Sunday, August 30, 2015

OUR WEEK - SEPTEMBER 6TH THRU SEPTEMBER 12TH

REMINDERS —
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2ND —
OFFICE OPEN FROM 9 A.M. TO NOON.
———————————————————
ADAIR U.M.W. MEETS AT 1:30 P.M.  

   ——————————————————— 
AD COUNCIL AT CASEY U.M.C.
• Casey Council at 7 P.M.
• Adair Council at 7:45 P.M.
• Combined Councils after.
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SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 6TH —
Happy Anniversary —
Keith and Karla Caltrider!
Happy Anniversary —
Joe and Glenda Moore!
Happy Anniversary —
Tony and Sheryl Richter!
Happy Anniversary —
Dave and Debie Stolk!
15TH SUNDAY AFTER PENTECOST
COLOR:  GREEN
Jesus goes to Lebanon for a vacation
and there encounters a local woman
whose begging ultimately convinces
him to free her daughter from a demon.
Returning to Galilee, and re-entering the
region of the Decapolis.
———————————————————
SCRIPTURE READINGS —
———————————————————
PROVERBS 22:1-9, 22-23
THE MESSAGE (MSG)

About wealth, justice, generosity and
the poor.


CURE COMES THROUGH DISCIPLINE
1 A sterling reputation is better than
striking it rich;
    a gracious spirit is better than money
in the bank.

2
The rich and the poor shake hands as
equals—
    God made them both!

3 A prudent person sees trouble coming
and ducks;
    a simpleton walks in blindly and is
clobbered.

4 The payoff for meekness and Fear-of-
God
    is plenty and honor and a satisfying
life.

5 The perverse travel a dangerous road,
potholed and mud-slick;
    if you know what’s good for you, stay
clear of it.

6 Point your kids in the right direction—
    when they’re old they won’t be lost.

7 The poor are always ruled over by the
rich,
    so don’t borrow and put yourself
under their power.

8 Whoever sows sin reaps weeds,
    and bullying anger sputters into
nothing.

9 Generous hands are blessed hands
    because they give bread to the poor.
———————————————————
PSALM 125
THE MESSAGE (MSG) 
God's protection for the righteous.

A PILGRIM SONG
1-5
Those who trust in God
    are like Zion Mountain:
Nothing can move it, a rock-solid
mountain
    you can always depend on.
Mountains encircle Jerusalem,
    and God encircles his people—
    always has and always will.
The fist of the wicked
    will never violate
What is due the righteous,
    provoking wrongful violence.
Be good to your good people, God,
    to those whose hearts are right!
God will round up the backsliders,
    corral them with the incorrigibles.
Peace over Israel!
———————————————————
JAMES 2:1-17
THE MESSAGE (MSG)
God has enabled the poor to be rich in
faith, but the rich have often exercised
their power to oppress people and keep
them poor. Disciples of Jesus must take
direct action—not just have good
intentions-- to relieve the needs of the
poor. "Faith without works is dead."

THE ROYAL RULE OF LOVE

1-4 My dear friends, don’t let public
opinion influence how you live out our
glorious, Christ-originated faith. If a man
enters your church wearing an
expensive suit, and a street person
wearing rags comes in right after him,
and you say to the man in the suit, “Sit
here, sir; this is the best seat in the
house!” and either ignore the street
person or say, “Better sit here in the
back row,” haven’t you segregated
God’s children and proved that you are
judges who can’t be trusted?
5-7 Listen, dear friends. Isn’t it clear by
now that God operates quite differently?
He chose the world’s down-and-out as
the kingdom’s first citizens, with full
rights and privileges. This kingdom is
promised to anyone who loves God. And
here you are abusing these same
citizens! Isn’t it the high and mighty who
exploit you, who use the courts to rob
you blind? Aren’t they the ones who
scorn the new name—“Christian”—used
in your baptisms?
8-11 You do well when you complete the
Royal Rule of the Scriptures: “Love
others as you love yourself.” But if you
play up to these so-called important
people, you go against the Rule and
stand convicted by it. You can’t pick and
choose in these things, specializing in
keeping one or two things in God’s law
and ignoring others. The same God who
said, “Don’t commit adultery,” also said,
“Don’t murder.” If you don’t commit
adultery but go ahead and murder, do
you think your non-adultery will cancel
out your murder? No, you’re a murderer,
period.
12-13 Talk and act like a person
expecting to be judged by the Rule that
sets us free. For if you refuse to act
kindly, you can hardly expect to be
treated kindly. Kind mercy wins over
harsh judgment every time.  
FAITH IN ACTION
14-17 Dear friends, do you think you’ll
get anywhere in this if you learn all the
right words but never do anything?
Does merely talking about faith indicate
that a person really has it? For instance,
you come upon an old friend dressed in
rags and half-starved and say, “Good
morning, friend! Be clothed in Christ! Be
filled with the Holy Spirit!” and walk off
without providing so much as a coat or
a cup of soup—where does that get
you? Isn’t it obvious that God-talk with-
out God-acts is outrageous nonsense?
———————————————————
MARK 7:24-37
THE MESSAGE (MSG)
Jesus goes to Lebanon for a vacation
and there encounters a local woman
whose begging ultimately convinces
him to free her daughter from a demon.
Returning to Galilee, and re-entering the
region of the Decapolis (where he had
cast out a legion of demons), Jesus
heals a man who could not hear or
speak. The more he ordered others not
to speak of this, the more they spread it
abroad.

24-26 From there Jesus set out for the
vicinity of Tyre. He entered a house
there where he didn’t think he would be
found, but he couldn’t escape notice. He
was barely inside when a woman who
had a disturbed daughter heard where
he was. She came and knelt at his feet,
begging for help. The woman was
Greek, Syro-Phoenician by birth.
She asked him to cure her daughter.
27 He said, “Stand in line and take your
turn. The children get fed first. If there’s
any left over, the dogs get it.”
28 She said, “Of course, Master. But
don’t dogs under the table get scraps
dropped by the children?”
29-30 Jesus was impressed. “You’re
right! On your way! Your daughter is no
longer disturbed. The demonic affliction
is gone.” She went home and found her
daughter relaxed on the bed, the
torment gone for good.
31-35 Then he left the region of Tyre,
went through Sidon back to Galilee Lake
and over to the district of the Ten Towns.
Some people brought a man who could
neither hear nor speak and asked Jesus
to lay a healing hand on him. He took
the man off by himself, put his fingers in
the man’s ears and some spit on the
man’s tongue. Then Jesus looked up in
prayer, groaned mightily, and
commanded, “Ephphatha!—Open up!”
And it happened. The man’s hearing is
clear and his speech plain just like that.
36-37 Jesus urged them to keep it quiet,
but they talked it up all the more, beside
themselves with excitement. “He’s done
it all and done it well. He gives hearing
to the deaf, speech to the speechless.”
———————————————————
• 1620 - Pilgrims left on the Mayflower
from Plymouth, England to settle in the
New World.
• 1837 - The Oberlin College of Ohio
went co-educational.
• 1876 - The Southern Pacific rail line
from Los Angeles to San Francisco was
completed.
• 1899 - Carnation processed its first
evaporated milk.
• 1901 - U.S. President William McKinley
was shot and mortally wounded. He died
eight days later.  He was shot by Leon
Czolgosz, an American anarchist, who
was executed the following October.
• 1909 - Robert Peary, American explorer,
had sent word that he had reached the
North Pole. Actually, he reached his goal
five months earlier.
• 1941 - Jews in all German-occupied
areas were ordered to wear the Star of
David with the word "Jew" inscribed.
• 1943 - The youngest player to appear
in an American League baseball game
was pitcher Carl Scheib of the
Philadelphia Athletics. Scheib was 16
years old.
• 1975 - Tennis player Martina
Navratilova requested political asylum
while in New York for the U.S. Open
Tennis Tournament.
• 1990 - Iraq warned that anyone trying
to flee the country without permission
would be put in prison for life.
• 1991 - The name St. Petersburg was
restored to Russia's second largest city.
The city was founded in 1703 by Peter
the Great. The name has been changed
to Petrograd (1914) and to Leningrad in
(1924).
• 1993 - Renault of France and Volvo of
Sweden announced they were merging.
Volvo canceled the deal the following
December.
• 2000 - The U.N. Millennium Summit
began in New York. It was the largest 
gathering of world leaders in history
with more than 150 countries present.
• 2001 - Ebay Inc. was found not liable
for copyright infringement because
bootleg copies of a Charles Manson
documentary had been sold on the site.
• 2002 - In New York, the U.S. Congress
convened at Federal Hall to express the
nation's mourning for the losses on
September 11, 2001 and unity in the war
 against terrorism.           
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MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 7TH —
Happy Birthday Ron Keating!
Happy Anniversary —
Bob and Margaret Sullins!
OFFICE IS CLOSED TODAY.
    BIBLE AND BREW BIBLE STUDY —
    IN CASEY U.M.C. AT 10:30 A.M.
    IN ADAIR U.M.C. AT 7 P.M.

