Wednesday

God did not give us a spirit

that makes us afraid

but a spirit of power

and love

and self-control.

~2 Timothy 1:7 (NCV)~

 

 

 

. . . . I would also like to see if you would add our new Church plant in Amite, LA to the prayer link. We are being sponsored by NAMB, Louisiana Baptist Convention, Two Rivers Assoc., and First Baptist Church of Amite, LA. Starting a new church has many challenges. We ask that our friends pray for us and view us as missionaries because our purpose is to seek and let Jesus save those who are lost. You can post my address and phone number on the link. . . .

Heath Rohner (985) 517-3303
Cross-Point Church
PO Box 4
Roseland, LA 70456

 

WEDNESDAY WINDOW ON THE WORLD

October 15, 2008

JAPAN’S CENTRAL MEGACITIES. A few months ago, you prayed for a new missionary family who would be moving near a train station on the southern end of the Osaka Loop Line, a major train line in the city. When the missionaries arrived on the field and moved into their new home in an apartment building, the first person they met told them that she was a Christian. With less than 1 percent of the population being Christian, that seemed amazing. Since that time, the missionaries have learned that the woman calls herself a Christian because her parents are Christians. She attended church as a child, but she resents the fact that her mother seemed to “make everything be about God.” However, once a week now she and her husband and elementary school-aged daughter are meeting with the missionaries to read the Bible, talk about what God is saying through His Word, sing Christian songs, and pray together. Her husband asks many questions. Praise God for this encounter so soon upon arriving on the field, and pray that this couple and their daughter will become true believers in Jesus Christ. This family has many contacts in the apartment building and neighborhood, so please pray for them to share what they learn and experience through God’s Word with others in the area.

ST. VINCENT AND THE GRENADINES. The church in Overland is small and its members are not wealthy. Most of them are subsistence farmers, as is their bi-vocational pastor. Yet these devoted and faithful people want to start a new work in a nearby village. Please pray for wisdom and discernment for the IMB missionaries as they seek to teach the concept of planting self-sustaining, multiplying churches. They write: “Join us in praying that the learners will be open to the possibilities of planting churches using lay leadership and very little material resources. And please pray that God will provide a ‘person of peace’ in each area where He wants a new church planted. Ask Him to send workers into the harvest, and pray that that He will prepare the hearts of the people to hear and respond to the gospel.”

DINKA OF SOUTHERN SUDAN (DINK-ah). Though many hearts in Dinkaland do not acknowledge it, the rainy season declares the praises of God as the lush shades of green spring forth, concealing patches of red dirt and alleviating the sun’s intensity. However, the rainy season is also the time when sickness and disease spread most rapidly. With rancid mud puddles, disease-carrying mosquitoes, and poor sanitation methods, many Dinka people are in search of a healer. Some turn to the few medical facilities available, but more turn to witchdoctors and spiritists whom Satan uses to keep people bound in fear. Pray for the people of Southern Sudan, asking that they will put their trust in the Great Physician and be freed from fear by His perfect love. Pray that this season, God will display His power to heal diseases, both physically and spiritually. http://sudansouth.org/

Thank-you for praying today. You mean so much to so many. Have a wonderful Wednesday!

Anna Lee

Tuesday

“All men shall fear,

and shall declare the work of God;

for they shall wisely consider His doing.”

~Psalm 64:9~

Mr. Phillip Harrell is home. Please continue to pray for Mr. Phillip and “Miss” Annie Bell.

Debbie Miller is still undergoing tests at North Oaks. Pray for a diagnosis so treatment can begin.

JAPAN. Please pray for a small house church meeting in Shizuoka, Japan. The group has been meeting together and has been receiving training on being believers, being church, and being witnesses for Christ in their own communities. Please pray that the training will take root and that multiplication of disciples will be the result. Pray that they will “catch a vision” for reaching their own people even without the assistance of a missionary.

ONESTORY: WEST AFRICA. When IMB missionaries in the West Africa region came together recently for their annual meeting, they participated in small-group sessions led by their “OneStory” missionary colleagues. These OneStory missionaries demonstrated how they use stories from the Bible, told in a simple way, to bring the lost to Christ. One missionary in Senegal reports: “Since this meeting, we’ve been inspired to practice Bible storying on a more daily basis and have had several wonderful opportunities to share Christ. Please pray for the Muslims of Senegal to come to know Jesus through these stories and for us to obey the Holy Spirit’s leading in sharing these stories every day.”

