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About The voice. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1946-195? | View Entire Issue (July 20, 1950)
j \phwidtsL&' Quiun Chapel 4. M. K. Oh arch 6th and C Streets Rev. J. B. Brooks, Pastor. 6:00 p. m. Young Peoples Fellowship 7:30 p. m. Evening Service 9:45 a. in. Sunday School 10:45 a. m. Morning Worship Tuesday 8:00 p. ra.. Prayer meeting North side Church of God. 23rd and T Street. 10:00 a. m. Church School. 11:00 a. m. Morning Worship. 7:30 p. m. Evening Worship. 7:30 p. m. Midweek Prayer Meeting. 7:30 p. m. Friday Bible Study. For place of meeting call 2-4673. Alton Chapel. (Seventh-day Adventist) Recount Butler, Associate Pastor. 9:45 a. m. Sabbath School. 10:45 a. m. Missionary Meeting. 11:00 a. m. Morning Worship. 4:00 p. m. Young People’s Society. CHRIST TEMPLE Church oi Christ (Holiness) 2149 U Street. Pho- i 2-3901 Rev. V. O. McWilliams, Jr., 'astor. Rev T. T. McWilliams, Sr.. Ass’t. Pastor. Order of Worship. Sunday School, 10 a. m. Morning Worship, 11 a. m. Service at Carver Nursing Home, 2001 Vine Street, 5 o’clock. Evening Service. 7:30 p m. Mt. Zion Baptist Church. Rev. W. L Monroe, Pastor. Corner 12th and F Streets. 10:00 a. m. Sunday School. 11:00 a. m. Morning Worship. 6:30 p. m. Baptist Training Union. 8:00 p. m. Evening Worship. Newman Methodist, 23rd 4 S. 9 :45 a. m_ Church School. 6:30 p. m. Methodist Youth Fellowship. 11:00 a. m. Morning Worship. CME Methodist Church. 3030 T Street. First and Third Sundays. Rev. J. W. Simpson, Pastor. 9:30 a. m. Sunday School. 10:3*' a. m. Methodist Training Union. 11:00 a. m. Morning Worship. Church of God In Christ. 9:00 a. m. Sunday school. 11:00 Morning worship. 6:30 p. m. Y. P. W. W. 8:00 p. m. Evening worship. • 8:0ti p. m. Tuesaay and Friday regular service. Prayer oand 9 p. m. Junior church serv ice. 7:30 p. m. Thursday prayer and Bible pastor. Rev. Charles Williams. - Plans BY REV. FRANK CLARENCE LOWRY FOR ANP 1. Isn’t it strange when you consider with what t care man builds other things, but takes a chance without any planning to obtain his eternal wings? 2. Things of no special impor tance he seems ever to put first, but those requiring special spir itual planning, if at all, are con sidered last. 3. The whole world is common ly affected by man’s choice and ability to plan, but when God is left out of his reasoning, things begin to slip and get out of hand. 4. With that high degree of intellect with which man has been endowed, it would seem that God, in every step of his planning would have every reason to be justly proud. 5. But rather, man has en couraged the catch-and-g r a b habit, not letting God in his plans, to come too near—and when things begin to get out of kilter he begins to quake and fear. 6. Then as children begin to enter in upon this pathetic scene, they too are wafted into this Maelstrom and begin to droop and lean. 7. Their plans then in like man ner begin to reflect an unwhole some design, and real men and women from year to year become more difficult to find. 8. If this world is to undergo a change and be saved of its oncoming illfate, then for youth, our best men and women, must now lay plans before, it is too 4£te. 9. Incogitant, insatiable and given to chicanery and greed for gold, we are drifting daily into moral darkness, and our richest treasures are being sold. 10. Eternal planning is the only answer—that simple thing for which Christ came; to restore light for utter darkne?* and set this worki ieto a spiritual flame. Sunday School \ Lesson SAMUEL THE UPRIGHT JUDGE Scripture: I Sam. 2:26; 3:1-10, 19-21, 7:3-6, 15-16; 12:1-5. Memory Selection: And Samuel grew, and the Lord was with him, and did let none of his words fall to the ground. I Sam. 3:19. We have for our consideration today a man who occupies a prominent place in the history of Israel. He was the last of the judges—those local officials who for a period of more than four hundred years after the Hebrews entered the promised land ruled each one his own territory and people. Samuel occupies a unique place in the history ’of the nation. “In this crisis of the chosen peo ple, second only in importance to the exodus, there appeared a leader second only to Moses. Amidst the wreck of the ancient institutions, of the country, amidst the rise and growth of the