THIS IS LABOR DAY.  WE HONOR ALL 
OF THE INDUSTRIOUS, DEDICATED, 
COMMITTED, DRIVEN  PEOPLE WHO 
CAME BEFORE US AND MADE THIS 
COUNTRY WHAT IT IS TODAY.     
ALL LABORERS, WE SALUTE YOU!   
———————————————————
• 1812 - Napoleon of France defeated the
Russian army of Alexander I at the battle
of Borodino.
• 1813 - The nickname "Uncle Sam" was
first used as a symbolic reference to the
United States. The reference appeared in
New York's Troy Post.
• 1888 - Edith Eleanor McLean was the
first baby ever to be placed in an
incubator.
• 1915 - Johnny Gruelle received a patent
for the Raggedy Ann doll.
(U.S. Patent D47789)
• 1940 - London received its first rain of
bombs from Nazi Germany during World
War II.
• 1942 - During World War II, the Russian
army counter attacked German troops
outside the city of Stalingrad.
• 1977 - The Panama Canal treaties were
signed by U.S. President Carter and
General Omar Torrijos Herrera. The
treaties called for the U.S. to give control
of the canal's waterway to Panama in the
year 2000.
• 1986 - Desmond Tutu is the first black
to be installed to lead the Anglican
Church in southern Africa.
• 1989 - Legislation was approved by the
U.S. Senate that prohibited all
discrimination against the handicapped
in employment, public accommodations,
transportation and in communications.
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TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8TH —
Happy Birthday London Vais!
Happy Birthday Joann Morris!  

OFFICE OPEN FROM 9 A.M. TO NOON.
———————————————————
• 1565 - A Spanish expedition
established a first permanent European
settlement in North America at the
present-day city of St. Augustine,
Florida.
• 1664 - Today the Dutch surrendered
New Amsterdam to the British, who then
renamed it New York.
• 1945 - Bess Myerson of New York was
crowned Miss America. She is the very
first Jewish contestant to win the title.
• 1973 - Hank Aaron hit his 709th home
run.
• 1975 - In Boston, MA, public schools
began their court-ordered citywide
busing program amid scattered
incidents of violence.
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WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9TH —
OFFICE OPEN FROM 9 A.M. TO NOON.
———————————————————
AC FOOD PANTRY AT CASEY U.M.C.
OPEN 6 TO 8 P.M.   

  ———————————————————
• 1776 - Second Continental Congress
officially used the term "United States",
to replace the previous term of
"United Colonies."
• 1836 - Abraham Lincoln received his
license to practice law.
• 1850 - California became the 31st state
to join the union.
• 1898 - In Omaha, Nebraska, Tommy
Fleming of Eau Claire, Wisconsin won
the very first logrolling championship.
• 1942 - Japan dropped incendiaries in
an attempt to set fire to the forests in
Oregon and Washington. The forests did
not ignite.
• 1957 - The first civil rights bill to pass
Congress since the Reconstruction was
signed into law by U.S. President Dwight
Eisenhower.
• 1994 - The U.S. agreed to accept about
20,000 Cuban immigrants a year. This
was in return for Cuba's promise to halt
the flight of massive hoards of refugees.
• 1998 - Four tourists who had paid
$32,500 each were taken in a submarine
down to view the wreckage of the Titanic.
The ship is 2 miles below the Atlantic off
the coast of Newfoundland.
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THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10TH —
OFFICE OPEN FROM 9 A.M. TO NOON.
———————————————————
• 1608 - John Smith is elected president
of the Jamestown, Virginia council.
• 1794 - The first non-denominational
college in America was charted. Blount
College later became the University of
Tennessee.
• 1899 - A second earthquake in seven
days hit Yakutat Bay, Alaska.
It measured 8.6.
• 1913 - The Lincoln Highway opened. It
was the first paved coast-to-coast high-
way in the United States.
• 1919 - New York City welcomed home
25,000 soldiers along with General John
J. Pershing who had served in the First
Division during World War I.
• 1940 - In England, Buckingham Palace
was hit by German bomb.
• 1942 - President Franklin Roosevelt
mandated gasoline rationing as part of
the U.S. wartime effort.
• 1943 - German forces began the
occupation of Rome during World War II.
• 1953 - Swanson began selling its first
"TV dinners."
• 1963 - Twenty black students entered
public schools in Alabama at the end of
a standoff between federal authorities
and Alabama governor George Wallace.
• 1989 - Hungary gave permission to
thousands of East German refugees to
immigrate to West Germany.
• 2002 - Switzerland became the 190th
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FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11TH —
Happy Birthday Bud Peterson!
———————————————————
• 1609 - Explorer Henry Hudson sailed
into New York harbor and discovered
Manhattan Island and the Hudson River.
• 1776 - A Peace Conference was held
between British General Howe and three
representatives of the Continental
Congress (Benjamin Franklin, John
Adams and Edward Rutledge). The
conference failed and the American war
for independence continued for seven
more years.
• 1789 - Alexander Hamilton was
appointed by U.S. President George
Washington to be the first secretary of
the treasury.
• 1842 - 1,400 Mexican troops captured
San Antonio, Texas. The Mexicans then
retreated with many prisoners.
• 1897 - A ten-week strike of coal workers
in Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and Ohio
came to an end. The workers won eight-
hour workdays, semi-monthly pay, and
company stores were abolished.
• 1936 - Boulder Dam in Nevada was
dedicated by U.S. President Franklin D.
Roosevelt by turning on the dam's first
hydroelectric generator. The dam is now
called Hoover Dam.
• 1941 - President Franklin D. Roosevelt
gave orders to attack any German or
Italian vessels found in U.S. defensive
waters. The U.S. had not officially
entered World War II at this time.
• 1974 - "Little House On The Prairie"
made its television debut.
• 1991 - Soviet President Mikhail
Gorbachev announced that thousands
of Soviet troops would be withdrawn
from Cuba.
• 2001 - In the U.S., four airliners were
hijacked and were intentionally crashed.
Two airliners hit the World Trade Center,
which collapsed shortly after, in New
York City. One airliner hit the Pentagon
in Arlington, VA. Another airliner crashed
into a field in Pennsylvania. About 3,000
people were killed. 
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SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12TH —
———————————————————
• 1609 - English explorer Henry Hudson
sailed down what is now known as the
Hudson River.
• 1814 - During the War of 1812, the
Battle of North Point was fought in the
state of Maryland.
• 1873 - The first practical typewriter was
sold to customers.
• 1918 - During World War I, At the Battle
of St. Mihiel, U.S. Army soldiers operate
tanks for the first time. These tanks were
French-built.
• 1938 - In a speech, Adolf Hitler
demanded self-determination for the
German Bohemians in Czechoslovakia.
• 1940 - The Lascaux paintings were
discovered in France. The cave paintings
were 17,000 years old and were some of
the best examples of art from the
Paleolithic period.
• 1944 - U.S. Army troops entered
Germany, near Trier, for the first time
during World War II.
• 1953 - Nikita Krushchev was elected as
first secretary of the Communist Party
of the Soviet Union.
• 1974 - Violence occurred on opening
day of classes in schools of Boston, MA,
due to opposition for court-ordered
school "busing."
• 1977 - South African anti-apartheid
activist Stephen Biko died at the age of
30. The student leader died while in
police custody which triggered an
international incident.
• 1992 - Dr. Mae Carol Jamison became
the first African-American woman in
space. She was the payload specialist
aboard the space shuttle Endeavor.         
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Thank you for your attention to our
our church details this week.  You know
we could not open the doors without 

you.

