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Vol. III, # 52, Vol. IV, # 4, September 2, 2005
September 11, 2001, a day of
moral evil in our land
August 29, 2005, a day of natural evil in our
land
A prayer request from Margaret and John Oliver
Pray
for all those suffering from Katrina and family concerns. Our
son, John III, and family live in Long Beach - next door to Gulfport
Mississippi. His family left the area ahead of Katrina, and found
lodging in Destin, FL. He stayed -- the house did not get any
major structural damage - but electricity may not be restored
for 3 - 4 weeks, if they are lucky. Phone communication is out.
Today his family is on the way to Virginia to stay with her mother
until it is safe to return home. His college aged daughter, student
at USM in Hattiesburg, is also on her way, we think, to Virginia.
We are grateful that they are safe, but our hearts go out to the
thousands who are in turmoil.
Pray for Wayne Price in Williamsburg who has
just recently found that his cancer has worsened. He currently
is still serving an Episcopal church and plans to do so as long
as he can. He said "my work is what helps me to keep going.
I can manage the pain at this point." Wayne is the father
of Jessica Price, wife of John Vaughan.
A message from Carolyn Thomas
As you may remember our son, David, lived on
the gulf coast of Mississippi in Long Beach. Long Beach is between
Gulfport and Pass Christian. Wanted to let you know that David
is safe in Arkansas with friends but his apartment and its contents
apparently have been totally destroyed along with everything else
between the water and several miles inland. We are so thankful
that he is safe. His plans are uncertain at this point as you
can understand but wanted folks to know that he is alive and safe.
Carolyn
A message from Kathy Wade in Oklahoma
Dear Doc,
Thanks so much for your special word about the
past. Today I just finished my second chemo shot that one of my
doctors started me on this year. They're so potent that you only
take them every three months. My oldest sister Barbara went with
me this morning and as usual she is my comic relief. So as I drove
us to the hospital very early this morning, she made wisecracks
and made me completely forget about what I was facing this morning.
The needle is quite huge and in fact an anesthetic is needed in
the abdomen prior to the shot. So, my sister who is widowed after
losing her husband and middle son within six weeks of each other
many years ago, embraces life and insists on looking at the brightest
side of life with Christ.
Amen to your message Doc. And praise our good
God that I only have one more shot!
Take care!
Kathy
A message from Franklin Fowler
Thank you for your note. We indeed have had a
wonderful life, the Lord has blessed me with many blessings, among
the best has been Dorcas.
We enjoy so much our S.S. class. Sorry we missed
Sunday, but for some reason or other the church bus did not come,
and it is a long walk. Next Sunday I preach here at our Health
Care Unit. We shall miss you all.
Love, Franklin
Shepson Bill sends a message about Betsy Foster
Betsy Foster and husband Chris will leave in
September on a two-week trip to China. Betsy and her mother will
then visit Belgium for a week in October to see the location where
her father was captured by German forces during the World War
II Battle of the Bulge. Her father was subsequently imprisoned
in a POW camp inside Germany for five months before finally being
rescued.
Bill
Remember in your prayers: John Oliver III and his
family, Wayne Price, Jessica Vaughan's father, David Thomas, Carolyn
and George Thomas' son, Kathy Wade, Betsy Foster, Arlene Perry's
friends Linda and John, Gene Cox, Bill Moore, Brooke Belfiore, Jeanette
Gholston, Don Bunn, Kay and Bob Culpeper, Philip and Shanna Davis,
the VCU BSU, Julia Tyler and her parents, the youth of the church,
the Church clergy and the church staff. Prayers should also be offered
for all those in peril from Hurricane Katrina and our men and women
in the armed forces and for civilians around the world in harm's
way and for those only known to you
The Micah Tutors team wants to thank all the
Friends of Micah who have helped get the project off the ground
in record time. Our project, conceived last spring, will start
this month at Summer Hill Elementary School, off Rt 1 in back
of Philip Morris. Many of you suggested others who could tutor,
and many who were unable to supply the ongoing commitment of regular
time each week want to be involved in whatever way possible.
We
have great news for all of you. Per the late Don Ameche in the
film of the same name: Things Change. One day, you, too, could
become a Micah tutor. Moreover, you're not off the hook; we expect
to call on some of you for the inevitable ad-hoc project at the
school as we go forward.
Our roster of tutors as of last Friday (in no
particular order):
John Oliver
Norm Vaughn
Gene Cox
Bob Shepherd
Ellen Nurney
Jane Terry
Eric Johnson
Sheryl Johnson
Terry Marsh
Sheila Marsh
Karen Cothran
Susan Vaughn
George Davis
Dan Stevens
Byrd Latham
Oh, and it turns out having Norm Vaughn as one
of our Micah tutors hasn't hurt us at all :) Yesterday, Linda
Schreiner signed up to help us.
That makes 16 of us to start our project. Know
anyone else who wants to help? Just one hour a week and a steady
commitment.
Our partner school (Summer Hill) held Stephen
Covey (Seven Habits of Highly Effective People) training for staff
last week. Micah team tutors were invited and several of us attended.
We were impressed with the teaching staff who took summer vacation
time to attend. One, Mary Pace, is a long time teacher who is
about to get her Ph.D.
Our tutors have been invited to parent's night
this Thursday and staff breakfast this Friday morning. School
starts next week. Stay tuned.
Terry Marsh
HAVE
YOU SIGNED UP FOR THE SEPTEMBER 10TH CLASS HYMN SING SOCIAL YET?
WHO SHOULD YOU NOTIFY? Ann Sledge at e-mail >GusSledge@aol.com<
WHEN SHOULD YOU NOTIFY? As you are reading this
reminder.
Please come.
This Sunday Dr. Tom Graves, President of BTSR,
will present the ninth and last Catacombs lecture of 2005. This
lecture will be the first
of two on the topic, "The End is Near." This Sunday's
lecture will be on "The Christian and a Philosophy of History."
The Catacombs Lectures of 2005 have been excellent. Sheila and Terry
Marsh are to praised for this outstanding series of lectures.
Pastor
Mike has been our pastor for one year. PH wonders if he was only
twenty-eight a year ago?
Barbara and Jack Harvie will celebrate forty-seven
years of marriage on next Tuesday and Susan and John Gordon will
celebrate forty-two years of marriage on next Wednesday.
Violence as a way of achieving justice is both
impractical and immoral. It is impractical because it is a descending
spiral ending in destruction for all. The old law of an eye for
an eye leaves everybody blind. It is immoral because it seeks
to humiliate
the opponent rather than win his understanding; it seeks to annihilate
rather than to convert. Violence is immoral because it thrives
on hatred rather than love. It destroys community and makes brotherhood
impossible. It leaves society in monologue rather than dialogue.
Violence ends by defeating itself. It creates bitterness in the
survivors and brutality in the destroyers.
Source: Martin Luther King, Jr., Nobel address,
Oslo, December 11, 1964
As far as I'm concerned, the greatest suffering
is to feel alone, unwanted, unloved. The greatest suffering is
also having no one, forgetting what an intimate, truly human relationship
is, not knowing what it means to be loved, not having family or
friends.
Mother Teresa
PH

August
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19, 2005
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12, 2005
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