Christian Chronicle (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 33, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 13, 1958 Page: 2 of 8
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CHRISTIAN CHRONICLE
May | j
1
1
Page 2
Guest Editorial
editorials ..
Rlackboand Nu^ldtno^
Brethren
1 tear
(XCHTUT
in
TO
rj
comfort
' *4
L
B
;1
Bret h ren
I lea r
b:
.1 re
help
Jlcuf, the tytHudtalia+t
SI 00 pw Y»*r In advance
1AMES W
NICHOIS
AM*
T«X»«. under the
jiiil
letters to
the editor
Brethren
sincere thanks
Barbara
Austin
Davidson
California
hat-
no<
ins
R
Wilmington
Hille,
Texas
work
Idaho
l>' • bl i
A P<
FAS
it
ha ve
thi'
of
Oclofeer 18. >944 •• the Pott
1879
you
If is
bro
th*
ACC. H»rt
of
on
at
TlUnc^i.
I
Ike J
destroyed simply because
. or our of
of dollars
and
1 could
-J former
nowby>»
M I
Port
working with
series hen it
" here nightly I
high school
.....1 about th*
to
same turn
Christian evident
tiiat from
than
that I
* news
recent
have
Irvin Christian
N C
r °
F<F <
■<>.
to
h< nil's
\nd, you
s.ivs. “l or
fend
at
• oilier
Weymouth
were W.
Mr. House
John and
but they were
My father passed away
My brother and
also decbased
now in her 88th
... JUST ONE UTT IE SIN-
THATS AU. THEY THO’T
IT WAS !!!
I fear
Our sincere thanks to
and your tine publication
a real inspiration to the
therhood
XVOIII•’ 11
mil coin.’
Thex
'pest
T"
opportunity to help lay the ready
work
use the
where i
it assist
i hren
(Col
<>( • et]
an a I
hope I
around
sing I
At hJ
dent •
cotnln
highly
McQu
Buildi
athlet
terest
here
proa.
uminds as deepl’
and
Summerlin
Arthur Tex
Brethren
wanted to
Mrs H H
Ingelwood
-
last hating
looking on
• k cd back
learning
Subt, riphont muii include mint and complete addratt
’••f issue C‘ ... ......
Entered a. .econd class manor,
— ----L. .I.j act of March 3,
Portland was
of Con
Streets
M Hous
The dea
Andrew
not
nd iM I®**
on luesday ot each wook except the leaf wook In Jon* * *y|en». I*
December Abilene Texet, by Fidelity Prow, Inc., Bo» ',Jy ___
you Sllfll
have al
Nigerian
I yon can
article (else
and may
wonderful lire
so much for
Office •>
u mutt include name and complete address or the, iSP’Et
Change of eddress notice should Include both old
ri***
Send all communication! and material to Box >739, Abilene Texe*.
TAOOI Office 'W $ Troadawav
) ct
faith
li i g lie I
than Pl,ii
and its
Why do our young people,
higher learning outside the brotherhood: why do
I a 11 h '
walked
same to them as
mg Freed Hardeman
In the first place they are away
the are at which they break
home open wide the gates to
minds were
those who
enme
did
tn rn
In
drix e
W8KHNION P«IC«J^ * |fc.
arc
In out (>u n minds, we
like drunkenness, adultery or cursing
prone to try to white wash and
mistakes that we
There
sharp tongue,
use of slang
associations st»i
from the apron
. what may’" Those <!><*
- fall the harUe«
immediately rebel and
themes tW
are re»dy w
I tea r Brethren
I cun never thank ■
• lentlv for what you
done for the
It is hoped that
■ attached
in this issue)
t hose
there doing
mu ny
unequippe,
Sl’lll awax
til meet xx
t hex iannot
d with
leading
.if anybody
x ersed xx it h
lie.| I
. i xx a x
I 'eopli
preacher
III.I I k
this • oil ise
\ lid in
XX rot e ba, k tn
becoming all
■ the theme •
lost meaning
on, I nd i n i; lines
xmi nr maii
m m I s 11 y then
. I 11 I X • ■ t s I t X
ba i k l mxx
h.ix e
• ritieisms ol
■i no greats
"Greek War Ixrrd": the Bible
of existence'
who attend schools nt
they lose their
Why do they not continue along as they hate former!.
and why does not prayer and godly deeds
to them as it does to our boys and girls at
Freed Hardeman and the rest 9 Why'
from former
loose
"come
most suppressed, when they fall
were forced" Into faith i..............
