Saturday

“Work hard at living in peace with others”

~1 Peter 3:11 NLT~

Continue to pray for Mr. Cete and “Miss” Ruby Dillon as his eye heals from yesterday’s emergency surgery.

Pray for Mr. Jimmy and “Miss” Linda Williams as her recovers from surgery Thursday at North Oaks.

Momma is in a new environment.   Pray for her to accept the change.  She was better yesterday evening than yesterday afternoon.  Continue to pray for Daddy as he make daily trips to Hammond to check on her.

Our grandson,Braden (7), fell from his swingset and broke his left arm.  He had previously broken the right arm requiring surgery.  The arm is functional, but not stratight.  He may requiere additional surgery on that arm one day.  The new cast goes from his armpit to the middle of his fingers and looks like it weight half as much as her does.  Pray for a quick and complete healing.

Bro. Milton and Mrs. Pam Kliesch are thankful their son, Whitney, is on the way home from a second tour in the war zone.  We are proud of him serving his country and thankful he is safe.

Colton Frazier

Friday, October 2, 2009 2:37 PM, CDT

Well the last few  days has had very good.  The therapist says he does something new for them everyday.  He is helping them do everything they ask.  He may not be able to do everything but he sure does try.  They say he is a very hard worker which we all know that.  He has chewed on some ice and swallowed, ate some applesauce and did ok with that too.   They showed him pictures and he was able to point out the person they asked him to  THAT WAS GREAT!!!!.  Well my battery is going out, please keep up the prayers and faith.  will update soon

Friday, October 2, 2009 11:25 PM, CDT

Ok everyone, we had a great night.  Colton Whispered to MrWillie and said “Hold My Hand”  then we could read lips. “Paw Paw”.   He told Lori “I Love You”  still a whisper. then read lips. “tell Scott”.  It was great!!!!

He went to sleep early and was snoring when we left.  We were so excited.
Callie Cole
Hey this is Frances.  Callie had a really good noon visit with her daddy.  She

Her eyes were moving alot and were cracked open a little.  She was also raisin

g her brow as trying to open.  Her left extremeties were moving well especially her fingers, one at a time and in a group.  Isn’t this great?  And I missed it!! God is sooo good!

Now at the 5 pm visit, Callie was out.  Of course along with the extra movement she also had been off the vent for at least 20 to 30 minutes today.  She was spent.  Maybe she’ll be lively for mama this evening.  We shall see.

Thanks again for all your prayers.  Remember to continue to pray without ceasing and without doubt.

Psalm 34 is a good read.

Much love,
Frances


Adriuanna Cavanagh

I just went downstairs (at the hospital courtyard)where they were having a Free Fall Lunch for all employees and special guests.  We got to be a special guest since we are practically living here!  Anyway, it was nice b/c there was food and music everywhere.  The DJ was playing “My Boogie Shoes”, and I thought about how much I wish Adrianna and I could put on our boogie shoes!  🙂

It’s a little cramped in this hospital room to be boogying, but lil Adri has been extremely happy to be “unhooked” from all her IV wires and tubes.  She says, “I’m free, Mommy!  I’m free!”  But all she gets to do is walk around this room…..not really a big deal to you and me, but she is satisfied with just that.  Sweet baby…

I’m kinda bummed b/c I just found out she can’t even go to the Halloween parties at the hospital.  Too risky for infections.  Sooooo, the only one she’ll be able to make is the one they do at clinic on the 14th.  I guess it’ll be better than nothing, and I’m sure we’ll be in clinic all day that day anyway, so might as well dress her up in her precious Nutcracker Mouse costume.

I know I should be counting my blessings, and I do most of the time, but can’t help but wish we could bring her to the zoo, or the park, or to an ice cream shop, around other kids, and her cousins, etc. etc.

I’m not even sure when she’ll be able to be around the rest of our adult family.  We will have to talk to Dr. Yu about that- hopefully we’ll get to see her on Monday before she goes out of town again.

As of now, I think we’ll only be able to bring her to the Audobon Park or other open spaces in the late afternoon to early evening, when the sun goes down.  That’s fine as long as there is not a crowd.  Otherwise, she can’t go at all.

I know it’s all for the best and it’s just 6 months to a year, but it sure does feel like a lot longer!  Especially b/c we were so used to being on the go before.  Gonna be hermits now!

Cute story:  Adrianna snuggled up to me last night and was fidgeting with my gloves saying, “I miss you so much, Mommy. (she says this when i’m right next to her!) I love you so much!”  And then, “Mommy?  I don’t want you to die!  I miss you!”  and gave me the biggest bear hug.  I don’t know where that came from!!!  The only thing I can think of is that we were watching Snow White and the dwarfs thought Snow White had died and they were all sad.  So then she goes, “Are you my sister or my brother?”  She cracks me up.  I just love that lil thing!

No fevers today either!!  YAAAYY!!!  So we’re basically sitting here b/c Dr. Yu is not here to discharge us, which is unfortunate, but at least we know we’re safe here from infection- in this room!
Daddy Joe comes here tonight and I think I’ll go home to recoop for the upcoming week of nonstop clinic days!!  And new training on all her new meds, and new instructions on basically how to live our lives the cleanest, most sterile way possible.  It’s gonna be data-overload all over again!  Yikes!

Have a super great weekend, everyone!  God Bless!  And keep praying for our friend Grant.  He’s still in ICU with complications from his kidney failure, but is hanging on!  Prayers, everyone, please!!!
~Steph, Joe, & Adrianna

Gerald M. Jenkins
(August 6, 1948 – October 1, 2009)

Gerald M.  Jenkins

Gerald M. Jenkins the youngest of four siblings was born on August 6, 1948 and passed away at 10:35 a.m., October 1, 2009 at Tulane Medical Center, New Orleans surrounded by his family. He was 61, a native of Amite and resident of Roseland.Gerald served our country in the United States Army in the 1970’s and 1980’s. He was employed with International Paper Company over 20 years. He continued logging by starting his own company XIP with a business partner.

Gerald is survived by his wife, Carol McElveen Jenkins, Roseland, whom he married on June 30, 1973; 2 daughters & son-in-laws, Lori Jenkins Trahan and Cory, Amite, and Kelli Jenkins Schwebel and Jacob, Roseland; a son, Ryan Blake Jenkins, Roseland; 2 sisters, Shirley Jenkins Primes and Francine Jenkins both of Amite; brother, Perry Jenkins and wife Carolyn, Amite; grandchildren, Caden Andrew Trahan, Ian Alexander Trahan, Caroline Marie Trahan and Abby Schwebel.

Preceded in death by his parents, George M. and Beatrice Hale Jenkins.

Visitation will be at the McKneely & Vaughn Funeral Home, Amite, on Saturday, October 3, 2009 from 6:00 p.m. until 9:00 p.m. with a Celebration of Life Memorial Service at 7:30 p.m. in the funeral home Chapel.

An on-line Guestbook and a to view a video tribute 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 & Bond Eye Clinic.

