1/18/2012

THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER ONLINE ENGLISH EDITION (1/18/12)


Bishop Richard Franklin Norris - Chair, Commission on Publications
The Reverend Dr. Johnny Barbour, Jr., Publisher
The Reverend Dr. Calvin H. Sydnor III, the 20th Editor, The Christian Recorder



January - Cervical Health Awareness Month

Lent 2012 begins on Ash Wednesday - February 22, 2012
 




1.  EDITORIAL – MESSAGE FROM THE EDITOR


Dr. Calvin H. Sydnor III,
The 20th Editor, The Christian Recorder


This week has been difficult.  As a matter of fact, the first three weeks of 2012 has had it challenges, and I am drafting this message to bring the subscribers of The Christian Recorder up-to-date. I don’t want you to think that anything has happened to me; I am fine. 

We spent the first week in January visiting my sister-in-law, the Rev. Cheryl Hoskins who had been hospitalized.

When we returned from Covington, Kentucky, I noticed that my iTunes and iPhone needed to be updated. I am a person who likes to keep my computer up-to-date, so I proceeded to do the updates.  Unfortunately, I received error messages each time I attempted to install the updates. Everything else on my computer was working fine; no other problems. I could not install the updates for iTunes and iCloud. I like everything to be in working order, even though iTunes and iCloud had no connection to the work of The Christian Recorder; I wanted to get the updates installed. I had the grand idea to see if I could get someone to do what I thought was a minor task because I wanted to have everything working perfectly.

I first attempted to have the repairs done remotely; read overseas, but that didn’t work and so I decided to take my computer to a store that sells and repairs computers.  Again, I thought the fix was going to be an easy one and I took my computer to Staples.

In my mind, I had figured that I would get The Christian Recorder Online out on last Thursday (1/12/12) or Friday (1/13/12). But, what looked like an easy job turned into a nightmare. The technicians got iTunes and iCloud properly installed and I was a “happy camper”; or so I thought.  When I got back home I saw that my personal folders in Outlook were missing.  I took my computer back to Staples on Friday morning. Microsoft Outlook and my personal files were back in place and got my personal files restored. I took my computer back home and began working on The Christian Recorder Online and by that time it was late Friday evening. And, at that point, I discovered that my Word files were missing! Opps, and if I thought I had a problem with the missing personal folders in Outlook, I really had a problem with my missing Word files, which were in place when I took my computer to Staples. My Word files were there the previous day, Thursday; so I never thought about having to check on the Word when I picked up my computer on Friday. I just assumed the Word files were where they had been all of the time and that they were still on my computer. Of course all of the Staple technicians had gone home by the time I discovered my missing Word Documents. I guess that I would have fared better to have let the folks from overseas take care of my computer. My computer is still at Staples and they are still trying to find my Word files.

I am now working on my old computer, so all is not lot lost. I have most of my files backed up, but not the ones from the last couple of weeks. If you have sent an article since December 21, 2011, please resend it.  I know that several persons have sent articles and they are in my computer at Staples. The articles are not in this short issue of The Christian Recorder Online. And, unfortunately, the Clergy Family Bereavement Notices and the Clergy Family Congratulatory Messages are in the computer at Staples. I have the most recent Congratulatory and Bereavement notices. I also have prepared an article about the late Richard Allen Hildebrand; and that article is in my computer at Staples. 

As soon as I retrieve my computer, and hopefully the files will not have been lost, I will publish the articles and bring The Christian Recorder Online up-to-date; so please bear with us.

Another thing

I am seeing a number of obviously hacked email addresses. A sexually explicit message allegedly was sent from my email address.  Hopefully, no one is fooled by messages sent by unscrupulous individuals using hacked email addresses.  If a message looks strange and “out of character” for what a sender normally sends, do not open the message – delete the message!  I have repeatedly begged, asked, insisted, suggested and cajoled subscribers and readers of The Christian Recorder to use Bcc and to delete all email addresses before forwarding messages. Sending message with multiple addressees is how we get hacked by unscrupulous individuals; it’s so easy to do.  I receive obviously hacked email messages from bishops, clergy and laity; from people I know and from people I don’t know. The messages are obvious fake messages, but you can be sure those unscrupulous persons will, in the future, “up the ante” and make the messages look more authentic. Please, let’s all be careful! 



