{ title: 'The journal-register. volume (Medina, N.Y.) 1970-current, February 25, 1972, Page 10, Image 10', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn93063954/1972-02-25/ed-1/seq-10/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn93063954/1972-02-25/ed-1/seq-10.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn93063954/1972-02-25/ed-1/seq-10/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn93063954/1972-02-25/ed-1/seq-10/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Lee-Whedon Memorial Library
TRINITY EV. LUTHERAN CHURCH 1212 Weet Avenue Medina, N.Y. The Rev. W. P. Lottes, Pastor Ralph Schnackel, Organist Charles Meter, Choir Director Mr. J. Reinboit, S$.S5. Supt. 1 Sunday- | 6:30 a.m. Luth. Round Table, WKBW-radio, 1520 ke. 6:30 a.m. \Pattern for Liv- ing,\ WKBW-TV, channel 7. 8:00 a.m. \Lutheran - 30,\ WXRL-radio, 1300 ke. _ 9:00 a.m. \Lutheran Hour,\ WGR-radio, 550 ke. 9:15 a.m. Adult Discussion Gr. 9:15 a.m. Bible Study for all. 10:30 a.m. Holy Communion. Lutheran Hour Sunday. 11:00 a.m. \This Is the Life,\ WROC-TV, channel 8. 11:30 a.m. \This Is the Life,\ WGR-TV, channel 2. ‘ 12:30 p.m. \Lutheran Hour,\ WROC-radio, 1280 ke. Monday- _ 8:00 p.m. Luth. Laymen's Lg. Zone meeting. Tuesday- ' ~ 8:00 p.m. Teach Staffs, Im- manuel Luth., Ridgewood. Wednesday- ‘ 4:00-6:45 p.m. Weekday School of Religion. , 6:45 pm. Chapel Choir. 7:30 p.m. Lenten Service. 8:20 p.m. Youth & Adult Choir. Thursday- ' , 7:30 p.m. Concordia Chapel Choir Concert at Holy Ghost Lu- theran, Bergholtz. JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES ~ Middleport .Cong. 3830 Stone Rd., Middleport Tuesday- 8:00 p.m. Weekly Bible Study in \Then is Fini the Mys- tery of God.\ - Thursday, School. 8:30 p.m. Service Meeting. Sunday- 9:38 a.m. Public Bible Dis- course. _. 10:40 a.m. Weekly Watchtower Bible study. ST. MARY'S CHURCH West Avenue and Eagle Street Medina, New York Fr. Bernard D. Sexton, Pastor Fr. Ray Niezgoda, Asst. Pastor Saturday Masses- 5:15 and 7:30. Confessions are heard 15 minutes before the Masses. _ Sunday Masses- 9:00 and 11:00 a.m. Severe drinking problem in the home? . Write Al-Anon Family Group . P.O. Box 182 Madison Square Station New York, N. Y. 10010 o, 26.06 th tht 2h 26 26 th th dh tid 3% 75 \ 36 \5 36 35 \6 36 3. 36 36 36 36 36 26.26 tb J Sunday in Our \Remember The Sabbath Day To Keep N Hely\ 10 MEDINA JOURNAL-REGISTER . FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1972 sos sos ~ ~o% sos sos sos \\\\s\\‘\\\~ l’ .~1\=5T‘~3I. \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\ FIRST UNITED PRESBYTERIAN UNITED METHODIST CHURCH CHURCH 522 Main Street Medina, N.Y. John H. Francisco, Jr., Minister Mrs. R. Martin, Church Scheol Supt. Mrs. Anthony Kozody, Organist Mrs. Graydon Clack, Choir Director Miss Cindy Clack, $r. Choir Director Sunday- 9:45 a.m. Church School. 9:45 am. Choir rehearsal. 11:00 a.m. Morning Worship. 2-5 p.m. Simulation Game. 5:00 p.m. Union Lenten Serv- ice at Assembly of God Church. Tuesday- ' 10:00 a.m. Clergy Assn. here. 8:00 p.m. Adult Study Group. Wednesday 1:00 p.m. World Day of Prayer rehearsal at Methodist Church. 7:30 p.m. Session meeting. Friday- 12:30 p.m. Fellowship hr. fol- lowed by World Day of Prayer Service at 1:30 at the U. Metho- dist Ch. Babysitting provided. 4:00 p.m. Jr. Choir. ST. PETER EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH West Avenue no: yum 31 Rev. Ronald A. Haefer, Paster Rev. P. H. Nemeschy, Emeritus Mrs. Helen Bergemann, $.$. Supt. Saturday- 1:00 p.m. Stewardship Comm. Sunday- 9:00 a.m. Sunday School and Adult Class. 10:00 a.m. Worship Service. 