2/25/2016

THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER ONLINE ENGLISH EDITION (02/25/16)


The Reverend Dr. Johnny Barbour, Jr., Publisher
The Reverend Dr. Calvin H. Sydnor III, the 20th Editor, The Christian Recorder


-- Palm Sunday, March 20, 2016
-- Good Friday – March 25, 2016
-- Easter - Sunday, March 27, 2016
-- Pentecost - Sunday, May 15, 2016

-- Massacre of Emanuel 9, June 17

-- Daylight Saving Time (USA) 2016 begins at 2:00 a.m. on Sunday, March 13, 2016


1. TCR EDITORIAL – LET’S “CUT TO THE CHASE” – IT’S TIME – LET’S DO IT:

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

Let’s cut to the chase, it’s time to right a wrong and it is long overdue! 

On August 13, 1985, Pope John Paul II apologized to black Africa for the involvement of white Christians in the slave trade.

The United Methodist Church and the Southern Baptist Convention and other religious denominations in the United States have all issued statements apologizing for the part they played in slavery, which lasted for almost 250 years.  The first slaves arrived in what is now the United States in the year 1619 and the legal institution of slavery lasted until the 13th Amendment was ratified on December 6, 1865. 

The Southern Baptist Convention apologized in 1995 for the part they played in the slave trade and did so by a resolution in which they stated, "... we lament and repudiate historic acts of evil such as slavery from which we continue to reap a bitter harvest, and we recognize that the racism which yet plagues our culture today is inextricably tied to the past…” and went on to apologize to all African-Americans for condoning and/or perpetuating individual and systemic racism that still exists. The resolution asked for forgiveness from African-Americans.

The United Methodist Church (UMC) at its 2000 General Conference apologized to the black churches (AME, AMEZ, CME, AUMP, UAME et.al) that left the Methodist Episcopal Church because of pervasive racial discrimination. In addition, UMC apologized to black United Methodists who still faced racial prejudice.

The churchwide mea culpa is the latest apology in an unprecedented season of repentance that saw Pope John Paul II apologize to Jews for the Holocaust and Christians apologize to Muslims and others for its involvement in the Crusades and Pope John Paul II begged God's forgiveness.

The Episcopal Church at its 75th General Convention in 2006 apologized for supporting the institution of slavery. The denomination issued a resolution declaring that the institution of slavery was a sin and a betrayal of humanity and apologized for the benefits it derived from the slave trade in the Caribbean. 

I felt great each time a religious group apologized for their past injudiciousness and inhumane misdeeds.  Those denominations that apologized for not having done the right thing gained my respect for they were willing to right the wrongs they had done and the injustices they had ignored.

An apology and taking corrective actions earns the respect and praise of individuals and groups.

On an individual level, we admire and respect a person who steps forward and says, “I am sorry” or “I was wrong, please forgive me.” There is just something noble about confession and acknowledgement intentional or unintentional wrongdoing and taking responsibility for one’s actions.

The quickest way to lose respect is for a person to do wrong and fail to acknowledge and apologize.

I think most of us who were aware of the apologies of the United Methodists, Southern Baptists, Episcopalians, Roman Catholics and other groups who apologized for slavery felt good and gained respect for the courage of those religious groups.

Well, it’s our time

The African Methodist Episcopal Church needs to right a wrong that is long overdue.

The AME Church needs to make a posthumous ordination of Jarena Lee.

And the Church needs to go further and issue an apology to women in ministry for inequitable pastoral appointments, failure to prepare congregations for women clergy, failure, across the board to promote women in ministry, but that’s another editorial!

The posthumous ordination of Jarena Lee is a no-brainer and does not take an “Act of Congress” or a vote from the General Conference. Unless I have missed something, there is nothing in The AMEC Doctrine and Discipline – 2012 that would prohibit the posthumous ordination of Jarena Lee.

I suspect a decision of the Council of Bishops, the President of the Council of Bishops or a “suggestion” of the Senior Bishop could make it happen. It could be done by something as simple as a resolution or a full-fledged ceremony could be held for the posthumous ordination of Jarena Lee.  The process does not have to be complicated.

There is no need for an annual conference or laying on of hands, no need for an ordination sermon, unless someone would want to give one. There would be no need for an ordination certificate, but it would be nice to have something that could be placed with the other historical documents at Mother Bethel AME Church. A posthumous certificate of ordination from the General Conference would be nice and a generous gesture.  The GC Ordination of the Rev. Jarena Lee could be displayed at Mother Bethel and doing so at the 200th anniversary of the denomination might be the appropriate place to do it.

A posthumous action is a ceremony of recognition (Simply, it’s the fair thing to do, makes people feel good because it’s the right thing to do). 

“Posthumous” does not require a body / corpse or anyone to stand in for her.

Posthumous promotions and awards happen regularly in the military, academia and in other entities.

During combat or after combat, a soldier is promoted posthumously because, if he or she had lived, they would have been promoted or awarded a special medal(s). 

Women were not ordained during Jarena Lee’s lifetime; had they, no doubt, she would have been ordained. Women are ordained today and Jarena Lee was a pioneer for women in ministry. We can’t bring her back in this life, but we can “right the wrong” that she experienced. She lived and preached in a time when women were second-class citizens and could not vote. That was then, this is now!

In a posthumous ceremony, no laying on of hands is necessary.  A posthumous ordination of Jarena Lee could be done anywhere and actually, the General Conference would be an appropriate place to conduct the ceremony. The Women In Ministry would be an appropriate group to participate. 

Does a posthumous ordination set precedent?

Yes and no, but I don’t think so, because Jarena Lee is so unusual and she stands in a class by herself. There were other women who desired to preach, but in her situation, Richard Allen who at first denied permission for her to preach, allowed her to preach and she was a member of Mother Bethel AME Church.  Her position at Mother Bethel and her relationship with Richard Allen put her in a unique position.

As it relates to precedent, posthumous awards should not be given out frivolously! For example, we wouldn’t want to posthumously consecrate bishops or give posthumous recognition to general officers and other clergy.

The issue is the posthumous ordination of Jarena Lee – Let’s “cut to the chase” – it’s time and let’s do it!

Let’s not worry about why we can’t do it or who gets the credit, let’s put our energy into doing it!

2. 13TH EPISCOPAL DISTRICT TO HONOR RETIRING GENERAL OFFICERS:

The 13th Episcopal Midyear Meeting will be held Marc 3-5, 2016 at Greater Bethel AME Church, 1300 South Street in Nashville, Tennessee. Bishop Jeffrey N. Leath is the Presiding Prelate of the 13th Episcopal District.

In addition to the business of the District, Bishop Leath and the 13th Episcopal District will host an evening of Appreciation for retiring General Officers, the Rev. Dr. Johnny Barbour, Jr. and the Rev. Dr. Calvin H. Sydnor III on Friday March 4, 2016 at 7 p.m.

