Friday – Update on Jesse Dean

Jason Dean wrote this update this morning:

My father is at home am doing well. He has a long way to go to get his strength back. His knee is doing well,his sugar level and kidneys appear to be improving. His main problem now is regaining his strength and his blood levels to return to normal. Thank everyone for all the prayers and keep remembering him.

The Dean Family

Friday

Aaron Hill

Please begin now to pray for this baby, his family. and the medical staff who will minister to Aaron and his family today. God has touched many lives through the life of one sick little boy. Pray that no matter how the surgery turns out today, lives will continue to be touched and blessed. Pray Aaron and his family will feel the love, support, and encouragement of many people as well as the peace and endurance from God for whatever they face today.

I thank all of your for the many prayers you are lifting up for Aaron. Each message has truly blessed me today. We cherish each new friend we are making through this process (we can’t wait for Aaron to thank you himself for your prayers one day!), those of you whom we haven’t seen in years and those friends that we just haven’t seen since leaving for PA. Thank you, thank you, thank you.

Aaron will be the second surgical case tomorrow. They anticipate coming to take him to the operating room about 10 a.m. We will spend the morning with him and let everyone know when the surgery begins. Please pray for the hands of the surgeons, for Aaron’s peace and pain, that intubation will be easy and all toxins will stay out of Aaron’s body, that the holes will be easily located and repaired, that Aaron will have no trouble coming off the bypass machine and that his heart will not misfire when it begins working again. Pray for healing after the surgery.

We love you all.

Billy Wilkinson

I saw Billy Wilkinson of Fluker last night. He continues to have treatments at Mary Bird Perkins in Baton Rouge. Please pray for him as he continues his treatments.


Paul D. Morel, DMD

Paul Douglas Morel, DMD, died April 1, 2008, at his residence.
Visitation is 6 to 8 p.m. Thursday at Hartman-Sharkey Funeral Home in McComb. Services are 11 a.m. Friday at the funeral home chapel with Dr. David Millican officiating.

Dr. Morel was born April 26, 1958, in Pasadena, Calif. He was the son of Jo Blades Morel of Magnolia and the late Paul Francis Morel. He was a practicing dentist in Magnolia.

KOMpray

Kids on Mission Pray

Prayer requests

April 4, 2008

“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

EIGHT-HOURS TO THE OASIS… A team of volunteers went from the United States to West Africa to tell the Kanuri people about Jesus. They wanted to go prayerwalking-you know, praying while walking. You can walk through your neighborhood too and begin praying for your neighbors. Well, these volunteers wanted to pray for the Kanuri people. Sad to say, they weren’t allowed to go to some of the villages they hoped to visit. So, the missionaries took them on an eight-hour trip to a desert oasis. Make a picture in your mind-hot sun, huge sand dunes, and water for thirsty travelers! The volunteers were very excited about the trip. They planned to do some prayerwalking in the desert and definitely wanted to tell someone about Jesus.

Whew, eight-hours riding through the desert! At the oasis, they climbed to the top of huge dunes to look out and pray for the desert peoples. The volunteers asked God to show them people who wanted to hear about Jesus. Even before the volunteers left the United States, they thought about that. They used the church’s Vacation Bible School missions offering to buy some very special, small media players. They have four-hours of Bible stories on them-sort of like Sunday School lessons-from Creation through Jesus. The stories were in seven different languages so everyone could understand. Everyone who lives in the Saharan desert that is!

After praying on the sand dunes, the volunteers started back. And what did thy see? A camel caravan! Yes, they were in the middle of a caravan of 150 camels and 30 drivers. The camel drivers were excited to take the media players and listen to the stories in their language. Please pray for these camel drivers (kind of like West African cowboys). Pray for them to listen to the stories many times and become Christians. Pray that they will share the stories with their families and others they meet on the trail.