2. A CALL TO COMMITMENT ON DR. MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR. DAY:

"Today the United States of America pauses because we recognize the significance of the works and life of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. in moving this great nation toward achieving its founding principles of freedom and equality for ALL people.  You and I are blessed to have this opportunity to join in the 26th annual celebration of this holiday - a time when humankind around the globe should re-visit his proclamations and re-commit our lives to continue the mission.   Dr. King is often quoted with words of wisdom and inspiration, and we do so now, remembering his admonition, "Life's most persistent and urgent questions are: What are you doing for others?"

In 2012, the faith communities worldwide would do well to keep in mind that our mission is "to do for others", especially those who can not do for themselves.  Dr. King also recognized that he was "one" in a season of advocacy that others had blazed a trail for his helm in leadership and that he, in turn was creating a pathway for generations to come.  He reminded us of that fact when he said, "Change does not roll in on the wheels of inevitability, but comes through continuous struggle."

The AME Church had a role in four of the legal cases that ultimately comprised what we know as Brown vs. Topeka Board of Education (named for Rev. Oliver Brown - an AME preacher).  That is one of our rich legacies.  The A.M.E. Church is proud to claim Mother Rosa Parks, the initiator of the modern day Civil Rights movement kicked off on December 1, 1955 when she refused to leave her seat on a bus in Montgomery, Alabama.  This humble and proud deaconess, in her quiet way demonstrated that God can use ordinary people to lead a revolution for change.   A. Phillip Randolph, an AMEer and a union leader in the Pullman car movement had the vision for the March on Washington, a dream that did not become a reality until he joined with 250,000 others on August 28, 1963 to peacefully march for jobs and freedom.    In my own life, Rev. King Solomon Dupont, my daddy, joined with the people of Tallahassee, FL to lead a parallel bus boycott to Montgomery to defeat the tenants of racial segregation and claim the American dream that this country is a place where everybody counts.  All acted to declare that “enough is enough" and move the side liners into the arena of action.

Indeed, the baton of freedom was passed to us, and each of us has our own story of trailblazing for freedom that we must tell to our youth and young adults. Protecting the right to vote, insuring that every individual's vote is equally valued, and defending the freedom to speak out without fear for one's life are ways that we can protect and honor the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.   Let us not grow weary... and let us not drop that baton which has inspired civil rights movements both domestic and abroad.   Let us commit to be proclaimers of the great ideals of non-violence and protectors of the freedoms that Dr. King died to protect.  While America has made great strides in "walking the talk", we still have miles to go until we can unequivocally cry, "Free at last, Free at last, Thank God almighty, We are free at last"!   

Finally, to paraphrase from one more Dr. MLK wisdom alert:  "The ultimate measure of a man (person) is not where (s)he stands in moments of comfort and convenience, but where (s)he stands at times of challenge and controversy". 

Be well and Happy Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr Day!

Mrs. Jacquelyn Dupont-Walker, Director, the Social Action Commission               
Bishop Carolyn Tyler Guidry, Chair, the Social Action Commission                      
Bishop David R. Daniels, President, the Council of Bishops


3. RETIREMENT GALA FOR BISHOP CAROLYN TYLER GUIDRY:

Retirement Gala for Bishop Carolyn Tyler Guidry, the 122nd Elected and Consecrated Bishop of the African Methodist Episcopal Church.

The Retirement Gala:

The Retirement Gala will be held on Friday, February 24, 2012, 7:00 PM at the Sheraton Hotel New Orleans.

