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About The voice. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1946-195? | View Entire Issue (Nov. 4, 1948)
» % Quinn Chapel A. M. E. Church Rth and ••C" Streets Rev. J. B. Brooks, Pastor. 9:45 a. no. Sunday School 11:00 a. m, Morning Worship 6:00 p m. Young Peoples Fellowship 7:30 p. m. Evening service Tuesday, 8:00 p. m.. Prayer meeting North side Church of God 23rd and T Street. Robert i-i. Moody, Pastor. 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 plaoe ct meeting call 2-4673. Alton Chape i (Seventh-day Adventist). Urban League—2030 "T" Street. Frank W. Hale, Jr.. Pastor. LeCount Butler, Associate Pastor. 9:45 a. m. Sabbath School. 10:45 a. m. Missionary Meeting. It :00 a. m. Moro ns Worship. 4:00 p. m. Young People's Society. Christ Temple Churen of Christ (Holiness) 2149 U Street Rev. T. O. McWilliams, Jr., Pastor. 7:00 a. m Early Morning Prayer 10:00 a. m. Sunday school. 11:00 a. m. Morning Worship 5:00 p. m Service at Carver home 6:00 p. m. H.Y.P.U., Richard McWil liams, president. 7:45 p. m Evening Service 1st & 3rd Mondays, C.W.W.W. meets at 8:00 p. m., Mrs. Margie Norris, president. Tuesday, Bible Study. 8:00. Wednesday Prayer and Praise, 8:00. 1st A 3rd Friday. Jr. Choir rehearsal at parsohage. 8:00. 2nd A 4th Friday. Young People's FraydT Band. 8:00 Kathryn King, presi dent • You are always welcome to Christ Temple Churen. Church of God in Christ. 20th A C. Rev. B. T. McDaniels, Pastor. 10:30 a. m. Sunday School. 12:00 Noon Morning Worsiiip. 7 60 p. in. Y.P.W.W. , 8:00 p. m. Evening Worship. 8:00 p. m. Tuesday and Friday, regula service. Thursday. 1 to 3 p. m., Sewing Circle. Wednesday. S p. m.. Prayer Band. Ml. linn Baptist Churcb Corner 12th and F Streets Rev tJonn S. Favors. Pastor 10:00 Sunday School . 11:00 Morning Worship ’ 6:30 Baptist Training Un'on 8:00 Evening Worship Newman Methodist, 23rd A 8. Rev William Green, pastor. 9:45 a. m. Churen School. 11:00 a. m. Morning Worship. 6:30 p. m. Methodist Youth Fellowship. CME Church. 2030 T; Rev. George L. Ray, pastor. 1st and 3rd Sundays. Time 11 a. m. Henry Davis HONOLULU. (ANP). Henry Davis and his brilliant new man ager, Sad Sam Ichinose, will fly to Minneapolis the first of No vember to fight Jackie Graves. Davis is an outstanding island boxer and appears to be on the upgrade. He beat Harold Dade, ^ ex-world bantam champion, here several weeks ago. The Journal Printing Co. After the staff has gathered and edited the best in the news for you, THE VOICE is “put to bed,” at The Journal Print ing Company. Here it goes through the other half of its romance in the long trip from events to your home and office. So we’d like to inject a word of real appreciation here to Mr. Jay Seacrest and his efficient staff of compos ing room foremen, type set r ters, proofreaders, compositing men, engravers, librarians, casters, pressmen and ad dressographers and all the other people who help us get out one of THE BEST NEWS PAPERS OF ITS SIZE for many a mile around. SEWING MACHINES NEW & USED All Makes Repaired RENTALS » O. K. SEWING MACHINE CO. 219 No. 12th St. Phone 2-5668 Sunday, SdhjooL cdcA&jon. Theme: Drama in the Bible. Job. The Book of Job a Great Drama. The Book of Job is dra matic in form, if by drama is meant a vivid depiction of real people facing the demands of some life crisis. The strict dic tionary meaning of the word drama emphasizes the element of action—a drama is a composition | which tells a story by action ac companied by dialogue. In the Book of Job we do not find ac tion. It is in dialogue form, but none of the speakers do any thing. Yet there is movement in the book, only the movement is mental and spiritual. Job has found the l'eligion in which he has been brought up suddenly bankrupt. It has crashed down into ruin, utter and hopeless ruin, along with the rest of his life. He is struggling with agonized insistence to find a faith which can give an answer to the ques tion of the meaning of life in a world in which righteousness goes down to ruin while evil prospers, in which moral distinctions have apparently nothing to do with the issues of fortune. Toward that faith he moves slowly and pain fully until at last he finds it. The Book of Job is a drama of the spirit; its action goes on in the unseen world of the mind and heart. But it is none the less a 1 great drama. The Real Problem of the Book. The problem is usually stated as the question of why the righteous suffer. Of course this is the im mediate occasion of the great dis cussion. Job, a man, “perfect in all his ways,” is suddenly over whelmed with calamity. Why is that? But the real problem of the book, while it takes its rise from the misfortunes of a great and good man, goes deeper than the immediate situation. The real question is whether life is worth living. In a worlcl in which the best of men faces a fate no bet ter than that of the worst of men, in which, indeed, he may be far less fortunate than the evil-doer, in a world in which men are the plaything of fortune, can life have any real meaning or value? Why is man compelled to live a j life which is so baffling and so cruel? On the one hand he is given powers of thought and self consciousness so that he is acute ly aware of the misery of his lot. On the other, he is ringed in by mystery which mocks his ques tions with a tantalizing silence. Job does not complain just be cause he is suffering, but because his suffering seems causeless and meaningless, reducing his life to futility. “Why is life given to a man whose way is hid, and whom God hath hedged in?” —Journal of Religious Education. r-.-.. —i FREADRICH BROS. • • • • j Since 1902 Master Grocers The Best Place to Trade After All—1316 N Street 9th & L Super Market Huskerville at Air Base Miss Southern -preitT and talented Bon.^T Fa)e Tucker, senior, majoring English, has been named . . Southern” b, the student body M 11 I 1 A never ending supply of fine letter-paper* when you choose your style from our Open Stock selection of Eaton* Fine Letter Paper* “Be Kind to Your Clothes” PEERLESS ■ CLEANERS 322 so. n Geo. H. Lemon Bt.l'ck »»' »18 W* *,‘t J Smith Pharmacy 2146 Vine Prescriptions — Drug* Fountain — Sundries Phone 2-1958 "~UMbIrGER:S 2-2424 | 1110 Q. Funeral and Ambulance I Service. Roy A. Sheati, i Jess Williams 9 Springs MIDWEST supple? cO;6#ss GOOD FOODS-GOOD FEEDS PSng machines8 WASHERS SWEEPERS Gourlay Bros. Nmo Co. 212 So. 12 ONE-STOP LOANS $100-$200-$300 or More family FINANCE CO. 206 1st Nat- Bk. Blde; B. A KiUtram. Mat __ it of Southern university, Baton ' Rouge, La., and will reign over the Homecoming game and dance. Miss Tucker hails from Memphis, and is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Tucker. A.N.P. Button the fronts of dresses and shirts when ironing. Then place buttons downward on a folded Turkish towel. You can iron over them and the right side is smooth. ARTHUR GRISWOLD , COMPANY Inlaid Linoleums Cork and Rubber Tiles 1426 O STREET 2-5000 BEAL BROS. GROCERY Fresh Fruits & Vegetables \ Meats 2101 R TeL 2-6933 George H. Wentz Inc. PLUMBING & HEATING 1620 N Phone 2-1293 L... . 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