Tuesday Afternoon

Cheryl Hughes Green requests prayer.  She’s having same day surgery tomorrow to remove four small tumors in her right arm.

CaringBridge

Loys Calvin Neal
(March 22, 1946 – October 2, 2010)

A resident of Kentwood, he died on Saturday, October 2, 2010 at 7 p.m. at his home. Born in Independence on March 22, 1946, he was 64. He was a Retired U. S. Army Veteran of Vietnam. Calvin is survived by his wife, Anneliese, Kentwood; 3 sons; one daughter; grandchildren; great-grandchildren; and many nieces and nephews. Preceded in death by his mother, Dorothy L. Brown; his father, Loys W. Neal; a brother, James E. Neal; and 3 sisters, Dorothy Marie Neal, Bessie Rhodus, and Reava Newman. Visitation at McKneely Funeral Home, Kentwood, on Saturday, October 9 from 9 a.m. until religious services at 11 a.m. Interment with full military honors will be Tuesday, October 12 at Port Hudson National Cemetery, Zachary, LA.

Tuesday

It is God himself who has made us what we are

and given us new lives from Christ Jesus;

and long ages ago he planned

that we should spend these lives in helping others.

~Ephesians 2:10 (LB)~

Pray for Holly K. as she completes her work in West Africa and returns Stateside to do graduate work in French.  Thank God for her willingness to give of herself to teach MK’s for the last two years.

The obituary for Calvin Neal is still incomplete.  I will post an update when it is complete.

Thought for the Day

The Last Day of Your Life

The following quotes are reported to come from an actual newspaper contest where entrants ages 4 to 15 were asked to imitate “Deep Thoughts by Jack Handey”:

Give me the strength to change the things I can, the grace to accept the things I cannot, and a great big bag of money. –Age 13

It sure would be nice if we got a day off for the president’s birthday, like they do for the queen’s. Of course, then we would have a lot of people voting for a candidate born on July 3 or December 26, just for the long weekends. –Age 8

Democracy is a beautiful thing, except for that part about letting just any old yokel vote. –Age 10

For centuries, people thought the moon was made of green cheese. Then the astronauts found that the moon is really a big hard rock. That’s what happens to cheese when you leave it out. –Age 6

As you make your way through this hectic world of ours, set aside a few minutes each day. At the end of the year, you’ll have a couple of days saved up. –Age 7

Often, when I am reading a good book, I stop and thank my teacher. That is, I used to, until she got an unlisted number. –Age 15

The only stupid question is the one that is never asked, except maybe “Don’t you think it is about time you audited my return?” or “Isn’t it morally wrong to give me a warning when, in fact, I was speeding?” –Age 15

If we could just get everyone to close their eyes and visualize world peace for an hour, imagine how serene and quiet it would be until the looting started. –Age 15

I believe you should live each day as if it is your last, which is why I don’t have any clean laundry because, come on, who wants to wash clothes on the last day of their life? –Age 15

Who can argue with that last statement? But it raises an interesting question. If you knew (with full certainty) that this would be your last day on this earth, how would you live it? Would you spend the day in Bible study and prayer? Talking with people about Christ? Relaxing with your family? Or would you spend it washing clothes, cleaning the house, going to work and doing all the “mundane” things that you do every day?

We are told to “watch” at all times, knowing that the second coming of Christ will be as unexpected as a “thief in the night” (I Thess 5:1-6). It could be within the next few hours! And since none of us are promised a certain number of years, this may well be our last day of life on this earth. So how should that affect the way we live?

If we really believed that, it would cause us to rearrange our priorities. It would cause us to ask ourselves, “Is what I am doing important from an eternal viewpoint?” Mundane tasks such as washing our clothes remain necessary, but we all find ourselves spending much of our time doing things that seem to be important at the moment (from an earthly perspective), but which have no eternal significance.

“Therefore let us not sleep, as others do, but let us watch and be sober……For God did not appoint us to wrath, but to obtain salvation through our Lord Jesus Christ, who died for us, that whether we wake or sleep, we should live together with Him. Therefore comfort each other and edify one another, just as you also are doing.” (1 Thess. 5:6,9-11)

Have a great day!