The Sheraton Hotel
500 Canal Street
New Orleans, LA 70130
For reservations call 504-525-2500

The hotel reservation deadline for the banquet has been extended to January 23, 2012.

Tickets are $75 and can be purchased by contacting:

The Eighth Episcopal District Office
5450 Executive Place
Jackson, MS 39206

Office telephone: 601-366-8240
FAX: 601-366-8175
eighthdistamec08@aol.com


The Keepsake Journal
For those who may be interested in placing an ad in the Souvenir Keepsake Journal may do so by contacting the Eighth Episcopal District Office. The deadline for sending your payment and print-ready ad is February 1.

Rates:

Back cover $10,000 (event sponsorship)
Inside Back Cover $10,000 (event sponsorship)
Platinum Full Page $1,000
Gold Full Page $750
Silver Full Page $500
Bronze Full Page $300
Half Page $200
Patrons List $50

SEE:


Checks may be made payable to: "Eighth Episcopal District" with "Retirement Gala" as the memo.


4. DR. MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR. AND THE AFRICAN METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH:

*Brother Bill Dickens
 
This past weekend many churches across the US participated in some type of birthday celebration for, easily, the most influential person, white or black, of the 20th Century, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.  Many AMEs are mute when asked about the relationship between Dr. King and the AME Church. Dr. King was a frequent speaker at Brown Chapel AME Church in Selma, Alabama and Clayborn Temple AME Church in Memphis, Tennessee during the historic civil rights struggle in the US.  Another little-known fact is that Dr. King's epic speech, "I Have a Dream" was inspired by Archibald Carey, Jr., son of AME Bishop Archibald Carey, Sr.  King was a friend of the Rev. Archibald Carey and consulted with him during the Montgomery Bus Boycott.   The younger Carey gave a keynote address to the GOP Convention in 1952 and in that speech ended with the now famous concluding section about “Let Freedom Ring...” 

Surprisingly, while King was awarded 20 honorary doctorates for his distinguished service, not one AME academic institution granted him an honorary degree.  This fact is embarrassing and shameful and I believe the African Methodist Episcopal Church should correct for this blatant injustice by granting Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. a posthumous honorary doctorate from Wilberforce University, Payne Theological Seminary or from Turner Theological Seminary.  If Yale University and Jewish Theological Seminary can award King an honorary degree, certainly the oldest black denomination that professes to be the epitome of social justice can do the same.
  
Dr. King's honorary degrees are listed below.

Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr Honorary Degrees:

1957: Doctor of Human Letters, Morehouse College.
1957: Doctor of Laws, Howard University.
1957: Doctor of Divinity, Chicago Theological Seminary.
1958: Doctor of Laws, Morgan State College.
1958: Doctor of Humanities, Central State College.
1959: Doctor of Divinity, Boston University.
1961: Doctor of Laws, Lincoln University.
1961: Doctor of Laws, University of Bridgeport.
1962: Doctor of Civil Laws, Bard College.
1963: Doctor of Letters, Keuka College.
1964: Doctor of Divinity, Wesleyan College.
1964: Doctor of Laws, Jewish Theological Seminary.
1964: Doctor of Laws, Yale University.
1964: Doctor of Divinity, Springfield College.
1965: Doctor of Laws, Hofstra University.
1965: Doctor of Human Letters, Oberlin College.
1965: Doctor of Social Science, Amsterdam Free University.
1965: Doctor of Divinity, St. Peter's College.
1967: Doctor of Civil Law, University of New Castle Upon Tyne.
1967: Doctor of Laws, Grinnell College, Grinnell, Iowa.

*Brother Bill Dickens is the President of the Allen AME Church, Tacoma, Washington Lay Organization


5. ON MARTIN LUTHER KING DAY, REMEMBER THE MESSAGE, NOT THE MONUMENT:

 

By the Rev. William Lamar, Published: January 11


I am ambivalent about Martin Luther King Jr. being frozen in stone not far from where we are sitting tonight.  Although a resident of Prince George’s County, I have not visited the memorial complex.  Like the Laodiceans in the book of Revelation, I am not hot about the monument nor am I cold.  I have driven past it on numerous occasions rubbernecking to sip its serene beauty.  But I have not been close to the soaring statue.  My eyes have not beheld it up close.  My hands have not touched it.  I have yet to drink deeply from the monument designed to remind humanity that it is possible to hew a stone of hope from the mountain of despair.

