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Rev. Thomas E. Gilmore honored with courthouse square named in his honor in Greene County

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Rev. Gilmore   More than 300 people turned out in Greene County Saturday, Oct. 12, for the dedication of the county courthouse square named in honor of Rev. Thomas Earl Gilmore, the county’s first Black sheriff and now Pastor of First Baptist Church Ensley for 30 years.
The historic event included proclamations and presentations by some of the state’s well-known political officials and dignitaries from the state’s Civil Rights Movement.
“Rev. Thomas E. Gilmore is the greatest because he is a servant of all,” said retired federal District Court Judge U.W. Clemon. “He has done great things for Greene County and Jefferson County.”
Clemon also read a portion of a letter from former Alabama Attorney General Bill Baxley which said, “Sheriff Gilmore is one of the most able public servants I have known, and we were warriors together for justice in Alabama.”
Gilmore was the first Black sheriff elected in Greene County, and the second only Black sheriff elected in the state by 1971. He was famously known as the “sheriff who did not carry a gun” mainly because of his Christian influence as a minister and Dr. Martin Luther King’s philosophy of non-violence. He was portrayed by Lou Gossett Jr. in the 1979 movie This Man Stands Alone.
Born in Forkland, Alabama, in 1941, Gilmore attended local public Greene County schools before enrolling in Selma University in 1959.  He later married his childhood sweetheart Miss Minnie Gilbert, and the couple moved to Los Angeles, California, a short time later – just months before the bombing of 16th Street Baptist Church in 1963.  Gilmore, his wife and three young sons returned to Greene County in 1965 and found themselves in the midst of growing racial turbulence.
Just a few weeks after returning to Greene County, Gilmore travelled to neighboring Demopolis one evening to purchase milk for his young son. As he pulled into a gas station, he unknowingly drove across a puddle of water, slightly splashing a white state trooper and his patrol car. The angry officer exited his patrol car and pushed Gilmore against the gasoline pump. He also frisked Gilmore and demanded that he wash his patrol car. A fellow state patrol officer intervened and threatened Gilmore’s life because the officer thought Gilmore was an active Civil Rights worker because he had a beard, was wearing overalls and driving an automobile with California license plates. That moment left a lasting impact on the young clergyman and set his mind on staying in the Greene County area to do something about police brutality.
Gilmore immediately became active in the local Civil Rights Movement and the meetings held at Ebernezer Baptist Church in Forkland, Ala., where Rev. William McKinley Branch was pastor. Rev. Branch was instrumental in recruiting Gilmore to take part in the local Civil Rights Movement. Later Rev. James Orange, a veteran of the Birmingham Civil Rights Movement recruited Gilmore to become a paid staff member of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s Southern Christian Leadership Conference. At Dr. King’s behest, Branch, Gilmore and others led local voter registration drives.
Months later, Gilmore helped lead a demonstration after a young Black woman was assaulted by a local deputy sheriff. While trying to file a complaint with the local district attorney, Gilmore and others were beaten by the Greene County Sheriff in the district attorney’s office.
Shortly afterward, Rev. Branch and Rev. Orange courageously put forth the idea that Gilmore should seek the office of sheriff, and Rev. Branch spoke at many of the mass meetings about the idea from then until Gilmore was elected fours year later.
“He (Rev. Branch) was the general of our movement, and to help end police brutality here in Greene County, it was his idea that I was to run for sheriff.”
At the age of 24, Gilmore ran for his first public office, but voter irregularities caused his election defeat in 1966. He ran again four years later in answer to the countless cases of police brutality across the Black Belt and won.
“I am the man I am today because I had a good family,” Gilmore told the crowd gathered in front of the original Green County Courthouse on Saturday. “But I also had a good civil rights family,” he continued, referring to Rev. Branch.
Several state officials took the time Saturday to recognize Gilmore for his courageous effort and work leading the Green County Sheriff’s Department and County Jail for three terms.
State Senator Bobby Singleton presented a proclamation from the Alabama Legislature recognizing Gilmore for “his outstanding achievement and public service.”
Charles Steele, president emeritus of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference and first Black member of the Tuscaloosa City Council, said as a young man Gilmore inspired him to dream big dreams and accomplish large goals. “He always said as long as we talk, we can make things happen. Whoever thought this little country boy would go all over the world? I too have since traveled all over the world and there are opportunities that I didn’t realize that I could achieve until I met Rev. Gilmore. ”
Ms. Hattie Edwards, the mayor of Eutaw, Ala., presented Gilmore with a key to the city and called him a trailblazer and a visionary. “I am standing on his back so that someone like me could be the mayor of Eutaw,” she said.
Current Greene County Sheriff Jonathan Benison said Gilmore gave him his first job at the age of 22 in 1982 after just graduating from Alabama State University. Today Benison runs a sheriff’s department and the county jail with the help of 10 deputy sheriffs working along with him. Benison also presented Gilmore with a proclamation and a framed sheriff’s department uniform.
Nick Underwood, the chairman of the Greene County Commission presided over the ceremony, and helped unveil the marker in Gilmore’s honor on the courthouse square. The program also included wonderful music from the Greene County Community Choir, the Mass Choir from First Baptist Church Ensley and a surprise performance earlier in the day from Birmingham band director Donald Crawford on saxophone after recently recovering from an extended illness.
Gilmore retired as sheriff in 1983 and moved to Birmingham to pastor the First Baptist Church of Ensley. Looking back over his life and time as sheriff in his hometown, Gilmore said,” I do believe that we shall overcome someday.”
A caravan of two chartered buses and a trail of 20 cars entered Eutaw, Ala., by police escort for the town square ceremony in honor of Gilmore. The caravan, made up of Gilmore’s family, church members and friends, visited Gilmore’s birthplace in Forkland and the Old Green Oak Baptist Church, where Gilmore grew up and preached his first sermon. The family also laid a wreath at the gravesite of Gilmore’s grandmother Clara Gilmore at Birdine Cemetery and at the gravesite of his wife Mrs. Minnie Gilmore at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Forkland.
Gilmore was also joined by his mother, his uncle and aunt, his five sons and daughter as well as many grandchildren and great-grandchildren, cousins and others at the special, momentous and historic event.
“I could not have made it without my wife, my mother, my grandmother, and my mother-in-law,” he said as he paid tribute to them as well.

