Bronze Reporter [Volume: 1, Issue: 8]
. Saturday, January 9, 1954 THE BRONZE. REPC ORTER | Prc- ~Three ~DIRECTORY METHODIST: SERVICES Bethel: Methodist Church Liberty. at Twelfth Streets ~ rhe Rev. W. Ez Teague; Pastor x * * Blac ~12384 Central Ave. The Rev.., Le Mm Bugg, Pastor Dézier thie bce Chuich North and Pasadena. Streets The Rev.. T. Kennie, Pastor oe a Chapel, C.M.E. Church:.: Campau: Street: The: Rev. S.: B: Cummins. * ek Quinn Chapel: A.M.E. Chareh 121 East Seventh Street; The Rev, F: B: Jones, Pastor { + ee Vékson Chapel A.M.~.: Church St. John and. Rhode Island Sts. e Rev. S. Davis, Pastor. CHURCH OF GOD Church of. God: in Christ Black: and Shelby Streets Eider Markham, Pastor: * ~ *. Church of. God.~ 1242 Florida: Ave. The Rev. P. Jj Cox, Pastor CATHOLIC SERVICES Church. of. Christ The. King The Rev Father Norman. Dukette Thirteenth and Clifford; Sts. Sunday Service 8:30 and 11 a.m.: Public is welcome xk * Wirbciins Christian -Church Lippincott and Winans Sts, The Rev. T. Courts, Pastor BAPTIST. SERVICES Antioch Missionary Baptist ' Church 1083. Stewart Ave, The Rev. L. _ Vet Brxor, ~Pastor _ (Canaan Sinadilg Church: | 910) East Gillespie. St f The, Rev. T. T- Newman * * Golden Leaf Baptist 916 Jamieson St. won The Rev. W. A. Vaughn; Pastor ee ee Macedonia. Baptist Church 1130- Hickory St, The Rev. Ira Watkins, Pastor * * & Metropolitan Baptist Tabernacle | 8989 Industrial Ave. They Rev. E.:J Timmons, Pastor * * * { Mount Calvary. Baptist ' | 3017 Industrial Ave... ~ The Rev. M: Montgomery, Pastor * * Mount Olive Baptist 424. East Kennelworth The Rev. R. R. Turpin, Pastor * * * New Zion Baptist 3517 St. John Street The Rev.~ P. J. Yancey, Pastor *x* ke * Shiloh Baptist Church St: John and Massachusetts Ave. The Rev. C. R. Neal, Pastor Please List- Your Church With The kwell A. M. E. Zion. Church thinketh he. standeth take: heed: Bronze Reporter Veselsky Modern at Shoe Repair i NATIONAL BRAND~: SHOES. Free Shines. ~NEW LACES WITH EVERY | | HALF~ SOLE. JOB 1617S. SAGINAW Text: Wherefore. let him: that lest. he fall. 1 Cor. 10-12: Seripture Lesson Rom, 1: 1-16;: David~s awful trespass against his captain Joab. against. the Amonites with the result: that ~they were destroyed. Militarian triumphs on: every hand so different from the streneosity of. his flights from king Saul. In the eve after a great yvictory, David, a man after God's own heart, and walked out upon the roof of Uriah the Hitite, being a great warrior and king of Israel, he abused this: great power to steal another man~s wife and to kill ~| him with the sword. It seems' that most people find it. comparatively~ easy to be good in adversity but hard to do right when things go well. - There is a true saying in this + connection which runs: The devil was sick, the devil a monk would be the devil got well, the: devil a monk. was she. he Most of us will find the greatest temptations in those points where we are strong, with the knowledge that we are susposed to be strong along certain lines, has a tendency to urge us on towards. recklessness. It is said that it is usually the good swimmers that are drowned, because they are liable to~ venture out too far from shore; but the poor swimmer or the ones who cannot swim at all doesn~t risk going very deep. but little boats must. keep. near the shore. Some people can~t stand pros or political linies so often serve as one~s undoing; den Coolidge made stand to be President for two turned. in the Island off. Corsica way toFrance where he became a poor student) in the Military school at Brienne. No one paid any marked attention to this shy dark lad, but one day, years after that, a crisis arose in France. The streets of Paris were dyed with ~human blood; in this condition of things Napoleon, at the| age of 30, put down the mobs, restored order and suddenly found in his hands mere power than had come to any