo principal of OSUSU (Women Creating Wealth) is “Owe No One” We were instructed to meet with our prayer cluster daily for 30 minutes and to personally take time for two 30 minute sessions of deep personal prayer and journal.

Rev. C was the Speaker for the opening evening service. The topic was “Let’s Get it Started.” Some of the points she made were: God teaches three lessons – Repentance, Obedience and Restoration. She also said that ordinary religion would keep you faithful but not filled. At the end of the service, Rev. C anointed the Doctors and Nurses that came on this journey for service. Bishop Paul Kawimbe extended a warm welcome to us in several languages.

Many workshops were presented on various topics such as When HIV/AIDS is in the family by Dr. Precilla Belin and Eating Well – Food for Life by Dr. Patricia Barnes, RN.

The Doctors began the arduous process of getting certified to provide health service to the Zambians. There were obstacles to overcome, but because we serve a BIG GOD, the walls begin to come down. There was much prayer, praise and marching silently seven times around the meeting room at the Intercontinental Hotel. On Tuesday Morning, many who were destined to work in the make shift clinic at the Showground Compound went over early to clean the huts that would be used by the doctors and nurses. We set up a registration hut, pharmacy hut, and doctors examining huts along with HIV/AIDS testing. The clinic officially opened that afternoon to the delight of many. The doctors, nurses and volunteers worked well into the night. Many returned the next day to complete as much as possible the examining of the people. There was even a pediatrics hut set up to see the children. The clinic officially closed on Wednesday night but the work of the doctors and nurses did not stop. They set up a clinic at the hotel where we stayed in order to provide services to all of the hotel employees on Good Friday after service.

During the week, we were blessed to receive the Word from Rev. Carolyn Baskin Bell, Rev. Elfridah Musambazi, Rev. Pazina Mwitubmwa, Supervisor Rosalyn Brookins, Rev. Ann Shaw, Rev. Margaret Mwanza, Rev. Stephanie Butler, Rev. Joyce Chassala, and Minister Heidi Stevens. There were visits to orphanages, a transit home, schools, clinics, hospitals, museum (cultural visit), hospices, and a special visit to the university to present scholarships to students. All of the visits were blessed with both monetary gifts and supplies.

On Easter Sunday, groups of 9-10 persons visited 11 A.M.E. Churches in the area where we worshipped in tents, schoolrooms, and mud walled shelters. Each declared they had a beautiful experience. The singing and praising will not be forgotten. Each church was blessed with Altar Cloths, Communion trays, wafers and cups, bibles and hymnals and a financial donation from each attendee of $100.00 each.

Much to our surprise, Supervisor Yvonne Kawimbe presented all 117 of us with gifts. She said that it is there custom that every woman should have a cloth. Those who have so little thought it not robbery to give to all of us. We knew we were blessed by just being there but by being given these gifts, we received a double blessing.

In closing, Rev. C shared with us that the office of the missionary is to teach. That we are a witness to the possible. The need is SO GREAT and SO is GOD. We come to bring, not sympathy but empowerment, equipping the saints. She said that we have completed our assignment in Zambia.

Delegation Lead Ambassadors: Janet Gloyd-SCC (Sapphires), Carolyn Moore-SCC (Diamonds), Cheryl Hariston-Missouri, Phyllis Kitchen-Midwest, Sandra Harrison-Desert Mountain, Arisie Anderson-California, Beverly Habersham-California and Zinda Foster-Pacific Northwest.

Special thanks to Allison Stradford as the Delegation Coordinator whose hard work and dedication to this journey accounted for its success.

Next Stop: Lesotho – The next Global Mission Outreach is Lesotho from Nov. 27 - December 6, 2006. The focus of the trip will be PRAYER and EDUCATION – Women’s Health Education, Teacher Education and Christian Education. Registration Fee $100.00. – Pay to WGRDI – 1968 W Adams Blvd Ste 401 – Los Angeles, CA. 90018 – 323-730-7707.

Women’s Global Resource and Development Initiative Week is September 4-10, 2006. Intercession, Information, Resource Development. Yvette Williams and Veronica Triggs, Coordinators.

Reporting for the NaMayo Delegation
Lessie M. Thompson

6. THE GLOBAL CORNER - REPORT ON ZAMBIA:

Respectfully submitted by Shelia Brooks-LeFridge
Fitzgerald- Simpson Unit
First AME Church, Los Angeles, California

The NaMayo Initiative proved to be a co-journey of learning, healing, binding, praising, worshipping, and of tapping God’s unlimited power within myself. Many occasions mimicked when Jesus fed the multitudes with a few loaves of bread and fish. For instance, when the delegation was asked to bring the medical supplies to a conference room, it did not take long for all the tables to be filled up chest-high with all sorts of over-the-counter and prescription medications. Also, while at the NaMayo Clinic, which was set-up at the Show Grounds, several of the local Zambian women sought to feed the delegation by cooking the local staple food Nshemi and frying chicken in these huge silver caldron pots. When we inquired as to the wonderful aroma steaming from their pots, one of the delegation members handed the “head” cook a hundred dollar bill and advised them to feed the hundreds of waiting patients instead. The throngs of people were fed for two days. I was truly overwhelmed by God’s limitless abundance in many situations.

The structure of our missionary co-journey brought us closer to our missionary sisters, our global AME family, and our God. We worked from an itinerary and stuck to it as closely as unforeseen events would allow. There was actually very little deviation, barring the fact that the government officials held the medical staff members up for 1 ½ days. Upon my return home, several people I know who went on similar global outreach missions advised that they had more of a vacation trip to Africa. Not us. We worked. We prayed. We ministered. We gave all of ourselves and then, through prayer and study, found more of ourselves to give. The most memorable and substantial periods were the times spent in the daily prayer cluster groups, the Tuesday Healing Service and the Wednesday Miracle Prayer and Healing Service. These were awesome witnesses of the Holy Spirit in action and my participation in them will be unforgettable.

Reverend Cecelia “C” Bryant took several opportunities to educate and enlighten us. Beginning with orientation in Atlanta, she taught us the principle of Osusu, exercising financial responsibility, and reinforced this periodically throughout our trip. We also learned about submission through silence and setting you heart and mind to hear a Rhema Word from God, wherein God can speak directly to your spirit. Reverend “C” gave us techniques to enhance our prayer life and to move ourselves to a daily existence closer God. She also intuitively had us to address our spirits in acquiring forgiveness for our misdoing toward one another, whether intentional or not. All in all, we learn to be better stewards of our spirit, our friendships, our interactions, and our finances.

It is hard to digest how disproportionate the AIDS epidemic is in places like Lusaka throughout Africa. It is actually pandemic and poverty is its greatest ally. Even still, the various AME members showed us a level of worship and praise beyond my American experience. From the time we exited the airport in Lusaka, the Zambian members greeted us in soul stirring song. Every service was a new and deeper experience in spiritual praise, worship, and communion with God: the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. At these times, the spirit of thanksgiving transcended earthy infirmity and worldly lack.
Report for Prayer Cluster C

One word to express the overall sentiment of the group is “Gratitude”. The members, under the prayer direction of Cynthia Pitts, prayed daily for the NaMayo delegation to be taken deeper into providing ministry to the Zambian people through the medical teams and daily outreach ministries. Everyone felt profoundly more blessed in what was received from the experience of worship and praise with our Zambian sisters, brothers, and children, than anything we could have brought to them. One of the sisters in our prayer cluster gave testimony to her heart being touched on Easter Sunday in a small church in Chilenga, in knowing that our Zambian sisters understood that we offered ourselves as gifts more so than any material gifts we brought.

Working in the clinics serving the people, doing what we could to help them in the moment, the extensive intercessory prayer offerings and the Miracle Prayer and Healing Services were utterly awesome spiritual releases of God’s supernatural power into the natural. The gratitude was not in what we have compared to our African brothers and sisters, but in what God blessed us to give and in what God put in our hearts as a result of this experience and journey.

Respectfully submitted by Shelia Brooks-Elbridge

On behalf of Cynthia Pitts,
Prayer Leader,
Cluster C

7. NEWS FROM AROUND THE AME CHURCH:

- The Reverend Dr. J. E. Taylor of the Georgia Annual Conference of the Sixth Episcopal District has been appointed Presiding Elder of the Waycross District. His wife, Mrs. Shirley V. Taylor, Sixth is the Episcopal District President of the Ministers' Spouses, Widows and Widowers Organization, Plus PK's.

8. THE AME LUNCHEON AT THE HAMPTON UNIVERSITY MINISTERS’ CONFERENCE WILL BE HELD ON THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 2006 AT THE RADISSON HOTEL:

The AME Luncheon has been an annual event at the Hampton University Ministers’ Conference for a number of years. The luncheon has grown significantly in the last several years. The Right Reverend John Bryant serves on the Board of the HU Ministers Conference and he has been instrumental in the luncheon’s growth. The luncheon will be held at the beautiful Radisson Hotel this year on Thursday June 8, 2006. Last year about 200 persons attended the luncheon and an increase attendance is expected this year. The luncheon will be held at 2 p.m. and really, it is a heavy lunch. Six AME Bishops attended at last year’s luncheon and it was a gala affair.

The Reverend Andre Jefferson, pastor of Bethel AME Church, Hampton, Virginia is the coordinator of the AME Luncheon. He and his committee are planning for an exciting luncheon. Entertainment will be provided. The Reverend Dr. Timothy Boddie, Hampton University Chaplain has been invited and is looking forward to attending the AME luncheon. Dr. Boddie is the Executive Secretary/Treasurer of the Ministers’ Conference

The cost of the luncheon (it really is a dinner) will be $20.00.

When you get to the Ministers Conference, please register your name, no money, for the AME Luncheon at the Hampton University Religious Studies Program booth in the Convocation Center. If Editor Sydnor is not at the table when you get there, just leave you name with the representative at the staffing the booth.

9. THE 92nd ANNUAL HAMPTON UNIVERSITY MINISTERS' CONFERENCE AND 72nd ANNUAL CHOIR DIRECTORS' ORGANISTS' GUILD:

The 92nd Annual Hampton University Ministers' Conference and 72nd Annual Choir Directors' Organists' Guild will be held June 4 - June 9 on the beautiful Hampton University. Once again, HU will host a variety of accomplished ministers.

Ministers' Conference President, Dr. Suzan Johnson Cook, marking her final year as the first female president in Conference History, announced the theme for this year's conference as, "A Call to Celebration and Consecration." The conference will focus on the various and diverse ways in which pastors and ministers celebrate and consecrate their ministries.