God Bless and Keep You,
Donna

Sunday, August 23, 2015

OUR WEEK - AUGUST 30TH THRU SEPTEMBER 5TH

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SUNDAY, AUGUST 30TH —
14TH SUNDAY AFTER PENTECOST
COLOR:  GREEN
Be the first fruits of God's generosity
toward others. Stay away from excess
and impurity. Actively do the word.
Restrain the tongue. Make sure the weak
and vulnerable are protected.
(James 1:17-27)

———————————————————
SCRIPTURE READINGS —
———————————————————
SONG OF SOLOMON 2:8-13
THE MESSAGE (MSG)

 A suitor calls on his beloved to prepare
for their uniting.

8-10 Look! Listen! There’s my lover!
    Do you see him coming?
Vaulting the mountains,
    leaping the hills.
My lover is like a gazelle, graceful;
    like a young stag, virile.
Look at him there, on tiptoe at the gate,
    all ears, all eyes—ready!
My lover has arrived
    and he’s speaking to me!
The Man
10-14 Get up, my dear friend,
    fair and beautiful lover—come to me!
Look around you: Winter is over;
    the winter rains are over, gone!
Spring flowers are in blossom all over.
    The whole world’s a choir—and
singing!
Spring warblers are filling the forest
    with sweet arpeggios.
Lilacs are exuberantly purple and
perfumed,
    and cherry trees fragrant with
blossoms.
Oh, get up, dear friend,
    my fair and beautiful lover—come to
me!
Come, my shy and modest dove—
    leave your seclusion, come out in the
open.
Let me see your face,
    let me hear your voice.
For your voice is soothing
    and your face is ravishing.
———————————————————
PSALM 45:1-9 (UMH 795)
THE MESSAGE (MSG)  

A Wedding Song of the Sons of Korah
45
My heart bursts its banks,
    spilling beauty and goodness.
I pour it out in a poem to the king,
    shaping the river into words:

2-4 “You’re the handsomest of men;
    every word from your lips is sheer
grace,
    and God has blessed you, blessed
you so much.
Strap your sword to your side, warrior!
    Accept praise! Accept due honor!
    Ride majestically! Ride triumphantly!
Ride on the side of truth!
    Ride for the righteous meek!

4-5 “Your instructions are glow-in-the-
dark;
    you shoot sharp arrows
Into enemy hearts; the king’s
    foes lie down in the dust, beaten.

6-7 “Your throne is God’s throne,
    ever and always;
The scepter of your royal rule
    measures right living.
You love the right
    and hate the wrong.
And that is why God, your very own
God,
    poured fragrant oil on your head,
Marking you out as king
    from among your dear companions.

8-9 “Your ozone-drenched garments
    are fragrant with mountain breeze.
Chamber music—from the throne room
— makes you want to dance.
Kings’ daughters are maids in your
court,
    the Bride glittering with golden
jewelry.
———————————————————
JAMES 1:17-27
THE MESSAGE (MSG)
Be the first fruits of God's generosity
toward others. Stay away from excess
and impurity. Actively do the word.
Restrain the tongue. Make sure the
weak and vulnerable are protected
16-18
So, my very dear friends, don’t get
thrown off course. Every desirable and
beneficial gift comes out of heaven. The
gifts are rivers of light cascading down
from the Father of Light. There is
nothing deceitful in God, nothing two-
faced, nothing fickle. He brought us to
life using the true Word, showing us off
as the crown of all his creatures.
ACT ON WHAT YOU HEAR
19-21
Post this at all the intersections,
dear friends: Lead with your ears, follow
up with your tongue, and let anger
straggle along in the rear. God’s right-
eousness doesn’t grow from human
anger. So throw all spoiled virtue and
cancerous evil in the garbage. In simple
humility, let our gardener, God,
landscape you with the Word, making a
salvation-garden of your life.
22-24 Don’t fool yourself into thinking
that you are a listener when you are any-
thing but, letting the Word go in one ear
and out the other. Act on what you hear!
Those who hear and don’t act are like
those who glance in the mirror, walk
away, and two minutes later have no
idea who they are, what they look like.
25 But whoever catches a glimpse of the
revealed counsel of God—the free life!
—even out of the corner of his eye, and
sticks with it, is no distracted scatter-
brain but a man or woman of action.
That person will find delight and
affirmation in the action.
26-27 Anyone who sets himself up as
“religious” by talking a good game is
self-deceived. This kind of religion is hot
air and only hot air. Real religion, the
kind that passes muster before God the
Father, is this: Reach out to the home-
less and loveless in their plight, and
guard against corruption from the
godless world.
——————————————————— 
MARK 7:1-15, 21-23
THE MESSAGE (MSG)
Pharisees and scribes from Jerusalem
confront Jesus about why his disciples
do not follow the customary hand
washing rituals before eating. Jesus
insists that true cleanness is not a
matter of external cleansing, but the
cleansing of the “inner self.”

MARK 7:1-15
THE SOURCE OF YOUR POLLUTION    

1-4 The Pharisees, along with some
religion scholars who had come from
Jerusalem, gathered around him. They
noticed that some of his disciples
weren’t being careful with ritual
washings before meals. The Pharisees—
Jews in general, in fact—would never
eat a meal without going through the
motions of a ritual hand-washing, with
an especially vigorous scrubbing if they
had just come from the market (to say
nothing of the scourings they’d give
jugs and pots and pans).
5 The Pharisees and religion scholars
asked, “Why do your disciples flout the
rules, showing up at meals without
washing their hands?”
6-8 Jesus answered, “Isaiah was right
about frauds like you, hit the bull’s-eye
in fact:

These people make a big show of
saying the right thing,
    but their heart isn’t in it.
They act like they are worshiping me,
    but they don’t mean it.
They just use me as a cover
    for teaching whatever suits their
fancy,
Ditching God’s command
    and taking up the latest fads.”

9-13 He went on, “Well, good for you.
You get rid of God’s command so you
won’t be inconvenienced in following
the religious fashions! Moses said,
‘Respect your father and mother,’ and,
‘Anyone denouncing father or mother
should be killed.’ But you weasel out of
that by saying that it’s perfectly
acceptable to say to father or mother,
‘Gift! What I owed you I’ve given as a
gift to God,’ thus relieving yourselves of
obligation to father or mother. You
scratch out God’s Word and scrawl a
whim in its place. You do a lot of things
like this.”
14-15 Jesus called the crowd together
again and said, “Listen now, all of you—
take this to heart. It’s not what you
swallow that pollutes your life; it’s what
you vomit—that’s the real pollution.”

