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Holiday Survival Tips: practical Advice to Help Anyone Coping with Grief

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grief21National organization comforting families of Fallen Troops offers tips for navigating the holiday season

WASHINGTON – Holiday cheer and merrymaking may be everywhere this time of year, but for thousands grieving the loss of a loved one, the holiday season can be an emotional minefield. And there’s no road map for easy navigation.
Coping with grief over the death of a loved one during the holidays can be difficult. Memories of holiday traditions shared with a loved one who died may be painful. Somehow, mourners must navigate an emotional roller coaster ride during the holidays that can be bittersweet with nostalgia and happy memories, and also feel painfully cruel and isolating.
The Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors (TAPS), a national nonprofit organization offering comfort and care to families of our fallen military troops, offers the following tips to help anyone who is grieving the death of a loved one during the holiday season.

Take charge of your holiday season. Anticipating the holiday, especially if it’s the first one without a cherished family member, can be worse than the actual holiday. Take charge of your holiday plans, and map out how you will spend your time. This can help relieve anxiety.

Make plans. Plan to spend the holidays where you feel nurtured, emotionally safe, and comfortable. Having a plan will help you navigate the holiday season and its activities. But remember to plan for flexibility, as you may not know how your emotions will respond, especially if it is your first or second holiday season after the death of a loved one.

Find sustenance for the soul. Your church, synagogue, mosque or other faith community may offer services, resources, and support networks for the bereaved. You may want to look for a support group for people who are grieving and have suffered a similar loss. Families who have lost a loved one serving in the military may find comfort by connecting with other survivors through the TAPS online community, peer support groups, peer mentoring or care groups.

Don’t be afraid to change your holiday traditions. Some traditions may be a comfort, while others can cause pain. Consider which traditions to keep, and which ones to forego this year. Do not feel like you have to do something because you have always done it that way.

Include your lost loved one in gift-giving. Give a gift on behalf of your loved one to someone else. Consider making a donation to a charity in memory of your loved one.

Create a tribute. Light a candle, display a favorite photograph, or set a place at the dinner table to represent the missing loved one. Consider writing a letter to your loved one about the holidays and your special memories with that person.

Be gentle with yourself. Realize that familiar traditions, sights, smells and even tastes, may be comforting, or may jolt your emotions. This is the time of year when you need to be careful with your emotions and listen to yourself.

Attend holiday functions if you can. Consider attending holiday parties and events, especially if you’ll be able to spend time with supportive family members and friends. Make an escape plan in case the event is more than you can handle. If you think a holiday gathering might be more than you can bear, it is ok to stay home.

Don’t pretend you haven’t experienced a loss. Imagining that nothing has happened does not make the pain of losing a loved one go away, nor does it make the holidays easier to endure. Even though holiday memories may be painful, they can be comforting. It is ok to talk with others about what you have lost and what the holidays mean to you.

Pay attention to your health. It’s often difficult for people who have experienced a recent loss to sleep. Make sure you get regular rest and drink lots of water. Do not over-indulge in sweets or alcohol. If you feel overwhelmed, talk with your medical care provider.

Take stock of both joy and sadness. Give yourself permission to feel joy as well as sadness. Don’t feel like you have to “be a certain way” because of your loss, or because it is the holidays. Just be yourself.

Express your feelings. Bottling up your feelings may add to distress, not lessen it. To express your feelings, use your creativity to write a poem, talk with a supportive friend, create a painting, or pen a journal entry.

Share your holiday season with someone else. There are many lonely people who might like to experience the holiday season alongside someone else. Consider volunteering with a local charity or soup kitchen, inviting a neighbor for a special holiday meal or including others in your holiday activities.

For more tips on dealing with grief during the holidays, go to the TAPS website at www.taps.org and look for our holiday survival guide.