2:00 p.m. Church Bowling Lg. 5:00 p.m. Oak Orchard Assem- bly of God Union Lenten Serv- ice: The McClurg Family, Gos- pel Singers. Monday- 7:30 p.m. Church Council. Tuesday- 7:00 p.m. Jr. Conf. Class. - 8:00 p.m. Sr. Conf. Class. - Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. Mid-Week Lenten Service. PULLMAN MEMORIAL UNIVERSALIST CHURCH | Albion, N.Y. Affiliate of Unitarian Universalist Assn. Richard G. Hoffman, Chairman Board of Trustees Bernard Lynch, Organist unday- 11:00 a.m. Worship Service. Guest speaker, Frank A. Sala- mone, member of the Anthropol- ogy Dept. at State U. College at Brockport. Topic: \Oedipus at the Dawn of Creation'' Compara- tive Creation Myths. __ EAGLE HARBOR i UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Eagle Harbor Minister Rev. Frank H. Kels Sunday- ‘ 9:30 a.m. Morning Worship. 10:30 a.m. Sunday School. Medina, New York Rev. Victor L. Smith, Minister Organist: Mrs. Robert Merlin Saturday- 9:30-11:30 a.m. Batavia Dist. Children's Div, leaders and tea- chers Workshop at the Oakfield United Methodist Church. Sunday- ; 10:00 a.m. Morning Worship. Sermon: \What To Give Up for Lent.\ Nursery care provided. 11:15 am. Church School. 35 p.m. Reception in honor of the new Exec. Dir. of Gateway {(U. Meth. Home for Children) Mr. Marshall C. Jost at the home, Williamsville. 5:00 p.m. United Lenten Serv- ice at The Assembly of God Ch., Oak Orchard on Ridge. The Mc- Clurg Family, Gospel Singers. 7:00 p.m. Jr. & Sr. U.M.Y.F. Monday- - \ 1:30 p.m. Prayer Fellowship, Patterson's. | 6:30 p.m. Tutorial |. 7:30 p.m. Boy Scout Troop 28. Tuesday- _ Co. clergy at United Presby- terian Church. 6:30 p.m. Tutorial. 8:00 p.m. Prayer Fellowship, lounge. Wednesday- 7:30 p.m. Council on Minis- tries, lounge. 7:30 p.m. TOPS, room 1. Thursday . 6:30 p.m. Tutorial. 7:00 p.m. Choir rehearsal. 8:00 p.m. W.S.C.S., lounge. Friday- 12:30 p.m. World Day of Pray- Service here beginning with Fel- lowship Hr. in the lounge. Public invited to both events. Alert to Sr. Citizens: Instead of the Social Hr. at the Center on Friday p.m. all Sr. Citizens are invited to the World Day of Prayer program, Fellowship Hr. in the lounge at 12:30 and Serv- ice in the Sanctuary at 1:30 p.m. HARTLAND BAPTIST CHURCH , d Finch, Pastor Sunday—my 9:45 a.m. Bible School. 11:00 a.m. Worship Service. Sermon: \The God of the Chris- tian Faith\; music by Miss Don- na Baer and Miss Anna Koch of the Youth Crusaders. 7:00 p.m. Study and fellowship service, topic: \What to Do When Death Visits Your House.\ Tuesday- 6:00 p.m. Christian Fellowship. Wednesday 8:00 p.m. Prayer and Bible study. Thursday- 6:30 p.m. Youth Crusade fo ages 7-17. * (bani. The Conformist The last thing Connie intended to be was a conformist. So oneday Connie resolved in dead earnest to bea nonconformist. She joined the FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Medina, N.Y. H. Burton Entrekin, Minister Harold Suzanne, Organist, Choirmantes $.$. Suptt., Mr. and Mrs, Robert Cavers Sunday- 9:30 am. Church School. 11:00 a.m. Morning Worship. 3:00 pm. Niag. Baptist Assn. at Sanborn. 5:00 p.m. United Lenten Ves- pers at Oak Orchard Assembly of God. 7:00 p.m. Eve. Service of Niag. Assn. present by Youth. Monday- _ 7:00 p.m. Boy Scout Troop 32. Tuesday- e 10:00 a.m. Al-Anon, 7:30 p.m. Laymen's League at home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Howlett. 7:30 p.m. Weight Watchers. Wednesday- 12:00 noon. Kings Daughters, Tureen luncheon at home of Mrs. Myrtle Oliver, Friday- 12:30 p.m. World Day of Pray- er Fellowship. 7 1:30 p.m. Service of Worship and Prayer at Methodist Church. Saturday- 12:30 p.m. Jr. Choir. 6:00 p.m. Sr. choir ST., JOHN'S CHURCH Medina, N.Y. The Rev. R. B. Moes, Rector Samuel $. Dick, Organist Sunday- 8:00 a.m. The Holy Eucharist. 10:45 am. Ante - Communion and Sermon. 10:45 a.m. Church School N-6th. 11:45 a.m. Coffee Hr., ch hall 5:00 p.m. Lenten Vespers at Oak Orchard Assembly of God. Wednesday- 7:30 p.m. The Holy Eucharist. Discussion of St. Luke Chap. 5-8. Thursday- 7:00 p.m. Choir rehearsal. Friday- 12:30 p.m. Fellowship hr, U. Methodist Church lounge. 