Thursday, December 10, 2015

Typical 10-year-old, extraordinary voice

Recently, I was privileged to meet 10-year-old Mikaya Taylor and her mom, Traci. What an incredible story of her improbable start in music!  Mikaya is already getting noticed in the business but she's a normal girl with a powerful voice.  This appeared in the Dec. 2 edition of The Anderson News.


In many ways, it would seem that Mikaya Taylor is your typical 10-year-old girl.

“Do you want to ask me some questions about my dog,” the fifth-grader from Robert B. Turner Elementary School asks.

She proceeds to go into detail about Zoe, her 7-month-old Doberman Pinscher, who hops on the couch to get some hugs and return the love. “She has a big nose,” Mikaya says, “but she’s a good dog.”

Mikaya has a passion for Chinese food and loves to talk about sports, too. “My favorite colors are the ones for the Florida Gators,” she says. But her love is for the Kentucky Wildcats, which should be no surprise since her grandfather, Mickey Gibson, played in 17 games for Adolph Rupp’s top-ranked basketball Wildcats in 1963-64.

Mikaya Taylor and her dog, Zoe.
Mikaya loves to talk. When asked if she ever gets in trouble at school for talking too much, she giggles and covers her face in embarrassment. “They say she is a social butterfly,” laughs Mikaya’s mother, Traci Taylor.

She just looks like a typical fifth-grader.

Until she starts singing, that is.
There is nothing ordinary when Mikaya belts out a few lines of a country classic.

I am a poor wayfaring stranger
While traveling through this world of woe ...

The chilling voice almost makes one forget this is a 10-year-old.

I’m going there to my mother
She said she’d meet me when I come ...

Make that a 10-year-old who got her first taste of performing publicly in May but in just over six months, has done more than turn heads. She’s performed on a world-wide radio show, been booked for one of the world’s biggest bluegrass festivals in 2016 and has been invited to sing in Nashville in February.

But it’s been that kind of a year for a child who wants a four-wheeler for Christmas and whose start came when her mom would stop what she was doing around the house when Mikaya started singing.

“She was always singing in her bedroom,” Traci says. “I am her mother, but I thought she had a beautiful singing voice.”

The music would be anything from pop – Mikaya claims to know the words to all of Taylor Swift’s songs – to country or bluegrass.

Mikaya Taylor sings "Wayfaring Stranger" with Kevin Chilton.
And the break came in May when long-time friend Kevin Chilton and his band, Custom Made Bluegrass, were playing at the Woodland Arts Festival in Lexington. Chilton asked Mikaya to the stage where she let go with a rousing version of “When You Say Nothing At All,” a song recorded by both Allison Krauss and the late Keith Whitley.

Nervous?

“I would have to say, ‘Yeah,’” Mikaya says.

It apparently did not show as representatives of the Festival of the Bluegrass were in attendance and booked Mikaya for one of the 2016 gathering at the Kentucky Horse Park.

Since then, Taylor has been wowing country and bluegrass fans around central Kentucky. Her songs include a cover of Dolly Parton’s mega-hit, “Jolene,” in addition to classics from Emmy Lou Harris and Loretta Lynn.

That’s something for a kid who counts the pop group “One Direction” as her favorite group.
It begs the question, “Why bluegrass?”

“That is what Michael Johnathon asked me,” Mikaya giggles.

Johnathon, a Kentucky-based folk singer, is the creator and host of the popular “WoodSongs Old-Time Radio Hour” which is broadcast on public radio and television. It originates at the Lyric Theatre in Lexington and is beamed worldwide on the Armed Forces Radio Network. His motto is, “You don’t have to be famous to be on WoodSongs, you just have to be very good.”
About five months after Chilton called Mikaya to the stage at Woodland, she was singing on WoodSongs on Oct. 19.

Mikaya and Michael Johnathon at Woodsongs
“Ruth McLain Smith of the McLain Family Band recommended her to me,” Johnathon said in an email. “WoodSongs is used in schools nationwide, complete with lesson plans, and for the past couple years I’ve been featuring children performers. They don’t win anything, they are not judged, but they get a chance to be on a national broadcast with seasons, touring performers. In that light, we look for WoodSongs Kids who sound like themselves, who smile a lot, who love music and their place in it. Mikaya fit all those things to me."

And, true to Johnathon’s signature phrase, Mikaya was very good.