Karen Graham Ballard
(January 6, 1945 – October 2, 2009)

Karen Graham  Ballard

Karen Graham Ballard was born on January 6, 1945 and passed away at 1:00 p.m., Friday, October 2, 2009, at North Oaks Medical Center, Hammond. She was 64, a native of Plant City, FL and a resident of Amite.Karen is survived by husband, Jack G. Ballard, Amite; 3 daughters, Rhonda Frances, Albany, Jackie Ballard, Knoxville, TN, and Karen Ballard, Hammond; son, Gary Ray Ballard, Denham Springs; mother-in-law, Collean Finch Bickham, Independence; 8 grandchildren.

She is preceded in death by her parents, Theodore and Louise Stone Graham; grandmother, Edna Stone.

Visitation will be at the Kedron Baptist Church, Amite, on Monday, October 5, 2009 from 9:00 a.m. until Religious Services at 11:00 a.m. with Rev. Jake Williams officiating. Interment in Kedron Cemetery.

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

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

KneEmail
“At the name of Jesus every knee should bow…” Philippians 2:10
Mike Benson, Editor

I CANNOT OVERSTATE how frightning it is to lose a sense of control or influence…

People will even choose to stay in familiar situations that they know are not working rather than face the ambiguity of the unknown.  Many times a battered wife will remain for years, even a lifetime, with a physically violent husband.  Women have reported that, among other reasons, they have stayed with brutal husbands because breaking out of the relationship was even more frightning than the beatings.  Even though the situation may be physically and emotionally abusive, such women have at least learned what to expect, and there is an odd comfort in being able to anticipate the future–even a negative future.  Daryl Conner

“By faith Abraham obeyed
when he was called to go out to a place
which he would afterward receive as an inheritance.
And He went out, not knowing where he was going.”
Hebrews 11:8
Change is hard for most of us, but it is necessary.  Pray for all those around you who are going through difficult changes.  Your prayers are apprediated by many each day
Happy preparation for Sunday!
Anna Lee


Friday

Adriunna Cavanagh (2 posts)

http://www.caringbridge.org/visit/adriannacavanagh/journal

Grant Hebert

http://www.caringbridge.org/visit/granthebert

Callie Cole

http://www.caringbridge.org/visit/calliecole/journal

Pray for Mr. Cete Dillon.  He had energency eye surgery yesterday morning and is doing well.

Continue to pray for my momma as she has her first day in a new facility.  Pray for success in adjusting her medications quickly.

Continue to pray for Wayne and Cora Morris who live west of Amite.

Continue to pray for the Estay famiy as they wait for the birth of their new little one.

Pray for the Jenkins and McElveen families in the loss of Gerald Jenkins, the guy that gave me my first box of Vanentine cane.  That was in second grade!

Gerald M. Jenkins
(August 6, 1948 – October 1, 2009)

Gerald M. Jenkins was born on August 6, 1948 and passed away at 10:35 a.m., October 1, 2009 at Tulane Medical Center, New Orleans. He was 61, a native of Amite and resident of Roseland.

Gerald is survived by his wife, Carol McElveen Jenkins, Roseland; 2 daughters & son-in-laws, Lori Jenkins Trahan and Cory, Amite, and Kelli Jenkins Schwebel and Jacob, Roseland; a son, Ryan Blake Jenkins, Roseland; 2 sisters, Shirley Jenkins Primes and Francine Jenkins both of Amite; brother, Perry Jenkins and wife Carolyn, Amite; 3 grandchildren, Caden Andrew Trahan, Ian Alexander Trahan, Caroline Marie Trahan and (soon to be) Abby Schwebel.

Preceded in death by his parents, George M. and Beatrice Hale Jenkins.

Visitation will be at the McKneely & Vaughn Funeral Home, Amite, on Saturday, October 3, 2009 from 6:00 p.m. until 9:00 p.m. with a Celebration of Life Memorial Service at 7:30 p.m. in the funeral home Chapel.

An on-line Guestbook and a to view a video tribute 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 & Bond Eye Clinic.

Dr. Buck’ offers Mongolians help, hope

Dea Davidson
International Mission Board

Dr. A.H. “Buck” Rusher cuts a path through the crowd of Mongolians clutching X-rays and records, opening the outer office door and unlocking the inner. The clinic is open.

Every available seat is taken as a 47-year-old father describes his initial stages of lung failure. Listening to the man’s chest, “Dr. Buck” makes a hard assessment.

“You can’t make a bad lung good, you can only make it worse,” he says. “I’m afraid if we do the operation, he will die. It’s better for nature to end his life than me.”

An hour and eight patients later, the clinic closes as the award-winning general surgeon attempts to shut the door while changing clothes. He dons teal scrubs, cinching them around a frame 15 pounds lighter than when he began his tenure two years ago.

Heading into surgery
Pounding down the surgical wing of Ulaanbaatar’s First State Hospital, Buck enters a prep room a thousand miles from the countryside hospital he visited last week. He scrubs in using real soap, not detergent, in a sink used only for pre-surgery. A white-capped nurse pulls a fresh scrub shirt over his arms. For this operation, there will be no delays waiting for an anesthesia machine.

Beep … beep … beep … beep. The heart monitor is the only sound permeating the room as Buck takes his place next to the patient.

“I don’t like to play music in the operating room,” he says of the silence. “I feel like I’m entering a holy temple. I don’t like people to have their attention diverted.”

Dr. Nyamkhuu, his partner and the country’s most celebrated surgeon, pauses as Buck takes a scalpel in hand.

“Lord, help us with this case,” he says.

Nyamkhuu nods at the prayer.

Friends across cultures and time
Theirs is a 15-year friendship, marked by tragedy and joy. He is one of three physicians Buck brought to the United States for training following his first short-term visit to Mongolia. While there in 1993, Buck was moved by a medical community that deserved a chance to make progress after communism. Although they didn’t share a language, Buck brought the doctors to his practice and home in Jonesboro, Ark., for one month. The trio trained in laparoscopy, becoming the first laparoscopic surgeons in Mongolia.

“There was a lot of gesturing, pointing and diagramming,” Buck says of the trip. “I looked like a mother duck with goslings behind me.”

Saying goodbye to one of these mentees one year later was a defining moment in Buck’s Mongolian journey. After a celebratory meal during his second trip to the country, Buck and his wife, Pam, contracted food poisoning. So did the entire party. Three days later, when Buck was stable enough for a medical evacuation out of the country, he went to see his friend.

“We saw him in the ICU before we left,” Buck says, remembering. “I looked at him, he looked at me, and we both knew he was going to die. We stood around his bed and cried. Two days later he died. Had he been in a more developed place, he wouldn’t have [died]. I am really grieved by the fact that if I hadn’t been sick, I could have attended to him.”

Pushing through his grief
That grief could have kept Buck from returning to Asia. Instead, the loss of a life he’d poured himself into fueled him to a deeper commitment to Mongolia and to reaching one of its influential people groups — doctors. Responding to a request for Southern Baptists to serve as overseas medical workers, the Rushers first planted themselves in Mongolia in 2001. The move fulfilled Buck’s life dream to use his skills in vascular, chest and abdomen surgery for Christ.

“My people group has become the doctors — especially the surgeons — of Mongolia,” Buck says. “As a result of finding the Lord their lives have completely changed. Their wives see something different in them. Hope.”

That group of hopeful doctors formed an English Bible study in 2006 that later became a church. For their Easter 2008 service at a cancer hospital, the newly christened Shine Alxam (New Steppes) church had a high attendance of almost 50. The group of medical Christians now shares Buck’s perspective on life, one far different from Buddhist doctors and their patients.

