The Reverend Dr. Johnny Barbour, Jr., Publisher
The Reverend Dr. Calvin H. Sydnor III, the 20th Editor, The Christian Recorder
-- Ash Wednesday - February 10, 2016
-- Palm Sunday, March 20, 2016
-- Good Friday – March 25, 2016
-- Easter - Sunday, March 27, 2016
-- Pentecost - Sunday, May 15, 2016
--
Daylight Saving Time (United States) 2016 begins at 2:00 a.m. on Sunday, March
13, 2016
1. TCR EDITORIAL – I AM NOT CONFUSED, I AM
ANGRY:
Dr. Calvin H.
Sydnor III
The 20th Editor of The Christian Recorder
If I thought I was
confused when I wrote the previous editorial that was entitled, “I am confused, is anyone else confused,”
the use of the term “confused” was sort of “tongue in cheek” because I am not
really confused about the reality of the injustice experienced by a large
segment of our population in the U.S.
I had not intended
to deal with law enforcement terrorism this week because I wanted to address
some pastoral issues, which I love addressing, but the Chicago officials’
release this week of the video of police officers chasing and fatally shooting
an African-American teenager angered me.
The images show Cedrick
Chatman, a 17-year-old black youth running away from the police and being shot
in the back. Each time I viewed the
video, the angrier I got.
In November a video
shows Laquan McDonald being shot 16 times while he was walking away from the
policeman. As in the case of Cedrick
Chatman this week, the Laquan McDonald video was released under a judge’s order
after months of resistance from city officials.
And the add insult
to injury, in these two cases and probably many more cases, the City officials
had fought for months to keep the videos private. The Chicago city officials’ rationale for not
releasing the images is because they make the decision about how much
information the city should reveal when an officer fatally shoots a resident.
The police officers involved in the Laquan Chatman shooting have not been
charged with wrongdoing, and both remain on full-duty status. The officer
involved in the Cedrick Chatman is still a free man and if the past is any
indication, he will be exonerated.
If Chicago Mayor
Rahm Emanuel didn't know about the cover-up, he should have known. Everyone connected with the cover-up should
be disciplined.
We
have been saddened by the news of too many deaths of unarmed African American
citizens by white police officers.
We
recall Sandra Bland, a black woman stopped for a minor traffic violation of
switching lanes without using her turn signal, thrown to the ground, arrested
and found dead three days later.
We
read about the University of Cincinnati police officer, Ray Tensing, who shot unarmed Samuel Debose in
the head in July 2015. Mr. Dubose did not act aggressively or pose a threat to
the officer. And to add insult to injury, the police officer lied about being
dragged by Mr. Dubose’s car.
In
Chicago, both young men, Laquan McDonald and Cedrick Chatman were moving away
from the policemen and, it appears in the video that neither posed a threat to
law enforcement officers, but in both cases, the law enforcement officials felt
threatened and their excuses were supported by their superiors even in the face
of videos that showed a different scenario from of the policemen’s version of
events.
I
am angry about white police officers violently acting against black males and
females for seemingly minor issues; and in the case of Trayvon Martin, killed by a man who wanted to be a
cop.
Police
violence seems to be rampant and out of control. Police violence against black
citizens includes Hempstead, Texas; Chicago, Staten Island, Cleveland,
Baltimore, North Charleston, South Carolina; Ferguson, Missouri; and other
cities and probably a lot of other incidents of which we are
unaware.
I
am angry about use of force by
law enforcement generally and specifically as it relates to race; and most specifically as it relates to police crimes against blacks. It
seems to me that “Black Lives don’t matter.” Black women and children are
violated by white policemen who apparently feel threatened by black
Americans.
Let
me get back to Chicago and the videos we have been privy to see. I wonder how many more images are “out
there.”
I
am angry that the Chicago officials, and probably other officials, withheld
videos, in other words, “covered-up the evidence.” And, what makes me “more”
angrier (ebonically, “twice as angry”) is the fact that the videos appear to
show the policemen acting grossly inappropriate.
I
guess, if the officials, after seeing that the policemen acted inappropriately
took some kind of negative action against the offending policemen, like firing
them, demoting them, giving them letters of reprimand, suspending them “or
something,” but to “cover up the offense; do nothing and issue statements that
the offending policemen acted appropriately, without even a “blush of shame,”
shows disrespect and contempt and for law and order that they should be
protecting. It shows dishonesty and racism (and now I have used the “r” word).
If
you changed the race of the black men and women who have been killed by white
policemen, you could not even imagine that the outcomes would have been the
same.
If
Sandra Bland, the black woman stopped for a minor traffic violation of
switching lanes without using her turn signal had been white, she would have
never been thrown to the ground, arrested and found dead three days
later.
If
Trayvon Martin had been white, he would have never been confronted by George
Zimmerman.
If
Laquan McDonald and Cedrick Chatman had been white, they would still be
alive.
If an armed group
of militiamen who have taken over the federal wildlife refuge in Oregon had
been African Americans or Muslims, my gut tells me there would have been a
significant law enforcement response that would have resulted in significant
deaths.
I am angry about
inequality of law enforcement and the justice system!
It’s time for a
change and change needs to happen now!
2.
BISHOP RICHARD ALLEN COMMEMORATIVE STAMPS ARE AVAILABLE NOW - ORDER AT YOUR
POST OFFICE OR ONLINE AT HTTPS://WWW.USPS.COM/:
The Richard Allen
stamp is available. Every AME should
purchase a block of Richard Allen postage stamps. Join Ms. Carol Crosky and St
Paul AME – Ocala, Florida and organize a “Richard Allen Stamp WALK IN.” Take a group to your local post office; buy
stamps (for the year, monthly supply to mail your bills, gifts for special
people in your life). If your group exhausts the supply, ask your local
postmaster to order more." Let's
make this a significant event!
Also order Richard Allen stamp:
3. READER RESPONSE TO
EDITORIAL AND OTHER ISSUES:
-- To the Editor
RE: Richard Allen postage stamp
Elation
was unsurpassed on a visit to the Post Office in Frederiksted St. Croix, the
town of seven streets, as I caught a glimpse on the counter of the Sarah Vaughn
stamp. As I looked closer, what did I see but the likeness of Richard Allen on
the second stamp!
Excitedly
I called attention of the attendant to tell her that Allen was the founder of
my Church, the African Methodist Episcopal Church? Knowing me well, she smiled
broadly and I am sure expects me to buy out the supply. It has been a long time
waiting for this to happen. I could not
wait to exit the Post Office to share my excitement with Presiding Elder Uklyn
Hendricks, who was with me at the time to let him know that after many years of
trying it really happened. I shouted to
him, "I saw it, I saw it! .... Right here in St. Croix, USVI.
To
all of us who have been envisioning the coming of this day and those who have
been working to make it a reality, Gloria
in excelsis Deo!
Bishop
Frederick Talbot
4.
NEWS AROUND THE AME CHURCH:
--
Bishop Clement Fugh will be preaching at Emory’s Candler School of Theology on
Tuesday, Jan. 26th for the Annual Pan-Methodist Chapel Service.
-- CharmTV offers special Black History
Month screening of new series, “Who We
Are!”
This February, in
honor of Black History Month, CharmTV
will premiere, Who We Are, a new documentary series focused on Baltimore's
local and national heroes.
The first episode,
featuring Bishop Vashti Murphy McKenzie, the first female bishop of the
African-American Episcopal Church, will premiere Wednesday, February 17, 2016
at 8 p.m. on CharmTV.
As part of its
Black History Month celebration programming, CharmTV is also offering citizens,
educators, churches, and other community organizations an opportunity to screen
the special.
Organizations
interested in receiving a copy of the DVD for screening should contact cami.walker@baltimorecity.gov.
"CharmTV is very excited to premiere the first episode of Who
We Are during Black History Month. “Who
We Are” offers an intimate look at Baltimore's national and local heroes. I can't think of better programming that
reflects the 'essence of Baltimore' and we hope citizens enjoy it," said
CharmTV General Manager, Tonia Lee.
For a sneak peak of
the premiere episode, click here:
--
Lisle's DuPage AME church renames diversity institute for Sandra Bland
A Lisle church is
naming its annual diversity institute after a black woman who died in a Texas
jail cell three days after she was arrested during a...
5. I
ASK:
*Bishop Carolyn
Tyler Guidry
I
Ask:
Someone inquired
whether "extending the invitation to discipleship is an exclusive function
of clergy?"
Bishop
Guidry’s Response:
I am assuming you
have in mind extending the invitation at the end of a worship service which is
usually done by the "preacher." Extending the invitation to
discipleship is NOT an exclusive function of clergy. Anyone who is Christian and knows how to
invite others to salvation in Jesus Christ may do so, i.e. During a Lay service
when the participants are Lay Persons. (The Order of Receiving Members into the
Church is done by clergy; see Page 518 in The
Doctrine and Discipline of the African Methodist Episcopal Church 2012.
6.
BIG BETHEL AME CHURCH, ATLANTA, GA, RECEIVES $2,000,000 DISCOUNT ON MORTGAGE
LOAN:
Big Bethel African
Methodist Episcopal Church – under the leadership of the Rev. John Foster,
Ph.D., senior pastor – has successfully renegotiated its current mortgage loan
with a principal of $4,800,000 to a new mortgage loan with a principal of
$2,800,000, realizing a savings of $2,000,000. Working with Wells Fargo Bank as
the former loan holder and Citizens Trust Bank as the current loan holder, Big
Bethel has reduced its loan principal through a process of “Discounting.”
“These negotiations have been ongoing with Wells Fargo and Citizens Trust for
more than two years. God has blessed Big Bethel in a mighty way to realize this
reduction in the amount owed and of course the savings on our monthly mortgage
note,” said Dr. Foster. The new monthly mortgage savings exceed ten thousand
dollars. “We are awed by the greatness of our God and how He has blessed us
through these negotiations,” said Dr. Foster.
Mortgage
Loan Reduction Celebration
In recognition of
the discounted loan, Big Bethel hosted a Mortgage Loan Reduction Celebration
ceremony on Sunday, November 15, 2015. Attending the ceremony were
representatives from the following groups: Wells Fargo Bank, Citizens Trust Bank,
Bethel Towers, the Commission on Stewardship and Finance, the Big Bethel
congregation and administrative staff, and City of Atlanta Organizations. These
seven entities all contributed to making this loan reduction a reality. Mrs.
Rasheen Lucas – Wells Fargo’s loan officer for Big Bethel – stated: “This loan
reduction happened because of the right people in the right organizations
coming together at the right time. I am delighted to play a role in making this
deal come to fruition.”
“Big Bethel has been
progressing with their property development by leaps and bounds over the past
couple of years. They are moving forward in a powerful way which will benefit
the entire community.” said Ms. Jennifer Ball.
Big
Bethel Campus Development Plan
The two million
dollar mortgage reduction came at an opportune time in the life cycle of Big
Bethel’s strategic planning. Big Bethel AME Church, in conjunction with the
Benoit Group/Herman Russell Construction, has entered into a Memorandum of
Understanding (MOU) to develop a 120 million dollar four-phase development
project. This project includes the following four phases: i) the renovation of
a 160 unit, low-income apartment condominiums, ii) the construction of a
multi-level, 700 unit parking deck, iii) the construction of a 1,100 student
commercial dormitory, with retail space, and iv) the development of new and
renovated 35,000 sq. ft. retail/office space on
the frontage of Auburn Avenue. “The $2,000,000 mortgage reduction allows
us to leverage the savings towards the project,” Pastor Foster explained, “It
puts the Church in a better position to move forward.”