“She was flat out adorable and a mighty fine singer. The audience loved her,” Johnathon recalls.
And the WoodSongs appearance provided the simple answer to why Mikaya is singing bluegrass these days. “It just seems that is where the doors are opening for her,” her mother says.

Chilton, an Anderson County resident known throughout central Kentucky for picking his banjo, was impressed, not just with Mikaya’s talent, but her stage presence. “She’s 10 years old but she is very professional,” he says. “When she gets up there, she takes over and does her job.”

That was apparent the weekend before Thanksgiving when Chilton’s group was opening for the renowned bluegrass group, The Grascals, in Clay City. He called Mikaya to the stage, where she wowed an audience that included several of the Grascals.

Mikaya Taylor singing with The Grascals in Nov. 2015.
Mikaya only knew the group from what her mom had told her, but quickly became acquainted as The Grascals also called the young lady to the stage. Despite never practicing together and being unfamiliar with each other, the stars and the 10-year-old delivered a crisp rendition of “I’ll Fly Away.”

Here is a link to the performance.  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8uSadSxvToA

It has all happened very quickly for a young girl who says, “I was surprised people wanted me to sing for them. I was just singing and mom listened,” Mikaya says.

Chilton initially got Mikaya on-stage. Smith gave her a recommendation. Johnathon and the Grascals have given her a break, but if things work out, some more of the big names in bluegrass and country music might hear Mikaya. She’s been named one of Tomorrow’s Bluegrass Stars and is one of 126 kids, age 18-and-under, from across the nation to participate in the Society for the Preservation of Bluegrass Music of America’s gathering in Nashville from Feb. 4-7.

Whether any of her her favorite singers will be around isn’t known but Mikaya says bluegrass legend Rhonda Vincent is her favorite artist of the genre. If she met Vincent, Krauss or Harris?

“I would freak out!” Mikaya says.

It is just what a visitor needs to be reminded again that despite her success, Mikaya Taylor is still in elementary school.

Traci Taylor says she has no worries about her daughter being overwhelmed by her whirlwind rise. Traci says her daughter is very active in church and is well grounded. Plus, Traci is trying to make sure things stay in perspective.

“I have had a lot of festivals contact me, but I am not going to let her go all summer,” Traci says. She is working on a demo CD and is taking bookings for 2016.

For now at least, the big time will have to remain in Mikaya’s dreams.

She wants a bus for travel, but also wants to give to others.

“When I get my bus,” Mikaya says, “I want to go to Florida at Christmas and give a lot of kids presents. Kids that don’t have much.”

Chances are they will talk about Mikaya’s dog.

And undoubtedly, they will sing.


Hearing Mikaya Taylor
Mikaya Taylor is off to a fast start in the music business and will be featured on the television version of WoodSongs Old-Time Radio sometime during the coming season. The show is available on KET.
The radio version of Mikaya singing at WoodSongs will broadcast on WEKU – FM, 88.9, or WUKY-FM 91.3 on Dec. 19.
Her mother, Traci Taylor, has taken to social media to get the word out. Traci runs a Twitter account, kysingingangel and has a Facebook fan page, Mikaya Taylor.
Traci has also posted videos on YouTube on the channel “Mikaya Taylor Musician Band.” She also has a website, mikayataylor.weebly.com.
For more information, email kentuckysingingangel@gmail.com.

Looking for Nashville, looking for a band

Traci Taylor says her daughter is looking for a sponsor to help defray the costs of what promises to be an expensive, but worth it, trip to Nashville for Tomorrow’s Bluegrasss Stars.
Taylor also says she is looking for musicians to form a band to perform with her daughter. Young musicians looking for some experience are encouraged to contact Traci at kentuckysingingangel@gmail.com.

