Bishop T. Larry
Kirkland - Chair, Commission on Publications
The
Reverend Dr. Johnny Barbour, Jr., Publisher
The
Reverend Dr. Calvin H. Sydnor III, the 20th Editor, The Christian Recorder
Mark
and Save Date in your Calendars:
June
is National HIV Testing Month
1. TCR
EDITORIAL – THE
2013 GENERAL BOARD MEETING IN KINGSTON, JAMAICA WILL BE REMEMBERED FOR A LONG
TIME:
Dr. Calvin H. Sydnor III
The 20th Editor of The Christian Recorder
I was prepared to write Part 2
for “Another Look at what I would do differently in my Preaching ministry if
I had to do it all over again.”
There are other things in my ministry I would do differently if I could
do my ministry over again. There are also changes in my personal life, my
relations with my family and especially my children. Oh boy, there are so many
things I would do differently. I plan to do so in the next issue because I got
caught up in the General Board Meeting in Kingston, Jamaica.
The
2013 General Board Meeting was held at the Pegasus Hotel in Kingston, Jamaica
on June 23 – 26, 2013. This was not the first connectional meeting held at the
Pegasus Hotel. The first connectional meeting held in Districts 14 – 20 was
held in the Pegasus Hotel when Bishop Fredrick H. Hilborn convened the meeting
of the Bishops’ Council in 1978. Bishop
Talbot was the Presiding Prelate of the 16th Episcopal District from
1972 – 1980.
I have been to Jamaica many
times, but this time was different and this General Board Meeting was
different.
I left Jamaica feeling so
blessed to be an African Methodist. I am just, well, beyond words when I think
about all the AME Church means to me. I am probably going to ramble because
there are so many thoughts in my head; but, I am old and I am permitted to
ramble.
But, before I ramble let me say
that we will publish a full report about the General Board Meeting that was held
in Kingston in the next issue of TCR.
The Public Statement prepared by the Council of Bishops is published in
this issue (Item #3).
The transparency of the Council
of Bishops’ Public Statement is much appreciated and we heard many comments of
appreciation, not only of its transparency, but also how it was done and when
it was done. Someone said to me about the Public Statement, “That was
different; we didn’t have to waits weeks to be given the Public Statement from
the Council of Bishops.
The Public Statement was one of
the things that made me proud to be an AME.
I was also proud -
The 16th Episcopal
District planning and the execution of the General Board Meeting was
phenomenal! Bishop Sarah Francis Taylor
Davis and Episcopal Supervisor Claytie Davis and their staff planned and
executed the most efficient General Board Meeting. It was a positive experience
from beginning to end.
We arrived in Kingston and were
met by AME greeters who welcomed us, marshaled us through customs, got us on
air-conditioned buses, transported us to the hotel, and got is registered
seamlessly. And, those of us who responded to the email messages sent
requesting credit card information didn’t even have to fill out any forms, were
handed our hotel room keycards and we were on our way to our rooms. The
efficient service of the 16th Episcopal District was provided to all
attendees not just to the leadership of the Church. Everyone received equal
treatment!
Assistance never
stopped
The 16th Episcopal
District greeters were stationed throughout the lobby for the entire meeting.
They met the needs of those who attended the General Board from the beginning
to the end. When attendees departed the hotel at the close of the meeting,
greeters were still manning their stations.
Began with worship
Transportation
was provided to the various AME churches in Kingston area.
I
attended Sunday Morning worship at the Chapel of Christ Our Redeemer AME Church
in Kingston where the Rev. Dr. Monica Spencer is the pastor. Dr. Spencer is recovering from surgery and
was not present, but the church leadership was in charge and did a wonderful
job in leading the worship service. The worship was Holy Spirit-filled,
dynamic, creative, AME-focused and challenging.
The preacher, a lay preacher and steward, Sister Dorothy Smith delivered
a dynamic Word – “The Battle is not Yours, it’s the Lord’s.”
The first full day: June 24,
2013
The
General Board Meeting opened with a Spirit-filled devotional service. An inspirational sermon was delivered by the
Rev. Mark Griffin of the 11th Episcopal District.
The
Commission members, clergy and lay, were present.
Bishop
John Hurst Adams, Bishop Frederick C. James, Bishop Frank C. Cummings, Bishop
Philip R. Cousin, Bishop Vinton R. Anderson, active Bishop Richard Franklin
Norris and several retired general officers’ absences were excused. All of the active General Officers, retired
General Officers Dr. Jamye Coleman Williams and Dr. Paulette Coleman were
present.
The attendance
of bishops, general officers, connectional officers, delegates, presiding
elders, visitors, and spouses filled the beautiful Pegasus Hotel conference
hall. The attendance at the General Board Meeting was absolutely wonderful and
the Pegasus Hotel and the overflow hotels were full of AMEs.
Bishop
Adam Jefferson Richardson, the President of the General Board presided over the
General Board sessions.
Bishop
John R. Bryant reported that there are now 89 AME Churches in India. Bishop
Sarah Frances Davis, President of the Council of Bishops gave warm welcome
remarks.
Retired
Bishop Frederick Hilborn Talbot made a presentation on the songs of the 16th
Episcopal District and led in the Caribbean hymn, “I have got the sword in my Hand, Help me to use it Lord.”
Ms.
Marcia Fugh Joseph gave a presentation on the status of the AME App, a mobile
application designed to work through the internet on smartphones and other
devices and the Rev. Conitras Moore gave an orientation and presentation on the
DropBox application being used to help the AME Church “go green.” AMEC General Secretary Jeffery Cooper is
working hard to help our Zion to make efficient use of technology, which saves
money.
Bishop
Preston Warren Williams gave an update on Morris Brown College. Important news
concerning MBC was expected to be released on Thursday, June 27, 2013. When MBC
news is released and received, it will be reported in TCR.
Bishop
Paul Kawimbe shared information about AME SADA.
He asked that one Sunday in May be set aside for designated offerings to
be collected for AME SADA. Other reports were given.
The
first day afternoon session was devoted to the various Commission breakout
meetings.
Investiture Reception and
Worship
Bishop
Sarah Frances Davis hosted an Investiture Reception that featured the foods of
Jamaica.
The
Investiture Worship Celebration was a dynamic affair which featured music by
the 16th District 100 Voices.
His Excellency, the Most Honorable Sir Patrick Allen, Governor General
of Jamaica was in attendance and gave remarks.
Bishop Ivan Abrahams, General Secretary of the World Methodist Council
was also present and gave greetings and tributes to Bishop Sarah Davis. The
sermon was expertly delivered by the Rev.Dr. Claudette Copeland, Executive
Pastor of the New Creation Christian Fellowship in San Antonio, Texas.
The second day the
Commission reports were given and approved.
The
highlight of the second day was the evening sermon delivered by Bishop Wilfred
J. Messiah at the service of Word and Sacrament. Bishop Messiah preached a
strong biblical sermon with power. Bishop Messiah is the Presiding Prelate of
the 17th Episcopal District.
The
16th Episcopal District Choir was awesome and the Worship service
was Holy Spirit-filled and creatively African Methodist.
Bishop Messiah
preached about “The Cry of a Penitent Soul” taken from Psalm 51:10. He spoke
about David’s accomplishments, challenges and failures, specifically his failure
with Bathsheba and the Prophet Nathan’s intervention. Bishop Messiah explained that sin has a guilt
component and said that there is no hiding place from sin. He went on to say
that the only way to confront sin is repentance. He gave an illustration and
explained when the face is dirty; a person can take some soap and wash his or
her face. If a person’s clothes are dirty, a person can get some detergent and
wash his or her clothes. His hallelujah
moment came when he explained, “If your life is sin-stained, “… Nothing but the
blood of Jesus" washes away sin.
Both
worship services were African Methodist Episcopal with creativity. The 16th
Episcopal District Choir was phenomenally “off the chart!” The selections and
hymns had a Caribbean flavor and the presence of the Holy Spirit was felt by
all of the parishioners.