MISSIONARY PERSONAL NEEDS. As a final summer fling before school started, a 9-year-old MK set up a “store” outside the elevators of her apartment building. Her goal was to catch neighbors as they came home from work, hoping they would buy some of the beads and things she had made. Not to miss an opportunity, she also brought gospel tracts down with her. She confessed later to her parents that she had some help with the tracts. Some of her little Hindu friends decided they should grab the tracts and start helping to hand them out. A couple of the boys even distributed them around the parking lot on their bicycles. It seems like God intends to be known, and He uses a number of different ways of delivering His Message! What’s your delivery method? Please thank God for this young girl’s faith and desire to share the gospel with the lost. Pray that she will have the privilege of leading those young friends who helped her to receive Jesus as Savior. Ask God to honor her efforts with a harvest in their apartment complex.

William Reagan “Bill” Gallagher
(April 4, 1951 – October 13, 2008)


U.S. Veteran William Reagan “Bill” Gallagher was born April 4, 1951 and passed away October 13, 2008 in Amite, La. Bill was 57, and a native of North Riverside, Illinois and a resident of Amite. He was the son of the late Dudley Michael Gallagher and Mary Harriot Reagan.

He is survived by his wife, Glenda Russum Gallagher, Amite; 3 daughters, Jennifer Gallagher, Phenix City, Al., Megan Gallagher, Baton Rouge, and Emily Gallagher, Murfreesoboro, Tn.; 2 step-daughters, Brittany Kennedy, El Paso, Tx. and Ann Kennedy, Amite; a brother , Michael Gallagher and wife, Diane, of Opelousas, La.; 4 sisters, Jean Alford and husband, Jack, of Orlando, Fl., Patti Helm and husband Tom, of Austin, Tx., Peggy Isby and husband John, Alaska, and Kay Herrick and husband Bob, San Jose’, Ca.

A private Memorial Service will be held at a later date.

Donations may be made in Bill’s honor to Make A Wish Foundation or Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Awareness.

McKneely & Vaughn Funeral Home, Amite, in charge of arrangements.

An on-line Guestbook is available at http://www.mckneelyvaughnfh.com

FIRST-PERSON:
An Opportunity in Hard Times
By Joe McKeever

Baptist Press

NEW ORLEANS (BP)–An absolutely fool-proof way to stress yourself out is by staying glued to the television newscasts about the economy. “Wall Street dropped another 700 points today!” “Here is our panel of experts to tell you why the news is just going to get worse!” “Big Plants, Inc., is laying off another 4,000 employees!”

Oh great. Just what I needed to hear.

That’ll send your blood pressure through the ceiling, no matter your situation, but particularly if you are a heavy investor in stocks.

You’re not? Don’t be too sure. If you have a retirement account with some agency somewhere, you might be one of those (like me) who is being severely affected by the free-falling stock market. The headline on the front of Friday’s The Times-Picayune newspaper asked, “How Low Can It Go?”

Frankly, I don’t want to know.

Twenty years ago, when the market did a sort of “correction” — we’ll be generous and call it that — I recall someone asking either Ted Turner or Donald Trump, one of those big boys, “You lost a billion dollars. What do you have to say?”

He answered, “It was a paper loss. I’m not selling anything today. I’ll still be here tomorrow and first thing you know, I’ll have it all back.”

And that’s precisely what happened.

My neighbors, Bill and Sandra, are both retired from long careers in the commercial world, and this is scaring the daylights out of them.

A news report this week indicated that 80 percent of Americans say the economy is stressing them out.

The funny thing about this craziness in the economy is that we’re told the actual businesses of America are just fine. What is driving the roller-coasterness of Wall Street is a little thing called fear.

Remember FDR telling the nation at his 1933 inauguration, “The only thing we have to fear is fear itself”? He was right then, and it appears that’s the problem today.

