Showing posts with label star news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label star news. Show all posts

Friday, December 4, 2009

Wilmington News

First Presbyterian Church of Wilmington, NC's partnership with a Chinese church goes strong 100 years later:
You can't buy a 110-year relationship.For three members of First Presbyterian Church, working on that relationship with Jiangyin Church, its Chinese sister church, meant traveling to Jiangsu Province in October.

The group – Alex Munroe, Walter Conser and the Rev. Ernie Thompson – attended the dedication of the new Jiangyin Pastoral Training Center there, a venture the Wilmington church partially funded.

The center is one of the first projects of its kind to open in China using foreign funding, Thompson said.

Several high-ranking Chinese officials, including the undersecretary of the state administration for religious affairs, attended the opening.

“The government is having a stronger sense that the church is good for the overall good of society,” he said. “The Chinese government supports these partnerships with only three requirements – that the work be open, that the work be legal, and that the foreign churches treat the Chinese church as equals.”

A mission's legacy

The story of how the churches got to this cooperative point started in 1895 when First Presbyterian sent missionary Rev. George Worth to establish the Jiangyin Mission Station. (Jiang­yin is 200 miles west of Shanghai on the Yangtze River.) Until Worth left the country during the Cultural Revolution in the 1950s, he and his family founded a hospital, schools and nursing schools. After that, the churches lost touch, until Munroe visited Jiangyin in 2005 and found the original mission had grown to 14 government-recognized Christian churches in the province.But these churches had a problem. There weren't enough pastors to handle the needs of each growing parish – most megachurch-size – and new churches couldn't open without leadership. The Jiangyin Church, for instance, has four two-hour services each Sunday, all with the same pastor.

Pastors from the Jiangyin church and Chinese officials traveled to the United States to visit First Presbyterian for the first time during Tropical Storm Hanna in September 2008.

Since, the two congregations have been working together to establish the training center. Though not a divinity school, the training center will educate lay leaders to preach, direct choirs and provide continuing education for the ordained pastors in the province. It will accommodate 90 students at a time. In addition to the center, First Presbyterian also sent money to re-vamp the Jiangyin Bible School library – donating about $100,000 to both projects.

One of the marvels of the center's development was the government's support, agreeing to donate the building to the center for free.

(Read on: Here).


Time Warner Cable to announce new charity effort

From staff reports


Published: Wednesday, November 18, 2009 at 8:13 p.m.
Last Modified: Wednesday, November 18, 2009 at 8:13 p.m.
Time Warner Cable launches a new philanthropic effort at 3 p.m. Thursday on Wilmington's riverfront.

Called Connect A Million Minds, it will introduce youth to opportunities and resources to develop skills they need to succeed, the company said.

Time Warner Cable said it is making a 5-year, $100 million commitment in cash and in-kind support companywide, with $11 million of that going to North Carolina, according to spokeswoman Melissa Buscher.


Read more: Here.

Monday, August 31, 2009

UPDATE: Boy in coma after fall from tree dies

Here's an article from our local newspaper with further details surrounding this post: TheoPoetic Musings: Summer Long Hiatus/Tragedy In The Church: "Summer Long Hiatus/Tragedy In The Church":
UPDATE: Boy in coma after fall from tree dies

Taken off life support on Friday
By David Reynolds
Dave.Reynolds@StarNewsOnline.com


Published: Sunday, August 30, 2009 at 7:49 p.m.
Last Modified: Sunday, August 30, 2009 at 7:49 p.m.
Belville | On Friday, Heather Skipper made the most difficult decision of her life. Her 9-year-old son Teddy Hiatt hadn’t woken up from a coma since he fell from a tree in Belville on Aug. 23.

He was dying.

If she allowed Teddy’s organs to be donated, Skipper said, maybe other parents might not go through what she has.

“I wanted something good to come out of this,” Skipper said. “It’s agony wondering whether your child is going to survive.”

Teddy of Oak Island was taken off life support on Friday, and he died at New Hanover Regional Medical Center in Wilmington. Skipper said his organs will be used to help eight other children.

On the afternoon of Aug. 23, Teddy was rushed from a neighborhood in Belville to the hospital after he fell out of a tree.

The Southport Elementary School student had been playing with friends outside his friends’ home at 10043 North Olde Towne Wynd when he fell.

The next day, Skipper said her son was on life support, but she was holding out hope he would pull through. She also said doctors had told her it was unlikely Teddy would survive.

Since Skipper does not have health insurance, people in the community have helped her with donations for medical bills.

Most recently, a fundraiser was held at Chaser's Beach Club in Oak Island on Saturday, Skipper said. She has also set up a fund at RBC Centura Bank in Wilmington.