Hope of Glory

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NoahBradley_hope-of-gloryUntil Christ Be Formed

We pass laws to deter crime and the trespassing of rights of others. Of all human efforts to enforce such laws, none touches the root of our problem,  a lack of morals and value for the human life: which derives from the heart and soul of man. What provokes a neighbor to trim his lawn and blow the debris into your yard? What provokes young people to destroy vacant homes, breaking the windows and stealing the contents? What provokes a parent to kill his own innocent children? What provokes road rage? These questions, among many others, are serious and they deserve an answer. Morals cannot be legislated but they do legislate. God has set the ultimate laws in the earth, His Word.
Humans are not born with morals, they are taught and learned. The Apostle Paul made a striking statement to the Galatians – 4:19 “…My little children, of whom I travail in birth again until Christ be formed in you.” The key word here is formed in you. Our lower nature dominates our lives  as long as the character and mind of God does not take preeminence. As for our children, they too must have the formation of Christ within. Perhaps we all believe in God, and that’s a good thing. But Paul asked the Ephesians, Have you received the Holy Ghost since you believed?  The true foundation of all humanity reflects Christ in us the Hope of Glory. David wrote to us in Psalm 82: 5…They know not, neither will they understand; they walk on in darkness: [all] the foundations of the earth are out of course. Wherever the absence of God is, there is also chaos, lawlessness, violence, murder. Just a thought! Children’s Church is a good thing for involvement purposes, but the tragedy is when they are released in the world without the Holy Spirit within them, understanding spiritual conflicts and war; they have not been validated as a person nor a spirit being. The world will, without a doubt, define them from a carnal perspective. Without a godly definition of self, humans will struggle through life, being moved by every wind, manifesting someone, something, but not the God-self. We all must determine to allow no man to redefine who God has already declared us to be. Without Him dwelling within, there is no you.

