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Showing posts with label chronicles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chronicles. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 18, 2020

IN SICKNESS AND IN HEALTH (audio)














As the Coronavirus (COVID 19) pandemic spreads, social interactions change, and panic threatens to overwhelm reason and faith, our Sunday worship opened up into a moment for conversation and for comfort. The Holy Spirit spoke and the core of that conversation is this message titled: OUR SAVIOR, IN SICKNESS AND IN HEALTH.

Listen well.

If you can’t get the audio on your device, visit the main podcast page at http://revandersongraves.podomatic.com/   

---Anderson T. Graves II   is a pastor, writer, community organizer, and consultant  

Rev. Anderson T. Graves II is pastor of Bailey Tabernacle CME Church in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. He writes the popular blog: A Word to the Wise at www.andersontgraves.blogspot.com

Follow me on twitter @AndersonTGraves 

Click here to support this blog with a donation.  Or go to andersontgraves.blogspot.com and click on the DONATE button on the right-hand sidebar. 

Support Bailey Tabernacle CME Church with a donation through Givelify
Givelify

Support by check or money order may be mailed to 
Bailey Tabernacle CME Church
1117 23rd Avenue
Tuscaloosa, Alabama 35401

Saturday, November 10, 2018

FROM RENOVATION TO REVIVAL (audio)

Delivered for the fall revival at Emory Chapel CME Church, the title of this message is:  FROM RENOVATION TO REVIVAL.


Listen well and leave a comment.


If you can’t get the audio on your device, visit the main podcast page at http://revandersongraves.podomatic.com/   

 --Anderson T. Graves II   is a writer, community organizer and consultant for education, ministry, and rural leadership development.

Rev. Anderson T. Graves II is pastor of Bailey Tabernacle CME Church in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. He writes the popular blog: A Word to the Wise at www.andersontgraves.blogspot.com

Follow me on twitter @AndersonTGraves 

Click here to support this ministry with a donation.  Or go to andersontgraves.blogspot.com and click on the DONATE button on the right-hand sidebar. 
Visit the ministry’s website at baileytabernaclecme.org

Support by check or money order may be mailed to 
Bailey Tabernacle CME Church
P.O. Box 3145 
Tuscaloosa, Alabama 35403



Sunday, August 26, 2018

LESSONS FROM AN ARMY OF ANCESTORS

A message  about history, His-story, and the power of faith to change a nation.  The title is LESSONS FROM AN ARMY OF ANCESTORS.


Listen well and leave a comment.

If you can’t get the audio on your device, visit the main podcast page at http://revandersongraves.podomatic.com/

 --Anderson T. Graves II   is a writer, community organizer and consultant for education, ministry, and rural leadership development.

Rev. Anderson T. Graves II is pastor of Bailey Tabernacle CME Church in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. He writes the popular blog: A Word to the Wise at www.andersontgraves.blogspot.com

Follow me on twitter @AndersonTGraves 

Click here to support this ministry with a donation.  Or go to andersontgraves.blogspot.com and click on the DONATE button on the right-hand sidebar. 
Visit the ministry’s website at baileytabernaclecme.org

Support by check or money order may be mailed to 
Bailey Tabernacle CME Church
P.O. Box 3145 
Tuscaloosa, Alabama 35403

Sunday, March 19, 2017

A BLESSING FOR THE GATEKEEPERS

Long ago a man of God rebelled against his fellowship and split the church of his day.   In a spectacular display of Divine wrath, God destroyed the spiritual mutineers.  Generations later, the Lord used a great king to redeem the descendants of that disgraced rebel.  And that is why churches have ushers.

Learn the whole story and how what happens at the doors of the church affects every one of us every day.

The sermon is about: A BLESSING FOR THE GATEKEEPERS.


Listen well.

If you can’t get the audio on your device, visit the main podcast page at http://revandersongraves.podomatic.com/

---Anderson T. Graves II   is a writer, community organizer and consultant for education, ministry, and rural leadership development.

Rev. Anderson T. Graves II is pastor of Miles Chapel CME Church in Fairfield, Alabama;  executive director of the Substance Abuse Youth Networking Organization (SAYNO);  and director of rural leadership development for the National Institute for Human Development (NIHD).

Subscribe to my personal blog  www.andersontgraves.blogspot.com .

Email atgravestwo2@aol.com
Follow me on twitter @AndersonTGraves  #Awordtothewise 

You can help support this ministry with a donation to Miles Chapel CME Church.

You can help support Rev. Graves’ work by visiting his personal blog and clicking the DONATE button on the right-hand sidebar.