Novices like me are perplexed at how the stock market rises and falls based on fears. The Fed chairman makes some statement about the future, and depending on whether he was optimistic or pessimistic, the market fluctuates. We laymen would like to think the people handling our investments are knowledgeable about the true value of stocks and not given to reacting to the latest whim.

Apparently that confidence is poorly placed. It would appear our stock brokers don’t know much more than the rest of us, but wet their index finger in the morning and poke it heavenward to see which way the winds are blowing before risking the billions of dollars entrusted to them.

Jean Chatzky, a frequent authority on money matters for the networks, urges that we not “make the financial channel our home page.” That is, quit running to see what your stocks did every day. “Check on them once a week or so,” she said.

For what this is worth, here are my own personal conclusions:

— The people in the pews this Sunday need to hear the pastor deliver a word from God. That word would include commands like, “Don’t collect for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust destroy and where thieves break in and steal. But collect for yourselves treasures in heaven … (Matthew 6:19-20).

The pastor will want to remind the people of the best bad-news text in all the Bible, Habakkuk 3:17-19: “Though the fig tree does not bud and there is no fruit on the vines, though the olive crop fails and the fields produce no food, though there are no sheep in the pen and no cattle in the stalls, yet I will triumph in the LORD ….”

— This crisis gives the pastor an opportunity to speak to the faith of the people in the pews.

“You have put more joy in my heart than they have when their grain and new wine abound” (Psalm 4:7). Three kinds of joy are referenced here: Superficial (grain = money); artificial (new wine); and beneficial (the Lord’s presence). Only one of the three is constant and dependable. The other two are fleeting and of limited value.

— So, maybe the Lord wanted some of us to work a little longer before retiring. Perhaps He was not too excited about His people parking in the rocking chair on the front porch when He had more work for us to do.

Margaret and I are having that discussion since my employment at the Baptist Association of Greater New Orleans comes to a dead halt next April 30. Since my retirement fund at GuideStone has lost some 40 percent from its peak a couple of years ago, ideally, I’d like to leave it alone for two more years before even touching it. Give it time to replenish itself.

So, that means, like a lot of others in the same boat, I will keep on working. Doing what is the big question, of course, and the subject of my frequent prayers to the Father.

— The Father is not particularly worried about any of this. He knows what He is doing and is not perplexed about matters that stress us out.

Sometimes when church members have found themselves in the difficult position of losing good jobs in their middle years — what should be their peak-earning period — as their pastor, I have counseled them to be strong and go forward. “It’s tough right now and it’s going to be hard getting through this. But I guarantee you, the day will come when you will look back and give thanks to the Lord for the experience and the lessons you learned.” (As my dad used to say about his six children, ‘I wouldn’t take a million dollars for any one of them, and I wouldn’t give you a dime for another!’ That’s how you will feel about this difficult and trying time.)

Randy and Charlene were reminiscing with some of us about that very subject recently. When a new owner took over the factories Randy was managing, he suddenly found himself without a job. One day, he heard Paul Harvey talking about ServiceMaster, the home-and-office cleaning business. Randy looked into it, decided this was the right thing for him, and bought the franchise for our area of the state. To raise the money, he sold his boat and borrowed money from family members.

Eventually — a lot of personal sacrifices and hard work were involved, I’m confident — this business became one of ServiceMaster’s great success stories. In fact, Randy McCall has spoken at the national meetings of their franchisees, giving his and Charlene’s testimony.

As the story goes,
the guest preacher arrived at the airport and was greeted by the church member who had been assigned as his driver. On the drive back to the church, the layman poured out his fears over the way the country is going, despair over the decline in morals, and disgust in the lack of leadership in high places. “Don’t you agree?” he asked the visiting preacher.

“I expect you may be right,” the man of God said. “But let me remind you, the last time I checked despair was still a sin and hope a virture.”

Good reminder for us today. “Why are you cast down, O my soul? Hope thou in the Lord.” (Psalm 42:5).

Joe McKeever is director of missions of the Baptist Association of Greater New Orleans.

Have a tremendous Tuesday!

Anna Lee

Monday


“I thank my God upon every remembrance of you,

always in every prayer of mine

making request for you all with joy,

for your fellowship in the gospel

rom the first day until now.”