“Patients feel life is not all that valuable because you come back,” Buck says. “Doctors don’t see death like I do. I see somebody’s heading to eternal life.”

Often complications
Holding on to precious life is difficult when the post-operation care causes complications. Making rounds before surgery, Buck finds a man tampering with his wife’s stomach drain, causing the tube to reverse the bacteria. Walking on to the Intensive Care Unit, a doctor teaching a group of residents calls him over for a consult. Rolling the patient, Buck discovers bed sores. These cases provide teaching opportunities.

“I just had contact with 20 students,” he says, pulling off rubber gloves. “If they notice my lapel pin or manner of treating nurses, maybe they’ll see that I’m following the Great Physician.”

Mongolia’s medical field is no small population with 6,637 doctors for the country’s 2.5 million people — one doctor for every 375 people. Mongols don’t go into medicine for the money. After paying for school and their 18-month residency, each makes approximately $150 per month through the socialized system regardless if they are a cardiac surgeon or a general practitioner.

As Buck builds rapport with these physicians, telling stories like the prodigal son before a gallbladder or liver surgery, he is giving them a lesson they don’t expect. Nyamkhuu’s eternity was also changed from his work with Buck. He came to faith 10 years after he first heard the Good News.

“God really did something when He let us meet,” Buck says. “When I met him, it became important to learn Mongolian so I could tell him about Jesus. The friendship superseded language.”

Partners in touching the countryside
“Big wolf” and “Little wolf” (as Nyamkhuu calls them) are a light in the capital as well as in the countryside where they offer their services to small aimag (regional) hospitals, scattering seed as they travel. In the western city center of Khovd, Nyamkhuu and Buck offered surgeons The Purpose Driven Life book and New Testaments between surgeries. The last night of their trip, the surgeons came to their apartment carrying fish and sheep meat. Close to midnight, they began asking: What do Christians believe? Nyamkhuu, the country’s foremost surgeon, answered with conviction and influence while Buck backed him.

“Nyamkhuu and I can read each other’s minds,” Buck says. “It’s like dancing — you just know what the other steps are going to be.”

As Buck leaves the hospital each day, he pauses on Ulaanbaatar’s streets to say, “Thanks, God, for the opportunity to live here and work.”

“There’s nobody who has had a better medical opportunity than I’ve had here,” he says. “I’ve had an open invitation to do what I want to do. This is our people. When we’re home, our prayer is for Mongolia.”

Update: Several months after the Rushers completed their most recent stint in Mongolia and returned home to Jonesboro, Ark., Buck was diagnosed with a malignant brain tumor. Following surgery and radiation combined with chemotherapy, he is again receiving chemotherapy through November. Aside from a little fatigue, he was feeling few side effects, said Pam, when we talked with her in early August.

“We feel part of the reason he’s done as well as he has is around-the-clock, around-the-globe prayer,” she said.

What has happened is an affirmation of their decision to go “when the Lord told us to go,” rather than waiting until after retirement, she added. “He (God) knew what was coming.”

Act

Specialists in fields such as pediatrics, gynecology and radiology are highly respected in Mongolia. For more information, contact ripetoharvest@pobox.com.

World Hunger Day

Kenyan villages overflow with famished hearts, stomachs

9/25/2009

By Caroline Anderson

SAMBURU, Kenya (BP)–Charlie Daniels (no relation to the country music legend) is in mid-sermon when an elderly woman faints. It isn’t the Kenyan heat that’s the culprit — it’s hunger. She has not eaten in four days.

“Is there any food?” the woman’s son asks. “Please, anything,” he pleads. No one volunteers.

Daniels stops his sermon and retrieves a peanut butter and jelly sandwich from his truck.

Village women slowly feed the elderly woman tiny pieces of the sandwich.

Daniels asks why no one answered the son’s plea for food.

“There’s no food here,” the people respond.

It’s been three days, four days — or more — since any of them have eaten.
Daniels, a Southern Baptist missionary in Kenya, heads to a nearby town in search of food in a country that’s already skeletal from famine.

Drought and famine are close cousins in the Samburu district in central Kenya. Crops have shriveled from the lack of water. Daniels’ wife, Sandra, says there has not been sufficient rain since last November and livestock is dying.

In January, the Kenyan government reported more than 10 million people could be facing starvation. The Kenya Food Security Steering Group, which acts as an advisory board on issues of drought management and food security, reported in September that 3.8 million people in several districts, including Samburu, are in need of emergency humanitarian assistance.

When Daniels drove to the town of Kisima to buy beans and maize meal for the villagers, he used World Hunger Funds to pay for the supplies.

As he returns to the village, the crowd has swelled from 25 to 50 as word spreads that someone is bringing food. The two 200-pound sacks of beans and maize meal will feed the families for another week.

“Thank you for bringing the food when you did,” a Samburu man later tells the Daniels. “I would not be here today if you had not come with the food.”

Everywhere Charlie and Sandra travel in the region, they are met with food requests. There also is a great need for medicine, rides to hospitals and money for hospital bills.

The Daniels have formed a plan with Baptist Global Response, an international relief and development organization, to help alleviate the hunger needs they are witnessing.

Mark and Susan Hatfield, who work in sub-Saharan Africa for Baptist Global Response, helped the Daniels design a relief project to feed 4,800 people a month for the equivalent of $5.11 per person. The money, $24,528 in total, is coming from the Southern Baptist World Hunger Fund.

Despite the drought, the Daniels are seeing God at work in great ways. Almost 300 Samburu have been baptized this year. One Samburu leader has been instrumental in starting 10 new churches since January.

Oct. 11 is World Hunger emphasis Sunday. Go to imb.org/worldhungerdonations to give to the World Hunger Fund. Find more ways to help alleviate world hunger at baptistglobalresponse.com and worldhungerfund.com. To watch a short video on hunger relief efforts in Kenya, go to http://www.baptistglobalresponse.com/blog/?p=75.

Caroline Anderson is a writer for IMB. Sandra Daniels, a Southern Baptist missionary in Kenya, contributed to this story.

Obedient Ordinary People

Volunteer nurses give shots for Jesus

9/29/2009

By Caroline Anderson

RICHMOND, Va. (BP)—“I’m down to Barbie Band-Aids. Sorry, dude,” nurse Joe Thomas tells a future missionary in his mid 20s after giving him a shot.

Thomas and nurse Katrina Otto are long-time volunteers at IMB (International Mission Board) immunization clinics held at the International Learning Center near Richmond. Their patients are missionaries participating in the two-month orientation to prepare for overseas service. The nurses administer shots for everything from rabies to Japanese encephalitis and yellow fever.

Otto, an emergency room nurse at Providence Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan., has been volunteering since 1999. When she accompanied a friend to IMB for a missionary orientation in 1998, she realized the shot clinics were an excellent opportunity for her to use her nursing skills. She also has a special place in her heart for missionaries — her parents were North American Mission Board missionaries to Alaska.

Thomas, a nurse in the intensive care unit at St. Luke’s South Hospital in Overland Park, Kan., heard about the opportunity through Otto, a fellow church member at Lenexa (Kan.) Baptist Church. After going with Otto to a missionary orientation at ILC in 2000, Thomas committed to returning as a volunteer. He sees volunteering as a way to be involved in missions while using his God-given talents.