other man of France up to that time. Rapidly he ~ascended the heights of power precipitately he descended on the other side to Ellaor Elba and | then to St. Helena ~ he died in exile. ' As it~ has been among individuals, so has it been in nations. Dr, Harry Emerson Fosdick noted Baptist clergyman of New York City, has: said that history) is strewn with corpses of | nations. that. have. been blown over the precipiee of their own power. It~s a long list:! Egypt, Assyria, Media, Persia, Greece, Rome, Spain, Babylon and Germany. Dr. Fosdick says that it is not the sprigs, the shrubs, or the bushes: against~ which the wind spends its greatest: force, but. it is the tall pines, firs and.oaks of the forest that are uprooted by the: storms; So it is in life. It isn~t always the~ weak, non-ithportant that | meet the greatest opposition; but Uriah was committed. during, the |~ height of his. power. He had just} 3 slain forty thousand soldiers of | # the Assyrians; He had: also. sent @ Great ships may venture out | perity in so many lines. A good}.. education, a latge sum of money, || great influence in business, social |} in many in-|, stances at the first the pressure): ~ - is too great. Year's ago Ex-Presi-|:. a statement }m> ~.to this effect that no man could |!~ ~it is usually the man or woman who has reached: the heights that arose from his bed a Franklin. B, Jones, Minister Quin Chapel AME Church must take heed. | It is not the ne~er do well or scala ways of the community that must be on guard as much as it is those who bear a reputation for christian character and moral rectitude. It is the) christians who are regarded as the salt of the earth. But if the salt has lost its savor where withal shall it be salted it is thenceforth good for nothing, but to be trod den under the feet of men. St. Paul once said. let him that 4: + battles. | Stand therefore having your loins ) shield of faith, thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall. He knew the danger of a great ~spiritual power and thus: he wrote {to the Corinthians concerning a +spiritual experience fi years. ago (Whether in the body~ | 1 cannot tell or out of'the body I ~ne had 14 cannot tell God knoweth) he was caught up into the third heaven ~and paradise where he ~words. unspeakable which are unlJawfal.for a man to utter. I don~t expedient for me to glory bit it was. a glorious experience. We: are running a great race. or swift. We are fighting and we are forging against many things. We have our~ material battles, we have our social. and. moral battles. we have our intellectual batties, we have our = spiritual How can you~ stand? girtled about. with truth. The breastplate of righteousness, having.on the girtle of truth, the feet shod with the preparation of the Gospel of \peace. Stand and when you can~t stand}.stand anyway. The old soldier of Christ caught. in the storm said, ride. on Jesus. 3 Month Appointment Given. Rev. | Fi. LE Jones of ~ Baptist Church terms.without having~ his head|'.~ Napoteon was a poor boy, born ei in~ the| t= Mediterranean Sea. He made his|~ Rev. A: J. Jones 1 During~ the illness of Rev. W. A. Vaughn, pastor of Golden Leaf Baptist Church, Rev, Jones 7| will be * St. John 3:3. ~|has been appointed to serve Rev. Vaughn~s congregation, He (Rev. Jones) was highly recommended by this pastor, Rev. Li W.. Pryor, ~of. Antioch Missionary Baptist '<|| Church. The suisy ect of bev: Jones. text: a for~ Sunday, January 10, 1954, ~The New Birth~ from { Seashore sand at Beppu in Japan ts~ black, hot to the touch, and gives-off sulphur fumes: Thousands of people go there to lie for hours, even days, covered by the pulverized voleanic debris,. which they hope will: cure their ailments.; Bituminous coal accounts for 80 percent of all:the- energy produced ' from mineral fuelg and water power in all, states east of the Missis~sippi river: Fintioch Missionary Baptist Church ~A FRIENDLY CHURCH~ WHERE EVERYBODY |IS SOMEBODY ~We enter to worship~ and we depart to service.