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14 The Hampton Roads Messenger


Hampton Roads To list your church here, call 757.575.1863


Church Directory Norfolk First Baptist Church,


Logan Park 7493 Diven Street Norfolk, Virginia 23505 www.fbcloganpark.com 757-423-0407


Mount Gilead Missionary


Baptist Church 1057 Kennedy St. Norfolk, VA 23513 (757) 853-3721


Second Calvary Baptist


Church 2940 Corprew Avenue Norfolk, Virginia 23504 www.secondcalvary.org 757.627.SCBC (7222)


Queen Street Baptist


Church Glenn E. Porter, Sr., Pastor 413 E Brambleton Ave Norfolk, VA 23510 www.qsbcva.org (757) 622-4458


Faith Christian Center


Church 1066 Norview Ave, Norfolk, VA 23513 www.fccnorfolk.com


(757) 857-1336


Portsmouth Grove Baptist Church 5910 W Norfolk Rd Portsmouth www.grovebaptistchurch.com (757) 484-4149


Hampton


Sixth Mount Zion Baptist Temple 3100 Butternut Dr, Hampton, VA 23666 (757) 896-6050


Newport News


Ivy Baptist Church 50 Maple Ave Newport News, VA 23607 www.ivybaptistchurch.org (757) 245-1781


Virginia Beach


New Light Full Gospel Baptist Church 5549 Indian River Road Virginia Beach, VA 23464 757.420.2397


Pleasant Grove Baptist Church


2153 Kempsville Rd Virginia Beach, VA 23464 (757) 479-1239


Chesapeake


Bethany Baptist Church 2587 Campostella Rd, Chesapeake, VA 23324 (757) 543-5887


Suffolk


Oak Grove Baptist Church 2635 E Washington St Suffolk, VA 23434 www.oakgrovebaptist.net (757) 539-8012


Our Faith


“If You Do What Is Right, Will You Be Accepted?” By Rev. Dr. Gregory Headen


If you do what


is right, will you be accepted? The question arises: “Will I not be accepted by whom?”


Doing well or


doing what is right might not win for us the acceptance


of everybody. It is God’s acceptance that ultimately matters. Could it be that we give most of our energy to winning the acceptance and approval of people instead of God? Who will have the last word concerning our lives? Who will determine our eternal state? We have another opportunity


to commune together and to witness baptism. We are reminded again of two very important truths of our faith. First, God loved us so much that he made the way for us to escape death by sending his Son to die in our place. The supper reminds us of this. Secondly, we respond to God’s great act of love by faith, repentance and surrender. Baptism is an act of obedient


surrender to the Lord of life. After this surrender, should follow a life of


surrender and acts of obedience to the Lord’s commands. The New Testament gives a different spin question God put to Cain in Genesis 4:6 “If you do well, shall you not be accepted?” (NKJV). In Christ, God declares that you and I have already been accepted. Every human being on the


earth wants to be accepted, loved, and appreciated. At times, we pretend that this does not matter to us, but deep inside we worry about whether we are accepted by God and by those we love. We are concerned that society and peers accept us. We go to great lengths to find acceptance. Yet, God has a way of wrapping his arms around us and reassuring us of his love. If Jesus will walk with us, we can keep going. If we can touch the hem of his garment, we will be whole. At the root of this is telling the truth. The truth is that we need a savior to help us find our true selves. If we do not speak this truth, we


cheat ourselves out of salvation. To believe is to believe it all. How can you believe that a Savior has come and not believe that you were lost? One assumes the other. Thank God we are found now


Volume 7 Number 11


July 2013


Your Opinion Matters Nelson Mandela’s Long Goodbye Has Lessons for All of Us


BY: SANDIP ROY Nelson Mandela is dying.


Hard as it is to accept the fact, the world has to come to terms with it. It's not surprising that South


Africans are praying for his recovery. But perhaps a final gesture of gratitude to the man who is indisputably the Father of the Nation is to pray for his peaceful death. Or passing. Or transition. If those euphemisms offer some solace and sound less final than death.


Nelson Mandela is almost 95. He


has been in and out of hospital three times this year. Newsrooms around the world have probably gotten his obituary ready more than once. His health has gone up and down, each “recovery” a little slower than the previous one. The man's body is tired. Reports say he has not opened his eyes in days and is largely unresponsive.