~Philippians 1:3-5~

Please pray for our children, Deloy and Debbie. They are on a mission field overseas at this time. There are in a group of seven…pray for all of them.
This is a special trip requested by the Foreign Mission Board. They will return Oct. 21. Thank you and God bless each of you.
Ann Chapman

Leola M. Martinez Guthrie Prescia
(Died October 12, 2008)

Passed away October 12, 2008 at 12:20 A.M. in Hammond, La. at Belle Maison Nursing Home. Arrangements are incomplete at this time. Arrangements have been entrusted to McKneely and Vaughn Funeral Home in Amite.

Mrs. Ann Chapman shared this:

Excuse me, Are you Jesus?’

A few years ago a group of salesmen went to a regional sales convention in Chicago . They had assured their wives that they would be home in plenty of time for Friday night’s dinner. In their rush, with tickets and briefcases, one of these salesmen inadvertently kicked over a table which held a display of apples. Apples flew everywhere. Without stopping or looking back, they all managed to reach the plane in time for their nearly-missed boarding.

ALL BUT ONE!!! He paused, took a deep breath , got in touch with his feelings, and experienced a twinge of compassion for the girl whose apple stand had been
overturned.

He told his buddies to go on without him, waved good-bye, told one of them to call his wife when they arrived at their home destination and explain his taking a later flight. Then he returned to the terminal where the apples were all over the terminal floor.

He was glad he did.

The 16-year-old girl was totally blind! She was softly crying, tears running down her cheeks in frustration, and at the same time helplessly groping for her spilled produce as the crowd swirled about her; no one stopping and no one to care for her plight.

The salesman knelt on the floor with her, gathered up the apples, put them back on the table and helped organize her display. As he did this, he noticed that many of them had become battered and bruised; these he set aside in another basket.

When he had finished, he pulled out his wallet and said to the girl, ‘Here, please take this $40 for the damage we did. Are you okay?’ She nodded through her tears.. He continued on with, ‘I hope we didn’t spoil your day too badly.’

As the salesman started to walk away, the bewildered blind girl called out to him, ‘Mister…..’ He paused and turned to look back into those blind eyes. She continued, ‘Are you Jesus?’

He stopped in mid-stride, and he wondered. Then slowly he made his way to catch the later flight with that question burning and bouncing about in his soul: ‘Are you Jesus?’ Do people mistake you for Jesus? That’s our destiny, is it not? To be so much like Jesus that people cannot tell the difference as we live and interact with a world that is blind to His love, life and grace.

If we claim to know Him, we should live, walk and act as He would. Knowing Him is more than simply quoting Scripture and going to church. It’s actually living the Word as life unfolds day to day.

You are the apple of His eye even though we, too, have been bruised by a fall. He stopped what He was doing and picked up you and me on a hill called Calvary and paid in full for our damaged fruit.

The share group will meet at the cabin Thursday night at 6:30. Please consider joining us for food, fellowship, and a devotional.

Don’t let the devil make this a miserable Monday!

Anna Lee

Sunday

“Oh, give thanks to the Lord!

Call upon His name;

make known His deeds among the peoples!”

~Psalm 105:1~

 

 

Prayer Requests from Holly K.

* The people of Senegal
* The family I will be working with in Senegal – safety and good health
* My younger brother as he prepares to head back to Iraq in a month
* My grandmother as she recovers from major surgery
* Safe travel for me and my friends to Virginia

 

Deacon Hospital Ministry

  • Robert Wilson
  • Tom Brister

Nursery Workers Today

  • Stacy Strickland
  • Emily Daniels
  • Elisabeth Sanders
  • Nancy Stokes

We’re over half way to our goal of $7,500.00 for the Georgia Barnette State Missions Offering and will soon begin Operation Christmas Child (Shoebox Ministry for Children).

Terrified Christian Families Flee Iraq’s Mosul

Saturday , October 11, 2008

AP

BAGHDAD –
Hundreds of terrified Christian families have fled Mosul to escape extremist attacks that have increased despite months of U.S. and Iraqi military operations to secure the northern Iraqi city, political and religious officials said Saturday.