The
African Methodist Episcopal Church will remember and talk about the General
Board Meeting that was held at the Pegasus Hotel in Kingston, Jamaica for a
long time!
Thank
you, Bishop Sarah Frances Taylor Davis, Episcopal Supervisor Claytie Davis and
all of the persons who helped to execute a well-planned meeting that was a
model for the African Methodist Episcopal Church. It was obvious that a lot of
prayer and hard work went into the preparation and execution of the 2013
General Board Meeting / Bishops’ Council.
Full
coverage of the 2013 General Board Meeting will be published in the next issue.
2. READER RESPONSE TO EDITORIAL AND OTHER
ISSUES:
-- To the Editor:
RE: Five Religious
Facts You Might Not Know About Frederick Douglass
In my book, A Liberated Past: Explorations in AME Church
History (2003) is a chapter, "Frederick Douglass & African
Methodism." In it I discuss his vacillating ties between the AME and AMEZ
denominations. Most importantly, it should be known that while a slave in
Baltimore he joined Bethel AME Church, years before he was licensed as an AMEZ
lay preacher in New Bedford, Massachusetts.
When Douglass
visited the 1884 General Conference convening in Bethel, Baltimore, he recalled
his Bethel membership and said he sat under the quiet teaching of the Reverend
Edward Waters, who became the 3rd Bishop in the AME Church.
The Rev. Dennis
Dickerson, Ph.D
--To the Editor:
Re: Another look
at what I would do differently in my preaching ministry if I had to do it all
over again
Thank you for
your article on the above captioned subject.
You talked about "stepping on [your] toes" as well. It emphasized further to me that as human
beings, not even preachers are perfect and we have issues that need to be dealt
with. It is while preparing my sermons,
I realize a lot of what I am preparing is meant for me as well and preach it
anyway.
Thanks for
teaching us as ministers that we need as well to apply our own sermons to
ourselves and to have the courage, where there is the need, to say "I
repent."
The Rev.
Primadonna Steele
-- To the Editor:
Re: Another look
at what I would do differently in my preaching ministry if I had to do it all
over again
It's a great pleasure
to read your first part of what will I do differently in my ministry a second
time where you stress a point that Bishop Messiah addressed some years ago when
he was the Dean of the R. R. Wright Theological Seminary. He said. "You
can be a good singer, administrator, and motivator; but just know that the AME
ministry relies mostly on your preaching."
After reading
your post I now fully understand that preaching is the back-spine (foundation)
of an individual preacher's ministry. In all other good talents a preacher has;
he/she must deliver more on preaching.
Never take a
chance to stand behind the pulpit and deliver an unprepared unprayed sermon.
With a Spirit-filled message we then see a growth in people’s character and the
turn out is some unlimited blessings from God.
The Rev. Lazarus
B Thotobolo
-- To the Editor:
Re: Another look
at what I would do differently in my preaching ministry if I had to do it all
over again
I would like to
thank you for the extensive analysis of “What I Would Do Differently...If I Had
To Do It All Over Again.”
Too often, we
read editorials from many different sources that are shallow, inconsiderate and
offensive. Yours was comprehensive,
sensitive and informative. Many of the
challenges or “human habits” you described can be attributed to most of us
whether we are an ordained minister, lay member, politician, educator,
professional, corporate executive or community activist.
We do not plan
enough, prepare enough or produce enough.
Hopefully, your truthful reflection will touch the hearts and minds of
those who have been endowed as leaders.
We must begin to recognize that ALL things are possible and with Christ,
there is no crisis...just opportunities.
And, if we are blessed to wake up tomorrow morning, God has given us
another opportunity to get it right.
I was once told
that 49% of the people will watch things happen and 49% will wonder what is
happening. ONLY 2% will make things
happen! Thank you for being a
2-percenter and I encourage others who are a part of Church Universal to do the
same.
We can and MUST
do better if we are going to provide our Beloved Community with the hope and
resources needed for survival in the 21st century and beyond.
May you continue
to “write the vision and make it plain.”
Blessings and
peace,
Stephanie A.
Walker Stradford, CEO
Youth Achievers
USA Institute
-- To the Editor:
Re: Another look at
what I would do differently in my preaching ministry if I had to do it all over
again
Every now and
then, I do a walk through the lectionary at our church's noonday study and
utilize the readings for the upcoming Sunday. I will do that for at least four
(or so) out of the twelve months and use intentional resources for advent and
lent and additional material for the rest of the year. The noonday study
attendees are already familiar with the text that are read on Sunday morning
and that provides them with a greater understanding of the text and the use of
the text for the particular liturgical season. More churches need to emphasize
the liturgical season more than is frequently done.
Most of the time
I preach from the lectionary since the groundwork has already been completed
for the noonday study. Exceptions occur when I am invited to preach elsewhere
and the church has a particular text/theme, or if the Spirit directs me to use
another text.
Thank you for
presenting this issue, and I am somewhat leery when people say "good/great
sermon" or "wonderful message." I would rather them tell me how
the sermon is going to impact their lives or whether or not it wont make a
difference or does not encourage change.
Peace!
The Rev. Velma
Grant
-- To the Editor:
Re: Another look
at what I would do differently in my preaching ministry if I had to do it all
over again
Thank you. I
receive your insights about preaching (early and current) as words that might
inspire acts of repentance for many of us, whether we see ourselves in it or
not. We may not be able to start over, but there is for each of us "right
now" to begin again.
Having entered my
50th year as a preacher, I am still in the learning mode. I would humbly add
only these thoughts:
1. We have to
always try be our authentic self; using the "voice" God has given to
us. It is what makes the preaching moment we have been afforded unique.
2. We have to be
true to our call to intellectual curiosity, even when we may be considered as
too "bookish." Preaching should always be considered as teaching,
though teaching does not have to be preaching.
3. I am concerned
that much of our preaching has degenerated into cliché riddled sound bites,
uninformed by having read the classics, and only a cursory exposure to liberal
arts education.
4. We do not have
to sound bookish when we are doing intelligent preaching. The real key to
conversational preaching is to be thoughtful, insightful, and prayerful; this
is possible when the preacher has actually internalized what is being preached.
Bishop A. J.
Richardson
3. THE 2013 PUBLIC STATEMENT FROM THE COUNCIL
OF BISHOPS:
The Council of Bishops
The African Methodist Episcopal
Church
Jamaica Pegasus Hotel
Kingston, Jamaica
25 June 2013
The
Council of Bishops of the African Methodist Episcopal Church convened its
Annual Meeting in Jamaica, the 16th Episcopal District. For the first time since 1978, the Bishops of
the Church have come to this nation to deliberate on various issues confronting
the Church.
We
congratulate Bishop Sarah Frances Taylor Davis on her Investiture as President
of the Council of Bishops. We also
acknowledge, with joy and prayer, Supervisor Claytie Davis on his election as
the President of the Supervisors' Council.
We
are appreciative for the impeccable hospitality of the 16th Episcopal District
in hosting the Council of Bishops and The General Board, along with other
component meetings during this week.
Friendly, helpful faces have greeted us from the time of arrival, and
the flow of Christian love and kindness has not waned. The 16th District has hosted us in excellent
form. The nation of Jamaica has extended
extraordinary courtesy and encouragement through government officials, faithful
AMEs and the host facility. On behalf of
the AME Church, we say thanks to Bishop & Supervisor Davis, the 16th
Episcopal District and Jamaica!
We
acknowledge the excellent performance of the Finance Department and the Office
of The General Secretary (Dr. Lewis, Dr. Cooper and their staffs). They, along with Bishop Adam Jefferson
Richardson, President of the General Board, have created a wonderfully
efficient meeting. Thanks to all!
The
Council of Bishops asks the African Methodist Episcopal Church to note the
following:
I. Legal Matters
The
bishops recognize the concern of our church with various matters with legal
ramifications. On the advice of legal
counsel, we are not able to comment on the pending litigation which we face in
various parts of the world. The Council
would like the Church to know that we are pursuing situations with due
diligence. We ask the church to pray for
an outpouring of love and peace which will help us to focus on our true mission
for Christ.