MARK 7:21-23
20-23
He went on: “It’s what comes out
of a person that pollutes: obscenities,
lusts, thefts, murders, adulteries, greed,
depravity, deceptive dealings, carousing,
mean looks, slander, arrogance, foolish-
ness—all these are vomit from the heart.
There is the source of your pollution.”
———————————————————
• 1645 - American Indians and the Dutch
made a peace treaty at New Amsterdam.
New Amsterdam later became New York.
• 1682 - William Penn sailed from
England and established the colony of
Pennsylvania in America.
• 1780 - General Benedict Arnold secretly
promised to surrender West Point fort to
the British army.
• 1862 - The Confederates defeated the
Union forces at the second Battle of Bull
Run in Manassas, Virginia.
• 1941 - During World War II, the Nazis
severed the last railroad link between
Leningrad and the rest of the Soviet
Union.
• 1945 - General Douglas MacArthur set
up Allied occupation headquarters in
Japan.
• 1960 - A partial blockade was imposed
on West Berlin by East Germany.
• 1965 - Thurgood Marshall is confirmed
by the U.S. Senate as a Supreme Court
justice. Marshall was the first black
justice to sit on the Supreme Court.
• 1991 - Soviet republic of Azerbaijan
declared its independence.
• 1994 - Rosa Parks is robbed and beaten
by Joseph Skipper. Parks was known for
her refusal to give up her seat on a bus
in 1955, which sparked the civil rights
movement.
• 1996 - An expedition to raise part of the
Titanic failed when nylon lines being
used to raise part of the hull snapped.   
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MONDAY, AUGUST 31ST —
OFFICE IS CLOSED TODAY.
BIBLE AND BREW BIBLE STUDY —
IN CASEY U.M.C. AT 10:30 A.M.
IN ADAIR U.M.C. AT 7 P.M.
———————————————————
• 1852 - The first pre-stamped envelopes
were created by legislation of the U.S.
Congress.
• 1920 - John Lloyd Wright was issued a
patent for "Toy-Cabin Construction,"
which are known as Lincoln Logs.
(U.S. patent 1,351,086)
• 1964 - California officially became the
most populated state in America.
• 1990 - East and West Germany signed
a treaty that meant the harmonizing of
both political and legal systems.
• 1991 - Uzbekistan and Kirghiziz
declared their independence from the
Soviet Union. They were the 9th and 10th
republics to announce their plans to
secede.
• 1994 - Russia officially ended military
presence in the former East Germany
and the Baltics after a half-century. 
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TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1ST —
OFFICE OPEN FROM 9 A.M. TO NOON.
———————————————————
• 1799 - The Bank of Manhattan Co.
opened in New York City, NY. It was the
forerunner of Chase Manhattan Bank.
• 1807 - Former U.S. Vice President
Aaron Burr was found innocent of treason.
Aaron Burr was the U.S. vice president
under Thomas Jefferson who shot and
killed his rival, Alexander Hamilton.
• 1939 - Today World War II began when
Germany invaded Poland.
• 1985 - The Titanic was found by Dr.
Robert Ballard and Jean Louis Michel in
a joint U.S. and French expedition. The
wreck site is located 963 miles northeast
of New York and 453 miles southeast of
the Newfoundland coast.
• 1998 - Vietnam released 5,000
prisoners, including political dissidents,
on National Day.   
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WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2ND —
OFFICE OPEN FROM 9 A.M. TO NOON.
———————————————————
ADAIR U.M.W. MEETS AT 1:30 P.M.    

———————————————————  
AD COUNCIL AT CASEY U.M.C.
• Casey Council at 7 P.M.
• Adair Council at 7:45 P.M.
• Combined Councils after.
———————————————————
• 31 B.C. - The Roman leader Octavian
defeated an alliance of Mark Antony and
Cleopatra. Octavian, known as Augustus
Caesar, became first Roman emperor.
• 1666 - The Great Fire of London broke
out. The fire burned for three days and
destroyed 10,000 buildings including St.
Paul's Cathedral. 6 people were killed.
• 1775 - Hannah, the first American war
vessel was commissioned by General
George Washington.
• 1864 - During the U.S. Civil War Union
forces led by Gen. William T. Sherman
occupied Atlanta following the retreat of
the Confederate Army.
• 1901 - Theodore Roosevelt, then Vice
President, said "Speak softly and carry
a big stick" in a speech at the Minnesota
State Fair.
• 1945 - Japan surrendered to the U.S.
aboard the USS Missouri, ending World
War II. The war ended six years and one
day after it began.
• 1963 - Integration of Tuskegee High
School was prevented by state troopers
assigned by Alabama Gov. George
Wallace. Wallace had the building
surrounded by state troopers.
• 1985 - It was announced that the
Titanic had been found on September 1
by a U.S. and French expedition 560
miles off Newfoundland. The luxury liner
had been missing for 73 years.
• 1996 - Muslim rebels and the Philippine
government signed a pact to formally
end 26-years of insurgency that had
killed more than 120,000 people.      
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THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 3RD —

Happy Birthday Betty Elgin!
Happy Birthday Brian Rumple!
OFFICE OPEN FROM 9 A.M. TO NOON.
———————————————————
• 1783 - The Revolutionary War between
the United States and Great Britain
ended with the Treaty of Paris.
• 1838 - Frederick Douglass boarded a
train in Maryland on his way to freedom
from being a slave.
• 1939 - British Prime Minister Neville
Chamberlain, in a radio broadcast,
announced that Britain and France had
declared war on Germany.
• 1943 - Italy was invaded by the Allied
forces during World War II.
• 1989 - The U.S. began shipping military
aircraft and weapons, worth $65 million,
to Columbia in a war against drug lords.
• 2013 - Hunters in Mississippi caught a
727-pound alligator.   
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FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4TH —
———————————————————
• • 0476 - Romulus Augustulus, the last
emperor of the western Roman Empire,
was deposed when Odoacer proclaimed
himself King of Italy.
• 1609 - English navigator Henry Hudson
began exploring the island of Manhattan.
• 1781 - Los Angeles, California, was 
founded by Spanish settlers. The original
name was "El Pueblo de Nuestra Senora
La Reina de Los Angeles de Porciuncula,"
which translates as "The Town of the
Queen of Angels."
• 1833 - Barney Flaherty answered an ad
in "The New York Sun" and became the
first paperboy at the age of 10.
• 1894 - A strike in New York City by
12,000 tailors took place to protest
sweatshops.
• 1899 - An 8.3 earthquake hit
Yakutat Bar, Alaska.
• 1923 - The first American dirigible, the
"Shenandoah," began its maiden voyage
in Lakehurst, New Jersey.
• 1972 - Swimmer Mark Spitz captured
his seventh Olympic gold medal in the
400-meter medley relay event at Munich,
Germany. Spitz was the first Olympian to
win seven gold medals.
• 1993 - Pope John Paul II began his first
visit to the former Soviet Union.
• 1995 - The Fourth World Conference on
Women began in Beijing. There were
over 4,750 delegates from 181 countries
in attendance.
• 1998 - The International Monetary Fund
approved a $257 million loan for the
Ukraine. 
• 1998 - Google was incorporated as a
privately held company.
• 2003 - Keegan Reilly, 22, became the
first parapalegic climber to reach the
peak of Japan's Mount Fuji.
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SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5TH —
Happy Birthday Earl Joint!

Happy Anniversary —
Dean and Mary Ann Heckman!
———————————————————
• 1698 - Russia's Peter the Great
imposed a tax on all beards.
• 1774 - The first session of the U.S.
Continental Congress convened in
Philadelphia. The delegates drafted a
declaration of rights and grievances,
organized the Continental Association,
and elected Peyton Randolph, the first
president of the Continental Congress.
• 1836 - Sam Houston was elected as the
first president of the Republic of Texas.
• 1881 - The American Red Cross made
relief available for disaster for the first
time. The disaster was the Great Fire of
1881 in Michigan.
• 1882 - The first U.S. Labor Day parade
was held in New York City.
• 1914 - The First World War Battle of the
Marne in France began. The Germans,
British and French fought for six days
killing half a million people.  It was an
Allied victory over Germany. 
•  1960 - Cassius Clay of Louisville, KY,
won the gold medal in light heavyweight
boxing at the Olympic Games in Rome,
Italy. Clay later changed his name to
Muhammad Ali.
• 1991 - Soviet lawmakers created an
interim government to usher in the
confederation after dissolving the
U.S.S.R.
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Thank you for all you have done for 

our church life this week.