Electra Adams, Gethsemane Ministries
1024  Ethel Lane  Trussville, Ala. 35235
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Appreciation for Helen Diane Owens

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DIANE OWENS    We, the members of the Tittusville A.O.H. Church of God, are blessed to have such a talented, dedicated, and faithful individual as our Minister of Music, Sis. Helen Diane Owens.
Sis. Owens was educated in the Birmingham Public School System, where she attended Washington Elementary School and Samuel Ullman High School. She received her Associate degree in Arts and a Bachelor of Science degree in Elementary Education from Daniel Payne College in Birmingham. Ala.  She also received a Masters of Arts degree in Secondary Education and English from the University of Alabama in Birmingham.
Sis. Owens retired from the Shelby County Board of Education, where she taught for 31 years. She has been employed at Virginia College and Jefferson State Community College as an English Tutor.
Sis. Owens is the wife of Bro. Myron Owens, the mother of Sean Michael Ray, Marlon Patrick Owens, and the daughter of our own, Sis. Ruth Caldwell.
Tittusville Church has been blessed to have Sis. Owens as a musician since her teenage years.  As a musician, she has given birth to many musical endeavors, such as, the Yours In Christ Choir, the Youth Choir, the Pathfinders of Praise, the Chorallettes, the Sons of Zion, and the Little Angels.

Think Smart

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Think Smart Flyer

Wenzig Named National Award Candidate for two awards

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Wenzing Bobby MONTGOMERY, Ala.—Alabama State University senior punter Bobby Wenzig, San Diego, Calif., has been named a candidate for the Fred Mitchell Award and the National Football Foundation National Scholar-Athlete Award.
Wenzig is now a candidate for the Fred Mitchell Award which will be announced in December.  It is provided to the nation’s top collegiate place kicker among more than 750 FCS, Division II, III, NAIA and NJCAA football teams. The award is named for Fred Mitchell, the record-setting place kicker, Wittenberg University Athletic Hall of Fame member, author, philanthropist and Chicago Tribune sports columnist.
Wenzig is one of 170 candidates for the NFF National Scholar-Athlete Award and one of only 46 candidates from Football Championship Series (FCS) member institutions.
Candidates for the award must be a senior or graduate student in their final year of eligibility, have a grade point average of at least a 3.2 on a 4.0 scale, has outstanding football ability or significant contributor, and has demonstrated strong leadership and citizenship.
The class is selected each year by the NFF Awards Committee, which is comprised of a nationally recognized group of media, College Football Hall of Famers and athletic administrators.
Sixteen recipients will be selected by the NFF Awards Committee and the results will be announced on Oct. 31. Each recipient will receive an $18,000 postgraduate scholarship and will vie for the 2013 William V. Campbell Trophy.

9th Annual “O Give Thanks” Community Food Drive Program

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HopewellSunday November 17, 2013, 7:45 a.m. Church Service
Hopewell Baptist Church 4817- Jefferson Ave. SW, Birmingham, AL 35221 Dr. Edward E. Rodgers, Pastor

Dr. Grant stated he pleased that the Charlie Smith Sunday School Class has continued serving the community with this food campaign drive for nine years. During these economic hard times many families from various communities Bessemer, Brighton, Birmingham, West End and other locations are welcome. Dr. Grant stated that Hopewell Church, Dr. Edward E. Rodgers, Pastor, serves over 1500 children at various aftercare school hot meals daily. With this being said, we cordially invite you join us in services during our kick-off services. Come join us and fellowship together in a wonderful experience of worship and praise.

Drop off location: Hopewell Family Life Center. We are in need of donations, turkeys, hams, canned goods, condiments and monetary gifts.
Contacts: Hopewell Church 925.2134; Chairperson Dr. Albert Grant Chair-Teacher 428-5229 and Sis. Mildred Smith Co-Chair 426.3631. Application may be pick up at church office. Deadline for Application is November 18, 2013 at 12 p.m.