As a child I was given a bust of Dr. King.  When I got a little older I was given Stephen B. Oates’ magisterial biography of Dr. King.  Even now I am reading Clayborne Carson’s edited volume entitled “The Autobiography of Martin Luther King, Jr.” and Taylor Branch’s elegant trilogy on America during the King years. I wanted to go to Morehouse College because that is where King earned his undergraduate degree.  I considered attending Boston University’s School of Theology because that is where King earned his doctorate.  I guess I assumed that I would be endowed with his unswerving commitment to God’s just reign and towering intellect by osmosis if I walked the hallowed halls that he once walked.

The first church trip that I was privileged to lead as a pastor was a pilgrimage to the Martin Luther King Jr. Center for Nonviolent Social Change in Atlanta.  And I can say that I am a pastor today largely because of King’s ministry.  A ministry that proved that preachers don’t have to check their brains at the door of the sanctuary nor abandon the ministry of justice while serving the flock of Christ. I have been challenged by the legacy of King, soaked in his words, and baffled by his unswerving commitment to justice.  Some people are bibliophiles. Some are anglophiles.  I am a Kingphile. 

But I remain lukewarm about King in stone. Why?  Americans are people stricken with amnesia.  We forget history, especially when it is convenient to do so.  We banish suffering and strife and violence from our collective memory without realizing that our struggles become more intractable when wed to silence.  Why am I lukewarm?  Because Americans would rather glaciate our Martin Kings in monuments surrounded by flora and fauna than deal with the harsh, prophetic realities that made them both attractive and repulsive to the body politic.  I am afraid that if I cling too closely to the monument, King’s heart of flesh that often offended us will become a heart of stone that comfortable middle-class blacks like me and Democrats and Republicans and others can manipulate and smash into pebbles of convenience.

Cornel West talks about the santaclausification of Martin Luther King.  According to Dr. West with our vapid celebrations of King, “He just becomes a nice little old man with a smile with toys in his bag, not a threat to anybody, as if his fundamental commitment to unconditional love and unarmed truth does not bring to bear certain kinds of pressure to a status quo. So the status quo feels so comfortable as though it's a convenient thing to do rather than acknowledge him as to what he was, what the FBI said, "The most dangerous man in America." Why? Because of his fundamental commitment to love and to justice and trying to keep track of the humanity of each and every one of us.”  West also says, “[I]n the market-driven world in which celebrity status operates in such a way that it tries to diffuse all of the threat and to sugarcoat and deodorize what actually is rather funky.”

Indeed we have sugarcoated and deodorized King. Every year this time I grow weary of hearing about his dream. Those on the right use this dream language as a pretext to talk about colorblindness without talking about justice and the enduring legacy of American apartheid and structural racism. Those on the left go to marches or sponsor a day of mercy while eschewing the hard work of justice.

It is hard to say what King would be doing and saying if he were alive.  But preachers traffic in imagination.  So let me imagine based on my study of the man’s life and legacy. He would not be very popular among the educated black middle class because he would remind us of our entanglement in the trappings of success and material excess while neglecting the dire educational and economic straits faced by millions upon millions of our people.  He would not be popular among the corporatocracy (the powerful oligarchy of corporations, banks, and governments that control finance and economics and therefore politics) because he would call out their unchecked greed, astronomical salaries, and their erosion of the protection and prosperity of workers.  He would not be popular in the White House because American muscular militarism has not yielded to peaceful ways to resolve conflict and the era of government by and for the haves to the exclusion of the have-nots seems uninterrupted.  Neither Democrats nor Republicans utter the word poverty and the middle class they fetishizes with rhetoric and neglect with policy shrinks every second. He would not be popular with the self-centered, culturally accommodated American church.  He would remind us that we exist to serve, not to be served.