Hampton Ministers Conference Presenters include, Conference Preacher, Bishop Kenneth Ulmer, Inglewood, CA; Morning Preacher, the Rev. W. Darin Moore, Mt. Vernon, NY; Early Morning Prayer, Bishop Ernestine Reems Dickerson, Oakland, CA; Hermeneutics, Dr. William Epps, Los Angeles, CA; Theology of Celebration, the Rev. Mack King Carter, Ft. Lauderdale, FL; Practical Theology, Pastor Rita Twiggs, Dallas, TX; Theology of Contemplation, Dr. Robert Smith, Birmingham, AL; Theology of Consecration, Bishop Violet Fisher, Rochester, NY; Practical Theology, Dr. Dennis Proctor, Baltimore, MD.

Additional exciting presenters this year include the Rev. Jasmine "Jazz" Sculark, of York, PA; and Dr. Kevin Cosby of Louisville, KY. Another notable feature of the Conference will be the Father-Son team of Dr. Otis Moss, Jr., and his son, Rev. Otis Moss, III, addressing the question, "Can the Moses and Joshua Generations Meet?" The conference will also include a panel to discuss women in ministry.

The Reverend Dr. Timothy Boddie Executive Secretary/Treasurer of the Ministers’ Conference

For more information: http://www.hamptonu.edu/events/ministers_conference/index.htm


10. THE REV. TERESA L. FRY BROWN, PH.D. KEYNOTES ST. MARK AME CHURCH 70TH ANNUAL WOMEN’S DAY:

“Special Gifts: Elevating To The Next Level”

Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The Rev. Teresa L. Fry Brown will bring the keynote address at St. Mark AME Church’s 70th Annual Women’s Day Service on Sunday, May 21, 2006, at 11:00 a.m. Women’s Day is an opportunity to recognize the services and contributions of women to the church and their communities.

Though the church was founded in 1869, it was not until 1936, however, that a “special day” for women was born under the leadership of the late Mrs. Flossie Chalmers. These activities were used as a means for women to rededicate themselves to the church.

Rev. Fry Brown currently serves as Associate Professor of Homiletics at Candler School of Theology at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia. She obtained a Doctorate of Philosophy in Religious and Theological Studies from Iliff School of Theology and the University of Denver. Dr. Fry Brown has over thirty years teaching experience in elementary, secondary, post secondary, academic, ecumenical and denominational settings across the United States, and internationally.

As a prolific author, Dr. Fry Brown’s books include, “God Don’t Like Ugly: African American Women Handing on Spiritual Values,” “Weary Throats and New Song: Black Women Proclaiming God’s Word,” and a devotional booklet “The 2006 African American History Devotional.”

Dr. Fry Brown is an Associate Minister at Big Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Atlanta, Georgia. She is an ordained Itinerant Elder in the AME Church, and is a member of the Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc.

The public is invited to come and hear this dynamic pastor and author. St. Mark is located at 1616 W. Atkinson Avenue, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The Rev. Darryl Williams is the pastor.

For more information, please call the church office at (414) 562-8030.

11. WOMEN’S DAY CELEBRATION AND REVIVAL - HISTORIC ST. PETER A.M.E. CHURCH, HARRODSBURG, KENTUCKY:

Monday – May 15th, 2006
The Rev. Sherry Green
Powerhouse Church of God
Lexington, KY

Tuesday – May 16th, 2006
Sister Teresa Payne
Greater Harvest Worship Center – Danville, KY

Wednesday, May 17th, 2006
Licentiate Sharon Johnson
St. Peter AME Church
Harrodsburg, KY

Thursday, May 18th, 2006
Sister Doris Coffey, Exhorter
St. Paul AME Church
Lexington, KY

Friday, May 19th, 2006
Sister Anita Harris
Cincinnati, OH

Saturday, May 20th, 2006
Women’s Conference
9:00 a.m.

Sunday – May 21st, 2006

Sister Jessica Browning
11:00 A.M. Morning Services

The Reverend Vashti Murphy McKenzie, Presiding Bishop, 13th Episcopal District, 3:30 PM Afternoon Service

Nightly Revival Services – 6:30 p.m. Devotions
Preaching – 7:00 p.m.

The Rev. Ralph Boyd Smith is the pastor of St. Peter A.M.E. Church

12. INTERESTING INSPIRATIONAL ARTICLE FROM ZONDERVAN:

"[As a Jehovah's Witness,] I had knocked on doors for 28 years," Paul Blizzard told us. "I have been in thousands of homes of Christians, including pastors. I have had doors slammed in my face, dogs attacked me, and water thrown on me. But, I never, never, never had anyone share the gospel with me. No one, that is, except a clerk in a Christian bookstore." "On the way home [after hearing the gospel]," Paul reflected, "I pulled the car over onto the side of the road so we [he and his wife Patricia] could talk. On that day in 1982, one lost person told another lost person how to be saved. We gave our lives to Christ." To this day Paul has not heard from any of his family. He has not heard a word since 1982. The cost of following Christ has not been small.

From Zondervan Website

Editor’s note – When people come to evangelize their faith at your home, you should use the opportunity to evangelize for Jesus Christ.

13. CLERGY FAMILY CONGRATULATORY NOTICE:

The Birth of twin boys - Richard Thomas Sinkfield Belin and Blake Roderick Dwayne Belin

The Reverend Henry Allen Belin, III, pastor of First African Methodist Episcopal Church (Bethel) New York, New York and Mrs. Rita Sinkfield Belin, Esq. were blessed with the arrival of twin sons on March 27, 2006.

Richard Thomas Sinkfield Belin weighed in at 7 pounds 6 ozs.
Blake Roderick Dwayne Belin weighed in at 7 pounds 10 ozs.

The proud grandparents are the Right Reverend and Mrs. Henry Allen Belin, Jr.

Congratulatory messages may be sent to:

372 Dekalb Avenue #3F
Brooklyn, NY 11205

718-622-5022 (Phone)

Or emailed to: hallenbiii@aol.com rdsinkfieb@aol.com

14. CLERGY FAMILY CONGRATULATORY NOTICE:

The graduation of Marcia Dionne Fugh

Marcia Dionne Fugh, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Clement W. Fugh, General Secretary/CIO, will graduate on Saturday, May 6, 2006, from Tennessee State University, Nashville, TN, with a Masters Degree in Public Administration, with a specialty certification in Non Profit Management.

Marcia is currently employed in the Office of the General Secretary as Information Systems Project Manager and on the Secretarial Staff of the General Board and General Conference.

Congratulatory messages may be emailed to: cioamec@bellsouth.net

15. CLERGY FAMILY CONGRATULATORY NOTICE:

The graduation of Rev. Dr. Reginald Blount.

“God Almighty has brought me; the love of family has supported me; the joy of friendship has uplifted me; and with the guidance given by the Holy Spirit, I have arrived! With great pride, I the Rev. Reginald Blount am proud to announce my graduation from Northwestern University as a candidate for the degree Doctor of Philosophy.”

Thank you for sharing this with the A.M.E. Community!

Rev. Dr. Reginald Blount, Pastor

Trinity African Methodist Episcopal Church
P.O. Box 9178
Waukegan, IL 60087
847-623-8529

Email: rblount@garrett.edu

16. CLERGY FAMILY CONGRATULATORY NOTICE:

The graduation of Sister Birdie Young Parker

Sister Birdie Parker, who works in the Office of the Publisher at the AME Sunday School Union in Nashville, Tennessee and who is an Associate Minister of Mary's Chapel in Fayetteville, Tennessee, will be graduating from Trevecca Nazarene University with a B.A. Degree in Management and Human Relations on Saturday, May 6, 2006.

Sister Parker is planning to attend seminary and is married to the Reverend Joseph Parker, pastor of Mary's Chapel AME Church, Fayetteville, Tennessee.

Congratulatory messages may sent to: u_sunday@bellsouth.net

17. CLERGY FAMILY CONGRATULATORY NOTICE:

The graduation of Charity Battle and Renisha Battle

Charity Battle and Renisha Battle will graduate on May 6, 2006 from North Carolina Central University at 8:00 a. m. These are the daughters of the Rev. and Mrs. Milton Battle (2nd Episcopal District).

Congratulations to all!

18. ALL CLERGY FAMILY CONGRATULATORY NOTICES:

Congratulatory Messages/Praise Reports received will be compiled and posted by the Clergy Family Information Center on Friday of each week. Clergy Family Births, Graduations, Weddings and Wedding Anniversaries (25th, 50th, 75th)

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)

Please remember these families in your prayers.

20. CONGRATULATIONS TO 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 congratulations and prayers for al of the praise reports. We thank God for the blessings that God bestows “Morning by morning. Great is Thy Faithfulness.”

21. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

Episcopal Supervisor, Mother Barbara Jeanne Chappelle,
12th Episcopal District, President, Charolett Martin

This comes to inform you of the passing of WMS Life Member, Agnes Mildred Williams Hunter. Our sister, the beloved wife of Presiding Elder W. H. (Jim) Hunter, former Presiding Elder of the Pine Bluff South District and the Camden District, died on Thursday evening in her home. Mrs. Hunter was a former Episcopal District YPD Director, and was most active on every level of the Women's Missionary Society.

Funeral Services for Life Member, Mrs. Agnes Mildred Williams Hunter, will be held on Tuesday, May 9, 2006, 11:00 a.m. at Bethel A.M.E. Church, 600 North Cedar Street, North Little Rock, AR 72114.

There will be a viewing on Monday, May 8, 2006, 6 - 7 p.m. at Premier Funeral Home, 1518 South Battery Street, Little Rock, AR

Telephone (501) 376-4800.

The Reverend W. H. Hunter and family may be contacted at:

2621 South Chester Street
Little Rock, AR 72206

Telephone 501-374-6909.

Please remember the Hunter family in your prayers.

22. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

From: Sixth Episcopal District, The Right Reverend William P. DeVeaux, Presiding Prelate

The Reverend J. R. Campbell, former Presiding Elder of the Eastern District of the Southwest Georgia Annual Conference, passed on Thursday, May 4 at the Sumter Regional Hospital in Americus, Georgia. Rev. Campbell, the beloved husband of Mrs. Mamie Campbell, pastored in several conferences in Georgia.