Some 3,000 Christians have fled the city over the past week alone in a “major displacement,” said Duraid Mohammed Kashmoula, the governor of northern Iraq’s Ninevah province. He said most have left for churches, monasteries and the homes of relatives in nearby Christian villages and towns.

“The Christians were subjected to abduction attempts and paid ransom, but now they are subjected to a killing campaign,” Kashmoula said, adding he believed “Al Qaeda” elements were to blame and called for a renewed drive to root them out.

Political and religious leaders interviewed said the change in tactics may reflect a desire on the part of extremists to forcibly evict all Christians from Iraq’s third largest city.

Earlier this week, Chaldean Archbishop Louis Sako said he was worried about what he termed a “campaign of killings and deportations against the Christian citizens in Mosul.”

Mosul police have reported finding the bullet-riddled bodies of seven Christians in separate attacks so far this month, the latest a day laborer found on Wednesday. On Saturday, militants blew up three abandoned Christian homes in eastern Mosul, police said.

Father Bolis Jacob of Mosul’s Mar Afram Church said he was at a loss to understand the violence. “We respect the Islamic religion and the Muslim clerics,” he said. “We don’t know under what religion’s pretexts these terrorists work.”

The violence in Mosul occurs despite U.S.-Iraqi operations launched over the summer aimed at routing Al Qaeda in Iraq and other insurgents from remaining strongholds north of the capital.

The killings come as Christian leaders are lobbying parliament to pass a law setting aside a number of seats for minorities, such as Christians, in upcoming provincial elections, fearing they could be further marginalized in the predominantly Muslim country.

Iraq’s Christian community has been estimated at 3 percent of Iraq’s 26 million people, or about 800,000, and has a significant presence in the northern Ninevah province.

In Mosul, where Christians have lived for some 1,800 years, a number of centuries-old churches still stand.

Joseph Jacob, a professor at Mosul University, said there were nearly 20,000 Christians in the city before the 2003 U.S. invasion. But over half have since left for neighboring towns, or new countries, he said.

Islamic extremists have frequently targeted Christians since the invasion, forcing tens of thousands to flee Iraq. Attacks had tapered off amid a drastic decline in overall violence nationwide, but that appears to be changing with the deaths this month.

On Saturday, Bashir Azoz, a 45-year-old carpenter, said he was forced to flee his home in the city’s eastern Noor area after gunmen warned a neighbor the day before to leave or face death.

“Where is the government and its security forces as these crimes take place every day?” asked Azoz, who is now staying with his wife and three children in a monastery in the Christian-majority town of Qarqoush, east of Mosul.

Separately on Saturday, a U.S. soldier died when a bomb exploded near his vehicle outside Amarah, southeast of Baghdad. The U.S. military said it was withholding soldier’s name until it notified next of kin.

As we freely worship today, let’s take time to pray for those who cannot worship freely around the world. Pray they will cling to their faith and remain faithful.

Anna Lee

Saturday – Late Morning

Billy Graham Hospitalized

After Fall in North Carolina Home

 

Saturday, October 11, 2008

Fox News


ASHEVILLE, N.C. – Evangelist Billy Graham was hospitalized Saturday after tripping and falling over one of his dogs at his North Carolina home, a hospital spokeswoman said.

The 89-year-old Graham was at Mission Hospital in Asheville with discomfort and bruising and hoped to be home later in the day, said spokeswoman Merrell Gregory. He was listed in fair condition and his physicians report that X-rays showed no broken bones, Gregory said in a news release.

For six decades, Graham led a worldwide crusade-based ministry that packed stadiums with believers and allowed him to counsel every U.S. president since Harry Truman.

The Southern Baptist minister fell late Friday at his home in Montreat, N.C.

Earlier this year, Graham had elective surgery to update a shunt that controls excess fluid on his brain. The shunt was first installed in 2000 and drains fluid from through a small tube, relieving excess pressure that can cause symptoms similar to Parkinson’s disease.

Graham has also suffered from prostate cancer and macular degeneration. He was hospitalized last year for nearly two weeks after experiencing intestinal bleeding.

Graham turns 90 on Nov. 7.

We know this great man of faith and prayer and his family would appreciate prayers for his comfort during this time.