A frozen Martin Luther King is not what we need. A sweet, saccharine a historical Martin Luther King is not what we need. We need the King who died unpopular among blacks and whites because he was more concerned with truth and justice than popularity and access.  The King who said no to Vietnam.  No to American empire.  No to a silent, lethargic church. We need the King who said yes to the dignity and humanity of the poor. Yes to the personhood of people of every race, gender, and socioeconomic status.  We need the King who knew that the parched land of America needed the waters of justice in order to bloom into what the founders envisioned even in their brokenness.

I may get to the monument.  But I won’t stay long.  Can’t stay long.  The living, breathing King will be beckoning me away from the mountain and into the valley where there is work to do.
Rev. William Lamar is senior pastor at Turner Memorial AME Church in Hyattsville.


6. PASTOR CLAUDE RAY JAMES HONORED FOR 30 YEARS OF PASTORAL MINISTRY:

On November 19, 2011, members of historic First AME Church, Athens, GA, celebrated the 30 years of Pastoral Ministry of their pastor, Rev. Claude Ray James. Individuals traveled long distances to celebrate with their former pastor, mentor, friend and colleague. The evening was designed to celebrate, roast and toast the outstanding career of Pastor James. Over eighty people enjoyed the program that was divided into three parts: Presiding over the Blaze, Fanning the Flames, and Fiery Response.

During the “Presiding over the Blaze,” speakers “lightly roasted” Pastor James.  During the “Fanning the Flames” segment, speakers toasted the Rev. James for his many accomplishments. Some of the comments were: Pastor James is a biblical scholar.  His Bible Study classes are excellent. His sermons are biblically based and well-structured; Pastor James is a lover of humanity. He relates well with people from all walks of life; and Pastor James is a no nonsense pastor. He is well disciplined and well prepared.

Pastor James began his ministry in 1982.

In 1982-1986, he pastored St. Paul AME Church in Covington, Georgia; and from 1986-1993, he pastored First AME Church in Athens, Georgia. After leaving Athens, he pastored Bethel AME Church in Albany, Georgia. In 1993, he was assigned to Allen Temple AME Church in Atlanta, Georgia.

He made history in 2009, by returning to First AME Church in Athens, Georgia for a second pastoral assignment. 

He has revived a ministry with the Bethel Town Village community which is adjacent to the church.  In addition to many other initiatives, he has re-established the church Food Bank which serves over 50 families per week.

Perhaps the most ambitious initiative is the Nehemiah Project, which is designed to raise $100,000 as “seed money” for renovation of Historic First AME Church; $81,000,000 has been raised to date.

The evening also included a liturgical dance by the First AME Liturgical Dancers, which was organized by Pastor James.

A spectacular video presentation with photos of Pastor James from infancy to present day was a delight for everyone in attendance.

The guests enjoyed a bountiful multi-tiered buffet of delectable food.  It was mentioned during several presentations that Pastor James loves to eat and he was not disappointed during the evening.

During the “Fiery Response,” Pastor James thanked the group for coming; he was most gracious for the years of friendship with those in attendance.

To commemorate this milestone in his career, Pastor James was given an engraved crystal Bible and an engraved pen and pencil set.

The evening concluded with a formal toast to Pastor James. Everyone stood with cider filled glasses and toasted Pastor James.

Pastor James conducted a tour of the historic church for some of the guests.


7. SUPREME COURT RECOGNIZES MINISTERIAL EXCEPTION TO EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION CLAIMS:

The First Amendment's Establishment and Free Exercise Clauses bar suits brought on behalf of ministers against their churches that claim termination in violation of employment discrimination law.