~ We, the members of Antioch Baptist Church wish to commend ~our young minister, Rev. Andrew Jones, for the fine service that he is doing in the absence of Rev. W. A. Vaughn at the Golden Leal We do: bid Rev. Jones. God~s Speed. And the Lord will ever hold His hands of mercy upon him. Those that know the worth of prayer, pray for Rev. Vaughn that the Lord will ever touch and heal his~ body. | We feel our members: did a fine job for the first Sunday in January 3, 1954, ' Réyv.. L. W: Pryor, Pastor, Mrs Jeanette Bell, Reporter Baptist. Church. on, Jamieson. St. 1. Purveyor is. a person. who. furnishes. s' 2.. The front, part of bullam, (c) Anus, | (b)~one; (c): three?; word) for (a) a shoplifter; plies; (c) a skilled technician. brain is the (a) ~cerebrum; (b) cere 3. How many U. 8. presidents: ~were born in June: (a) none; (b) 8 | ANSWERS Boas Xe seqsjusng *200N 3, wniqei29 * heard: like: to boast of this for it is not. The battle is not to the strong~ Rev. Robert H. Harper Jesus and Nicodemus: Jobn 3: 1-16 Golden: Text: Jobm 3: 16 Nicodemus is known as the mam who came.to Jesus. by night, and many: have. believed he was: ~afraid: to come by day. But later he coop-. erated. with Joseph of: Arimathaea: in lasing the body. of Jesus. aways hew a man ~could be born again. And: there are-many. to the present time who. have: never learned. the way andithe how of the new: birth. A great: preacher in London, heary. ing the-celebrated young Summerfield preach, afterward asked ~the young man where he had been born. ~In Dublin and in Liverpool.~* was the answer. ~How can that. be?~ the great. preacher asked. - Summerfield. replied with a.ques tion, in. the. words of Jesus. im speaking to Nicodemus, ~~Art. thou. a master in Israel and knowestnot:these things?~~ By-faith in Christ, men may be born again and enter into new life for the-soul. Reader, do you trust in Jesus as the-savior of your. soul? John. Wesley was long without the assurance that he was the deemed child of God, a new-born. - man, But in his memorable experi ence in. the Aldersgate Street Church in London, as one was..reading the Scripture, he felt his-heart strangely~ warmed, and was. given the assurance that God for Christ~s - sake had* forgiven his sins and made him an heir of everlasting life: Let us find such an assurance through our faith in Jesus Christ, the Savior of men.. Seientists: say that. continued research over the past 20 years had& tTe-:. raised~ the average egg production. per hen from one every three oe to one every two days. A. floating post office, perhaps. the first in the world, has. been introduced for tourists in Kashmir, Indias A house boat visits all boats on.the: Dal Lake, distribut -ing and collecting. mail and trang acting other postal business. > Spleens anadn/crdnaineta vik peta | Funeral Sprays SHEILA~S FLOWERS. (24 Hour Service) ~SAY IT WITH FLOWERS~ Weddings ~ Flowers Fit Any Occasion! ~ 2518 S. Saginaw St. Telephone: 4-5609" heh ak wel Rat dew
About this Item
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- Bronze Reporter [Volume: 1, Issue: 8]
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- Page 3
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- Flint, MI
- January 9, 1954
- Subject terms
- African Americans -- Michigan -- Flint -- Newspapers
- Flint (Mich.) -- Newspapers
- Genesee County (Mich.) -- Newspapers
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- Black Community Newspapers of Flint
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"Bronze Reporter [Volume: 1, Issue: 8]." In the digital collection Black Community Newspapers of Flint. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/35177303.0001.008. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 6, 2025.