God Bless and Keep You,
Donna

Sunday, August 16, 2015

OUR WEEK - AUGUST 23RD THRU AUGUST 29TH

R E M I N D E R S —
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WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 19TH —   

Dorcas-Ruth Circle meets at 1:30 P.M.   
Esther Circle meets at 7 P.M.  
Casey Circle meets at 7 P.M.
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SATURDAY, AUGUST 22ND —
 • AC FOOD PANTRY OPEN 9 - 11 A.M. 

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SUNDAY, AUGUST 23RD —
13TH SUNDAY AFTER PENTECOST
COLOR:  GREEN
Happy Birthday Jennifer Clarke!
Happy Birthday Paul Snyder!
Jesus continues to contrast those who
"chew on his flesh and live into eternity"
with those who "ate the manna in the
wilderness and died" while teaching in
the synagogue in Capernaum.

———————————————————
SCRIPTURE READINGS —
———————————————————
1 KINGS 8:1-11, 22-30, 41-43
THE MESSAGE (MSG)

In this prayer, Solomon calls promises
in the covenant with David to ask God
to sustain the dynasty and to hear the
prayers prayed in or toward the temple.

1 KINGS 8:1-11 
1-2 Bringing all this to a climax, King
Solomon called in the leaders of Israel,
all the heads of the tribes and the family
patriarchs, to bring up the Chest of the
Covenant of God from Zion, the City of
David. And they came, all Israel before
King Solomon in the month of Ethanim,
the seventh month, for the great autumn
festival.
3-5 With all Israel’s leaders present, the
priests took up the Chest of God and
carried up the Chest and the Tent of
Meeting and all the holy vessels that
went with the Tent. King Solomon and
the entire congregation of Israel were
there at the Chest worshiping and
sacrificing huge numbers of sheep and
cattle—so many that no one could keep
track.
6-9 Then the priests brought the Chest
of the Covenant of God to its place in
the Inner Sanctuary, the Holy of Holies,
under the wings of the cherubim. The
outspread wings of the cherubim
stretched over the Chest and its poles.
The poles were so long that their ends
could be seen from the entrance to the
Inner Sanctuary, but were not noticeable
farther out. They’re still there today.
There was nothing in the Chest but the
two stone tablets that Moses had placed
in it at Horeb where God made a
covenant with Israel after bringing them
up from Egypt.

The Temple Finished, Dedicated, Filled.
10-11 When the priests left the Holy
Place, a cloud filled The Temple of God.
The priests couldn’t carry out their
priestly duties because of the cloud—
the glory of God filled The Temple of
God!
1 KINGS 8:22-32
22-25
Before the entire congregation of
Israel, Solomon took a position before
the Altar, spread his hands out before
heaven, and prayed,

O God, God of Israel, there is no God
like you in the skies above or on the
earth below who unswervingly keeps
covenant with his servants and
relentlessly loves them as they sincerely
live in obedience to your way. You kept
your word to David my father, your
personal word. You did exactly what you
promised—every detail. The proof is
before us today!

Keep it up, God, O God of Israel!
Continue to keep the promises you made
to David my father when you said, “You’ll
always have a descendant to represent
my rule on Israel’s throne, on the
condition that your sons are as careful
to live obediently in my presence as you
have.”

26 O God of Israel, let this all happen;
    confirm and establish it!

27-32 Can it be that God will actually
move into our neighborhood? Why, the
cosmos itself isn’t large enough to give
you breathing room, let alone the Temple
I’ve built. Even so, I’m bold to ask: Pay
attention to these my prayers, both
intercessory and personal, O God, my
God. Listen to my prayers, energetic and
devout, that I’m setting before you right
now. Keep your eyes open to this Temple
night and day, this place of which you
said, “My Name will be honored there,”
and listen to the prayers that I pray at
this place.

Listen from your home in heaven and
when you hear, forgive.

When someone hurts a neighbor and
promises to make things right, and then
comes and repeats the promise before
your Altar in this Temple, listen from
heaven and act accordingly: Judge your
servants, making the offender pay for
his offense and setting the offended free
of any charges.
1 KINGS 8:41-43
41-43
And don’t forget the foreigner who
is not a member of your people Israel
but has come from a far country
because of your reputation. People are
going to be attracted here by your great
reputation, your wonder-working power,
who come to pray at this Temple.

Listen from your home in heaven.

Honor the prayers of the foreigner so
that people all over the world will know
who you are and what you’re like and
will live in reverent obedience before
you, just as your own people Israel do;
so they’ll know that you personally
make this Temple that I’ve built what it is.
———————————————————
PSALM 84  (UMH 804)
THE MESSAGE (MSG)
A psalm in praise of the beauty of the
temple and its worship.
A KORAH PSALM
1-2
What a beautiful home, God-of-
the-Angel-Armies!
    I’ve always longed to live in a place
like this,
Always dreamed of a room in your
house,
    where I could sing for joy to God-
alive!
3-4 Birds find nooks and crannies in
your house,
    sparrows and swallows make nests
there.
They lay their eggs and raise their
young,
    singing their songs in the place where
we worship.
God-of-the-Angel-Armies! King! God!
    How blessed they are to live and sing
there!

5-7 And how blessed all those in whom
you live,
    whose lives become roads you travel;
They wind through lonesome valleys,
come upon brooks,
    discover cool springs and pools
brimming with rain!
God-traveled, these roads curve up the
mountain, and
    at the last turn—Zion! God in full view!
8-9 God-of-the-Angel-Armies, listen:
    O God of Jacob, open your ears—I’m
praying!
Look at our shields, glistening in the
sun,
    our faces, shining with your gracious
anointing.

10-12 One day spent in your house, this
beautiful place of worship,
    beats thousands spent on Greek
island beaches.
I’d rather scrub floors in the house of
my God
    than be honored as a guest in the
palace of sin.
All sunshine and sovereign is God,
    generous in gifts and glory.
He doesn’t scrimp with his traveling
companions.
    It’s smooth sailing all the way with
God-of-the-Angel-Armies.
———————————————————
EPHESIANS 6:10-20
THE MESSAGE (MSG)
Parting words from Paul: Put on the
whole armor of God as defense against
surrounding evil spiritual strongholds
and pray constantly for all sisters and
brothers in Christ.  

A FIGHT TO THE FINISH
10-12
And that about wraps it up. God is
strong, and he wants you strong. So
take everything the Master has set out
for you, well-made weapons of the best
materials. And put them to use so you
will be able to stand up to everything the
Devil throws your way. This is no
afternoon athletic contest that we’ll walk
away from and forget about in a couple
of hours. This is for keeps, a life-or-death
fight to the finish against the Devil and
all his angels.
13-18 Be prepared. You’re up against far
more than you can handle on your own.
Take all the help you can get, every
weapon God has issued, so that when
it’s all over but the shouting you’ll still
be on your feet. Truth, righteousness,
peace, faith, and salvation are more
than words. Learn how to apply them.
You’ll need them throughout your life.
God’s Word is an indispensable
weapon. In the same way, prayer is
essential in this ongoing warfare. Pray
hard and long. Pray for your brothers
and sisters. Keep your eyes open. Keep
each other’s spirits up so that no one
falls behind or drops out.
19-20 And don’t forget to pray for me.
Pray that I’ll know what to say and have
the courage to say it at the right time,
telling the mystery to one and all, the
Message that I, jailbird preacher that I
am, am responsible for getting out.
———————————————————     
JOHN 6:56-69
THE MESSAGE (MSG)
The point is so clear and offensive that
many of his followers abandon him.
Peter and an unspecified number of
others, including the Twelve, remain.
They are convinced Jesus is the Holy
One of God who has the words of life.