Funeral Services will be held on Thursday, May 11, 2006, at 2:00 p.m. at Allen Chapel A.M.E. Church in Americus. The Reverend D. D Davenport is the pastor of Allen Chapel.

Please keep this family in your prayers.

Condolences may be sent to:

Mrs. Mamie Campbell
912 Davenport Street
Americus, Georgia 31709

Telephone: 229-924-8580

23. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

From: The 8th Episcopal District, the Right Reverend C. Garnett Henning, Presiding Prelate

The Rev. John W. Jenkins, the beloved husband of Mrs. Ida Jenkins and father of Chander N. Jenkins Johnson, Yolanda Nanette Jenkins, John Weston Jenkins III and Kendra Antoinette Jenkins passed on Saturday afternoon, May 6, 2006. He was the pastor of Bethel A. M. E. Church, Brookhaven, Mississippi.

Funeral Services will be held at 3 p.m. Tuesday, May 9, at Bethel A.M. E. Church, 701 South First Street, Brookhaven, MS 39601.

The Church telephone number is (601) 833-7740.

The Rev. Joseph Young is the presiding elder.

Contact:

Mrs. Ida Jenkins
390 Jakes Trail, N.W.
Brookhaven, MS 39601

Telephone (601) 353-6682/835-1689

Please remember the Jenkins family in your prayers.

24. 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.

25. 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

5/5/2006

THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER ONLINE ENGLISH EDITION (5/5/06)

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. AMERICAN MILITARY DEATHS IN IRAQ NOW 2400+:

American deaths in the war in Iraq have now passed 2,400, and thousands are wounded and maimed. Tens of thousands of Iraqi men, women and children have died. Three more soldiers were killed today (5/5/05)

2. BUS TRANSPORTATION FROM THE 12TH EPISCOPAL DISTRICT TO THE GENERAL BOARD MEETING / BISHOPS’ COUNCIL:

The folks from the 12th Episcopal District are planning to saturate the General Board Meeting in support of their Episcopal Leader, the Right Reverend Richard Allen Chappelle. Folks are flying in on airplanes, taking trains, and driving automobiles. They want the Church to know that they love their Episcopal Leaders, the Right Reverend Richard Allen Chappelle and Episcopal Supervisor Barbara Jeanne Chappelle.

Not only are the folks coming in by planes, trains and automobiles, but also Sister Trina D. Jones, Pastor of San Hill AME Church in Little Rock, Arkansas has charted a 40-passenger bus to attend the General Board Meeting in Charleston, South Carolina on June 25 through 28. The cost of the round-trip will be $145.00.

Those who are interested traveling on the bus should immediately call Sister Trina D. Jones at 501-838-2992. Please leave a message if she is not available.

The General Board Meeting will be held in Charleston, SC on June 25-28 (Sun-Wed). The bus fare does not include hotel accommodations.

Submitted by Sister Jackie Weary

3. THE CONNECTIONAL HEALTH COMMISSION IS PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE THE LAUNCH OF ITS NEW WEBSITE:

www.amechealth.org. Although in its infancy, the website holds the CHC Handbook, forms and links to several health sites. Soon the DVD's made available by the Council of Bishop's Living Well Program will be viewable on the site.

We are also extremely pleased to announce that the registration forms and agenda for the Annual Health Director's Training to be held, June 23-25, 2006 at the site of the General Board Meeting, are also available on the website.

Please visit the site, register and watch for new additions.

The Rev. Miriam J. Burnett, MD, M. Div., MPH
Medical Director
AMEC Connectional Health Commission
Turner Theological Seminary
702 MLK Jr Dr SW
Atlanta, GA 30314-4143
Office 404-614-6398
Fax 404-614-6369
Email: mjbamehealth@yahoo.com

4. THE AME LUNCHEON AT THE HAMPTON UNIVERSITY MINISTERS’ CONFERENCE WILL BE HELD AT THE RADISSON HOTEL:

The AME Luncheon has been an annual event at the Hampton University Ministers’ Conference for a number of years. The luncheon has grown significantly in the last several years. The Right Reverend John Bryant serves on the Board of the HU Ministers Conference and he has been instrumental in the luncheon’s growth. The luncheon will be held at the beautiful Radisson Hotel on Thursday, June 8, 2006. Last year about 200 persons attended the luncheon and an increase attendance is expected this year. The luncheon will be held at 2 p.m. and really, it is a heavy lunch. Five AME Bishops were in attendance at last year’s luncheon and it was a gala affair.

The Reverend Andre Jefferson, pastor of Bethel AME Church, Hampton, Virginia is the coordinator of the AME Luncheon. He and his committee are planning for an exciting luncheon. Entertainment will be provided. The Reverend Dr. Timothy Boddie, Hampton University Chaplain has been invited and is looking forward to attending the AME luncheon. Dr. Boddie is the Executive Secretary/Treasurer of the Ministers’ Conference

The cost of the luncheon (it really is a dinner) will be $20.00.

When you get to the Ministers Conference, please register your name, no money, for the AME Luncheon at the Hampton University Religious Studies Program booth in the Convocation Center. If Editor Sydnor is not at the table when you get there, just leave you name with the representative at the staffing the booth.

5. THE 92nd ANNUAL HAMPTON UNIVERSITY MINISTERS' CONFERENCE AND 72nd ANNUAL CHOIR DIRECTORS' ORGANISTS' GUILD:

The 92nd Annual Hampton University Ministers' Conference and 72nd Annual Choir Directors' Organists' Guild will be held June 4 - June 9 on the beautiful Hampton University. Once again, HU will host a variety of accomplished ministers.

Ministers' Conference President, Dr. Suzan Johnson Cook, marking her final year as the first female president in Conference History, announced the theme for this year's conference as, "A Call to Celebration and Consecration." The conference will focus on the various and diverse ways in which pastors and ministers celebrate and consecrate their ministries.

Hampton Ministers Conference Presenters include, Conference Preacher, Bishop Kenneth Ulmer, Inglewood, CA; Morning Preacher, the Rev. W. Darin Moore, Mt. Vernon, NY; Early Morning Prayer, Bishop Ernestine Reems Dickerson, Oakland, CA; Hermeneutics, Dr. William Epps, Los Angeles, CA; Theology of Celebration, the Rev. Mack King Carter, Ft. Lauderdale, FL; Practical Theology, Pastor Rita Twiggs, Dallas, TX; Theology of Contemplation, Dr. Robert Smith, Birmingham, AL; Theology of Consecration, Bishop Violet Fisher, Rochester, NY; Practical Theology, Dr. Dennis Proctor, Baltimore, MD.

Additional exciting presenters this year include the Rev. Jasmine "Jazz" Sculark, of York, PA; and Dr. Kevin Cosby of Louisville, KY. Another notable feature of the Conference will be the Father-Son team of Dr. Otis Moss, Jr., and his son, Rev. Otis Moss, III, addressing the question, "Can the Moses and Joshua Generations Meet?" The conference will also include a panel to discuss women in ministry.

The Reverend Dr. Timothy Boddie Executive Secretary/Treasurer of the Ministers’ Conference

For more information: http://www.hamptonu.edu/events/ministers_conference/index.htm

6. MISTAKES LEAD TO GREATNESS

S. Renee Smith

Attend any athletic event and you will hear the thunder of applause and shouts of excitement and pleasure when a player executes a play properly. In an instant, when a player fails at being perfect, the atmosphere shifts to disgust and disappointment as fans start calling the “star” names and causing chaos.

A teacher shows his or her approval when a student earns a “good” grade by marking the students’ paper in blue and adding a smiley face. When the student earns a “bad” grade, his or her paper is marked in red and he or she gets a sad face. What a message for our little ones.

If you do the right thing according to your mates’ standards, life will be peaceful. Make a mistake and suddenly life becomes stressful and, depending on what you did, nearly unbearable. Before we learned to talked, we learned that making a mistake is not a good thing. Our society teaches us to celebrate the winners and forget the losers. To support the good students and let the others fend for themselves. In marriage, we place unrealistic expectations on one another. We are expected to know and understand who we marry, how we should act at all times, how to meet his or her needs, and how to make the “right” decision every time.

Living in a society, which reveres perfection, physical and otherwise—according to its fictitious, predetermined standards—makes making a mistake or being less than Halle Barry’s twin quite a challenge to overcome. That is until we learn the truth about who we are and what our mistakes can and do mean to us.

Many people have become rich by turning their “mistakes” into huge businesses. I am definitely not saying that a plan is not important. What I am saying is that the mistakes that you make in the attempt to fulfill the plan is not a mistake at all. If you learn and grow from the mistake, it is life’s gift to you.

Did you know that cola, potato chips, cheese, popsicles and many other inventions were accidents? Potato chips were invented because a fussy, irritated customer wanted super thin potatoes. Cola came about because a doctor was working on a headache medicine that would taste good. Not every mistake will lead to a phenomenal invention, but it can lead to a phenomenal lesson.

In 1988, I ran in the Miss Delaware USA Pageant. I decided I would be a step ahead of my competition by presenting my introduction in Spanish. I diligently studied my open statements for weeks. I was confident and well rehearsed. The moment had come. I started out fine, but before I knew it, my mind went completely blank in an auditorium full of people. You could hear a pin drop.

As I stumbled and struggled to regain my composure, I realized that I did not know the language well enough to recover. Now, that was a mistake! Speaking Spanish was not the mistake. Trying to impress people was a mistake. In my mistake, life gave me the gift—without anyone dying or becoming emotionally damaged—of understanding the importance of being myself. Your mistakes do not have to hold you hostage until your next victory. You simply learn the lesson, change your direction, and thank life for the gift of learning.

© 2005 S. Renee Smith is a member of Emmanuel AME Church, Hartly, Delaware and an affiliated member of Byrd AME Church, Clayton, Delaware; and an Image Consultant, Motivational Speaker & Author of There Is More Inside. For booking information, visit her website at www.srenee.com or call (302)736-5131.

7. TWELVE THINGS THE NEGRO MUST DO FOR HIMSELF (HERSELF)

Nannie Helen Burroughs (Circa Early 1900's)

I. The Negro Must Learn To Put First Things First. The First Things Are Education; Development of Character Traits; A Trade and Home Ownership.

- The Negro puts too much of his earning in clothes, in food, in show and in having what he /she calls "a good time." Dr. Kelly Miller said, "The Negro buys what he WANTS and begs for what he needs."