The Memorandum of
Understanding, in support of the Big Bethel Campus Development Project, is
expected to be concluded by late 2016. The construction phase of the project is
expected to begin during the 2017 – 2020 time period. One potential scenario
for the construction timetable is to begin the Bethel Towers and Parking Lot
phases concurrently, to be followed by the Student Housing/Retail Space, and
ending with the Auburn Avenue Retail/Office Space.
“I want to take
this opportunity to thank Bishop Preston Williams for his visionary leadership
of the Sixth Episcopal District. He has encouraged us to move forward with
God’s vision at the local church level,” said Dr. Foster, “Bishop Williams
inspires us to strive to realize God’s plan for our lives, both individually
and collectively.”
God is doing great
things at Big Bethel AME Church, as we proclaim that “Jesus Saves!”
7.
AME ELECTED JUDGE TO THE MUNICIPAL COURT OF DAYTON, OHIO:
--
Ms. Mia Wortham, Third Episcopal District General Counsel, elected Judge to the
Municipal Court of Dayton, Ohio
--- Mia Wortham Spells Takes Office
Marsha Bonhart-Neilson
As a child, Judge Mia Wortham Spells became infatuated
with the legal process. She listened carefully when her father absorbed
instruction on recorded tapes of legal courses he took by correspondence. The
late Rev. William Hopson was a presiding elder in the Pittsburgh District of
the AME Church. He was blind, but was never handicapped in his faith or his
knowledge of The Word and he instilled his passion for God and the AME Church
in his daughter. She later commissioned those same values in her law
practice and as a prosecutor. "Often because of life's
circumstances, people don't follow the Golden Rule, either because of drugs,
alcohol, lack of family involvement, lack of love or self love," says the
newly elected Dayton (Ohio) Municipal Court Judge. Wortham Spells has had
much practice advocating this biblical principle. She has 28 years experience
as a practicing attorney in Dayton and has sat on the judicial bench as an
acting judge before winning her six year term on November 3rd.
The active community advocate first entertained becoming
an administrator of justice 12 years ago. Her belief that a comprehensive drug
program can be an instrument to reduce crime fuels her faith in servant
leadership. “I saw people who made huge mistakes and didn't have the ability to
overcome those mistakes and will live the rest of their lives suffering as a
result. I have seen devastation to their families and to their
communities," she says. "I wanted to work in the legal field to do
what I believe is necessary in terms of programs, probation, community service
and anything else that can assist people who come through the legal
system."
Growing up as the daughter of an itinerant preacher,
Dayton's newest judge calls Pennsylvania her home state. After high school, she
made her way to Ohio to attend Wilberforce University, her father's alma mater.
Graduating in 1977, she then pursued and received her law degree from the
University of Dayton in 1986. Initially joining the 3rd Episcopal
District's Wayman AME Chapel, Mia was a member of Greater Allen AME. She
found a strong adviser in the Rev. Dr. Floyd Alexander, whom she knew as a
friend of her father. Through his confirmation, she became legal counsel for
the Church's 3rd District and became a Spiritual Daughter of Bishop McKinley
Young. Her support was further strengthened by another Spiritual Father,
Presiding Elder Rev. Earl G. Harris, who pastored in Pittsburgh and also knew
her father well. All three were in attendance when she took the oath of
office, January 3rd at the historic Old Courthouse in downtown Dayton.
Wortham Spells says she will combine her love for church
and the law to create equal justice in her decision making. "You take an
oath to follow the law whether you agree or not, you have to follow the law,
but even the law has its limits. Your conscience has to guide you."
She acknowledges for the most part, the Judeo-Christian ethics upon which laws
are based are in step with biblical precepts. So she will always be guided by
her faith, her moral censor and her legal understanding, beliefs that, at an
early age, she learned to develop as the building blocks of her life.
8. BISHOP & MOTHER
WILLIAMS HONORED BY SIXTH DISTRICT & CONNECTIONAL AME CHURCH AT THEIR
RETIREMENT CELEBRATION:
Thursday, October 22, 2015, as part of the Sixth
Episcopal District’s Midyear festivities, approximately 1,500 people gathered
from across the globe to pay tribute to one of the most prolific bishops in
recent AME Church history. Colleagues, friends and family convened at The
Classic Center in Athens, Georgia, U.S.A., to honor the Right Rev. Dr. Preston
W. Williams II & Supervisor Wilma D. Webb Williams as they celebrated their
impending retirement from Episcopal and pastoral service in the African
Methodist Episcopal Church.
As an Episcopal team, this momentous occasion marked the
end of 16 years of superb Episcopal service as leaders of the 17th District
(2000-2004), 7th District (2004-2012), and 6th District (2012-2016). For Bishop
Williams, this elegant event served as a fitting salute to 57 years of
ministerial service to the A.M.E. Church.
In his welcome letter found at the beginning of the
evening’s printed program, Bishop Williams stated, “I pray that Mother Dear and
I were able to convey a spirit of love and faith during our visitations across
each Episcopal district in which we served.” Many of the attendees who traveled
from far and near knew first hand of Bishop Williams’ deep spirit of love and
faith. All came to pay tribute to this exemplary bishop whose greatness flows
from his profound humility, open-heartedness, loving-kindness, anointed spirit,
and the divine grace given to him directly by God.
In attendance were: Bishop Gregory G.M. Ingram, Bishop
Reginald T. Jackson and Supervisor Jackson, Bishop Paul J.M. Kawimbe, Bishop E.
Earl McCloud Jr., Bishop McKinley Young, retired Bishop Frank C. Cummings,
retired Bishop Zedekiah Grady and Supervisor Grady, retired Bishop Cornal
Henning Sr., retired Bishop Robert Webster, retired Bishop Carolyn Tyler
Guidry, General Officer Rev. Dr. Teresa Fry Brown, and Episcopal Committee
Chairman Rev. Dr. Harold Mayberry.
Other dignitaries included: Ambassador Andrew Young,
former Mayor of Atlanta, Georgia and former United States Ambassador to the
United Nations; Rev. Dr. Leah G. Fitchue, first woman President of both Payne
Theological Seminary in Wilberforce, Ohio and the Association of Theological
Schools (ATS); Rev. Dr. Edward L. Wheeler, President of the Interdenominational
Theological Center (ITC) in Atlanta, Georgia; Rev. Dr. John Green,
President/Dean of Turner Theological Seminary in Atlanta, Georgia; Rev. Dr.
Stanley Pritchett, President of Morris Brown College in Atlanta, Georgia;
Bishop W. Darin Moore, Presiding Prelate, Western District, A.M.E. Zion Church;
and the Honorable Nancy Denton, Mayor of the City of Athens, Georgia.
The affair began at 7:00 p.m. as the distinguished
guests processed into the ballroom announced by the Master of Ceremony, Mr.
Michael Thurmond, Esquire, and the Mistress of Ceremony, Ms. Xernona Clayton,
President and CEO of the Trumpet Awards Foundation. With natural chemistry, the
two MC’s ushered the evening along with bright smiles and warm laughter which
added to the joyful atmosphere.
The opening prayer was a powerful invocation delivered
by Dr. Leah G. Fitchue, President of Payne Seminary, whose spirited message was
reflective of her great admiration and respect for Bishop Williams. For more
than a decade Bishop Williams and Dr. Fitchue have developed an extraordinary
working relationship often teaming up to educate, elevate and inspire the
hearts, minds, and souls of thousands of clergy and laity. Together, they have
presented numerous theological institutes in various Episcopal districts,
bringing the brightest theologians out of the classrooms of academia and
directly to the people of the A.M.E. Church. Through the divinely inspired work
of these two extraordinary A.M.E. leaders, thousands of clergy and laity were
able to access seminary level training in the comfort of their own local church
communities. Similarly, numerous A.M.E. clergy were awarded scholarships to
attend Payne Seminary, which made possible their pursuit of their formal
educations in the form of Master of Divinity degrees. On this special evening,
Dr. Fitchue’s presence and prayers were a testament to the great things that
she and Bishop Williams accomplished together. The fertile seeds that these two
exceptional servant-leaders sowed will form their historical legacy of
education, elevation and empowerment which will live on long after they both
have gone from here to eternity.
Bishop Williams’ four children, Arnold, Stella,
Priscilla and Prestina, made their way to the dais to offer insight about their
father from a family perspective. Lovingly they shared stories from their
childhood and sang gospel songs as tribute to their father and praise to God.
Following The Occasion delivered by the Rev. Dr. John
Foster, Senior Pastor of Big Bethel AME Church in Atlanta, Georgia, Bishop
Williams was presented with a proclamation from the United States House of
Representatives from the office of Henry “Hank” Johnson, U.S. Representative
for Georgia’s 4th Congressional District, which in part read: “Whereas, Bishop
Preston Warren Williams II has provided stellar leadership to his church on an
international level… Whereas, with the support of his wife Dr. Wilma Delores
Webb Williams, and under the guidance of God, has pioneered and sustained the
6th Episcopal District, as an instrument in our nation that uplifts the
physical, spiritual and mental welfare of our citizens; and Whereas, this
remarkable and tenacious man of god has given hope to the hopeless, fed the
hungry and is a beacon of light to those in need; and Whereas, Bishop Williams
is a spiritual warrior, a man of compassion, a fearless leader and a servant to
all, but most of all a visionary who has shared his passion to spread the
gospel of Jesus Christ; and Whereas, the U.S. Representative of the Fourth District
of Georgia has set aside this day to honor and recognize Bishop Preston Warren
Williams II, as he celebrates service in ministry and to salute him as he
retires from pastoral leadership; A true man of excellence. Now, therefore, I,
Henry C. “Hank” Johnson, Jr. do hereby proclaim October 22, 2015 as Bishop
Preston Warren Williams II Day in the 4th Congressional District.”
Similarly, the Honorable Rev. Karen Bennett, Georgia
State Representative of District 94, presented Bishop Williams with a Resolution
from the Georgia House of Representatives which in part read: “Whereas, during
his illustrious career, Bishop Williams was actively involved in Atlanta's
Board of Education, serving 19 years in various capacities as President, Vice
President, Chairman of the Superintendent Search Committee, and Chairman of the
Finance Committee; and Whereas, he has served as the pastor of numerous A.M.E.
Church congregations throughout the State of Georgia, including Bethel A.M.E.
Church in Augusta, Georgia, Paradise A.M.E. Church in Jefferson, Georgia, Saint
Mark A.M.E. Church in Athens, Georgia, and Allen Temple, Saint Paul and Trinity
A.M.E. Churches in Atlanta, Georgia; and Whereas, he has been instrumental in
saving Morris Brown College for the A.M.E. Church, the State of Georgia, and
the nation, as an historic institution of higher learning with a long and proud
history that is dedicated to uplifting the minds, spirits, and souls of our
country's youth; and Whereas, it is abundantly fitting and proper that the outstanding
accomplishments of this remarkable Georgian be appropriately recognized. Now,
therefore, be it resolved that Reverend Dr. Preston Warren Williams II is
recognized and honored for the immeasurable contributions he has made
throughout the State of Georgia and the world and extended best wishes for
success in his future endeavors.”
The Honorable Nancy Denson, Mayor of the City of Athens,
Georgia, where the evening’s affair was held, presented Bishop Williams with
both a proclamation and a key to the city. In part the proclamation read:
“Whereas, Bishop Williams was instrumental in bringing several of the A.M.E.