Saturday

“When He saw the multitudes,

He was moved with compassion for them,

because they were weary and scattered,

like sheep having no shepherd.

Then He said to His disciples,

‘The harvest truly is plentiful,

but the laborers are few.

Therefore pray the Lord of the harvest

to send out laborers into His harvest’.”

~Matthew 9:36-38, NKJV~

Mr Philip Harrell was admitted into the Greensburg Hospital today, they are running test to discover what is wrong with him.

Please pray for him, and keep him in your thoughts.

Bill (Frazier)Prayer requests

KOMpray

Kids on Mission Pray

 

“Let the little children come to Me,

and don’t stop them,

because the kingdom of God

belongs to such as these,”

~Luke 18:16b~

SILLY HIPPO TALK

“Why do you talk like a man who has been cut in half by a hippo?” This is literally what the Dinka people of Southern Sudan say when someone is talking silly. The Dinka people believe that if you are cut in half by a hippo and your top half is in the water, you will still be able to talk for awhile. You won’t make much sense, but you’ll be able to talk.

The Dinka culture is full of stories!

Another of their stories says that a dog brought fire to ancient Dinka people. Before fire, they cooked by the heat of the sun.

Since the Dinka people love stories, they are willing to listen to the stories of the Bible. Pray for them to understand that they are more than stories. Bible stories are the truth of God. Ask God to speak to their hearts through Bible stories so that they will want to know Jesus, the Savior.


MORE PRAYER REQUESTS FROM MISSIONARY KIDS

I live pretty far away from any other MKs and expatriates. Even though I love the people, it gets lonely, and I crave times when I can see MK friends or just hear a sermon in English. Also, my brother is going to college soon…he’s been like my best friend and it’s gonna hurt when he’s gone. DANIEL, age 16, (Central, Eastern and Southern Africa)

Please pray that 6th grade will go well. KATI, age 10 (Pacific Rim)

Please pray that Miss Rachel will stay well, and pray that Rebeca will be okay. CORNELIUS, age 10 (South Asia)

Pray for Sashy that her lungs will clear up and for Ms. Hannah and Ms. Rachael. GABRIELLA, age 8 (South Asia)

Please pray for me, my sister and brother that we will be healthy. And please pray for the people in Indonesia that they will come to know the Savior Lord and God. MIKAYLA, age 7 (Pacific Rim)

I need prayer for God to help me make more Indian friends, so that I can share with them. And my mom, that God keeps her healthy because she gets sick very easily. She has had malaria and other sicknesses. TILLY, age 12 (South Asia)

SHOWING GOD’S LOVE

Doug Nichols went to India to be a missionary, but while he was just starting to study the language he became infected with tuberculosis and had to be put in a sanitarium. It was not a very good place to be. It was not very clean and conditions were difficult because there were so many sick people there. But Doug decided to do the best he could in that situation. So he took a bunch of Christian books and tracts and tried to share the gospel with the other patients in the sanitarium.

But when he tried to pass out tracts, no one wanted them. He tried to hand out books, but no one would take them. He tried to talk with them, but he was handicapped because of his inability to communicate in their language, and he felt so discouraged. There he was. Because of his illness he would be there a long time. But it seemed like the work that he had been sent to do would not be done because no one would listen to him.

Because of his tuberculosis, every night at about 2 o’clock he would wake up with chronic coughing that wouldn’t quit. Then one night when he awoke he noticed across the aisle an old man trying to get out of bed. He said the man would roll himself up into a little ball and teeter back and forth trying to get up the momentum to get up and stand on his feet. But he just couldn’t do it. He was too weak. Finally, after several attempts the old man laid back and wept.

The next morning Doug understood why the man was weeping. He was trying to get up to go to the bathroom and didn’t have enough strength to do that. So his bed was a mess and there was a smell in the air. The other patients made fun of the old man. The nurses came to clean up his bed and they weren’t kind to him, either. In fact, one of them even slapped him in the face. Doug said that the old man just laid there and cried.

Doug said, “That next night about 2 o’clock I started coughing again. I looked across the way and there was the old man trying to get out of bed once more. I really didn’t want to do it, but somehow I managed to get up and I walked across the aisle and I helped the old man stand up.” But he was too weak to walk.

