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Word of the Day: Accept the Whole Body of Christ

Matthew 10:40 – He that receives you receives me, and he that receives me receives him that sent me. *God has developed certain inter-dependence throughout the Body of Christ. In other words, we have to rely on each other. You see no one person has all the anointing, all the revelation, all the gifts, or all the power.

Campaign Started
Churches Encouraging
The Making of Wills

A number of Oklahoma City congregations have begun a campaign to encourage members to make wills so as to protect their wealth.[Read full story]

Quote Of The Day

Laughter is America's most important export.

-Walt Disney-

Weather

WeatherBug

10 Steps to Turning Your Life Around

Up is the movement and direction toward possibility--"with God nothing is impossible." Up is the movement of reaching. Up is where we're going. When you watch birds take off, they don't fly down, they fly up. They leave the ground after they've found their food. They leave the place where they have come for their nurturing and their nourishment, and then they fly up, they soar.

Moving up, you will begin to discover who you are. So make the decision right now to fly, to change your life by moving up toward God and toward moments filled with yeses and possibilities in life.

 

Religion

Shopping Carts and Bibles
At East Village Food Pantry,
The Price Is One Sermon

Chronicle News Services

NEW YORK--The shopping carts are lined up hours early in Tompkins Square park, not far from the dog run, where the East Village’s more genteel residents are unleashing retrievers and beagles and chatting animatedly. 
The poor or elderly waiting on benches to get the free food that comes with a dose of the Gospel seem more lost in their own thoughts, even though many meet every Tuesday.
A guard, Michael Luke, a powerhouse known as “Big Mike,” who himself was a consumer at church pantries until he found religion and decided to work for “the man upstairs,” manages the crowd with crisp authority until the 11 a.m. services starts across the street at the Tompkins Square Gospel Fellowship. 
There is nervous tension because only the first 50 will get in, and suddenly two women are squabbling over a black cart.
“How do you know that’s your cart?” “Big Mike” firmly asked one, a fair question since the carts look alike. 
But the mystery is cleared up with the discovery of an orphaned gray cart.
Inside the worship hall, the 50 men and women sit in neat rows in front of a pulpit and a painting of a generic waterfall while a pianist softly plays hymns. 
Their carts are reassembled in neat rows, as well.
The room has the shopworn air of Sgt. Sarah Brown’s Save-a-Soul mission in “Guys and Dolls.” 
One almost expect Stubby Kaye to get up and sing “Sit Down, You’re Rocking the Boat.” 
But people don’t mind having to sit through a sermon as the price of admission, and few have jobs they need to run to. 
While they wait, volunteers fill each cart with a couple of bread loaves--redolent of a Gospel miracle, except these are ciabatta and 10-grain--a couple of bananas, a couple of less-than-freshly-picked ears of corn, a box of eggs, a box of blueberries, even as Asian pear.
The food is donated by Trader Joe’s, the gourmet and organic food puveryor, which has a store nearby. 
It usually feeds the kinds of professionals who use the dog run, but it provides the fellowship with a wealth of unsold baked goods, and fruit vegetables.
The fellowship was started 115 years ago as a mission to the immigrant Jews of the Lower East Side, but now mostly serves the Black, Latino and Asian poor. 
The East Village has several other pantries that dispense food without sermons; their food is government-financed and so much be religion-free. 
The fellowship started its giveaways in January and now feeds 250 people during three services on Tuesdays--one in Chinese--and a single evening service on Sundays and Wednesdays.
The mission is run by Rev. Bill Jones, a lively ordained Baptist minister from the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina.
“People are not only hungry for food, but hungry for the word of God,” Mr. Jones said.  “There’s not just a physical need but a spiritual need.”
Nevertheless, he is aware of the actual hunger. 
“If you wait for three hours to get $25 worth of groceries,” he said, “you have a need.”
He affirms that thought to the waiting crowd in a stentorian drawl.
“You all get blueberries today,” he announced.  “Some of you get eggs.  If you don’t get eggs, don’t be upset.  You neighbor is getting eggs, so be grateful.”
The people who come include Rafael Mercado, 52, who lost his job as a mailroom clerk four years ago.
“I don’t have the kind of money now to go shopping,” he said, “so, I go to many pantries.” 
Another is Asia Feliciano, 37, a single mother with a lush head of cornrow braids. 
She and her 3 year-old and 5 year-old sons live in a nearby shelter, and they stumbled upon the mission in August while panhandling.
“It puts food on our plates every night,” she said.
Mr. Jones begins the service with a prayer--“Heavenly father, we are so grateful for the provisions you have brought us for another day.”  He then offers a lesson from the Gospel of John, in which Jesus tells the disciples to love one another. 
With ardor that is not quite brimstone, Mr. Jones urges listeners to love one another, as well, not give in to temptations and pray to remain faithful to God.
Many among the 50 sit stone-faced.  But some clearly listen. 
Though she comes mostly for the food, Mrs. Feliciano indicated that the worship has subversively taken hold.
“When I have to sit through the service, it opens my eyes,” she said.  “So, I started reading the Bible and I asked them for a Bible, and they gave me one.” 

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