53-58 But Jesus didn’t give an inch.
“Only insofar as you eat and drink flesh
and blood, the flesh and blood of the
Son of Man, do you have life within you.
The one who brings a hearty appetite to
this eating and drinking has eternal life
and will be fit and ready for the Final
Day. My flesh is real food and my blood
is real drink. By eating my flesh and
drinking my blood you enter into me
and I into you. In the same way that the
fully alive Father sent me here and I live
because of him, so the one who makes
a meal of me lives because of me. This
is the Bread from heaven. Your
ancestors ate bread and later died.
Whoever eats this Bread will live always.”
59 He said these things while teaching in
the meeting place in Capernaum.

TOO TOUGH TO SWALLOW
60
Many among his disciples heard this
and said, “This is tough teaching, too
tough to swallow.”
61-65 Jesus sensed that his disciples
were having a hard time with this and
said, “Does this throw you completely?
What would happen if you saw the Son
of Man ascending to where he came
from? The Spirit can make life. Sheer
muscle and willpower don’t make
anything happen. Every word I’ve
spoken to you is a Spirit-word, and so it
is life-making. But some of you are
resisting, refusing to have any part in
this.” (Jesus knew from the start that
some weren’t going to risk themselves
with him. He knew also who would
betray him.) He went on to say, “This is
why I told you earlier that no one is
capable of coming to me on his own.
You get to me only as a gift from the
Father.”
66-67 After this a lot of his disciples left.
They no longer wanted to be associated
with him. Then Jesus gave the Twelve
their chance: “Do you also want to
leave?”
68-69 Peter replied, “Master, to whom
would we go? You have the words of
real life, eternal life. We’ve already
committed ourselves, confident that
you are the Holy One of God.”
———————————————————
• 1838 - The first class graduated from
Mount Holyoke Female Seminary in
South Hadley, Massachusetts. It was
one of the first colleges for women.
• 1839 - Hong Kong was taken by the
British in a war with China. 
• 1902 - Fannie Farmer opened her
cooking school, Fannie Farmer’s School
of Cookery, in Boston, Massachusetts.
• 1939 - Nazi Germany and the Soviet
Union signed a non-aggression treaty.
• 1947 - Margaret Truman, U.S. President
Truman's daughter, gave her first public
performance as a singer. The event was
at the Hollywood Bowl and had an
audience of 15,000.
• 1979 - Soviet dancer Alexander
Godunov defected while the Bolshoi
Ballet was on tour in New York City.
• 1998 - Boris Yeltsin dismissed the
entire Russian government again.   
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MONDAY, AUGUST 24TH —
Happy Birthday Amber McClain!
OFFICE IS CLOSED TODAY.    

BIBLE AND BREW BIBLE STUDY —
IN CASEY U.M.C. AT 10:30 A.M.
IN ADAIR U.M.C. AT 7 P.M.
———————————————————
• 0079 - Mount Vesuvius erupted killing
approximately 20,000 people. The cities
of Pompeii, Stabiae and Herculaneum
were buried for years in volcanic ash.
• 0410 - The Visigoths overran Rome.
This event symbolized the fall of the
Western Roman Empire.
• 1456 - The printing of the Gutenberg
and Capitol.Bible was completed.
• 1814 - Washington, DC, was invaded
by British forces that set fire to the
White House.
• 1932 - Amelia Earhart became the first
woman to fly across the U.S. non-stop.
The trip from Los Angeles, CA to
Newark, NJ, took about 19 hours.
• 1954 - The Communist Party is virtually
outlawed in the U.S. as the Communist
Control Act went into effect.
• 1985 - 27 anti-apartheid leaders were
arrested in South Africa as racial
violence rocked the country.
• 1991 - Russian President Mikhail
Gorbachev resigned as the head of the
Communist Party.
• 1998 - A donation of 24 beads was
made, from three parties, to the Indian
Museum of North America at the Crazy
Horse Memorial. The beads are said to
be those that were used in 1626 to buy
Manhattan from the Indians.
• 2005 - Planet Pluto was reclassified as
a "dwarf planet" by the International
Astronomical Union (IAU). Pluto's status
was changed due to the IAU's new rules
for an object qualifying as a planet.
Pluto met two of the three rules
because it orbits the sun and is large
enough to assume a nearly round shape.
However, since Pluto has an oblong
orbit that overlaps the orbit of Neptune,
it disqualified Pluto as a planet.        
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TUESDAY, AUGUST 25TH —
OFFICE OPEN FROM 9 A.M. TO NOON.
———————————————————
• 1718 - Hundreds of colonists from
France arrived in Louisiana. Part of
them settled in what is now New
Orleans.
• 1814 - The U.S. Library of Congress
was destroyed by British forces.
• 1875 - Captain Matthew Webb swam
from Dover, England, to Calais, France
making him the first person to swim the
English Channel. The feat took about 22
hours.
• 1916 - The National Park Service was
established as part of the U.S.
Department of the Interior. 
• 1941 - President Franklin Roosevelt
signed the bill appropriating funds for
construction of the Pentagon Building.
• 1944 - Paris, France, was liberated by
Allied forces ending four years of
German occupation.
• 1998 - A survey released said that 1/3
of Americans use the Internet.  
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WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26TH —
OFFICE OPEN FROM 9 A.M. TO NOON.
———————————————————
• 55 B.C. - England was invaded by
Rome forces under Julius Caesar.
• 1498 - Michelangelo is commissioned
to make the "Pieta" statue.
• 1842 - The first fiscal year was
established by the U.S. Congress to
start on July 1st.
• 1873 - The school board of St. Louis,
Missouri, authorized the first U.S. public
kindergarten.
• 1920 - The 19th amendment to the U.S.
Constitution went into effect. This
amendment prohibited discrimination
on the basis of sex in the voting booth.
• 1945 - The Japanese were given
surrender instructions today on the U.S.
battleship Missouri at the end of World
War II.
• 1973 - A U.S. Presidential Proclamation
was declared that made August 26th
Women's Equality Day.
• 1991 - Soviet President Mikhail S.
Gorbachev promised that national
elections would soon be held.      
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THURSDAY, AUGUST 27TH —
Happy Birthday Margaret Sullins!
Happy Birthday Sharon Aupperle!
OFFICE OPEN FROM 9 A.M. TO NOON.
———————————————————
• 1789 - The Declaration of the Rights of
Man was adopted by French National
Assembly.
• 1859 - The first oil well is successfully
drilled in the United States by Colonel
Edwin L. Drake near Titusville,
Pennsylvania.
• 1892 - The original Metropolitan Opera
House in New York City was seriously
damaged by fire.
• 1921 - The owner of the Acme Packing
Company bought a pro football team for
Green Bay, Wisconsin. J.E. Clair paid
tribute to those who worked in his plant
by naming the team the Green Bay
Packers. (NFL)
• 1938 - Robert Frost, in a fit of jealousy,
set fire to some papers to disrupt a
poetry reading by another poet, who was
Archibald MacLeish.
• 2001 - Work began on the future site of
a World War II memorial on the U.S.
capital's historic National Mall. The site
is between the Washington Monument
and the Lincoln Memorial.    
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FRIDAY, AUGUST 28TH —
Happy Birthday Gage Noland!
———————————————————
• 1609 - Delaware Bay was discovered
by Henry Hudson.
• 1774 - The first American-born saint
was born in New York City. Mother
Elizabeth Ann Seton was canonized in
1975.
• 1833 - Slavery was banned by the
British Parliament throughout the British
Empire.
• 1907 -"American Messenger Company"
was started by two teenagers, Jim Casey
and Claude Ryan. The company's name
was later changed to "United Parcel
Service."
• 1963 - Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., gave
his "I Have a Dream" speech at a civil
rights rally in Washington, DC. Over
200,000 people attended.
• 1972 - Mark Spitz captured the first of
his seven gold medals at the Summer
Olympics in Munich, Germany. He set a
world record when he completed the
200-meter butterfly in 2 minutes and
7/10ths of a second.
• 1990 - Iraq declared Kuwait to be its
19th province and renamed Kuwait City
al-Kadhima.
• 2014 - Google announced its Project
Wing. The project is aimed at delivering
products across a city using unmanned
flying vehicles.    
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SATURDAY, AUGUST 29TH —
Happy Birthday Jim Rogers!
———————————————————
• 1833 - The "Factory Act" was passed in
England to determine child labor laws.
• 1842 - The Treaty of Nanking was
signed by the British and the Chinese.
The treaty ended the first Opium War
and gave the island of Hong Kong to
England.
• 1944 - During a continuing celebration
of the liberation of France from Nazis,
15,000 American troops marched down
the Champs Elysees in Paris.
• 1957 - Senator Strom Thurmond of
South Carolina set a filibuster record in
the U.S. when he spoke for 24 hours and
18 minutes.
• 1983 - The anchor of the USS Monitor,
from the U.S. Civil War, was retrieved by
divers.  It was an iron-hulled steamship,
built during the American Civil War, and
she was the first ironclad warship to be
commissioned by the Union Navy.
• 1991 - The Communist Party in the
Soviet Union had its bank accounts
frozen and activities suspended because
of the Party's failed coup attempt
against Mikhail Gorbachev.   
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Thank you for all you have done this
week.    You are definitely devotion in 