11. The Negro Must Stop Expecting God and White Folk To Do For Him / Her What He / She Can Do For Him/Herself.

- It is the "Divine Plan" that the strong shall help the weak, but even God does not do for man what man can do for himself. The Negro will have to do exactly what Jesus told the man (in John 5:8) to do--Carry his own load--"Take up your bed and walk."

111. The Negro Must Keep Himself, His Children And His Home Clean And Make The Surroundings In Which He Lives Comfortable and Attractive.

- He /she must learn to "run his /her community up"--not down. We can segregate by law, we integrate only by living. Civilization is not a matter of race; it is a matter of standards. Believe it or not--some day, some race is going to outdo the Anglo-Saxon, completely. It can be the Negro race, if the Negro gets sense enough. Civilization goes up and down that way.

IV. The Negro Must Learn To Dress More Appropriately For Work And For Leisure.

- Knowing what to wear--how to wear it--when to wear it and where to wear it are earmarks of common sense, culture and also an index to character.

V. The Negro Must Make His Religion An Everyday Practice And Not Just A Sunday-Go-To-Meeting Emotional Affair.

VI. The Negro Must Highly Resolve To Wipe Out Mass Ignorance.

- The leaders of the race must teach and inspire the masses to become eager and determined to improve mentally, morally and spiritually, and to meet the basic requirements of good citizenship.

- We should initiate an intensive literacy campaign in America, as well as in Africa. Ignorance-- satisfied ignorance --is a millstone about the neck of the race. It is democracy's greatest burden.

- Social integration is a relationship attained as a result of the cultivation of kindred social ideals, interests and standards.

- It is a blending process that requires time, understanding and kindred purposes to achieve. Likes alone and not laws can do it.

VII. The Negro Must Stop Charging His /her Failures Up To His / Her "Color" And To White People's Attitude.

- The truth of the matter is that good service and conduct will make senseless race prejudice fade like mist before the rising sun.

- God never intended that a man's /woman’s color should be anything other than a badge of distinction. It is high time that all races were learning that fact. The Negro must first QUALIFY for whatever position he / she wants. Purpose, initiative, ingenuity and industry are the keys that all men /women use to get what they want. The Negro will have to do the same. He /she must make him/herself a worker who is too skilled not to be wanted, and too DEPENDABLE not to be on the job, according to promise or plan. He / she will never become a vital factor in industry until he / she learns to put into his /her work the vitalizing force of initiative, skill and dependability. He /she has gone "RIGHTS" mad and "DUTY" dumb.

VIII. The Negro Must Overcome His / Her Bad Job Habits.

- He / she must make a brand new reputation for him/herself in the world of labor. His/her bad job habits are absenteeism, funerals to attend, or a little business to look after. The Negro runs an off and on business. He /she also has a bad reputation for conduct on the job--such as petty quarrelling with other help, incessant loud talking about nothing; loafing, carelessness, due to lack of job pride; insolence, gum chewing and--too often--liquor drinking. Just plain bad job habits!

IX. He (She) Must Improve His (Her) Conduct In Public Places.

- Taken as a whole, often he (she) is entirely too loud and too ill-mannered.

- There is much talk about wiping out racial segregation and also much talk about achieving integration.

- Segregation is a physical arrangement by which people are separated in various services.

- It is definitely up to the Negro to wipe out the apparent justification or excuse for segregation.

- The only effective way to do it is to clean up and keep clean. By practice, cleanliness will become a habit and habit becomes character.

X. The Negro Must Learn How To Operate Business For People--Not For Negro People, Only.

- To do business, he / she will have to remove all typical "earmarks," business principles; measure up to accepted standards and meet stimulating competition, graciously--in fact, he /she must learn to welcome competition.

XI. The Average So-Called Educated Negro Will Have To Come Down Out Of The Air. He / she is too inflated over nothing. He / She Needs An Experience Similar To The One That Ezekiel Had--(Ezekiel 3:14-19). And He /She Must Do What Ezekiel Did”

- Otherwise, through indifference, as to the plight of the masses, the Negro, who thinks that he /she has escaped, will lose his /her own soul. It will do all leaders good to read Hebrew 13:3, and the first Thirty-seven Chapters of Ezekiel.

- A race transformation itself through its own leaders and its sensible "common people." A race rises on its own wings, or is held down by its own weight. True leaders are never "things apart from the people." They are the masses. They simply got to the front ahead of them. Their only business at the front is to inspire to masses by hard work and noble example and challenge them to "Come on!" Dante stated a fact when he said, "Show the people the light and they will find the way!"

- There must arise within the Negro race a leadership that is not out hunting bargains for itself. A noble example is found in the men and women of the Negro race, who, in the early days, laid down their lives for the people. The “latter-day leaders” have not appraised their invaluable contributions. In many cases, their names would never be recorded, among the unsung heroes of the world, but for the fact that white friends have written them there. "Lord, God of Hosts, Be with us yet."

- The Negro of today does not realize that, but, for these exhibits A's, that certainly show the innate possibilities of members of their own race, white people would not have been moved to make such princely investments in lives and money, as they have made, for the establishment of schools and for the on-going of the race.

XII. The Negro Must Stop Forgetting His Friends. "Remember."

- Read Deuteronomy 24:18. Deuteronomy rings the big bell of gratitude. Why? Because an ingrate is an abomination in the sight of God. God is constantly telling us that "I the Lord thy God delivered you" --through human instrumentalities.

The American Negro has had and still has friends--in the North and in the South. These friends not only pray, speak, write, influence others, but make unbelievable, unpublished sacrifices and contributions for the advancement of the race--for their brothers in bonds.

- The noblest thing that the Negro can do is to so live and labor that these benefactors will not have given in vain. The Negro must make his heart warm with gratitude, his lips sweet with thanks and his heart and mind resolute with purpose to justify the sacrifices and stand on his feet and go forward-- "God is no respecter of persons. In every nation, he that feareth him and worketh righteousness is" sure to win out. Get to work! That's the answer to everything that hurts us. We talk too much about nothing instead of redeeming the time by working.

R-E-M-E-M-B-E-R - In spite of race prejudice, America is brim full of opportunities. Go after them!

And, this was written in the early 1900's! The more things change the more they stay the same.

Received from the Rev. Dr. Ted Cunningham

8. THE CLERGY FAMILY INFORMATION CENTER ALSO SHARES JOYFUL MOMENTS OF GOOD NEWS:

The Clergy Family Information Center serves as a global notification system through which Clergy Families can today express words of comfort and sympathy to one another in a timely fashion, "ministering to each other in times of need." Feedback responses reflect that comfort is being expressed to those experiencing bereavement in a marvelous fashion. For this, we praise God!

We would also like to share your "Joyful" moments, the "The GOOD NEWS" of Clergy Family Births, Graduations, Weddings, and Wedding Anniversaries (25th, 50th, 75th). The Congratulatory Notices "The GOOD NEWS" received will be compiled and will be shared once each week.


9. PASTOR SHERRY MILLER HONORED BY THE KENTUCKY LAY ORGANIZATION:

Pastor Sherry Miller was honored as Pastor of the Year” by the Kentucky Lay Organization.

10. CONGRATULATORY NOTICE - PAULA CAMPBELL WILL GRADUATE FROM MIDWAY COLLEGE:

Paula L. Campbell (formerly Paula Rudd), Kentucky Conference Director of Public Relations will graduate from Midway College with a Bachelor of Arts degree in Human Management at the Commencement Exercises on Saturday Morning, May 13th, 2006.

She attends St. Paul AME Church in Lexington, Kentucky and will celebrate her 40th birthday on July 17, 2006.

Messages of congratulations may be emailed to paulac@iglou.com

11. CONGRATULATORY NOTICE -STEPHANIE LYNN YOUNG WILL GRADUATE FROM HAMPTON UNIVERSITY:

Stephanie Lynn Young, (the daughter of proud parents, Bishop McKinley Young and Supervisor Dr. Dorothy Jackson Young, 11th Episcopal District) will be graduating from Hampton University with a Bachelor of Arts degree in Broadcast Journalism on Sunday Morning, May 14, 2006 at 10 a.m. The Commencement ceremony will take place in Armstrong Stadium. President William R. Harvey is the President of Hampton University.

Congratulatory messages may be emailed to:

supdjy@bellsouth.net

Or to

supdjy@11thdistrictamec.org

12. CONGRATULATORY NOTICE - CONGRATULATIONS: BIRTH OF TWIN GIRLS:

Baby Angel Joanne Bryant and Baby Adore Cecelia Bryant were born on Sunday evening, April 30, 2006, 7:30 PM to proud parents Reverend Dr. Jamal-Harrison Bryant and Lady Gizelle Bryant, Empowerment Temple AME Church, Baltimore, Maryland. Weighing in at 7 ½ pounds, 19 inches was Angel Joanne. Weighing in at 8 pounds and 20 inches, Adore Cecelia. ALL are doing well.

The Proud grandparents are Bishop John R. Bryant and Supervisor Rev. Dr. Cecelia Williams Bryant, 5th Episcopal District.

Congratulatory messages may be emailed to:

Empowering1@aol.com

Or to
pastor@emplowermenttemple.org

13. CONGRATULATORY NOTICE - CONGRATULATIONS: IT IS A BOY - BABY ELIJAH LEROY ANDERSON:

Baby Elijah Leroy Anderson, was born on March 31, 2006, weighing 7lb. 11 oz. 20 inches to proud parents, Leroy and Angela Anderson.

The Proud Grandparents are the Rev. Deloris and 1st gentleman Earl A. Prioleau, Jr. and Rev. Shirley Anderson.

The Proud parents, Leroy and Angela Anderson, were to have been recommended for admission to the Washington Annual Conference, which convened on April 17th 2006.

The Proud grandmother, Rev. Deloris Prioleau, is pastor of Cornerstone AME Church in Washington, DC and Treasurer of the Connectional Women in Ministry.

Congratulatory messages may be emailed to RevDeeABP@msn.com

14. SERMON OF THE WEEK:

Preached by Sister Loretta Matthews at Shorter Chapel AME Church, Franklin, Tennessee. The Reverend Charlotte Ann Blake Sydnor is the pastor.

- “Who Wants to be a Missionary?”

Since retiring from my job a few years ago, I have been watching more television. I love game shows. When “Who wants to be a Millionaire” started airing it became one of my favorite game shows. It started with Regis Philbun as host and more recently as an offshoot of the show, Meredith Viera hosts just plain “Millionaire.”

