Month: December 2009
Thursday
“Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations,
baptizing them in the name of the Father
and of the Son
and of the Holy Spirit.”
~Matthew 28:19a~
Continue to pray for Mr. “Cete” Dillon. He’s not well yet.
Pray for Rev. Butch Reviere as he has a MRI today and meets with his doctor tomorrow.
Mrs. Margurite Vernon of Arcola is in ICU at North Oaks. Pray for her and for her family as they continue to help care for her.
Tiffany B. Currier
The second try to open a valve did not work. Pray for Tiffany as she takes blood thinners and waits to see if her body will solve this problem on its own. Pray for Tiffany as she lives daily with this health concern.
CaringBridge Sites
- http://www.caringbridge.org/visit/kathyjothompson
- http://www.caringbridge.org/visit/larkindorris
- http://www.caringbridge.org/visit/calliecole
LOTTIE MOON (Part 3)
Lottie extended her work into the interior, especially P’ingtu and Hwangshien, until additional missionaries arrived to carry on the work. Only then did she allow herself to take a much-needed furlough, the first in 1892, and the second in 1902. Lottie was very concerned that her fellow missionaries were burning out from lack of rest and renewal and going to early graves. The mindset back home was “go to the mission field, die on the mission field.” Many never expected to see their friends and families again. Lottie argued that regular furloughs every ten years would literally extend the lives and effectiveness of seasoned missionaries. (Today missionaries get a furlough roughly every four years.) She also took a month of rest during the year.
The War with Japan (1894), the Boxer Rebellion (1900), and the Nationalist uprising (that overthrew the Qing Dynasty in 1911) all profoundly affected mission work. Famine and disease took their toll, as well. When Lottie returned from her second furlough in 1904, she agonized over the suffering of the people who were literally starving to death all around her. She pled for more money and more resources, but the mission board was heavily in debt and could send nothing. Mission salaries were voluntarily cut. Unknown to her fellow missionaries, Lottie Moon—the Southern belle who was once described as “overindulged and under-disciplined”—shared her own meager money and food with any and everyone around her, severely affecting both her physical and mental health. In 1912, she only weighed fifty pounds. Alarmed, fellow missionaries arranged for her to be sent back home to the United States with a missionary companion, but she died on Christmas Eve on board ship in Kobe Harbor, Japan. Her body was cremated and the remains returned to loved ones in Virginia for burial.
Since her sacrificial death at the age of seventy-two, Lottie Moon has come to personify the missionary spirit for Southern Baptists and many other Christians, as well. The annual Lottie Moon Christmas Offering for Missions has raised a total of $1.5 billion for missions since 1888 and finances half the entire Southern Baptist missions budget every year.
http://www.trailblazerbooks.com/books/Moon/Moon-bio.html
Mrs. Willie Mae Page Lee
(December 29, 1922 – December 9, 2009)
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Mrs. Willie Mae Page Lee was born on December 29, 1922 and passed away at 4:55 a.m. on Wednesday, December 9, 2009 at Golden Age Nursing Home in Denham Springs. She was 86, a native of Mer Rouge, LA and a resident of Denham Springs.
Mrs. Willie Mae is survived by 5 daughters, Margaret Ann Lee, Albany, Barbara E. Collier, Ponchatoula; Sue L. Glass and husband, Bobby, Denham Springs, Pattie Page Lee, Sharon, TN, and Cara W. Fonrouge and husband, Pete, Albany; 3 sons, Percy Truman Lee and wife, Jackie, Healey Field, MS; Mickey Lee and wife, Sandy, Kentwood, and Billy Lee and wife, Annette, Independence; numerous grandchildren, great grandchildren, great great-grandchildren, nieces and nephews.
Preceded in death by her parents, Bunyan and Dora Thompson Page; previous husbands, Percy T. Lee and Lonnie E. Williams; 3 sisters, Evelyn Hudson, Fannie Lee Allen, Lois Carrier; 4 brothers, Hirm Page, Edwin Buck Page, Robert C. Page and Harold Page.