Support by check or money order may be mailed to 
Miles Chapel CME Church
P O Box 132
Fairfield, Al 35064



Monday, February 29, 2016

INTO THE BIBLE AND BEYOND BLACK & WHITE

What does the Bible say to and about Black culture?  Is the Christianity a White man’s religion, or is the Bible really a story of Black peoples that’s been whitewashed by a prejudiced system?  Maybe it doesn’t matter.  Maybe God doesn’t see color at all?

Now more than ever, these questions need to be answered.  They are in a message titled INTO THE BIBLE AND BEYOND BLACK & WHITE.  

At first this may sound like a message for Black History month, but it’s not.  It’s a message for all of us, right now.

Listen well.

If you can’t get the audio on your device, visit the main podcast page at http://revandersongraves.podomatic.com/

---Anderson T. Graves II   is a writer, community organizer and consultant for education, ministry, and rural leadership development.

Rev. Anderson T. Graves II is pastor of Miles Chapel CME Church in Fairfield, Alabama;  executive director of the Substance Abuse Youth Networking Organization (SAYNO);  and director of rural leadership development for the National Institute for Human Development (NIHD).

Subscribe to my personal blog  www.andersontgraves.blogspot.com .

Email atgravestwo2@aol.com
Follow me on twitter @AndersonTGraves  #Awordtothewise 

You can help support this ministry with a donation to Miles Chapel CME Church.

You can help support Rev. Graves’ work by visiting his personal blog and clicking the DONATE button on the right-hand sidebar.

Support by check or money order may be mailed to 
Miles Chapel CME Church
P O Box 132
Fairfield, Al 35064


Monday, October 12, 2015

WE, THE WICKED


Then Jesus said, “Assuredly, I say to you, no prophet is accepted in his own country.”    

This quote appears in all 4 gospels.  The context indicates that Jesus said this on the way to visit His hometown  (John 4:44) , during worship while visiting His hometown (Luke 4: 24), and each time He went back to His hometown to visit (Matthew 13: 57; Mark 6: 4).

It’s like Jesus was sighing. 

In Luke 4, after coming off a powerful 2 day revival in Samaria, and a successful preaching tour of Galilean villages, Jesus circled round to Nazareth.  He went to worship in the church where He’d grown up.  He even taught the morning Bible lesson.  To His cousins, His classmates, His brothers-in-law, His old playmates, His old teachers.  Not just generically or spiritually His people, but HIS PEOPLE.   He loved them, so He had to tell them.

He knew how they’d respond, but He had to tell them the truth.

“But I tell you truly…” (Luke 4: 25-27)

The truth is that sometimes God punishes the people in the right country with the correct religion who voted for the most patriotic candidates because you’re just as full of sin and corruption and hypocrisy as the heathens and the Jezebels.

The truth is that God loves you all, but sometimes the person in the room that God likes most is the single mother with the lowest socio-economic status and the wrong ethnic background.

The truth is that the lifelong skeptic/ heretic/ infidel who humbles himself and obeys the word of the Lord will experience the miraculous power of the Holy Spirit before you do.

The truth is that you are pissed off now.  Sigh. 

So all those in the synagogue, when they heard these things, were filled with wrath, and rose up and thrust Him out of the city; and they led Him to the brow of the hill on which their city was built, that they might throw Him down over the cliff. (Luke 4: 28, 29)

You don’t have to throw me under the bus or off the cliff.  I already know.  It’s always like this when you tell the truth at home.

When the prophets speak of God’s favor on the righteous and His wrath against the wicked, we shout, “Amen,” because we think we're  the righteous and those people are wicked.   Sigh.

But God seldom sent His prophets to speak to the righteous.  He sent the prophets to warn the wicked.

Son of man, I have made you a watchman for the house of Israel; therefore hear a word from My mouth, and give them warning from Me. (Ezekiel 3: 17)

It makes us so mad, so form-a-mob-and-throw-him-off-the-cliff mad to hear  that maybe, maybe WE are the wicked.

WE ARE the wicked.

You know this one well, don’t you?   2 Chronicles 7: 14  if My people who are called by My name will humble themselves, and pray and seek My face, and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin and heal their land.

But go back to the verse before.

When I shut up heaven and there is no rain, or command the locusts to devour the land, or send pestilence among My people (2 Chronicles 7: 13)

“When,” not “If.”   God PROMISED to punish the land because of what His people did.  Not because of what the heathens did.  Not because of what the unbelievers did. 

WE ARE the wicked.

Ever heard a televangelist declare coming judgment for greed?  Or vanity?  Or self-promotion?  Or falsely prophesying the date for judgment so you could raise a million dollars but not sending anyone’s money back when the world didn’t end as predicted?  Stop listening to them telling you that judgment is coming for all the sins they don’t commit.