On Sunday, Skipper said Teddy was adventurous and loved the outdoors. A little environmentalist, she said, Teddy would get frustrated if he saw someone throw their cigarette out a car window.

He loved to surf and already could beat his mom at chess. He is survived by his mother, his older sister Angel Hiatt, 13, and his father T.R. Hiatt.

Doctors performed surgery to relieve pressure on Teddy’s brain, Skipper said, but he didn’t recover from the serious neck and head injuries he received in the fall.

Teddy’s viewing will be held from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday at Peacock Newnam & White Funeral Home at 1141 North Howe St. in Southport. Skipper said anyone who would like to attend is welcome.

The funeral will be at 4 p.m. Wednesday at First Baptist Church of Oak Island.

David Reynolds: 343-2075

On Twitter.com: @StarNewsOnline

All rights reserved. This copyrighted material may not be re-published without permission. Links are encouraged.


Theodore “Teddy” Hiatt, of Oak Island, died at New Hanover Regional Medical Center on Friday. Contributed photo

Thursday, June 4, 2009

Day of prayer unites many across Southeastern N.C.

Day of prayer unites many across Southeastern N.C.
By Amanda Greene

Published: Sunday, May 31, 2009 at 11:12 p.m.
Last Modified: Sunday, May 31, 2009 at 11:12 p.m.

Carrying a red flag bisected with a diagonal black bar – the flag of her native Trinidad and Tobago – Lisa Hamilton gazed and smiled at the people applauding as she and dozens of volunteers walked around the basketball court at Trask Coliseum Sunday. But the event wasn’t an off-season basketball game.

The flag bearers carried the symbols representing many nations of the world for the second Global Day of Prayer that focuses on praying for our nation, world or specific causes.

The event was sponsored by the new nonprofit Pray Wilmington, Inc. About 1,000 people attended this year’s two-hour event that included collective prayers, individual prayers and worship music.
“This is my first time at the event, but just the notion of the churches coming together to pray is awesome, especially because I’m not from this country,” Hamilton said.

Members from her congregation, Global River Church, carried the flags.

The interfaith event in Wilmington was part of similar Global Day of Prayer events happening simultaneously in every country in the world. The event started in Fiji and will end in this hemisphere.

To begin the prayers, a choir of five shofar blowers blew a long note in their hollow dissonant tones. A shofar is typically made of a ram’s horn and is one of the earliest instruments used in Jewish tradition.
The 50-member Global Day of Prayer Mass Choir sang cross-denominational hymns such as Open the Eyes of the Lord and A Mighty Fortress is Our God between prayers as members of the audience came to the microphone to offer prayers for homelessness, Christian unity, forgiveness, persecuted Christians and mercy and grace for the world.

“Let us labor together as partners to bring unity between Gentile and Jew, between the cultures, between the races. We thank you Holy Spirit,” one woman prayed. “Give us ears to hear what your spirit is saying to the modern day church.”

A man sat in the bleachers with his head in his hands, his forehead wrinkled in concentration. A mother held her baby in a sling as she swayed at her seat, her hands raised to the ceiling.

Lydia Gaster, a member at Wilmington Pentecostal Holiness Church, brought her teenage daughter and her daughter’s boyfriend to the event because “I came last year, and I think it’s a really good, edifying time for Christians in this community,” she said. “It’s good for the city; encouraging.”

When it came time for the group to pray The Apostles’ Creed, an announcer invited everyone in the crowd to pray it in their native languages.

James Halls, a member of Port City Community Church, said the event gave him momentum to start his week.

“Just to really get a more global view of how real God is all around the world is great,” he added. “I’m going to meditate on that throughout the week.”


Unfortunately I didn't get to go to this event, but it looks like it was a great ecumenical gathering to celebrate global and religious diversity.

Saturday, November 8, 2008

More On The 1898 Memorial

Continuing from this post:

More on 1898
The 1898 Monument and Memorial Park will be dedicated at 10 a.m. Saturday. The park is at 1018 N. Third St.

The 1898 Memorial Foundation has published “Moving Forward Together: A Community Remembers 1898” to commemorate the 110th anniversary on Monday. This textbook highlighting the history, the genesis of the 1898 Memorial Park and the efforts for community reconciliation, is on sale at local bookstores. Books also will be available at a booksigning during a reception at City Hall, 102 N. Third St., immediately after the park dedication. Copies will be sent to public libraries and high schools throughout the state.


Our choir performed at the service along with our sister church, First Baptist Missionary Church-Wilmington with whom we had a joint service earlier in the year to celebrate African-American heritage. Other community churches also participated in that event as well as the 1898 Memorial event.