From the Bible

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FROM THE BIBLEby Jerry Kingery

John the Baptist Born

There was in the days of Herod, the king of Judaea, a certain priest named Zacharias, of the course of Abia: and his wife was of the daughters of Aaron, and her name was Elisabeth.
And they were both righteous before God, walking in all the commandments and ordinances of the Lord blameless. …
And it came to pass, that, as soon as the days of his ministration were accomplished, he departed to his own house.
And after those days his wife Elisabeth conceived, and hid herself five months, saying,
Thus hath the Lord dealt with me in the days wherein he looked on me, to take away my reproach among men. …
Now Elisabeth’s full time came that she should be delivered; and she brought forth a son.
And her neighbours and her cousins heard how the Lord had shewed great mercy upon her; and they rejoiced with her.
And it came to pass, that on the eighth day they came to circumcise the child; and they called him Zacharias, after the name of his father.
And his mother answered and said, Not so; but he shall be called John.
And they said unto her, There is none of thy kindred that is called by this name.
And they made signs to his father, how he would have him called.
And he asked for a writing table, and wrote, saying, His name is John. And they marvelled all.
And his mouth was opened immediately, and his tongue loosed, and he spake, and praised God.
And fear came on all that dwelt round about them: and all these sayings were noised abroad throughout all the hill country of Judaea.
And all they that heard them laid them up in their hearts, saying, What manner of child shall this be! And the hand of the Lord was with him.
And his father Zacharias was filled with the Holy Ghost, and prophesied, saying,  Blessed be the Lord God of Israel; for he hath visited and redeemed his people,
And hath raised up an horn of salvation for us in the house of his servant David;  As he spake by the mouth of his holy prophets, which have been since the world began:
That we should be saved from our enemies, and from the hand of all that hate us;
To perform the mercy promised to our fathers, and to remember his holy covenant;  The oath which he sware to our father Abraham,
That he would grant unto us, that we being delivered out of the hand of our enemies might serve him without fear,
In holiness and righteousness before him, all the days of our life.
And thou, child, shalt be called the prophet of the Highest: for thou shalt go before the face of the Lord to prepare his ways;
To give knowledge of salvation unto his people by the remission of their sins,  Through the tender mercy of our God; whereby the dayspring from on high hath visited us,
To give light to them that sit in darkness and in the shadow of death, to guide our feet into the way of peace.
And the child grew, and waxed strong in spirit, and was in the deserts till the day of his shewing unto Israel.

from Luke 1

For a free Scripture packet, please write From the Bible, BIBLE FOUNDATION, PO Box 908, Newberg, Oregon  97132. email: bf@bf.org.

The Dispensation of Promise

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Victor W. Baugh, Sr., Th.D., Ph.D.
Victor W. Baugh, Sr., Th.D., Ph.D.
Victor W. Baugh, Sr., Th.D., Ph.D.

The Dispensation of Promise
From the Call of Abraham
To the Egyptian Bondage

Know of a surety that thy seed
shall be a stranger in a land that
is not theirs, and shall serve them; and
they shall afflict them four hundred years;
and also that nation, whom they shall serve, will I judge:
and afterward shall they come out with great substance.