EXPERIENCE PAYS OFF

Thomas and Otto’s years of working together at the clinics have paid off, especially for shot recipients.

Swab with alcohol, then one, two, three — poke. The nurses’ needles puncture each arm of the patient in unison.

The reactions vary. Some victims scrunch their eyes shut. Some stare placidly at photographs from South Asia and Africa on the clinic wall. Still others crack jokes during the procedure.

Otto and Thomas attempt to lighten the mood with a little humor of their own. In fact, they have worked together so long they coordinate their jokes.

“Thank you for choosing IMB for your immunization care,” Otto says as a patient exits the room after receiving four shots, two in each arm.

“There will not be a quiz later,” Thomas adds as he hands out information about the vaccines administered.

SACRIFICIAL GIVING

Four times a year, Thomas and Otto fly to Richmond from Kansas at their own expense. Airfare isn’t cheap, but God has always provided, Otto says. The nurses say the rewards of volunteering far outweigh the cost.

“One of our goals is to be a support to the full-time medical staff and provide them with what they need,” Otto explains. “God spoke to us about coming, and I’m honored to be a part of it.”

Vaccinating hundreds of missionaries and their families at each orientation is a feat IMB’s full-time medical staff couldn’t accomplish without Thomas and Otto’s help. This past summer, 3,000 shots were administered. At one session, 486 shots were given in just 2 1/2 hours.

An average of 12,000 to 15,000 shots are dispensed at ILC per year which, according to Sandy Hammack, an IMB clinical nurse, makes IMB one of the largest administrators of immunizations on the East Coast.

The volume of work makes IMB’s medical staff appreciate Thomas and Otto’s servant hearts even more.

“It’s significant because they not only come at their own expense, they use their vacation time,” Hammack says. “They take off four times a year — for each of the orientation sessions.”

But their dedication doesn’t stop there. Both nurses sometimes work the graveyard shift so they are able to fly out for an IMB shot clinic that same morning. They are careful to plan mission trips and work schedules around clinic dates. They’ve even turned down job offers because they wouldn’t be able to volunteer at ILC.

FURTHERING THE KINGDOM

During the past decade, Thomas and Otto have vaccinated thousands of babies, toddlers and adults headed overseas. Their continuity and experience make them a valuable asset, says Connie Burton, medical department administrator.

“We’ve established a certain skill set, and to get to use it to further the kingdom, that’s really enjoyable,” Thomas says. “Ever since I became a Christian, I had an interest in missions. For whatever reason, God has not called my wife and me to full-time missions, but this is a place I can contribute to international missions on a continuing basis and do my part.”

Spending time with the missionaries and getting to hear their stories is what Thomas finds most rewarding.

“We [have] heard some fantastic stories of God working through them and how they were called and the conflicts they go through to get here and the commitment they make to go,” he says.

Another benefit is seeing firsthand how Lottie Moon Christmas Offering and Cooperative Program funds are used. The immunizations, some of which can cost $100 or more, are paid for by Southern Baptist contributions.

When Thomas and Otto return home, they share their experiences with their church family.

“We get the privilege of coming in and seeing all the support provided for the missionaries,” says Thomas, “and we try to encourage people from our church to get a glimpse of what is going on.”

PRAYER PARTNERS

One sacrifice both nurses make is time away from their families when they come to Richmond every few months. Otto’s husband is disabled and Thomas’ wife is continuing to recover from a serious car accident. But the prayer networks they’ve established are a major support. In addition to their church, they have prayer partners in the IMB missionary community.

When Thomas’ wife was in a car accident in 2005, he was unable to make it to several immunization clinics. But he knew he and his wife were being remembered.

“They took it on as a group to pray for her,” he says. “There were [missionaries] not only here [in Richmond], but when they went all over the world, they were praying for her.”

Otto adds, “When things happen in our family, these are some of the first people we call to ask for prayer.”

When they aren’t busy with clinics and their jobs, Thomas and Otto frequently go on mission trips. On several occasions, they’ve encountered missionaries on the field who they inoculated at ILC. These full-circle moments remind the two that every Christian plays a part in helping fulfill the Great Commission.

“God is doing fantastic things and He’s not calling ‘supermen,’” says Thomas. “He’s calling ordinary people who are willing to commit in obedience, and it is just such an encouragement to come [to ILC].”

Caroline Anderson is a writer for IMB.

I hope you enjoyed reading Caroline Anderson’s stories and that your heart was touched by the work of the people she described.

Anna Lee

Wednesday

From Mrs. Ann Chapman

Hello everyone. I am improving daily. December 2, I will have another C
T scan of my neck.  I will then know if the halo can be removed,
hopefully the bones will be healed by then.
Please know how much our family thank you for your prayers for us. I
covet your continued prayers for my total healing. Also please pray for
Krisa. She continues to have high blood pressure problems since the
accident.
Our sadness is the lost of Quincy. He appeared to be he least injured in
the accident, so it has been quite a shock.
I now have a regular computer. My new email address is;
maac1933@live.com .
Please let me hear from you.
Love, Ann

Caring Bridge

Adrianna Cavanaghhttp://www.caringbridge.org/visit/adriannacavanagh     (2 posts)

Callie Colehttp://www.caringbridge.org/visit/calliecole

Colton Frazierhttp://www.caringbridge.org/visit/coltonfrazier

From Trisha Wall McCain

Chris (my sister) is in North Oaks also.  You may see Maurice, Kathy, or Mama roaming around.  She is in ICU.  She had a heart attack this afternoon and they put in two stints and did a balloon procedure. We are hoping they will put her in a room tomorrow.  Remember her in your prayers also.  Thanks!

Tricia McCain

Dorothy Smith

Momma had a better day yesterday.  Thank you for praying.  We expect an important doctor’s report this morning.  Please keep us in your prayers.

Mrs. Estelle E. Bridges
(November 7, 1921 – September 29, 2009)

Mrs. Estelle E. Bridges a loving wife, mother, grandmother, great-grandmother and sister was born on November 7, 1921 and passed away at 6:28 a.m., Tuesday, September 29, 2009 at St. Helena Parish Hospital, Greensburg. Mrs. Estelle was 87, a native of St. Helena Parish and a resident of Greensburg.

She is survived by a daughter, Janice Bridges Flynn, Atlanta; 2 sons, Vernon Bridges and wife, Karlette, Denham Springs and Robert O. “Oscar” Bridges and wife Dawn, Greensburg; a sister, Mary Nell Kliesch, Kentwood: a brother, Bobby Easley, Kentwood; 8 grandchildren; 7 great- grandchildren; and numerous nieces & nephews.

Visitation will be at the McKneely & Vaughn Funeral Home, Amite, on Thursday, October 1, 2009 from 6:00p.m. until 9:00p.m. and at the Greensburg United Methodist Church, Greensburg, on Friday, October 2, 2009 from 8:00a.m. until Religious Services at 11:00a.m. with Rev LaMarylis Cotten & Rev. Milton Kliesch officiating. Interment in the Greensburg Cemetery.

Preceded in death by her parents, Oscar & Lydia Lee Easley; husband, William Harvell “H” Bridges; brother, Huey Easley; 3 sisters, Mildred Megison, Melva Lee Gill, & Rucie Lea.