A Tribute Book with letters of appreciation will be given. Submission of letters may be emailed to office@ame13.org.

The Rev. Dr. Johnny Barbour is the President/Publisher of the AME Sunday School Union and the Rev. Dr. Calvin H. Sydnor III is the 20th Editor of The Christian Recorder

3. NEWS AROUND THE AME CHURCH:

-- Meet the incredible woman chosen to lead Mother Emanuel Church after last year’s shooting by Collier Meyerson

Read more: http://fusion.net/story/272005/meet-betty-deas-clark-mother-emanuel-pastor/

-- Bullets break windows at Newport News church...

A Newport News church reported broken windows twice in the past few days due to damage from gunshots, police said.


4. SIXTH EPISCOPAL DISTRICT’S YOUNG HERO DELIVERS HIS BABY BROTHER AT HOME:

Eleven year old James Dukes is a member of Mt. Zion AME Church in College Park, Georgia of the Sixth Episcopal District.  He sings in the Youth Choir and is a member of the Youth Mime and Praise team. He is also a "Hero." He is being called his mother's "guardian angel" after he leaped into action to help deliver his baby brother with help from a 911 dispatcher. Ms. Kenyarda Dukes, his mother, says she and her son, James, were at home Tuesday morning when she knew it was time. "I was screaming and my son ran in the room. ‘Mom, are you OK?' I'm like, ‘Nooo!’" Dukes recalled.

Her baby was coming fast and the only "doctor" in the house turned out to be her young son, James."It didn't really scare me," James said, with poise and confidence beyond his eleven years. "It was more just like, let me clean the baby off, make sure he's OK, make sure my mom's OK.” “I called 911. They told me what to do. To get towels and wrap the baby up,” he said. James did just that, welcoming his new brother, Royal Dukes, into the world.
Mother and baby are fine. Baby Royal visited Mt. Zion with his Brother James and was greeted with a standing ovation by the Church members. "My son was brave. He didn't shake. He didn't budge. I was like, ‘Oh my God! Somebody help me.’  He did a wonderful job and I’m proud of him," Kenyarda Dukes said.

Dr. Eric Brown was supposed to deliver the baby, but it was James who ended up performing the emergency medicine. “I've never heard of anything like this. I think James is very special," Dr. Brown said. “The baby is doing fantastic. As you can see, his young doctor is taking very good care of him.  I'm anticipating James to spend some time with me at the office, and we'll help James make his dream come true to be a physician,” Dr. Brown said. For James, helping with the delivery was something he no doubt will never forget, and it's given him a whole new goal in life. Instead of his dream of playing football, he says he plans to become a doctor.

James also appeared on the nationally syndicated, Meredith Vieiro Talk show (former co-host of the Today Show) on NBC where he received a check for $5,000. His church, Mt. Zion AME church in Georgia’s Sixth Episcopal District under the leadership of Pastor Cornelius B. Scott gave James gifts and proclaimed a Special Day in his honor.

The Sixth Episcopal District under the leadership of Bishop Preston Warren Williams II and Presiding Elder Charles Bennett of the West Atlanta District can be very proud that they are raising such fine young boys to be men.

*Submitted by the Reverend Cornelius B. Scott

5. ONLY A FEW DAYS REMAINING TO HIGHLIGHT YOUR PIECE OF AME CHURCH HISTORY:

-- The African Methodist Episcopal Church Bicentennial Commemorative Journal
 
Contact:

Telephone: (215) 662-0506

6. MIRACULOUS MORTGAGE BURNING AT RAHWAY

On Saturday December 13, 2014 at 12:00 noon, believers from near and far gathered to celebrate the mortgage burning of 253 Central Avenue in Rahway, New Jersey; the house of worship for African Methodist Episcopal Ebenezer Church of Rahway. 

Accompanied by shouts of praise, the cheering of children, thunderous applause, words of commendation, tears of joy and the watchful eye of the Rahway Fire Department, the Believers at Ebenezer, Rahway watched the mortgage go up in flames—literally.  According to church records, this edifice is the first in the church’s 189 year history not be damaged by fire. 

In June of 2014, under the leadership of the Rev. Dr. Erika D. Crawford, Pastor, the Believers at Ebenezer embarked upon a “Journey towards Jubilee.”  Saddled with a monthly mortgage payment of almost $6,000 per month, the congregation followed Pastor Crawford on a faith journey towards the pre-mature liquidation of the quarter of a million dollar balance of its $1.3 million mortgage.  

Since her appointment in June of 2011, Pastor Crawford ceased all fundraising and moved the mid-size congregation towards being a totally tithing congregation as an act of faith and obedience.  This resulted in the retirement of almost a half-a-million dollars of debt, the settlement of multiple lawsuits, and the acquisition of two additional pieces of property in a little over four years.

In 1997, after years of praying and sacrifice, the white-stone church building was erected under the leadership of Rev. Rudolph P. Gibbs, Sr., who faithfully served the congregation for 32 years before retiring in 2007.  When asked why she pushed to liquidate the mortgage early, Pastor Crawford replied, “I was led to do this for several reasons.  First, I wanted the congregation to see how God honors our tithes and offerings by doing the impossible.  Second, because I wanted Pastor Gibbs to see the mortgage burned.  I even took him with me to make the final payment.  Lastly, there are other things God has in store for Ebenezer and it was time for us to move in that direction.”

In anticipation of this celebration, Pastor Crawford spent two years doing in-depth research on the congregation’s history which revealed years of financial hardship and difficulty dating back to the mid 1800’s. Ebenezer had its beginnings on December 25, 1826, and in 1829, thirty or more families of "free persons of color" procured a site on the banks of the Robinson Branch of the Rahway River, on Central Avenue, the site of the current edifice. 

On April 10, 1841, the Minutes of the New York Annual Conference of the AME Church say, “it seems that the Rahway Church was still in pecuniary embarrassment, and in order that it might be extricated, a committee was appointed for the purpose, which was to act in conjunction with a Philadelphia committee.”  It was again recorded in the May 21, 1842 minutes that “The Rahway church appears again to have been in an embarrassing condition and a collection was recommended to be taken up for its relief.” “Reading about Ebenezer’s rich yet trying history, made me more committed to setting them on a path of financial freedom and good stewardship” said Pastor Crawford.

In addition to burning the mortgage, the congregation dedicated its most recent property acquisition - a little red-brick building formerly known as “The Rahway School for Colored Children.”   In 1844, the construction of the one-room school house for colored children commenced on the property belonging to Jacob R. Shotwell (former Vice President of RSI Bank).  In 1848, with hopes of giving the school some stability, several Rahway citizens met in the home of Jacob R. Shotwell to incorporate Trustees for the Rahway School for Colored Children.  