II. Bishops' Vision Conference
Recognizing
the depth of the issues confronting the church, the Bishops are planning to
enter an extended season of assessment, reflection and visioning. This activity will be coupled with the annual
Bishops' Retreat in January 2014. The
outcome of these discussions should be apparent in the coming months. We ask the church to keep our leadership in
prayer during these conversations.
III. The Council Presidency Succession
Since
the General Conference, it was agreed by the Council of Bishops that the nature
of the location of Bishop McCloud should not deprive him of his place in the
rotation for the presidency of The Council of Bishops. Preparations have begun for the investiture
of Bishop E. Earl McCloud, Jr. next year in Atlanta, Georgia.
IV. Connectional Meetings
The
Bishops urge our denominational family to give support to the various upcoming
component meetings. Two which are on the immediate horizon are The MCAM (Music
& Christian Arts Ministry) meeting in Chicago, Illinois (July 9-12, 2012),
and the 33rd Lay Biennial (July 28- August 1) in Atlanta, Georgia.
V. Missions Concerns
We
highlight and invite support for various mission concerns in our global
ministry.
The Council supports:
-
The establishment of a connectional AME-SADA Day in May 2014
Namibia
Drought Relief (15th District)
-
We support a special appeal for aid donations in the easing of suffering and
the preservation of life. We especially express concern for the plight of women
and children, and we urge a response by the Church and other humanitarian
entities.
-
The effort to reconstruct the Episcopal Residence in the 18th Episcopal
District
-
The appropriation of Episcopal Housing funding for the 20th Episcopal District
VI. The Anvil
The
Council is grateful for the support of the Connection of The Anvil. We are especially appreciative for the
leadership of Bishop Vashti Murphy McKenzie in the quality and success of this
publication. We urge the prompt ordering
of paper and digital editions of the current Anvil.
The
current beneficiary of this project is The 16th Episcopal District. A gift of $10,000 (USD) will be used for
various activities in that district.
We
further embrace the exposition of the Class Leader System in the 2014 edition
as a part of our Discipleship focus.
VII. Discipleship
The
Council affirms the importance of our quadrennial themes around
Discipleship. We encourage the emphasis
of this important matter among district leaders and within the various
components. We urge connectional
cooperation as we rally on the Call to Discipleship.
VIII. The Voting Rights Act
Today,
the US Supreme Court cast a shadow over the landscape that had been carefully
groomed to protect the voting rights of every American and monitor any efforts
to disenfranchise voters. The African
Methodist Episcopal Church decries the action of the United States Supreme
Court eliminating Section 4 of the Voting Rights Act.
In
those fifteen states that were being monitored, and others where new
disenfranchising laws are being crafted, the AME Church will increase its
efforts to register, mobilize and educate potential voters. We urge our membership to be vigilant in
detecting violations to our basic right to vote under the guise of affirming
the rights of the states.
The
AME Church urges Congress to expedite the development of a new formula based on
current documented acts of voter discrimination and suppression. Our commitment
to justice will continue with greater urgency and vibrancy.
IX. President Nelson Mandela
We
express love and concern on behalf of the African Methodist Episcopal Church
for President Nelson Mandela. We urge
the entire denomination to pray for President Mandela, his family, the people
of the Republic of South Africa, and the many persons around the world who love
and respect this dear leader and champion of freedom.
On
Behalf of the Council,
The
Public Statement Committee
Jeffrey
N. Leath, Chair
Bishop
Sarah F. Davis
Bishop
Wilfred J. Messiah
Bishop
Carolyn Tyler Guidry
4.
THE AME CHURCH DECRIES US SUPREME COURT VOTING RIGHTS ACTION:
(Washington, DC) Today, the US Supreme Court
has cast a shadow over the landscape that had been carefully groomed to protect
the voting rights of every American and monitor any efforts to disenfranchise
voters. A deeply divided bench voted 5
to 4 to strike down Section 4. The bare majority ruled that this section was
outdated and based on progress made over the years; a new formula needs to be
used to determine which cities and states must get permission from the federal
government before changing their voting procedures.
"The African Methodist Episcopal Church
decries this action, declares Bishop Reginald Jackson, chair of the Social Action
Commission. Eliminating section 4 and
keeping section 5 essentially guts a major provision and protection for those
who have been subjected to historic and longstanding discrimination, including
threats to life and livelihood." In
those fifteen states that are now being monitored and others where new
disenfranchising laws are being crafted, the AME Church will increase its
efforts to register, mobilize and educate potential voters
(Operation EMR).
It means that the cities and states that have yet to send approval
requests to the Justice Dept, or those to which the Justice Dept has not
responded will be able to enact those procedures. As Sherrilyn Ifill, president of the NAACP
LDF stated, "This is like letting you keep your car, but taking away the
keys".
The AME Church will further advocate with the
members of Congress to expedite the development of a new formula based on
current documented acts that would address these concerns.
Finally, Operation EMR will work in partnership
with other civil and human rights groups to continue mitigating the damage done
to millions over the decades. Our
commitment to justice will continue with greater urgency and vibrancy.
Jacquelyn Dupont-Walker
Social Action Commission Consultant/Director
213-494-9493
5.
NAACP OUTRAGED BY THE SUPREME COURT'S DECISION TO INVALIDATE SECTION 4:
(Washington) –The NAACP released the following
statements in response to the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to invalidate
Section 4 of the Voting Rights Act.
From Roslyn M. Brock, Chairman, NAACP National
Board of Directors:
“This decision has the potential to set voting
rights back more than fifty years,” stated NAACP Chairman Roslyn M. Brock. “It
is especially unsettling in a year when we commemorate Medgar Evers, a man who
gave his life to expand and protect the right to vote. But in the spirit of Medgar,
who said 'You can kill a man but you can't kill an idea,' we will stand our
ground and bring this debate to Congress.”
From Benjamin Todd Jealous, President and CEO,
NAACP:
“This decision is outrageous. The Court’s
majority put politics over decades of precedent and the rights of voters,”
stated NAACP President and CEO Benjamin Todd Jealous. “Congress must resurrect
its bipartisan efforts from 2006 to ensure that the federal government has the
power to preemptively strike racially discriminatory voting laws. Without that
power, we are more vulnerable to the flood of attacks we have seen in recent
years.”
Jealous continued, “While Section 2 is
powerful after the fact, we must have a tool to protect against stolen
elections proactively.”
From Jotaka Eaddy, Sr. Director for Voting
Rights, NAACP:
"Today's decision puts Congress in the
center of the battle for voting rights in our nation,” said Jotaka Eaddy, NAACP
Senior Director for Voting Rights.
“While the Supreme Court’s decision to invalidate section 4 is a
setback, it is not the end of the fight. It is time for all Americans to take
this fight to Congress and ensure that every vote is protected. Our democracy demands it."
On February 27th, 2013, the NAACP and
thousands of activists from across the country rallied outside of the Supreme
Court to urge the Supreme Court to protect voting rights for all citizens and
uphold Section 5.
6. NATIONAL COUNCIL
OF CHURCH OFFICERS WELCOME SENATE PASSAGE OF COMPREHENSIVE IMMIGRATION REFORM
BILL:
Washington, June 28, 2013 – The National Council of Churches
praised the U.S. Senate Thursday for its bipartisan support of comprehensive
immigration reform.
The bill received wide support from Democrats and
Republicans and passed by a vote of 68 to 32.
The Senate bill offers a 13-year path to citizenship for the
11 million unauthorized immigrants in the country, as well as tough border
security provisions that must be in place before the immigrants can gain legal
status.
A similar immigration reform measure faces stiff opposition
among conservative members of the House of Representatives.
The National Council of Churches has supported immigration
reform for years. A “Call to Action on Comprehensive Immigration Reform” was unanimously
approved by the General Assembly of the NCC and Church World Service (CWS) in
New Orleans in November 2010.