Genesis 15:13-14

The Dispensation of Promise is also called the Age of the Patriarchs. Remember when you were young you learned the Patriarchal stories of old—Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob? We marvel at the numerous duties of the Patriarchs, that of father, ruler, military leader, family priest, and representative of God.
The Israelites had an innate need for an intermedial process. They feared dealing directly with Jehovah God. When He called Abram out of the Ur of the Chaldees, He chose to separate One Family to preserve pure religion. Abram became a nation with the charge to witness of the One True God in a world that had gone after idols. God covenanted with him, giving him a command and a promise—leave your country and go to a land of promise.
Abram’s strong abiding faith led him “out of and into.” Chapter 12 of Genesis takes us way beyond the history and statistics of that “called out” nation. God’s promise was to multiply Abram’s seed, but to that time there was no seed.
Both Abram and his wife, Sarai, were getting old, and now in Genesis 15:6, the Bible says Abram “believed in the Lord, and he counted it to him for righteousness.” Sarai got ahead of God’s plan, though, and gave her handmaid, Hagar, to Abram. Hagar bore a son, Ishmael, who was not the son of promise. But he was the only son for fourteen years. When Abram was ninety-nine, the Lord appeared announcing Sarai would bear a son herself. From a barren womb, she conceived and the son of promise was born—Isaac. At the promise, God changed Abram’s name to Abraham.
This in itself is a story of promise and from the day Isaac was born, he rightfully took his place as the son of the Covenant between God and Abram. Genesis 21 tells the story. Read it! If you believe God’s Word, it will open your heart and mind to what is taking place in the world today. From the time Isaac was born, natural enmity was taking place between the two sons and later their seeds. The Ishmaelites (Arabs) and the Israelites (Jews). The conflict continues to this day. The Arabs claim the land of Palestine by right of the first born of Abraham. The Jews, by the right of the everlasting covenant. This covenant was repeated and confirmed in Isaac and Jacob in Genesis 15, 18, 26, and 28.
For eighteen centuries, the land has been known as Palestine. It remains the land that God gave to the Son of Promise, Isaac, and in the end time Israel will be re-gathered and restored to her homeland, the land of Israel (Ezekiel 38). We have seen the rebirth of Israel as a nation, independent and self-governing. Through the ages, the enemies of Israel have desired to cut her off, but the fact remains that she belongs to Jehovah God and she will remain. Read Isaiah 66:22.
We can shorten our story for the sake of space by focusing on the text from Genesis 15, and by reading the story of Jacob’s son, Joseph, how that his brothers first put him in a pit to die, but through brother Reuben’s appeal, they sold him to Egyptian merchants, who sold him on the slave market to an officer of Pharaoh’s household. God was working, for Pharaoh on the throne gave Joseph the honorable position of Prime Minister. Many years later, Joseph died, but not before he was reunited with his father, Jacob, and his brothers. He had brought them to Egypt with him. When a Pharaoh “who knew not Joseph” came to the throne, Abraham’s seed were forced to labor mercilessly under the Egyptian government. Of course, you know the birth and story of Moses, who was raised up in Pharaoh’s household, but who heard and answered God’s call to lead the people “out of” and “into.”
Don’t you love that?
God leads us out of sin and into salvation.
Out of darkness and into light.
Out of bondage and into freedom in Christ.

But the Children of Israel lingered in bondage in Egypt, suffering afflictions unmentionable. In Exodus 3:7-8, “…the Lord said, I have surely seen the afflictions of my people, which are in Egypt, and have heard their cry by reason of their taskmasters; … And I am come down to deliver them out of the hand of the Egyptians, and to bring them out of that land unto a good land … flowing with milk and honey; unto the place of the Canaanites …”
And so the Dispensation of Promise begins with a call—the call of Abraham out of the Ur of the Chaldees, and a covenant that God will bring His people out of and into. And in Exodus 12, we have the fulfillment of that promise as “the whole assembly of the congregation of Israel” come through as God executes judgment upon the Egyptians with the ten plagues, with the final plague as death striking the palace of Pharaoh. And Moses leads the Children of Israel out of Egyptian bondage. Redemption!
And was it not from the bondage of sin and shame that God delivered us, through His Son, the Lord Jesus Christ? He was the promised Redeemer. At this time of year, since a blessed moment in history over 2000 years ago, we celebrate the virgin birth of our Savior in Bethlehem, the City of David, and we are reminded of God’s redemptive plan that materialized through the blood line of King David, and the Patriarchs Abraham … then Isaac, and then Jacob. When you read the story of the son of Promise, think about Isaac as a type of our Savior.
Explore the great Plan of Redemption in the book of Exodus. Israel’s Redemption is a type of the Redemption of mankind to all those who will come to Jesus in full pardon of sin. I hope you have done that. Thank God for our dear Savior, Immanuel—God with us!

May the Christ of Christmas bring you joy and peace!
Victor W. Baugh, Sr., Th.D., Ph.D.
Pastor, St. Luke AME Church
Havana, AL
Author of The Anchor Holds, Victor’s Story
http://www.thatgracemayabound.blogspot.com/ ©2012
That Grace May Abound Ministries International ©2014

Amen Comic

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amen comic strip dec 1_1

A Quest to know God

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Ms. Henrietta Tripp
Ms. Henrietta Tripp
Ms. Henrietta Tripp