The school averaged an enrollment of approximately 35 pupils. By 1882, the Rahway Schools integrated, and by the mid 1880s, the Rahway School for Colored Children was closed. After the closing of the school in the late 1800’s, the building was turned into a one-bedroom home.  However, in spite of its change in use, much of the structural and architectural integrity of the building has remained intact, making this 185 year old building the oldest standing schoolhouse in the City of Rahway and perhaps the oldest standing “Colored School in the State of New Jersey.”

In attendance at the mortgage burning were: Bishop Gregory G. M. Ingram, Presiding Prelate of the First Episcopal District; Bishop Reginald T. Jackson, Presiding Prelate of the Twentieth Episcopal District; Rev. Dr. Jessica Kendall Ingram, Episcopal Supervisor of The First Episcopal District; Rev. Vernard R. Leak, Presiding Elder of the New Brunswick District of the New Jersey Annual Conference; Rev. Melvin E. Wilson, Presiding Elder of the Brooklyn-Westchester District of the New York Annual Conference; Rev. Rudolph P. Gibbs, former Pastor of Ebenezer (1975-2007); Pastors and preachers of the New Jersey Annual Conference; and a host of members and friends from the community.

Together with the officers and members of Ebenezer, Pastor Crawford is prayerfully discerning the best way forward for this historic site, which will become The African American History and Heritage Learning Center of Rahway, NJ, as well as the future of Ebenezer Church as it continues to do great work for God.

Submitted by Ms. Paula Braxton (Trustee for Ebenezer)

7. RETIRED BISHOP FREDERICK H. TALBOT AND RETIRED EPISCOPAL SUPERVISOR SYLVIA TALBOT VISITED WITH EXECUTIVE PRESIDENT OF GUYANA:

Bishop Frederick H. Talbot

On December 2, 2015 during our visit to Guyana, retired Episcopal Supervisor, Dr. Sylvia Talbot and I paid a courtesy call on His Excellency, the Honorable David Arthur Granger, Executive President of Guyana.  We were accompanied by my niece, Lucinda Harding. 

President Granger was sworn in as Guyana's eighth Executive President on May 16th, 2015 and extended the "olive branch" to the outgoing party and administration by pledging to work for the unity of our country and the "good life for all."
       
The new President on the 50th Anniversary of Independence of Guyana from colonial rule produced a document, which traces the movement from colonialism to the independent nation on May 26, 1966.
       
President Granger is a retired military officer who served as Commander of the Defence Force and retired with the rank of Brigadier.  He is a graduate of the University of Guyana and pursued post-graduate Studies in International Relations at the University of the West Indies. He is a communicant of the Anglican Church.
       
During our visit and only after six months in office, the President had already begun the restoration of Georgetown to become again the "Garden City of the Caribbean." There is a great sense of hope for the nation as the President leads it into the future.

8. BISHOP TERESA E. SNORTON NEWLY ELECTED PRESIDENT OF CHURCHES UNITING IN CHRIST (CUIC):

Congratulations to Bishop Teresa E. Snorton, the 59th bishop of the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church and Presiding Prelate of the Fifth Episcopal District, on being the newly elected president of Churches Uniting in Christ (CUIC). 

CUIC member churches are the African Methodist Episcopal Church, the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church, the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church, the Episcopal Church, the International Council of Community Churches, the Moravian Church (Northern Province), the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), the United Church of Christ, and the United Methodist Church. The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America is a partner in mission and dialogue.

CUIC kicked off its January 28–30 plenary with opening worship and a celebration of the Lord’s Supper. Symbolic of their common work toward unity and reconciliation, representatives from the six Christian denominations jointly served Holy Communion to a congregation filled with worshippers from a diverse body of Christian communities in St. Louis, MO. Held at St. Peter African Methodist Episcopal (AME) Church, the host church, the worship service accentuated the group’s historic and ongoing commitment to work together to be change agents in the world.
“Regardless of how we name ourselves denominationally, we all claim a common brotherhood and sisterhood through Jesus Christ,” said Bishop Teresa Snorton.  

“It’s very important that an organization like CUIC be ready to lead the way in helping the faith community express a message that offers hope, a message that continues to do as scripture says: be an advocate for justice and be ones that work until righteousness rolls down.”  

In the Lord’s Service,

Senior Bishop Lawrence L. Reddick III


*Submitted by Dr. Jeanette L. Bouknight, Executive Secretary, Christian Methodist Episcopal Church

9. PRESIDING ELDER CELEBRATES 30 YEARS IN MINISTRY AND MISSION IN THE AME CHURCH:   

*Ms. Shelly Brown

At the conclusion of the 149th Session of the Allegheny-Scranton District Conference, Third Episcopal District, at Greater Allen African Methodist Episcopal Church, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, clergy, laity, friends and family, gathered for a reception to celebrate the Reverend Dr. Eric L. Brown  and Lady Margo Allen Brown’s 30 years of Ministry and Mission in the African Methodist Episcopal Church! The Reverend Dr. Eric L. Brown preached his trial sermon on February 9, 1986 at Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Johnstown, Pennsylvania with the sermon title “I Know My Redeemer Lives” Job 19:25. 

The Reverend Darian Banks, pastor Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Scranton, Pennsylvania was the Master of Ceremony.  “We’ve Come This Far by Faith” was the processional of the program participants and the honorees. Praise God From Whom All Blessings Flow. Musical selection was rendered by Ms. Twyla Glasgow, Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Tarentum, Pennsylvania and a mime selection was rendered by the Blessed and Chosen Mime Group of Payne Chapel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Duquesne, Pennsylvania.  The Invocation was rendered by the Reverend Cynthia Kirk, pastor St. Paul African Methodist Episcopal Church, Milton, Pennsylvania and Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Williamsport, Pennsylvania.  The scripture reading Psalm 27:13-14 was read by the Reverend Jeannette Hubbard, pastor New Ebenezer African Methodist Episcopal Church, Aliquippa, Pennsylvania. The Reverend Melvin D. Wilson, Jr., pastor Payne Chapel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Duquesne, Pennsylvania gave the Occasion and the Blessing of the Food was rendered by the Reverend C. Bill Mangrum, pastor Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Lewistown, Pennsylvania and Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Mt. Union, Pennsylvania. 

Reflections of the Wilberforce and Payne Years were rendered by Mrs. Juanita H. Arterberry, St. James African Methodist Episcopal Church, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Reverend Dr. James H. Harris, pastor Payne Chapel African Methodist Episcopal Church; and the Reverend Dr. Floyd W. Alexander, Administrative Assistant Third Episcopal District. 