The Sixth Circuit recognized the existence of a ministerial exception rooted in the First Amendment, but concluded that it did not apply to a complainant who claimed her church discriminated against her because she did not qualify as a "minister" under the exception.  In Hosanna-Tabor Evangelical Lutheran Church and School v. EEOC, No. 10-553 (U.S. January 11, 2012), the Supreme Court reversed holding that the Establishment and Free Exercise Clauses bar suits brought on behalf of ministers against their churches that claim termination in violation of employment discrimi­nation laws.

The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod classifies its school teachers as either "called" and "lay."  "Called" teachers are regarded as having been called to their vocation by God.  The complainant was a called teacher who taught a religion class, led her students in daily prayer and devotional exercises, and took her stu­dents to a weekly school-wide chapel service.  The complainant developed narcolepsy and began the 2004-05 school-year on disability leave.  In January 2005, she notified the school principal that she would be able to report to work in February.  The principal responded that the school had already contracted with a lay teacher to fill the complainant's position for the remainder of the school year and expressed concern that the complainant was not yet ready to re­turn to the classroom.  The congregation subsequently offered to pay a portion of the complainant's health insurance premiums in exchange for her resignation as a called teacher.  The complainant refused to resign and threatened legal action.  In due course the school terminated the complainant.  The complainant filed a charge with the EEOC claiming that her employment had been terminated in violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act.  The EEOC brought suit against Hosanna-Tabor alleging that the complainant had been fired in retaliation for threatening to file an ADA lawsuit.  The complainant intervened.  Invoking the "ministerial excep­tion," Hosanna-Tabor argued that the First Amendment barred the suit because the claims concerned the employment relation­ship between a religious institution and one of its ministers.  The District Court agreed and granted Hosanna-Tabor summary judgment.  The Sixth Circuit vacated and remanded.  The Supreme Court reversed the Sixth Circuit.

The First Amendment provides, in part, that "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof."  Since the passage of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and other employment discrimination laws, the Courts of Appeals have uniformly recognized the existence of a "ministerial exception," grounded in the First Amendment that precludes application of such legislation to claims concerning the employment relationship be­tween a religious institution and its ministers.  The Supreme Court agreed that there is such a ministerial exception.  Requiring a church to accept or retain an unwanted minister, or punishing a church for failing to do so, intrudes upon more than a mere employment decision.  Such ac­tion interferes with the internal governance of the church, depriving the church of control over the selection of those who will personify its beliefs.  By imposing an unwanted minister, the state infringes the Free Exercise Clause, which protects a religious group's right to shape its own faith and mission through its appointments.  According the state the power to determine which individuals will minister to the faithful also violates the Establishment Clause, which prohibits government involvement in such ecclesiastical decisions.  Moreover, any suggestion that Hosanna-Tabor's asserted religious reason for firing the complainant was pretextual misses the point of the ministerial ex­ception.  The purpose of the exception is not to safeguard a church's decision to fire a minister only when it is made for a religious reason.  The exception instead ensures that the authority to select and control who will minister to the faithful is the church's decision alone.

The Court emphasized that it is only holding that the ministerial exception bars a minister's employment discrimination suit challenging her church's decision to fire her.  The Court expresses no view on whether the exception bars other types of suits.

View this post online <https://ogconline.navy.mil/forum/communities_of_practice/cops_civilian_personnel_law/b/cplcopblog/archive/2012/01/13/supreme-court-recognizes-ministerial-exception-to-employment-discrimination-claims.aspx>

TCR Editor’s Note:  It appears that this U.S. Supreme Court decision has stated that churches can fire ministers and other employees without being concerned about a discrimination lawsuit. Terminated ministers and people who work for religious institutions may be able to file other types of lawsuits, if they apply; but they cannot file a discrimination lawsuit.  It’s also interesting that the United Methodist Church is rethinking and is considering making changes to the coveted Security of pastoral appointments.”