An on-line Guestbook and to view a video tribute are available at http://www.mckneelyvaughnfh.com

Baptist Press

September 29, 2009

PHILIPPINES–Manila flooding poses relief challenge. http://bpnews.net/BPnews.asp?ID=31350

MISSOURI–Gov. lauded for pregnancy funding. http://bpnews.net/BPnews.asp?ID=31351

VIRGINIA–Volunteer nurses give shots for missions. http://bpnews.net/BPnews.asp?ID=31352

ALABAMA–RESOURCE: ‘Molly’ imparts missions to kids. http://bpnews.net/BPnews.asp?ID=31353

WASHINGTON–WORLDVIEW (Erich Bridges): Talk to Muslims — not at them. http://bpnews.net/BPnews.asp?ID=31354

TENNESSEE–WHF ‘thank you’ video now downloadable. http://bpnews.net/BPnews.asp?ID=31355

KANSAS–FIRST-PERSON (Phil Boatwright): A few (clean) movies worth watching. http://bpnews.net/BPnews.asp?ID=31356

Monday Evening

Continue to pray for Momma and for the family as we sit with her around the clock.  Your prayers will be appreciated.
Just received word that Kelly Wall died this afternoon.  Many will remember him for his beautiful day lilies.  I think the funeral is to be Wednesday at 2:00 at Mount Vernon Baptist Church in Gillsburg.
Mary Alice (Fox)
Just talked to Polly Wilson, Kelly Wall’s sister.  She said the funeral is to be at 11:00 rather than 2:00 on Wednesday.
Mary Alice
Don Denton

Monday, September 28, 2009 10:14 AM, CDT

Just wanted to update you all.   We all have been sick with different sinus related illness.    It is that time of year.

I find myself pretty tired these days and it makes it hard for me to get to much.  And I must confess, this past weekend was one year and it brought up allot of memories when Don first became ill.  It has been an emotionally trying time for me.

I am struggling at this point and time and you would think that I would be celebrating

, which we are too.  That is an important part of looking forward and not back.

But the reality is that I am still grieving.  Grieving does not have a time table and I wish it did.

Don is still continuing a slow but steady improvement.  He does get headaches from time to time.  He is also still in physcial therapy.  We are most grateful for that.  His physcial therapist is an amazing women and we see her passion in what she does.

We do have a praise to share.   The university  has worked it so that we can get the reduction in Colbra health insurance.  That is an answer to pray and we are so grateful to God and the University for working with us.

We have about five weeks till we leave for Mayo.  Don will see specialist for annual follow up and some testing.  We could be there for up to 14 days.

I am still working with all the deludge of paperwork sorting through all the insurance issues of payment that we have.  That at times feels so overwhelming.  I would appreciate pray on this one too.

We again, could not do this without you love, prayer and support.  We love you all and are so grateful to you.

Bless you
Diane

Adriunna Cavanough

Monday, September 28, 2009 8:48 AM, CDT

Good morning, everyone!  Adrianna woke up a little while ago when the xray tech came in to take her chest picture, and said, “Hey Mommy- guess what?  I wanna go home!!!”
Sweet baby…I wanted to tell her that that was the original plan today, but she ran fever all weekend and around 4 am today, it got up to 103.
I could tell something was going on b/c she kept getting right on top of me and she was shaking and breathing hard.  When I asked her why she was breathing like that she said, “Cause I’m tired….like you!”  Ha!  But the nurse came in and confirmed she was having a fever….So I guess we’ll have to see what the docs say.  I’m hoping Dr. Yu will come  in today to see her.
They usually do not let the kids leave until 48 hours AFTER they’ve had fever, to make sure there’s no infection.  This is very typical of stem cell transplant patients, so they are telling me not to worry.  Fevers are a part of it.
Anyway, I had a feeling when they told us we’d get to go home today that something was going to happen–it always does!!!  Every time, lately.
So I explained to Adrianna that we can’t go to the Hope Lodge  yet b/c of her “feebers” and she said, “They want me to eat some food and drink.”  I told her yes, they do and that means we’ll get to leave even sooner!  So she did take some sips of milk.
Last night she made me go to the store to get her some muffins, so I picked up a smorgusboard of stuff to eat, and she tried a few bites of muffin, honey bun, and fruit chews, but didn’t like any of it.  So we’ll keep working on that.
The nurse just came in and said Dr. Yu will be out of town all week, so we probably won’t get discharged until NEXT MONDAY b/c normally she has to be here before they’ll discharge transplant patients.  OMG, another WEEK?!!!!  That totally stinks….I hope they change their minds.  I don’t think we can bear another week in this room….especially this poor darling who wants to leave soooo badly!
Her counts are really high, so she doesn’t have to have Neupogen anymore to raise them.  So all we need now is to have NO more fevers and then we should be ready to go, if they will let us.  She has 100.9 fever right now- anything over 100.4 is considered a fever, so they’ll give her Tylenol.
I just want to send out a SUPER DUPER thanks to all my beautiful friends who came to New Orleans this weekend to hang out with me and take me out for a fun night and dinner.  It was an incredibly awesome  night and the first time in a really long time we were all together.  There were 13 of us and it made such a difference in my mood and attitude!  Thanks so much, ladies!  I know it’s so hard for us to all get together these days, but it’s so worth it when we do!!  Nothing like your friends!
Please remember us this week, and we’re hoping for ‘NO MORE FEEBERS!’
Thanks for checking in,
Stephanie
Callie Cole

Sunday, September 27, 2009 7:00 PM, CDT

Hey! This is Frances.  I have just returned from the 5 PM visit and I am more certain that Callie can hear me.  I told her I had to leave 5 minutes early because I was meeting Landon downstairs and a tear came from her left eye and her respiration

s went wacky.  I know she hears my voice!  I can not imagine what she thinks or how she feels to be unable to communicate.  It will be nice to stay with her more often in a reg. room or the Shepard Center ICU, which ever is first!!  Let’s pray:
“Lord, I love you, and I wait on your perfect timing.  I know you are the One and Only to heal by baby’s broken body and I pray fervently that you do so.  The pain is almost unbearable.  Is this how your Father felt when he sacrificed you on that cross?  Callie is not a perfect, sinless teenager.  But, she does know who you are and she puts you on your throne.  Please forgive me and all my short comings.  I pray that you reveal those sins that I have hidden from myself so we may have perfect communion once again.  Please do not let me be an obstacle for Callie’s healing.  Reveal yourself to me, enlighten me. I beg you.  I love you.  I pray to the only Perfect One in the name of Jesus.  Amen.

Frances

KneEmail
“At the name of Jesus every knee should bow…” Philippians 2:10
Mike Benson, Editor
TWO MEN OWNED  farms side by side…

One was a bitter atheist, the other a devout Christian.  Constantly annoyed at the Christian for trusting God, the athiest said to him one winter, “Let’s plant our crops as usual this spring, each the same number of acres.  You pray to God, and I’ll curse Him.  Then come October, let’s see who has the bigger and better crop.”

When October came the athiest was delighted because his crop was larger.  “See, you fool,” he taunted, “what do you have to say for your God now?”

“My God,” the other farmer replied, “doesn’t settle all of His accounts in October.”