National Council of Churches President Kathryn Lohre
expressed thanks today for the Senate’s “bold step forward,” and said NCC
members “pray that the House of Representatives will continue to build on this
momentum.”
Lohre noted that the bill passed by the Senate is “not
perfect but it is a way forward.”
Lohre said, “We continue to pray for and with all of God’s
children whose lives hang in the balance until our broken system is repaired
and restored and to advocate for just laws, policies, and practices that
support human dignity and the integrity of families. As Paul reminds us in
Romans 15:5 we are to ‘welcome one another, just as Christ has welcomed you, to
the glory of God.’ As ambassadors of Jesus’ radical welcome, we stand firm in
our hope that the time for reform has arrived.”
The Rev. José Luis Casal, Vice President of the National
Council of Churches, said the time for comprehensive immigration reform is now.
“When justice is delayed,” he said, “injustice prevails.”
“We have in this country good people who have been a part of
this nation for years, and it is not fair to continue delaying their dreams and
hopes,” Casal said. “Now is the time to offer these people a path to
citizenship. Now is the time to re-unify families who are suffering. Now is the
time to stop deportations. Now is the time to allow youth opportunities that
have been withheld from them to study in universities. Now is the time to
rebuild America on its founding principles: a country of immigrants who created
the land of the free.”
7. THE ALLEGHENY
SCRANTON DISTRICT MAKES SIGNIFICANT DONATION TO THE SUSAN G. KOMEN FOUNDATION:
The "Awesome" Allegheny Scranton District, under
the leadership of the Rev. Dr. Eric L. Brown, Presiding Elder Allegheny
Scranton District, Third Episcopal District selected Breast Cancer Research and
Awareness for their 2012-2013 District Outreach Project. Lady Margo Brown,
District Coordinator and Outreach Project Chairperson, is a two-time breast
cancer survivor who desires to make a difference in the lives of others.
This initiative concluded on June 14, 2013 at the 146th
Session of the Allegheny Scranton District Church School Convention at St. John
African Methodist Episcopal Church in Bridgewater, Pennsylvania where the
Reverend Linda Moore is the host pastor.
The Reverend Dr. Helen M. Burton, pastor Payne Chapel African
Methodist Episcopal Church in Duquesne, Pennsylvania, and members received the
Outstanding Supporter Award for the Outreach Project.
Mrs. Julie Philp, Sponsorship and Event Coordinator for the
Pittsburgh Affiliate of the Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure Foundation joined
us for a special presentation. Dr. Eric L. Brown and Lady Margo Brown were
delighted to present a donation on behalf of the Allegheny Scranton District in
the amount of $3,800. This donation will enable the Susan G. Komen Foundation to
underwrite “38” mammograms for women within the Western Pennsylvania Region.
8. BETHEL HERITAGE
TRAIL DEDICATION CEREMONY IN HARRISBURG, PENNSYLVANIA:
PRLog (Press Release) - Jun. 20, 2013 - HARRISBURG, Pa. --
Harrisburg, PA: The Friends of Bethel Trail will officially kick-off the
commemorative "Bethel Heritage Trail" walking tour on Sunday June 30,
2013, starting at 3 p.m. at "Soldiers Grove" (near the fountain) of
the Capitol Complex located at Commonwealth Avenue in Harrisburg, PA. The celebration is called the Freedom
Jubilee, and will begin with a self-guided tour through the five locations
where Historic Bethel AME Church once stood. The tour is followed by a 3:15
p.m. ribbon cutting and then at 4 p.m. there will be a Historic Bethel Civil
War Church Worship Service beneath a tent at “Soldiers Grove” featuring
historic reenactments and singing by the Historic Bethel AME Church choir. The
Freedom Jubilee will showcase an array of singers including: Rev. Lela
Henderson, Ms. Diane Wilson, Mr. Ernest Tillman, The Bethel Mercersburg Choir,
and the Lark Quartet. Rev. Dr. Mark Kelly Tyler, 52nd pastor of Historic Mother
Bethel AME Church in Philadelphia, is the preacher and will join Historic
Bethel AME Harrisburg Pastor Micah Sims, Dauphin County Commissioners Jeff
Haste and George Hardwick, Harrisburg Mayor Linda Thompson, and State
Representative Patty Kim as platform guests. Then at 5:30 p.m. there will be a
"Farewell Procession" lead by USCT Color Guard and Troops in
commemoration of the Harrisburg Militia march to the train station.
The new "Bethel Heritage Trail" tour features
eight interpretive panels that make up the self-guided tour that follows the
five landmark sites of the Historic Bethel AME congregation and community
across Harrisburg's urban development. The “Bethel Heritage Trail” stops
include: The Pennsylvania Railroad, the
Harrisburg Forum, The State Capitol Fountain, the Justice Building, and the Fox
Ridge. Each location is where Historic Bethel AME once stood and served as an
anchor for a vital spiritual, enterprising, and social African American
community. All have literally vanished from the landscape and have been
replaced by historical markers along the newly created “Bethel Heritage Trail.”
Two panels at each of four locations along the pathway honor
the service and legacy of the African American patriots of the Civil War.
Historic Bethel AME Church, and its community, served the commonwealth and
nation as centers of recruitment for the eleven Pennsylvania Units and the
Massachusetts 54th, 55th, and 5th (as depicted
in the 1989 feature film “Glory”). Documents and records reveal Bethel
Harrisburg's members held recruitment rallies and spontaneous marches as young
Black men set off to join the USCT at Camp William Penn in Philadelphia. The
trail also highlights important and historic civic events in Harrisburg during
the 50th Anniversary - 1911, the 100th Anniversary in
1961, and present day Civil War 150th commemoration years.
The June 30th Freedom Jubilee marks both the
inauguration of the "Bethel Heritage Trail" and the commemoration of
the commitment of African Americans along the Bethel Heritage Trail as their
sons, brothers, lovers, fathers, husbands, and friends went south to fight for
freedom and unity,” says Lenwood Sloan, Creative Director of Freedom Jubilee.
“We invite all communities to gather at the river in worship and praise,
commemorating, reflecting, and remembering this great legacy.” The Friends of
Bethel Trail say this program could not be possible without the generosity of
its sponsors, Amtrak and Dauphin County Commissioners. Special thanks are also
extended to the Honorable Linda Thompson, Mayor of Harrisburg.
A free self-guided map/brochure will be distributed at key
locations along the trail and special guided walking tours will be provided
through Labor Day. For more information
on Freedom Jubilee kicking off the "Bethel Heritage Trail" on June
30, 2013, at 3 p.m. call (717) 599-5188 or go to www.dauphincounty.org. All
media inquiries should be directed to Leslie Patterson-Tyler via email Leslie@TylerMadePR.com or call (609) 247-2632
The Pastor and the Healthy Church
By George Mason
"Churches are either plums or pills,” an older
colleague once declared to me as I was discerning whether to accept a call to a
certain congregation. “Make sure this one is a plum.” It would have been easier
to figure out if he hadn’t mixed his metaphors, if I could have devised one
taste test or blind study to determine a plum or a pill. Another experienced
pastor was more helpful: “Churches have either problem-making or
problem-solving cultures.” Healthy churches find ways to address the challenges
they face without degenerating into toxic conflict. They build confidence over
time that they have the spiritual and relational resources necessary to make
the community of Christ a witness to the promise of new creation and not a
lingering sign of the sin and sickness of a world passing away.
Healthy congregations ought to reproduce themselves. We want
their kind to propagate. Unhealthy congregations can get healthy, but they
certainly should not expect a pastoral residency program to cure what ails
them. That would be like a married couple deciding to have children as a way of
resolving conflict between them. The effect of that will more likely be that
they will teach another generation to repeat the same mistakes they have
made.
Churches that host pastoral residency programs have a
formative affect on young ministers in the way those future pastors come to
view the church as well as how they develop their skills in serving it. If the
church they train in is a healthy congregation, it will instill a vision of
vitality and sound functioning in the novice pastor that will remain for years
to come.