Alan Smith

Have a blessed day!

Anna Lee

Sunday

Jesus said,

“I am the light for the world!”

~John 8:12b, CEV~

CaringBridge

(You may remember the Denton family as staff at FBC, Independence.)

Thank God for the good progress Don and his family have finally made.


Calvin Neal
(March 22, 1946 – October 2, 2010)

A resident of Kentwood, he died at 7 p.m. on Saturday, October 2, 2010 at his residence. He was born March 22, 1946 and was 64 years of age. Mr. Neal was a United States Army Veteran of Vietnam.

Arrangements will be finalized on Monday with McKneely Funeral Home, Kentwood.

(I’ll post more later.)

Reliability

Yugo (yoo’-go)
n. 1) Small, economical, Yugoslavian-built automobile.
v. 1) What doesn’t happen when you press the accelerator.
~~~

Q. How do you double the value of a Yugo?
A. Fill the tank with gas!
~~~

What do Yugos have in common with Ferraris?
– A Ferrari can go from 0 to 60 in 4 seconds.
– A Yugo can go from 0 to 4 in 60 seconds.

Actually, a Yugo CAN accelerate as fast as a Ferrari, if you give it a
fast enough running start, so it clears the cliff’s edge…
~~~

A man entered an auto parts store…
Man: “I need a windshield wiper blade for a Yugo.”
Clerk: “Well, only if you throw $20 into the trade.”
~~~