“Because He has appointed a day on which He will judge the world
in righteousness by the Man whom He has ordained.
He has given assurance of this to all by raising Him from the dead.”
Acts 17:32; cf. 2 Peter 3:9; Romans 2:5-6

Saturday

Maria E. Martinez Del Rio

Maria E. Martinez Del Rio entered into heaven by Gods grace on September 22, 2009 at the age of 60. She is preceded in death by her parents, Eloy and Sara Martinez; brother, Eloy Martinez; sister , Sara Simpson; nephews, Isaac Benavides and Edward McDuffie, Jr. Maria is survived by her husband, Louis A. Del Rio; daughters Sara E. Del Rio Wheeler (Willie), Maggie Del Rio; step-daughter, Marie Del Rio Hernandez (Rene); three grandchildren and one grandbaby boy on the way. Visitation will begin 5:00 p.m. Saturday, September 26, 2009 at Trevino Funeral Home, 2525 Palo Alto Rd. A rosary will be recited at 7:00 p.m. on Sunday, September 27, 2009 at the funeral home. A procession will depart the funeral home 11:00 a.m. Monday, September 28, 2009 for an 11:30 a.m. mass at Divine Providence Church. Interment to follow in Fort Sam Houston National Cemetery.

Wednesday Afternoon

Donna Smith Linton has been admitted for the delivery for her second baby.  Pray for Donna and her family as well as the staff caring for her.

Mrs. Ozell ” MawMaw” Fairburn
(November 8, 1922 – September 23, 2009)

Mrs. Ozell ‘ Maw Maw” Fairburn a loving mother, grandmother & great-grandmother passed away at 8:30 a.m. Wednesday, September 23, 2009 at the Regency Hospital of Covington. She was 86, a native and resident of Spring Creek. Mrs. Ozell was a lifelong member of Spring Creek Baptist Church.She is survived by 2 sons, Darrell Fairburn and wife Tish, Spring Creek; Jerry Fairburn and wife Sharon, Southaven, MS; daughter in law, Carol Fairburn, Spring Creek; 9 grandchildren, Darren Fairburn and wife Sharon, Scott Fairburn, Steve Fairburn, Brandon Fairburn and wife Breanne, Tammy Fairburn, Kevin Fairburn, Lynette Edwards, Angie Fairburn and Stacey Fairburn; 10 great- grandchildren and numerous nieces & nephews.

Preceded in death by her parents, Huey and Myrtis Jane Simmons Gill, husband, Woodard Fairburn, 2 sons, Roger Fairburn & Gerald Fairburn, 5 sisters, Merlie Varnado, O. V. Kennedy, Ona Schillings, Chloe Bateman and Mavis Ditto, 2 brothers, G. H. Gill and C. W. Gill.

Visitation will be at the Spring Creek Baptist Church, on Thursday, September 24, 2009, from 6:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. and Friday, September 25, 2009 at the Spring Creek Baptist Church from 8:00 a.m. until Religious Services at 11:00 a.m. with Dr. Danny Smith officiating. Interment at Spring Creek Cemetery.

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


Wednesday

“It is dangerous to be concerned with what others think of you.” ~Proverbs 29:25 GN~

Today is See You at the Pole day.  Students around the world will be meeting at the flag pole at their schools to pray.  Pray for them.  Thank God for their willingness to meet and pray.

From Landon Estay:

Update on baby Caleb: we had an appointment last week. It appears the spina bifida opening is lower than we initially thought, and it seems to be protected by skin. So, the cord isn’t exposed to the amniotic fluid. He does have a club foot, which the first ultrasound said he had but the MRI did not. The swelling in his head is mild, so he may not require a shunt to drain the fluid. God is protecting Caleb.
As you are praying for Caleb Estay, pray for his dad to find a new job – in God’s timing – so it will be the right one.

Pray for Donna Smith Linton, daughter of J.D. and Lorna Smith.  Donna is two days late in delivering her second baby, a big one!

Annie L. Stringer

Annie Kathryn Lewis Stringer, 74, of McComb, died unexpectedly Sept. 19, 2009, at St. Luke’s Episcopal Hospital in Houston, Texas.

Visitation is 5 to 8 p.m. Wednesday at Hartman-Sharkey Funeral Home in McComb and 10 a.m. Thursday at New Heights Baptist Church in Summit until services there at 11 a.m., with the Rev. Rick Kennedy officiating. Burial will be in Hollywood Cemetery.

Mrs. Stringer was born April 20, 1935, in Heidelberg, to T.D. and Annie Livingston Lewis, and was the youngest of 11 children.

Mrs. Stringer and her husband Charlie made McComb their home in 1961. They would have celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary on Nov. 25, 2009. Together they raised five children.

Mrs. Stringer’s family said that as a member of New Heights Baptist Church, she lived her life as a testament of God’s love, believing that her calling was to raise a family. As a devoted wife, mother, grandmother, sister, aunt and friend, she loved gathering with family and friends and cooking and entertaining in her home. She always cooked more than enough because “you never know who might stop by.” Her love for her neighbors made hers the most popular house on the block. She often served as the neighborhood dentist and snack stand for the kids.

Though she battled severe rheumatoid arthritis for 30 years, Mrs. Stringer rarely let the disease slow her down. She enjoyed shopping in town and made friends everywhere she went.

Mrs. Stringer was preceded in death by her parents; brothers, William, Alvin, Melvin, Edwin and Lucius Lewis; and sisters, Helen, Lolean and Baby Girl Lewis.

Survivors include her husband; five children, Wanda Caulfield and her husband David and their children Kaitlyn and Matthew of Hattiesburg, Colleen Siebert and her husband Sid and their children August, Marisa and Shelby of Summit, Anthony Stringer and his children Chase and Tyler, and Vince Stringer, all of McComb, and Amanda Stringer of Houston, Texas; twin sisters, Myrtice Castles and husband C.G. of New Port Richey, Fla., and Myrtle Hernandez of Houston, Texas; two sisters-in-law, Mrs. Melvin Lewis and Mrs. Alvin Lewis, both of Heidelberg; and numerous nieces, nephews, cousins and friends.

Pallbearers will be Kathy’s grandsons Chase and Tyler Stringer, August Siebert and Matthew Caulfield, her sons-in-law Sid Siebert and David Caulfield, and a longtime family friend, Tim White.

In lieu of flowers, the family requests that donations be made to the New Heights Baptist Church Building Fund or to the Parklane Academy Capital Campaign.

To share sympathies, condolences and memories, go to Hartman-Sharkeyfuneralhome.com.

Caring Bridge sites to check today:

http://www.caringbridge.org/visit/cheyennehartman

http://www.caringbridge.org/visit/adriannacavanagh

http://www.caringbridge.org/visit/calliecole

Number

images.jpgI READ OF an old Norwegian who had kept very careful notes of his life in a series of notebooks he kept on the shelf of his business…

On his eightieth birthday he went to the store and pulled the books from the shelf and began to compute his life. He was surprised to find that he had spent five of his eighty years waiting on customers. He had spent six months tying neckties, three months scolding children who had been running around the store, and eight days telling his dogs to lie down and be quiet.

Some stuff is pressing (i.e., urgent); some stuff is consequential (i.e., important). We need to learn to distinguish between the two and then act accordingly.