Everybody wants to be a millionaire. My husband and I sit glued to the television answering as many questions as we can and somehow aspiring to become a contestant so that we may be come millionaires.

You are probably thinking what in world does have to do with Missionary Day and Missionaries? Well, as I thought about “Who Wants to be a Millionaire?” it occurred to me that that would be a good question for this day.

Pray with me for a few minutes on the subject, “Who Wants to be a Missionary?”

The first thing we need to clarify is what or who is a Missionary? According to my dictionary a Missionary is one who is sent by the church to spread their religion among unbelievers, especially in foreign countries…one who chooses or is sent to do humanitarian or educational work, especially in foreign countries…one who advocates or works to gain support for some idea or cause.

Now, the Doctrine and Discipline of the African Methodist Episcopal Church states the Mission of the Women’s Missionary Society as this, “We are called to strengthen our faith and sent to continue the ministry of Jesus Christ by service and witness to the world.”

The Missionaries have as their Purpose: “As women called to discipleship to grow in knowledge and experience of God through Jesus Christ, committed to support the mission of the church and empowered by the Holy Spirit, we are challenged to help one another engage in ministry and action, and grow and respond in faith to God’s redemptive plan for the church, the society and the world.”

This is truly a noble purpose, but I must ask the question of you today, “Who wants to be a Missionary?”

We say we are called to continue the ministry of Jesus Christ…who wants to be a servant of the people? Jesus said in Matthew 20:27-28, “Whoever wants to become great among you must be your servant, and whoever wants to be first must be your slave…just as the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give His life as a ransom for many.”

Who wants to go, clean, wash, and cook for someone who is sick and unable to do for themselves? Who wants to give a place to stay to some homeless person? Who wants to provide some clothes for someone in need instead of saying, “I’m praying for you?” Who wants to be a big brother or big sister to a child or young person who just needs someone to talk with? Who wants to visit someone in prison? Who wants to pick up the telephone and call someone just to say ‘I haven’t seen you lately and was thinking about you?” Who wants to encourage an elderly person who has lost their will to live or a young person who has gotten in with the wrong crowd and has given up hope that there is anything for them in life? Who can do these things without being judgmental?

Who wants to be a Missionary?

Who is a Missionary? A Missionary is one who is committed to lifting up their Sisters and Brothers…a Missionary is one who cares about their fellowman…a Missionary is one who finds ways to build up rather than tear down…a Missionary is one who walks in the Light of Christ…A Missionary is one who allows the Power of the Holy Spirit to rule in their lives.

I ask you, “Who wants to be a Missionary?”

How can we say, “I’m a good Missionary,” and can’t wait until service is over to spread gossip about our church members, your friends, your pastor and even people we don’t know! Oh, Yes! All it takes is, “Honey, I heard” and we take it from there.

Do you want to be a Missionary because you get to wear your beautiful, pristine white outfits? (And then you say to a fellow church member, “Don’t hug me, you might get make-up on my dress). Oh, but you see I am a good missionary! I pay my dues! I go to the meetings!

Maybe you enjoy your position. Do you want to get into a position where you can hog the limelight…so that you can be recognized, and everybody will see you and say, “Oh, that’s Miss Missionary!” Do you want to look down on those poor, weak, misguided people who don’t know anything about missionary work? Or maybe you are working toward becoming a life member…you have “paid your dues”…now it’s time to reap some rewards.

My Sisters, I ask you “Who wants to be a Missionary?”

Do you want to be a Missionary so that you can run for delegate to the Missionary Quadrennial? I’ll get a free vacation. “I’ve been waiting four years for this day and I am going to enjoy myself!” Not ‘I’m going to learn something to take back to my local Missionary Society. I don’t want to step on any toes, but you know where I’m coming from.

Is God impressed with what you do? Is He impressed with your Faith? Do you have the Faith of a Deborah who went out to fight not doubting that God would be with her and that everything would turn out alright? How many times have you just stepped out on faith?

Jesus said if we have Faith of a grain of a mustard seed, we could move mountains. How many mountains have you moved lately? Who have you really helped? Have you given to someone because they needed help and you did not look for anything in return from that person? Do you believe that God will supply all of your needs according to His riches in glory? He has it all, we say,” The cattle on a thousand hills belong to God,” but is our faith strong enough to trust God with all that we have and all that we are?

My Sisters and my Brothers, Missionaries have faith!

Who wants to be a Missionary?

So you have plenty of Faith…God calls Missionaries to do some work, too! James 2:14-18 plainly states, “What good is it, my Sisters and my Brothers, if a person claims to have faith and has no deeds? Can such Faith save him or her?” It goes on to say that if someone is without clothes or food and you say to them, “Go, I wish you well, keep warm and well fed,” but you do nothing to meet their physical needs, what good is it?” So, Faith by itself, if it is not accompanied by deeds is dead. You see, you can’t have faith without working…without having a deep desire…to do some work. Work is a by-product of Faith. They go hand in hand.

God calls Missionaries to follow Jesus’ example—Jesus went about doing good! God calls Missionaries to work while it is still day, for when night comes, He says, “No one can work.” Don’t wait until you can’t do anything and say I wish I had. Do it now!

My Missionary Sisters and Brothers (I must include the brothers), how is your Prayer Life? Is God impressed with your prayers? You know that God is not impressed with every kind of prayer from every kind of person. According to the Word, the “The Prayer of a Righteous person is effective.” It doesn’t say anything about showboat praying…It doesn’t say anything about high-sounding words…It doesn’t say anything about eloquent praying…It doesn’t say anything about scholarly petition…It doesn’t even say anything about a well-tuned voice. The Bible says fervent—prayer straight from the heart: sincere prayer!

Who Wants to be a Missionary?

God also looks at the “Pray-er” too! Before we can pray right, we must start to live right. God is not impressed with your rooftop praying and your basement living. He wants uprightness every day of our lives. How effective are your prayers? Have you had any prayers answered lately?

If we are to be Missionaries for God, we must put our all on the altar for Him!

The hymn states it this way, “Is your all on the altar of sacrifice laid? You heart doth the Spirit control? "You can only be blessed and have peace and sweet rest as you yield Him your body and soul."

You must do His sweet will and be free from all ill, on the altar your all you must lay. “You see, Missionaries, you can’t go around hold grudges against anyone because forgiveness is in God’s plan. In the prayer that Jesus taught His disciples, we ask God to “forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us.”

I am going to give you something else you need to be a real Missionary, and that is we must love our sisters and our brothers.

Every Sunday we hear and say the words, “Hear what Christ our Savior says, you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind. This is the first and great commandment, and the second is like it. You shall love your neighbor as yourself. On these two commandments depend all the law and prophets.”

When you hear those words, do you stop and think about them or have they become just some words that we hear and say?

I Corinthians 13 considered the “Love Chapter” in the Bible makes it even plainer for us. In essence, it tells us that all the things we do for others don’t mean a thing unless we do them with a Spirit of love! Hallelujah!

Romans 12:9-10 tells us, “Let love be without dissimulation. Hate that which is evil; cling to what is good. Be devoted to one another in brotherly love…honor one another above yourselves.”

There is only one quality that characterizes all true Christians, those who truly have been born again…it is love! The one aspect that distinguishes the saved from the unsaved …it is love! (Everybody who goes to church is not saved, you know) Hallelujah!

The one factor that identifies the redeemed from the unredeemed…that is love. That identifies the converted from the unconverted…that is love! That identifies the saint from the sinner…it’s love! Love is what separates the Godly from the Ungodly!

Nothing remains the same if there is true love. Love will transform the plain to the pretty…love will change the common to the uncommon! …The worthless into the priceless.

The Word tells us that while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us! He didn’t have to do it but He did it because of His love!

Now, I ask you again, “Who wants to be a Missionary?” You won’t have to die for anyone, but do you love as Jesus loved?

I don’t know about you, but I want to be a Missionary! Why! Because I want to demonstrate my faith…I want to help someone…I want to visit those in prison…I want to love my neighbor as myself…I want to be a prayer warrior for the Lord…oh, yes, I want to be a Missionary!

You see, I know I can be self-sharing instead of self-serving. I know that I can help make changes in our Connectional Church, in our District, and in our local churches by being faithful and doing God’s bidding.

He has no voice unless we speak; He has no hands unless we use ours; He has no feet unless we walk where He leads; He has no song unless we sing.

God can use all of us to build up His kingdom here on earth! He can use us to be the Missionaries who are willing to work with the other organizations and commissions to make a difference in the life of the of God’s Church!

If you have not really been involved in your Missionary Society here at Shorter Chapel, take the time to join and become an active member. Encourage someone who feels that they can’t do anything…let them realize that we can do all things through Christ who strengthens us.

Our young people need mentors…they need someone to teach them to be godly girls and boys…take responsibility to do what you can. If you are asked to teach a Church School class, or visit the sick, or minister to someone in prison, and yes, you must love your enemies…just do it through the Power of the Holy Spirit!

I would remind you that Jesus never called anyone who was not busy to do anything! Every disciple that He called was busy doing something, so you can’t get so busy that you can’t do the work that you are called to do!

My question to you today is Who Wants to be a Missionary?

We should be able to say in the words of an old, old song, “I’m going to work until my day is done; I’m going to work until the setting of the sun; I’ll cease from sorrow, there’ll be no tomorrow, I’m going to work until my day is done.”

In Conclusion, I will reiterate: Missionaries must love…they must have faith in God…they must be willing to serve…they must work NOW to build up God’s Kingdom…they cannot be judgmental…they must follow Jesus’ example…they must have an active prayer life…they must allow the Holy Spirit to guide their lives…they must be obedient to God’s will.

My Sisters and my Brothers, the question I asked at the beginning of my message, I ask at the ending, “Who wants to be a Missionary?”

Mrs. Loretta Matthews is the wife of the Rev. Dr. E. Holmes Matthews, pastor of Quinn Chapel AME Church, Lexington, Kentucky

15. THE PASTOR’S CORNER- THE ABUNDANT LIFE – A YIELDED LIFE:

Therefore do not let sin reign in your mortal body so that you obey its evil desires. Do not offer the parts of your body to sin, as instruments of wickedness, but rather offer yourselves to God, as those who have been brought from death to life; and offer the parts of your body to Him as instruments of righteousness. (Romans 6: 12-13)


The Apostle Paul calls us to acknowledge a yielded life as the means to living life to the full. God directs us to choose to yield our lives to Him. Paul tells us to “offer ourselves to God…” (Romans 6: 13). To offer is to yield (Romans 6: 16). To yield is to give one’s self over to something or someone. We’re reminded whatever we yield to we become servants of that person or thing. Perhaps it is time to YIELD - Stop, look, listen, and consider what I am doing. To what am I yielding in life?