Q. Why does a Yugo have rear a window defroster?
A. To keep your hands warm as you push it.
~~~

Q. What comes with every Yugo User’s Manual?
A. The bus schedule.

Having a reputation for being inexpensive isn’t much consolation if it
is accompanied by a reputation for having a lack of power and being
unreliable. Reliability is one of the qualities we look for when we
purchase a car. After all, what good is a car that gets 60 miles to the
gallon if it breaks down before we get where we’re going?

In the scriptures, reliability is also one of the most important
qualities a person can have. We admire someone who keeps their promises.
Someone whom we can count on to do what they say they’ll do. Someone who
is trustworthy.

Fortunately, we serve a God with all those qualities.

“Let us hold fast the confession of our hope without wavering, for He
who promised is faithful.” (Heb. 10:23)

“If we are faithless, He remains faithful; He cannot deny Himself.” (2
Tim. 2:13)

May the reliability and faithfulness of God motivate you to exhibit
those same qualities in your own life.

Have a great day!

Alan Smith
Boone Church of Christ
Boone, North Carolina

Have a wonderful fall, Lord’s Day!

Anna Lee

Saturday Afternoon

Aubrey “Vic” Hayden
(March 9, 1944 – October 1, 2010)

A resident of Independence, LA, died at 3:15 AM on Friday, October 1, 2010 at Richard Murphy Hospice House in Hammond, LA. He was born March 9, 1944 in Amite, LA and was 66 years of age. Vic was employed at North Oaks Medical Center in construction for 23 years, was a member of Oak Grove Church of Christ, and was a member of Amite City Lodge #175, F&AM, Scottish Rite, and a Shriner. Visitation at McKneely Funeral Home, Amite, from 6 p.m. until 9 p.m. on Sunday and from 9 a.m. until religious services at 1 p.m. Monday.. Services conducted by Bro. Dale Zeibarth & Bro. Murphy Brantley. Interment Loranger Cemetery, Loranger, LA. Survived by beloved wife of 45 years Janis L. Hayden, Independence, children, Marla Hayden Davis and her husband, Billy C. Roper, Independence, and Robert Edward Hayden and his wife, Brandi Hayden, Independence, 4 grandchildren, Douglas Davis, Danielle Davis, Darla Davis, and Cody Hayden , 2 sisters, Frances Hayden Nix and her husband, James, Kingland, AR and Claire Hayden Wooley, and her husband, J.L. Woodlawn, AR, 2 brothers, Danny Hayden and his wife, Helen, Amite and Tommy Hayden and his wife, Jackie, Kentwood. Preceded in death by his parents, Mary Brown Hayden and TJ Hayden, 2 brothers, Billy Hayden and Douglas Hayden.

Joseph E. “Joe Eddie” Anzalone, Jr.
(August 18, 1935 – October 1, 2010)

Joseph E. “Joe Eddie” Anzalone, Jr. was born August 18, 1935 and passed away at 10:25 p.m., Friday, October 1, 2010 at North Oaks Medical Center, Hammond. He was 75, a native of New Orleans and a resident of Hammond.

Joe Eddie is survived by his wife, Nedra P. Anzalone, Hammond; son, Joseph E. “Joey” Anzalone, III, Houston, TX; daughter, Stephanie Anzalone, Gonzales; brother, Frank Arthur Anzalone and wife, Rosetta, Hammond; 3 grandchildren.

He was preceded in death by his parents, Joseph E. and Nina Laird Anzalone, Sr.

Joe Eddie was a retired Judge of the 21st JDC, loved to read and an avid golfer.

Special thanks to the nurses and staff on the Step-Down Unit at North Oaks Medical Center

Visitation at McKneely & Vaughn Funeral Home, Amite, on Monday, October 4, 2010 from 12:00 Noon until Celebration of Life Services at 2:30 p.m. in the funeral home Chapel with Deacon Mike Agnello officiating. Interment in the Colonial Mausoleum at a later date.

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

McKneely & Vaughn Funeral Home, Amite, is located at I-55N & Hwy 16W (Exit 46) next to Bill Hood Automotive and behind Mr. Tom’s Car Wash and Holiday Inn Express.

Saturday

If we confess our sins,

He’s faithful and just to forgive us

and to cleanse us from every wrong.

~1 John 1:9 NLT~

Pray for Carol New.  She had another procedure on her knee yesterday.

CaringBridge

Vic Hayden
(March 9, 1944 – October 1, 2010)

A resident of Independence, he died at 3:15 a.m. on Friday, October 1, 2010 at Richard Murphy Hospice House in Hammond. He was born March 9, 1944 and was 66 years of age. McKneely Funeral Home, Amite, in charge of arrangements.

Being Prepared

Earthquakes can strike without warning, and being prepared for such a disaster can mean the difference between life and death. Here are some tips someone has offered to help you and your loved ones make it through a quake:

~ Those living in areas not prone to earthquakes can respond quickly to the plight of disaster victims in quake zones by complacently smirking and saying, “I told you so.”

~ To minimize loss and damage in a quake, try not to own things.

~ Practice your burrowing-out-from-under-40-tons-of-rubble skills ahead of time.