“So teach us to number our days,

that we may gain a heart of wisdom.”

~Psalm 90:12~

On Mission in Kentwood is scheduled for Saturday.  If you, or someone you know, has a need for minor maintainance, household assistance,  or yard work, please contact the church office or me.

Have a wonderful Wednesday.  Thank you for praying for the needs listed here and for the ones that are not listed for one reason or another.

Anna Lee


Be a missionary. Forward KneEmail to a friend, loved one, or co-worker today.
To SUBSCRIBE or find archives, go to: http://forthright.net/kneemail/

Posted by Mike Benson at August 25, 2009 11:21 AM

Tuesday

“Be careful how you think;

your life is shaped by your thoughts.”

~Proverbs 4:23 GN~

Pray for Eyvonne Ricks as she has surgery on both feet this morning in Baton Rouge.  Pray for the time of recovery and rehab to also go well.

Adrianna Cavanagh

Monday, September 21, 2009 8:22 PM, CDT

Stephanie is staying at Hope Lodge and couldn’t get to the computer because of the number of folks ahead of her-so she asked me to write a journal entry which she relayed to me.
The ultrasound of the liver only revealed nominal swelling, which the doc. says is “no big deal” because this happens with most kids.  They will scan her again Wednesday.

Adrianna is very sweet, and still maintains her keen sense of humor.  Although she is very, very quiet, not speaking due to the presence of lots of saliva (which they have to suction often), and mouth sores, something happened today which will exemplify her spunk and playfulness:  when Stephanie lay down with her on the hospital bed, Adri grabbed her mom’s head with both hands and pulled her face to face , eye to eye- and then grinned her biggest grin. What a sweet, sweet kid!  Adri has been sleeping most of the time, still throws up despite having had nothing to eat, but she continues to display her sweet, loving spirit when she does awaken. As Jackie Gleason used to say, “How SWEET it IS!!!”
Steph sends her thanks to you all for your continuous, unceasing prayers, which we believe are indispensible to Adri’s healing.  Thank you all,  to the top of the Chrysler Building! God bless you and keep you!  With love from Joe, Steph, Adri and the whole extended family.  Stephanie will write tomorrow if possible.
Poppa [Reggie]

Callie Cole

Monday, September 21, 2009 8:25 AM, CDT

Good Morning.  This is Frances.  I just wanted to let you know Callie had another uneventful night. So praise Him! God is so good.
The newest milestone for Callie is she is tolerating her nutrition.  She receives sustinance through a nasogastric tube.  She is given a 2000 calorie liquid to restore her body’s energy.  I anticipate better movement once a couple of feedings are complete.  She has gone 9 days without any additional energy.

We need to fuel our body much like we fuel our car.  We also should fuel our souls with His word in the same way.  Make up your mind to ride on a full tank.  Please continue to pray for your relationshi

p with our Lord and Savior and continue to lift Callie up to the Great Physician.
Thanks for all your love and support.
With much love                                           France

Monday, September 21, 2009 10:16 PM, CDT

Hey!  This is Tom.  During the 9 PM visit, Callie got really agitated.  Her blood pressure, heart rate and ICPs were extremely high for a couple of minutes.  She may have been in pain.  To ease the pain, the nurse gave her 2 mg of morphine.  She calmed down and her vitals returned to normal after 5 minutes or so.
We really don’t know what Callie can comprehend at this point.  The agitation and high vital signs could possibly be anxiety due to the coma.  Our desire is that she won’t become scared.  We prayed over her tonight and asked the Lord to comfort Callie and allow her to feel his presence.

Frances and I covet the prayers of all of you who continue to lift up our precious child to the throne of grace.  It brings to us tremendous peace to know we are not alone in this.

Tom

Colton Frazier

Monday, September 21, 2009 10:02 AM, CDT

We had a good weekend with Colton.  All the therapist said he worked hard this past week.  We fully dressed him and sat him in his chair.  We all went outside on the deck.  Colton would take his feet and roll himself back and forth in the chair.  It had to be good for him to get some fresh air.  He even wore his cap one time.  Stella gave him a hair cut and trimmed his face.  He looks great!!!

Saturday they had a Jambalaya benefit for Colton in St. Francisville, his mothers home town.  The turn out was huge.  I know it takes a lot of hard work to put something like that together.   We just want to thank each and everyone who participated in making it all happen.    Thanks so much!!

Elaine Hilbun
(November 4, 1926 – September 19, 2009)

Died at 8:40AM on Saturday, September 19, 2009 at Liberty Community Living Center in Liberty, MS. She was a native of Tangipahoa, LA and a resident of Osyka, MS. Age 82 years. Visitation at McKneely Funeral Home, Kentwood, from 9 a.m. on Monday until religious services at 11 a.m. Monday. Services conducted by Rev. Ken Irwin. Interment Woodland Cemetery, Kentwood, LA. Survived by son, William Laine “Billy” Hilbun, Gloster, MS, sister, Helen Joyce Newsom Dykes, Kentwood, 3 grandchildren, William S. “Van” Hilbun, John Wesley Hilbun, and Daniel Laine Hilbun, 1 great-granddaughter, Johanna Laine Hilbun, numerous nieces and nephews. Preceded in death by sister, Doris Newsom Kennon and brother, Ernest Donald Newsom.

Marcus “Danny” Duarte, Jr.
(May 20, 1946 – September 19, 2009)

Died at 5:15 p.m. on Saturday, September 19, 2009 at M. D. Anderson Medical Center in Houston, TX. He was a native of Dallas, TX and a resident of Roseland, LA. Age 63 years. Visitation at McKneely Funeral Home, Kentwood, from 6 p.m. until 9 p.m. on Wednesday and from 8 a.m. until religious services at 10 a.m. Thursday. Services conducted by Bro. Jim Mauldin. Interment Spring Creek Cemetery, Spring Creek, LA. Survived by wife, Jenine Duarte, Roseland, children, David W. Mote, Roseland, Judy M. Varnado and her husband, Mark, Kentwood, Bridgette Duarte-House, Franklin, NC, and Jeffrey M. Duarte, Van Nuys, CA, 6 grandchildren, Sara, Marcus, Emily, Victoria, Alexander, and Madison, parents, Marcus Duarte, Sr. and Alicia Duarte sister, Anna Gomez, brother, Mark C. Duarte. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to Leukemia Foundation. http://www.leukemia.org/.

Diane Ruth Cutrer
(September 2, 1956 – September 20, 2009)

Diane Ruth  Cutrer

Diane Ruth Cutrer was born on September 2, 1956 and passed away at 12:00 Noon, Sunday, September 20, 2009 at North Oaks Medical Center, Hammond. She was 53, a native and resident of Amite. Diane was a 1974 graduate of Amite High School, served our country in the US Navy for 10 years of which she spent 4 years in Spain and was a Federal Firefighter/Dispatcher for 18 years while living in California.

She is survived by her mother, Mrs. Beatrice Bennett Cutrer; 2 brothers, Jay Cutrer and wife, Cookie, and Ray Cutrer and wife, Donna; a sister Linda Cutrer Hines and husband, Leland; 2 nieces, Susie Cutrer Simmons and husband, Chad and Shellie Cutrer Lynn and husband, Evan; and a nephew, Ryan Schumacher all of Amite; 6 great nieces & nephews

Preceded in death by her father, Lawrence Louis Cutrer.