What is a Yielded Life?

What We Focus On – Colossians 3: 1-4 tells us the yielded life is what we now focus on. We are to become in experience what we already are by God’s saving grace. To yield is to set our hearts and minds on spiritual things (v. 1-2) – set my sights on the things of God and focus on Him. To say I will not think about a pink elephant is to ensure that I will. To think about a beautiful tiger in the wild will redirect my attention and pink elephants will not come to mind. By focusing on the things of God through taking in the word, praying, and enjoying positive entertainment, He fills my thoughts and heart. As He fills my thoughts and heart, He pushes other things out of focus and out of my life. To get your mind and heart off something, set them on something else.

When Practice Conforms to Privilege – I John 3: 6-7 tells us the practices of our lives are to conform to our position of privilege. Christ traded places with us on the cross (II Corinthians 5: 21). Our lifestyle is to reflect the righteousness we received from Him. The lifestyle of the believer (I John 3: 6) who “lives in Him” (keeps God’s commands) will be obedient and yielding to God. The believer who does what is right (I John 3: 7) reflects the righteousness of Christ. Sometimes this requires starting new habits or practices. During the Lenten Season, many of the readers of “The Pastor’s Corner” participated in the “Comfort Food Fast” or the “Secular Media Fast.” Those who participated, broke old eating habits, eliminated unhealthy viewing and took in healthy foods, Christian and family oriented viewing, and additional Bible reading. You can start new practices or habits that conform to your new identity. Don’t wait to “feel like doing it!” “Just do it!”

Christ’s life lived through me. Colossians 1: 27 tells us of God’s choice to make Christ known in us. The believer is made a new creation and we no longer live for ourselves but for Christ who died and was raised again. Christ now lives in us and our lives are to proclaim Christ. In a suburb south of Chicago, a group of believers purchased a nightclub. As unusual as this sounds, it was all for the glory of God. They quickly went about converting the establishment to a sanctuary for the worship of God. Today the place once used as a “watering hole” is now a place from which “rivers of living water flow.” The same holds true for believers. We are made new creations to the glory of God. God then uses our lives for the spread of His loving gospel. This is one of God’s ways of bringing others to Christ.

Finally, every believer MUST choose. We can choose to offer ourselves to sin and experience defeat in life (Romans 6: 13). Or, we can choose to offer ourselves to God by faith and enjoy the abundant life.

Prayer: “Lord, to what am I yielding in life? Please touch me that I would offer myself to you in every way. I choose you Father. I choose to live life abundantly. In Jesus Christ’s name, I pray. Amen.”

Pastor James Moody
Quinn Chapel AME, Chicago

16. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

The passing and funeral of Mrs. Olease W. Scott. She was the mother of Rev. William Scott - pastor of Chapel AME Church, Paxville, SC in the Central Conference. The family is receiving friends at 821 Rachel Road, Hemingway, SC.

Family Visitation:
7:00 PM - 8:00 PM
Thursday, May 4, 2006
Bartell's Funeral Home
Highway 261 West of Hemingway
Hemingway, SC 29554

Funeral Services will be held:

1:00 PM
Friday, May 5, 2006
New Mt. Carmel AME Church
797 Tupperware Road
Hemingway, SC 29554
(843) 558-5053

Funeral services are entrusted to:

Bartell's Funeral Home
Highway 261 West of Hemingway
Post Office Box 125
Hemingway, SC 29554

(843) 558-3216 Phone
(843) 558-3216 - Fax (call before sending fax)
(843) 558-5700 Phone

Messages of condolence may be sent to:

The family of Mrs. Olease W. Scott
821 Rachel Road
Hemingway, SC. 29554-5633

From: Gwendolyn Brown

Please remember the family in your prayers.

17. 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.

18. 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

5/2/2006

THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER ONLINE ENGLISH EDITION (5/2/06)

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 AFRICAN METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH MOURNS THE PASSING OF ONE OF ITS BELOVED BISHOPS – THE RIGHT REVEREND HAROLD BEN SENATLE:

Harold Benjamin Senatle, the 102nd bishop of the Church, was born in Christiana, South Africa to William and Anne Senatle. He was the second South African-born bishop in the history of the AME Church. The first bishop was the Right Reverend Frances Herman Gow, who served from 1956 to 1964. He was born in Cape Town, South Africa.

He was educated in Christiana. Senatle completed his secondary education at Tigerkloof High School and later responded to the calling of the ministry. He was ordained in 1950 in East Transvaal, South Africa, he has pastored at Brandford, Orange Free State; Mt. Sinnah, Edenburg; Mt. Pisgah, Bethlehem; Mt. Nebo, Wikom; Mt. Zion, Gloemfontein, and St. Peter in East Transvaal.

He served as the administrative assistant to Bishops Harrison Bryant, Frederick James, G. Dewey Robinson, Donald G. K. Ming, and John Hunter.

Reverend Senatle was elected to the episcopacy at the 42nd Quadrennial Session of the General Conference in Kansas City in 1984. He served the 18th, 19th, and 15th Districts before retiring in 2000 at the 46th General Conference in Cincinnati. His legacy includes building the Episcopal Headquarters for the 19th District.

Bishop Senatle encouraged young men and women to equip themselves academically and he was a vocal opponent of the apartheid laws.

In 1980, the Wilberforce University (Ohio) honoured him with a doctorate in divinity.

His wife of almost 50 years, four children, 20 grandchildren and two great-grandchildren survives Senatle. One son, the Reverend Thabo Senatle is pastor at the Trinity AME Church in Evaton. Another son, Pitso, left South Africa in 1976 and lives in Atlanta, Georgia. He is a mathematics lecturer at Morris Brown College.

The leadership, pastors, and laity of the African Methodist Episcopal offer its condolences to the Senatle family.

2. THE SOUTH AFRICAN COUNCIL OF CHURCHES MOURNS THE DEATH OF BISHOP HAROLD BEN SENATLE:

The African Methodist Episcopal Church in South Africa has lost one of its beloved bishops, the Right Reverend Harold Ben Senatle, at the ripe age of 79, spokesperson for the church, the Reverend Themba Mbambo announced this week.

A friend of the Ecumenical Movement in South Africa, Bishop Senatle, who was born on December 16, 1926, took an active role in both the affairs of the South African Council of Churches and of the South African Leaders' Religious Forum, distinguishing himself, according to Mbabo, "as a Pastor and presiding elder very vocal about the oppressive laws of apartheid". Said Mbambo: "He built schools, churches and the AME headquarters at Phillips Street, Johannesburg. As the church, we are proud of his contribution and the role he played in the struggle to bring education to African children, and in his own right, contributed meaningfully to the demise of apartheid in South Africa."

Senatle, born in the small town of Christiana in the then Western Transvaal, received his secondary education at Tigerkloof, and later responded to the call of the ministry of the AME Church, studying at the RR Wright Theological Seminary at Wilberforce, Evaton, Gauteng. In 1980, the Wilberforce University, Atlanta, Georgia in the United States, honoured him with a doctorate in divinity. In 1988, he held the distinction of being the second African person to have been elected bishop of the AME in its 92 years of existence in South Africa. His episcopacy covered Botswana, Free State, Northern Transvaal, now Limpopo, Cape Province, Namibia and Angola.

The General Secretary of the SACC, Mr Eddie Makue, said the Ecumenical Movement was greatly indebted to the leadership of Bishop Senatle. "We extend our deepest condolences to his family and the AME Church of which he was the leader. In this difficult time, we trust that his wife and family will be comforted by the knowledge that we share in their loss," said Makue.
His wife of almost 50 years, four children, 20 grandchildren and two great-grandchildren survives Senatle.

For more details, contact: Reverend Teboho Klaas (082 412 2960)
http://www.sacc.org.za/news06/senatle.html
11 April 2006

3. FORMER MORRIS BROWN PRESIDENT PLEADS GUILTY TO EMBEZZLEMENT:

From The Associated Press – ATLANTA

The former president of Morris Brown College pleaded guilty Monday to embezzling federal funds that were intended to cover student tuition.
Delores Cross, 69, who was president of the 125-year-old college from November 1998 until February 2002, entered the plea in front of U.S. District Judge Julie Carnes at a morning hearing.

Monday's plea agreement dismisses 27 other counts Cross was facing in connection with the case. Had she gone to trial on the single count to which she pleaded guilty, Cross could have faced up to five years in prison, three years of supervised release and a $250,000 fine.

Instead, prosecutors are asking that Cross receive a sentence of 10 to 16 months in prison. Her attorneys indicted in court that they would seek a lesser sentence of zero to six months because of an undisclosed medical condition.

The prosecution and defense agreed she will pay $11,000 in restitution if it is imposed by the judge.

Cross' trial had been expected to begin Monday.
At one point in recent years, MBC enrollment plunged from 2,000 students to as low as 80. (http://www.ap.org/ )

Cross declined to be interviewed Monday but released a statement through her attorney, Drew Findling, "I will always regret what happened," Cross said. "And I apologize to the students, faculty and staff of Morris Brown College." (http://www.ajc.com/metro/content/metro/index.html)

4. BISHOP VINTON ANDERSON TO SPEAK AT SHORTER COLLEGE GALA:

The 12th Episcopal District family of the African Methodist Episcopal Church takes pride in demonstrating our support of Shorter College, North Little Rock, Arkansas.

A Benefit Banquet will be held on Friday, May 19, 2006 at 7 p.m. at the Embassy Suites Hotel – Grand Ballroom, 11301 Financial Centre Parkway, Little Rock, Arkansas. The keynote speaker will be retired bishop, the Right Reverend Vinton R. Anderson, of the African Methodist Episcopal Church. Bishop Anderson was the Editor of the A.M.E. Hymnal, and the past President of the World Council of Churches.

Proceeds of this event will provide educational opportunities for students at Shorter College.

The public is invited to attend. Tickets donations are $100.00. If you would like to purchase tickets or place an ad in the souvenir book please call the 12th Episcopal District Office – (501) 375-4310.

Editor’s Note: Bishop Anderson caught the Editor’s mistake in the article about the Delaware Annual Conference when it referred to Deaconesses being ordained. Deaconesses are consecrated, not ordained. Thank you, Bishop Anderson.