When Wilshire Baptist Church was discussing whether to call
me as pastor in 1989, a line of questioning arose about my youth and
inexperience during a congregational meeting. “Is he up to the challenge of
leading a large church like ours?” they asked. After some back and forth about
my age and maturity, about whether I could grow into the job, and so forth, an
elderly deacon rose to speak from the back of the room. “It seems to me that we
are putting the question the wrong way. It’s not a matter of whether he’s up to
the challenge; it’s whether we are. Great pastors don’t make great churches,”
he said. “Great churches make great pastors.”
Conversely, churches that find themselves in perpetual conflict
have a way of taking the heart out of a pastor. Pastoral ministry is
challenging to begin with. It requires sacrifices small and large. Pastors have
to persevere. They shouldn’t expect congregational Camelot, given that even a
church founded by Christ and animated by his Spirit is a human institution. But
like families that fall on a continuum between functional and dysfunctional,
pastoral residency work is most successful in a church that is more life-giving
than life-draining.
How then do you determine whether your church is healthy
enough to move further down the road of discernment toward initiating a
residency program? Many have attempted to assign markers to what constitutes a
healthy church. These attempts generally reflect the theological or
denominational tradition in which the expert has been formed. Or perhaps the
definitions of health are sociological and financial. But is a church that is
growing numerically and monetarily automatically a healthy church? Or course
not. They may have fleeting appeal. Healthy churches are deep and wide both.
They have spiritual depth and increasing scope.
The more important question of congregational health may be
whether it experiences itself as a spiritual community of well-being. Two
questions for congregational reflection to that end may be:
Does the church have a long record of holding together
through times of dispute, or have church splits been the key to ever-narrowing
unity? People will come and go in every church. Conflict increases the likelihood
that people will leave the membership. Sometimes people will join the church
after that time, partly due to a clearer congregational identity. But if the
church has a history of splitting, it would not possess important resources to
share with a novice pastor about how to help a congregation work through its
challenges and stay together. Stability is a bedrock virtue of a congregation
that is ready to begin a residency program.
Is there evidence that the church has an adventurous spirit
that can try new things? If the virtue of stability keeps a church grounded,
creativity defies gravity. Churches need this kind of tension between being
security minded, which assures continuity, and risk-taking, which adds vitality
and opens the church to new possibilities. Every venture does not have to
succeed in order to be successful. Because the church is not a business per se,
it doesn’t have to show a financial return on investment in order to justify a
new ministry. Because the church is the body of Christ that is ever dying and
rising again, it can risk itself for the sake of the gospel and find that the
very venture undertaken that looks to some like failure may in fact have
transformed the lives of those involved, making it successful in spiritual
ways. But if a church has no history of risking failure by attempting new
things, it will have a hard time creating a pastoral residency program that
will demand much of the congregation.
Healthy churches are congregations that keep stability and
creativity in tension. They hold together the tried and true with the untried
and new. They imagine what may be without neglecting what has been. They
exercise prudence and faith at the same time.
From the Alban Weekly
9. THINGS FOR UNITED
METHODIST PREACHERS TO UNLEARN…:
This commentary was originally posted on the Kyrie Eleison
blog.
Being a creature of habit, both Type “A” and a bit on the
OCD side, I like routine, rhythm, and routine better than anyone. If something
works, I leave it alone; if it’s functional, I don’t try to improve it or buy
something new. Over the years I have seen pastors work this way, and pastoral
work is hard: writing/designing sermons takes time, study, planning, and
discernment; pastoral care often interrupts the busiest of schedules. When you
find something that works, we tend to run with it. We keep sermon files so that
when we move, we don’t waste previous work done. We function on local church,
district, and conference levels in ways that are comfortable for us. We
gravitate toward like-minded colleagues and find comfort in such community.
These things “work” for us.
But not really. It’s not working.
For us to offer Christ to a hurting world, we have to
transcend some of what “worked” for us in the past. It requires a lot of introspection and
self-awareness. It requires some confession and repentance. It requires that we
“unlearn” some things which have become rote for us as UM pastors. Having
recently read John Wesley’s “Large Minutes” and being challenged by scholars
Andrew Thompson and Doug Meeks, I’m led to share these things:
Our seminary professors and continuing ed teachers were
wrong about clergy professionalism. If we are to being about discipleship,
conversion, and mission, we can’t have “professional distance” from those we
serve – we have to be intimate with those we engage! If we do not live this and
model this, we cannot expect anyone else to do it. Jesus MET the woman at the
well; he didn’t say to himself, “This is improper,” even though most everyone
else probably did. Our society has confused intimacy with sexuality; it
actually comes from the Latin intimatus/intimare, “to make familiar with.”
Familiarity doesn’t breed contempt – it breeds a relationship!
Preaching needs some change. It’s a sore spot for most
preachers to be told anything critical about their preaching – but my
experience is that collectively, we’re missing the mark. When I was younger I
was asked to preach at a 6-day revival; I had no idea what to do. An older
colleague advised me, “Preach your six ‘sugar sticks.’” If I had it over to do
again, I would have met with the church leadership several weeks beforehand and
heard their story, their struggles, and their edges know I would know the
context. Preaching has to be (a) hermeneutical, (b) preach Christ, and (c) help
us make a connection WITH Jesus. As Wesley was clear to note, preach the Christ
whom the scriptures witness, not the scriptures themselves. I have to remind
myself often: it’s the logos, stupid!
UM Pastors – more specifically, elders and deacons – act too
much like a union (I’ve blogged about this before) and not enough like servants
and vessels. I’m not the only one that has noticed this; our polity once
protected pastors so they could be about Kingdom work (i.e., security of
appointment), but it has now turned into (a) a financial benefit/liability that
we may one day not be able to honor, and (b) led in some cases to
ineffectiveness through malaise. Few of our laity have such a safety net, and
indeed in some congregations, the pastor may be among the highest earners in a
local church when salary, insurance, pension, housing, and other benefits are
considered.
The Book of Discipline is too large, connectional and
conference structures too wieldy, and theological / missional / discipleship
questions as well as policy questions are often decided by popular vote instead
of theological / missional foci. What was once a tool for order has become an
imitation of US government bureaucratise and an entity unto itself. When we
need a judicial council to tell us (or prevent us from) how to do mission and
discipleship, we have got serious problems (there hasn’t always been a judicial
council, by the way). These things can change – even the Book of Discipline. If
you don’t believe one individual can make change, think again.
We don’t live the trust – much less model it – that the
Kingdom and the denomination demands of us. We often get put on committees or
commissions and remain silent, waiting until the parking lot or text messages
to our buddies to kibbutz and critique… thus depriving the institution we vowed
to uphold and denying the spirit of conferencing that is so at the heart of our
Wesleyan DNA… and then turn around and chastise our congregations for doing the
same after board and council meetings! Of course it means conflict and
difficult conversations. However, Christianity – indeed, Jesus – was no
stranger to conflict or hostility. Read the correspondence of John and Charles
Wesley, who were even estranged for a period of time over differences of
opinion. Or read John Wesley and George Whitfield. St. Nicholas attacked Arius
over heresy (though probably didn’t slap him at the Council of Nicea as legend
says). Without trust and honesty modeled and lived, we cannot embrace the deep
change that this season required of us!
Like it or not, we have to be generalists. More than once I
have heard, “That’s just not me” or “I was raised/educated in a different era.”
To those that we serve, that is a great disservice. For example: I didn’t grow
up with nor was educated in the use of multimedia in worship or for preaching.
However, I have since learned that only about 9% of the population are auditory
learners – and a lecture-style of preaching and witness is thus limited in its
effectiveness.
Now, do I personally like using images, movie clips, etc. in
my sermon illustrations? Personally, no. But I’m learning how to do it –
because it is effective for many and helps address the hermeneutical task of
preaching, which today has become a larger and more diverse method of verbal
AND non-verbal communication of interpretation of the biblical text… which is NOT
to be confused with exegesis, which is the more narrow focus of examination of
the text. I wasn’t taught this or raised with this, but they are effective
methods of preaching that I cannot ignore. God could care less whether or not I
“like” something personally.