~ Look out your window often. If you see a large, zig-zag-shaped crevasse moving rapidly from the horizon toward your home, step either to the right or the left.

~ For those who fear earthquakes, it may comfort you to know that a majority of the damage during the 1906 San Francisco earthquake did not come from the tremors themselves. Instead, it was from the raging, out-of-control fires that consumed most of the city.

~ A doorway is the safest place to be during a quake. Eat, sleep, and work in doorways.

~ Be sure to mail your house-insurance payments a full five business days before a major earthquake strikes.

~ If you are caught in a major earthquake in Southern California and are part of the entertainment industry, take a moment or two to reflect on how grossly you’ve wasted your life.

As several of the suggestions above point out (with tongue firmly in cheek!), the problem with an earthquake is its unpredictability.
A few months ago, Hurricane Ike devastated the Galveston area, but there was at least warning for several days that danger was coming. With an earthquake, there is none — it simply strikes!

Jesus described his second coming as an event like that. He used terminology like “a thief in the night” to describe the unexpectedness of the moment. His purpose in using that image was not to suggest that he is coming to steal something. Rather, he is coming at a time when we least expect it. And the only way to be ready for that moment (just as with an earthquake) is to stay prepared all the time.

“But the day of the Lord will come like a thief. The skies will disappear with a loud noise. Everything in them will be destroyed by fire, and the earth and everything in it will be burned up. In that way everything will be destroyed. So what kind of people should you be?
You should live holy lives and serve God, as you wait for and look forward to the coming of the day of God.” (I Peter 3:10-12a, NCV).

My prayer is that you will be prepared so that you, too, can truly “look forward” to that day (whenever it may be!).

Have a great day!

Alan Smith

Have a great day!

Anna Lee

Friday

“Be quick to listen, slow to speak …”

~James 1:19 NIV~

Mrs. Avis Sullivan will be moved to Hood Memorial for the next phase of her rehabilitation.  Continue to keep her in your prayers.

The last report I had on Mrs. Lois Bridges was a couple days ago, but she was doing well and trying to determine her next placement.

Ronnie Brabham returned from Houston yesterday with the good report that he is now cancer free.  Thank God for this good report Ronnie Received.

Karl Jackson Ott Jr., 80, of Osyka, died Sept. 27, 2010, at G.V. (Sonny) Montgomery V.A. Medical Center in Jackson.

SO MANY VALUABLE POSSESSIONS

This comes from the file of “stupid criminals”:

Waylon Prendergast, 37, of Tampa, Florida, committed a spur-of-the-moment robbery while on his way home from a late-night drinking session.  A very inebriated Mr. Prendergast forced his way into the house through an open upstairs window, filling a suitcase with cash and valuables before setting the living room on fire to cover his tracks.  He then escaped through the back door and made his way home, chuckling all the way.  Only as he turned the corner into his own street, however, and discovered three fire engines outside his house, did he realize that in his drunkenness he had, in fact, burgled and ignited his own property.  His comment:  “I had no idea I had so many valuable possessions.”

While we may not do anything quite that stupid (at least nothing that makes the national newspapers), there are times when Christians need to stop and reflect, coming to same conclusion Mr. Prendergast did:  “I had no idea I had so many valuable possessions.”

From family and friends to material comforts (like electricity and running water),  from our basic needs (like food) to luxuries other generations never dreamed of (like the computer you’re sitting at right now), from the freedoms we enjoy to the jobs we hold, there is much that we have been blessed with that we take for granted.

Even beyond the physical blessings, there is so much that God has given us through Jesus Christ.  As Paul wrote,

“Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places in Christ.” (Ephesians 1:3)

Truly, I had no idea I had so many valuable possessions.  “God, forgive me for taking so much of it for granted.”

Have a great day!

Alan Smith
Helen Street Church of Christ
Fayetteville, North Carolina

Enjoy some time outside in the fall weather.

Anna Lee

Thursday

“Anyone who listens to the word but does not do what it says

is like a man who looks at his face in a mirror and,

after looking at himself, goes away

and immediately forgets what he looks like.”

~James 1:23-24 (NIV)~