MORE PRAYER REQUESTS FROM MISSIONARY KIDS

My prayer request is that God will help me reach more and more hearts of people. LS, age 10 (East Asia)

Pray that other people would love me. THAD, age 5

Please pray that I would have more girls to play with in my neighborhood. DANIELLE, age 9 (Pacific Rim)

Dear God. Please help my great grandma to stay healthy. RAYMOND, age 7 (East Asia)

Please pray for my strength as I try to lose weight and exercise more. Pray that I will have faith that I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me. AP, age 15

Nanna was born with only half of a heart in Scarborough, East Toronto, Canada. Her church (Iglesia Bautiste Betel) prayed for her survival as a testimony to Jesus’ love for children and His power as the Great Physician to keep her alive. She has been alive longer than anyone else in her condition, but the more she grows, the more she needs a whole heart. Please pray that she will be put on a list to receive a heart transplant. Please ask Yahweh the Father to let this little vivacious girl with an infectious smile and lots of joy in the Lord continue to live as a testimony to Jesus’ love for children. NANNA, age 7 (Middle America and Caribbean)

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

LEADERSHIP OF THE Democratic Party in Michigan and Florida is in a quandary…

In the past, the presidential nomination process has been settled by the time their primaries were held. In an attempt to make their primaries more meaningful, they scheduled the events for an earlier date. The national party leaders warned them not to make those changes, or their votes would not be counted. The warnings went unheeded.

The closeness of the 2008 Democratic presidential campaign has surprised many. The delegates that would have been chosen in the Michigan and Florida primaries might have made a distinct difference. In hindsight, all wish that they had left the schedule alone. Now there is discussion about redoing the primaries. Many oppose such efforts, however, saying that rules can’t be changed after the fact. It will be interesting to see how all of this develops.

Attempting to change the rules is an ancient practice. Esau, described in Hebrews 12:16 as a “profane person” (NKJV), made an impulsive decision to sell his birthright in order to satisfy his physical hunger. Later he begged his father to reverse the blessing he had given to Jacob, or at least to pronounce a second blessing. His words in Genesis 27:38 reveal his desperate situation: “And Esau said to his father, ‘Have you only one blessing, my father? Bless me — me also, O my father!’ And Esau lifted up his voice and wept.” But it was too late. There was no blessing for one who had thought so little of his spiritual heritage. The rules would not be changed for Esau.

Similar desperation can be found in Matthew 7:21-23, words which will surprise many religious folks: “Not everyone who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ shall enter the kingdom of heaven, but he who does the will of my father in heaven. Many will say to me in that day, ‘Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in your name, cast out demons in your name, and done many wonders in your name?’ And then I will declare to them, ‘I never knew you; depart from me, you who practice lawlessness!'”

God’s will had been given to these startled souls. They could have known and obeyed the will of God if they had so chosen. Instead they launched out on their own wisdom, doing whatever seemed right and religious to them. In the end they were lost because they had not obeyed God’s rules. No amount of pleading would change what God had laid down in scripture.

Let us learn from the mistakes others have made. Let us be thankful that God has given us everything we need for life and godliness (2 Peter 1:2-4), and then let us be intent on knowing and doing those things. One thing is certain: We’re not going to change what God has said! (Tim Hall)


“Not everyone who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’

shall enter the kingdom of heaven,

but he who does the will of my father in heaven.

Many will say to me in that day,

‘Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in your name,

cast out demons in your name,

and done many wonders in your name?’

And then I will declare to them,

‘I never knew you; depart from me,

you who practice lawlessness!'”

~Matt. 7:21-23~

 

 

Have a great Friday!

Anna Lee

Thursday

“But you will receive power

when the Holy Spirit has come upon you,

and you will be My witnesses in Jerusalem,

in all Judea and Samaria,

and to the ends of the earth.”

Acts 1:8 (HCSB)

 

 

Betty Taylor is still sore from her fall, but continues to improve. Please continue to remember her in your prayers.

Rusty Williams also continues to improve. Last week, he was able to use his wheelchair and attend church. Please continue to pray for him.

Continue to pray for Joan Hagan as she prepares for surgery on Wednesday, April 30th.

Pray for Mrs. Joann Carter. She has a recurrence of cancer.

Families on Mission in Kentwood!

  • Saturday, April 26
  • Men, women, boys, girls, Sunday School classes, families, young, not so young, any combination of people
  • Assist people in the community with tasks they are not physically able to do on their own.
  • Contact the church office with needs you are aware of.

Annie Armstrong Easter Offering

  • Goal: $13,000.00
  • Receoved: $7,667.85

Nursery Volunteers for April 6

  • Velma Anthony
  • Jill Brister
  • Patty Hoffstadt
  • Emily Daniels

No “Baptist Message” will be printed today.