motion.

God Bless and Keep You,
Donna

Sunday, August 9, 2015

OUR WEEK - AUGUST 16TH THRU AUGUST 22ND

R E M I N D E R S —
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WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 12TH —
 • AC FOOD PANTRY OPEN 6 - 8 P.M.  

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SUNDAY, AUGUST 16TH —
12TH SUNDAY AFTER PENTECOST
COLOR:  GREEN
Happy Birthday Janice Sheeder!
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SCRIPTURE READINGS —
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1 KINGS 2:10-12, 3:3-14
THE MESSAGE (MSG)
Solomon succeeds David as King and
follows David's advice to consolidate
his power by isolating or ordering the
death of David's most powerful
adversaries. Some years later, he has a
dream in which he asks the Lord for
discernment to govern, and God
promises him wisdom beyond that of
any before or since.
1 KINGS 2:10-12
2:10-12
Then David joined his ancestors.
He was buried in the City of David.
David ruled Israel for forty years—seven
years in Hebron and another thirty-three
in Jerusalem. Solomon took over on the
throne of his father David; he had a firm
grip on the kingdom.
1 KINGS 3:3-14
3 1-3 Solomon arranged a marriage
contract with Pharaoh, king of Egypt. He
married Pharaoh’s daughter and brought
her to the City of David until he had
completed building his royal palace and
God’s Temple and the wall around
Jerusalem. Meanwhile, the people were
worshiping at local shrines because at
that time no temple had yet been built to
the Name of God. Solomon loved God
and continued to live in the God
honoring ways of David his father,
except that he also worshiped at the
local shrines, offering sacrifices and
burning incense.
4-5 The king went to Gibeon, the most
prestigious of the local shrines, to
worship. He sacrificed a thousand
Whole-Burnt-Offerings on that altar.
That night, there in Gibeon, God
appeared to Solomon in a dream: God
said, “What can I give you? Ask.”  
6 Solomon said, “You were extravagantly
generous in love with David my father,
and he lived faithfully in your presence,
his relationships were just and his heart
right. And you have persisted in this
great and generous love by giving him
—and this very day!—a son to sit on his
throne.
7-8 “And now here I am: God, my God,
you have made me, your servant, ruler
of the kingdom in place of David my
father. I’m too young for this, a mere
child! I don’t know the ropes, hardly
know the ‘ins’ and ‘outs’ of this job. And
here I am, set down in the middle of the
people you’ve chosen, a great people—
far too many to ever count.
9 “Here’s what I want: Give me a God-
listening heart so I can lead your people
well, discerning the difference between
good and evil. For who on their own is
capable of leading your glorious
people?”
10-14 God, the Master, was delighted
with Solomon’s response. And God
said to him, “Because you have asked
for this and haven’t grasped after a long
life, or riches, or the doom of your
enemies, but you have asked for the
ability to lead and govern well, I’ll give
you what you’ve asked for—  
I’m giving you a wise and mature heart.
There’s never been one like you before; 
and there’ll be no one after.  As a bonus,
I’m giving you both the wealth and glory
you didn’t ask for—there’s not a king
anywhere who will come up to your
mark. And if you stay on course,
keeping your eye on the life-map and
the God-signs as your father David did,
I’ll also give you a long life.”
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PSALM 111  (UMH 832)
THE MESSAGE (MSG)
A psalm of praise in a time of national
and religious stability and prosperity.
1-10
Hallelujah!
I give thanks to God with everything I’ve
got—
Wherever good people gather, and in the
congregation.
God’s works are so great, worth
A lifetime of study—endless enjoyment!
Splendor and beauty mark his craft;
His generosity never gives out.
His miracles are his memorial—
This God of Grace, this God of Love.
He gave food to those who fear him,
He remembered to keep his ancient
promise.
He proved to his people that he could do
what he said:
Hand them the nations on a platter—a
gift!       
He manufactures truth and justice;All his products are guaranteed to last—
Never out-of-date, never obsolete, rust-
proof.
All that he makes and does is honest
and true:
He paid the ransom for his people,
He ordered his Covenant kept forever.
He’s so personal and holy, worthy of our
respect.
The good life begins in the fear of God—
Do that and you’ll know the blessing of
God.
His Hallelujah lasts forever!
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EPHESIANS 5:15-20
THE MESSAGE (MSG)
The writer advises the churches to be
clear minded and grounded in the Holy
Spirit.  

11-16 Don’t waste your time on useless
work, mere busywork, the barren
pursuits of darkness. Expose these
things for the sham they are. It’s a
scandal when people waste their lives
on things they must do in the darkness
where no one will see. Rip the cover off
those frauds and see how attractive
they look in the light of Christ.

Wake up from your sleep,
Climb out of your coffins;
Christ will show you the light!

So watch your step. Use your head.
Make the most of every chance you get.
These are desperate times!

17 Don’t live carelessly, unthinkingly.
Make sure you understand what the
Master wants.

18-20 Don’t drink too much wine. That
cheapens your life. Drink the Spirit of
God, huge draughts of him. Sing hymns
instead of drinking songs! Sing songs
from your heart to Christ. Sing praises
over everything, any excuse for a song
to God the Father in the name of our
Master, Jesus Christ.
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JOHN 6:51-58
THE MESSAGE (MSG)
Here the language of eating the flesh
and drinking the blood of Christ
becomes graphic and specific. The
Greek verb for “to eat” changes here
from “phagein,” a term for eating with
some symbolic overtones, to “trogein,”
a much more specific verb meaning
“to chew upon.”  The meaning of the
teaching for the gospel's audience:
Those, and only those, who gather to
offer the Eucharist and so receive the
blessed, transformed bread and wine
have eternal life. Indeed, the gospel
commends Holy Communion as THE
means of abiding in Jesus Christ.

47-51 “I’m telling you the most solemn
and sober truth now: Whoever believes
in me has real life, eternal life. I am the
Bread of Life. Your ancestors ate the
manna bread in the desert and died. But
now here is Bread that truly comes down
out of heaven. Anyone eating this Bread
will not die, ever. I am the Bread—living
Bread!—who came down out of heaven.
Anyone who eats this Bread will live—
and forever! The Bread that I present to
the world so that it can eat and live is
myself, this flesh-and-blood self.”
52 At this, the Jews started fighting
among themselves: “How can this man
serve up his flesh for a meal?”
53-58 But Jesus didn’t give an inch.
“Only insofar as you eat and drink flesh
and blood, the flesh and blood of the
Son of Man, do you have life within you.
The one who brings a hearty appetite to
this eating and drinking has eternal life
and will be fit and ready for the Final
Day. My flesh is real food and my blood
is real drink. By eating my flesh and
drinking my blood you enter into me and
I into you. In the same way that the fully
alive Father sent me here and I live
because of him, so the one who makes
a meal of me lives because of me. This
is the Bread from heaven. Your
ancestors ate bread and later died.
Whoever eats this Bread will live
always.”
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•  1777 - During the American
Revolutionary War, the Battle of
Bennington took place. New England's
minutemen routed the British regulars.
• 1812 - Detroit fell to Indian troops and
British troops in the War of 1812.
• 1861 - President Lincoln prohibited the
Union states from trading with the
states of the Confederacy.
• 1923 - Carnegie Steel Corporation put
into place an eight-hour workday for its
 employees.
• 1960 - The free-fall world record was
set by Joseph Kittinger. He fell more
than 16 miles (about 84,000 feet) before
opening his parachute over New Mexico.
• 1999 - In Russia, Vladimir V. Putin was
confirmed as prime minister by lower
house of parliament.         
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MONDAY, AUGUST 17TH —
OFFICE IS CLOSED TODAY.    