Reflection of the Pastor and Presiding Elder Years was rendered by Mr. Michael Aldrich, owner Aldrich Funeral Home, Munhall, Pennsylvania; the Reverend Cheryl Lynn Reed Ruffin, pastor St. Paul African Methodist Episcopal Church, Pittsburgh; Presiding Elder (Retired) Reverend Dr. Samson M. Cooper; and Presiding Elder Reverend Dr. James H. McLemore, Pittsburgh District. 

Reflection of the Ministry Today was rendered by Mrs. Marsha Washington, President Pittsburgh Women’s Missionary Society; Mr. Andrew Coleman III, President Pittsburgh Y.P.D.; Mr. Vernon R. Kelly, President Pittsburgh Conference Lay Organization; and the Reverend Rodrecus Johnson, Jr., pastor St. James African Methodist Episcopal Church, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. 

The Reverend Linda Moore, pastor First African Methodist Episcopal Church, Clairton, Pennsylvania introduced and presented roses to Lady Margo Allen Brown who gave a heartfelt thank you to everyone for their love and support. 

The Reverend Melva Hartzog, pastor Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Tarentum, Pennsylvania introduced the Reverend Dr. Eric L. Brown and presented him with a commemorative plaque for this momentous occasion.    

The Reverend Dr. Eric L. Brown was overjoyed at the outpouring of love shown to him throughout his ministry and at this celebration another heartfelt thank you was given.  Reverend Dr. Eric L. Brown was especially proud to have his son, Justin Bailey, who is a sophomore studying Sports Medicine to share this celebration with him and Lady Margo.  

Continue to serve well Reverend Dr. Eric L. Brown!

Submitted by Ms. Shelly Brown, Administrative Assistant Allegheny-Scranton District Third Episcopal District

10. AFRICAN AMERICAN COLLEGE STUDENTS TEND TO CONCENTRATE IN MAJORS THAT LEAD TO LOW PAY:

Filed in Research & Studies on February 12, 2016

A new study by researchers at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., finds that although more African Americans are going to college in recent years, they tend to concentrate in majors that lead to lower-paying jobs.

The study found that only 6 percent of African Americans majored in pharmacy sciences, the bachelor’s degree which had the highest median earnings. But 12 percent of all African Americans with bachelor’s degrees majored in psychology or social work, one of the lowest paying majors.

African Americans make up about 13 percent of all undergraduate students but they are 21 percent of the graduates in health and medical administration, 20 percent of the majors in human services, 19 percent in social work, and 17 percent in public administration. All of the majors are among the lowest paying among the 137 bachelor’s degree programs analyzed in the study.

Anthony P. Carnevale, director of the Center on Education and the Workforce at Georgetown University and a co-author of the report, stated that “the low-paying majors that African Americans are concentrated in are of high social value but low economic value. Meaningful career planning before college can provide transparency about major choice and potentially prevent onerous debt and unemployment down the road.”

The full report, African Americans: College Majors and Earnings, may be downloaded by clicking here: https://cew.georgetown.edu/wp-content/uploads/AfricanAmericanMajors_2016_web.pdf

11. AFRICAN-AMERICAN LEADERS URGE CONGRESS TO REFORM CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM:

Houston, Texas, February 24, 2016 – Participants in the Samuel DeWitt Proctor Conference, which concluded its annual meeting recently, urged members of Congress to reform the country’s criminal justice system. Today, African-Americans are seven times more likely to be incarcerated as whites, contributing to high rates of hunger and poverty.

“When men and women are not home working for their families and when they can’t work after leaving prison, more children are at risk of suffering from hunger,” said Rev. David Beckmann, president of Bread for the World, who addressed the conference. “We need swift, bipartisan action to ensure that prison reform allows families to live free from poverty and hunger.”

Conference participants urged Congress to support and pass sentencing reform laws without further delay. The Sentencing Reform and Corrections Act (SRCA), S. 2123, represent a major first step in serious criminal justice reform. If passed, it would place limits on mandatory minimum sentences, allowing more parents to support their families.

“Congress needs to pass comprehensive prison reform soon, because too many children are going hungry,” said Beckmann. “The letters to Congress from the Proctor Conference are an encouraging sign and are critical to keep the momentum to reform the criminal justice system.”

The United States is home to five percent of the world’s population but 20 percent of its prison population. The sharp rise in levels of incarceration in the United States since 1980 has contributed to the rise of hunger and food insecurity in the country.
                                                                                                              
Mandatory minimum sentences for drug-related offenses have left many parents behind bars, unable to provide food for their children. Those leaving prison also face difficulties in securing employment, further reducing their ability to keep their families from poverty and food insecurity.

The Samuel DeWitt Proctor Conference (http://sdpconference.info/) is a leading social justice network for the African-American faith community. It was named after Dr. Samuel DeWitt Proctor, former pastor of the Abyssinian Baptist Church of New York City and president of Virginia Union University and North Carolina A&T State University.
                                
Bread for the World (www.bread.org) is a collective Christian voice urging our nation’s decisionmakers to end hunger at home and abroad.

Esteban García
Media Relations Specialist

12. MORGAN STATE UNIVERSITY GETS $5 MILLION SCHOLARSHIP DONATION:

-- MSU alumnus and wife expand their endowed fund for students from Baltimore City

Retired UPS senior executive Calvin E. Tyler Jr. and his wife, Tina, nationally known philanthropists, announced a $5 million gift to Morgan State University for an endowed scholarship fund established in their name at MSU. The fund provides need-based scholarships that cover full tuition for select Morgan students who reside in Baltimore City, the Tyler's’ hometown.

The couple’s contribution is the largest individual donation in the school’s history, and is believed to be the fifth largest from an individual to any historically black college.

“This incredibly generous donation from the Tylers will provide many talented, hardworking students with a higher education they may not otherwise have achieved,” said Morgan President David Wilson. “But more than that, it will help ensure the success of Morgan’s mission and benefit the youth of Baltimore City, at this particularly challenging time and far into the future.”

Calvin Tyler was the first person in his family to attend college when he entered Morgan to study business administration in 1961. But he had to interrupt his higher education in 1963 because he lacked the funds to continue. He took a job as one of the first 10 drivers at UPS in Baltimore in 1964, during the company’s early days. Two years later, he became a UPS manager and, with much hard work and sacrifice—his own and his family’s—he climbed the corporate ladder, joining the company’s board of directors and becoming senior vice president of operations, the position from which he retired in 1998.

“I think anyone who has had any success in life and has the ability to reach back and help others, this is the time for them to do it,” Tyler said. “There are two major things I want to achieve [with the endowed scholarship fund]: Number one, to see as many of our young people graduate with a degree as possible…. The second thing that my wife and I are concerned about, and that’s why we’re providing 10 full-tuition scholarships each year, is that we want more students to get a college degree and graduate debt-free.”