Thanks for the many migrant health kits that were turned in.

Sunday, April 6

  • No discipleship classes
  • AWANA will meet
  • Worship at 6 P.M.

Paid Nursery Position Open

  • Sunday mornings, Sunday evenings, Special services
  • Applications are available in the church office

 

KneEmail

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


MOST PARENTS HAVE seen this happen…

As the communion tray passes by, our little one stretches to see its contents, then in a stage whisper says: “Mom, can I have some juice too?” Of course, you could say flat out, “No!” but most parents wisely respond, “Not yet.”

“No you can’t,” and “Not yet” are quite different responses, you know. Sometimes it’s important to wait. Delay is not denial. Waiting for the proper time is not idle waiting, nor is it empty.

Anticipation is the best preparation for the moment of fulfillment.

Of course, our kids could take crackers and juice right with all the other participants, but they would not be partaking of the body and blood of the Lord, and the special nature of this ceremony would be lost on them.

Delayed gratification is not popular in our culture, but there are times when it is important. I remember the first time I took communion. I was twelve years old, and it was the week after I was baptized. What a very special moment that was!

Human beings are always in such a hurry. God, I have noticed, allows for nature to take its course. And it doesn’t hurt for our children to observe baptisms, and the Lord’s Supper, and to begin to form the idea that one day, they, too, will grow to participate in and appreciate these grownup mysteries. (Stan Mitchell)

“Wait for the Lord;

be strong and take heart and wait for the Lord.”

~Psalm 27:14~


Have a wonderful day. “Let Others See Jesus in You”!

Anna Lee

Wednesday Night

Latest post on Baby Aaron Hill

(Wednesday @ 8:15 P.M.)

We got disappointing news today from our surgeon. For the past 36 hours, Aaron has not been getting better. He has been draining tons of fluid from his chest tubes and his heart rate and respirations have been high. He has been laboring with each breath. They have been giving him blood products and iv nutrition, but he continues to weaken. Dr. Spray feels like Aaron needs another open heart surgery very soon to repair the holes between his ventricles and atria. One of the holes is in the area where they put a patch to connect his aorta with his VSD–the doctors think some of the stitches may have come out around the patch. The other hole is in a very difficult place to reach, but it is doing lots of damage b/c it’s allowing backflow into Aaron’s right atrium. Dr. Spray had wanted to see if Aaron would get better so we could skip another surgery because it will be a difficult repair, but that has not happened. The operation may be Friday, but at the latest Monday. They don’t want Aaron to get any worse.

We are disappointed and scared. We want Aaron to get well and don’t want to hand him over to be cut open again. We haven’t held our baby boy in over two weeks now. This has been hard for us, but harder on our Aaron. Please pray for healing for our son.

Wednesday

“The Lord has heard my supplication;

the Lord will receive my prayer.”

~Psalm 6:9~

 

MISSIONARY PERSONAL NEEDS. Pray for Ramona Reese, IMB missionary to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and her family as they grieve the sudden loss of her mother in a car accident. Lift up Ramona and her family as decisions are made regarding her mother’s belongings. Pray for the grandchildren, who are taking it the hardest. Remember Ramona’s husband also as he is recovering from knee replacement surgery.

 

Please pray for my parents, Grant and Dot Smith of Roseland, as they undergo a number of medical tests.

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


I WEIGHED MYSELF one day recently…

I weighed a certain amount (nope, I am not going to tell, so don’t even ask!) on one scale. I guess I wanted a second opinion, so I weighed on another one. It showed me 20 pounds heavier than the first one did. (I liked the first one better; it must be doing a better job.) Therefore, just to see if I could get a majority ruling, I found a third one and weighed on it. It showed me 10 pounds heavier than the first scale, and 10 pounds lighter than the second scale. (I still liked the first one better.) To be honest, I do not know which one was right, so I just went with the one that pleased me the most.

Sadly, I believe that many religious people follow this same path. They try one religious organization, church or preacher, and then, they try another, which tells them something different, and maybe another that tells something totally different yet. They get confused, and then they just go to the one that pleases them most.