Thursday, November 26, 2015

A Blessing I Won't Take for Granted

The ads for Black Friday have been going strong for several days now. They've been telling us all we really cant live without something we have done without for all these years.
Or as a friend tells me, Black Friday is when people buy a $300 tent to wait in line to save $50 on a television. Or it is the day that thankful people get up to push and shove to spend money they don't have on items they don't need.
At least that is what I expect of Black Friday.
Sometimes, though, we just need to sit back and think about some of the simple things in life. We say it often, but do we really understand it? I think I do now.
Something that happened in my life that really taught this old boy, at age 57, that the things we take for granted every day really do matter most.
A couple of months ago, I was checking my Facebook account when I saw where Paul Martin, who had been a member of Marty Stuart's band, The Fabulous Superlatives, had posted a YouTube video that caught my attention.
It was Kathy Mattea, Suzy Bogguss and Allison Krauss, three of the sweetest voices this side of heaven, singing the classic “Teach Your Children” at the White House in 1995. Legendary guitarist Chet Atkins was in the video while Martin was playing the pedal steel guitar. I had known of Paul for many years, dating to his time as a member of another of my favorite groups, Exile.
But I had no idea about this gig, in which he was actually a last-minute replacement for someone who had an appendicitis attack. If you have never seen it, check it out here https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g795h7HaZsw
What really got me about the video, though, was the song itself. I had not known about this version of the great Crosby, Stills and Nash song. Apparently, it had been very popular 20 years ago, but I never knew that three of my favorite singers had this version of one of my favorite songs.
Those who know me know that I have cochlear implants. Since undergoing the surgeries to stimulate my cochlea, I've had the world of music reopened. From about 1992 or so until having the second cochlear device implanted in 2010, I rarely listened to music. Usually, it just sounded like jumbled noise.
Dr. Kari Mobley, then my audiologist at the University of Kentucky, introduced me to Pandora and encouraged me to listen to as much music as possible.
But I had not thought about “Teach Your Children,” which I actually heard first performed by The Imperials, a gospel group, back when I was in high school.
The video Paul posted might have been some good entertainment for many people. To me, however, it was another link to those days before my hearing deteriorated to the point of giving up something I love.
After watching the video, I immediately got out the inexpensive guitar I purchased last year. I started strumming that “D” chord, the key in which I had played “Teach Your Children” more than 30 years ago. Then “G,” “A” and so on. Admittedly, it was a bit rough and my fingers did not perform some of the runs I had been able to perform when I had played a 12-string guitar years ago.
To many, this might seem silly. After all, it was just a song.
But it is the very point I was profoundly reminded of when Paul posted that link. Just a song, regardless of its magnitude on the charts, can be something more profound to others.
I heard it. And yes, I could still play it, rough as it might be.
THAT, is a blessing.
It's so easy to overlook even the smallest things in life, even simply listening to a song or strumming a few chords on a guitar.
But they, too, are blessings. I will never take them for granted again.

“Every good and perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of the heavenly lights, who does not change like shifting shadows.” James 1:17.


Thursday, November 12, 2015

Winner didn't surprise but margin did. Some thoughts on the Kentucky election

 I don't think very many of us saw this one coming.
Privately, I had told a very few close friends that I thought Matt Bevin was going to be the next governor of Kentucky, but that we might not know until the early hours of Nov. 4, the day after we had the opportunity to go to the polls.
A statewide margin of less than 10,000 votes either way would not have been a surprise and the lingering question would have been the effect of a third-party candidate.
While the effect of Drew Curtis on election dialogue could be open to debate, there is little doubt that Bevin's performance with voters was very strong, regardless of sensational Internet stories claiming the election was rigged or stolen.
I'm no political expert and believe election shenanigans do go on, but I find it very hard to believe a margin of 85,000 votes, or better than 9 percent of those cast, could be influenced by voting machine hanky-panky.
That being said, I am an interested observer. Elections affect all of us, including sports editors. How we perceive they affect us is obviously different, but, yep, they are significant exercises of our citizenship.
Over the last week, I have tried to figure out how Matt Bevin fooled the pollsters to pull off the most one-sided Republican gubernatorial win – in terms of his percentage margin – in my lifetime. Here are some thoughts, in no particular order.

1.Jack Conway might have run the weakest campaign by a major party candidate the state has ever seen.
Back in May, after Bevin won the Republican primary by 83 votes, the general consensus was the GOP had given the Governor's Mansion to the Democrats for four more years.
While that was premature, the race was probably Conway's to lose.
I can't say anything about how much either candidate was out shaking hands and kissing babies, but do know that the advertisements from Conway simply had the message, “Bevin is the Bogeyman.”
We knew little of what Conway wanted to accomplish other than the “better jobs and better schools” mantra that nearly every candidate since Isaac Shelby has espoused.
That was it. Precious little other than “Keep the Bevin the Bogeyman out of Frankfort.”
Even if attack ads work – pundits say they do – somewhere along the line, people want to know why they should vote for anyone.
Conway gave them little reason to do so.