The "Calvin and Tina Tyler Endowed Scholarship Fund" was established in 2002 with a $500,000 donation. Another $500,000 followed in 2005, and a gift of $1 million was announced in 2008. The recent gift of $3 million is “…a vote of confidence in Morgan State University and Dr. Wilson and his staff,” Calvin Tyler said. “[Dr. Wilson] comes from a very humble background, and he can relate to young people who are academically qualified but just don’t have the resources to get a college education. I think he has a real understanding of the plight of those young people.”

Cheryl Y. Hitchcock, Morgan’s vice president for Institutional Advancement, pointed out that 90% of the university’s students receive financial aid.

“The Tyler’s’ gifts have been exceedingly helpful in our mission to bring in all students who qualify academically,” Hitchcock said. “Morgan’s alumni, as a whole, have been increasingly supportive of the university over the past six years, boosting our institution’s alumni giving rate to a percentage far above the national average. We hope the Tyler's latest donation will inspire even greater giving.”

Morgan State University, founded in 1867, is a Carnegie-classified Doctoral Research Institution offering more than 70 academic programs leading to bachelor’s degrees as well as programs at the master’s and doctoral levels. Its student body is multiracial and multi-ethnic.


13. FAITH FOR YESTERDAY, TODAY, AND TOMORROW:       

The Rev. Dr. Angelique Walker-Smith

Already in this young year, the presidential and congressional races are well underway. This year also begins a long sprint in another race—the race to end hunger by 2030. This race has been energized by the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), adopted by world leaders last year. The SDGs have a partner in the recent launch of the Decade in Solidarity with People of African Descent, also adopted by world leaders. What does all of this have to do with people of African descent and their faith as we celebrate Black History Month?

For hundreds of years, people of African descent have found the strength to confront hurt, harm, and danger through their faith. They have relied on their faith to advance their vision of justice and to engage their imagination on what justice looks like when it seems impossible. Ending hunger and poverty has consistently been a part of this vision that has advanced hope for generations today and the future. African kings and queens and African leaders in the Bible as far back as Genesis to the earliest days of Christianity as well as during and after the trans-Atlantic slave trade are examples of this. In the last century and in this century, this vision has also been held up by pan-African churches and their witness in public life. Often these churches have not separated faith and public life. People like Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Rosa Parks come to mind. This year we also celebrate the bicentennial of the African Methodist Episcopal Church (AME), which has also been committed to bridging the inherent tensions of living the transcendent life and the public life on earth.

Whoever is elected to the presidency and Congress later this year will be in an important position to insure that our country has a deepened commitment to policies that support ending hunger. This includes the embrace of the SDGs in the U.S. and globally as well as the implementation of the climate change agreement made by world leaders last year, including President Obama, to reduce greenhouse emissions. Electing the right national, state, and local leaders directly impacts the way these dangers are addressed.

Hebrews 11:1 says faith is the assurance of things hoped for and the conviction of things not seen. The race toward ending hunger as we enter this election season of competing ideologies and visions of what the U.S. and the world should look like is timely and important. Bread for the World believes whoever is elected has the responsibility to not only serve all the people but to advance the vision of ending hunger, poverty, and mass incarceration. Visit www.bread.org/elections for resources to help you engage in this election and the effort to end hunger as a person of faith.

The Rev. Dr. Angelique Walker-Smith is the national senior associate for Pan-African church engagement at Bread for the World.

14. THE TRUTH IS THE LIGHT:

*The Reverend Dr. Charles R. Watkins, Jr.

Based on Biblical Text: 2 Corinthians 8:9 KJV: For ye know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that, though he was rich, yet for your sakes he became poor, that ye through his poverty might be rich.

Paul reminds us that we do well in so many things. We trust God; we are articulate, insightful, and passionate. He admonishes us to do our best in giving too. He says, "I’m not trying to order you around against your will."

However, using the example of the Macedonians’ enthusiasm as a stimulus to our love, he is hoping to bring the best out of us. We are reminded of the generosity of Jesus Christ. As rich as He was, He gave it all away for us in one stroke; he became poor and we became rich.

We have made many promises as it relates to our giving and our commitment to support the mission and ministries of our church. Our vow begins as we are read into full membership.

Question 4: Do you believe in the Doctrine of Holy Scriptures as set forth in the articles of religion of the African Methodist Episcopal Church?

Question 5: Will you be governed by the Discipline of the African Methodist Episcopal Church, hold sacred the ordinances of God and try as much as possible to promote the welfare of fellow members and the advancement of the Kingdom of God? Question

6: Will you give of your time, talents, and money for the support of the Gospel, Church, poor, and various ministries of the Church? The Doctrine and Discipline of the African Methodist Episcopal Church that we vow to be governed by reminds us that tithing shall be the official doctrinal stewardship position of the African Methodist Episcopal Church and every church shall work toward a full tithing commitment.

Finally, …the minister shall give the name(s) of the candidate(s), and say: We cordially welcome you into the fellowship of the Church of God, and in light of our Christian love, I extend to you the right hand of fellowship, and may God grant that you may be a faithful and useful member of the Church militant till you are called to the fellowship of the Church triumphant, which is faultless before the presence of God.

Paul admonishes us that the best thing we can do right now is to finish what we started and not let those good intentions grow stale. Our heart has been in the right place all along. We have what it takes to finish it up, so go to it.

Once the commitment is clear, we do what we can, not what we can’t. The heart regulates the hands. This is not so others can take it easy while we sweat it out. We are challenged to work shoulder to shoulder with each other all the way. In that way our surplus will match our fellow member’s deficit, their surplus will match our deficit. In the end we come out even. As it is written, “Nothing left over to the one with the most, nothing lacking to the one with the least.”

Beloved, we have not always followed through with what we promised. We have been excited at the beginning of our journey however we lose our zest for mission and ministry somewhere along the way. Paul makes it clear that God’s Word is plain and to the point. The cure for what ails us can be found in a letter the Apostle Paul wrote to the Corinthians, 2 Corinthians 8:7-15.

I think the translation from The Living Bible is a help at this juncture as it reads, “You people there are leaders in so many ways. You have so much faith, so many good preachers, so much learning, so much enthusiasm, so much love for us. Now I want you to be leaders also in the spirit of cheerful giving. I am not giving you an order; I am not saying you must do it, but others are eager for it. This is one way to prove that your love is real, that it goes beyond mere words. You know how full of love and kindness our Lord Jesus was: though he was so very rich, yet to help you he became so very poor, so that by being poor he could make you rich. I want to suggest that you finish what you started to do a year ago, for you were not only the first to propose this idea, but the first to begin doing something about it. Having started the ball rolling so enthusiastically, you should carry this project through to completion just as gladly, giving whatever you can out of whatever you have. Let your enthusiastic idea at the start be equaled by your realistic action now. If you are really eager to give, then it isn’t important how much you have to give. God wants you to give what you have, not what you haven’t. Of course, I don’t mean that those who receive your gifts should have an easy time of it at your expense, but you should divide with them. Right now you have plenty and can help them; then at some other time they can share with you when you need it. In this way, each will have as much as he needs. Do you remember what the Scriptures say about this? "He that gathered much had nothing left over, and he that gathered little had enough." So you also should share with those in need.