the opportunity- to find things that challenge
not willingly accept at home Of these many
from the faith, and do
the second place they want to be accepted,
for popular association belongs; and if it
(See Bl ACKBOARD NIGHTMARE. p»0e
1 am the oldest of the
children and at present
living here in California
Fogarty max have
second preacher to
to Maine but
1' alls
tor about 420 days work A
number of brethren who were
first transferred here have
made arrangements to stay on
The church is both young and
small, tint interested in work
and we need others to help do
needed work
Lewis T
Idaho
issue of April 22
article on the Fogarty broth
There is a statement con-
Fogarty moving
He was
the first preacher to move
By STANLEY E. SAYERS
Tulsa, Oklahoma
Have you ever awakened in the midst of a .
uncertain, fearful, totally aware yet unrealizing —|
ness with the emptiness of a lost security t
and touch things that tell you where you are.
of tinding landmarks of former things, associate c~
former acquaintances and then know all is xxel]— but"
The feeling ol being lost all by < -
on< e were, and the land
■
. I
l,'“ B
II. B
H
■
' f' ;B
t.u 'B
i B
< iB
- mH
i. B
a ■
tha' B
ma \ H
• la 11 H
be H
is a ■
mm ■
u d I
si
the I
lasti
whh
mm
strii
to t
only
• hat
tein
a G
shel
T
stra
tn Is
be
a 1
Hot
ass
(th
are
In the
an i
ers
cerning Jack
his family to Maine
not
his family to Maine.
Back in the summer of 1904
or 1905 my father. J. A. Hines,
began missionary work down
in the interior of Main under
the direction of the Portland
Maine Church He went back
each summer and in the early
summer of 1907 moved the
family consisting of wife and
four children to Portland where
he gave full time to the Port
land congregation We lived on
Taylor Street until October
190S. when we returned to
Ohio because of my father's
health
The
a while bai k who attended on*
k Last and he remarked, "They
! in God on that campus.'1 1 cob
who sat in an I (nation course to
xoung girl whose father had pasted
xe • lass to go home for the funeral
du- everx dav of a young gospel
• lass in which the opening re
hi intend to get anything out o(
X OU I
The norm*1
becotnM ***
3)
Christian families
opportunity of being
transferred with the Farns
xx ort h A- <' ha tuber s Co . Inc
Houston Texas, to work
then construction contratt
the National Reactor Testing
Station west of Idaho Falls, we
certainly would like to encour
age them to do so and to
with the church here
Most of the employees
mg at the site do live in I
The above contract calls
42b days work
brethren who
here
The United States Defense Department recently released
rhe bulletin that the latest Vanguard rocket failure was
to the failure of a
niulti-niillion dollar rocket was <
one extremely' small wire w as either broken, lost,
place.
We suppose that from a percentage, it could not have
represented more than one one-thousandth of one per
cent of the total mechanism, but it was enough to destroy
all of the other works.
How often is it that a good project becomes a failure
because of the break down of some unimportant phase'
How many worthy efforts never come into reality be-
cause some want to know who will get the credit-
How many times has the gospel been stopped because of
jealousy or cnvv: \nd vet, these are what many of us
yyould call little sins In our own minds, we certainly do
not class them as like drunkenness, adultery or
Wc so y cry often
pass of! .is really unimportant ‘‘little'
make. \\ e do not think they make any difference,
is nothing really wrong," wc reason, “with a
and a little gossiping now and then, or the
1 hese arc just little things."
Rut, you know , that xvirc yy as not so little It yy as enough
destroy millions of dollars of efforts and thousands of
of labor.
knoxy, there arc no little sms to Ciod. lames
whosoever shall keep the whole law, and vet of
in one point, he is guilty of all."
We need to stop right noyy and examine the little, minute
x\ ires in our lives.
Oldham
Fa Hr, Idaho
• I bclitv
tea' her
to a
o le.