Happy Birthday Mary Ann Knight

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Mary Ann  KnightThe St. James A.M.E. Church celebrated Mrs. Mary Ann Knight’s 110th Birthday in Goodwater, Ala. on October 6, 2013. She was presented, from the Mayor, the Key to the City of Goodwater, and a proclamation; Certificate from the Governor, State Representative Mike Rogers and many other cards, flowers, singing, refreshments in the fellowship hall, two (2) Birthday cakes, and a cake made out of cupcakes in the design of 110.
Guests from Anniston, Leeds, Opelika, Montgomery and Louisville, Kentucky, also the church family and friends in the area were excited and thankful for God allowing her to see October 3, 2013.
Mrs. Knight is still independent and has a lot of wisdom.

More Than Enough

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More Than EnoughAnd the waters prevailed exceedingly on the earth, and all the high hills under the whole heaven were covered. Genesis 7:19

God is so amazing and it’s unfortunate that many people don’t really know Him. The Word of God says God knows our thoughts but people will tell you that you must pray for God to know what is going on in your life. The Word of God says He knows our going out and coming in and before we were even conceived, He knew us. With all that being said, why wouldn’t you believe that if you think about something God can make it happen. Does that mean don’t pray? Of course not. But it does mean that you should watch what you think and that if you can imagine it, it can be so. God is not like man so He does not need you to spell out everything you need from Him or point out everything that is causing a problem for you. He knows and He can and will do more than you could imagine for you and to them.

Regions Bank signs on as Ticket Outlet for the 2013 State Farm Magic City Classic

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RegionsSelect branches to sell $15 general admission discounted tickets

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. – The State Farm Magic City Classic presented by Coca-Cola has announced that select Regions Bank branches will serve as a discount ticket outlet for the 72nd annual event. The largest Black college football game in the country will take place at Legion Field on Saturday, October 26th.
Fans can visit www.themagiccityclassic.com to find participating branches in their area that will sell the $15 general admission discounted tickets. Below is a list of the select Regions Bank branches that will serve as a ticket outlet for the State Farm Magic City Classic:
Birmingham
•    Downtown – Main
•    Five points West
•    Western Hills
•    Bessemer – Main
•    Eastwood

Huntsville
•    Huntsville – Main
•    South Parkway

Montgomery
•    Montgomery – Main
•    Cloverdale Branch
•    Zelda Road Branch

Reserved tickets are $25, while full-priced general admission tickets are $20 and are still available for purchase through TicketMaster at 800-745-3000 or online at www.themagiccityclassic.com. Tickets can also be purchased at Legion Field or AAMU and ASU ticket offices. As the official discount ticket outlet, fans will only be able to purchase the $15 general admission discounted ticket from the select Regions Bank locations.
“We are grateful to Regions Bank for serving as the official discount ticket outlet for this great event in Alabama,” stated Faye Oates, long-time executive director of the State Farm Magic City Classic. “This year’s Classic is shaping up to be one of the most exciting yet and we can’t wait for festivities to kick-off soon.”
The State Farm Magic City Classic brings fans and celebrities from around the country to watch as Alabama A&M University and Alabama State University battle it out for a potential spot in the SWAC Championship. Fans can also enjoy the McDonald’s Magic City Classic Parade and the Coors Light Tailgate Party throughout the weekend. Kick-off is at 2:30pm on Saturday, October 26th, and the much-anticipated halftime will feature the Marching Hornets and the Marching Maroon and White.
Also at halftime, both university presidents will honor this year’s celebrity ambassador, hip-hop artist, actor, director and movie producer, “Ice Cube.” Previous ambassadors are Bootsy Collins, LisaRaye, Sinbad, Wendy Williams, Charles Barkley and Vivica A. Fox to name a few.
“We have had a tremendous response from fans excited to have Ice Cube in town for the Classic,” Oates remarked. “We are honored to host him in the City of Birmingham and know he will enjoy the fans and atmosphere at the State Farm Magic City Classic.”
Back by popular demand, another big highlight this year is a concert that will take place on the field immediately following the game. The famed artist performing will be announced at a later date. Concert admission is included in the price of a State Farm Magic City Classic game ticket.
For more information on the State Farm Magic City Classic, visit www.themagiccityclassic.com.