Doug said, “I took him in my arms and carried him like a baby. He was so light that it wasn’t a difficult task. I took him into the bathroom, which was nothing more than a dirty hole in the floor, and I stood behind him and cradled him in my arms as he took care of himself. Then I carried him back to his bed and laid him down. As I turned to leave he reached up and grabbed my face and pulled me close and kissed me on the cheek and said what I think was `Thank you.'”

Doug said, “The next morning there were patients waiting when I awoke and they asked if they could read some of the books and tracts that I had brought. Others had questions about the God I worshiped and His only begotten Son who came into the world to die for their sins.” In the next few weeks Doug Nichols gave out all the literature that he had brought, and many of the doctors and nurses and patients in that sanitarium came to know Jesus Christ, too.

He said, “Now what did I do? I didn’t preach a sermon. I couldn’t even communicate in their language. I didn’t have a great lesson to teach them. I didn’t have wonderful things to offer. All I did was take an old man to the bathroom and anyone can do that.”

“Beloved, let us love one another, for love is of God; and everyone who loves is born of God and knows God. He who does not love does not know God, for God is love.” (1 John 4:7-8)

What can you do to express the love of God to people around you today?

Have a great day!

Alan Smith
Helen Street Church of Christ
Fayetteville, North Carolina

Have a great day!

Anna Lee

Friday Afternoon

Scott Fairburn had an accident yesterday morning and was airlifted from KHS to OLOL where he is in ICU. Please pray for Scott, his family, and the medical staff caring for him.

 

 

Greenlaw Baptist Church will hold their revival beginning Sunday Oct. 26th. thru Oct 29th. Dr. Victor Walsh will be bringing our messages to us. After the Sunday morning services we will have Dinner on the Ground. Bring a covered dish and join in with us during this revival. There will be no Sunday night services.
Our night services with begin at 7:00 p.m. Monday night Oct. 27th, Tuesday night Oct. 28th, Wednesday night Oct. 29th.

(Mary Ann Cutrer)

Big 10 from teamromany October 2008

1. Please pray for Cornel as he makes plans to travel to Romania next month. He will be teaching a course for the Romany Bible Institute. The session will be held Nov. 11-15.

2. Please pray for the wife of Pastor Costel in Spiru Harel, Romania. His wife has had continuing health problems. When she went to the hospital recently to have a tumor removed, it was discovered that she was two months pregnant. Doctors are trying to postpone surgery until after the birth of the baby. Please pray for her health and for the health of the child.

3. Pray for national leaders who will be following up from volunteer teams who served this summer. Pray for them as they disciple new believers.

4. Pray for a dental team that will minister in Giurgiu, Romania in early November. Pray that they will be able to share the gospel as they meet the physical needs of Roma.

5. Pray for Romanian pastor, Brother Ben, who is facing many difficulties. Pray for his strength and health.

6. Pray for Romany students who have returned to high schools and universities. Pray that the Christian students will remain faithful witnesses and stay committed to the Lord and follow through on their commitment to education.

7. Last month we asked you to pray for FARM debriefing. It was a great time for the students to share what God did in the places they served this summer. Thank you for praying for that event. Please pray that God would prepare students to participate next year.

8. Please continue to pray for our outreach group in Ostrava, Czech Republic. International World Changers worked with us in the Muglinov community in July. As part of the follow-up from the evangelism that took place then, we formed a Bible storying group. Pray for the new believers and those who are seeking as they learn God’s word and how it can change their lives. Pray for Boyd and Joe as they travel to Ostrava for these sessions.

9. Please continue to pray for our park ministry in Brno, Czech Republic. Pray that God would prepare a place for us to meet during the winter months so that we can continue the relationships we have built in this neighborhood.

10. Last month we asked you to pray for the summit for missionaries serving among the Roma. I am sending these requests from Prauge during a break during our sessions. The time with colleagues has been wonderful. We have been sharing ideas, resources, and prayer requests. Thank God for calling out workers to minister to the Roma. Pray that we would be encouraged and equipped as we return to minister in our Romany communities.

Thank you for praying with us and for us.