I think most of us could use a lesson in forgiveness.  I have only read about the movie, but I think it might be helpful to lots of people.  Let’s pray God uses the horrible tragedy in the lives of Leslie and Brooks to teach others forgiveness,

‘Heaven’s Rain’ depicts murder, forgiveness
Phil Boatwright

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (Baptist Press)–In 1979, two criminals invaded the home of an Oklahoma Baptist minister and his family. The mother and father were slain, and the children were also shot and left for dead after the burglars took turns raping the young girl. Though such a horrific scenario is reminiscent of Truman Capote’s chilling novel “In Cold Blood,” this horrific recounting adds a spiritual significance that can affect all our lives. The story’s conclusion affirms God’s existence and authority.

The film is called “Heaven’s Rain” and the story is a true one. Richard and Marilyn Douglass had been missionaries in Brazil. After returning to America, Richard pastored a Southern Baptist church (Putnam City Baptist) in Oklahoma City and led a tranquil life. That changed overnight for the couple and their 12-year-old daughter, Leslie and her 16-year-old brother, Brooks.

The film is never exploitive in its handling of the brutal incident. The act is discreetly represented, grieving the viewer with the pictorial thought that people can be so demonic, but then focuses on the living victims as they cope with the memories of that fateful night.

Perhaps motivated by the events of his early years, including that senseless crime, Brooks Douglass went on to grasp life, finding ways where he could display some control. He worked his way through college, served in the military, became a lawyer and prosecuting attorney, and went on to become an Oklahoma state senator for 12 years. Like a scene from “Mr. Smith Goes to Washington,” freshman senator Douglass stood his ground against a senatorial adversary to present a victims’ rights bill. And it passed.

“I didn’t campaign on victims’ rights,” says Douglass, “because I didn’t want to appear to be crusading and, frankly, I think I was trying to put the murders and all that happened behind me, but the injustice shown to victims of crimes kept coming at me.”

After that 1979 attack, the bloodied brother and sister got into the family car and raced to a local doctor who lived just behind a hospital. Soon, the two kids discovered they had fewer rights than those who had committed the crime. The children were cared for, but at a cost.

“The FBI impounded our car as evidence — it cost $115 to get it back,” Douglass, who co-wrote the script and is the film’s producer, says. “I know this, because my family and I had to pay that in order to get the car back.”

Young Leslie had to undergo a special examination, which cost $500. This also had to be absorbed by the family. These atrocities kept coming back to Sen. Douglass after being sent letter after letter from other crime victims who faced debts due to criminal actions against them.

Before, during, and after the senator’s quest to find justice for victims, he tried unsuccessfully to avoid his own demons.

“I thought of myself as a happy person and I didn’t think I was full of rage,” he says. “But I discovered after years of self-denial that I was overwhelmed with this hatred. My intent when I first saw the triggerman was not what God intended.”

Brooks and Leslie went on to testify at the murder trials of the two men, Glen Burton Ake and Steven Hatch. Each was convicted of the murders and sentenced to death. Hatch was executed in August 1996, but Ake, who did the shooting, got a new trial and was given a life sentence.

Eventually, Douglass was allowed to face Glen Ake.

“It’s impossible to depict on film what’s actually going on in your heart during moments like that. Literally, it was as if God laid his hand on me. The air was so thick I could almost taste it. I could feel God’s presence as if He was telling me, ‘I’m not going to let you get angry, I’m not going to let you blow this.’ The only way to describe it was this very intense and powerful sense of love. It was so thick around me that I was unable to do what I thought I was there to do.” (It’s implied in the film that Douglass was seeking a chance to kill his one-time attacker, the man who had brutalized his sister.)

“As I unloaded on him about Leslie, who suffered far more than me, I felt as if my body was full of water and my head full of poison. Then as I got up and put my hand on the door, I turned around and looked back at him and thought, ‘There’s more to this.’ I went back to the table, as if pulled by a magnet, and after an eternity of silence, something completely unexpected came out of my mouth. ‘I forgive you.’