Visitation will be at McKneely & Vaughn Funeral Home, Amite, on Saturday, December 12, 2009 from 10:00 a.m. until Religious Services in the Funeral Home Chapel at 1:00 p.m. with Bro. Jessie Tate officiating. Interment in the Loranger Cemetery.
An on-line Guestbook is available at http://www.mckneelyvaughnfh.com.
McKneely & Vaughn Funeral Home, Amite, is located at I-55N & Hwy 16W behind Mr. Tom’s Car Wash and Bill Hood Chevrolet.
Pray for the Wilkinson family as they have final services for Billy Wilkinson today.
Merry CHRISTmas!
Jesus is the reason for the season!
Anna Lee
Wednesday Afternoon
Will you please add my niece Nikki Sharp to the Prayer Link. She will be having gallbladder surgery Thursday. Nikke is the daughter of Keith and Donna Carter.
Mason (Carter) went to Dr. Austin today and is very stopped up. If he is not cleared up by the 23rd he will have surgery again after Christmax.
Lawana
Update on Caleb Estay (written by mom, Alisha, and passed on by Nana, Annette.
Caleb continues to do well, neuro surgery is still monitoring his head circumference for need of a shunt, so far so good. The longer we can hold off the better. He is eating 2.5-3 oz a feeding already, moving his legs. The only affect we see so far from the spin…a bifida is a little leg w…eakness and that is it. Should be home Friday. Continue to pray.
Wednesday
“Then the angel said to them,
“Do not be afraid, for behold,
I bring you good tidings of great joy0
which will be to all people,”
~Luke 2:10, NKJV~
Dr. Earl Council is home and feeling better. Continue to pray for him.
Mrs. Della McDaniel is in North Oaks. Please keep her in your prayers.
Pray for Kathy Wales.
Kathy Wales is having toe surgery Monday, December 14 to repair damage from a previous surgery. She will be totally non-weight bearing for two months in a cast. Please keep her in your prayers.
LOTTIE MOON (Part 2)
Edmonia didn’t last as a missionary, but Lottie did. She was a petite woman, only four foot three, but she had stamina, a lively spirit, vision, and a passion to win souls for God. Mission policies of the time limited what ministry women could do. But Lottie waged a slow, respectful, but relentless campaign to give women missionaries the freedom to minister and have an equal voice in mission proceedings. A prolific writer, she corresponded frequently with H. A. Tupper, head of the Southern Baptist Foreign Mission Board, informing him of the realities of mission work and the desperate need for more workers—women and men. She encouraged Southern Baptist women to organize mission societies in the local churches to help support additional missionary candidates—and to consider coming themselves. Many of her letters appeared as articles in denominational publications. Catching her vision, Southern Baptist women organized Women’s Missionary Unions (WMU) and even Sunbeam Bands for children to promote missions and collect funds to support missions. The first “Christmas offering for missions” in 1888 collected over $3,000, enough to send three new missionaries to China.
Raised in a family “of culture and means,” Lottie at first thought of the Chinese as an inferior people, and insisted on wearing American clothes to maintain a degree of distance from these “heathen” people. But gradually she came to realize that the more she shed her westernized trappings and identified with the Chinese people, the more their simple curiosity about foreigners (and sometimes rejection) turned into genuine interest in the Gospel. She began wearing Chinese clothes, adopted Chinese customs, learned to be sensitive to Chinese culture, and came to respect and admire Chinese culture and learning. In turn she was deeply loved and revered by the Chinese people.
Lottie began her tenure as a missionary by teaching in a girls school—but while accompanying some of the seasoned married women on “country visits” from village to village outside the bigger cities, she discovered her passion: direct evangelism. But there were so many hungry, lost souls, and so few missionaries! For forty years she kept up her not-so-gentle pressure for the Southern Baptists to become giving, sending, missions-minded people.
Lottie’s home base as a missionary was Tengchow (today Penglai) in Shantung Province in North China. T. P. Crawford was the senior missionary there, but he had a reputation among both missionaries and the Chinese as an inflexible, contentious personality. Lottie often functioned as a peacemaker, able to see both sides of a dispute. She had her own strong opinions about different things, but she always worked respectfully with the Foreign Mission Board and with her fellow missionaries. Eventually Crawford resigned from the mission and formed the independent Gospel Mission, taking several Southern Baptist missionaries with him. After Crawford’s death, however, Lottie encouraged the board to receive the remaining GM missionaries “back into the fold.”