I realize that it is extremely difficult to convince a selfish people that there are actually great benefits to sharing. However, we at the top must be convinced that we have a responsibility to set the example for those folk at the bottom of the chain who are struggling to understand what their responsibility to mission and ministry is.

We at the top must first come to understand that God’s plan for sharing is really quite simple. There should be, among us who have been appointed or elected to provide leadership for the flock, a general understanding that God wants 10% for the work of kingdom building, and then an offering according to our ability. In other words, after allowing God to claim His ten percent, give whatever else we can spare. Warning, God’s Word also says to us if we give little because our analysis of our expendable income is unrighteous we need to be careful! It is a fact that God is watching us. God knows what our needs are. God knows what excess we have.

When Paul says, “Give from what you have,” he’s not talking about the tithe. The tithe belongs to God. When Paul is saying give from what you have he is talking about an offering. Many times, maybe even most times the offering comes as a sacrifice. We are challenged to give according to our ability, recognizing of course that God loves a cheerful giver.

The truth of the matter is, God’s plan for sharing is sure to meet every need and solve every problem, if we trust Him. God’s plan for sharing is a cure for the financial woes of the church but it requires sacrifice and obedience. We who are Christian are challenged to be obedient to the cause of Christianity. When we sacrifice giving from what we have we help meet the physical needs of the church and enable the church to spread the gospel, clothe the naked, feed the hungry, comfort the afflicted and to help the helpless.

*The Reverend Dr. Charles R. Watkins, Jr., is the pastor of Morris Brown AME Church in Charleston, South Carolina

15. GETTING TO ZERO – EXAMPLE OF THE DISPARITY EXPERIENCED BY BLACK WOMEN:

*Dr. Oveta Fuller

- Serena Williams vs. Maria Sharapova

BY: Paul Kawata • NMAC 

In 2015, Russian tennis player Maria Sharapova earned nearly twice as much in endorsements as American Serena Williams (John Eligon, 2016). Serena is higher ranked and has won more Grand Slam championships, yet Maria made $10 million more in endorsements.

The world isn’t fair, but wasn’t talent supposed to be the great equalizer?  I was taught that if I worked hard enough, I could overcome my situation.  While that may be true for a select few, it's not the reality for the vast majority.  That’s what makes this such a difficult conversation.  If the vast majority gets left behind, then is Horatio Alger’s story an inspiration or a lie?  Can it be both?

If Serena Williams can’t catch a break, what does it mean to the average black woman living in America.  It means she is twenty times more likely than a white woman to catch HIV.  Her poverty rate (25.1%) is more than double that of white women (10.3%).  She is three times more likely to be murdered.

These statistics are all too familiar.  Society is numb and sometimes too accepting of this reality.  It's overwhelming to think of the structural changes that are needed for change.  How do we not become the disillusioned silent majority?

I work with beautiful black women. It breaks my heart when they don’t see themselves that way.  After reading this piece’s introduction, a staff member asked “what do I tell my daughter?”  I was at a loss for words.  The pain in her question is one that too many women of color must address with their children.  If the world isn’t fair and talent is not the great equalizer, how do you protect your children?

In many ways, HIV is a mirror of the challenges facing people of color in America.  The disease sits at the intersection of healthcare, race, treatment, prevention, and the uncomfortable balance between the haves and the have nots.  There are some very difficult conversations that need to happen in order to end the HIV epidemic.  We can’t end AIDS until we get people living with HIV (PLWH) on treatment.  We can’t get PLWH on treatment until we get them into healthcare.  We can’t get them into healthcare if their community has no health infrastructure, no safe housing, no jobs, no pathway to a better life.

We may have the science for treatment as prevention (TasP) and pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), but without real implementation plans that focus on the reality of what it means to live with HIV in America; our work is a pipe dream.  My biggest fear is that we will end the epidemic in certain communities while the virus continues to ravage the have nots. 

Paul Kawata, Executive Director

 *The Rev. Dr. Fuller is currently on Sabbatical leave from the University of Michigan and will submit her column as her schedule permits. 

16. iCHURCH SCHOOL LESSON BRIEF FOR SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 2016 - FESTIVAL OF BOOTHS (TABERNACLES) - LEVITICUS 23:33-43:

*Brother Bill Dickens

Key Verse:  So your descendants will know that I had the Israelites live in temporary shelters when I brought them out of Egypt.  I am the Lord your God.  Leviticus 23:43 (NRSV)

Introduction

Sunday, February 28, 2016 is the third Sunday of Lent - Color: Purple

When freshmen students enroll in my introductory macroeconomics courses I emphasize that a civil and responsible economic system attempts to ameliorate the following socio-economic ills: unemployment, inflation, poverty, healthcare disparities, hunger and homelessness.  Despite impressive progress concerning the first five problems, American public policy has still lagged behind other industrial nations in reducing the incidence of homelessness.  According to the National Alliance to end Homelessness, in January 2015, 564,708 people were homeless on a given night in the United States.  Fifteen percent of the homeless population is classified as chronically homeless and of that number eight percent are veterans.  The Adult AME Church School Lesson looks at how God responds to the Israelites housing needs.  A special festival is created to remind Israelites that God is indeed a shelter in the time of storm.

Bible Lesson

We find God’s instructions for celebrating the Feast of Tabernacles in Leviticus 23 33-43.  This command is given at a point in history shortly after God had delivered Israel from bondage in Egypt. The feast is the seventh and last of the great feasts described in Leviticus and was to be celebrated each year on “the fifteenth day of this seventh month.”  The feast was to run for seven days (Leviticus 23:34).  Like all feasts, it begins with a “holy convocation” or Sabbath day when the Israelites were to stop working to set aside the day for worshiping God.  On each day of the feast they were to offer an “offering made by fire to the Lord” and then after seven days of feasting, again the eighth day was to be “a holy convocation” when they were to cease from work and offer another sacrifice to God (Leviticus 23:38).  Lasting eight days, the Feast of Tabernacles begins and ends with a Sabbath day of rest.  During the eight days of the feast, the Israelites would dwell in booths or tabernacles that were made from the branches of trees (Leviticus 23:40–42).  This was a symbolic reminder for how God provided shelter for his people during the sojourn from their Egyptian exodus to the Promised Land in Canaan.