“It was not at all what I was there to do. I had told Ake, ‘My father was a minister and he taught me that I was always to forgive. I can’t. It’s not in me to do that.’ But when those words ‘I forgive you’ were spoken, I just fell back in the chair, suddenly feeling as if the bottoms of my feet opened up and the water and hatred were pouring out over the floor. I could almost see it. At the same time, it felt like a clamp was taken off my chest and I could breathe again for the first time in 15 years. I remember walking out the doors of the prison and feeling like the sky was bluer, the trees were greener. All my senses were just extraordinarily heightened. It was a life-changing experience.”

What was Glen Ake’s reaction to this?

“He just sobbed.

“He’s still in prison. In fact, we shot scenes from the film in that very prison. The last night of filming, I actually saw him. He had turned his light on in his cell at about 2 in the morning and I could see him through his window.”

Sitting in that interrogation room, amid the memories of the Douglass family’s night of horror and torment, Ake suddenly confessed something extraordinary to Sen. Douglass. He had become a Christian.

O. S. Hawkins, president of GuideStone Financial Resources, knew Richard Douglass and has seen the movie.

“Heaven’s Rain is the true and gripping story of how even the most horrendous of life’s tragedies can ultimately result in the power of forgiveness,” Hawkins said. “I have known and loved this family before their night of horror and afterwards. This is no fictitious tale but an experiential reality beaten out on the anvil of personal experience by the two Douglass children. This film will put you on the edge of your seat, and when all is said and done ‘weeping may endure for a night but joy will come in the morning.'”

Jack Graham, pastor of Prestonwood Baptist Church in Plano, Texas, also knew Richard Douglass.

“As a young pastor in Oklahoma in the 1970s, I was deeply saddened by the tragedy involving my friend Dr. Richard Douglass and his wife and two children,” Graham. “I am now so grateful that his son, Brooks, has shared the Douglass family story powerfully through Heaven’s Rain. This story of pain and suffering and sorrow is now a message of hope and redemption for the world.”

(Heaven’s Rain is opening in theaters in a limited release. (Visit the film’s website at http://www.heavensrainmovie.com.) It is rated R for the subject matter and a brief depiction of the home invasion. For the detailed review of Heaven’s Rain go to: http://moviereporter.com/. Phil Boatwright reviews films from a Christian perspective for Baptist Press and is the author of “Movies: The Good, The Bad, and the Really, Really Bad,” available on Amazon.com. He also writes about Hollywood for previewonline.org.)

Konnor Ray Cecil McGregor Strickland
(September 27, 2010 – September 27, 2010)

Konnor Ray Cecil McGregor Strickland one of God’s Precious Angels was called home at 11:57 p.m., September 27, 2010.

Konnor is survived by his mother, Shontell McGregor; father, Robert Strickland; sister, Jessica Strickland; maternal grandmother, Brenda McGregor; maternal grandfather, Kenneth Graham; paternal grandparents, Mr. & Mrs. Ben Strickland; great grandmother, Mrs. Jeannette Fairburn all of Kentwood; also numerous aunts, uncles and extended family.

He was preceded in death by grandfather, Mark McGregor; grandmother, Norma Ruth McCoy and great grandfather, Buddy Fairburn.

Private graveside services will be held at a later date.

McKneely & Vaughn Funeral Home in charge of arrangements

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

Make a difference in someone’s life today.

Anna Lee

Wednesday Obituaries

Peter Victor “Pete” Liuzza
(October 13, 1929 – September 27, 2010)

Peter “Pete” Liuzza, 80 years old of Independence, was called home for a final rest on Monday, September 27, 2010. He came into this world on October 13 1929, a beloved son of Josephine and Anthony Liuzza. A Korea war veteran, he earned the Silver Star for Valor in action, Korean Service Medal with Three Bronze Campaign Stars, and the United Nations Service Medal. After the war, he met and married his loving wife of 58 years, Carmel Kaselwicz Liuzza. They have 6 children, Pete and his wife, Leslie, Connie, Karen and her husband, Warren, Annette, Paul and his wife, Terri, and Stephen. Together his legacy lives on with 9 grandchildren, Rachel, Jason, Elizabeth, Erin, Angela, Brent, Adam, Cloey, and Paul, Jr. 4 great-grandchildren, Carmel Sadie, Donald Brayden, Ella, and Lillian. He was a strong, amazing man who loved to work and garden. He will be missed everyday by all who loved him. Memorial Services will be held at a later date at Mater Dolorosa Catholic Church in Independence. McKneely Funeral Home, Amite, in charge of arrangements.

Reginal Wesley Ivey