Tuesday Update
From Rev. Marshall Wallace concerning Larkin Parker
******My daughter (Sissy Riouxs) just phoned advising the test performed yesterday has revealed the area behind both eyes as being normal. They will now continue to work with him to determine the reason for all the pressure he is experiencing to the eyes. Thank you all for your prayers… You have been a blessing to me and the family….
Tiffany Bankston Currier needs our prayers. She having health issues similar to what led to major surgery early last summer. Today’s procedure was unsuccessful, so another one will be done tomorrow. Pray that works well so more invasive surgery is not necessary.
Tuesday
From Bill Frazier
Please add Laken Parker to the prayor list, He is just 17 years old and the doctors told him today that he would totally lose his sight. Please pray that the doctors are wrong, and something can be done.
I also had a message yesterday from Laken’s grandfather requesting prayer for this situation.
Wallace B. Carney, Sr.
(September 10, 1926 – December 7, 2009)
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Wallace B. Carney, Sr. was born September 10, 1926 and passed away at 11:30 p.m., Monday, December 7, 2009 at his residence in Tunica, LA. He was 83 and a native of Independence, LA. Mr. Wallace was a retired security officer from Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola and also served our country during WWII in the US Army.
He is survived by his wife of 66 years, Eva Mae Jones Carney, Tunica; 2 daughters, Ann Carney Lane and husband, Michael, Amite and Denise Carney Lemoine and husband, Donald, Mt. Hermon; 2 sons, Wallace “Sonny” Carney, Jr. and wife Nancy Ritchie, Tunica and Johnny Carney and wife Alana Courtney, Tunica; 10 grandchildren; 18 great-grandchildren and 1 great-great-grandchild; numerous nieces, nephews and friends.
He was preceded in death by his parents Alex Bradford and Lillie Ballard Carney; a sister, Eloise Mamie Carney Lilly; 2 brothers, Herman Redell Carney and Glen Leland Carney.
The family would like to extend special thanks to Jess & Jerry Ridgedell, Malcom “Coon” & Kathy Willson, David & Jane Regan, Senior Hector Barrios, P.T. and to all those who helped care and pray for Mr. Wallace when he needed it most. Also a special thanks to Pinnacle Home Health and Dr. Medina & Staff.
Visitation will be at McKneely & Vaughn Funeral Home, Amite, on Friday, December 11, 2009 from 10:00 a.m. until Religious Services at 12:30 p.m. Interment in Ford Cemetery, Independence.
An on-line Guestbook is available at http://www.mckneelyvaughnfh.com
McKneely & Vaughn Funeral Home, Amite, is located at I-55N & Hwy 16W behind Mr. Tom’s Car Wash and Bill Hood Chevrolet.
LOTTIE MOON
Southern Baptist Missionary to China
Lottie Moon was born in 1840, third in a family of five girls and two boys, on the family’s fifteen-hundred-acre tobacco plantation known as Viewmont. Her father, Edward Moon, was the largest slaveholder (fifty-two slaves) in Albemarle County; he was also a merchant and a lay leader in the Baptist church. But Lottie was only thirteen when her father died in a riverboat accident.
The Moon family valued education, and at age fourteen Lottie went to school at the Virginia Female Seminary [e.g. high school] and later the Albemarle Female Institute, where she earned both her bachelor’s and Master of Arts degree in teaching. A spirited and outspoken girl, Lottie was indifferent to her Southern Baptist upbringing until her late teens, when God touched her heart during a spiritual revival at Albemarle.
There were precious few opportunities for educated females in the mid-1800s, though her older sister Orianna became a physician and served as a Confederate doctor during the Civil War. Lottie helped her mother maintain Viewmont during the war, once hiding the family silver in a field from approaching Union soldiers, but when the threat evaporated, she was unable to find it again.
