Media Pg 1 - Prayers Across Texas
Transcription
Media Pg 1 - Prayers Across Texas
Volume 111 — Number 22 Tuesday, March 15, 2016 www.lampasasdispatchrecord.com 75 Cents A CALL FOR TEXANS TO PRAY Former Tarleton quarterback, now a Houston pastor, seeks national revival By JIM LOWE Staff Writer Dr. Johnny Teague, senior pastor of Church at the Cross in Houston, has had some challenging assignments over the years. Quarterbacking for the Tarleton State University Texans for four years. Completing five academic degrees. Serving as a Pfizer pharmaceuticals sales representative. Then taking on a church with only 16 members that had just split and building it up to a congregation of 700. But one of his current endeavors very well may be his most ambitious yet: conducting a prayer service in each of Texas’ 254 counties. On a cold, rainy evening last week, Teague met with some 20 local residents. He talked about different crises facing the United States, and how prayer and spiritual awakening can dramatically alter America’s rocky path. Last Thursday’s Prayers Across Texas rally originally was to have been held on the steps of the Lampasas County Courthouse. But inclement weather drove the event indoors to the commissioners courtroom. County Judge Wayne Boultinghouse, First Baptist Church Pastor Dr. Rick Willis and other citizens were on hand. Teague, a native of Glen Rose who still visits his farm there every week, pastors a church in WEATHER Date High Low Rain March 10 60 55 0.44 March 11 63 57 0.95 March 12 71 55 0.39 March 13 81 52 2016 rainfall total: 5.34 inches. Same date last year: 3.47 inches. Normal through this date: 5.32 inches. Data from the National Weather Service through the Lampasas Municipal Airport. BRIEFLY Jubilee Lometa’s 46th annual Diamondback Jubilee will be March 25-26 at Lometa Regional Park. Activities March 25 will start at 7 p.m. with free mutton busting. The Miss Diamondback Rodeo Queen will be crowned, and a jackpot rodeo will begin at 7:30 p.m. Later, there will be a dance with music by The Rivera Brothers Band. Activities March 26 will start at 10 a.m. with the rattlesnake display. Other events that day will include cookoffs, an Easter egg hunt and goat roping. PHOTO BY JIM LOWE Juanita Ray visits with Houston pastor Dr. Johnny Teague on Thursday at the county courthouse after Teague led local residents in prayer for the nation. The Southern Baptist pastor hopes to conduct prayer efforts in all of Texas’ 254 counties within a four-year period. west Houston that is 80 percent African-American. “They put up with a white pastor,” he said with a laugh. He made reference to the Republican presidential debate hosted by CNN the same night as the prayer event. And he asked those in attendance if they could name the two political parties that he said are mentioned in the Bible. Citing an Old Testament passage from Judges 21:25, Teague said the people in one of the parties did “what was right in their own eyes.” In other words, they were guided by their own whims, not by eternal principles. But the other party, he said, is described in 1 John 5:1. Its members are those who believe “that Jesus is the Christ.” The latter party determines to do what God wants. Teague said 1 John 5:14 states that those who have asked Christ to be their Savior can have confidence their prayers will make a difference. The passage says simply: “This is the assurance we have in approaching God: that if we ask anything according to His will, He hears us.” The following verse adds: “And if we know that He hears us – whatever we ask – we know that we have what we asked of Him.” A lot of people believe you can ask God for anything you want, and He will give it to them, Teague told his listeners. But the key to having one’s prayers answered is that they need to be “according to His will,” he said. In today’s culture, a person who is pregnant may pray for an abortion, Teague said. Or if a person is unhappy with his or her spouse, the person may pray for a divorce. Or, if someone is homosexual, he may pray for a relationship with another man, he said. But rather than “doing what is right in one’s own eyes” -- as was the case in the relativistic culture mentioned in Judges – people need to realize, Teague said, that “God sets parameters to protect us. He doesn’t want us to mess up our lives.” Reading from “The American Patriot’s Bible,” which tells how Scripture shaped America, the Houston pastor mentioned 2 Kings. There, the contrasts between a bad king, Ahaz, and a good king – his son Hezekiah who succeeded him – are stark. Ahaz, the Bible records, “did Please see PRAYING, page 8 Congregation: Church at the Cross, Houston, Texas. Senior pastor. His church is affiliated with the Southern Baptist Convention. Express. Tried out for the Houston Oilers pro football team in 1988. Athletic accomplishments: Quarterbacked for four years at Tarleton. Took 