ALL ON THE ALTAR
Would you like to know what do I mean? I feel like you would like to know what I am talking about, in order to know whether you want to participate or not, right? Well, I feel like I must tell you. You see many times someone thinks I am okay, I do not harm anyone, and I always try to help where the need is, so I’m okay, right. Well, that is not exactly what I mean about all on the Altar. You see when it comes to giving your life to Jesus, one must give Him your all or none, because He is a Holy God and He only works with you when “you want” to be totally committed to Him. Now are you ready for that?  You may be thinking, I go to church every Sunday and I participate in many different things around the church, and I help many people and organizations, etc. That is good, but that is not what the Lord wants; He wants YOU. THE LORD WILL SHOW YOU HOW TO WORK FOR HIM.
In Exodus 27: 1-8, we see the structuring of the Brazen Altar as well as in other parts of Scripture. God gave Moses the precise pattern, and depth of the sacrificial offering, which all points to the Body of Jesus who would someday give His Body for our sin, and the Altar is indeed explicitly detailed for us to see what God allowed to happen to His only Begotten Son, because He so loved us – the entire world. Therefore, placing yourself on the Altar means to give up self – yourself totally and completely to live for Jesus. HE IS WORTHY of anything you can do for Him, and it starts with you giving Him your all by asking Him to make you what He would have you to be and do for Him.Tell Him – Lord you are all I have, come and live in me. He will come into your heart, and you will know it. You will be conscious of Him each day; He will chastise you in your spirit, and you will know His chastisement; He is gentle and loving. JESUS LOVES YOU AND ME.

www.thealmightyeyes.com

Andrae Crouch Tribute Tour “Let the church say amen” kicks off December6

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Andre CrouchCelebration features CECE WINANS, MARVIN WINANS, ISRAEL HOUGHTON, MARVIN SAPP, RANCE ALLEN & GERALD ALBRIGHT, among others

Nationwide Tour is a Must-See Musical Tribute to the Father of ModernGospel and Will Feature Guest Appearances by Gospel’s Top Artists

(Los Angeles, CA) — GRAMMY® Award winning Gospel music legend, Andraé Crouch, will be honored with the “Let the Church Say Amen” Celebration Tour, kicking off nationwide on December 6 this holiday season, and hitting 10 major markets for its initial run. The tour will feature guest performances by some of Gospel’s top artists, including CeCe Winans, Marvin Winans, Israel Houghton, Marvin Sapp, Rance Allen and jazz artist Gerald Albright.

The “Let the Church Say Amen” Celebration Tour will make stops in: Philadelphia, Washington, Richmond, Birmingham, Atlanta, Charlotte, Orlando, Tampa, Miami and New Orleans, with additional dates expected to be announced.

Produced by Riverphlo Entertainment (Mano Hanes), the “Let The Church Say Amen” Celebration Tour pays homage to the living legend’s illustrious career spanning over five decades. With seven Grammy Awards, six GMA Dove Awards and an Academy Award nomination for The Color Purple, Andraé is a highly respected member of the Gospel Music Hall of Fame, and has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

As it relates to the tour, Pastor Andraé Crouch says, “Luther “Mano” Hanes is a musical genius! I am so proud of him! He is a monster producer and a superb musician. I am blessed to call him my son and whole heartily endorse this exciting tour.”

Adds Pastor Sandra Crouch, sister of Andraé, with a visionary like Mano at the helm, nothing but pure amazement will follow!  He walks in a psalmist anointing that can’t be denied. This is not just a concert this is an experience! You won’t leave the way you came.”

Andraé’s songs have been recorded by everyone from Elvis Presley to Paul Simon, and he has worked as a producer and arranger with many of music’s top artists, including Michael Jackson, Madonna, Quincy Jones, Diana Ross, Elton John, and many others. Andraé can also be heard on Michael Jackson’s hit singles “Man in the Mirror,” “Keep the Faith,” “Will You Be There” and “Earth Song.”

“Let the Church Say Amen” Celebration Tour dates are as follows:

12/6/14                       Philadelphia, PA                 Liacouras Center
12/8/14                       Washington, D.C.               Constitution Hall
12/9/14                       Richmond, VA                     Altria theater
12/10/14                     Birmingham, AL                  Alabama Theater
12/11/14                    Atlanta, GA                           Cobb Energy Center
12/13/14                    Charlotte, NC                       Bojangles’ Coliseum
12/15/14                     Orlando, FL                          CFE Arena
12/16/14                    Tampa, FL                            Sun Dome
12/17/14                     Miami, FL                              James L. Knight Center
12/19/14                     New Orleans, LA                 Waterfront Theater

For more information visit http://sayamentour.com.