Teamromany

 

Daniel Byrd – Romania

Boyd and Jennie Hatchel – Czech Republic

Bob and Gayle Hill – Romania

Joe and Julie Silby – Czech Republic

teamromany.com

wagonmissions.blogspot.com

Friday

Search me, O God, and know my heart;

test me and know my anxious thoughts.

See if there is any offensive way in me,

and lead me in the way everlasting.

~Psalm 139:23-24 (NIV)~

Thank God for good test results several people have received lately.

Mrs. Annie Bell Harrell may be a little better, but Mr. Phillip Harrell is now sick. Pray for this special couple.

Since this is a football night, begin to pray for the safety of the students and good sportsmanship by players and fans.

Prayer requests from H.K. as she prepares for 8 weeks in Richmond:

* The people of Senegal – for open hearts and receptive ears
* The family I will be working with in Senegal – safety and good health
* My younger brother as he prepares to head back to Iraq in a month
* My grandmother as she recovers from major surgery
* Safe travel for me and my friends to Virginia

Velta Morris‘ blog says she is thankful to be feeling much better. Thank God for her progress since surgery.


INTERNATIONAL MISSIONS PRAYERLINE
INTERNATIONAL MISSION BOARD
Friday, October 10, 2008

“. . . Great and amazing are your deeds,

O Lord God the Almighty!”

(Revelation 15:3a, ESV)

Dear Intercessors, this is Eleanor Witcher of the International Prayer Strategy Office, asking you to pray for deaf ministry in five varied locations.

GH met the Sign His Love Deaf Team in Kyoto Japan, and said, “All they want to do is talk about Jesus–Jesus this and Jesus that. I think it’s totally rude for them to talk about Jesus all the time.” Later, GH received a full-color “Messiah” animated life-of-Christ book as well as the “JESUS” video in Japanese Sign Language. “I have read the ‘Messiah’ book almost three times. I’m beginning to see how all these stories go together. God is really amazing!”

For Guatemalan deaf church planters, some of whom work Monday through Saturday, 7 a.m. to 7 p.m., for just a few dollars monthly, the challenge is to find transportation and time to visit unsaved deaf Guatemalans. These dedicated servants do not ask for financial help but look to the Lord for His provision.

Stacy and Jeremy Parks of the Ecuador Deaf Team ask for open doors and a place for the deaf to worship in Quito, Ecuador. Also pray for the new home missionary who will be appointed by the Ecuador Baptist Convention to work with the deaf.

Intercede for the beginning of a church in a school for the deaf in Durban, South Africa, and for the start of a work among deaf members in other Durban churches. A local Christian and IMB missionaries from Johannesburg are meeting with the Durban Urban Evangelism Team to try to establish a deaf ministry.

The West Africa Engagement Team has been assigned a new task: to research the deaf of Nigeria and any ministries that reach out to the deaf population there. Please pray that God will give them fruitful contacts.

* Please pray for work to expand among the Deaf around the world.

* Thank God for existing ministries and committed workers.

* Ask the Lord to soften your heart to those in your community who need to experience God’s great and amazing deeds.

Mattie Grace Meades
(January 11, 1947 – October 9, 2008)

Died on Thursday, October 9, 2008 at her residence in Kentwood, LA. She was a native of Pumpkin Center, LA. Age 61 years. Visitation at McKneely Funeral Home, Kentwood, from 9 a.m. on Saturday until religious services at 1 p.m. Saturday. Services conducted by Rev. Percy M. Frasier. Interment Jerusalem Baptist Church Cemetery, Pumpkin Center, LA. Survived by 1 sister, Doris Monteleone, Hammond, 2 brothers, Jerry Meades, Prairieville, and John Meades, Walker, numerous nices and nephews, extended family, Bobbie Gill, Tiffany and Kenny Gill, Debbie White, Michelle Anthony, Carol Gill, and Brenda Gilbert. Preceded in death by, parents, Jack and Ada Meades, 2 sisters, Joyce Madere, Betty Scott, 5 brothers, Leon Meades, Donald Meades, Floyd Meades, Robert Meades, and Lonnie Meades.

Have a fantastic Friday!

Anna Lee