After the Civil War, Lottie taught at female academies first in Danville, Kentucky, and later helped set up Cartersville Female High School in Georgia. The school was thriving academically (though not financially) under her leadership as associate principal when she felt a quite different call: to go to China as a missionary.
Single women on the mission field? Most mission work at that time was done by married men. But the wives of China missionaries T. P. Crawford and Landrum Holmes had discovered an important reality: Only women could reach Chinese women, and they needed help. To everyone’s surprise, Lottie’s younger sister Edmonia accepted a call to go to North China in 1872. Lottie followed a year later. She was thirty-three years old.
(To be continued tomorrow)
I saw photos of the Lottie Moon Tea at FBC, Ponchatoula. It was beautiful! I’m looking forward to the Lottie Moon Tea at FBC, Amite on the 19th at 2 P.M. All ladies and girls are invited to attend. Just let me know so I can put your “name in the hat”.
Merry CHRISTmas!
Jesus is the reason for the season!
Anna Lee
Monday Evening
URGENT PRAYER UPDATE
IMB
DECEMBER 7, 2009
AFRICA. Thank you for your continued prayers for the national Baptist partners in a southern Africa country that you are lifting before the Father’s throne. Strong disagreements have resulted in false accusations, police intervention, and upcoming court appearances. Despite the daily “bad” things that are happening, good things are happening each day as well! God is in control, and He will overcome. As you are able, please pray these promises over the entire issue: 2 Chronicles 20:15; Joshua 1:9; Isaiah 43:1-2; Psalm 121:7-8; Psalm 120:1-2; Psalm 33:10, 11, 18-22; Matthew 16:8; Ephesians 6:12; Romans 8:28; Jeremiah 29:11; 2 Peter 2:9; Psalm 37:3-9, 23-25; Matthew 10:18-20, 26; and 2 Corinthians 4:7-10, 15-18. Thank you for praying!
Billy L. Wilkinson
(June 7, 1941 – December 5, 2009)
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Billy L. Wilkinson was born on June 7, 1941 and passed away at 10:25 a.m., Saturday, December 5, 2009 at MD Anderson Medical Center, Houston, TX. He was 68 a native of McComb and a resident of Fluker.
Mr. Billy is survived by 2 daughters, Ginger Darlene Gaskin and husband Geoffrey, Newnan, GA and Misty Rae Nichols and husband Josh, St. Clairsville, OH; 2 sons, Patrick Shane Wilkinson and wife April, Fluker and Benjamin David Wilkinson, Kentwood; 2 sisters Barbara Jo Williamson, Collins, MS and Brenda Rollinson and husband James, Smithdale, MS; brother, Thomas Merle Wilkinson and wife Donna, McComb, MS; 6 grandchildren, Jordan, Kadence, Owen, Isabella, Gracie and Adalena.
Preceded in death by his wife, Barbara Darlene Wilkinson, father, William H. “Willie” Wilkinson, “Paw Paw Wilk”; mother, Eva Mae Sanders; step-father, Stanley Sanders.
Visitation will be at McKneely & Vaughn Funeral Home, Amite, on Wednesday, December 9, 2009 from 6:00 p.m. until 9:00 p.m. and on Thursday, December 10 from 8:00 a.m. until Religious Services at 1:00 p.m. Interment in the Roberts Cemetery, Osyka, MS.
Pallbearers will be Marvin Zeigler, Rudy Landry, Doug Gardner, Don Kent, Eric Kent, Benji McNabb, Audie Braase, and Walter Doty.
Special thanks to cousin Beverley Stewart of Osyka. We know the sacrifice you made to put our father’s care first in your life. There are no words that can say how much we thank you & love you for being there for us and him when his care was needed most. Also for providing our dad with a spiritual guidance each and every day.
An on-line Guestbook is available at http://www.mckneelyvaughnfh.com
McKneely & Vaughn Funeral Home, Amite, is located at I-55N & Hwy 16W behind Mr. Tom’s Car Wash and Bill Hood Chevrolet.
Sunday
“Are you tired? Worn out? Burned out on religion?
Come to me. Get away with me and you’ll recover your life.