Church’s annual meetings to Athens, Georgia which has had a profoundly positive
impact on the Athens economy and bolstered the business and civic community
relationships with the A.M.E. Church; and Whereas, Athens is home to numerous
colleges and universities, we salute Bishop Williams for his successful efforts
in saving Morris Brown College for the A.M.E. Church, the State of Georgia, and
the nation, so that future generations will be able to attend this historic
institution of higher learning; and Whereas, the Unified Government of
Athens-Clarke County, Georgia commends Bishop Williams for the significant
economic, social, political, and theological contributions he has made to
communities throughout the State of Georgia, the nation and the world. Now,
therefore, I, Nancy B. Denson, Mayor of the Unified Government of Athens-Clarke
County, Georgia extend congratulations to Bishop Preston Warren Williams II and
wish him success and happiness in his future endeavors as he prepares to retire
from 57 years of ministerial service in the African Methodist Episcopal
Church.” Mayor Denson further stated that although the awarding of the key to
the City of Athens is extremely rare, she was compelled to present the key to
Bishop Williams as a token of gratitude for his lifetime spent in service to
others.
One of the evening’s keynote addresses was delivered by
Ambassador Andrew Jackson Young, American politician, diplomat, activist and
pastor from Georgia who served as a Congressman from Georgia’s 5th
Congressional District, the United States Ambassador to the United Nations, and
Mayor of Atlanta. He served as President of the National Council of Churches U.S.A.,
was a member of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) during the
1960’s Civil Rights Movement, and was a supporter and friend of Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr. Ambassador Young was greeted with a standing ovation and
rousing applause as he spoke passionately about the excellent work accomplished
by the Atlanta City School Board during Bishop Williams’ tenure as President of
the Board. He commented on the often divisive dynamics and contentious issues
that plague contemporary governmental leadership and reflected that, “We did
not have those types of problems when Preston Williams was President of the
Board. Under his leadership we had a spirit-led Board that was about doing the
greatest good for our citizens and communities.”
Ambassador Young asserted that, “This nation is
fractured, polarized and we will continue to need your relationship with God to
intercede on our behalf… One of our proudest moments was when Emanuel A.M.E.
Church in Charleston, South Carolina stood together as Christians in the face
of tragedy and showed the nation and world what God’s grace can do… Bishop
Williams has been a blessing in the U.S. and Africa having accomplished
extraordinary things there.”
Picking up where Ambassador Young left off, The Rev. Dr.
Edward L. Wheeler, President of the Interdenominational Theological Center
(ITC) came to the podium and made one of the evening’s most memorable
statements. Dr. Wheeler said, “Bishop Richard Allen is known as the founding
father of our Zion. Bishop Daniel Payne is known as the Bishop of Education.
But I believe history will look back and Bishop Preston W. Williams II will be
regarded as the Bishop of Church Growth and Expansion.” As Ambassador Young had
earlier stated that Bishop Williams was, “A blessing to Africa,” Dr. Wheeler
also referenced the extraordinary work accomplished by Bishop Williams during
his tenure as the Presiding Prelate of the 17th Episcopal District, which at
that time encompassed eight (8) countries in Central Africa.
During four years under Bishop Williams’ leadership
(2000-2004), the 17th District grew at a stunning rate, adding tens of
thousands of members to its roles, expanding the District’s membership to 1,040
churches. The District grew from seven (7) Annual Conferences to sixteen (16),
and from twenty-four (24) Presiding Elder Districts to eighty-six (86). This
astronomical increase in membership required that the 17th District be split
into two separate parts forming a new 20th Episcopal District at the 47th
session of the General Conference. This historic feat was accomplished with the
guidance of the Holy Spirit and the blessing of God and according to Dr.
Wheeler will cement Bishop Williams’ legacy as one of the most prolific
bishops, in regard to church growth and expansion, in the entire history of the
African Methodist Episcopal Church.
Next, Bishop Williams’ life long attorney and friend,
Mr. Keith Wiener, Esquire, spoke about the character of the man he had known
for more than 40 years. Mr. Weiner stated, “As Bishop Williams’ attorney my job
has been to advise Bishop Williams as to what he can do according to the law.
However, Bishop Williams has always been more interested in, not what he can do
legally, but what he should do morally. Bishop Williams has always been focused
on the preeminent question, which is: what is the right thing to do.”
Following Attorney Weiner, numerous individuals and
organizations made heartfelt presentations filled with appreciation and
gratitude to Bishop and Mother Williams, including: retired Bishop Frank C.
Cummings; retired Bishop Carolyn Tyler Guidry; retired Bishop Cornal G. Henning
Sr.; Bishop Paul J.M. Kawimbe; the Rev. Dr. Harold Mayberry, Senior Pastor,
First A.M.E. Church, Oakland, California, and Chairman, Episcopal Committee,
A.M.E. Church; the Rev. Alan H. Wicker, President, 6th District Presiding
Elders’ Council; the Rev. Dr. Juennarl Keith, Presiding Elder, Mount Pleasant
District, 7th District A.M.E. Church; Mrs. Barbara Clayton Hudson, President,
6th District WMS; Mr. Michael Brown, President, 6th District Lay Organization;
Ms. Kabrina Bass, Episcopal Director, 6th District Christian Education; Ms.
Sandie Brown, Episcopal Commissioner, 6th District DMC; Mrs. Dorothy Ridley,
Episcopal President, 6th District MSWWO Plus PK’s; the Rev. Vandy Simmons,
Episcopal President, 6th District Sons of Allen; the Rev. Velma Grant,
Episcopal President, 6th District Women In Ministry; Mrs. Monica Bryant,
Episcopal Director, 6th District YPD; Ms. Victoria Jenkins, member of the
Morris Brown College Board of Trustees; the Rev. Dr. William Watley, Senior
Pastor, Saint Philip A.M.E. Church, Atlanta, GA; Attorney Renardo Hicks,
General Counsel, 6th District A.M.E. Church; and Dr. Sheila Cook and the Rev.
Veronica Lewis, Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc.
After a sumptuous meal and a well-preached word
delivered by Bishop W. Darin Moore, Presiding Prelate of the Western District
of the A.M.E. Zion Church, the grand moment had finally arrived as the two
honorees, arm-in-arm approached the microphone to say a word together. As is
the way they led each church and Episcopal district to which they were
assigned, they stood together, side-by-side, as one; a team of two sent to
teach and preach, guide, inspire and love.
In a soft and sweet tone, Mother Williams opened by
saying, “I will bless the Lord at all times; His praise shall continually be in
my mouth. My soul makes its boast in the Lord; let the humble hear and be glad.
O’ magnify the Lord with me, and let us exalt His name together… Thank you for
helping us celebrate our retirement. We have given our time, wisdom and
knowledge in trying to help our Zion grow in the ways of God. We have tried to
teach through example, always using the Bible as our guide to show how God
would have us to love each other and pray for one another… Think on those
things which you have been taught to do for Christ and work on them. Give God
your heart, read and study your Bible.
Allow God to speak to you… Let us make good use and not squander the
time He has given to us. I would like to close with one of our favorite hymns
which says, “Let Jesus lead you. Let
Jesus lead you. He’s a mighty good leader. He led my father. He led my mother.
All the way from earth to heaven. Let Jesus lead you all the way.”
The final words of the evening were reserved for the
chief-preacher, the master-pastor who was born in a tiny southern town in rural
Georgia; who at a young age answered the call from Christ to lead His people to
salvation; who through the anointing of the Holy Spirit and the grace of God
rose to the apex of ecclesiastical leadership as a bishop of the African
Methodist Episcopal Church. Leaning into the microphone with his booming
baritone voice, Bishop Preston Warren Williams II brought a lifetime of
experience to his closing remarks, which were, “Thank you. Thank you to
everyone who came tonight to support Mother Dear and me. We are overjoyed with
your presence at this occasion which is so special to us. Thank you for all of
your support over the years and we ask for your continued prayers as Mother and
I prepare to close this chapter of Episcopal service and open a new chapter
full of exciting possibilities. As always, we will continue working for the
Lord and we encourage you to include Christ in all that you do. We love you, go
in peace, do well, and God bless you.”
*Benjamin Harrison, Communications Director, 6th
District AME Church
9. THE 50TH QUADRENNIAL SESSION OF THE GENERAL
CONFERENCE OBSERVER REGISTRATION INFORMATION:
Go to the AMEC Website: http://ame-church.com/. From the main page you
will see banners that continuously scroll at the top of the page. When
the General Conference banner comes up you can click on it to get additional
information.
Here is the link to that information:
10.
THE WHITE HOUSE
On Tuesday night,
January 12, 2016, President Obama delivered the final State of the Union
address of his presidency.
Here's what the
President said:
Watch
his final State of the Union address.
He wasn't focused
on our past -- he was focused on our future. He spoke about how America's
unique strengths as a nation give us everything we need to build a better
future for generations to come.
"That's the
America I know. That’s the country we love. Clear-eyed. Big-hearted. Undaunted
by challenge.
Optimistic that
unarmed truth and unconditional love will have the final word. That’s what
makes me so hopeful about our future. I believe in change because I believe in
you, the American people."
Read
the full speech.
11.
TURNER THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY 122ND FOUNDERS' CONVOCATION HOTEL
ACCOMMODATIONS:
- The Sheraton
Atlanta Airport Hotel:
Telephone: (770)
997-1100 - Hotel Reservations: (888) 627-7046
The room rate is
$109 per night, plus tax. Ask for the "Turner
Theological Seminary block."
Please
Note: Hotel Reservations
MUST be made by January 19, 2016.
After January 19,
2016, all hotel rooms will be $199 per night.
For Additional
Information Contact:
The Rev. Rae D.
Fitch
Administrative
Assistant to the President/Dean
Turner Theological
Seminary
The
Interdenominational Theological Center
702 Martin Luther
King Jr Dr SW
Atlanta, Georgia
30314
Telephone: (404)
527-0080
FAX: (404) 527-4687
12.
STATE OF THE UNION/CHURCH REFLECTIONS:
*The Rev. Velma E.
Grant, M.Div., Th.M
The president of
the United States of America, Barack Obama delivered his final State of the
Union address to the citizens of America on January 12, 2016. The answers or
responses to the four issues or questions in the final address are as important
to current situations as well as to America’s future and the future of
America’s citizens. President Obama, being the compassionate, thoughtful
president that he is, is not only concerned about the state of affairs during
his presidency but it is apparent that his concern about the state of affairs
of the country will continue after his presidential term is completed.
The four
issues/questions are (1) how do we give everyone a fair shot at opportunity and
security in this new economy? (2) How do we make technology work for us and not
against us? (3) How do we keep America safe and lead the world without becoming
its policeman? (4) How do we make our politics reflect what’s best in us and
not what’s worse? President Obama perhaps, considers these questions important
because the answers will determine whether America remains the compassionate,
shining star of the world.
These questions
modified somewhat can be posed to the African Methodist Episcopal Church (AMEC)
as well, to determine whether or not the AMEC emerges as the compassionate, shining
star that makes a difference in the lives of the children of God.
Modifying President
Obama’s first issue to pose to the Church would ask – How do we give everyone a
fair shot at opportunity for pastoral and other
leadership positions in the AMEC? Yes, how does one promote fairness in
the Church when there are many instances of inequity and unfairness that stem
from age-old practices that seem to be hard to dismantle? How will the Church
embrace equal opportunity when there is a tendency to protect some individuals,
and deny opportunities to other individuals, who might be academically
qualified and more gifted than others who seem to receive access to greater
opportunities despite their inadequacies and lack of academic training.
The modification of
issue number two would ask – How do we make technology work for the Church to
promote evangelism, growth, and Christian Education? We make technology work by
keeping abreast of technological advances or software, utilizing technology to
educate and train congregational members. The Church can use technology to
share information, cut cost, and enhance present ministries that are relevant
to various generations. The use of technology will not decrease but will only
increase in the future; therefore, the Church should embrace, utilize, and
support technology as an everyday part of ecclesial life and community that is
not just for the younger generation but also again for various generations and
cultures.