How can I know how much I truly weigh? I have to find a reliable scale, one that is calibrated properly and that is consistent with the true weight of what it weighs. While all three of the scales I used were different, the fact is that I did actually weigh a certain amount when I used those scales. All of them could have been wrong, or one right and two wrong (I know you figure the heaviest one was right), but only one could have been right.

Religiously, there is a truth that does not change. It is the truth that is God’s Word (John 17:17), and that truth is understandable. In the religious world, we may find all kinds of “interpretations,” sort of like the measurements of my weight on those scales. The fact is, however, that there is a truth that is sure and certain, and is right. If two or more people are teaching different things on a matter of doctrine or Scripture, then either all of those teachings are wrong, or one is right and the others are wrong. That is an unpopular sentiment in today’s world.

If we take it and think about it in terms of how much I weigh, it is not hard to understand. I have a true weight. However, it cannot be 20 pounds different from one measurement, and 10 pounds different from another and all three measurements be true. That just makes sense. For example, I cannot weigh 100 pounds (I wish!), 110 pounds and 120 pounds all at the same time. If three scales weigh me these weights, then at least two of them are wrong (I know what you are thinking, in my case all three would be wrong at these weights, although the three combined might come close-Ha,Ha!).

From the perspective of religion, we must go to the Bible, and allow it to speak as the authority of God. We need to use it as our spiritual scale, or measuring instrument. In the end, it will be that by which we are judged. It is truth in its purest form. We must measure by God’s measurements and not by ours.

I would like to lose some weight. However, just going from one scale to another that gives me a reading that pleases me more does not change my real weight. I want to go to heaven. Just changing to some other organization or preacher that tells me what I want to hear will not change the course I am on. Only obedience to the truth of God can do that. Be careful what measuring instrument you use to guide your life. (Dean Kelly)

“Sanctify them by Your truth. Your word is truth” (John 17:17).

Be careful what measuring instrument you use to guide your life.

Have a wonderful day!

Anna Lee

Tuesday Evening

Request from Selena Morgan

Please add Kaden Underwood to the prayerlink. He is the 5 month old son of a Southeastern classmate. He is undergoing heart surgery somewhere up north. Please pray for this baby as well as his parents and the doctors as they care for him.

Today’s post by Faith Hill

In her post yesterday, Melinda gave me a simple prayer that I am trying to remember as each minute passes. “Father, please heal my son and if You choose not to, please keep me faithful.”

Today has been quiet and a lesson in patience. After Aaron‘s breathing tube was removed yesterday evening, he had a fairly pleasant night. He shed a lot more fluid, so today he is getting more blood products. They aren’t feeding him or giving him any IV nutrition other than blood products just yet, but they might start with something tonight. We hope so, as Aaron needs to bulk up to keep up with Levi.

On the surgical front, Dr. Spray reviewed all of Aaron’s images from the cath and his progress from the weekend. The location of the two remaining holes (if they are still there) would make it unlikely that they could be closed in a surgery. They would be hard to locate and view. The only other approach for closing them would be for a coil device to be placed during a heart cath, but one of the holes could not be reached that way, either. Aaron would only be a candidate for this procedure when he is older–most desirably 3 or 4 years old.

Before last Friday, the doctors thought Aaron did not have enough blood flow to his lungs. So they were trying to help him get more with drugs, oxygen, nitric, etc. In reality, the cath revealed that he had the opposite problem and the treatment was hurting him. We are hoping that since they now realize the true problem, Aaron’s heart will be able to do the work on its own. In the event this does not work, Aaron might have to have surgery where a band is placed on his pulmonary artery to try and slow the blood flow to his heart/lungs. This band would allow Aaron to grow until he is big enough for an interventional heart cath. We aren’t eager for him to have another surgery, b/c any surgery is dangerous, but the placement of the pulmonary band would not require any cutting on Aaron’s heart, so it is a LITTLE less scary. We are hopeful he won’t need this.

We are still practicing patience. Aaron is still covered in leads, catheters, chest tubes, wires to his heart, medication lines to his heart, ivs, bandages, etc. We are still eager to hold him, but the best we can do is stand by him and talk to him, give him his pacifier and promise him love, hugs, kisses and treats when he is better. We long for that day. Please keep praying for Aaron.