Bible Application

In 2002, I participated in a Habitat for Humanity housing project in Tallahassee, Florida.  This experience allowed me to share with others in the building of a home for a needy family in the community.  I was humbled seeing the tears of joy when the homeowner saw the completed product and the assurance of knowing she was a first-time homeowner.  I thought about my Habitat for Humanity experience as I began preparing for the homegoing services of my late father this week. 

My Dad was a master brick mason for 45 years.  He built homes and office buildings in three states: North Carolina, Virginia and Maryland.  He built additions to the home I grew up in as a child in Washington, DC.  I decided to write this column to honor my father since his work is directly related to how God provides shelter to all who seek Him.  If my father could help reduce homelessness in his 45 year career the least I can do is pen a few words showing how God meets our needs.  Jesus said it best, “In my Father’s House are many mansions...” 

Thanks Dad for teaching me the skills at an early age under your tutelage about mixing mortar, laying bricks and using a level device.  Most of all, thanks for helping reduce homelessness and providing a roof over your family’s head and leading by example that God is our Shelter!  QED

*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

17. MEDITATION BASED ON LUKE 9:18-24:

*The Rev. Dr. Joseph A. Darby

I’m writing this week’s Meditation during Black History Month - when America recognizes the achievements of people of color and during the Season of Lent - the Forty days (46 days minus Sundays) of sacrificial contemplation leading up to the celebration of the Resurrected Christ.  Those two very different events have something in common.

Many of those who celebrate Black History Month pull their African clothing out of the closet and wear it throughout February, attend concerts, lectures, special worship events and become very socially conscious during the “season of blackness” - only to pack away their clothing, interest in black history and social consciousness until the next February comes around.

Some Christians nobly sacrifice things and habits near and dear to them and become very focused on their faith during the Lenten season, only to reclaim what they sacrificed and go back to “business as usual” on Easter Sunday.

We’d do well to celebrate black history by our continual social awareness and pursuit of equity and justice and to sacrificially serve the Lord not just during the Lenten season, but every day of our lives.  The need for continuity also applies to our prayer lives.

Too many good people hinder their spiritual growth and well-being because human nature leads us to push our relationship with God down on our priority list; go to church when we have the time and interest, and only go to God in prayer when we run into situations that we can’t handle by our own means.

When we take the time to continually practice our faith, serve the Lord and go to God in prayer, we’ll find new strength, new possibilities and new power to face each day.  We can “take our burdens to the Lord and leave them there” - not as casual “visitors,” but as devoted children of the God who never fails to “make a way for us out of no way.”

Stay close to the Lord every day of your life.  When you do, God will stay close to you every day, bless you every day and give you daily reasons to appreciate the hymn that says, “Ask the Savior to help you, comfort strengthen and keep you; He is willing to aid you, He will carry you through.

*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

18. GENERAL OFFICER FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

We are saddened to announce the passing of Mr. Frank Brown, the husband of the Rev. Dr. Teresa Fry Brown, AMEC Historiographer. Please be in prayer for Dr. Teresa Fry Brown and family.

Arrangements for Mr. Frank Brown are as follows:

Visitation
Sunday, February 28th 2:00 – 5:00 p.m.
Gregory B. Levett & Sons Funeral Homes, Inc.
Gwinnet Chapel
914 Scenic Highway
Lawrenceville, Georgia  30045

Telephone: (707) 338-5558

Homegoing Celebration
Monday, February 29th 10:00 a.m.
New Bethel AME Church
8350 Rockbridge Road
Lithonia, Georgia  30058

Telephone: (770) 484-3350

Interment
Monday, February 29th 2:00 p.m.
Georgia National Cemetery
1080 Scott Hudgens Drive
Canton, GA 30114

Repast
Monday, February 29th
Following the Interment
New Bethel AME Church

Condolences may be sent:

The Rev. Dr. Teresa L. Fry Brown
1080 Palmer Road
Lithonia, Georgia  30058

Notes:

* Friends and Family are asked to wear “shades of blue” to the Celebration Service.

-  In lieu of flowers, financial contributions may be made to the Kids in Need Foundation: 
www.kinf.org./donate, in honor of Frank Brown.

-  In lieu of remarks, family and friends are asked to write letters or notes of fond memories to encourage the family.  Letters and notes may be emailed by Sunday, February 28th to
fdbmemorybook@gmail.com

19. TCR COLUMNIST FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

It is with deep sorrow we share news of the passing of Mr. James Randolph Dickens, the father of Dr. William (Bill) Dickens who serves as a Church School Teacher at Allen AME Church in Tacoma, Washington (Pacific Northwest Conference).  He is currently a member of the Fellowship of Church Educators for the African Methodist Episcopal Church and Columnist for the iChurch School column in The Christians Recorder and a Lay Delegate to the 2016 General Conference.

Mr. James Randolph Dickens is also the husband of Bessie L. Dickens for 62 years and father to two other sons, James Covington Dickens, Ph.D. (Mathematics), and George Wayne Dickens. He was a veteran of the Korean Conflict and a master brick mason for 40 years in Washington, DC.

Services for Mr. James Randolph Dickens:

Saturday, February 27, 2016
Wake:  10:00 a.m. - 11:00 a.m.
Funeral: 11:00 a.m.
Corinth Baptist Church
814 Cypresstree Drive
Capitol Heights, MD 20743

Telephone: (301) 636-9443

The Rev. Roosevelt Dickens, pastor

Professional services are entrusted to
Johnson & Jenkins Funeral Home
716 Kennedy St NW
Washington, DC 20011

Telephone :( 202) 882-8800

Contact information for Dr. Bill Dickens:

6408 86th Ave West
University Place, WA 98467

Mobile: (850) 459-6890
Email:
dickensb@comcast.net

20. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE: 

We regret to inform you of the passing of Bother Mason Rice Sr., the father of the Reverend Mason Rice Jr., pastor at Saint James AME Church in Denton, Texas and the Reverend Iona Smith, associate minister at Saint James AME Church in Fort Worth, Texas.  Brother Rice passed away at home on Thursday, February 18, 2016 surrounded by his loved ones. He was a long-time member of the AME Church and a well-known officer and member of the Lay Organization on the Local and Conference levels in the 10th Episcopal District.  Brother Rice is also survived by his loving wife of 69 years, Mrs. Effie Rice and other relatives and friends.