Modification number
three would ask – How do we keep the Church and its members safe in this
present environment with its penchant for gun violence, while extolling “the
doors of the Church are still open.” The
doors of the Church are certainly still open, but they should be open with an
increased level of vigilance and awareness from its leaders and members that
will prayerfully avoid a repeat of the fateful June 17, 2015 incident in
Charleston, South Carolina. That fateful day will be etched forever in the
memories of members of the African Methodist Episcopal Church because of the
violence and death that occurred in the safe haven of Mother Emanuel A.M.E.
Church. An act of kindness resulted in nine dead and many scarred for life and
while the physical scars will heal, the emotional scars are the hidden barriers
to sanity and well-being for many.
The fourth
modification would pose the question – How do we make our Church politics
reflect what’s best in us and not what’s worse? This question might not seem
relevant to some in the Church who do not believe that politics is an issue in
the Church, but, the modified question, is relevant particularly since the 50th
Quadrennial of the Church’s General Conference is on the horizon.
Will future
generations make an assessment and conclude that Church politics reflected not
what’s best in us, but what is actually worse, based on gender exclusion,
patriarchal practices, and favoritism. Church politics can reflect the best in
us when we make decisions based on equity, fairness, and justice instead of
decisions that exclude and marginalize some in favor of others.
President Barack
Obama in posing those questions in his final State of the Union address
demonstrated that his interest in the well-being and progress of the country
would not stop at the end of his presidential term. How America responds to the
issues in the State of the Union address will determine whether or not the
country thrives by being equitable and fair with all citizens, moves forward
with technological advances, protects the citizens of America and respects the
citizens of other countries, while electing politicians that reflect the best
human spirit and intentions of Americans.
Likewise the
response of the African Methodist Episcopal Church to those modified questions
will again showcase that the AMEC makes a positive difference not only in the
lives of her members but in the lives of all of God’s children regardless of
age, race, sex, socioeconomic status as well as familial bonds or association.
*The Rev. Velma E.
Grant, M.Div., Th.M. is the WIM President, Sixth Episcopal District and the
associate minister, First Saint Paul AME in Lithonia, Georgia
13.
AME PASTOR WILL LEAD THE BLACK CLERGY OF PHILADELPHIA AND VICINITY:
By Angelena Spears
Philadelphia
Conference Reporter
The Rev. Jay
Broadnax, pastor of the historic Mt. Pisgah AME Church, Philadelphia, has been
elected the new president of the Black Clergy of Philadelphia and
Vicinity. The election was held November
19 and the installation ceremony is planned for January 31 at Mt. Pisgah.
Prior to the
election, the Rev. Broadnax served as the first vice president of the
organization from 2012 to 2015.
During the November
election, the Rev. Paul J. Thomas, pastor of AME Union Church, Philadelphia,
was elected to serve as the organization’s General Secretary.
The 34-year-old
organization represents over 100 faith based organizations. The organization was formed in 1981 when
black clergy joined together to organize a demonstration to end a 51 day
boycott for the City of Philadelphia School District. Their strategy to block a major intersection
in the city proved effective and gave birth to the alliance.
Other AME clergy
who have served as president of the organization have included the Rev. O.
Urcille Ifill, when he was the pastor of AME Union Church, Philadelphia; the
Rev. Joseph D. Patterson, when he was the pastor of Hickman Temple,
Philadelphia; the Rev. Vernal E. Simms, Sr., when he was the pastor of Morris
Brown, Philadelphia; and the Rev. Ellis I. Washington, when he was the pastor
of St. Matthew AME Church, Philadelphia.
The Rev. Broadnax
said, “I hope to increase the organization’s presence in the community and
build on its tradition of advocacy on issues affecting our people such as
reform of the criminal justice system, full and fair funding for public
education, and economic justice.”
The Rev. Broadnax,
who is originally from the Boston area, has been the pastor of Mt. Pisgah since
2005. The church is the oldest AME
church in West Philadelphia. The granite
structure at 41st and Spring Garden streets, gained national
recognition in the 1980s when it was chosen to depict the fictional First
Community Church for NBC’s popular AMEN television show, which starred Sherman
Hemsley and Clifton Davis.
The Rev. Broadnax
also serves as the executive director of the First Episcopal District Christian
Education Department.
He and his wife,
Ingrid, have one daughter, Dara Jianna Broadnax.
14.
FROM A HISTORICAL POINT OF VIEW - A PROUD CHURCH HERITAGE:
The year 2016 will
resonate throughout the world and in American history as a significant period
in time for the African Methodist Episcopal Church. There are two outstanding events that are a
direct result of the forward thinking and progressive actions of the founder of
our denomination-- Richard Allen. “Negro
Richard”, as he was called during his early years as a slave, would rise up to
improve himself as a human being and would also better the lives of countless
people with whom he would directly or indirectly came in contact.
It is because of
Richard Allen’s visionary outlook on life in particular and people in general
and his standing as one of America’s most active and influential black leaders
that he is being honored by the United States Postal Service with a Richard
Allen Commemorative Forever Stamp on Tuesday February 2, with a first-day
ceremony at the Church he founded, Mother Bethel in Philadelphia. The other event is the celebration of the
denomination’s 200 years in its influential existence beginning July 6, at the
50th Quadrennial Session of the AME Church General Conference in Philadelphia,
PA. These two major celebrations are
because of the hard work, determined effort, fortitude and leadership of the
Right Reverend Richard Allen, the first consecrated Bishop of the African
Methodist Episcopal Church. To God be
the Glory.
As many of you
know, Richard Allen was born a slave on February 14, 1760 in Philadelphia and
sold into slavery at a plantation in Delaware.
The second owner sold his mother and three siblings but kept Richard his
older brother and a sister. Eventually,
Richard and his brother purchased their freedom for $2,000 each. Richard changed his name from “Negro Richard”
to “Richard Allen”. During his lifetime,
Richard had several titles including Shoemaker, Manager of a successful
chimney-sweeping company, Journalist, Civil Rights Activist, Educator and
Minister just to name a few.
Allen converted to
Methodism at the age of 17. He joined
St. George’s Methodist Episcopal Church, in Philadelphia where blacks and
whites worshipped together. There, he
became an assistant minister and conducted prayer meetings for blacks. In 1787, frustrated with the limitations the
church placed on him and black parishioners, Allen left the church with the
intention of creating an independent Methodist Church. That same year, along with the Reverend
Absalom Jones, Allen helped found the Free African Society, a
non-denominational religious mutual-aid society dedicated to helping the black
community. More importantly, in 1816
Richard Allen founded the first national black church in the United States, the
African Methodist Episcopal Church.
Richard Allen had a
vision of what America could--and should--become: a place where the promise of
equality set forth in the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution was
not simply a shining statement of principles but a living reality for all. Allen’s vision has echoed throughout history,
influencing activists and thinkers including Frederick Douglass and Martin
Luther King, Jr. One of Allen’s last
lessons, before his death in 1831 in Philadelphia was the economic power of
boycotting. Civil Rights workers
successfully used this tactic in the 1960’s.
Researched and
Compiled by William “Bill” Ayers,
Historiographer,
The Joseph C. McKinney Lay Organization
Ward Memorial AME
Church – Washington, DC
Volume 1 #1 –
January 12, 2016
15.
MT. NEBO AME CHURCH A SHARE PARTNER:
The Greater Mt.
Nebo (GMN) A.M.E. Church in Bowie, Maryland, led by Pastor Rev. Dr. Jonathan L.
Weaver, has been a SHARE participant for nearly 23 years. The founders were Daisy Stith, Eric Williams,
Theresa Grant, Hamilton, Laura Miller, Gerri Lynch, Elizabeth Coates and Robert
Coates.
The SHARE team at
GMN has enlisted a remarkable group of people in support of the mission of
providing fresh, healthy food to those in the community who need it. There are more than a dozen devoted members
who pick up, bag, drive, and help coordinate all of the activities that make
the SHARE Ministry a great success.
Founder Daisy
Stith, 88 years old, is still working, making courtesy calls to all the
participants the night before delivery and by bringing a delicious breakfast to
all SHARE team members.
Lenny Williams is
up before dawn to direct the 4:30 am transportation committee with dedicated
drivers and baggers Robert Adair and Anthony Payne. They are assisted by Marc
Rogers and Vernon Owens who are also members of the pickup crew. Eugene
Williams and Lenny Williams are SHARE Ministry advisors.
The food is handed
off to GMN’s faithful 6:00 am baggers who include Lorraine Willis, Florie
Purnell, Rachael Purnell, Linda Jones, Wendy Jenkins and Eugene Williams. They also deliver curb side service with a
warm and Godly smile to their customers.
SHARE volunteers
are rewarded by the warm feelings that come from serving others with nutritious
food. In fact, the GMN SHARE team often
prays with recipients when they bring their food.
In addition to the
traditional SHARE activities at Greater Mt. Nebo, new Coordinator, Vickie E.
Williams and her husband Eugene Williams extended the program through a
sponsorship program. They have enlisted
several organizations, including the GMN Church Family, Noon Day Bible Study
Family and Rev. Jackson, who all donate funds to help seniors and families who
need assistance in purchasing their Value Packages. This effort helps to
support more than 20 seniors and families by providing them with greatly needed
food supplies.
Vickie says, “I
have a tremendous feeling of accomplishment when I’m working with our awesome
GMN SHARE team members to feed seniors and families who can’t always put food
on their tables.”
Each month, she
works extra hard to expand the sponsorship program by emailing and making
personal calls to friends, conducting visits to companies in the community and,
especially, talking with the church family who are strongly supportive of the
program.
The GMN SHARE
ministry also provides community service hours to school students. And it
provides assistance to the heads of households by helping them to become more
self-sufficient and connecting them to government agencies for support.
The GMN team is
seeking to enlist other churches and organizations as partners to grow the
SHARE program. For example, they have a
partnership with Alzenia Hamlin and others at her Senior Resident’s Building
and with Evelyn Wallace, President of the Missionary Society.
The GMN SHARE
Ministry is also indebted to the office staff at the church. Tabitha Washington promotes the ministry to
the church membership through the Revelation Weekly News Letter. Vida Lawson
and Alfonso Jones provide the SHARE ministry video announcements. Additionally, thanks go to Vida Lawson for
managing the books. Audrey Hamilton,
Patrick Lynch, Deidre Singleton, John Simms, and Antwan Griffin help the
program by opening the doors of the church on delivery days between 5:45 am -
6:00 am. Sandy Scott is the team member who makes sure the SHARE flyers are
printed.
As Vickie Williams
says, “We thank God for leading this great ministry and thank Pastor Jonathan
L. Weaver for his support. We’ve come
this far by faith and we are depending on God to guide our future endeavors.”
Written by: Lenny Williams, Eugene Williams and Vickie
Williams
16.
STATEMENT ON SOCIAL JUSTICE ISSUES BY THE CHRISTIAN METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH
(CME) COLLEGE OF BISHOPS:
Presented at the
January 2016 Phillips School of Theology Pastor’s Conference
During this New
Year season, The College of Bishops of the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church
continues to be concerned about the various social calamities and tragedies
that we hear about in our nation and world daily.
We urge the church
to continue to use the powerful vehicle of prayer as a collective expression of
hope and faith that God’s presence will be felt even in the midst of trial,
tribulation, injustice, oppression, natural disaster and chaos created by human
depravity.