I’ll show you how to take a real rest.
Walk with me and work with me-watch how I do it.
Learn the unforced rhythms of grace.
I won’t lay anything heavy or ill-fitting on you.
Keep company with me and you’ll learn to live freely and lightly.”
~ Matthew 11:28-30 (MSG)~
Ethel Mae Durbin Bourgeois
(September 26, 1923 – December 4, 2009)
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Died at 7:00PM on Friday, December 4, 2009 at Lane Regional Medical Center in Zachary, LA. She was a native of Montpelier, LA and a resident of Zachary, LA. Age 86 years. Visitation at McKneely Funeral Home, Amite, from 4 p.m. until 6 p.m. on Sunday and from 8 a.m. until religious services at 10 a.m. Monday. Services conducted by Rev. David Luce. Interment Montpelier Cemetery, Montpelier, LA. Survived by her husband, Percy Bourgeois, Zachary , 2 daughters, Gloria Mobley and her husband, Andy, Calhoun, and Susan Durbin, West Monroe , daughter-in-law, Jennifer Bigner Durbin, Amite, 2 step-daughters, Linda Redden, Watson, and Susan Simpson, Baton Rouge, grandchildren, LaDonna Coleman Bender and her husband, Mike, Keller, TX, Clint Coleman and his wife, Tammy, Calhoun, Scott Coleman and his wife, Tracey, Plattsburg, NY, Mellissa Durbin Leto and her husband David, Sr., Amite, Kimberly Durbin Curry and her husband, Stephen “Nim”, Hillsdale, John Daniel Durbin and his wife, Andrea, Gulfport, MS, Ken Rogers, West Monroe, and Nichole Smith and her husband, Cody, West Monroe, 18 great-grandchildren, 1 great-great-grandson, Preceded in death by, first husband, Leland J. Durbin, Sr., and son, Leland J. Durbin, Jr. Pallbearers will be grandsons, Clint Coleman, Scott Coleman, Ken Rogers, John Durbin, David Leto, Jr., and Clinton Coleman.

Peoples of the Canary Islands
Pepe and Shari Lopez (names changed) rely heavily on relationship-building to enhance their ministry opportunities in Fuerteventura, one of seven Canary Islands located off the west coast of Africa.
Many islanders are immigrants from northwest Africa who have come looking for a better life in the European Union. Some enter the country legally, while others go a more dangerous route on rickety boats or makeshift rafts.
Earning these people’s trust is a lengthy process, but the Lopezes have found that providing free, no-strings-attached services — such as teaching — help tremendously. Shari leads multilingual children’s camps, and Pepe teaches a free Spanish class. Omar, a Muslim, is one of Pepe’s most dependable students. Because of Pepe’s dedication and free teaching, the trust level among his students has skyrocketed — especially with Omar.
The friendships built during the classes and camps have helped Pepe and Shari reach areas of the community that previously would have been nearly impossible.
Pray
Pray that Pepe and Shari will continue building deep relationships with fellow islanders.
Because you give
“The Lottie Moon Christmas Offering is our ‘life support.’ We could not live, function or remain here should Southern Baptists not be praying for us all the time,” Pepe says. “We are the tangible extension of your life and your ministry. So much of what we see around us — schools, hospitals, people and government … they are all in dire need of the Gospel. How could we continue to reach out to them if you do not pray and give?”
Don’t forget to bring your blankets, hats, and gloves to me so I can pass them on to Dena P. Simmons. She’s going to work through BrownBagsandJesus.com to get these into the hands of the homeless in New Orleans who live under a bridge.
Catalog
TIS THE SEASON to receive catalogs in the mail….
Every trip to the mailbox ends with an armload of slick holiday catalogs. Each one claims to offer me something I need–immediately. “Don’t wait!” “Limited offer!” “Order now!”
The lure works. I open the pages to discover what I didn’t know I needed. Sure enough, I see things that suddenly seem essential, even though a few minutes earlier I didn’t know they existed. Manufacturers use catalog illustrations to create desire for their products.
In a way, Christians are God’s catalogs. We are His illustration to the world of what He has to offer. His work in our lives makes us a picture of qualities that people may not know they need or want until they see them at work in us.