Service Arrangements for Bother Mason Rice Sr.:

Friday, February 26, 2016
Wake Services: 6:00 p.m. – 7:30 p.m.
Saint James African Methodist Episcopal Church
5020 Ramev Avenue
Fort Worth, Texas 76105

Telephone: (817) 536-7814

Saturday, February 27, 2016
Funeral Services – 11:00 a.m.
Baker Chapel African Methodist Episcopal Church
1050 E. Humbolt Street
Fort Worth, Texas 76104

Telephone: (817) 336-5326

Services are provided by:

Bakers Funeral Home
301 East Rosedale
Fort Worth, Texas 76104

Telephone: 817-332-4468

Expressions of sympathy may be sent to:

The Reverend Mason Rice, Jr.
2224 S. Cravens Road
Fort Worth, Texas 76112

Telephone: (817) 429-8925

The Reverend Iona Smith
2213 Lucas Drive
Fort Worth, Texas 76112

Telephone: (817) 457-3504

Mrs. Effie Rice
5516 Patton Drive
Fort Worth, Texas 76112

Telephone: (817) 451-7377

21. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

“Sunset and evening star And one clear call for me!  And may there be no moaning of the bar, When I put out to sea, But such a tide as moving seems asleep, Too full for sound and foam, When that which drew from out the boundless deep Turns again home.” Alfred Lord Tennyson

We regret to inform you of the passing of Sister Mary L. Klugh, the spouse of retired Presiding Elder Oscar Klugh of the Seventh Episcopal District of the AME Church. Sister Klugh was a Life Member of the Women’s Missionary Society. Bless the Lord O My Soul: Sister Klugh slept away very peacefully.

Please note the following:

Celebration of Life Services:

11:00 a.m., Tuesday, February 23, 2016
Long Cane A.M.E. Church
8 Long Cane Road
Abbeville, SC 29620

Telephone: (864) 360-9043

The Rev. Dr. Julius M. Johnson, pastor

Condolences May be Sent:
 
The Rev. Oscar Klugh, retired presiding elder
545 Klugh Road
Abbeville, SC 29620

22. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

It is with heartfelt sympathy that we announce the passing of and the funeral services for the Reverend Anthony Young, a Local Elder at Words of Faith AME Church in Mableton, Georgia.

The following information has been provided regarding visitation and funeral service.

Visitation and Family sharing:

Friday, February 19, 2016, 6:00 - 8:00 p.m.
Words of Faith AME Church
5719 Garner Road, Mableton, GA 30126

The Rev. Walter D. Moon, pastor

Celebration of Life Service: 11:00 a.m.
Turner Chapel A.M.E. Church, Rev. Dr. Kenneth Marcus, Pastor
492 N. Marietta Parkway
Marietta, GA 30060

Eulogist: The Rev. Walter D. Moon

Condolences and Expressions of Sympathy may be sent to:

Mrs. Reba Young
4944 Niagara Drive
Acworth, GA 30102

Telephone: 770-529-1007

23. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

The Third Episcopal District sadly announces the passing of the Reverend Keith Jones, Local Elder and Associate Minister at Spelman Chapel in Kent, Ohio who transitioned on Tuesday, February 16, 2016.  We unite in prayer with his family members in the loss of their loved one.

Services will be held Saturday, February 20, 2016;
.
Calling hours:  10:00 am to 12:00 noon.
The Homegoing Celebration will begin at 12:00 Noon.

Spelman Chapel AME Church
910 Walnut Street
Kent, OH 44240

Telephone: (330) 673-9194

The Reverend Sid Harris, Eulogist
The Reverend Dr. L. Anthony Gatewood, pastor

Arrangements entrusted to:

Bissler and Sons Funeral Home and Crematory
628 West Main Street
Kent, OH 44240

Telephone:  (330) 673-5857

Interment:

Standing Rock Cemetery, Kent, OH

Condolences may be sent to:

Marlon Jones
C/o Spelman Chapel
910 Walnut Street
Kent, OH 44240

24. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

We regret to inform you of the passing of Mrs. Elizabeth Rose Hightower Beasley on Saturday, February 13, 2016.  She was the mother of the Reverend Vincent Hightower, pastor of Zion Temple AME Church in Brazoria, Texas. 

Expressions of Sympathy may be sent to:

The Rev. Vincent Hightower (son)
506 Sims Court
Dickinson, Texas 77539

Telephone: (409) 256-1354

Service Arrangements:

Saturday, February 20, 2016,
Wake/Visitation: 10:00-11:00 a.m.
Funeral: 11:00 a.m.
Wesley AME Church
2209 Dowling Street
Houston, TX 77033

Telephone: (713) 659-1945

Professional Services are provided by:

McCoy and Harrison Funeral
4918 Martin Luther King Blvd.
Houston, TX 77021

Telephone: 713-659-7618
Fax: 713-748-7122

Internment:

Saturday, February 20, 2016
Houston Memorial Cemetery (Cullen)
Houston, TX

25. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

It is with heartfelt sympathy that we announce the passing of and the funeral services for Mr. L. J. Sapp, the husband of the Reverend Equilla Sapp, a Local Deacon at Greater Hayes AME Church in Oakdale, Louisiana.

The following information has been provided regarding visitation and funeral service.

Visitation and Celebration of Life Service: Saturday, February 20, 2016
Greater Hayes AME Church
602 Mill Street
Oakdale, LA 71463

The Reverend Michael Martin, pastor

Visitation: 9:00 a.m. - 10:55 a.m.
Celebration of Life Service: 11:00 a.m.

Arrangements have been entrusted to:

Braxton Funeral Home
301 East 6th Avenue
Oberlin, LA 70655

Telephone: (337) 639-2561

Condolences and Expressions of Sympathy may be sent to:
The Reverend Equilla Sapp
P. O. Box 455
Oakdale, LA 71463

Telephone: (318) 491-1896

26. CLERGY FAMILY BEREAVEMENT NOTICE:

We regret to inform you of the passing of Sister Lela Briscoe, mother of the Rev. Tara Briscoe who is the pastor of Mt. Zion AME Italy, passed on Tuesday, February 9th at 7:45 a.m.

The wake will be held February 19, 2016 at:
St. Luke AMEC
117 E. Church
Waco, Texas 76704
Time: 6:30-8:30 p.m.

The services will be held February 20, 2016 at:
Toliver Chapel MBC
1402 Elm Street
Waco, Texas 76704
Time: 11:00 a.m.

Condolences may be sent to:
The Rev. Tara Briscoe
301 Sherman
Waco, Texas 76704

Telephone: 254-644-7859

27. BEREAVEMENT NOTICES AND CONGRATULATORY ANNOUNCEMENTS PROVIDED BY:

Ora L. Easley, Administrator
AMEC Clergy Family Information Center
Email: Amespouses1@bellsouth.net      
Web page: http://www.amecfic.org/   
Telephone: (615) 837-9736 (H)
Telephone: (615) 833-6936 (O)
Cell: (615) 403-7751




28. 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.

Did someone you know pass this copy of The Christian Recorder to you? Get your own copy HERE: http://www.the-christian-recorder.org/


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