5. FROM THE DESK OF PASTOR MIKE BARTA

Congratulations to our Pastoral Intern, the Reverend Mercedes Tudy Hamilton who received an appointment as Pastor of Union Bethel A.M.E. Church in Great Falls, Montana from our Bishop, the Rt. Rev. John Richard Bryant, this past week. Rev. Mercedes will officially report to her new assignment on Sunday June 18th and will be working diligently in the mean time, to bring closure to her work and responsibilities here at Johnson Chapel. On Sunday June 11th at the 11:00 AM Worship, our Church Family will join together to celebrate this remarkable Woman of God and to sow seeds of favor and blessing into her life as she prepares to move out in faith and fulfill the calling that is so clearly on her life. Please keep Rev. Mercedes in your prayers in the days and weeks ahead as she makes preparations to take this very big step in her life and ministry.

Yours in the Joy of Jesus,
Pastor Mike

6. RACIST CLASSIC “BIRTH OF A NATION” ON RARE VIEW TUESDAY NIGHT (5/2/06):

By JIM AUCHMUTEY

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution Published on: 05/02/06

One of the most notorious films ever made is getting a rare national broadcast Tuesday night on Turner Classic Movies.

"The Birth of a Nation," D. W. Griffith's 1915 epic about the genesis of the Ku Klux Klan, depicts a lynching and two threatened sexual assaults on white women by black men. The major black characters are played by white actors in blackface. The title cards for the three-hour silent film include offensive dialect and the N-word.

7. MEDIA ADVISORY:

FRANKFORT, Ky. – Governor Ernie Fletcher today (5/2/06) will announce an Entrepreneurial Trucking Initiative in Louisville. The initiative is designed to bring economic opportunity and prosperity to individuals and communities in the Greater Louisville Area, particularly those in the Empowerment Zone.

WHO: Governor Ernie Fletcher

WHAT: Entrepreneurial Trucking Initiative

WHEN: 11 a.m., Tuesday, May 2, 2006

WHERE: Quinn Chapel AME Church
1901 W. Muhammad Ali Blvd.
Louisville, KY.

8. DOWNSIZING AMERICA’S FUTURE “ALONG THE COLOR LINE”:

Dr. Manning Marable

A quarter century ago, the United States embarked on an economic crusade to “downsize” its working class: to eliminate millions of jobs by outsourcing employment abroad, and to push millions more middle-class employees into low-wage jobs. The argument advanced by U.S. corporations was that in an age of global economic competition, American workers were simply “overpaid” and weren’t as productive as their European and Japanese competitors. By cutting salaries and benefits, terminating pensions, eliminating jobs, and forcing workers to pay for their own health care, U.S. corporations could stay competitive in global markets.

In the 1980s and early 1990s, the vast majority of layoffs occurred within the working class, especially skilled labor and manufacturing jobs. Blue collar workers were pushed in the service sector, frequently earning less than one-half of what they previously had been paid. Airplane mechanics and factory foremen were counseled to learn basic computer skills in order to compete for $10 per hour jobs that couldn’t cover their home mortgage payments or children’s college tuition bills.

An important new book by New York Times economics writer Louis Uchitelle, The Disposable American: Layoffs and Their Consequences, fully documents the disastrous consequences of downsizing and mass layoffs. According to Uchitelle, between 1984 and 2004, approximately 30 million Americans were involuntarily “laid off” or fired. Millions more who feared losing their jobs either took early retirement, or agreed to accept significant cuts in their wages or benefits. Surprisingly, layoffs nationwide rose faster in the early 1990s than the early 1980s, as President Bill Clinton aggressively preached that labor had to lower its wage demands in order for American businesses to be competitive in global markets. As Uchitelle explains, “As much as anyone, [Bill Clinton] disconnected the Democratic Party from its past, specifically its New Deal concern for job security and full employment.”

Throughout the 1990s, the layoffs spread into the ranks of white-collar professionals – managers, technicians, information technology employees, and engineers. In the early 2000s, workers in manufacturing took another round of devastating layoffs, by which African-American workers were particularly hard hit. In 2004 alone, overall union employment in the U.S. declined by 304,000, and African Americans comprised 55 percent of that drop, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Between 2000 and 2004, the number of black American union members plummeted from 2.5 million down to 2.1 million, a decline of 14.4 percent. Hundreds of thousands of African Americans who once held high-paying union jobs are forced into nonunion employment in food services, ground maintenance, and as security guards. And, increasingly, undocumented immigrants who can easily be exploited to accept even lower wages and no benefits are replacing thousands of black low wage workers.

In those few unions in which African Americans still comprise significant percentages – such as the American Federation of Government Employees, with nearly 25 percent of its 211,000 members who are black – federal jobs are being lost through the Bush administration’s policy of privatization. As the federal government outsources jobs and downsizes, African Americans lose out. Advances in automation at the U.S. Postal Service, primarily in the development of rapid mail sorting machines that require fewer workers, have also eliminated thousands of postal workers’ jobs, which have historically had a very high percentage of African-American employees.

The bitter irony of the downsizing, layoff mantra that politicians and corporate executives proclaim is that there is growing economic evidence that destroying jobs is actually bad for both the economy and for worker productivity. In The Disposable American, Uchitelle notes that many of the American corporations that show the highest rates of growth over the past decade have not downsized at all. Workers who have greater workplace satisfaction, flexibility and comprehensive benefits for health and their post-employment security are far more productive.

So, the great political question of our time is whether both Democrats and Republicans will mindlessly continue to permit the predatory corporations and privatizers in government to continue mass layoffs, downsizing America’s future. The government’s currently low “official” unemployment rate deceptively masks the fact that between 2001 and 2005 over one million Americans left the work force and aren’t even counted as “unemployed.” Another 4.2 million who are “part-time employees” today cannot get full-time jobs. As millions more are pushed toward unemployment lines, and elderly workers without pensions are coerced to seek toward fast food and Wal-Mart employment, how long will it take until the majority of America’s electorate explodes with anger about the disappearing promise of a middle class lifestyle? How long will it take even millions of white-collar managers and professionals, “yuppies” and “buppies” alike, to comprehend that they, too, are increasingly “expendable” in the brave new world of globalization and downsizing privatization?

Dr. Manning Marable is Professor of Public Affairs, Political Science,
History, and African-American Studies, and the Director of the Center for Contemporary Black Politics at Columbia University, New York City. “Along the Color Line” appears in over 400 publications internationally, and is available at www.manningmarable.net

9. NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF BLACK JOURNALISTS HONOR NOTED BLACK JOURNALISTS:

WASHINGTON May 1, 2006 The National Association of Black Journalists (NABJ) will induct a noted Washington post columnist, two icons of the magazine industry and a legendary media executive into the NABJ Hall of Fame this year, the association announced today.

At its spring meeting in Indianapolis last week, the NABJ Board of Directors voted to add the following legends into the NABJ Hall of Fame:

- Lerone Bennett Jr.: Writer and social historian who served as Ebony magazine’s executive editor for nearly 40 years. His written work deftly explores the history of race relations in the U.S. and his comprehensive articles have become one of the magazine’s literary hallmarks.

- Albert Fitzpatrick Jr.: Former assistant vice president of minority affairs for Knight Ridder from 1994 to 1985. Before joining Knight Ridder, worked for 29 years at the Akron Beacon-Journal, ending his newsroom career there as its first black executive editor. A former NABJ president, Fitzpatrick earned an NABJ Lifetime Achievement Award in (1984) and the Ida B. Wells Award in 1989.

- William Raspberry: Pulitzer Prize- winning columnist for The Washington Post and winner of NABJ’s Lifetime Achievement Award in 1994. Raspberry started as a columnist at The Post in 1966 and his work appeared in more than 200 newspapers before he recently retired.

- Susan Taylor: A name synonymous with Essence magazine, Taylor served as Editor-in-chief of the magazine from 1981 to 2000. Under her guidance, Essence experienced phenomenal growth, reaching black women worldwide. She remains editorial director and a voice with her “In the Spirit” column, which addresses themes such as family, faith, self-esteem and health. She continues to be a mentor for young people in crisis as well as a symbol of black beauty and inspiration.

The recipients will be inducted during a special ceremony at the 2006 NABJ Convention & Career Fair in Indianapolis, Aug. 16-20. The 15-member Board also awarded several distinguished journalists top honors in the organization’s annual Special Honors awards, to be delivered at the NABJ Awards Gala in October in Washington, D.C.:

- Cynthia Tucker, editorial columnist with the Atlanta Journal-Constitution as Journalist of the Year.

- Earl G. Graves Sr., founder, chairman and publisher of Black Enterprise Magazine, as recipient of the NABJ Lifetime Achievement Award.

Other Special Honors winners include:

- Lawrence Young, The Riverside Press- Enterprise, Legacy Award

- Trymaine Lee, New Orleans Times- Picayune and Errin Haines, Associated Press, Emerging Journalists of the Year

- DeMarco Morgan, WISN-TV (Milwaukee), Community Service Award

- Ruth Tisdale, Howard University, Student Journalist of the Year Award

- Kip Branch, Elizabeth City State University, Journalism Educator of the Year Award

- Deyda Hydara and the Gambia Press Union, Percy Qoboza Foreign Journalist Award

- The Indianapolis Recorder, Best Practices Award

Finalists for Chapter of the Year are the Philadelphia Association of Black Journalists, Las Vegas Association of Black Journalists, Houston Association of Black Journalists and the Bay Area Black Journalists Association.

The Carolina Association of Black Journalists and Temple Association of Black Journalists are vying for Student Chapter of the Year. Winners in those categories will be announced at NABJ’s 31st Annual Convention and Career Fair, Aug. 16-20, in Indianapolis.

Bennett, Fitzpatrick, Raspberry and Taylor will be inducted during the annual Hall of Fame banquet at the convention. Winners of the other Special Honors categories will receive their awards at either the banquet or at the 2006 Salute to Excellence Awards Gala, Oct. 14 in Washington.

An advocacy group established in 1975 in Washington, D.C., NABJ is the largest organization of journalists of color in the nation, with nearly 4,000 members, and provides educational, career development and support to black journalists worldwide.
http://www.najb.org/

10. MESSAGE FROM TYLER PERRY:

Okay here's the big news. Many of you may remember a few years ago I was going to do a TV show. I was very surprised to find out that in TV when you go the traditional route you really have no control over your show. They tell you what to say how to say it, and when to say it. God forbid you try to say Jesus. This didn't sit right with me at all. When it comes to me and us, I feel like I know what we want to see so if it doesn't feel right to me I have no problems walking away no matter how much money. I was not about to go on TV and have you all talking about me saying this show is terrible...what was TP thinking. It wouldn't have been because I didn't give my ideas, but because they shot it down and I was out of there on the next thing smoking.