8. THE 2012 ANNUAL CONFERENCE SCHEDULE FOR 16TH EPISCOPAL DISTRICT:

Bishop Sarah Frances Davis, Presiding Prelate
Mr. Claytie Davis, Episcopal Supervisor


FEBRUARY 2012

01      Haiti WMS Convention, Mariani AME Church; Host, Venue: Mary Beckett AMEC         
02-05 Haiti Annual Conference, Mariani AME Church, Hosting, Venue: Mary Beckett AMEC

08      Dominican Republic WMS Convention, La
          Romana, Impacto Davida AME Church,
          Bishop Preaching Night in White
09-12  Dominican Republic Annual Conference, La
          Romana, Impacto Davida AME Church

15-17  Global Development Executive Meeting,
          Johannesburg, South Africa

29       Suriname/Guyana WMS Convention, Nu
          Bethel, Suriname

MARCH /APRIL 2012

01-04  Suriname/Guyana Conference, Nu Bethel, Suriname

07      Windward Islands WMS Convention, Metropolitan AME Church, Port of Spain,
          Trinidad

08-11  Windward Islands Annual Conference, Metropolitan AME Church, Port of Spain, Trinidad

21      Jamaica WMS Convention, Chapel of Christ, Kingston, Jamaica

22–25 Jamaica Centenary Annual Conference, Chapel of Christ Our Redeemer, Kingston, JA

28      Virgin Islands WMS Convention, Bethel AME Church, Christiansted, Virgin Islands

29–     Virgin Islands Annual Conference, Bethel AMEC, Christiansted, Virgin Islands
April 1

APRIL

13     AMEC CONNECTIONAL DAY OF PRAYER

19     European Conference WMS Convention,
        Nouvelle Alliance AME Church, Lyon, France
20-    European Annual Conference, Nouvelle
22    Alliance, AMEC, Lyon, France

25-27 Bishop and Presiding Elders Planning Meeting, Port-Au-Prince, Haiti



9. CLERGY FAMILY CONGRATULATORY ANNOUNCEMENT:

- Bishop Samuel Lawrence Green Sr., Presiding Prelate Twelfth Episcopal District Announces "How I Got Over" CD wins two Stellar Awards

The CD recorded at the 12th District Holy Convocation in 2010, Smokie Norful and the 12th District AME Church Choir, "How I Got Over: Songs that Carried Us", won two Stellar Awards Saturday night for Traditional Male Vocalist and Traditional CD of the Year. I thank Smokie Norful for selecting the 12th District AME Church Choir to be the featured Choir for this project. Special thanks to all the Artists who participated on the Album, Ken Pennell and EMI Gospel for producing this project with Smokie & TREMYLES Music and the members of the 12th Episcopal District who participated on the CD.

Thank you 12th District for allowing God to take you beyond the boundaries of Oklahoma and Arkansas to another level to minister to the world through song. 12th Episcopal District I am proud of you and excited about what God is getting ready to do! To God be the Glory, the best is still yet to come.


Bishop Samuel Lawrence Green Sr.
P. O. Box 147
Little Rock, AR
72203-0147
Telephone: 501-375-4310
FAX: 501-375-0306


10. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

We are saddened to inform you of the passing of Mrs. Elaine Tyler, the mother-in-law of AMEC preacher's kid, Mr. William W. Easley, III and the mother of Mrs. Sonja Elaine Tyler Easley, the son and daughter-in-law of Dr. William W. Easley, Jr., pastor of Taylor Chapel AME Church, Bowling Green, Kentucky and Mrs. Ora L. Easley, Administrator, The AME Clergy Family Information Center.  William W. Easley, III and Sonja Elaine Tyler Easley are members of Reid Temple AME Church, Glenn Dale, Maryland; Dr. Lee P. Washington, Pastor.

Mrs. Elaine Tyler, the wife of Mr. Larry Tyler, mother of Daphne Pryor (Kenneth), Erik Tyler (Victoria), Sonja Easley (William), and grandmother of 10 grandchildren; of Washington, DC passed away peacefully and quietly in her sleep following an extended illness.