We also have to be counselors, spiritual guides, able to
read/interpret a financial report, teach doctrine, lead catechesis, and develop
leadership to aid in all these things. None of us will be experts in any, much
less all, of these things. But they are part of the authority of being ordained
and licensed for ministry, and in a Wesleyan ethos we have to continually ask
ourselves these questions: (1) What shall we teach? (2) How shall we teach? (3)
What shall we do?
I used to think we used the model of medicine or law in
training our pastors and leaders (lay or clergy) for ministry. But I am now of
the opinion that we need to embrace the model of artisan/apprentice. It’s
relational. It’s modeled. We mentor others as we are mentored. It’s the education
the disciples received – and after 3 years, they were commissioned to “go and
teach.”
We’ve got a lot to unlearn, and a lot to learn. But oh my,
what a journey and opportunity!
The Rev. Sky Lowe McCracken is district superintendent for
the Paducah District of the Memphis Annual Conference.
10. THINGS FOR UNITED
METHODIST LAITY TO UNLEARN — FROM A LAYPERSON:
Editor’s Note: Recently Sky Lowe McCracken, Paducah District
Superintendent in the Memphis Annual Conference wrote about things that he believed
that clergy needed to unlearn in order to restore the church to vitality. In
response, Susan Sadler Engle, lay leader of the Paducah District wrote the
following.
Susan Sadler Engle, Lay Leader of the Paducah District of
the Memphis Annual Conference
To all of my fellow laity: We have been highly critical of
the clergy for a number of years now. We
have been very vocal about issues with those who serve our local congregations,
many valid concerns, and some unrealistic demands. Though the Church has been slow to respond to
the frustration, in recent years there has been a move on the part of the
leadership to look at education, pastoral care and the lack of vision that has
disconnected the local church from the community. The lack of discipleship in the local church
is reaching critical mass, and the lack of leadership from the clergy is being
discussed on every level.
That’s all great news, and important for a move to health
and vitality. It is just half of the
picture. It is time we do our own
inventory and look at the things we need to unlearn. This is my short list:
1). While our church leaders, Pastor, church staff, are
responsible to give vision, direction and guidance, they are not charged with
keeping us happy. We are equally called
to service in the Body of Christ, not only to be served. We are partner in ministry, not
consumers. The staff cannot fulfill
their responsibilities in outreach to the community if they are forever holding
our hands, listening to our laundry lists of complaints about temperature,
sermon topic and new hymns we have never sung before. It’s time we grow up, take responsibility for
our own part of the Kingdom and go to work alongside our church leaders, as we
are gifted and called to do. We were
ordained in our baptism after all, not to every role, but to a role.
2). the church building does not belong to us; it is an
asset for ministry. Our functions are
important, and fellowship as believers is essential, but they are not the sole
purpose of the building. Inviting the
community to see the building as a great meeting place will connect us with
people who would never cross the threshold for a Bible study or a worship
service. Groups who find a home in one
of our classrooms may find a home in our church family, particularly if we
happen to be in the building when they come and extend hospitality. We cannot lock the doors during the week in
order to keep the building in outstanding condition and the expenses down and
think this is a good decision for the life of our church. It will work for as long as we are here to
pay the bills, then one day one of us will be the last one to turn out the
light.
3). Worship on Sunday is not entertainment, and we are not
the audience. Worship is a time for us
to gather, hear God’s word, get filled up, and go in the power of the Spirit to
change the world. If you go home and
nothing changes, in you or in your world, it’s time to stop and consider where
you are disconnecting. Where there is
life, there is growth. If all of your
God stories are from years ago, it might be time to take your spiritual pulse.
4). There are a lot more of us (laity) than there are of
them (clergy). Why did we ever decide
sharing the Gospel was only for the ‘professionals’? Who has the greatest opportunity to share
the love of God with the community? We
do! What is the best way to share your
faith with others? Live it, all the
time, in all of the places you go. Be
the love of God the world is hungry for, offer grace and mercy, be the disciple
you would like others to become. In football terminology, most plays work
better if the team huddles up, hears the call and plays their position. We like to huddle up, hear the call and go
sit in the stand to see how it goes.
Let’s get on the field, people.
Real change, deep change, begins one person at a time. We have to do the hard work of moving from
consumer to partner, give up rights and pick up our responsibilities, desire
that others develop deep relationships with Jesus Christ enough to surrender
being the center of the church. Growing
up in grace means we are so secure in our identities as children of God and
people of immeasurable worth that we can afford to sacrifice for the sake of
others. What will we get if we choose to
be faithful? I believe we will begin to
see the God’s Kingdom come, and God’s will done. That’s a legacy for our children and
grandchildren that will be worth the discomfort change brings. It’s time brothers and sisters; let’s be the
change we are ready to see.
Susan Engle
Paducah District Lay Resource Leader
Memphis Conference
11. SENATE APPROVES
SWEEPING IMMIGRATION OVERHAUL, IN FINAL VOTE:
By BILL CHAPPELL
June 27, 2013 4:28 PM
The Senate approved a sweeping immigration bill Thursday,
endorsing a bill that would put millions of immigrants who illegally entered
the United States on a path to citizenship. The final vote tally on the bill
was 68 in favor, with 32 opposed.
The bill also includes measures that would punish employers
who take advantage of immigrant workers, as well as providing billions in
spending to employ fences and high-tech tools to help secure the border between
the U.S. and Mexico.
All 52 Democratic senators voted for the bill, along with 14
Republicans and two independents.
The legislation, Senate Bill 744, is widely seen as the
product of the efforts of the "Gang of 8," a group that includes
Sens. John McCain, R-Ariz., Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., Marco Rubio, R-Fla., Chuck
Schumer, D-N.Y., and Bob Menendez, D-N.J.
During today's final vote, the chamber briefly erupted in
laughter after Sen. Jerry Moran, R-Kan., mistakenly answered the roll call vote
with "Aye" — supporting the bill — before abruptly and loudly
correcting his mistake by yelling "No!"
Around midday Thursday, the Senate voted to invoke cloture
on the bill, called the Border Security, Economic Opportunity, and Immigration
Modernization Act, setting an end to debate on the legislation. It has grown to
nearly 2,000 pages, although that includes many pages of material that was
stricken during debate and compromise.
The bill has been seen as a main priority for Senate
Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., who insisted the chamber, would act on it
before the July 4 holiday. It is also a centerpiece of the Obama
administration's legislative agenda.
"Its landmark legislation that will secure our borders
and help 11 million people get right with the law," Reid said Thursday.
The tally of the cloture vote earlier today was also 68-32,
with 14 Republicans joining Democrats in voting for the motion. When the Senate
approved an amendment on border security to the bill earlier this week, the
vote was 67-27, with 15 Republicans voting in favor.
But it remains to be seen how the immigration bill will be
greeted in the House of Representatives. And in the Senate, opponents of the
bill have included Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and his
deputy, Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, along with Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, and Sen.
Jeff Sessions, R-Ala.
Several House Republicans are believed to be working on
their own versions of the legislation.
"This bill may pass the Senate today, but not with my
vote. And in its current form, it won't become law," McConnell said.
Other Republicans, such as Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, and
Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, sought to build support for the bill among their
party. Backers of the immigration overhaul have said they hoped to pass the
legislation with strong support, to improve its chances in the House.
Speaking before the vote began, Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt.,
invoked the memory of the late Sen. Ted Kennedy.
"I like to think that our old friend would be proud of
what we're doing," Leahy said.
12. GETTING TO ZERO:
WHAT YOU KNOW:
*Dr. Oveta Fuller
In one Kitwe neighborhood in the Copperbelt region of
Zambia, we frequently pass by a wall where the statement is printed “it is smart
to know your HIV status.”
This true statement likely was painted there some time ago.