18-20 hours of semester course work, taught math labs and played football at same time. Played semipro football for the Houston How can you pray for him? For people to be receptive as he calls them to repentance and prayer for the U.S. He also asks for prayer for pastors and county judges in the cities where he will take the project. Prayer efforts to date: Has led prayer rallies in 36 counties Also leads: Prayers Across since last June. Goal is to reach Texas, an organization that all of Texas’ counties within seeks to mobilize prayer four years. gatherings at the courthouses in all 254 counties in Texas. Notable support: His own church members; the Southern Background: Holds five Baptist Convention; and the academic degrees. Two Walk to Emmaus spiritual bachelor’s degrees from renewal program. Tarleton State University – one in mathematics, the other Recent visits: Huntsville last in accounting; an MBA from Tuesday. the University of Houston in marketing; a Master of Divinity Attendance: Smallest turnout with Biblical Languages was five people; largest, 300, at from Southwestern Baptist Hallettsville in Lavaca County. Theological Seminary in Fort Because of rain, had to meet Worth; and a doctorate, also indoors. Standing room only; from the same seminary, with people in hallways, as well. an emphasis on expositional preaching. Has worked for A favorite hobby: Studying Shell Oil Co. in Houston as an presidential history. Has been accountant and for Pfizer as a to all 50 states and to the home pharmaceutical representative. of every U.S. president. Sales tax growth continues for Lampasas, Lometa By GAIL LOWE Staff Writer First-quarter sales tax returns have been good for the cities of Lampasas and Lometa, but not so much for Kempner. Both Lampasas and Lometa have recorded double-digit percentage gains in February and March, along with respectable sales tax gains for January, while Kempner has seen negative returns each month dating back to December. The March payment of $125,356 brings Lampasas’ 2016 sales tax total to $445,188, or an annual increase of 11 percent. The city’s February and March figures each represent monthly gains of 12 percent. In Lometa, the March sales tax allocation of $5,374 was up 18 percent over the comparable period last year. Receipts in 2016 are up 13 percent compared to the first quarter of 2015 with a total received of $19,687. For Kempner, the $9,949 payment this month translated to an 8 percent drop in sales tax revenues. March rebates to Texas cities are based on sales made in January that were reported to the state comptroller in February. Through the first three months of the year, Kempner shows a sales tax total of $31,779 which is 6 percent less than it accumulated for the first quarter of 2015. Among cities in the neighboring counties, Goldthwaite has started 2016 with the most economic promise. Its sales tax receipts already are up 61 over what it collected the first three months of 2015. The city more than doubled its March rebate from Please see CITIES, page 10 PHOTO BY DEREK MOY Kline Whitis Elementary Principal Mitzi Morin plans to retire this summer. Legacy of learning From student to principal, Mitzi Morin has cherished her role Correction A Briefly item in the March 11 edition incorrectly described the time change that took effect Sunday. Clocks should have been set ahead one hour for daylight saving time. By DEREK MOY Staff Writer TEXAS PRESS ASSOCIATION BETTER NEWSPAPER CONTEST AWARD WINNER 2015 Repeat regional title Hill Country Publishing Co., Inc. About Johnny Teague PHOTO BY JEFF LOWE Jason Ayers squats at the Region 2 Division 2 powerlifting meet on Saturday. The Badger senior won the 114-pound weight class at regionals for the second year in a row, earning a trip to state. Please see related story and photos, page 5. Kline Whitis Elementary School Principal Mitzi Morin will retire June 30 after serving as head of the school for 15 years. She attended Kline Whitis Elementary as a student for grades 3-5. After graduating from Lampasas High School, she attended Texas A&M University and became a first-grade teacher. After 11 years at a school district in College Station, she headed back “home.” “My dad just planted a seed one day about, ‘You ever consider coming back home?’ ” she said. “And I had not. We were very happy where we were, and I didn’t have any thoughts of coming back home… Things started to grow and happen out of that, so I decided to come back.” Mrs. Morin started as a Reading Recovery teacher at Kline Whitis Elementary. “[Principal Mickey] Edwards didn’t have any first-grade positions, but he had a Reading Recovery position, which worked with first-graders,” she said. “I didn’t want that job, but it turned out to be the best thing because I learned and grew so See PRINCIPAL, page 10 SPRING CREEK CONSTRUCTION COMPANY
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