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• 1790 - The capital city of the United
States moved to Philadelphia from New
York City.
• 1807 - Robert Fulton's "North River
Steam Boat" (the "Clermont") began
going up New York's Hudson River on
it's successful round-trip to Albany.
• 1815 - Napoleon began serving his
exile when he arrived at the island of St.
Helena.
• 1863 - Federal troops and ships
bombarded Fort Sumter in Charleston,
South Carolina, harbor in the Civil War.
• 1896 - The Klondike gold rush was set
off by George Carmack who discovered
gold on Rabbit Creek in Alaska.
• 1903 - Joseph Pulitzer donated one
million dollars to Columbia University.
Columbia started the Pulitzer Prizes in
his name.
• 1943 - The Allied conquest of Sicily
was completed as U.S. and British
forces entered Messina.
• 1961 - The Communist East German
government completed the construction
of the Berlin Wall.
• 1977 - Florists Transworld Delivery
(FTD) reported that this day the number
of orders for flowers to be delivered to
Graceland had surpassed the number
for any other event in the company's
history.
• 2002 - In Santa Rosa, CA, the Charles
M. Schulz Museum opened to the public.        
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TUESDAY, AUGUST 18TH —
Happy Birthday Jeff Larson!
OFFICE OPEN FROM 9 A.M. TO NOON.
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• 1227 - The Mongol conqueror Ghengis
Khan died.
• 1587 - Virginia Dare became the first
child to be born on American soil of
English parents.
The colony that is now Roanoke Island,
North Carolina, mysteriously vanished.
• 1846 - Gen. Stephen W. Kearney and
his U.S. forces captured Santa Fe, NM.
• 1914 - A "Proclamation of Neutrality"
was issued by U.S. President Woodrow
Wilson. It was aimed at keeping the U.S.
out of World War I.
• 1920 - Tennessee ratified the 19th
Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
The Amendment guaranteed the right of
all American women to vote.
• 1938 - The Thousand Islands Bridge
was dedicated by President Franklin D.
Roosevelt. The bridge connects the U.S.
and Canada.
• 1940 - Canada and the U.S. established
a joint defense plan against possible
enemy attacks during World War II.
• 1963 - James Meredith graduated from
the University of Mississippi. He was the
first black man to accomplish this.
• 1966 - The first pictures of earth taken
from moon orbit were sent back to the
United States.
• 1991 - An unsuccessful coup was
attempted in against President Mikhail
S. Gorbachev. Soviet hard-liners were
responsible. Gorbechev and his family
were effectively imprisoned for three
days while vacationing in Crimea.        
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WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 19TH —
Happy Birthday John Scholl!
Happy Birthday Rachel Whetstone!
OFFICE OPEN FROM 9 A.M. TO NOON.
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• 1812 - "Old Ironsides"
(the USS Constitution) won a battle
against the British frigate Guerriere east
of Nova Scotia.
• 1848 - The discovery of gold in
California is reported by the New York
Herald.
• 1909 - The first car race to be run on
brick occurred at the Indianapolis Motor
Speedway.
• 1919 - Afghanistan gained its
independence from England.
• 1934 - Adolf Hitler was approved to be
sole executive power in Germany known
as Fuehrer.
• 1942 - About 6,000 Canadian and
English soldiers launched a raid against
the Germans at Dieppe, France. They
suffered about 50 percent casualties.
• 1991 - Soviet hard-liners announced
that President Mikhail Gorbachev had
been removed from power. Gorbachev
was returned to power two days later.    
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THURSDAY, AUGUST 20TH —
Happy Birthday Alex Kading!
OFFICE OPEN FROM 9 A.M. TO NOON.
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• 1741 - Danish navigator Vitus Jonas
Bering discovered Alaska.
• 1866 - The National Labor Union in the
United States advocated an eight-hour
workday.
• 1866 - It was formally declared by U.S.
President Andrew Johnson that the
American Civil War was over.
• 1918 - The British opened its Western
Front offensive during World War I.
• 1923 - The first American dirigible, the
"Shenandoah," was launched at
Lakehurst, New Jersey.
• 1940 - France fell to the Germans in
World War II.
• 1964 - A $1 billion anti-poverty measure
was signed by U.S. President Lyndon B.
Johnson.
• 1991 - A rally of over 100,000 people
occurred outside Russian parliament to
protest the coup that removed
Gorbachev from power.
• 2010 - The last American combat
brigade exited Iraq after more than 7
years after the U.S. led invasion began.       
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FRIDAY, AUGUST 21ST —
Happy Birthday Phyllis Scholl!
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• 1680 - The Pueblo Indians drove the
Spanish out and took possession of
Santa Fe, New Mexico.
• 1878 - The American Bar Association
was formed by a group of lawyers,
judges and law professors in Saratoga,
New York.
• 1912 - Arthur R. Eldred became the first
American boy to become an Eagle Scout.
It is the highest rank in the Boy Scouts
of America.
• 1945 - U.S. President Truman ended the
Lend-Lease program that had shipped
about $50 billion in aid to America's
Allies during World War II.
• 1959 - Hawaii became the 50th state.
U.S. President Eisenhower also issued
the order for the 50 star flag.
• 1991 - Hard-line coup against Soviet
President Mikhail Gorbachev ended. The
uprising that led to the Soviet collapse
was led by Russian federation President
Boris Yeltsin.
• 1997 - Afghanistan suspended its
embassy operations in the United
States.      
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SATURDAY, AUGUST 22ND —
Happy Anniversary —
Jim and Vickie Moore!

AC FOOD PANTRY FROM 9 TO 11 A.M.  
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• 1642 - The English Civil War began
when Charles I called Parliament and its
soldiers traitors.
• 1770 - Australia was claimed for the
British crown when Captain James Cook
landed there.
• 1775 - The American colonies were
proclaimed to be in a state of open
rebellion by England's King George III.
• 1846 - The United States annexed New
Mexico.
• 1902 - In Hartford, Connecticut, U.S.
President Theodore Roosevelt became
the first president of the United States
to ride in an automobile.
• 1911 - It was announced that Leonardo
da Vinci's "Mona Lisa" had been stolen
from the Louvre Museum in Paris. The
painting reappeared two years later in
Italy.
• 1941 - Nazi troops reached the out-
skirts of Leningrad during World War II.
• 1950 - Althea Gibson became the first
black tennis player to be accepted into
a national competition.
• 1972 - Due to its racial discrimination,
Rhodesia was asked to withdraw from
the 20th Olympic Summer Games.
• 1991 - Mikhail S. Gorbachev returned
to Moscow after the collapse of Soviet
hard-liners' coup. On the same day he
purged the men that tried to oust him.
• 1992 - In Rostock, Germany, neo-Nazi
violence broke out against foreigners.
• 1996 - U.S. President Clinton signed
legislation that ended guaranteed cash
payments to the poor and demanded
work from the recipients of cash.        
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Thank you for your attention to our
details this week.  You make the wheels
go around, ya know.

God Bless and Keep You,
Donna