We are blessed to be
able to make our commitments to these issues real and to assist in the relief
of persons affected directly and indirectly by them, not only through prayer,
but also by providing donations that resource the relief work and ongoing
efforts to alleviate social ill and distress. To that end, we want the Church
to know that:
(1) In response to recent weather events,
including tornados and floods, disaster relief checks have been distributed to
the:
• 4th Episcopal
District, North Mississippi Region $1500
• 8th Episcopal
District Churches in Texas -Mims Chapel, North Park, Mt. Pleasant CME Churches
($250 each)
• 9th Episcopal
District, Oklahoma Region $1500
• American Red
Cross ($250)
• To be given to
the Carolinas Region - $8000
(2) In covenant and commitment to advocacy for
justice and ecumenical collaboration, other contributions and dues payments
made include:
• Bread for the
World $2500
• American Bible
Society $2500
• Churches United
in Christ $5,500
• Pan-Methodist
Commission on Cooperation and Union $4,250
• Urban League
$1,000
• National Civil
Rights Museum $25,000
(3) Last year, in response to the Ebola Crises,
we made donations of $6,000 to the Western West Africa Methodist Collaborative:
Plan for Working together as the Methodist Family to Enhance Human, Economic,
Evangelistic and Healthy Living and $6,000 to the 10th Episcopal District.
The General Funds
that the Regions of the Church submit on behalf of the local churches enables
the Connectional Church to make these expressions of care to those in need and
to those caring for them. We are grateful for your faithfulness in stewardship
and giving to make this possible.
(4) We further want
the Church to know that we continue to be engaged with cooperative efforts with
the other Black Methodist Denominations (AME and AME Zion), with the Black
Lives Matter movement, with the Freedom Sunday Initiative for Voter Empowerment
and many other avenues to speak truth to power and to speak on behalf of the
least and the lost.
Specifically, in
response to the ever increasing number of incidents of police violence against
unarmed black people and of gun violence in general:
We have signed the
Conference of National Black Churches’ Statement to the United Nations on
Police Violence, condemning recent acts that appear to target black people and
other people of color;
We stand in support
of President Barak Obama’s Executive Order regarding gun control; and
We adopt the
following policy on Guns/Weapons on CME Church Property:
“No weapons or firearms allowed upon the
premises of this facility except by authorized personnel as directed by
authorized church officials for security purposes”
Local churches are
asked to post this notice on all houses of worship and other church-owned facilities
that are open to the public, following any local and state ordinances or laws
pertaining to the notice and posting regarding weapons.
(5) In keeping with
our theme: “The Investment Factor” and with our historic commitment to
education and the schools founded by our CME forefathers and mothers, we are
declaring the month of February 2016 as “Love Paine College” month. We ask
every local church to take a special offering for the school during the month
of February. Offerings should be made
payable to the Department of Finance and submitted to your Presiding Bishop by
the end of February. Our goal is to raise a minimum of $100,000 for the school
this year.
In conclusion, we
urge every local church and every pastor to be engaged in these kinds of ministries
in their own community, town, city, county, and state as we recall and bring
life to the words of the prophet Amos (5:24) to “let justice roll down like a
river and righteousness like a mighty stream.”
In the Lord’s
Service,
The College of
Bishops of the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church
Bishop Lawrence L.
Reddick, Senior Bishop
Bishop Bobby R.
Best, Chair
Bishop Teresa E.
Snorton, Secretary
Bishop Henry M.
Williamson
Bishop Thomas L.
Brown, Sr.
Bishop Kenneth W.
Carter
Bishop James B.
Walker
Bishop Sylvester
Williams
Bishop Godwin
Umoette
Bishop Marvin
Thomas
Bishop C. James
King
Bishop Paul A. G.
Stewart, retired
Bishop E. Lynn
Brown, retired
Bishop Ron
Cunningham, retired
Bishop Othal Lakey,
retired
Bishop William
Graves, retired
Bishop Marshall
Gilmore, retired
17.
LPO FEATURES AN EVENING OF MUSIC BY RAY CHARLES AND MORE WITH “AMBASSADOR OF
SOUL” ELLIS HALL:
(NEW ORLEANS) - On
January 16 and 17, world-famous pianist and vocalist Ellis Hall joins the
Louisiana Philharmonic Orchestra in a concert including well-known favorites by
Ray Charles and Stevie Wonder. Soul Revival: The Music of Ray Charles and More,
featuring songs such “Georgia on my Mind,” “I Can’t Stop Loving You,” and other
favorites by Stevie Wonder, Tower of Power, and The California Raisins, takes
place January 16, 7:30 p.m., and January 17, 2:30 p.m., at the Orpheum Theater.
Tickets and information are online at LPOmusic.com or by calling (504)
523-6530.
Ellis Hall,
accomplished and prolific performer, multi-instrumentalist and vocalist with a
five-octave range, is entertainment’s best-kept secret. In a career spanning
more than four decades, Hall has solidified a reputation for soul-searing
Rhythm & Blues, and has electrified audiences throughout the world. A
master of the guitar, bass, piano, keyboards and drums, Hall has also made a
mark as an incredible songwriter, arranger, and producer. He is well-known for
his work with the magnetic soul sensations Tower of Power, where he was lead
singer and keyboardist in the mid-1980s. He has also performed with a multitude
of musical icons, including Stevie Wonder, Patti LaBelle, George Benson, Herbie
Hancock, Earth Wind & Fire, Natalie Cole, George Duke, Bobby Womack, Billy
Preston, James Taylor, Kenny G, Sheila E, John Mayer and his musical mentor Ray
Charles.
Diagnosed with
glaucoma as a child, in a time when there were no treatment options available,
Hall and his family were informed by doctors that he would ultimately lose his
sight. For many years he maintained good vision in one of his eyes, and was
blessed to enjoy the sense in many ways. Unfortunately, he lost this ability
after a devastating wrestling accident at the age of 18. By then, however, he
had already begun attending the Perkins School for the Blind in Boston,
Massachusetts, and found himself determined to succeed beyond his limitation.
Hall’s passion for
music has also led him to share his powerful vocals throughout the years on
many types of projects. He was a lead voice in the animated blues/soul band
“The California Raisins,” and the whimsical “Beetlejuice” for a Universal
Studios show. A versatile talent, Hall is a star of numerous film soundtracks,
including “The Lion King 2,” “Chicken Run,” “Shrek 2,” “A Bug’s Life,” “Bruce
Almighty,” “Beneath the Darkness,” and “Invincible.” He has even had acting
roles in the box office hits “Big Momma’s House” and “Catch Me If You Can.” He
also served as advisor to Jamie Foxx on the set of the movie Ray.
For more
information, contact Sean Snyder, director of marketing and communications at
504-523-6530, ext. 201 or email sean.snyder@lpomusic.com. For interviews
contact Ellis Hall's publicist Diane Larche' at 404 273-3227 or email diane@larchecommunications.com
Soul Revival: The Music of Ray Charles and
More
Saturday, January
16, 7:30 p.m.
Sunday, January 17,
2:30 p.m.
Orpheum Theater
18.
BISHOP MORRIS, STRONG LEADER AND PREACHER, DIES AT 78:
Retired United
Methodist Bishop William Wesley “Bill” Morris died Thursday morning, Jan. 14,
having suffered a massive heart attack at home, the Tennessee Conference
reported.
Morris, who was 78,
led the Alabama-West Florida Episcopal Area from 1992 to 2000. He was the first
African American to hold that post, and made news in 1998 when he was among the
clergy officiating at the funeral of George Wallace, who had by then often
apologized for defending segregation as Alabama’s governor.
Morris also oversaw
the Nashville Episcopal Area, comprising the Tennessee and Memphis Conferences.
He retired from the episcopacy in 2008.
In a 2007
television interview, Morris spoke about the importance of Christians taking
their vertical relationship with God and “making it horizontal” through
evangelism and service to others.
“In the missionary
enterprise … your objective is for people to know that God loves them,” he
said.
A ‘great gift’ to
the church
News of Morris’
death saddened many across The United Methodist Church, especially in
Tennessee, where he had continued to live in the Nashville area.
“Bishop Morris was
a great gift to the church,” said Nashville Area Bishop William McAlilly. “He
was especially helpful and a great mentor to me as I entered the episcopacy of
the Tennessee and Memphis Conferences.”
In Alabama, the
Rev. John Ed Mathison recalled Morris as an effective leader who could make
hard decisions and who moved the Alabama-West Florida Conference forward in
race relations.
Mathison, pastor
emeritus of Frazer Memorial United Methodist Church in Montgomery, also praised
Morris’s preaching.
“He was an
excellent preacher. As a lot of folks around here would say, he could shuck the
corn,” Mathison said. “And one of the interesting things was he incorporated a
solo in most every sermon. Rather than quote a song, he would sing it, which
was very, very effective. He had a marvelous voice.”
Far into
retirement, Morris taught Sunday school at Clark Memorial United Methodist
Church in Nashville.
“The United
Methodist Church has lost a giant and Clark Memorial has lost a giant,” said
the Rev. Herbert L. Lester Jr., the church’s pastor.
Bishop Marcus
Matthews of the Baltimore-Washington Conference also expressed sadness, and
recalled Morris fondly.
“He was a mentor,
adviser and friend,” Matthews said. “I will always remember hearing the sound
of his deep bass voice at Council of Bishops meetings. He lived `the Methodist
way.’”
He ‘knew his
churches’
William Wesley
Morris was born in Baltimore on August 7, 1937, and attended the Baltimore
public schools. He was a graduate of Ohio Wesleyan University, Garrett
Evangelical Theological Seminary, Scarritt College and Vanderbilt University,
where he earned a doctorate of ministry degree.
Morris was ordained
a deacon in 1959 and an elder in 1961. He served Bethany Methodist Church and
Union Avenue Community Methodist Church in Chicago; Stanley Methodist Church in
Chattanooga, Tennessee; John Wesley United Methodist Church in Nashville; and
First United Methodist Church in Gallatin, Tennessee.
As an
African-American pastor at the predominantly white Gallatin church, he also was
crossing an important racial boundary for the Tennessee Conference.
In that conference,
he twice was a district superintendent, leading the Clarksville and
Murfreesboro (Tennessee) Districts. The Rev. Skip Armistead, a retired
clergyman, recalled Morris as a district superintendent who “knew his
churches.”
“He read every
single church newsletter. He’d ask you, ‘How did your revival go?’” said
Armistead, who also served as assistant director of the old United Methodist
Council of Ministries when Morris was the director. He recalled Morris standing
up for a staff member that some people wanted to see leave.
“He stood up for
that person. He wanted to give them a chance,” Armistead said, adding that the
staffer turned out to be a real asset.
“He always saw potential,”
Armistead said.
On July 15, 1992,
Morris was elected a bishop at the Southeastern Jurisdictional Conference in
Lake Junaluska, North Carolina.
As bishop, Morris
served as president of the United Methodist Board of Pension and Health
Benefits from 2000 to 2004. He was a trustee of several United Methodist
institutions, including Emory University in Atlanta.
One abiding
interest of Morris’ was men’s ministries, and as a retired bishop he served as
interim top executive of the Commission on United Methodist Men for more than a
year and supervised the agency’s move into its current Nashville headquarters.
“In retirement, he
always spoke of his love for The United Methodist Church,” said Gil Hanke,
United Methodist Men’s current top executive.
The Rev. Ryan
Bennett, pastor of Bethlehem United Methodist Church in Franklin, Tennessee,
spoke of Morris as a mentor who cared deeply about people and never really
retired.
Bennett also
recalled how Morris would really pay attention and “be in the moment” in
relationships. Once when Bennett had a chance meeting with Morris and claimed
to be doing fine, Morris wasn’t convinced. “How are you really doing?” he
recalled the bishop asking.
Morris was married
to the late Mary Head Morris of McMinnville, Tenn., and they had four children.
He married Princilla Smart Evans in 2006.
Funeral
arrangements are pending.
Hodges, a United
Methodist News Service writer, lives in Dallas. Contact him at (615) 742-5470
or newsdesk@umcom.org. Heather Hahn, Kathy L. Gilbert and Vicki Brown
contributed to this article.