Stop trying to humble the Muslims, the Wiccans, the Atheists, the Republicans, the Democrats, the not-us.  We have to humble OURSELVES.

Stop seeking a preferred place in power, in history, and  in money.  Seek God’s face.  Cause He wouldn’t have told us we need to if that’s what we’d been doing.

The biggest problem isn’t THEIR ways of being wicked.  The problem is that we haven’t turned from OUR WICKED WAYS. 

Try this. Grab a piece of paper and write down the top 3 sins in America,  the 3 moral issues that are destroying the nation.  
Done?  Now list the 3 sins you personally commit most often.  

Which list do you spend more energy protesting against, voting against, and condemning on social media?

(Oh, and if you listed as one of your sins, "I don't stand up for what's right," you aren't paying attention.  That's just another way of saying "I don't focus on other people's wrong instead of mine.")


I know. YOUR sins aren't that bad.  The problem with this country is what everybody else does wrong.

Sigh.

In 2 Chronicles 7: 15, 16, the Lord promised that His house would always have a special place in His heart and whenever WE who come to the house of the Lord and call ourselves by His name decide to pray the way He told us to, “My eyes will be open and My ears attentive to prayer made in this place.”

The prayers of the righteous church can avail much, but first there must be the prayers of the present church that humbles itself and confesses OUR wickedness.

But you hate me calling you “wicked.”  I really need to check myself on that.    I know.  You’re right.  Sigh.

In John/ Luke, Jesus hometown folks tried to throw Him off a cliff because He told them the truth about themselves. In Matthew/ Mark, Jesus went to the same people and told them the same truth knowing they’d get mad at Him all over again.

How well do you know me?  Maybe too well.  Maybe so well that you know I’m not perfect, so why should you listen to me.  Maybe you know me so well that you can’t get past who I am (or am not) to see the truth that I’m speaking.  You probably can’t help it.  You can’t stop knowing me, and I can’t stop loving  you, so I have to tell you the truth. 

If I’ve offended you---- it won’t be the last time.

---Anderson T. Graves II   is a writer, community organizer and consultant for education, ministry, and rural leadership development.

Rev. Anderson T. Graves II is pastor of Miles Chapel CME Church in Fairfield, Alabama;  executive director of the Substance Abuse Youth Networking Organization (SAYNO);  and director of rural leadership development for the National Institute for Human Development (NIHD).

Subscribe to my personal blog  www.andersontgraves.blogspot.com .

Email atgravestwo2@aol.com
Follow me on twitter @AndersonTGraves 
#Awordtothewise

You can help support this ministry with a donation to Miles Chapel CME Church.

You can help support Rev. Graves’ work by visiting his personal blog and clicking the DONATE button on the right-hand sidebar.

Support by check or money order may be mailed to 
Miles Chapel CME Church
P O Box 132

Fairfield, Al 35064

Sunday, May 17, 2015

WHO'S THAT TEMPLE FOR?

Why do we build churches?  What kind of church does God want us to build?  How can we be sure?  What happens if we’re wrong?

These are the questions that fundraisers in the CME church face.  These are the questions that believers have faced since the days of King David.  The right answers can elevate a ministry.  The wrong ones can tear a church apart.

In a message originally delivered to missionaries in the CME Church, Rev. Anderson Graves takes us back to the original church building project and digs deep for God’s answers.  The message is called: WHO’S  THAT TEMPLE FOR?


Listen well.


If you can’t get the audio on your device, visit the main podcast page at http://revandersongraves.podomatic.com/

---Anderson T. Graves II   is a writer, community organizer and consultant for education, ministry, and rural leadership development.

Rev. Anderson T. Graves II is pastor of Miles Chapel CME Church in Fairfield, Alabama;  executive director of the Substance Abuse Youth Networking Organization (SAYNO);  and director of rural leadership development for the National Institute for Human Development (NIHD).

Subscribe to my personal blog  www.andersontgraves.blogspot.com .

Email atgravestwo2@aol.com
Follow me on twitter @AndersonTGraves  #Awordtothewise 

You can help support this ministry with a donation to Miles Chapel CME Church.

You can help support Rev. Graves’ work by visiting his personal blog and clicking the DONATE button on the right-hand sidebar.

Support by check or money order may be mailed to 
Miles Chapel CME Church
P O Box 132
Fairfield, Al 35064


Monday, March 30, 2015

EPITAPH or EPITHET


When I was an English teacher I pushed my adolescent writers to expand their vocabularies, but sometimes, while trying to impress me, my students would stretch their word choices beyond their grasp of definitions.   They’d use big words, but the wrong big words.