With all of that said and because of your investment in me I was able to write produce and finance 10 episodes of my first sitcom called "House of Payne." Allen Payne (Jason's Lyric, New Jack city) plays a fireman named CJ whose wife has a drug problem and burns down their house to cover their mounting debt. So, they have to move in with his parents Cassie Davis, and Lavan Davis form "Madea Goes to jail." CJ has two kids and he and the grands have very different ideas about raising these kids.

I wanted this show to be what my movies are, funny but serious with life lessons in them. Like my plays, but for TV. Do you remember those shows like "All in the Family", "Good Times", "Rosanna", and "Cosby". The shows that everybody wanted to watch because they not only made you laugh, but they had some heart. Well, this is one of those shows with heart.

This was a huge gamble, but if I know anything I know my faith. And I know my folks, and that's why I did it. If you give it a chance I know you're going to love it. This has never been done before, not like this, but I know it will work. I'm always asking ya'll to do something, buy this book, pay to see my movie, buy a ticket to the play, buy the DVD. Well, now I can say this wont cost you anything, just a little of your time.

Now, these ten episodes will run only in ten selected cities. If I had my choice it would have been all over the country. I'm working with a company that needs to know that people will watch it if it goes to the rest of the country. So it airs in New York and Houston on May eighth, and eight other cities, soon to follow.

Here is the schedule as I know it. As we get closer to the release date of your city, I'll send you some reminders. I hope I don't work on your nervous by then. (smile) If you are not in these cities and you know people in them, please call them and ask them to watch.

Visit http://www.tylerperry.com/ to see TV listings / schedule.

P.S. - Maybe you can forward this email to other people in the area. We need every body to watch. I know you're going to love it.

Tyler Perry

Editor’s note: Tyler Perry’s new book, “Don’t Make a Black Woman Take Off Her Earrings” is #1 on the NY Times Best Sellers’ List. (ISBN: 1-59448-921-1). This first book from Tyler Perry is a confessional memoir in the voice of Madea, the beloved, sharp- tongued, worldly, pistol-packing grandma who is at the center of Perry's stage shows.

11. THE PASTOR’S CORNER - THE ABUNDANT LIFE:

I am the gate; whoever enters through me will be saved. He will come in and go out, and find pasture. The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy; I have come that they may have life, and have it to the full. (John 10:9-10)

The “full life” Christ came for us to live is a quality of life that reflects the presence and nature of God in all we do. Porter Barrington, author of the Christian Life New Testament presents a wonderfully understandable introduction to the concept of abundant living. “All believers have eternal life through Christ’s death, burial, and resurrection. Not all believers enjoy “life to the full,” abundant life, as described by Jesus in John 10: 10. If we are believers and not living the abundant life, we are living beneath our privilege.”

I recently read a story that vividly illustrates the importance of living the abundant life – life to the full:

There once was a country where only ducks lived. On a Sunday morning, all the ducks came into the church, waddled down the aisle into the pews, and squatted. The duck minister waddled into the pulpit and read from the duck Bible. “Ducks! You have wings and with wings, you can fly like eagles. You can soar into the sky! You have wings!” At the conclusion of the message the ducks said, “Amen” and all waddled home. (Daily Uplink – April 26)

Unfortunately, this is so frequently true of believers in Jesus Christ. God has given us all we need to live life to the full – abundant life. Yet, we continue “waddling” through life, never living at the level of our privilege.

John 10:10 – What is the “abundant life?”

The word used in this passage for life is the Greek word Zoë. It describes a quality of life that reflects the presence and nature of God in all we do. Am I living at or beneath my privilege? Do others see the presence and nature of God when observing my life? What do others see?

Jesus tells us He is this life, and as God Almighty, (John 14: 6) Jesus is the source of abundant resources. The abundant life is a life of abundant resources and it comes from the only unlimited source of life, Jesus Christ. Am I living at or beneath my privilege? What do I see as the sources for my living?

Jesus describes Himself as the vine to which all the branches must be connected to have life (John 15: 1-5). The abundant life is the life of the believer lived in dependence on Jesus Christ, so Christ’s life reflected through the life of the believer. Am I living at or beneath my privilege? On whom or what do I depend?

The abundant life is living “in step with the Spirit.” (Galatians 5: 22-24) It is life that bears the fruit of the Holy Spirit. Am I living at or beneath my privilege? What fruit does my life bear?

The Apostle Paul reminds us receiving pardon from Jesus for our sins is only the beginning of our new life in Christ (Philippians 2: 12-13). Abundant life is the salvation we received through Christ’s death, burial, and resurrection being worked out in our everyday practices. Am I living at or beneath my privilege? Is the salvation from sin I now possess being demonstrated in my daily living?

Anything less than the abundant life is a life of defeat (Galatians 5: 19-21). We will soon yield to sin instead of reaping the fruit of the Holy Spirit in our lives. Anything less than the abundant life is simply “waddling along.” We will be circumstance controlled (John 14: 27) instead of walking in the peace of Jesus Christ. Anything less than the abundant life is a life of isolation. We damage or destroy relationships God has established for our lives (Galatians 5: 26) when we could be enjoying the fellowship of others. Anything less than the abundant life is a life of “drama.” We bring trouble and discord into our lives (Galatians 6: 7-10) when we could be bringing a harvest of good. Our next several weeks will explore the meaning, value, and living the abundant life (life to the full).

Pastor James Moody
Quinn Chapel AME, Chicago

12. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

The Reverend Lloyd Staple, Pastor of Bethel AME Church & Grace Temple AME Church, Jamaica, died last week. His funeral will be held on Sunday, April 30, 2006.

Condolences may be emailed to his wife, Mrs. Lloyd Staple.Email to: daintydor@yahoo.com

Submitted by: Sandra Pyke-Anthony (16th Episcopal District)

Please remember the Staple family in your prayers.

13. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

Dr. Curtis N. Adams, Sr. brother of Dr. Dorothy Adams Peck, immediate past Connectional President of the Women's Missionary Society of the African Methodist Episcopal Church passed on Tuesday, April 25, 2006. Dr. Curtis N. Adams was a retired dentist who practiced in Baltimore, Maryland.

Service Arrangements for Dr. Curtis N. Adams, Sr.Friday, April 28, 2006

Visitation:

6:00 PM - 7:30 PM

March Funeral Home West
4300 Wabash Avenue
Baltimore, MD 21215

Saturday, April 29, 2006
Wake: (Family will receive friends) 10:00 AM - 11:00 AM

Funeral: 11:00 A. M.

Heritage United Church of Christ
3110 Liberty Heights Ave.
Baltimore, MD

(410) 542-1204 - Phone

Interment immediately following service at:

Woodlawn Cemetery
2130 Woodlawn Drive
Baltimore, Maryland 21207

Professional Services entrusted to:

March Funeral Home West
4300 Wabash Avenue
Baltimore, MD 21215

(410) 542-2400 - Phone
(800) 456-8964 -Toll Free
(410) 542-4507 Fax

Condolences and expressions of sympathy may be sent to:

The family of Dr. Curtis N. Adams, Sr. (church or funeral home addresses).

Or to:

Dr. Dorothy Adams Peck
4001 Haden Avenue
West Palm Beach, FL 33407

(561) 845-1941 Phone)
(561) 842-9976 (Fax)

Email: DADAMSPECK@aol.com

14. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

From: Presiding Elder Dennis J. Hampton, Muskogee District (12th Episcopal District, AMEC), Email: PastorHampton@aol.com

The Rev. Jessie "JC" Williams "went home to be with the Lord" on Tuesday, April 25, 2006. He served as Pastor of Peters Chapel AME Church, Muskogee, Oklahoma.

ARRANGEMENTS:

Thursday May 4, 2006 - 1:00 PM

Vernon AME Church
307-11 N. Greenwood
Tulsa, OK 74120

918-587-1428 - Office

The Rev. Michelle Moulden, Pastor
Eulogist: Rev. Dennis J. Hampton, P. E

Services Entrusted to:

Jack's Memory Chapel
801 East 36th ST, N
Tulsa, OK 74106

428-4431 - Office
428-4437 - Fax

Condolences may be sent to:

Mrs. Jacque Williams
6524 East 21st PL #113
Tulsa, OK 74129

Email: medisinwoman@cox.net

Please remember the family in your prayers.

15. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

The passing of Mrs. Malissa Nelson Tyson, the mother of Mrs. Linda T. Eason, First Lady of Big Bethel AME Church in Atlanta, Georgia and the mother-in-law of the Rev. Gregory V. Eason, Sr., Senior Pastor of Big Bethel AME Church in Atlanta.

Celebration of Life Service for Mrs. Malissa Nelson Tyson:

Date: Saturday, May 6, 2006
Time: 11:00 a. m.
Place:

The Union Missionary Baptist Church
3900 Broadway
West Palm Beach, FL 33407

(561) 845-7320

Funeral Home:

Siders Funeral Home
1600 N. Dixie Highway
West Palm Beach, FL 33407

(561) 820-1403 - Phone
(561) 820-1405 – Fax

In lieu of flowers, contributions may be sent to:

The Malissa N. Tyson Scholarship Fund
P. O. Box 1162
Palm Beach, FL 33480

Messages of condolence may be sent to:

The Rev. and Mrs. Gregory V. Eason, Sr.
Big Bethel A.M.E.
204 Auburn Avenue, N.E.
Atlanta, Georgia 30303

(404)827-9707- Phone

Please keep the family in your thoughts and prayers.

16. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

Mr. Robert Inkton, the brother of the Rev. Shirley Inkton Bowers, will be funeralized on Friday, April 28, 2006, 11:00 AM at the Riverview AME, 213 Glenview Lane, North Arkansas, Arkansas.

Services are being entrusted to:

Hubble Funeral Home
1213 Washington Avenue
North Little Rock, AR

Rev. Bowers and her family may be contacted at:

2300 Rebsamen Park Road, #201A
Little Rock, AR 72202

Sister Anita Brannon

Please remember all of the bereaved families in your prayers.

17. 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.

18. 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