2.Bevin's campaign was much stronger than given credit for.
That was evident in the primary when he ran that memorable commercial depicting rivals Hal Heiner and James Comer in a food fight. It was about that same time I told my wife, “Bevin is letting them pick each other off and will slip through in the primary and win this fall.”
Full disclosure: I am a registered Republican, but did not vote for Bevin in the primary.
In the fall, most of the Bevin ads I saw showed him as a smiling businessman with his wife and nine children. It was very effective.
It would be unfair to say there were no attack ads on Conway, but, for the most part, they came from political action committees who successfully tied him – rightly or wrongly – to President Obama, who is not exactly a favorite in Kentucky.
Bevin was unorthodox, but the perceived gaffes, such as walking into Democratic headquarters during the campaign might have actually solidified some support in a climate where the a large portion of the electorate would like to give career politicians of both major parties a piece of its mind.
And agree or disagree with him, you knew a vote for Bevin was a vote for dismantling Kynect and for smaller government, among other things.

3.Bevin's win was a landslide among those who voted, but it was far from a mandate.
Bevin got 53 percent of the vote 938,715 who voted. Many of them are passionate in the call for a smaller government that Bevin rode to victory.
But over 2 million registered voters did not vote. About 70 percent of the so-called “responsible adults” did not take a few minutes to go to the polls on a beautiful day.
That's not just sad. It's pathetic.
Some pundits lamented that neither Conway nor Bevin excited the masses, but to that I say, “So what?” If the masses have to be prodded to go to the polls, it is much more of an indictment on the people than the candidates.
Regardless of where you stand on the political spectrum, there are few excuses for someone not voting. When Americans have one of the greatest freedoms of all and don't exercise that freedom, we are all losers.
Over the years, I've had some great political discussions that invariably devolve into “The politicians don't listen to me.”
Au contraire. They listen very carefully.
And when 70 percent of an electorate stays home, the message is, “We don't care.”
And we wonder why our country is in the mess it is in.

Tuesday, October 27, 2015

Martin Family Circus gives surprise performance at Hall of Fame induction

My wife and I were privileged to meet Paul and Jamie Martin and their four children earlier this year and we were simply blown away not just by their musical ability but most of all by their genuine faith in Jesus Christ.   I had known of Paul since his days performing with Exile and continued to enjoy his music with Marty Stuart and his Fabulous Superlatives. I also knew of Jamie, as I had seen her on several country music shows. I was even aware of the Martin Family Circus and was already a fan. However, getting to know them a bit gave me even more appreciation for what they are doing.

The Martin Family Circus was honored to sing Elvira at The Oak Ridge Boys' Medallion Ceremony for their induction in the Country Music Hall of Fame. I received this press release at work and have copied and pasted here. Hope you enjoy!


The Martin Family Circus sings Elvira at The Oak Ridge Boys' Medallion Ceremony inducting the Oaks into the Country Music Hall of Fame on Oct. 25. The performance was a surprise for the Oaks.  From left are Texas, Tallant, Jamie, March, Kell and Paul Martin. (Photo courtesy The Brokaw Company.)


Martin Family Circus Surprises The Oak Ridge Boys,
Including Father and Grandfather Duane Allen,
At the 2015 Country Music Hall of Fame Medallion Ceremony

Press release from The Brokaw Company

The Martin Family Circus achieved their goal of a grand surprise performance of the massive hit “Elvira” as a tribute to their father and grandfather, Oak Ridge Boys’ Duane Allen, and the other members of the group at the Country Music Hall of Fame Medallion induction ceremony last night in Nashville, TN. The Martin Family Circus – consisting of Duane Allen’s daughter Jamie, son-in-law Grammy-winning Paul Martin, and grandchildren, March (17), Kell (14), Texas (10), and Tallant (8) – were considered the perfect choice of performers. It was a thrill for all involved.

The performance was a surprise long in the making. The Martin Family Circus was initially invited to perform in May of this year by Kyle Young, CEO of the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum.. The Martins were then asked to keep it a secret for the last five-plus months, which was a feat in itself.

“We were completely blown away to be asked to perform. What a tremendous honor!” said Jamie Martin. “We never envisioned that we would be the ones to get to sing to The Oak Ridge Boys the very song that changed the course of their careers and lives forever, on the night that they received the highest honor possible in country music. We knew we had to give it our all. The toughest part about this was knowing for so long and having to make sure we didn’t let it slip.”