new, there was one counsellor to whom all turned for advice and support . . . Samuel was not a founder of a new state of things like Moses, not a champion of the existing order of things like Elijah or Jeremiah. He stood literally be tween the two—between the liv ing and the dead, between the past and the future, between the old and the new with sympathy for each at such a period is the best hope of any solution of any q u e st i o n which tormented.” (Stanley) Present Day Application BY FREDERICK JORDAN In addition to the qualities com mon to all leadership, the re ligious leader must have a vital religious experience. The author ity of such leadership depends on the belief that the one who speaks knows the mind of God. It is this belief in the leader’s intimacy with God which gains him a following and endows his utterances with authority. Men want to be led by men “sent from God.” This is a quality of lead ership needed in our world to day. Samuel was a fixed point around which his nation could rally because of their belief in his pwn life. He was always honest and upright and was firm in his convictions. He came at a time when a leader was a crying need. There is still a crying need for leadership like Samuel’s. A vital experience with God and a spirit of unselfish service exhib ited in one’s life will give to you and to me the quality of leadership found, in Samuel, it will give us power, for we can only succeed as leaders when the people believe that we are an example of that which we teach. Dorothy Maynor In NBC Summer Concert Series NEW YORK. (ANP). Dorothy Maynor, celebrated lyric soprano, and Pierre Monteux, conductor, will be the guests on the Summer Concert of the NBC Symphony Orchestra Sunday, July 23 at 8:30 p. m., eastern daylight time. Miss Maynor was the first so loist on the summer concert series of the orchestra last season. In all of her concerts, Miss Maynor includes music of a spiritual character. For the program of July 23, she has chosen two spir ituals, "Swing Low, Sweet Char iot” and “Rock-a My Soul,” with piano accompaniment. She also will sing the ’‘Ait de Lia” from Debussy’s cantata “L’Enfant Prochgue,” wrth the orchestra. JUNE GRADUATES—The two daughters of the well-known Dr. and Mrs. Howard Thurman of San Francisco, Cahf., were both June graduates. Olive, in front, received her master’s degree from the University of Iowa in Playwriting. Anne was the Negro to attend and graduate from Emma Willard school in Troy, N. Y„ oldest of all the girls’ preparatory schools in the country. Dr. Thurman is pastor of the inter-racial church in San Francisco.— (ANPJ Hernandez Called Holly wood? & Hottest CHICAGO. (ANP). Juano Her nandez is the “hottest” Negro actor in Hollywood today, the first of his race to achieve four major roles in a year since Step’n Fetchit shuffled to stardom 15 years ago, according to an article in the August issue of Ebony, Negro picture magazine. The most significant aspect of the big, granite-jawed, dynamic actor’s current success is that in his latest movie, “The Breaking Point,” Warner Brothers has cast him a white actor’s role and there is no reference to race or color in this movie, based on Heming way’s “To Have and Have Not.” Hernandez is cast as a fishing partner of John Garfield. Of his role in this movie, Di rector Michael Curtiz saws, Her nandez is the ‘new Negro* in our movies. No longer do we have janitors and shoe shine boys. Now, we have a dignified, intelligent big man.” Ebony further point sout, “This is a symbol of the changing pat terns of race relations in motion pictures since, in every role, Her nandez has played a dignified, understanding Negro character.” Hernandez’ other major roles this year have been as the mag nificent proud farmer faced by a lynch mob in ‘ Intruder in the Dust"; a sharecropper with Joel McCrea in "Stan m My Crown"; and a band leader with Kirk Douglas in “Yotmg Man With a Horn." To be cast in non-Negro roles is nothing new for Hernandez, who had 16 years of steady work as a radio actor before he came to the movies. As a radio actor, he portrayed Mussolini, Premier Tojo of Japan, Emperor Hirohito, Chi an g Kai-shek, Eduard Benes, Emperor Haile Selassie and others* Subscribe to The VOICE—Your subscription helps make Hus pub lication possible. 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