As you browse holiday catalogs, consider what the “catalog” of your life says about God. Do people see qualities in you that make them long for God? (Julie Ackerman Link)
“You are our epistle written in our hearts,
known and read by all men.”
~2 Cor. 3:2
Posted by Mike Benson
Jesus is the reason for the season!
Anna Lee
Saturday
“Your generosity …
not only provides for the needs of God’s people,
but also produces prayers of thanksgiving to God.”
~2 Corinthians 9:12~
From Trisha (Mrs. Dwayne) Wilson
Thanks, again, my friends for your prayers. Today’s outreach with Graham’s class went well. 10 kiddos came, along with 5 moms, a friend from my Community Bible Study (wanting to get ideas for her outreach next week) a 2 yr. old, and a 5th grader (came to help out a bit)….quite a houseful including my 4 kids!
Love and appreciate your support!
Tricia
Caring Bridge Sites
- http://www.caringbridge.org/visit/adriannacavanagh
- http://www.caringbridge.org/visit/calliecole
- http://www.caringbridge.org/visit/kathyjothompson
How, then, did Frankl avoid the fate of pessimism and bitterness? He wrote: “Everything can be taken from a man but one thing: to choose one’s attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one’s way.”
Our attitude is a matter of choice? Few ever come to that realization. They merely take the mood that comes with the events of their day and act correspondingly. If someone cuts me off in traffic, I’ll be in a foul mood for awhile. If I get that promotion, I’ll be on top of the world. If not, stay out of my path!
What can a person do to test Frankl’s theory of choosing one’s attitude? Here are some ideas from one who was described as having a heart like God’s (Acts 13:22):
• Practice Praise: “Oh, magnify the Lord with me, and let us exalt his name together” said David in Psalm 34:3 (NKJV). When we take time to realize how much greater God is than the problems of our world, we’ll be encouraged. Life won’t seem so dismal to one who is a child of the Omnipotent Father!
• Try Thankfulness: In Psalm 103:2, David gave this admonition: “Bless the Lord, O my soul, and forget not all his benefits.” After writing that, he listed some of his many blessings. It will work the same for us. When we count our blessings, we remember that God has not forgotten us. Every day his mercies toward us are rich.
• Break Out The Blinders: Hear David again in Psalm 101:3: “I will set nothing wicked before my eyes; I hate the work of those who fall away; it shall not cling to me.” Is television filling our souls with discouraging images of problems or with scenes of wickedness? Would our attitudes improve if we spent time meditating on good, wholesome ideas and images (cf. Philippians 4:8)? “Garbage in, garbage out” was first applied to computers, but it also explains many a bad attitude.
Christians should demonstrate attitudes that are markedly different from those of the world. Jesus said so in John 15:11: “These things I have spoken to you, that my joy may remain in you, and that your joy may be full.” Ask someone close to you: “Does my joy show?” If it doesn’t, it’s time to choose a better attitude – with God’s help. Tim Hall at http://www.forthright.net
Jesus is the reason for the season.
Anna Lee

Lost cities of China
During the past two decades, central China’s urbanization has grown at full-throttle. Workers migrating from the countryside to new urban centers have transformed 223 towns into cities, each counting more than 1 million people.
The lure? Money. A city job pays three to four times the salary possible in villages. But in the past, moving to find that job put rural people at risk because government policies denied them the documentation they needed to work in the cities. Last year, thousands of Chinese took to the streets to protest their dire economic situation. The government responded by allowing 20 percent of them to move into cities — cities with insufficient housing, factories and roads.
And little Christian witness. As these metropolitan areas continue to sprawl, there’s a growing concentration of people who don’t know Jesus and have little opportunity to meet Him. In essence, they are a collection of lost cities.
Finding a way to share Christ’s love, developing a plan to reach these urban centers is critical. Now is the most opportune time as workers arrive and struggle to find their way. They — and the relatives they left behind — need the stability found only in Jesus.
Pray
Pray that God will call more Christian workers to take the Gospel to these unreached peoples.



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