1:30 p.m. World Day of Prayer Service in United Methodist Ch. 4:00 p.m. Confirmation Inst. YATES BAPTIST CHURCH NON-AFFILIATED tyndonville Rd. at Yates Center Lyndonville, New York The Rev. Duane R. Hawser, Paster Ronald Felstead, $.$. Supt. Church Organist, Mrs. Dorothy Cooper Sunday- 10:00 a.m. Worship Service. . Sermon: \Laying Up A Good Foundation\ I Timothy 6. 11:15 am. Bible School. 6:00 p.m. B.Y.F. 7:00 p.m. Eve. Fellowship Hr. Message: \Victory and Its Re- ward.\ Series on life of David. Wednesday 7:30 p.m.. Bible Study and Prayer 8:40 p.m. Choir rehearsal. MILLVILLE UNITED METHODIST _ CHURCH Rev. A. Howard Gabriel, Minister Mrs. Bruce Heacock, Organist Mrs. June Dresser, Supt. Saturday- 11:00 a.m. Choir practice. 8:00 p.m. Couples Club: Larry Fri Smith guest speaker on wildlife conservation. Sunday- - 9:45 a.m. Church School. 11:00 a.m. Worship Service. Sermon: Self-Denial and the Christian Life.\ Wednesday- 8:00 p.m. Administrative Bd. and Council On Ministries. ST. JOHN'S LUTHERAN CHURCH County Line, Lyndonville, N.Y. Rev. Clarence Elliott, Interim Pastor Mr. Morris Smith, $.$. Supt. maas Can A Hard-Headed Man Admit 'Miracle' Concept? Trinity Episcopal Church, Rev. Benjamin Moss, priest-in-charge; Communion service and sermon, also Sunday School at 9:15 a.m. St. Stephen's R. C. Church, Rev. Daniel Duggan; Mass at 7:30 and 11 a.m. Sunday. Weekly Obligation Mass, Saturday 7 p.m. Universalist Church, Rev. Syd- ney W. Mayell; No 11 a.m. serv- ice this Sunday. Due to weather condition Feb. 20th the 6:30 serv- ice was postponed and will be held this Sunday instead. Ser- mon: \Superstars-Us.\ Public welcome. Holy Cross Lutheran Church, Rev. Gerald Grimm; Lutheran Hour Sunday observed at 10 a.m. Sermon: \Filled With Joy.\ Sun- day School at 11:15 a.m. c Congregational Fellowship with carry in supper at 5:45 p.m. Program by Rev. Wilbur Lottes of Medina on Concordia College of Bronxville, N.Y. _ SS. teachers meeting at 7:30 Tuesday. Lenten service at 7:30 Wednes- day, Sermon: \Not My Will, But Thy Will Be Done.\ Bible Study will follow service. United Methodist Church serv- ices at 10 a.m. Sunday conduct- ed by Mr. William Stockfield of Medina. He will present the Lay Witness Mission program which has been used in many churches throughout the nation. The mis- sion represents an effort on the part of many laymen from vari- ous churches to challenge fel- low laymen to a deeper level of Christian living. The council of missionaries voted in 1971 to consider the pos- sibility of conducting a lay wit- ness mission, and this presenta- tion help in reaching a decision. Sunday School 10 a.m. Members of Middleport United . Meth. Ch. are encouraged to at- tend the special 6:30 p.m. Lenten service in the Universalist Ch. UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Lyndonville, New York © Minister: Rev. F. Ray Hazlett Music Director - Mrs. Gary House! Organist -- Mrs. Roger Brown: Mrs. Donald Moore, Mrs. Warren Breed . Directors of Education Sunday- ' 9:45 a.m. Church School. 11:00 a.m. Worship Service. Sermon: \Thoughts That Kill.\ Exodus 20:13. 4:30 p.m. The 12, Wesley Lange. 6:30 p.m. Sr. U.M.Y.F. Monday- ' 3:30 p.m. Brownie Troop 52. 7:30 p.m. Finance Committee. Tuesday- 3:30 p.m. Brownie Troop 23. 7:00 p.m. Jr. UMYF. Program: David Merrill and Craig Bar- nard. Wednesday- 2:30 p.m. Cadette Scouts. 7:00 p.m. Chancel Choir re- hearsal. Thursday- 2:30 p.m. Jr. Girl Scouts. day- 10:30 a.m. Koinonia Group. 33:30 p.m. Youth Choir rehear- UNITED PRESBYTERIAN . CHURCH Saturday- 2:30 pm. Jr. Choir rehearsal. Sunday- 9:45 a.m. Sunday School. 