*Used with
permission of the United Methodist News Service
19.
REMEMBERING FRANCES HOOKS, DEDICATED EDUCATOR AND WIFE OF NAACP LEADER BENJAMIN
HOOKS:
BALTIMORE, MD - The
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) is deeply
saddened at the passing of Memphis educator and civil rights advocate Frances
Hooks. Ms. Hooks, known for her dedication
to education and philanthropic endeavors – both in her home in Memphis,
Tennessee, and nationwide – was the dedicated wife of former NAACP leader
Benjamin L. Hooks.
Frances Hooks
married the renowned civil rights figure in 1951, proving to be his greatest
advocate and supporter until his death in 2010.
A second grade teacher in Shelby County, Tennessee, Ms. Hooks put her
career on hold to assist her husband in his own roles as an activist and civil
rights leader. The couple moved to
Washington, D.C. in 1972 when Mr. Hooks became the first African-American
appointee to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC).
Benjamin Hooks, who
began his career as a minister and attorney, rose in the legal system to become
a judge and, later executive director of the NAACP, serving from 1977 to
1993.
During her
husband’s tenure as executive director, Ms. Hooks became a major figure within
the organization as well. Along with
fellow member Earleen Bolden, she organized the trailblazing Women in the NAACP
(WIN), an unprecedented project which aimed to enhance the leadership roles of
women both within the Association and in everyday life. She also co-founded The People Power Project,
a community advocacy group for race relations and social justice outreach, and
the Memphis Volunteer Placement Program.
Both organizations continue her legacy to this day.
A true example of
civil rights fortitude and social responsibility, Frances Hooks was 88 years
old. She leaves behind the couple’s only
daughter, Patricia, two grandsons and great-grandsons.
It is with the
deepest gratitude and admiration for Frances Hooks’ lifetime of civil rights
dedication that the thoughts and prayers of the NAACP and its national
constituency go out to her family.
20.
NAACP STATEMENT ON SUPREME COURT DECISION IN FLORIDA DEATH PENALTY CASE:
BALTIMORE, MD – The
NAACP released the following statement following the U.S. Supreme Court’s 8-1
decision in Hurst v. Florida. The Court ruled that Florida’s sentencing scheme
violates the Sixth Amendment of the Constitution.
Prior to the
ruling, a Florida jury would make an advisory opinion regarding the application
of the death penalty and then the trial judge would determine--after alone
weighing aggravating and mitigating factors--whether the death penalty should
be applied. The Court determined that
scheme failed to comply with the Court’s prior decisions holding that a jury
must determine, beyond a reasonable doubt, all facts required to be found
before a sentence of death may be imposed.
--
From Cornell William Brooks, NAACP President and CEO:
“While we applaud
the Supreme Court’s decision, which reaffirms that an impartial jury has the
responsibility to make all factual findings necessary in cases serious enough
to impose the death penalty, the NAACP remains unequivocally against capital
punishment - it is racially biased and inhumane. Over the past several years,
we have worked hard to abolish the death penalty in Maryland and we seek to
continue this trend across the country.
In states where it has yet to be abolished, a sentence of death must
adhere to the Constitutional requirements set out by the U.S. Supreme Court.
“In Florida alone,
12 people have been cleared from death row through DNA evidence in recent years
and 400 people remain on death row in that state. Nearly all of those
exonerated in Florida and across the nation have been black, brown, and or
desperately poor. While many continue to debate the abolishment of the death
penalty, it is undeniable that life and death mistakes of the justice system are
almost always made at the expense of the lives of people of color and those
without access to vigorous representation. The NAACP will continue to advocate
for the abolition of a law that is biased, flawed and violates our
Constitutional right against cruel and unusual punishment.”
--
From Adora Obi Nweze, President, Florida State Conference and National Board
Member:
“The Supreme
Court’s decision in Hurst v. Florida is a step in the right direction, with the
ultimate resolution being the abolishment of the death penalty in Florida. As a board member of the Florida Innocence
Project, we know that people of color are disproportionately sentenced to death
row in Florida and across the country.
Since 1973, 26 former death row inmates have been exonerated – those are
26 lives saved from a from a broken criminal justice system. It is unconscionable that we continue to
employ capital punishment as a means of punishment when we know it is
ineffective, flawed and makes no exceptions for fallibility.”
21.
NAACP STATEMENT ON THE ANNOUNCEMENT OF THE NOMINEES FOR THE 88TH ANNUAL ACADEMY
AWARDS:
Baltimore, MD - The
NAACP today released the following statement following the announcement of the
nominees for the 88th Annual Academy awards:
“The presentation
of the annual Academy Awards has long served as the culminating event of the
awards season. With the announcement of
the nominees for the 88th Academy Awards, the contributions of people of color
to the movie industry—both in front of and behind the cameras—have once again
been severely overlooked. Of the 20
acting nominations, including Best Actor and Actress and Best Supporting Actor
and Actress, the Academy failed for a second year in a row to consider a single
actor of color for this distinguished award.
“The lack of
recognition by the Academy of exemplary performances and work by people of
color working in the industry led to the creation of the NAACP Image Awards
almost 47 years ago. With the 2016 nomination results, our mission and efforts
are as relevant today as they have been in the past.
“Academy voters are
members of a private, invitational club of artists that lacks diversity by race
and gender. While a sprinkling of
filmmakers from varied populations have been invited to join the Academy ranks,
this organization neither reflects the global diversity of the world, or the
many moviegoers who support the industry. According to the 2013 Motion Picture
Association of America’s Theatrical Market Statistics Report, people of color
represented 51 percent of the frequent movie going audience -- 32 percent of
that audience was Latino, while African Americans represented 12 percent.
“These numbers
alone reflect the unbalanced relationship people of color have with
Hollywood. Our brothers, sisters and
friends love and support film and art, yet the Academy Awards seldom recognize
the numerous and notable contributions by people of color making and appearing
in entertainment today.
“It is time for the
Academy Awards to be as relevant to the new crop of actors and movie-going
audiences as they are to the new movie viewing platforms. A first step is to revisit the Academy
membership and how it can play catch up to reflect a 21st century world. Another is to question advertisers who
support the Awards show. In 2014, the
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences’ revenue of $97.3 million dollars
was due in large part to the domestic rights of its broadcast partner, ABC television,
which has broadcast rights through 2020.
“The 2014 Oscars
broadcast boasted the most-watched telecast in 10 years with 43 million
viewers. This was the same year that had
the most diverse slate of movies by filmmakers of color as well as actors,
which assuredly attributed to its ratings increase. Diversity is not just good business, it’s the
only business, and the 2014 ratings numbers show that. It’s time the Academy recognizes the value
and the voice of people of color and until they do, we should switch the
channel until that old guard can reflect and respect what people of color bring
to the table.”
22.
THE SPIRIT OF THE LAW VERSUS THE LETTER OF THE LAW:
*The Rev.Dr.
Angelique Walker-Smith
I confess. One of
my favorite television shows is “The Andy Griffith Show.” This may be because I
was raised in two small Ohio towns and have spent considerable time in rural
Alabama. It may be because my faith
tells me that I must always imagine more neighborhoods in the USA that have
caring police. The show’s charming
stories of life lessons addressing parenting, community building, faith, and
friendship, sprinkled with laughter and sentimental moments, remind me that
this is possible. The show also provides relief from graphic violence so often
depicted in the media today and tragically normalized in too many real
experiences of people of African descent historically and today. In the popular
new film, “Chi-Raq,” for example, viewers learn that the death toll by murder
in Chicago over the past decade is higher than the number of American forces
who have died in Afghanistan since the beginning of "Operation Enduring
Freedom," according to a police analysis. Many of these murder victims are
of African descent.
A recently repeated
“Andy Griffith Show” episode illustrated the difference between policing by
“the book” and policing with “the heart.” This approach was also communicated
to Christians in Rome, who were taught to embrace the spirit of the law versus
the letter of the law (Romans 2:29). Another recent episode illustrated
hospitality to those in the Mayberry jail. The sheriff and deputy sheriff were missing two former
inmates who were now serving time in the state prison. They decided to visit
the former inmates in prison to see how they were doing and let them know they
were missed in Mayberry.
Contrary to the
caring setting of Andy Griffith’s Mayberry in the 1960’s, the viewer does not
see what was happening at that time for many people of African descent in the
south and north of the U.S. Racial hatred and violence often resulted in the
horrors of lynching and other types of fatalities and miscarriages of justice
by police and others. For people of African descent, the thought of hospitality
and friendly visits from those who were official or unofficial authorities
would have been unthinkable. Sadly, this painful period of American history
still haunts us. Today, people of African descent make up the highest
percentage of those who are imprisoned and many African-Americans are still
convinced that racial hatred and violence toward them is “still routine” in the
U.S.
The juxtaposition
of Mayberry and these painful realities raises important questions today. How
shall we pray and hope for the transformation of the hearts of those who
promote racial bias and violence? Can lawful reforms at both the local and
federal levels make a real and positive difference in this historic American
challenge?
Bread for the World
works with people of faith who see the connections between hunger and these
issues and who say yes to legislative change. Please join this movement to help
end hunger by supporting legislative changes that can help make more of our
neighborhoods hunger-free and safe.
Learn more at www.bread.org/library/hunger-and-mass-incarceration.
*The Rev. Dr.
Angelique Walker-Smith is the national senior associate for Pan-African church
engagement at Bread for the World.
23. THE TRUTH IS THE LIGHT:
Dr. Watkins’s column
will return next week.
*The Reverend Dr.
Charles R. Watkins, Jr., is the pastor of Morris Brown AME Church in
Charleston, South Carolina
24.
GETTING TO ZERO: DECLARING AN “EBOLA-FREE WEST AFRICA”:
*Dr. Oveta Fuller
It is a joy to report that West Africa has
arrived at zero with Ebola virus. On Thursday, January 14, 2016 the World
Health Organization (WHO) declared that “Liberia is Ebola-free to bring an
official end to the West African epidemic.”(1)
Liberia, Sierra Leon and Guinea-- the three main West African sites of
the 2014 West African epidemic-- have all been without a known Ebola virus case
for 42 or more days.
What
“Ebola-free” means
Forty two days without a known disease
case is the official criteria for ending an epidemic of this virus. Its incubation
period (the time from a person’s first exposure to the virus through the
longest time that symptoms might appear) is 21 days. That no one has been
detected as infected in 42 days (twice the incubation period) means that the
virus is not circulating in any infected person who could pass it to others in
that population to begin a new pocket of infection or epidemic.
Liberia previously was designated as
Ebola-free two times in 2015 only to have a new case of virus transmission. The
new cases likely occur from virus transmission in the semen of an Ebola virus
disease (EVD) male survivor. We are at
zero transmission in the region since Sierra Leon officially was declared
Ebola-free on November 7, 2015 and Guinea on December 29, 2015. Preventing
Ebola virus spread from the last known case in Liberia led to the current state
of “no known Ebola infection in 42 days” and hence an official Ebola free
designation for the three countries.
Why this
is not the end of Ebola
Does this mean Ebola virus will not
appear in this area? No.
Besides the unknown length of time that
Ebola virus can remain in survivors, this virus is found in some reservoir
(storage place) in nature. This may be in bats or other animals. There is
typically no disease or symptoms from virus found in its natural reservoir.
Contact of humans or some animals with that reservoir allows virus movement
into the human population where it causes Ebola virus disease (EVD). In humans,
Ebola virus infection is particularly virulent.
The first infection case of the West
African epidemic has been traced to infection of a young male child in Guinea
in December 2014. At 13 months later, of over 28,000 known infections, there
have been 11,315 deaths from Ebola virus disease and over 17,000 others who survived
infection.