Tuesday

“Therefore I say to you,

whatever things you ask when you pray,

believe that you receive them,

and you will have them.”

~Mark 11:24~

 

 

BUCHAREST, ROMANIA (BOO-kuh-rest). IMB personnel have seen many changes in Bucharest and Romania over the past nine years. Romania has worked hard to be accepted by the Western European countries. They have passed several hurdles to be accepted into NATO and the European Union. The first week of April, Bucharest will be hosting the NATO Summit. This is a big deal for them. Airports will be shut down, and this city will be under heavy security. Schools will be closed. Although the summit is government-related, pray for God’s presence to be felt here during this time. Pray for people to realize that they will only have true peace in their lives through knowing the Lord personally. http://www.imbromania.ro/

MISSIONARY PERSONAL NEEDS. Please remember the 5-year-old son of missionaries Kelly and Ann Carruthers in your prayers. In February, he broke his left femur bone, and stayed in the hospital for 14 days. Pray this month that he will regain his strength from the break and that God will continue to protect him.

CHINA. New life was celebrated in many ways through Easter celebrations held throughout China late last month. Praise God that the Risen Savior lives in the hearts of many millions of Chinese people and that His saving grace is constantly being shared in cities and villages throughout China. Pray that new believers will accept the challenge of sharing their newfound faith with others so that millions more can also know the One who conquered the grave.

UNENGAGED PEOPLES OF CENTRAL, EASTERN AND SOUTHERN AFRICA. Please be in prayer for the people in northern to central Namibia. Heavy rains in Angola to the north of Namibia have caused major flooding in northern Namibia and into the heart of Ovamboland. The flooding has killed 42 people (at last count) and displaced thousands since early February. More flooding is expected. Raging rivers have replaced normally dry plains, with roads and bridges being washed away as a result. In an area where the main mode of transportation is by foot, this is more than an inconvenience–it is a death sentence. As many as 250,000 people have been cut off in this region, with many only reachable by helicopter. Please be in prayer for the peoples of Namibia. forgottenpeoples@telkomsa.net; http://www.forgottenpeoples.info

Our Daily Bread

April 1, 2008


In The Driver’s Seat

READ: Matthew 5:13-16


Let your light so shine before men,

that they may see your good works

and glorify your Father in heaven.

-Matthew 5:16

I love the story of the stressed-out woman who was tailgating a man as they drove on a busy boulevard. When he slowed to a stop at a yellow light, the woman hit the horn, cussing and screaming in frustration and gesturing angrily. As she was still in mid-rant, she heard a tap on her window and looked up into the face of a police officer who ordered her to exit the car with her hands up. He took her to the police station and placed her in a holding cell.

An hour later, the officer returned and said, “I’m sorry, Ma’am. This has been a big mistake. When I pulled up behind you, I noticed your ‘What Would Jesus Do?’ license plate holder and your ‘Follow Me to Sunday School’ bumper sticker. I assumed the car was stolen!”

Satan doesn’t care so much if you’re a Christian as long as you don’t act like one. If he can get you to live by his signals, he can damage and disarm you every time and dishonor the name of Christ in the process.

Instead, Jesus calls believers to be “salt” and to “Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works and glorify your Father in heaven” (Matt. 5:16).

With Jesus in the driver’s seat of our lives, we can show off the love and glory of God. – Joe Stowell

Called to be salt and light in this world,
Called to preserve and to shine,
Called to reflect the glory of God-
Oh, what a calling is mine! -Fitzhugh

Don’t let Satan manage the details of your life.

I suppose the scene might vary some from person to person:

  • Wearing a cross or fish symbol and being in a place where a Christian shouldn’t be
  • Wearing a Christian lapel pin and being involved in office gossip
  • Having a Bible beside you and l listening to music that brings glory to the things of the world
  • Etc.

Have a great day. Show the world who your best friend really is!

Anna Lee

Monday Evening – Aaron Hill

Praises

Frann Smith Clark

Just a quick praise-Aaron is off the ventilator and seems to be doing well. They also took out his NG tube, so other than getting some oxygen through a nasal cannula, his little nose and mouth is free for the first time in 4 days. It is wonderful to see his face. He has been awake and looking at us as if to say “IT’S ABOUT TIME…”