11:00 a.m. Morning Worship. Of God and Man By LOUIS CASSELS United Press International Some people believe in miracles, not merely as events that may have occurred long ago in Palestine, but as a live possibility here and now. Others regard miracle stories as an embarrassing survival of primitive superstition, a stum- bling block to Christian faith in a scientific age. Nearly everyone develops one attitude or the other by his late teens. There after his mind tends to harden around his adopted attitude, automatically rejecting any contrary ar- gument. Observing this, the late C.S. Lewis concluded that it is not evidence, pro or con, but preconceptions which determine whether a person believes in miracles. Lewis felt it was footless for Christians who believe in miracles to offer testimony or \evidence\ to non-believers. Not even direct personal experience, he said, can con- vince a man who's already made up his mind that miracles cannot happen. _ Senses Not Infallible \Whatever experiences we may have, we shall not regard them as miraculous if we ASHWOOD WESLEYAN CHURCH Lyndonville, New York Rev. Emerson Twining _ Joan Baker, Organist Stewart Baker, S.$. Supt. Sunday- . =- . 10:00 a.m. Sunday School. 11:00 a.m. Morning Worship. Jr. Church, Supervised Nursery. 6:00 p.m. Choir rehearsal. 7:00 p.m. Evening Service. Wednesday 7:30 p.m. Bible Study and Prayer. Thursday 7:00 p.m. Youth Fellowship. UNITED METHODIST CHURCH i New York Frank H. Keis, Minister Mrs. J. T. Gidley, Organist and Mrs. Neat Eddy, Sunday School S Mrs. Nea , Sun oli Supt. Saturday- _ M i 9:30 a.m. Religious Ed. class. 10:00 a.m. Sunday School. 11:00 a.m. Morning Worship. Sermon: \Are You Ready?\ Monday- 7:30 p.m. Adminstrative Bd. Wednesday- 7:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal. SACRED HEART CHURCH Medina, New York - Rev. Joseph J. Rydz Saturday Mass- 7:00 p.m. Sunday Masses- 8:00 a.m., 10:30 a.m. Weekday Masses- 8:00 a.m. daily. Confessions- - Saturday-3:00, 6:30 p.m. aTe eZefeSeR 23:0:0: \a tater already hold a philosophy which excludes the supernatural,\ he said. \Any event which is claimed as a miracle is, in the last resort, an experience received from the senses; and the senses are not infallible. We can always say we have been the victims of an illusion. If we believe in the supernatural, this is what we always shal} say.\ In the same way, Lewis said, people whose faith is heavily mortgaged to belief in miracu- lous \guarantees\ are precondi- tioned to imagine miracles where none have occurred, and often consider it a mark of - piety to accept gullibly every miracle story that is spread abroad. Neither of these extreme attitudes' seemed reasonable to Lewis, the brilliant Oxford don who probably was the most persuasive advocate of mature Christian faith in this century. Findings Accepted - As a thorough going intellec- (The guest writer is the Rev. Daniel. Mohnkern of Shelby Baptist Church. All clergy are invited to use this column.) \THE MASTER'S TOUCH _ A little girl was sick and her father came to Jesus for help. Some one met them on the way and~ said \Don't trouble the Master, the child is dead.\ But the Master said, \Don't be. afraid, only believe.\ And He came and took her by the hand and she lived! ._ - One that is dead is completely helpless. A man who is spiritually dead can do nothing. He cannot make a life com- mitment. He cannot repent. He cannot even believe. Nothing can help him but the entrance of life. Life can come only by the touch of the Master's hand. The first order of the work of the church is to bring men to where Christ can touch them When life established, understanding can begin. When the prophet Daniel had fasted and prayed for three weeks, an angel came to make him tounderstand. At the sight of the angel Daniel fell on his face unconscious. It took three dif- ferent touches before he was able to stand and communicate and be made to understand. |_ Being made alive by the touch of the Master does not guarantee the ability to understand the Bible. Clear direction for qur life may be a little slow in coming. Earnest prayer, and sometimes fasting, is sure to bring results. If the answer is delayed, wait for it.