For example, sometimes students would confuse the words epithet and epitaph.

An epitaph is “something written or said in memory of a dead person; especially : words written on a gravestone.” (Merriam Webster online)

An epithet is a word or phrase, often “an offensive word or name that is used as a way of abusing or insulting someone” (Merriam Webster online), as in “a racial epithet.”

In the Bible, when a prominent character died, Scripture often gave a one verse summary of his/her life --- an epitaph.  Epitaph not epithet.

But then, there was King Jehoram of Jerusalem.  The summary of his life is in 2 Chronicles 21:20.

He was thirty-two years old when he became king. He reigned in Jerusalem eight years and, to no one’s sorrow, departed.

The King James Version says that Jehoram died without being desired.  That English phrase is a single Hebrew word.

Jehoram’s epitaph is kind of an epithet.

How sad.

Remember that other people will bury you.  Someone else will decide what your tombstone says.  Even if you have the stone carved while you’re living, someone else will still decide.

How sad it would be for you or I to attain great titles, to gain positions of power and personal prosperity, and then die “to no one’s sorrow.”  To be remembered as an epithet.

Live daily the verse you want carved on your grave.  Be now the person you want preached in your eulogy.

By your actions, choose an epitaph that is not an epithet.

Rev. Anderson T. Graves II is pastor of Miles Chapel CME Church in Fairfield, Alabama;  executive director of the Substance Abuse Youth Networking Organization (SAYNO);  and director of rural leadership development for the National Institute for Human Development (NIHD).

Subscribe to my personal blog  www.andersontgraves.blogspot.com .

Email atgravestwo2@aol.com
Follow me on twitter @AndersonTGraves 

You can help support this ministry with a donation to Miles Chapel CME Church.

You can help support Rev. Graves’ work by visiting his personal blog and clicking the DONATE button on the right-hand sidebar.

Support by check or money order may be mailed to 
Miles Chapel CME Church
P O Box 132

Fairfield, Al 35064

Monday, February 16, 2015

GOD'S AFRICAN CONNECTION



Eurocentric historians have worked hard to portray Black Africa as perpetually uncivilized and unimportant to world history, including Biblical history.  Part of that effort included  dividing Egyptian civilizations from “Black” Africa, so that the well-known Biblical references to Egypt wouldn’t count as references to Black people.  Implicitly and explicitly, I was taught that outside of Egypt, ancient Africa was just a bunch of disorganized, insignificant, tribal villages.

Well that’s not what the Bible says.

The Bible says that Egypt was totally integrated into the larger African culture. 

Around 926 B.C., during the reign of Rehoboam, king of the Judah, the Bible says that Shishak king of Egypt came up against Jerusalem… with twelve hundred chariots, sixty thousand horsemen, and people without number who came with him out of Egypt— the Lubim, and the Sukkiim, and the Ethiopians. (2 Chronicles 12: 1, 2)

Egyptologist identify Shishak as Pharaoh Sheshonk I, who  left behind records of a military campaign into Canaan.  So, we don’t have to argue about historical support for this passage.  It happened. 

The invasion force in 2 Chronicles 12 was an alliance of Egyptians, Lubim, Sukkiim, and Ethiopians. 

Lubim were Libyans, a central north African nation. Sukkiim refers to desert tribes from the Saharan territory of ancient Libya.  Ethiopia covered territory in central and west Africa.   

17th Century British Map of Africa
Remember that the modern, post-colonial borders of Libya, Egypt, and Ethiopia are nothing like their ancient boundaries.  As the map shows, as late as the 17th century, Europeans faced expansive African states, not tiny, disorganized, uncivilized tribal savages.

In fact, you can’t think of ancient Egypt, Libya, and Ethiopia as “countries.” Think of them as regions and empires.  The army in 2 Chronicles 12 consisted of peoples from the regions of northern, eastern, western, and central Africa. 

The Bible says that Black people were always a positive part of God’s plans.

15 centuries before the Islam came into existence,  Black people marched into Judah.

And God had sent them.  

When Rehoboam had established the kingdom and had strengthened himself, that he forsook the law of the Lord, and all Israel along with him….Shishak king of Egypt came up against Jerusalem, because they had transgressed against the Lord (2 Chronicles 12: 1, 2)

When King Rehoboam saw the power of Black army arrayed against his new kingdom, he started praying.  God responded: “…My wrath shall not be poured out on Jerusalem by the hand of Shishak. Nevertheless they will be his servants, that they may distinguish My service from the service of the kingdoms of the nations.”  (2 Chronicles 12: 7, 8)

That’s right. An African army conquered Judah.