The entire Martin Family is proud of The Oak Ridge Boys and feel that there is no one more deserving of the high honor of induction into the Country Music Hall of Fame. Martin adds, “They have given our family the greatest example of hard work and determination. There aren’t very many country acts that have been around as long as they have and who are still performing to packed houses over 150 nights a year. That is an incredible achievement. They are our inspiration, and we’re so happy that they are being recognized for their career full of great songs, hitting musical milestones and crossing into multiple genres, supporting lots of charitable organizations—especially our US Troops, selling over 41 million records and still going strong!”

Jamie and Paul Martin have been singing together with their four children as the Martin Family Circus since 2010. Representing four generations of musical heritage, they are a self-contained band, focusing on tight harmony-driven music of many genres that delivers a room full of fun. They were originally dubbed the Martin Family Circus by Country Music Hall of Fame member Vince Gill.

So where did it all begin? Grammy-winning artist Paul Martin, lead singer/guitarist of country-pop group Exile, met and married Jamie Allen, daughter of Duane Allen of The Oak Ridge Boys and Norah Lee Allen of the Grand Ole Opry’s own background vocalists, the Opry Singers. They began raising a family that was exposed to a rich musical heritage from birth. Each of the four children showed God-given musical talents early on, along with the same insatiable passion for music as their parents and grandparents had. All are accomplished musicians as well as singers.

Practice soon led to performances around the region and a successful web-based unscripted podcast-series called “The Martin Family Circus.” They have made appearances on The Oak Ridge Boys’ nationally televised Christmas special for the American Legion and episodes of television shows such as “The Marty Stuart Show” and “Larry’s Country Diner.”

Their first CD project, titled In Training, represented their rich musical roots, as it paid tribute to many of their favorite artists. Now, in 2015, they are recording their second project, Past, Present, Future, which includes classic hits, current favorites, and some brand-new self-penned material.

Jamie Martin sums it up for the family, “We were honored, humbled and elated to be asked to sing “Elvira” for The Oak Ridge Boys on this incredible night. The privilege of singing to Hall of Fame members and music industry friends—it was a night we will never forget. It has given us irreplaceable memories that we have made with our kids, our parents and our grandparents. These memories will last forever.”

As for the surprised father and grandfather, Duane Allen, he proudly commented, “I already knew that Jamie and Paul are great singers, but I am consistently blown away with the kids! I can't believe they were able to pull this off without a word. They made a very special evening even more special.”

Thursday, September 24, 2015

American Pride: Veteran shares special flag with Bearcat football

 (Note: This story appeared in the Sept. 23 edition of The Anderson News. I have copied here to share with a wider audience.)


Is this the first time you've been to our little town?
...I don't like to brag but we're kinda proud of that Ragged Old Flag.”
--Johnny Cash

The flag the Anderson County football team rallies around is not yet ragged. It might never be tattered or threadbare.
But the same message it waved in the winds near one of the world's hot spots is the one the Bearcats want to shout every time they take the field for the battle of a football game.
The Anderson County Bearcats take the field with the American Flag.
It's all about patriotism. It is about the freedom to play a game. It's about the sacrifice and cohesion needed for success in something as little as a football game or in fighting for the freedom that flag represents.
Anderson County is a place where people like to wave the red, white and blue. Just sit along one of the main highways that mark the county and chances are it won't be long until you see the Stars and Stripes flying from the back end of a pickup.
It's just who Anderson County is.
Just as Kirby Alexander's flag being carried by one of the Bearcats for Friday Night Lights is now part of the fabric of the community.


Service was 'something to do'
An Army veteran, Kirby Alexander was just trying to become a part of his new community when he started attending high school football games six years ago.
He'd been a pretty good player at Montgomery County High School in the early 1970s, but joined the Army after graduation. He saw much of the world before leaving the service and eventually coming to Lawrenceburg.
I just started going to the (Anderson County) football games,” Alexander says.
He became a regular, regardless of the location.
I first met Kirby at Marion County,” remembers Steve Carmichael, who had two sons line up as quarterback and lead the Bearcats to district and regional championships. “I thought he was a bus driver, but he was at the game and we just started talking.
I tell him I thought he looked like he was part of the Duck Dynasty crew.”
It was in 2008, not long after Kirby started calling Anderson County home.
Instead, Kirby became part of the field painting crew charged with getting Bearcats' home turf ready for Friday nights. “He was very dependable,” remembers Carmichael, who was also on the crew.
I just enjoy it. It gives me something to do,” says Alexander, now 58 and retired.
Little did anyone know the guy who just showed up at games because he wanted to be a part of his new community would grow into a fixture.