Survivors of EVD may live with any of
several reoccurring symptoms that include surging fevers, muscle and nerve body
pain, blurriness and loss of vision to blindness, hearing impairments, migraine
headaches, fatigue, inability to sleep and depression. The high number of Ebola
survivors in West Africa and those in the USA for the first time allow study of
what is called “post-Ebola syndrome”. We now know that even when the disease is
over in a person, its physical impact (the illness) is not over.
From this outbreak we know now that
virus survives in semen much longer than the 82 days previously thought. Sexual
transmission of virus from an infected male survivor seems possible for at
least a year. In July 2015 this was one source of new Ebola infection detected
in Liberia after the country had been declared Ebola-free in March. How long
this virus survives in the testes or semen of a male who recovers from EVD is
yet to be determined. It represents another concern in this period of time
beyond the active Ebola epidemic.
What now –
“Beyond Ebola”
Now that the 2014 Ebola outbreak is
officially over, the concern does not end for the West African countries mainly
affected. In some ways the more difficult longer-term work comes into focus. This
is providing physical and mental healthcare, support for children orphaned by
the epidemic, rebuilding or building infrastructure and enabling of an economy
that has faltered in many ways in the three countries.
A family friend, Dr. Rodwell Buckley, Bishop
of the Faith Mission Temple International, shared in late 2015 about the
indescribable devastation that people of Liberia have experienced. The addition
of Ebola virus came to an already economically devastated country from years of
civil war and political unrest. Dr. Buckley is in the midst of plans to build a
hospital and educational center to meet some of the needs in Liberian
communities.
Such efforts undoubtedly must and will
occur in Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leon in this time “Beyond Ebola” including
by the AME Church. Bishop Clement Fugh is the current presiding prelate of the
14th Episcopal District. It includes Annual Conferences of Liberia, Central
Liberia, Sierra Leone, Ghana, Nigeria, Cote D’ Ivoire and Togo-Benin.
Celebrating
“Bye, Bye Ebola”
For now, let’s join in celebrating this
development! (3) Praise God who hears
and answers prayer and from whom all blessings flow.
We are grateful for the many efforts
that bring about conditions to allow the WHO to officially declare that this
historic devastating epidemic is over. Let’s learn from the lessons provided.
Let’s embrace those lessons so to do better with the aftermaths of the 2014
epidemic and to be mindful and better prepared going forward.
This is not the end of Ebola, but the
end of the 2014 West African Ebola outbreak. We are grateful to arrive at such
a time of zero transmission even while committing to keep the children, women,
men, families, and leaders of communities of these countries in prayer for guidance
and provision to meet the many needs.
Addendum to “Getting to Zero:
Declaration of an Ebola-free West Africa”
-- Late Breaking News - New Ebola case in Sierra Leone
Not quite at zero. This is an update
summarizing info from the "Global Health Now" newsletter that
includes a report from a Reuter’s press release of January 15, 2016.
A Setback in
Sierra Leone
"Mere hours after the WHO’s
cautious proclamation yesterday that West Africa had no more Ebola cases, the
agency confirmed a new case in Sierra Leone." Tests on the body of a
22-year old female patient came back positive for Ebola virus. The report from
Reuters explains that tracing possible contacts of the young woman has led to
at least 27 people that might have been exposed to the virus-- 22 in her
household and 5 others involved in performing funeral rites."
The young woman who died on January 12
at her parent's home near Freetown first sought medical care on January 8. She
is reported to be a student who traveled home from school in northern Sierra
Leon that is near to the border of Guinea. This northern area of Sierra Leone
has many waterways used for traveling and was one of the last known hotspots
for Ebola virus transmission in this country.
The missed or late Ebola virus disease
diagnosis reminds us that: 1) early symptoms from Ebola virus disease can look
very much like those of other illnesses such as malaria, influenza; and 2) the
impacts an flyer math of this epidemic are not over. A single case can lead to
a new pocket of transmissions that must be contained for controlled to avoid a
new epidemic. To prevent spread, persons who might have been exposed (taxi
drivers, medical personnel, family members) must be tracked, tested and
isolated for 21 days to monitor daily for early symptoms of Ebola virus
infection.
This unfortunate, but predictable development
is a reminder that surveillance and best practices to avoid possible exposure
to any infectious agent must continue. Despite the just declared Ebola-free
status of the West African countries, WHO warns that flare-ups are
likely to occur throughout 2016 and that diligence is needed so to prevent
more infection and deaths and that an out of control epidemic does not emerge.
The Rev. Dr. Fuller is currently on Sabbatical leave from the
University of Michigan and will submit her column as her schedule permits.
25. iCHURCH SCHOOL LESSON BRIEF FOR SUNDAY,
JANUARY 17, 2016 - AN
UNFAITHFUL BRIDE - HOSEA 1: 1-11:
*Brother Bill Dickens
Key Verse:
When the Lord began to speak through Hosea, the
Lord said to him, “Go marry a promiscuous
woman and have children with her, for like an adulterous wife this land is
guilty of unfaithfulness to the Lord.”
Introduction:
The institution of marriage is based on three
fundamental factors: trust, communication and fidelity. While love for one’s partner is important the
collapse and/or breakdown of marriage will occur when one of the above three
factors materialize. Fidelity means that
the couple pledges to devote one’s emotional, social and sexual assets to each
other. Fidelity is captured in the
traditional marriage vows………”forsaking all others.” When we forsake all others and make a vow to
our marital partner we fulfill the principle of fidelity.
The Adult AME Church School lesson for January
17, 2016 looks at the causes and consequences of when marital immorality
corrupts the concept of fidelity. The
lesson will enable us to understand and embrace the importance of fidelity in
our secular and spiritual endeavors.
Bible Lesson: The Cause and Consequence of Infidelity Hosea
1:1-11
For the past three Sundays we have examined the
institution of marriage. We began with
the marriage contract that Jacob agreed to obtain Rachel. On last Sunday we explored the rich symbolism
embedded in Solomon’s bride in Song of Solomon.
On Sunday we continue our frank and open dialogue about marriage by
looking at the fascinating description provided by the prophet Hosea. Hosea is a minor prophet but the book packs a
major message. Chapter one begins with a
brief introduction of the prophet and quickly lays out the plan of action for
Hosea. The prophet is commanded to marry
a prostitute or harlot. I’m sure Hosea
was stunned beyond belief at this command!
He probably wondered given all of the suitable brides, why he should
have to marry a whore! However, it
doesn’t end with this illicit marriage.
The prophet is instructed to also to father three children through the
union. So, here we have a man of God
being instructed to plan for a marriage with a woman who is the epitome of
infidelity. No doubt the prophet is
puzzled, speechless and unenthusiastic about the upcoming change in his marital
status.
This unusual marriage begs the question
“why?” Why marry a prostitute? Yahweh makes clear in verse two that Hosea's
marriage to Gomer is the perfect symbol about the unfaithfulness Israel has
exhibited to Him. Israel’s spiritual
preference for worshipping false gods and ignoring his divine law was
tantamount to an unfaithful spouse. God
commands and demands faithfulness in our relationship with Him. When we don’t exhibit a faithful, covenantal
relationship we commit spiritual whoredom.
Hosea’s offspring have symbolic names to reflect the cause and
consequence of the corrupted marriage.
The first born son was named Jezreel to denote the end of Israel’s
kingdom. The second born was a daughter
named Lo-Ruhamah which means “not loved.”
The last child, a son, born by Gomer was named Lo-Ammi, which means “not
my people.” The consequence of sin is
separation from God and exacting punishment as reflected in the names of the
children. Despite the bleak outlook,
Yahweh shows mercy and grace in verse 11.
Once again we see God is ready to forgive and provide an opportunity for
His people to be reconciled back to Him.
Bible Application:
Infidelity can and will create a strained
relationship; It affects celebrity marriages and non-celebrity marriages
equally. Marital counseling is typically recommended in order to save the
marital compact. Unfortunately, for many
couples, professional counseling is rejected because of the rigid inflexibility
of one of the partners. Can counseling
help if the couple is not really interested in getting help? Can counseling help if one of the partners is
a serial adulterer? What is the limit of
“forgiving an unfaithful spouse?” These
questions are critically important and the answers will influence whether the
marriage will survive or dissolve. Hosea’s marriage to Gomer is a commentary
about our spiritual marriage to God. Are
we faithful to God when we elevate staying home on Sunday to look at a football
game rather than attending church to give God praise and glory? Are we practicing fidelity when we show
neglect and benign indifference to the needy, but are quick to purchase the
latest fashions for ourselves? Fidelity
requires commitment. Commitment requires
allegiance to principle and purpose. QED
Homework Assignment:
What idols are hindering you from having a committed relationship with God?
*Brother Bill Dickens is currently the Church
School Teacher at Allen AME Church in Tacoma, Washington. He is
currently a member of the Fellowship of Church Educators for the African
Methodist Episcopal Church
26.
MEDITATION BASED
ON PSALM 61:
*The Rev. Dr. Joseph A. Darby
I’m writing this week’s meditation a few days
after a “residential nightmare.” Just before bedtime a few nights ago, I
heard the sound of the master bathroom shower running - even though no one was
taking a shower. A minute or so later, the wall behind the shower split
in three places and water came gushing through - mostly into the bathtub,
thankfully!
Our usual “handyman” was kind enough to get
out of bed, come over, turn off the water to the house and install a temporary
shut-off valve the next morning when the hardware store opened - leaving us
without water for only one interesting and innovative night. When he then
inspected the split in the water pipe behind the wall, he called a contractor,
who checked it out and then called a master plumber, who did a fairly complex
job of replacing the entire pipe the next day before the contractor repaired
the wall.
Both our handyman and the contractor were wise
enough to realize that the problem was complex and both of them said essentially
the same thing - “Rather than mess with this, we need to call someone with
experience who knows what he’s doing.”
Beyond the obvious reminder of how we take
little things - like running water - for granted, the words of both our
handyman and the contractor spoke to a “life lesson” that goes beyond a water
leak.
The best of us sometimes run into situations -
great and small - that are beyond our ability to handle them. When we do
try to handle them on our own, we sometimes make those situations worse and end
up frustrated, panicked and confused about what to do or where to turn.
That’s why it’s good to have a relationship to
the God who created this world, created us, knows what we need and can handle
life’s tough and challenging situations that are beyond our control or our
power to fix. When we know the Lord, we can, in the words of our handyman
and contractor, “call on someone who knows what he’s doing” - someone who can
fix our broken and troubled situations and bless us beyond measure.
Don’t try to handle life’s complicated
situations on your own. Trust in and turn them over to the God of our
salvation - the God who has answers and solutions where life only offers
problems and obstacles - the God who led my ancestors in the faith to say, “Whenever
you pray let Him have His way, Jesus will fix it for you.”
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
27. CLERGY FAMILY CONGRATULATORY
ANNOUNCEMENTS:
-- The Rev. Dr. Anne Henning Byfield to
receive the 2016 Dr. King Drum Major Award
The Rev. Dr. Anne Henning Byfield, Presiding Elder, North
District, Indiana Annual Conference, 4th Episcopal District, to receive the
2016 Indiana Christian Leadership Conference Dr. King Drum Major Award on
January 18, 2016
The 47th Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Birthday
Celebration Embraces Interfaith Communities
The 47th Annual Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Birthday Celebration Service of the Indiana Christian Leadership Conference
(ICLC) will be held Monday, January 18th at St John’s Missionary
Baptist Church, 1651 Dr. Andrew J. Brown Avenue, Indianapolis, IN.
The official program will commence at 10:00 a.m.
The Rev. Dr. Daniel T. Hembree, pastor of Bluff Road United
Methodist Church in Columbia, South Carolina is this year’s main speaker.