~ The touch of the Master is worth any amount of waiting. It will give us the ability to hear Him, and give us a goal for our lives. Another great prophet, Isaiah was visited by the Lord as he is - findings of modern science and took for granted the \normal stability of nature.\ But he was also convinced that there is \a reality beyond nature.\ When both of these beliefs are held at once, and only then, Lewis argued, a person \can approach with an open mind 'the various reports which claim natural or extra-natural reality has sometimes invaded and disturbed the sensuous content of space and time which makes our world.\ is one of the hitherto unpub- lished essays collected posthu- - mously by his long-time friend and former personal secretary Walter Hooper, recently pub- lished in the United States by the William B. Erdmands Publishing Co., Grand Rapids, ~~ Mich., under the title, \God in the Dock.\ It is worshiped in the temple. The majesty of His glory so over- whelmed Isaiah that he cried out in fear and self-abasement. Then - one of the heavenly beings in the presence went to the altar and took a coal of fire and laid it on Isaiah's lips and purged him of his guilt and fear. When he had received this touch, he heard the call of the Lord and volunteered to be sent out to declare the message of God. It is this touch of fire that __ we need before we are in position to make any commitment to the cause of the Lord. Without it we are too unworthy to speak in His name. When we have received His life giving touch, when we have the power to communicate with the Holy One, when we have been touched with the fire of purification, then we can with ' intelligence make a meaningful commitment to the cause of Christ. -K \THE FAITH THAT COUNTS\ By REV. HOWARD GABRIEL Jesus marveled at the faith of the Roman centurion in Luke 7:1- 10, exclaiming: \Not in all Israel 'have I found such a faith.\ He had the habit of commending unusual people: the poor widow who gave beyond her means to the church, the dishonest steward for his great prudence, the tax-collector for admitting his sinfulness, John the Baptist for his strength of mind and purpose, and Zacchaeus for his spiritual hunger. The centurion was unusual in his faith, being no ordinary person, and was commended by Jesus for it. The centurion was commended for his faith because it was a faith grounded in love. He came to Jesus to have him heal his sick .,.; Slave who was \dear to him.\ ** Such a love for a slave was. DAVID POLING, D.D. Church, Military: Time for Reflection - unheard of in that day, especially among the Romans who treated - slaves as useful tools, and who left them to die when they became sick and useless. Julius Caesar apologized to a friend for expressing pity toward a suf- fering slave, saying he did it in a moment of weakness. But this natural Lewis' discussion of miracles highly _ - commended to all Lewis fans. OUR FAITH TODAY - % heir vi hei s Claudia Robinson in charge of Roman centurion was different group. She learned their views, their Lois Fernburg, Organist the Nursery. \ , e Sola. , in that he loved his sick slave, values, their life-style. Soon the cy- Sunday- ‘ _ Sermon: \What on Earth Are Thelreligtious commumta; age] $th émhtarzl1 easetgggeshar‘lheél; and came to Jesus to have him Conni L 9:30 a.m. hool. You Doing?