However, for such a time as this with current biomedical developments that can
make HIV/AIDS a chronic rather than fatal disease, a more on target statement
is “it is foolish not to KNOW your HIV status!”
Did you “get to the test” during events of the National Day
of HIV Testing on June 27. If not, any day or week is a great moment to take
that critical step to take yourself and others to an HIV test site. Congregations
and organizations like the Missionary Society, the Young Peoples’ Division, the
Lay Organization, the Sunday School, the Christian Education Department, the
Evangelism and Church Growth ministry, the choirs, the Praise Team, the
Saturday or Thursday prayer group, the Liturgical Dancers, the Hospitality
Ministry, the clergy and ministerial staff, the Steward and Trustee Boards, the
ushers, the health ministry, the social clubs, the birthday month groups and
classes--- can make a huge impact on lives by including HIV screening as part
of sponsored events. Include education sessions and a chance to “get to the
test” for group members. Invite the surrounding community.
One more person who completes the HIV test is one more smart
person who begins to take control of HIV/AIDS. The more you know, the more it
just makes sense to stop HIV/AIDS.
Below are explanations of answers to the HIV/AIDS self-test.
Whether you scored above or below 80%, understand why the correct answer is
correct. Discuss the questions and answers with others in your family, church
and workplace. Learning is a lifelong process. Enjoy!
1. HIV can be transmitted by?
A. Saliva in kissing
B. Touching a person
with AIDS
C. *Sexual intercourse
D. Inhaling respiratory drops
E. Multiple mosquito
or tick bites
The fragile lipid membrane as the outer layer of HIV must be
intact for the virus to survive transmission. Enzymes, acid, pH or salt
concentration in fluids involved in other modes of microbial transmission
damage the HIV fatty membrane. Only blood, semen, vaginal fluid and breast milk
can protect the lipid membrane that is critical to virus infection. HIV does
not survive in respiratory drops or in the saliva of insects.
2. How can you tell if someone has HIV/AIDS?
A. *You cannot tell
B. They look tired
and ill
C. They carry an infectious disease ID card
D. They are thin and have no appetite
E. They have dry
rough skin
You cannot tell that a person has HIV/AIDS by their outward
appearance. You, and they, can only know from completing a test to detect
antibodies that were made to HIV at the first encounter. So get the test to
know. Healthy looking people can be HIV+ or have AIDS. People who look ill can
have many other disorders other than HIV/AIDS.
3. It is estimated that at the end of 2010 about how many
people worldwide were known to have been infected with HIV since it was
discovered?
A. 1 million
B. 15 million
C. 33 million
D. *60 million
E. 90 million
Since the virus and disease were officially recognized in
about 1981, about 30,000,000 people worldwide have died from HIV/AIDS or
related illnesses. In 2013, an estimated 33,000,000 people live with HIV
infection. Globally, on average HIV has infected about one person per 100
people.
4. Living with HIV can include?
A. Taking several
different anti-retroviral medicines
B. Avoiding
infectious agents
C. Medical care
D. Healthy diets
E. *All of these
Biomedical and clinical advances now available can allow one
to live a long productive life after HIV infection. However, living with HIV
requires focused diligence in nutrition, exercise, medical care, avoiding
infectious agents and protected sexual intercourse. It likely will include use
of anti-retroviral drugs. Under medical care, people who are living with HIV
(HIV+) can manage the infection similar to how a person with diabetes handles
their glucose levels as a requirement for wellness.
5. Which is true about testing for infection by HIV?
A. It is painful
B. It is
expensive
C. *It is a blood or saliva test to detect antibody to HIV
D. It should occur
only if you think you may have AIDS
The screening test for HIV infection does not detect virus.
It detects antibodies made to HIV as a footprint provided by the immune system.
The rapid test takes about 15-30 minutes. It uses a swab of the mouth or blood
from a finger prick. In many places in the USA and internationally, agencies
offer no cost HIV counseling and testing (HCT). See the G20 column of last week
or go to www/AIDS.gov to use the Testing Center locater that is based on zip
code.
6. Presence of sexually transmitted diseases such as herpes
simplex, syphilis, chlamydia and human papilloma virus (HPV).
A. *can make HIV
infection more likely to occur in a person
B. is unrelated to
HIV and AIDS
C. have been
eliminated by vaccines and antibiotics
D. each of the above
is true
E. not one of the
above is true
These STDs change the lining of the genital organs so to allow
easier access of HIV into capillaries and tissues. They also indicate
engagement in unprotected sex that would allow exposure to HIV. Thus they are
indicators that a person may be at higher risk for HIV infection that can lead
to AIDS if infection is undetected.
7. The key cells in the human body that are infected and
destroyed by HIV are:
A. Red blood cells
B. *T-lymphocytes
C. Nerve cells
D. Epidermal
cells
The cells infected by HIV are white blood cells that are a
key part of the immune system. The cells susceptible to HIV have the CD4
protein on the surface to distinguish them in function from CD8 and other white
blood cells such as B-lymphocytes. CD4 cells are a central coordinator of
immune responses that are destroyed by HIV replication. A person becomes immune
deficient and cannot fight off other invading microbes.
8. Infection with HIV that can eventually lead to AIDS is:
A. is mostly
preventable
B. can be avoided by
using the ABCs of infection prevention
C. is spreading rapidly
in the African American community
D. can occur with no
initial symptoms
E. *each statement
is true
Each one of the statements is true as has been discussed in
a G20 article. Using the ABCs at all times will prevent exposure to virus in
the four body fluids in which it can be transmitted. In the USA population that
is about 13% African American, about 50% of the known HIV infections and AIDS
cases are among African Americans. This is one reason for the continued focus
on HIV/AIDS by the AME Church and others who serve primarily within our
communities.
9. The structure of HIV is relatively fragile because it
has?
A. RNA genetic
material
B. *a fatty lipid outer membrane
C. protein in its capsid
D. none of the above is TRUE
HIV, a retrovirus family member, has an unusual RNA genome.
This RNA genome allows it to change rapidly (mutate) once the virus is inside
the body. HIV also has a protein inner coat (capsid) that surrounds the RNA.
However, HIV is relatively fragile compared to some other human viruses because
of the lipid (fat like) membrane that surrounds the entire virus. This membrane
and proteins inserted into it allow the virus to adhere to and enter a human
cell to deposit its genetic material into the cell’s interior. Only fluids that
protect the lipid membrane will transmit HIV that is intact structurally to
successfully infect a cell. HIV cannot be transmitted in other body fluids. See
question one.
10. An effective step towards reducing infection and
eliminating HIV/AIDS is
A. providing community leaders with an understanding of how
HIV is transmitted
B. using a combination of appropriate HIV/AIDS preventions
C. practicing the ABC’s at all times by individuals
D. making counseling and testing for HIV a routine part of
health care
E. *each of the above is TRUE
To stop HIV/AIDS will require use of combinations of
education, biomedical and social interventions and approaches. Each one of the
statements is an effective way to help reduce HIV infection. Used together with
other interventions not mentioned in the answers, we have an opportunity to
control and eventually eliminate HIV/AIDS.
Thank you to those who shared the HIV quiz questions with
others. Several emailed letters were received. We are delighted to know that
readers benefit from and appreciate the TCR commitment to keep a focus on
HIV/AIDS. Letters to the editor are welcomed.
June is National HIV Testing Month. Get to the test! It is foolish, potentially
fatal to your health, not to know your HIV status.
*The Rev. Dr. A. Oveta Fuller is an Associate Professor in
Microbiology and Immunology at the University of Michigan Medical School and
Adjunct Faculty at Payne Seminary. She served as pastor of Bethel AME Church in
Adrian, MI for seven years before primarily focusing on global HIV/AIDS
ministry. Currently, she serves at Brown Chapel AME Church in Ypsilanti,
Michigan in the 4th Episcopal District while continuing HIV/AIDS
research in parts of Zambia and the USA.