See also:1898 Race Riots Wilmington.

Religion And Race

Sunday mornings still largely remain segregated

By Amanda Greene
Staff Writer


Published: Friday, November 7, 2008 at 5:48 p.m.
Last Modified: Friday, November 7, 2008 at 11:07 p.m.
Editor's Note: On Nov. 10, 1898, a white mob terrorized Wilmington. They murdered blacks, overthrew the city’s government and burned the black newspaper. Thousands of black citizens fled the city and never returned. To mark the anniversary of this event, the Star-News is publishing a three-part series that digs into issues of race and religion in Wilmington, why 11 a.m. Sunday is still the most segregated hour in the United States and where reconciliation is happening today in the Port City.
Two nondenominational churches – New Beginning Christian Church and The Sanctuary of Wilmington. Each values tithing. Each congregation claps and sings in worship. And each congregation enthusiastically responds to the preaching.

But the main difference in these churches is the people sitting in the pews.
Most of the members of New Beginning Christian Church are black. Most of the members of The Sanctuary are white.

Rev. Robert Campbell preached one recent Sunday at New Beginning about anger and how to avoid letting it take over your life: “Anger is simply one letter away from danger. The devil is trying to tear up some stuff and his weapon of choice is your tongue.”

“Listen, listen,” and “Preach” were the calls from the congregation.

Last weekend, The Sanctuary’s Rev. Daniel Cook spoke about the life of King David: “God doesn’t look upon the outer appearance. He looks at the heart. Somebody say ‘Amen.’ ”

His congregation responded: “Amen” and “That’s right.”

Despite the fact that the United States just elected its first black president. Despite the fact that Martin Luther King, Jr. shamed his Christian brethren in 1963 with the words “we must face the fact that in America, the church is still the most segregated major institution in America. At 11:00 on Sunday morning when we stand and sing and Christ has no east or west, we stand at the most segregated hour in this nation.”

Most churches still self-segregate on Sunday mornings.

Choosing to be separate
Nationally, only 8 percent of churches are statistically multiracial, meaning that no one racial-ethnic group constitutes more than 80 percent of the membership, according to the Multiracial Congregations Project. The Rice University study was completed in 2000.

There are churches locally and across the nation that are making an effort to become multiracial. The Rock of Wilmington was founded as a multiracial church. Black and white greeters stand at the church doors to welcome its congregation each Sunday. Its worship team has both black and white musicians.

But the road to becoming a multiracial church isn’t easy, said The Rock’s senior pastor, Rev. Bryan McGee.

“We’ve had people even today who have been shunned by their family for doing so,” he said. Some of his parishioners have told him how their families asked: “Why are you going to that church with the white pastor?” or “You’re going to that church that loves blacks.”

“You really have to believe that this is a God thing,” McGee added, “because people have made sacrifices to come here.”

But their style of blended worship is a rarity in Wilmington.

So why do we still worship separately?

Obviously, there are practical reasons for separate worship such as music preference, preaching styles and worshipping in churches that are closer to our homes.

“It takes real pioneers to get out of their own comfort zone in worship,” Campbell said. “Because even as we’re trying to be a little bit more diverse in our music, most white churches don’t do gospel, and our music is closer to R&B. White churches tend to do the Maranatha-type of praise and worship music. We’re trying to make our music appealing to those we want to attract, but that’s difficult to do without losing our core membership.”

Cesar DeMatta, who is Hispanic, visited some black churches before choosing The Sanctuary because “in the black community, they tend to shout and dance more,” he said. “But I like the preaching here. He speaks with authority.”

Uncomfortable honesty
But the deeper reasons for segregated worship are difficult to talk about because they require an uncomfortable honesty, said Esther Acolatse, assistant professor for pastoral theology at Duke Divinity School. She believes blacks and whites interpret the gospels differently because of their different societal histories in this country. Acolatse, who is from Ghana, attends a majority white Presbyterian church in Durham.

But she believes segregation on Sunday means something different today than it did in the 1960s.

“Today, worshipping separately is both a bad and a good thing. Bad because it gives an impression of disunity. It says that we are first black and second Christian,” Acolatse added. “It’s good in the sense that we get to worship in freedom.”

At St. Luke A.M.E. Zion Church, the reasons for that church’s segregated worship extend back to desegregation in the schools. Many in the black community believe the 1968 closing of Williston Senior High School, New Hanover County’s only black high school, was detrimental to the community.

“A community that has given up so much doesn’t want to give up their institutions,” said Rev. William Johnson, pastor at St. Luke. “And the black church is, sadly, one of the last institutions for them.”

