North Delta’s Lenair building ministry
Thursday, June 05, 2008
William H. Perkins Jr.
June 5, 2008
MEETING NEEDS — Robert Lenair (second from right) of Lula, moderator for North Delta
Association in Clarksdale, pitches in to help sort donated items at the association’s headquarters.
Lenair, pastor of New Strangers Rest Church in Dundee, is the first African-American moderator in
the history of Baptist associational missions in Mississippi. (Photo by William H. Perkins Jr.)
Robert Lenair was a little more than surprised when he was elected moderator of North Delta Association in Clarksdale.
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Calif. Court Rules Against the Sanctity of Marriage
Wednesday, May 28, 2008
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Biloxi mayor says gambling provides new trucks and new jobs to all Tunica residents . . . Really?
Rob Chambers
Biloxi mayor gives gambling a positive spin in recent article, Presidential politics likely to impact gambling landscape:
A.J. Holloway, the four-term mayor of the city of Biloxi, said he doesn’t know the politics of Alabama, but Mississippi had to do something. He’s talking about casinos. “We were the poor state,” he said last week after one of the conferences of the Southern Gaming Summit held at the Mississippi Coast Coliseum & Convention Center. “This has been a big boom for Mississippi.” He cites Tunica in the Mississippi Delta…
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Heartbreak: A Reality Check on Gambling in Tunica
Wednesday, May 21, 2008
Grace Thornton
‘Heartbreak’ shift a daily reality for gambling facilities nationwide
The dazzling lights of nine casinos flood miles of farmland in the Mississippi Delta, blasting across the region as if they had more to compete with than a few catfish ponds and cotton fields.
Nothing hinders the casinos’ glow in the flat expanse of Tunica County, Miss. For the poverty-stricken area, the lustrous resort complex is the moon that rises every night in the west, glimmering in the Mississippi River on one side and penetrating the shadows of pawnshops on the other.
The area’s financial…
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Tasting the Forbidden Fruit
Thursday, May 15, 2008
Bob Terry - May 14, 2008
God promised it would happen. “You must not eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, for when you eat of it you will surely die,” God cautioned Adam in Genesis 2:17. But Adam and Eve did not believe the warning. They concluded they knew more than God did and ate the forbidden fruit.
You know what happened next. Their innocence died and they hid behind fig leaves. Their relationship to each other died, and Adam blamed Eve for his problems, while Eve blamed the serpent. Their relationship to God died, and they hid from…
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A Transformed Life, Transforms Many More Through Mission First
Saturday, May 03, 2008
By Staff - Taken from “Mission First: Illumination” Issue I Fall 2007
The name Lorenzo Bailey is synonymous with words like successful, intelligent, poised and star athlete. This former Mr. Jim Hill High School turned Millsaps College senior psychology major is the captain of the varsity men’s basketball team, a scholar and a role model for young boys and girls in the Metro-Jackson area. However, the man Bailey is today is not the result of an easy, privileged life. It is the result of a difficult life transformed by the investment of many individuals like Coach Willis Bridges, director of sports and adolescent ministries at Mission First in downtown Jackson.
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Does It Really Matter… Contacting Your Legislators?
Sunday, April 13, 2008
Jimmy Porter
A Baptist layman tired of the bingo establishment operating the same hours his church was having services, especially since they were so close to one another. The Christian Action Commission (CAC) suggested he contact his state representative about the situation. He did. His representative filed a bill stipulating the hours bingo could operate if within a certain distance to a church. The bill passed both houses and the governor signed it into law. One man made a difference.
President Abraham Lincoln, in his Gettysburg Address on November 19, 1863, said, “. . . and that government of the…
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Miss. Taxpayers Beg for Crumbs from Rich Man’s Table
Some things just get under your skin, and House Bill 1196 presently being considered by Mississippi legislators does that to me. The short description given to it is, “Tourism; revise the definition of tourism projects for the ‘Tourism Project Sales Tax Incentive.’” The bottom line is that this bill will allow the gambling industry to take advantage of this – call it what it really is—tax rebate.
HB 1196 allows a corporation that invests a minimum of $10 million in a tourism project to receive a tax rebate for up to 10 years, not to exceed 30% of…
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Getting Away with the Big Giveaway: Most Legislators Vote for Casino Tax Rebates
Friday, April 11, 2008
Rob Chambers
Many TV shows have been emphasizing the importance of charity, and it appears most Mississippi legislators have taken this lead as well – but not in the true sense of charity. To be charitable means to give to someone in need, ill or helpless, but most Mississippi legislators have chosen to redefine charity to apply to lucrative casino businesses.
In 2007 casinos had revenue in excess of $2.8 billion and for January and February 2008 alone nearly $500 million, but despite these numbers most legislators have chosen to deem the casino industry in need of charity.
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Illinois church wins first round of religious liberty court battle
Monday, April 07, 2008
Marty King
CARLINVILL, Ill. - Carlinville Southern Baptist Church “can do everything we want in the new facility except use it for worship,” according to the church’s First Amendment attorney, Daniel Dalton. More
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2008 Mississippi Legislative Guide
Tuesday, January 01, 2008
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