\ are close to a new round of dialogue and A, ~- made well; His faith was also cle was complete-Connie had em 10:45 a_ms,ungfmm, Wednesdag— have shared this world since the beginning of time- prounded in the love he had braced the way of the nonconform- frequently close allies, sometimes as friends, occasionally ist . . . had conformed to it. enemies. In Christian terms, one should serve Christ, the other Caesar. The Holy Roman Empire believed that both could serve God and the American community has gen- erally taught this doctrine. | Right now the primary source of uneasiness is the mili- - tary chaplaincy. Critics want the clergy off the Pentagon payroll, with rank and uniform nearly invisible. Support- ers accept the present arrangement, deplore any sug- gestion that ministers, priests and rabbis are told what to say or what to do. Prisons have chaplains, so do hos- pitals, labor unions, and 'steamship lines. So why pick on toward the Jews, a love that impelled him to build them a church. A delegation of Jews came to Jesus commending him to Jesus thus: \He is worthy to have you do this for him, for he loves our nation, and he built us our synagogue.\ This mutual love between the Roman and these Jews was unheard of in a day when there was mutual hatred between Romans and 7:00 pm. Communicant's Class; pastor's office. _ Thursday 6:30 p.m. Stand by Class. Sup- per committee: Mildred Petrie, | Esther Cain, Mabel Stroyan and Nellie Robinson. Devotions led _ by. Marian Houseman; the pro- gram by Jessie Nichols will fea- ° ture Lyndonville's guest AFS student from Brazil. The adventure of Connie is a reminder that conformity is part of human nature. We all conform to something. And the seemingly sharp differences apparent between certain life-styles merely reflect the contrasts and contradictions be- tween the things to which men con- Free copies of one of the world's most 1 ORCHARD the military, reply the pastors in uniform. . Jews. It would be as if Gor i form. quoted “22,5“, OF Gop In a new book,. \Military Chaplains,\ William J. Wallace of Alabama 633312“? | E ; ; Ook Orchard the Hughges, chaplain at the White Sands Missile Range in church for blacks in his state in ' The role of the Church in our newspapers n}. Rev. Mfimfifi, New Mexico, offers a comment worth considering: our day of mutual hatred bet. | ; society is to provide spiritual and , y- * \Fourteen months ago, I landed in South Vietnam. I was ween blacks and whites, a thing moral values that enrich life. In a 9:45 a.m. Sunday School for opposed to our involvement then. I am even more firmly which. could not happen because world in which all men conform to all ages. opposed to it now. During these long months, I have been Gov. Wallace doesn't have a faith Judgedthe most fair 11:00 a.m. Morning Service. silent on this issue in my preaching. I have done this de- grounded in love. newspaper in the U.S. by something, the Church's aim with ‘ - 1 1 inely felt that I and my men 7 am a, . + . P naal p - 5:00 p.m. Union Lenten Serv- liberately because genuinely fe at an y me The Roman centurion youth and adults is to give them fggfisszfix'xggggzts ice. Th}; Irhl/IcClurgs will be with Should not, indeed could-not, oppose this war from within deserved to be commended for SOMETHING WORTH CONFORM- international daily. One of us the area of conflict. I have honored our dead, comforted pis faith because it was grounded our wounded and admonished, encouraged or consoled.