13. MEDITATION BASED
ON ROMANS 8:28-39:
*The Rev. Dr. Joseph A. Darby
Almost five decades ago, I came home from summer band
practice at Columbia, South Carolina’s Booker T. Washington High School
confused, angry and outraged. My friends
and I, who were running late to catch the last city bus home, took a short cut
across the University of South Carolina’s campus, where we were confronted and
physically thrown off campus by a U.S.C. police officer who said, “Don’t bring
your black behinds (he actually used another word) back unless you get a job as
a groundskeeper or janitor.”
I told my mother what happened, we talked about the
realities of southern segregation, and mom said, “I know it’s rough, but one of
these days, God will fix things.” I
thought of her words nine years later, when I graduated from a then integrated
U.S.C. and made a point of finding that same campus cop to let him know that I
was back! When I confronted him face-to-face, he talked about how times had changed and I said, “Not that
much!
I also thought of my mother’s words as I sat to write this
meditation on the day that the United States Supreme Court made the political
decision to cut out the heart of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, opening the
door for old racists with new rhetoric to make new efforts to deny some citizens
the right to register and vote. I was
confused, angered and outraged by that decision, I spoke to a lot of friends
who felt the same way and I really didn’t feel like writing a mid-week
meditation until I remembered the words of Eloise Janerette Darby - “I know
it’s rough, but one of these days, God will fix things.”
Remember my mom’s wise words - not just when you face unjust
situations, but also when life’s unexpected twists, turns and disappointments
leave you feeling confused, angry and outraged.
We’d do well to remember that this is still God’s world, that God still
has all power, that the words of the old spiritual are true: “I’m so glad,
trouble don’t last always” and that, as those who raised me used to say when I
did dubious things, “The Lord don’t like ugly.”
We’ll all face our share of confusion, anger and outrage
sooner or later, but when we go to God in prayer and let God use us as
instruments of peace, justice and progress, God will step into our worst situations,
give us new strength, show us new possibilities and never fail to bring us
ultimate victory.
Look beyond your headaches and heartaches and trust in the
God who can do anything but fail. This
world and those in it may sometimes leave you feeling confused, angry and
outraged, but don’t worry, one of these days, God will fix things.
Get Ready for Sunday, and have a great day in your house of
worship!
*The Rev. Dr. Joseph A. Darby is the Presiding Elder of the
Beaufort District of the South Carolina Annual Conference of the Seventh
Episcopal District of the African Methodist Episcopal Church
14. CLERGY FAMILY
CONGRATULATORY ANNOUNCEMENTS:
-- Congratulations to
Barbara Chester on the birth of granddaughter Carmyn Corinne Chester
Congratulations to Barbara Chester on the birth of her
granddaughter Carmyn Corinne Chester born June 21st. Carmyn is the daughter of
Stephen Paul and Janea Chester of Atlanta, GA. Steve is the son of Barbara
Chester and the late Rev. Amos T. Chester. "Thanking God that all went
well with the birth and that both mother and baby enjoys excellent
health."
Also, congratulations to Steve who was on the May cover of
the Atlanta Tribune along with his partner as "Who Runs the World? Entrepreneurs, the up-and-comers" for their
business ATL-Cruzers.
Congratulatory email can be sent to:
Mrs. Barbara Chester: revatc@aol.com
15. CLERGY FAMILY
BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:
We regret to inform you of the passing of Mrs. Evelyn Henry,
wife of Mr. Ed Henry, sister of the Rev. Agnes Henderson, pastor of New Allen
AME Church in Memphis, Tennessee, and the aunt of the Rev. Mary Hayslett of
Atlanta, Georgia.
Homegoing Arrangements for Mrs. Evelyn Henry:
Wake: Friday, June
28, 2013
6:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m.
N.J. Ford and Sons Funeral Home
12 South Parkway West Memphis, TN 38109
Phone: (901) 948-7755
Fax: (901) 948-7103
Funeral Services:
Saturday, June 28, 2013
Viewing of Remains
10:00 am-11:55 am
12:00 noon
St. Andrew AME Church
867 South Parkway East
Memphis, Tennessee
The Rev. Kenneth S. Robinson, MD, Pastor
Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the family of Mrs.
Evelyn Henry, care of N.J. Ford and Sons Funeral Home (address above).
16. CLERGY FAMILY
BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:
We regret to share news of the passing of Mr. Robin Michael
McKissack, brother of the Rev. Dr. James McKissack, associate minister at St.
Paul AME Church in Columbia, Tennessee.
Mr. Robin Michael McKissack entered eternal rest Wednesday, June
19, 2013 after suffering a brief illness.
Visitation, Tuesday, June 25, 2013 from 11:00 a.m. - 12:00
noon at Highland Hills Funeral Home, 2422 Brick Church Pike, Nashville, TN.
Funeral Services will be Tuesday, June 25, 2013 at 12:00
noon at Highland Hills Funeral Home, Trinity Lane and Brick Church Pike.
Family contact:
The Rev. Dr. James McKissack
C/o St. Paul AME Church
405 Church Street
Columbia, TN
17. CLERGY FAMILY
BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:
We regret to share news of the passing of Dr. Robert J.
Williams, Past Connectional Lay Organization Parliamentarian and Past President
of the Sixth Episcopal District Lay Organization.
Dr. Robert J. Williams entered eternal rest Thursday, June
20, 2013. He was born on February 17, 1925 in Macon, Georgia to the late Robert
G. and Clara J. Williams. He served in the United States Army. He retired as an
educator in the Bibb County School System after forty-one years of service.
Dr. Williams was married for 58 years to Gwendolyn C.
Williams, who preceded him in death as well as his son, Charles C. Williams. In
bereavement, he leaves one daughter, Wanda Lynne Williams (Larion); two sons,
Robert J. Williams, II and Edwin T. Williams; two granddaughters, Chelsea and
Lauren Williams; two nieces, Gladys L. Goodwin and Karen Y. Durham; other
relatives and friends.
Visitation, Thursday, June 27, 2013 from 6:00 p.m. - 7:00
p.m. in the Chapel at Hutchings Funeral Home.
Funeral Services will be Friday, June 28, 2013 at 11:15 a.m.
at Greater Allen Chapel A.M.E. Church, 269 Pursley Street. In lieu of flowers,
the family appreciates all acts of kindness and prayers.
Family contact:
Hutchings Service
291 Pursley Street,
Macon, GA 31201
Sign Guest Book: http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/macon/obituary.aspx?n=robert-j-williams&pid=165468036#fbLoggedOut#storylink=cpy
18. CLERGY FAMILY
BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:
We regret to inform you of the passing of Mrs. Andrew Louise
'Mother J' Jordan, 80 of Orangeburg, S.C., the mother of the Rev. Andrew
Jordan, pastor of Biggers AME Church, Manning South Carolina Central
Conference. Mrs. Jordan was a member of Williams Chapel AME in Orangeburg,
South Carolina.
Funeral - Tuesday, June 25, 2013- 11:00 a.m.
Williams Chapel AME Church
1198 Glover Street
Orangeburg, S.C.
29115
Telephone: (803) 536-0600
Dr. Caesar R. Richburg, Pastor
Services Entrusted to:
Bythewood Funeral Home
1195 Amelia Street
Orangeburg, S.C.
29115
(803) 534-3301
Condolences may be sent to:
The Rev. & Mrs. Andrew Jordan
832 Nance Street
Orangeburg, S.C. 29115
(803) 937-8018
19. CONGRATULATORY
ANNOUNCEMENTS PROVIDED BY:
Ora L. Easley, Administrator
AMEC Clergy Family Information Center
Email: Amespouses1@bellsouth.net
Web page: http://www.amecfic.org/
Phone: (615) 837-9736 (H)
Phone: (615) 833-6936 (O)
Cell: (615) 403-7751
Twitter: https://twitter.com/AMEC_CFIC
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/The-AME-Church-Clergy-Family-Information-Center/167202414220
20. CONDOLENCES TO THE BEREAVED FROM THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER:
The Chair of the Commission on Publications, the Right Reverend
T. Larry Kirkland; 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.
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