Visitation will be at McKneely & Vaughn Funeral Home, Amite, on Wednesday, September 23, 2009 from 9:00 a.m. until Religious Services in the Funeral Home Chapel at 11:00 a.m. with Bro. David Cutrer and Rev. Bob Simpson officiating. Interment in the Arcola-Roseland Cemetery.

An online Guestbook is available at http://www.mckneelyvaughnfh.com

McKneely & Vaughn Funeral Home, Amite, is located at I-55N and Hwy 16W behind Mr. Tom’s Car Wash and Bond Eye Clinic

KneEmail
“At the name of Jesus every knee should bow…” Philippians 2:10
Mike Benson, Editor

ANTHILLS ARE MADE when a bunch of insignificant creatures get together…

If you ever mistakenly step on an anthill without shoes, their fellowship will make an impact on you.  One ant bite might sting a little.  Most folks can handle that.  But if a person messes with the whole family in an anthill, those ants will gather around your foot and serve notice that you are unwelcome in their house…

One ant can’t create that kind of impact by itself.  Gathered together, their combined effect is much greater.  Not only do they ward off intruders together, they will also work together to rebuild in a day and a half what was destroyed.  (Tony Evans)

“Though one may be overpowered by another,
two can withstand him.
And a threefold cord is not quickly broken.”
Ecclesiastes 4:12
Have a wonderful Tuesday.
Anna Lee

Sunday Afternoon

This morning, after I posted The Prayer Link, I received work that Mrs. Kathy Stringer of McComb passed away in Houston.  Please be in prayer for the Stringers.

Kathy Stringer

Kathy Lewis Stringer, 74, a resident of McComb, died Sept. 19, 2009, at St. Luke Episcopal Hospital in Houston, Texas. Arrangements are incomplete with Hartman-Sharkey Funeral Home in McComb in charge. To share sympathies, condolences and memories, go to Hartman-Sharkeyfuneralhome.com.

Diane Cutrer
(September 2, 1956 – September 20, 2009)

Diane Cutrer was born on September 2, 1956 and passed away at 12:00 Noon, Sunday, Spetember 20, 2009 at North Oaks Medical Center, Hammond. She was 53, a resident of Amite.

Arrangements are incomplete at this time.

An online Guestbook is available at http://www.mckneelyvaughnfh.com

McKneely & Vaughn Funeral Home, Amite, is located at I-55N and Hwy 16W behind Mr. Tom’s Car Wash and Bond Eye Clinic.

Sunday

“Blessed be God,

who has not turned away my prayer,

nor His mercy from me!”

~Psalm 66:20~

Today, let’s especially pray for all those who would love to be in church, but who are unable to go.  This includes nursing home patients, hospital patients, home-bound, and those working.

Caring Bridge Sites

Week of Prayer for the Georgia Barnette State Missions Offering

Day 8 – Friday Night Church, Morgan City

“… for we are laborers together with God.” 1 Corinthians 3:9

FridayNigtChurch-pgGod not only has a desire for everyone to know Him through Jesus Christ, He also has a divine plan. His mission is to reach His world, which includes Louisiana, with the Gospel. Our one task is to reach the lost and unchurched for Christ.

Charles Gilder, retired pastor of Bayou Vista Baptist Church in Morgan City, and Marty Romero, pastor/church planter at Friday Night Church, have one task, and they share a vision to accomplish it. Their task: to reach persons in Morgan City who would not go to traditional churches and to make and disciple new believers, guiding them toward a church home.

The sponsoring church, Bayou Vista, takes its role seriously; many of the members attend services and help with music. Together Bro. Marty and Pastor Gilder find joy in reaching people who are discouraged and seeing them come and get excited about what God is doing. Marty says “sharing the Gospel is serious business, but at Friday Night Church people are reached where they are.”

This unique church plant model can be used elsewhere, too, according to Bro. Marty and Pastor Gilder. Unique approaches are needed if we are to reach Louisiana for Christ.

  • Pray for continued vision to reach people who might otherwise be overlooked with the Gospel.
  • Pray for disciples. Disciple making is a challenge when working with people accustomed to undisciplined lifestyle.
  • Thank God for assistance through Georgia Barnette State Missions Offering that enables church planters and missions pastors to focus more on ministry.
  • Pray for partnering churches.


Elaine Hilbun
(November 4, 1926 – September 19, 2009)

Died at 8:40AM on Saturday, September 19, 2009 at Liberty Community Living Center in Liberty, MS. She was a native of Tangipahoa, LA and a resident of Osyka, MS. Age 82 years. Visitation at McKneely Funeral Home, Kentwood, from 9 a.m. on Monday until religious services at 11 a.m. Monday. Services conducted by Rev. Ken Irwin. Interment Woodland Cemetery, Kentwood, LA. Survived by son, William Laine “Billy” Hilbun, Gloster, MS, sister, Helen Joyce Newsom Dykes, Kentwood, 3 grandchildren, William S. “Van” Hilbun, John Wesley Hilbun, and Daniel Laine Hilbun, 1 great-granddaughter, Johanna Laine Hilbun, numerous nieces and nephews. Preceded in death by sister, Doris Newsom Kennon and brother, Ernest Donald Newsom.

Mrs. Lucille Pledger’s daughter, Melinda, is planning a big part for “Miss” Lucille’s 90th birthday on September 24th.  Let’s let her know Kentwood connected people still love and care for her.

Melinda’s address is:   Melinda Huss
2307 Western Drive
Decatur,  IL  62521

The truck will be in Kentwood to pick up the groceries we have given for the Louisiana Baptist Children’s Home Fall Food Roundup.  Please leave your donations in the area at the base of the steps that lead to the church office.

KneEmail
“At the name of Jesus every knee should bow…” Philippians 2:10
Mike Benson, Editor
SOMETIMES GOD SEEMS to take forever…

You wait and wait and wait.  But when He finally moves, He does more in one hour and you could accomplish in a lifetime.  So it’s your choice: be busily consumed with your paltry attempts or wait on God until He moves in the fulness of His glory and purposes.  God’s sense of timing is like this: He waits forever and then moves suddenly and instantaneously.  There’s only one way to even begin to tune into God’s sense of timing, and that is through waiting.  Waiting transports us out of the temporal, out of our time-zone, and into His time-zone.

God can out-wait anybody.  He just waits and waits, while the crisis looms larger and larger, and He waits some more.  He waits until the crisis becomes an impossible predicament.  And then He waits some more!  Finally, when the remotest chance of escape is completely gone, God intervenes suddenly.  A good example of this is Abraham.

God promised Abraham a son when he was 75 years old, even though Sarah was baren.  And then God waits five years, ten years, fifteen years, twenty years.  By now it’s too late.  Even if Sarah were not barren, she is now too old, and so is Abraham.  Twenty-five years.  Count them.  Twenty-five interminable years.  Finally, when all natural hope was exhausted, God provided and Sarah became pregnant!  God is the king of wait.  (Bob Sorge)

“Rest in the LORD, and wait patiently for Him;
do not fret because of him who prospers in his way,
because of the man who brings wicked schemes to pass.”
~Proverbs 37:7~

Honor God on His day!

Anna Lee