\ There are countless participants in Vietnam who have shared the sorrow and anxiety expressed by Chaplain Hughges. Many of them caught up in the draft shared this officer's quiet form of protest: in broadmindedness. He saw good in other nations and races, and was therefore open-minded and liberal. Jesus commended the cen- 7:45 p.m. Eve. Evang. Service. Testimonies, Music, & Fellow- ship. Tuesday- 7:45 p.m. Teachers conference. ING TO. the top three newspapers in the world according to journalistic polis. Winner of over 79 major awards in the last five years, including three Pulitzer Wednesday \On the other hand, I have done what I could to briné turion's faith because it was Prizes. Over 3000 news- 7:45 p.m. Prayer and Bible °U involvement here to a quicker end. I have prayed for grounded in humility. He said to paper editors read the Stuiiy £400 ' our leaders and negotiators in Paris and elsewhere be- - Jesus: \Lord I'm not worthy to Monitor. UJ + cause negotaiationkis hzmotisittglle in a .batttle agea, Erhave have you come under my roof, Just send us your FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH written and spoken to both prominent and ordinary nor do I count myself fit to come . ‘ iti i . mi t or But i ay name and address Sholby Conter citizens with the hope that I might move thgm to ac to you. But just say the word, and asan , Rev. Daniel E. Mehnkern, Pastor encourage them to continue their opposition. let my slave be healed.\ Here fa \d ® If mall I yoga. --= The result of this stance and quiet activity is not easy wasa man in authority humbling ew iree copies of the 10:00 a.m. Sunday School. to measure. No conflict captures ultimate truth and most himself before a Jew, which was , 213mm: glthout Seiko” 1?er Church Service. gag; gangle justice rather casually. Concludes Chaplain zmegzhingf uglheard of in that . ' Jon. rmon by pastor. ughges: C | ‘ . day. His faith was completely A Copyright 1972 Keister Advertising Service, Inc., Strasburg, Virginia wen man mam san oin oan as sen mealmes e 6:00 p.m. Jr. B.Y.F. \'Should I stay in the Army as a United Methodist chap- committed and dedicated. It was ’ I Please Print I 7:00 p.m. Church Service. lain? Some feel there is no room for me within the mili- a faith that did not doubt or , Scriptures selected by the American Bible Society = Name I Wednesday Eafy. ghey fie] in all honegstg thatt‘IJ ain'gypocfifiécalthfxl-d gglgstloni‘ongt heiren with ,a \I ‘ | 7:00 p.m. Choir rehearsal. alse. Some have encouraged me resign, while others believe, Lord, help my unbelief,\ Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday I address = 8:00 gm. Bible Study. Enthdperhaps a bit less love have denounced me as a as in the case of the ¥aiher with Colossians e Genesis e@Deuteronomy®e Ezekiel e Zechariah o Romans e Hebrews 1 ' j ' raud.\ © . the epileptic son in Mark 9:24, I:12-23 - 9:8-17 33:26-29 37:21-28 9:9-17 8:24-39 §:6-13 1 C- = ST. JOSEPH'S CHURCH Perhaps the New Testament offers some guidance here, who added, \If you can, Lord.\ . e e [\ ° z 7 Luke Avenue - for soldiers and military appear throughout the Gospels. If we all had today such a - ‘ ' ' I 2:2” P- co Lyndonville, New York Fiaststgf allmthey are ”if agceptedtgart of “£115“; fxistence commendable faith that counts, The above message is sponsored the following public-epirited business establishments ; AHE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE Rev. Albert Booeack _- an . Paul was thankful more than once for their pres- a faith grounded in love and {s by th ng I . = Mommg. | I Saturday Masses: 5 and 7:30 ence. Secondly, they are to measure up to high standards broadmififiedness, and in Phim‘ey Tool & Die Co., Inc. Medina Parts Co., Inc. Box 125, Astor Station 1 pm. of service and compassion. Read the charge that John the humility and dedication, we W. Center St. -- Medina, N. Y. Main St. - Medina, N. Y. I Boston, Massachusetts 02123 I Sunday Masses: 8:30 and 10:- Bappst gives .to those soldiers .(Luke 314) wishing to be could say, \Lord just say the me Sm a before all forgiven. It might even be applied to cians word,\ and we'd be healed, too, N yam M N I m a an mme on ae an am oon am on before all masses. - ~ of our troubles.