So Shishak king of Egypt came up against Jerusalem, and took away the treasures of the house of the Lord and the treasures of the king’s house; he took everything. He also carried away the gold shields which Solomon had made (2 Chronicles 12: 9)

The Bible says that Egypt wasn’t the only African empire that influenced Biblical history.

Notice that that the human authors of the Old Testament clearly understood that Egypt was one of many empires in region we know as Africa, and they understood from interaction and experience that even separate nations were formidable civilizations.  

A generation after the African conquest of Judah, Ethiopia had overtaken Egypt as the dominant power.  2 Chronicles 2: 9 says Then Zerah the Ethiopian came out against them with an army of a million men and three hundred chariots, and he came to Mareshah.

A million soldiers.  Black soldiers.  In the 9th century.  B.C.

The Bible says that not only were Black empires important in God’s plan, so were individual Black persons. 

When the prophet Jeremiah was unjustly imprisoned for speaking God’s truth to the power in the Jewish state, an Ethiopian eunuch named Ebed-Melech was the prophet’s only ally.

Ebed-Melech went out of the king’s house and spoke to the king, saying: “My lord the king, these men have done evil in all that they have done to Jeremiah the prophet, whom they have cast into the dungeon, and he is likely to die from hunger in the place where he is. For there is no more bread in the city.”  (Jeremiah 38: 8, 9)

Oh, and before you waive off Ebed-Melech as an insignificant “slave,” remember that his position and personal status in the court of the Jewish king was identical to that of Daniel, and the 3 Hebrew boys who served Nebuchadnezzar the Babylonian. 

To them the chief of the eunuchs gave names: he gave Daniel the name Belteshazzar; to Hananiah, Shadrach; to Mishael, Meshach; and to Azariah, Abed-Nego.  (Daniel 1)

The Bible says that there was a constant African connection.

Dark skinned Ethiopians were so familiar to ancient Jews that they were used as a metaphor in Jewish proverbs.

Can the Ethiopian change his skin or the leopard its spots? (Jeremiah 13: 23)

That’s the ancient version of modern African-American saying:  “The only two things I have to do are stay Black and die.”

In the book of Acts, God made Philip the evangelist go way out of his way to make sure that the gospel went to “Black” Africa. 

Now an angel of the Lord spoke to Philip, saying, “Arise and go toward the south along the road which goes down from Jerusalem to Gaza.” This is desert.  So he arose and went. And behold, a man of Ethiopia, a eunuch of great authority under Candace the queen of the Ethiopians, who had charge of all her treasury, and had come to Jerusalem to worship (Acts 8: 26, 27)

Since at least the days of King Solomon, Ethiopians had practiced Judaism.  The Bible says that while the original apostles were still alive and preaching, Ethiopians of the highest influence and rank were pious and observant Jews. 
The Mosaic law and prophets  were published and read in ancient Africa while ancient Europeans were still worshipping Thor, Odin, and the Druid trees.

So Philip ran to him, and heard him reading the prophet Isaiah (Acts 8: 30)

And, according to the Bible, Black African Jews were among the first generation of converts to Christianity.

So he commanded the chariot to stand still. And both Philip and the eunuch went down into the water, and he baptized him. Now when they came up out of the water, the Spirit of the Lord caught Philip away, so that the eunuch saw him no more; and he went on his way rejoicing. (Acts 8: 38, 39)

Empress Candace’s treasury secretary did not die the only Black African Christian in the first century. 

By 330 A.D., King Ezana the Great made Christianity the official religion of Ethiopia and the Aksumite empire.   Christianity didn’t become the the state church of the Roman Empire until AD 380. 

Because of the Holy Spirit’s intervention in the book of Acts, the Church of Ethiopia is the oldest continuing, organized Christian church on the planet.

That’s not just Black history. That’s history ---if you believe the Bible.

---Anderson T. Graves II   is a writer, community organizer and consultant for education, ministry, and rural leadership development.

Rev. Anderson T. Graves II is pastor of Miles Chapel CME Church in Fairfield, Alabama;  executive director of the Substance Abuse Youth Networking Organization (SAYNO);  and director of rural leadership development for the National Institute for Human Development (NIHD).

Subscribe to my personal blog  www.andersontgraves.blogspot.com .

Email atgravestwo2@aol.com
Follow me on twitter @AndersonTGraves 

You can help support this ministry with a donation to Miles Chapel CME Church.

You can help support Rev. Graves’ work by visiting his personal blog and clicking the DONATE button on the right-hand sidebar.

Support by check or money order may be mailed to 
Miles Chapel CME Church
P O Box 132
Fairfield, Al 35064