Sometimes, people just see what they’re used to as the norm, and that can prevent worshipping in more diverse environments, said Rev. Mike Queen, pastor at First Baptist Church downtown.

“The older the church, sometimes the harder it is to get them (the congregation) to change,” he said. First Baptist turned 200 years old this year. “When there are two First Baptist churches four blocks apart in this city, that should tell you something.”


The Rev. John Veasey, Jr. is the pastor of the majority-black First Baptist – First Baptist Missionary Church.

“People are concentrating more on who they are than on what they can be with others. ... We can contribute to a better society if we can all let go of the hatred of the past,” he said. “And I think this new generation that’s coming up is not breeding hatred and division and are more comfortable with diversity. My generation and older are not that comfortable with that.”

Barbara and Sherwood Miller prayed for a year before leaving their all-black Baptist church to worship at The Rock.

“The only way you can bring about reconciliation is to intermingle in the races,” Sherwood Miller said. “When Jesus comes back, he’s coming back for the church, not denominations. The body, not black or white.”

“As a preacher, I would certainly have to agree with this. I must admit that I have gone through those moments when I was greatly disappointed with the church and what it has done in this period of social change. We must face the fact that in America, the church is still the most segregated major institution in America. At 11:00 on Sunday morning when we stand and sing and Christ has no east or west, we stand at the most segregated hour in this nation. This is tragic. Nobody of honesty can overlook this. Now, I’m sure that if the church had taken a stronger stand all along, we wouldn’t have many of the problems that we have. The first way that the church can repent, the first way that it can move out into the arena of social reform is to remove the yoke of segregation from its own body. Now, I’m not saying that society must sit down and wait on a spiritual and moribund church as we’ve so often seen. I think it should have started in the church, but since it didn’t start in the church, our society needed to move on. The church, itself, will stand under the judgement of God. Now that the mistake of the past has been made, I think that the opportunity of the future is to really go out and to transform American society, and where else is there a better place than in the institution that should serve as the moral guardian of the community. The institution that should preach brotherhood and make it a reality within its own body."

-- The full quote about Sunday segregation from Martin Luther King, Jr., who was speaking at Western Michigan University in 1963

Amanda Greene: 343-2365

amanda.greene@starnewsonline.com

Sunday, October 12, 2008

FBC-Wilmington Celebrates It's 200th Anniversary



All month long, we have been celebrating our church's 200th Anniversary and this Sunday. Several of our former pastors' families were here to witness that event.
Also, Bill Saffo, our mayor was there to read the official proclamation.

Our associate pastor, Jim Everette's book on our church's history called Heritage of Hope: A History of First Baptist Church, Wilmington, North Carolina has finally been published and he was signing them for members. Copies will be available through our church and our bookstore at the Activity Center.

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

FBC-Wilmington: Transforming Lives One Brick At A Time

Editorial: Transforming lives, brick by brick


Published: Friday, October 3, 2008 at 7:40 p.m.
Last Modified: Friday, October 3, 2008 at 7:40 p.m.
Churches usually stress transformation as part of their mission, and Wilmington's First Baptist Church at Fifth Avenue and Market Street is doing just that. This time, however, the church has saved a building and is hosting community groups that help transform lives.

That bulk of red brick on Princess Street that once housed the New Hanover County jail is now the Jo Ann Carter Harrelson Center, an outreach arm of the church run under a separate foundation.

One of the biggest obstacles for outreach agencies is finding a home. Commercial real estate in Wilmington obviously is not cheap, and groups have been crammed into tight spaces not conducive to their work. Sometimes related agencies have been housed miles apart, making it even more difficult to serve a population that may have limited transportation.

A good example is Good Shepherd Ministries. Although it did great work for years out of a small and outdated space at Good Shepherd Church, the ministry did not meet its full potential until it moved into a consolidated space on Martin Street.

While Good Shepherd deals primarily with the homeless, the Harrelson Center will host a variety of groups, among them Phoenix Employment Ministry, Cape Fear Habitat for Humanity and Southeastern Sickle Cell Association.

After being a close neighbor to the jail for years, the good folks at First Baptist saw an opportunity for ministry when the jail moved to its new location, near the airport. A generous gift from the Harrelson family allowed the church to purchase the building from the county - for about a sixth of its listed value. The fruits of the project are beginning to be seen.

The symbolism of this particular building from a place of imprisonment to a place of empowerment is certainly compelling. But it also is a reminder of the many outreach groups that do such good work across the entire region.

Whether they be religious or secular, they all deserve a loud amen.