thex
• geology
xx a s If
s xx ell throxx youi Bibles out the windox
I lear the sobbing tones of a young mat
xx ho xx rote ba< k to one of <mr Christian colleges saying that h«
xxas bei oming an itheist and as the former things of God. the
Bible the theme of i ighteonsness temperam e and judgment to
come lost meaning he km xx that much of his life was gone: in
his coni hiding line- he a-ked tot those who cared to pray
(if a voting man xx ho attended one of our schools to prepare
tot the ministry then xxent axvax to get his further schooling in 1
iiopiil.it aiiixeisitx to iti'xer enter the church doors again I
•hink bai r uoxx hoxx that oxer the past fexx years young met
tiid xxoinen h.ixe i i tm back home ovei the weekends, from
" liool ind coin;' to i buri Ii xxas not what it xxas when the) e®
tolled' I bex haxe oiiiie to me during the training series in
'he deepest concern ovei difficulties confronting them in arch
aeology. science anthropology and the social sciences and phil
osophy • nurses In seconds one could sense the deepening •<»
roxx and the rising turmoil growing within these young souli
a turmoil that in xears must turn into rebellion and come he®*
at last hating the church'
I love them for I feel their
and forth by the whims
to hear Jesus called a simple man
and God compared to a '------
stories rationalized out
do our young people, the 90%
By JAMES D BALES
Searcy, Arkansas
It is not often that a student Ims the <.......... .......
foundation of a school Every generation does not have the priv-
ilege of being the student body which < rentes the spirit which
"ill influence the school for years to come
Sm h an opportunity however, is presented to the students who
will form the first student body of Magic Valiev Christian Col
lege The College is to open its doors next fall under the capable
leadership of Dr George \V DeHoff He and I were roommates
in Harding College as we]] as in George Peabodv College for
Teachers in Nashville. Tennessee It is with gratitude that I have
seen him render service after service Io the cause ,,f Chiist and
now I am thankful that he has acept,M this challenge and is
^ntcrin^ into <i now phnsp of sorviep
Brother DeHoff is sound in the faith zealous energetic and a
inan of vismn My prayer is that God will give him many years
of fruitful labor in his work m Magi, Valiev Christian College
it would he very fine >f at least 15 dedicated voung people, who
are now finishing their Freshman vear in each of the colleges
maintained by our brethren would determine to take their sec
• md year in Magi, Valiev Christian College Also It would be fine
if some finishing high school in H0Int. of tlu, w.h<M>|8 mnintnlT1Prt
hv brethren would go to help make up the freshman class
Why not decide to make your contribution to the building of a
school spirit at Magi, Valley Christian College a spirit which
will mfluence fo, the good the student bodies which will make
up Magic Valley Christian College in rears to come
chin i h
located at the
gress and
The elders
ton and a
cons were
Anderson,
related
in 1925 My brother and one
sister are also decbased My
due mother now in her 88th year
minute wire in its electronic brain. This ,1>'' youngest daughter, live
in Ohio
four
and
Jack Fogarty max have been
the second preacher to move
his family to Maine but we
moved there and back 50 years
ago
I lea r
I wanted to tell VOU
am enjoying the vigorou
presentation in the
Christian Chronicles
read
* ' £ idfSp
,eft
try'n» to r8tc|^,
a'“d in th®
r’UUto
feeling of being lost all by oneself' All the
things not as thex once were, and the land occupied
things one cannot fathom, save to know that they are yhxf«»-
they aie things that haxe removed the past with
and assuring nearness It is "the tragedy in the little red »i
house" "the blackboard nightmare" this something thet
to pass within the intellectual and emotional faculties of
teenager leaving home to go away to a college or
ami there begin to learn facts." facts that say "The Bible |g
book of fables, and God is a myth!" ’
()xei the past y, ai I have had the rare delight of
Brother Alan Bryan in the "Training for Service” i
Tulsa at the Dallas seiies at Sunset Church x ’
stood before the youthful laces of better than 200 1
students mitdoois in ., large tent talking with them
nature of then pieetous faith and how to keep it from going
ruin In Oklahoma City the following week with the
sage to the high sepool teachers themselves
Detei mined that the young shall secure their hearts'"
I am deeply disturbed that our young people today are brought
almost unequipped from our Bible schools, our pulpits andon’
homes seni axvax to a college or university with a great sound
ing name, to meet with arguments that tear their faith to shreds
been Us, t hex i a n not a lis w er '
I talked xx it h one x oung man
ol on i leading ii n I x ersi I les b;
laugh at anybody xx h
a x • m II,’
the professor say
and w ho .x a nted t
re like docs,
who sat III
f the plofessol
vou had .
I h is do \
one ,
Itheist
f I ighteousness
he
he
xx hi
went a wax
to nex er enter
hoxx t (mt oxer the
I ollie back home
to i hiireli was not
ha X e
• on, et n
science
, oil rses
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Nichols, James W. Christian Chronicle (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 33, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 13, 1958, newspaper, May 13, 1958; Abilene, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1306738/m1/2/: accessed July 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Christian University Library.