But as a society, we now have the


medical capability to prolong life to a degree our grandparents could never imagine. Every day in hospitals all over, elderly patients, entirely non-functional, unable to register anything, are hooked up to ventilators offering some semblance of life and hope to the family around them. And it's a lucrative source of revenue for hospitals which always seem very eager to strap on the ventilator and charge a hefty fee. A doctor friend once told me that the ventilator was meant as a temporary breathing assistance for a young person who might have had some traumatic injury or illness but who hopefully would fully bounce back to life afterwards. It was never meant to be a semi-permanent breathing solution for a person already dying.


I am not implying at all the hospital


in Pretoria has ulterior motives in prolonging Mandela's life. It's just that determining what is the natural end of a life has become increasingly more complicated and fraught for all of us.


All my grandparents died at home.


It does not mean the deaths were easy and peaceful. One grandfather died in his sleep, one from a stroke in his sixties. My grandmothers both died after painful struggles with cancer. My great grandfather lived hale and hearty till 95, had a stroke, and as he lay in bed, unable to speak, kept pointing to a curtain. It was askew and obviously deeply bothered him. He was a particular man. It was fixed to his satisfaction. The next day he died peacefully with minimum fuss.


Now the advancement of medical


technology has meant a longer life, as well as the hope of recovery from illnesses that felled our grandparents. But it has also meant we can cling on to life with greater tenaciousness and artificiality. Visiting a great-aunt at a hospital not so long ago, I tried to reconcile the jolly beaming woman I knew with the shapeless lump under a hospital sheet, tethered to tubes and a ventilator, reduced to a line on a monitor, silent except for the shuddering intake of breath. Once she looked at me, and her eyes were so full of pain and questions, I had to drop my gaze.


It is hard to let loved ones go.


Sometimes it's because the children scattered around the world need to come. But mostly it's because we keep hoping for miracles, that she will get better. At 95 Nelson Mandela, even if he comes out of hospital one more


time, is not likely to get better. But we still hope. "Nelson Mandela, for me, is like my father," Alex Siake, a South African, said in Pretoria. "Every day, I just pray that he can recover quickly and be among us again."


However even as we cling to life,


no one wants to cling to suffering. The other day I remember worrying about how upset my mother would be about the death of a close friend. But to my surprise, she was almost envious that her friend had died after a stroke in the bathroom without any apparent suffering. The vision of an old age with a broken hip, spiraling diabetes, or a new cancerous tumour, stuck full of needles in an ICU is an ever present terrifying nightmare as we grow older.


But for those around the patient,


it's hard to let go because it feels wrong to pull the plug on a loved one. We are not used to, or comfortable, playing God in that fashion. We are plagued by hope against hope. Often the people closest to the dying, the ones likely to be most affected, are the ones who come to terms with letting go. It's the son who lives abroad, rushing in at the last moment, who desperately wants to prolong life by throwing every medical advancement at a tired and battered weary body.


Mandela's daughter Makiziwe


is quoted as saying she is praying his "transition is smooth". But Daliwe Bida, a resident of Mandela's native village told the media, ""We are praying non-stop because we don't know what can happen if he leaves us." One can understand the stakes are that much higher when it's a person of the stature of Nelson Mandela. The pressure to keep the man alive almost reaches the point of wanting to keep him immortal.


South Africans have been asked to


pray for his recovery as if praying for his death would appear ungrateful. As long as he is physically alive he gives a certain reassurance to his nation, and even to the world. Unlike many other statesmen, his stature has not faded around the world even though he has long left office because his stature was never really tied to his office. It preceded him becoming the President of South Africa and lived on after he relinquished that post. In fact, it grew even more powerful that the man who could easily have been South Africa's president for life, in a continent where many freedom-fighting founding fathers chose to do just that, decided to retire.


Yet in his long goodbye, Nelson


Mandela is also teaching us something. That no matter how much we want to hold on to something or someone, sometimes we have to let them go. Nelson Mandela has given a lot the world. To let go of Nelson Mandela is perhaps the greatest gift of gratitude the world can offer him at this point.


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