The Rev. Dr. Anne Henning Byfield, Presiding Elder North
District, Indiana Annual Conference, 4th Episcopal District, AME Church is the
47th Drum Major Recipient for her extensive and continual leadership
in social justice issues in the state of Indiana and beyond.
Appointed and elected city and state officials are special
guests on the program. “Stop the Killing - Rally for Real Living: L.O.V.E.: Let
Our Violence End” is the active theme and new initiatives will be shared at the
service.
The Indiana Christian Leadership Conference, through the
vision of the late Dr. Andrew Brown, was one of a few organizations across the
nation to celebrate the life and legacy of Dr. King, on January 15, 1969,
King’s birthday, following the assassination in April 1968.
Reverend Dr. Thomas L. Brown is the president. He is the son of the late Dr. Andrew J.
Brown, who was the founder of the Indiana SCLC chapter which is now ICLC. The Rev. Marilyn Gill is the Executive
Director. Dr. Phillip L. Shobe is the
host pastor.
Event inquiries may contact:
The Rev. Marilyn Gill, Executive Director or
The Rev. Dr. Thomas L. Brown, President
Telephone: (317) 545-5440
-- Ms. Yvette L. Broughton earned the
degree of Bachelor of Arts in Liberal Studies with a minor in Criminal Justice
The President, Trustees, Faculty, and Graduating Class of
Clayton State University, Atlanta, Georgia are pleased to announce that Ms.
Yvette .L. Broughton earned the degree of Bachelor of Arts in Liberal Studies
with a minor in Criminal Justice, Saturday, December, 12, 2015.
Ms. Broughton is employed as a Senior Logistics and
Procurement Chain Coordinator and manages Customer Service, Shipping &
Receiving, and Graphics at Amcor Packaging in Peachtree City, Georgia.
She is the daughter of The late Rev. Dennis W. Broughton,
Sr., and Mrs. Wilhelmenia Broughton, former 7th Episcopal District WMS
Treasurer and presently Columbia Conference President of MSWAWO; sister of Dr.
Wilma D. Broughton, former Episcopal District YWI Coordinator, Big Mak
Chairperson and Columbia Conference DMC Commissioner; sister of the Rev. Dennis
W, Broughton, Jr, pastor, Orangeburg District, Central Annual Conference, 7th
Episcopal District.
28. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:
It is with a sad heart that we announce the passing of
Melvin D. Wilson, Sr., the father of the Rev. Melvin D. Wilson, Jr., pastor
Payne Chapel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Duquesne, Pennsylvania.
The funeral service is scheduled as follows:
Viewing: Friday,
January 15, 2016, 10:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m.
Strowder’s Funeral Chapel
822 East 105th Street
Cleveland, OH 44108
Homegoing Celebration: Saturday, January 16, 2016,
Viewing: 9:00 a.m.
Service: 10:00 a.m.
Olivet Institutional Baptist Church
8712 Quincy Avenue
Cleveland, OH 44108
Phone: 216-721-3585
Fax: 216-721-2809
The Reverend Jawanza Karriem Colvin, pastor
The Reverend Melvin D. Wilson, Jr., eulogist
Final arrangements are entrusted to:
Strowder’s Funeral Chapel
822 East 105th Street
Cleveland, OH 44108
Condolences may be sent to:
The Reverend Melvin D. Wilson, Jr.
601 Priscilla Avenue
Duquesne, PA 15110
Telephone: (412) 466-6662
Fax: (412) 466-1091
29. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:
We regret to announce the passing of the Rev. Joseph Donald
Patterson, retired Presiding Elder of the First Episcopal District. He served
for more than 50 years in the itinerant ministry (45 years of active service)
of the African Methodist Episcopal Church. His sage-like counsel will be sorely
missed by those who have labored under his divinely enabled mentoring. The
following information has been provided regarding funeral arrangements.
Monday, January 18, 2016
Viewing: 9:00 a.m. – 10:30 a.m.
Fraternal Rites: 10:30 a.m. – 11:00 a.m.
Funeral Service: 11:00 a.m.
Mt. Pisgah A.M.E. Church
428 North 41st Street
Philadelphia, PA 19104
Telephone: (215) 386-6181
Fax: (215) 386-3341
The Rev. Jay B. Broadnax, pastor
Eulogist: Bishop Gregory G. M. Ingram, Presiding Prelate of
the First Episcopal District of the African Methodist Episcopal Church
Condolences may be sent to:
Mrs. Joyce A. Patterson
6213 Walnut Street
Philadelphia, PA 19139
Interment: West Laurel Hill Cemetery
215 Belmont Avenue
Bala Cynwyd, PA 19004
Repast at Mt. Pisgah A.M.E. Church(Address posted above).
30. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:
It is with sadness that we announce the passing of the Rev.
Norma R. Tyson an ordained Itinerant Elder in the South Annual Conference of
the Eleventh Episcopal District of the African Methodist Episcopal Church. The
Rev. Tyson was the former pastor of Bethel AME Church in Acworth, Georgia.
The Rev. Tyson is the daughter of the Rev. Joseph Benjamin
Tyson, pastor of the St. John Missionary Baptist Church in West Palm Beach,
Florida and the sister of Mrs. Linda Tyson Eason and brother-in-law of the Rev.
Dr. Gregory V. Eason, Sr., senior pastor of St. Paul AME Church in Atlanta,
Georgia.
Please forward all expressions of sympathy and
acknowledgements to:
The Rev. Joseph Benjamin Tyson
P.O. Box 1162
Palm Beach, FL 33480
In lieu of flowers, please make a donation in her memory to:
Tyson’s Community Development Inc.
P.O. Box 1162
Palm Beach, FL 33480
The Wake:
Friday, January 15, 2016 – 6:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m.
Mt. Calvary Full Gospel Baptist Church
1111 36th Street
West Palm Beach, FL 33407
Telephone: (561) 848-8812
Funeral Service:
Saturday, January 16, 2016 – 1:00 p.m.
St. John Missionary Baptist Church
2006 A E Isaac Ave
West Palm Beach, FL 33407
Telephone: (561) 833-3966
Fax: (561) 833-3071
Final Arrangements are Entrusted to:
Shulers’s Memorial Chapel
5301 N. Australian Ave
West Palm Beach, FL 33407
Telephone: (561) 882-4255
Fax: (561) 882-4199
31. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:
It is with sad hearts that we announce the passing of Mrs.
Rose Ann Brown, the grandmother of the Reverend Casey Gatewood, wife of the
Reverend Dr. L. Anthony Gatewood, pastor of Spelman Chapel, Kent, Ohio.
The funeral service is scheduled for Thursday, January 14,
2016
Viewing at 6:00 p.m.
Funeral Service at 7:00 p.m.
The Oakley Full Gospel Baptist Church
3415 El Paso Drive
Columbus, OH 43204
Telephone: (614)
279-3307
The Reverend Dr. Jonathon McReynolds, pastor / eulogist
Final arrangements entrusted to:
Diel-Whittaker Funeral Home
720 E. Long Street
Columbus, OH 43203
Telephone:
614-258-9549
Fax: (614) 258-5835
Condolences may be sent to:
The Reverend Dr. L.A. & the Rev. Casey Gatewood
27600 Chardon Road, Apt. 1187
Willoughby Hills, OH 44092
Telephone: (614)
314-0650
Fax: (614)279-4045
32. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:
This communication comes to share the passing of Mrs.
Dorothy Green. Mrs. Green is the sister
of Presiding Elder Mary (Edward) Williams of the North Little Rock/Ft. Smith
District, Arkansas Annual Conference; the daughter of the Rev. Lucy Jones
(superannuated minister in the Arkansas Annual Conference); and the aunt of the
Arkansas Conference Lay President, Corey E. (Tamera) Williams.
She was a spirit-filled soloist, and an active member of
Moody Chapel AME Church.
Arrangements have been entrusted to:
Robinson Mortuary
1201 Dr. Martin Luther King Drive
Little Rock, AR 72202
Telephone: (501) 371-0111
Family Hour:
Thursday, January 14, 2016, 5:30-6:30 pm at Robinson's
Mortuary.
Celebration of Life Service:
Friday, January 15, 2016, 11:00 a.m.
Moody Chapel AME Church
5630 Mabelvale Pike
Little Rock, AR 72209
Telephone: (501) 562-1117
Condolences may be shared with the family:
C/o Presiding Elder Mary (Edward) Williams and family
4 Pine Way Court
Little Rock, AR 72211
Telephone: (501) 952-0097
Or
Mr. Corey (Tamera) Williams
Telephone: (501) 352-2170
33. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:
We regret to announce the passing of our beloved Doris Marie
Thornton, the widow of the late Rev. Dr. Samuel C. Thornton, a former pastor of
Tyree AME Church (Philadelphia Conference, West/Mainline District). Sister Thornton was a member of Tyree A.M.E.
Church and a life member of Women’s Missionary Society of the A.M.E. Church.
The following information has been provided regarding funeral arrangements.
Saturday, January 16, 2016, Homegoing Celebration:
Viewing – 9:00 a.m.
Funeral - 11:00 a.m.
Tyree A.M.E. Church
3800 Hamilton Street
Philadelphia, PA 19104
Telephone: (215) 222-5620 / (215) 222-5621
Fax: (215) 222-0211
The Rev. Dr. Esther L. Seales, Pastor
Eulogist: The Rev. Dr. Janet J. Sturdivant, Presiding Elder
of the South District in the Philadelphia Conference
Condolences are being received by:
The Cullars Family
275 Bryn Mawr Avenue
Apt. E-15
Bryn Mawr, PA 19010
Repast at Tyree AME Church (address listed above)
34. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:
We regret to announce the passing of Mrs. Ruth L. Walters,
the sister of retired pastor the Rev. David L. Randolph and the aunt of the
Rev. Dawn S. Christopher, pastor of Byrd’s AME Church in Clayton,
Delaware. Mrs. Walters was a longtime member
of Tyree AME Church in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
The following information has been provided regarding
funeral arrangements.
Thursday, January 14 2016
Viewing – 9:00 a.m.
Funeral - 10:00 a.m.
St. Matthew AME Church
215 N. 57th Street
Philadelphia, PA 19139
Telephone: 215-472-4784
Fax: 215-472-5544
The Rev. Roland McCall, pastor
Eulogist: The Rev. Dawn S. Christopher, pastor of Byrd’s AME
Church in Clayton, Delaware
Condolences are being received by:
The family of Ruth Walters
C/o Rev. David L. Randolph
St. Matthew A.M.E. Church
215 N. 57th Street
Philadelphia, PA 19139
35. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:
We are saddened to announce the passing of Sister Cheryl
McCoy Smith, the sister of Brenda Graham, Coordinator of the Clergy Families
Organization of the East Annual Conference.
Please continue to life the family up in prayer.
Funeral information for Cheryl McCoy Smith:
Funeral Home in Charge:
Willie Watkins Funeral Home
1003 Ralph David Abernathy Blvd.
Atlanta, GA 30310
Family Hour:
Friday, Jan. 15, 2016,
5:30-6:30 p.m.
Funeral:
Sat. January 16, 2016,
12:00 Noon
Hoosier United Methodist Church
2545 Benjamin E. Mays Drive SW
Atlanta, Georgia, 30311
36. BEREAVEMENT NOTICES AND CONGRATULATORY
ANNOUNCEMENTS PROVIDED BY:
Ora L. Easley,
Administrator
AMEC Clergy Family
Information Center
Telephone: (615) 837-9736
(H)
Telephone: (615) 833-6936
(O)
Cell: (615) 403-7751
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/The-AME-Church-Clergy-Family-Information-Center/167202414220
37. 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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