Band of Brothers carry flag to battle
About the same time, Anderson football coach Mark Peach, an avowed history buff, had been reading Stephen Ambrose's classic, “Band of Brothers.” Fascinated with the incredible stories of Easy Company of the 101st Airborne in World War II, Peach believed he could apply some of those lessons to the football field and teach his team about sacrifice and service in the real world at the same time.
The Anderson County team gathers under the flag before a game.
The kids started talking about wanting something to carry into battle,” Alexander says. “I started thinking this flag might be the best thing they can carry. The players are very patriotic and want to thank the veterans for serving every day.”
This flag” is not just any red, white and blue fabric, though.
Alexander, at one time a paratrooper, was assigned to the 2nd Infantry Division at Camp Casey, South Korea, located near the Demilitarized Zone. The base is manned to deter aggression from North Korea and to provide defense, if necessary.
When he returned to the United States, Alexander brought a flag home with him.
That same flag which flew in sight of Kim Jong-il's Communist regime would teach some lasting lessons.
I put the flag on a 10-foot pole and drove up there,” he says of a trip to the 2011 regional championship game at Conner High School. “Nobody knew what I was going to do. … I told Coach Peach and he said, 'Let's go ask the kids. I have no problem.'”


Not a good luck charm
It would be wrong to think that the Anderson football team sees the flag as a good luck charm. Nor is the Band of Brothers military theme a careless use of military terminology to get high school athletes to play a game with raw emotion.
What Kirby's flag represents is much, much deeper and meaningful.
You have to be chosen by the rest of the team to carry it,” says current Anderson senior Nathan McGregor, one of the team captains. “It is an honor.”
Carmichael, an Air Force veteran, liked what he saw in the Band of Brothers theme and what Alexander's flag had made it hit close to home.
The kids had bought into the Band of Brothers theme,” he says. “They gained an appreciation for people who serve and the representation of that flag and the freedoms we have because of that flag. It means something for these kids to be able to take it on the field.”
Peach has used the Band of Brothers theme to talk about sacrifice and teamwork, but is quick to remind any who listen that a game is nothing compared to war.
It's not even close,” says Peach. “But we can honor people who have served when we do sacrifice.”

Getting the message right
Alexander says his adopted hometown and team are getting it right.
A lot of people don't really understand what a soldier has to do,” he says. “No soldier can do it alone. You have to have a team. You have to have cohesion, leadership, dedication and sacrifice. And you have to use your intelligence to get things done.
I have no problem with (using the military theme). I wish more schools would take the concept.”
Over the years, the Bearcats have become more than a football team as they engage in various community service projects such as Challenger League baseball for special needs children and cleaning up around The Healing Field, a collection of flags remembering every Kentuckian killed in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Alexander says he salutes the field every time he drives past it on Broadway in Lawrenceburg.
Over the past five or six years, I have seen the football team with very much integrity,” Alexander says. “I can't explain the word for it. I see them go to The Healing Field at the Legion, clean it up and not say a word.
Younger children want to help Kirby Alexander with his flag.
I have seen two of the boys in Alton Station drive by in a pickup truck. They didn't know I was behind them. They stopped and helped a lady who was mowing her yard with a push mower. They ended up mowing the yard for her. They got in their truck and drove off without taking any money.”
And sometimes that service goes beyond doing something in the community.
Several players have chosen some form of military service when they finish high school. “I had nothing to do with their decisions,” Alexander says, “but I think the military is a good career.”
The Anderson County flag tradition was borne on a cold November night at Conner High School. The Bearcats drove for the winning touchdown with 44 seconds to play.
The young man who caught Seth Carmichael's fourth-down pass, Matt Sprague, had already decided what he wanted to do with his life.
He'll graduate from the United States Air Force Academy next spring.