Jesus’ Real Ministry

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Jesus Real Ministry

Try Jesus

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Deidra Bibbby Deidra Bibb

To everything there is a season, A time for every purpose under heaven…. I know that whatever God does, It shall be forever. Nothing can be added to it, and nothing taken from it. God does it, that men should fear before Him.  That which is has already been, and what is to be has already been, And God requires an account of what is past.  Ecclesiastes 3:1, 14-15

Everyone is caught up with the recession, loss of material possessions, loss of employment, loss of spouses and significant others and as a result the crime rate is increasing, suicides are happening regularly and killing sprees are out of control. The President is doing his very best to relieve the situation and getting grayer every day in the process.  The governments are out of money, the church is out of money and your bank account is probably out of money. This is a GREAT time to TRY JESUS!
To everything there is a season – walk in to it – it’s now.  I know it seems frightening, I know you can’t see the end, I know it doesn’t make sense and I know you feel, if you do it, you may end up alone (no friends, no mate, no members) but I warn you not to think that way. The Bible says that God will never leave you nor forsake you and if you believe that YOU ARE NEVER ALONE!
I encourage you today to TRY JESUS!  I did and I am sooooooooooooo glad I did. Things are happening in my life that I know I could not have done for myself, I am going places that I know I could not go on my own and I am doing things I have never imagined I could do.  But I am not doing anything God had not already planned for me to do. I delayed the process because I did not trust Him. Won’t you trust Him today? Just do it – TRY JESUS!

You’ve tried the rest,  now try the best, TRY JESUS today
Minister Deidre Bibb

A Foundation For Living

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Rev. Reid
Rev. Reid
Rev. Reid

Moving From Humility to Exaltation
by Rev. Reid

Jacob, a ninety-year-old polish Jew and Leroy a ninety-five-year-old Black man were sitting around thinking about their past. Jacob was thinking about the beatings of Hitler in Nazi Germany, the concentration camps, and dozens of other anti-Semitic experiences. Leroy was thinking about slavery and the beatings back then and how racism exists today. They both were praying the same prayer, “Oh, Lord isn’t it true that we are your chosen people?” From heaven boomed a voice: “Yes, Jacob and Leroy, you both are my chosen people!” “Well, then” they said, “Don’t you think it’s time that you choose somebody else?”
Sometimes being chosen can seem like humiliation but what humanity intends for evil God intends for Good. No matter what happens to us God declares, not humanity, our glorification in Jesus Christ. And Jesus is our premier glorification and highest exaltation!
No matter who we or others think we are “God exalted Jesus to the highest place and gave Him the name that is above every name, that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, in Heaven and on earth and under the earth and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord.

Judson College to celebrate annual Christmas Tea and Vespers

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Judson College's VespersMARION, ALA: Christmas Tea and Vespers is one of Judson’s most festive annual traditions. This year’s holiday celebration is planned for Saturday, December 6. The day’s event will also provide an Open House for Judson College students’ families and friends.
The Christmas Tea will take place in the Gladys Hale Dunkin Parlors of Jewett Hall on Saturday at 3:00 pm. Following the tea, Christmas Vespers will take place in Alumnae Auditorium at 6 p.m.
This year’s Christmas Vespers Program will be directed by Dr. Camilla Horne, Assistant Professor of Music. Entitled “Mary’s Journey,” the program will celebrate, with scripture readings, music and song. One theme will reflect the strength and deep faith of Mary, mother of Jesus.
Musical selections will be offered by the Judson Singers and FAITH ensemble, the Judson Ringers handbell ensemble, an instrumental ensemble, a string trio, and the program will include several congregational Christmas hymns.
“Vespers is the sixth of the canonical hours that is said or sung in the late afternoon or early evening,” according to Horne. Judson staff members Leah Washburn and Miriam Nicholson will serve as accompanists for the program; faculty member Dr. Ray Price will be the organist.
“Following Judson tradition, four seniors in the music department will be recognized at this their last Christmas Vespers performance at the college. They will sing a verse of “Silent Night” and lead a candle lighting ceremony,” Horne said. The students are: Christina Blain of Ariton, Ala.,  Carly Gamblin of Crossville, Ala., Anna Hollingshead of Century, Fla., and Courtney Tindale of Bremen, Ala.,
The public is welcome to attend Christmas Vespers, and there is no charge for admission.