Service arrangements for Mrs. Elaine Tyler:

Wednesday, January 18, 2012
Viewing: 10:00 AM
Mass of Christian Burial: 11:00 AM

St. Gabriel Catholic Church
26 Grant Circle N.W.
Washington, DC 20011
Office: (202) 726-9092
Fax: (202) 291-0334

The Rev. Fr. Agustin Mateo Ayala, Pastor

Professional services are entrusted to:

Marshall's Funeral Home
4217 9th Street NW
Washington, DC 20011-7298

Phone: (202) 723-1250
Fax: (202) 829-1432

Expressions of sympathy and messages of condolence may be sent to:

Mr. and Mrs. William W. (Sonja) Easley, III
1612 Monarch Birch Way
Bowie, Maryland 20721
(301) 925-8749

Email Addresses:
(Sonja Tyler Easley)   So_bo@hotmail.com
(William W. Easley, III)  weasley3@gmail.com

Or to the funeral home (address is above)

And to:

Mr. Larry Tyler & Family
807 Underwood Street, NW
Washington, DC 20012


11. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

We regret to inform you of the passing of Sister Geneva G. Deal, the mother of Mrs. Marjorie Deal Brown who is the widow of the Rev. Levi Brown. The members of the Ministers' Spouses, Widows and Widowers Organization, Plus P.K.'S of the Second Episcopal District African Methodist Church extend sympathy to their Historiographer in her loss.

Services for Sister Geneva G. Deal:

Viewing & Funeral Service: Thursday, January 19, 2012
Viewing: 12:00 noon - 12:55 P.M.
Service: 1:00 P.M.
Chambers Chapel Baptist Church
Chambers Chapel Circle
Glen Alpine, NC 28628

Professional Service Entrusted to:

Ebony Funeral Services
220 Avery Avenue
Morganton, NC 28655
Phone: (828) 437-2864

Internment: McElrath Chapel A. M. E Cemetery

Expressions of sympathy may be sent to:

Mrs. Marjorie D. Brown
2709 Kendall Drive
Charlotte, NC 28216


12. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

We regret to inform you of the passing of the Reverend Jared L. Graves, Sr., pastor of Franklin AME Church, Niles, Michigan, South District, Michigan Conference. Please keep the family of the Reverend Jared L. Graves lifted in prayer.

Funeral service:

Friday, January 20, 2012
Family Hour: 9:30 AM
Service: 11:00 AM
Union Memorial AME Church
911 South Crystal Avenue
Benton Harbor, Michigan 49022
Phone: 269-927-2219
Dr. Michael C. Carson, Pastor

Condolences and Expressions of sympathy may be sent to:

Mrs. Joyce A. Graves (wife)
1919 Broadway
Benton Harbor, Michigan 49022
Phone: 269-363-4159

Or to:

Mrs. Carolyn A. Graves (mother)
1974 E. Britain Ave. #2
Benton Harbor, Michigan 49022
Phone: 269-925-6963


13. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

We regret to inform you of the passing of the Reverend Oltha Thomas Austin, Jr., son of the Reverend O. Thomas Austin, Sr., retired minister in the Tenth Episcopal District, North Texas Conference, and Mrs. Verdene Kirven Austin, former 10th Episcopal District M-SWAWO + PK'S president. The Reverend Oltha Thomas Austin, Jr. passed away, Friday, January 13, 2012.

Funeral arrangements for the Rev. O. Thomas Austin, Jr. are as follows:

Wake: Wednesday, January 18, 2012, 7:15 - 8:15 P. M.
Golden Gate Funeral Home
4155 South R. L. Thornton Freeway
Dallas, TX 75224
Telephone: (214) 941-7332

Funeral Services: Thursday, January 19, 2012, 11:00 A. M.
New Mt Zion Baptist Church
9530 Shepherd Rd
Dallas, TX

Condolences may be sent to:

The Rev. and Mrs. O. Thomas Austin, Sr.