So we raise her up every morning, we take her down every night.
We don't let her touch the ground and we fold her up right.
On second thought, I'd like to brag
'Cause I'm mighty proud of the Ragged Old Flag.
--Johnny Cash

Wednesday, August 26, 2015

Shooting of TV reporter hits clost to home

     As I sat in my home office this morning, I was shocked when the news came that two journalists for a Virginia television stations were killed while conducting a live interview for the station's morning news show.
     I had planned to catch up on some personal work but really have not been able to get my mind off these young people, both in their 20s, whose bright futures ended so abruptly as they were doing what appeared to be a positive feature about a business district.
     You might have seen the video and the look of horror on the face of Alison Parker, the young reporter, just before her life was senselessly taken.
     As someone who has made my living, or at least part of it, in journalism over half of my life, I hurt for the people involved. I never met either and have no ties other than being in the larger journalistic fraternity.
     But I can't say I was shocked. We live in a crazy, mixed up world in which anything goes and the deranged walk the streets with us.
     Even though I work for a small town newspaper, I have seen glimpses of the dangers of just doing this job.
     It is not uncommon to have my camera bag or brief case searched. At first, I thought it was kind of silly, but the fact is that anyone could be capable of lunacy. If someone does not know me personally, I now have no problem showing the security detail what I have with me. I don't have anything to hide.
     Over the years, I have witnessed people in the stands who give me reason to pause. While I have never felt threatened with serious injury while working the sidelines, I have seen people at games who appear unstable or so belligerent that I wonder if they are capable of serious violence.
     I won't go into details here. Let's just say it happens and most any journalist knows exactly what I mean.
     Journalists also receive e-mails or letters threatening varying degrees of ill will. While I believe most are from people who have had a bad day and really have not thought through what they say, you can never be too careful.
     Now we have seen tragedy on live TV.
     That makes it hit close to home.

Wednesday, August 12, 2015

Still singing after 40 years! Oak Ridge Boy Joe Bonsall talks about the fair, his book and my mom



(Note: The following column appeared in the Aug. 12 edition of The Anderson News. Joe Bonsall of The Oak Ridge Boys graciously gave of his time before the Oaks took the stage at Renfro Valley in June. We talked about 20 minutes and I found him to be very funny and engaging, down-to-earth and one who genuinely cares about people.)