(November 10, 1935 – September 27, 2010)

A resident of Greensburg, he died at 4:16 p.m. on Monday, September 27, 2010 at his residence in Greensburg. He was born November 10, 1935 in Baton Rouge and was 74 years of age. McKneely Funeral Home, Amite, in charge of arrangements.

(I’ll post again when the obituary is more complete.)

Wednesday

“Do not merely listen to what the word says

and so deceive yourselves.

Do what it says.”

~James 1:22 (NIV)~

Keri K. Wickham shared this.

Please pray for my brother, Pete Harper. He is receiving treatment in North Carolina and he is suffering some very serious side effects. He needs to have six more treatments this week.

Margie Williams shared a picture of her mother, Mrs. Avis Sullivan, at rehab.  “Miss” Avis looks good.

It seems lots of people are having a virus lately.  Pray that most people  will be able to avoid being sick, especially now that the weather is so pretty.  Pray that if someone gets sick, they will be able to recover quickly.

McKneely Funeral Home has posted two new obituaries.  I will post them when they are completed.

Reginal Wesley Ivey
(November 10, 1935 – September 27, 2010)

Peter Victor Liuzza
(October 13, 1929 – September 27, 2010)

Your Dollars at Work

Projected Allocations of 2010 Georgia Barnette State Missions Offering*

Mission Budget Supplements $800,000.00
Financial assistance for mission churches salary supplements
Missions Education, Promotion, and Leadership Training 300,000.00
Ministry project assistance and leadership training/missions education events for adults, youth, and children
Special Mission Projects 155,000.00
Resort missions, Language Radio Outreach, Disaster Relief, and mission projects
Scholarships 145,000.00
Hannah Reynolds WMU Christian Education Scholarship and Christian Vocational Service Scholarships at LC
Mission Church Buildings 120,000.00
Assist mission churches with building grants
New Church Sites 110,000.00
Purchase property for mission churches
Mission Church Builder Program 100,000.00
Assist with funding for Church Builder strategist and operations
Equipment and Special Needs 20,000.00
Emergency needs of mission churches when other funding sources do not exist
Total Projected Allocations $1,750,000.00
*Projected Allocations approved by the State Missions Offering Committee

I pray you will be able to enjoy this beautiful weather today.

Anna Lee

Saturday Afternoon

Mason Carter

Thank you everyone who prayed for Mason. He came our of surgery fine. No pain this time. He goes back October 8th for a check up. I will update on what Dr. Austin tells us.
Thank yall
Lawana

Stacey Scarle

This is a brief update on Stacey. She met with the oncologist yesterday and her blood work was good. She is still on the 21 day plan for chemo which means she should finish in Dec. She also had an appointment with the reconstructive surgeon and he advise of the plans for surgery. If possible he will do the surgery in Dec. The surgery and reconstruction will take place at the same time. Hopefully this will be all she has to have. About 1 month after surgery she will begin radiation. If the skin is damaged due to the radiation she may have to have an additional surgery. Please keep up the prayers as they seem to be working for her. We thank God that she has done as well as she has . We appreciate all your support.

Joan Scarle

Opal Butler Chaney
(January 25, 1917 – September 25, 2010)

A resident of Greensburg, La, she died at 12:30 a.m. on Saturday, September 25, 2010 at Promise Specialty Hospital in Baton Rouge. She was born January 25, 1917 in Greensburg and was 93 years of age. She was a life long member of Center United Methodist Church of Greensburg. She is survived by her son, Eddie “Ed” Chaney and his wife, Gloria, Clinton; 2 daughters, Cheryl Chaney Coates and her husband, Larry, Denham Springs and Darlene Chaney Dunaway, Greensburg; 6 grandchildren, Eddie Ray “Bo” Chaney, Donna Chaney Morel, Pamela Chaney Windham, Tammy Taylor Napoli, Ronald B. Taylor, Jr. and Darla Pittman-Graham; 7 great-grandchildren, Joseph Ryan Windham, McKenzie Anne Windham, Patrick Edward Chaney, Kayla R. Chaney Laiche, Victor Anthony Napoli, Sarah Elizabeth Taylor and Alton Mich Ray Graham; 2 great-great-grandchildren, Quinn Thomas Windham and Finley Ray Laiche. She was preceded in death by her husband, Rheaburn D. “Ray” Chaney; parents, John L. and Minnie Allen Butler; 2 sisters, Ola Butler and Stella Butler Ravencraft; 3 brothers, John, Charlie and Wilton “Dink” Butler. Visitation at Center United Methodist Church, 4001 Hwy 1043, Greensburg, from 9 a.m. until religious services at 12 Noon on Monday, Sept. 27, 2010. Services conducted by Rev. Larry Robertson. Interment Center Cemetery, Greensburg. The family requests flowers or memorial contributions to Center United Methodist Church.