Those who know me best think I only recognize two music groups: 1. The Oak Ridge Boys 2. Everybody else.
It's not quite that way, but it's close. What can I say?
I was attending Oak Ridge Boys' concerts before doing so was cool. I was listening to them when their hits were songs like “I Know” and “Jesus is the Man for the Hour.” A concert meant you got a chance to talk with them at a record table set up in a church foyer.
That was all a few years before the Kentucky State Fair made The Oaks as much a part of the annual lineup as Freddie Farm Bureau, handmade quilts and Hereford bulls.
Next Sunday, Aug. 23, will mark the 40th straight year the Oak Ridge Boys will perform at the fair. I plan to be there, just like thousands of others from around the Commonwealth and it will be my 30th Oak Ridge Boys' concert.
Unless, of course, I have not counted some of those all-night singings my mom used to attend when I was a little boy.
The Oak Ridge Boys sing at Renfro Valley in June.
The Oaks might have faded from the top of country music, but they routinely pack Cardinal Stadium for the annual concert that began when they opened for country singer Eddie Rabbitt. Even last year, several thousand people braved a steady rain for nearly two hours of those familiar hits that everyone had heard time and time again. It's a phenomenon that is just in the fabric of the Kentucky State Fair.
If you haven't seen The Oaks in Cardinal Stadium, then you really haven't been to the fair. There's never been anything like it, anywhere.
“It will never happen again in history,” says Oaks tenor Joe Bonsall. “I can't even imagine it happening with any act playing at the same venue that many times.”
I caught up with Bonsall when the Oak Ridge Boys made their annual trip to Renfro Valley back in June. He graciously gave some of his time to talk about The Oaks, the fair, his book, their latest CD and my mom.
Yes, my mom. Some of her story is mentioned in Bonsall's latest book, “On the Road with The Oak Ridge Boys.”
It all came about when the Oaks were going to perform at Renfro Valley in June of 2014. Early that Saturday morning, I took to Twitter saying something about heading to the concert that night and my mom being ready to sing “Elvira.” I thought nothing more about it.
About 90 minutes into the show, Bonsall, who sang lead on “Elvira” and serves as the group's master of ceremonies, said, “Where is John Herndon?”
Joe Bonsall and I chat about his career and about my mom.
Not knowing what was going on, I raised my hand. Joe grinned and said, “We don't need to talk to you. We just want to say hello to your mom.”
At that moment, all four of the Oaks moved across the stage to wave at her.
It was totally unexpected. And it made my mom's night.
The next day, I sent Bonsall a message thanking him for what he did and telling some of Mom's story and the fact she had suffered a stroke two years before. He got back with me, asking permission to use her story in his latest book, which was released earlier this year. For the record, the episode is found on pages 182-184 of the book.
I had told Bonsall about mom and her sister taking me to gospel concerts when I was a kid and that she had been a fan even before he joined the group. (Bonsall tells me a concert we attended at Louisville's Memorial Auditorium in 1973 was his second as a member of the Oaks.)
The book, which has countless behind the scenes stories, has a simple message and he references I Corinthians 13:1 as what drives him.
“I think if you live (one's faith), you let your light shine and people know,” Bonsall said. “In a book situation – I have done a lot of writing – if you are not going to bring a message of hope and faith, if you are not going to let your light shine, based on what you are doing, then the writing is a tinkling cymbal.”
Bonsall noted that when “Elvira” had everybody oom-boppa-maw-mawing in 1981, Twitter, Facebook and even e-mail were not around. “Back then, if John Herndon sent me a letter and said, 'My mom and me are going to be at a show. Would you dedicate this song to her?'
“I may have never seen it with all the mail we get at the office. … The reason you are in the book is it was a tremendous example of the difference in social networking. Now I can say, 'Hi,' to John Herndon's mom and do something meaningful for someone that maybe I would have missed before or we might have missed before.
“I thought your letter was beautiful. Your mom and your story was beautiful to me and your long-time coming to see the Oak Ridge Boys was meaningful to me. It was beautiful to me.”
Which is how millions of fans feel about the Oak Ridge Boys and their music. Whether one started listening when the group was singing “Jesus is Coming Soon,” or “Bobbie Sue,” the message has always been about faith, family and some old-fashioned American values.
“I think (the positive messages) are very big things and they are a reason for our longevity,” Bonsall said. “Middle America still comes out to see The Oak Ridge Boys. We are a clean group. We are the guys you see at the state fair. We are the guys you can see at Renfro Valley and bring your whole family.
“It is a fast-paced show with a lot of music and a lot of hit records. You won't be able to hear them all but we are going to give you a big dose of them. We are going to wave the flag a little bit and we are going to sing some gospel. That is just The Oak Ridge Boys and that is the way we do it.”
That flag-waving has earned the group numerous honors from veterans' groups over the years. Just last week, the group received the Bob Hope Award by the Congressional Medal of Honor Society. It is the society's highest award for service to veterans in the entertainment industry and the group joined people such as actors Mark Wahlberg and Tom Selleck, the last two recipients of the award.
It's been a good year for the Oaks. They'll be inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in October, of which Bonsall says, “There is nothing bigger for the Oak Ridge Boys than to be in the Country Music Hall of Fame, where the circle will not be broken. It will be the four of us together, as it has been, as it will be and even after we are gone, it will be there still.”
They released a CD, “Rock of Ages,” filled with old hymns, too. “We put our heart and soul into that,” he said.
One day, the run at the fair will end. Bonsall is the young 'un of the group at 67. The other three singers – Duane Allen, William Lee Golden and Richard Sterban – have all passed 70.
Still, Their non-stop energy on stage belies the calendar.
“After this Hall of Fame thing came down, one of the questions thrown at us was 'What do you do now?'
“We said, 'We sing. We are music men.’”
Those music men stay true to their roots.
“Not that much has changed,” Bonsall says. “The years have gone by and we are more experienced. We don't worry about things any more. When we were younger, we worried about this and that but we don't worry about a doggone thing anymore. We just pray that God gives us the help to do it.”
And the Oaks plan on being on Louisville in August as long as the Kentucky State Fair will keep booking them.
“I think to a man, the Oak Ridge Boys know what a legacy this has been and nobody wants to see it stop,” he says. “Nobody, in our hearts, wants to see it end.”
And neither does this fan.


More than 50 shows for man with Anderson ties
            John Blakeman still remembers that first time he saw an Oak Ridge Boys’ concert.
            “It was the Oaks and the Sego Brothers and Naomi. What a pair!” says Blakeman, a Louisville resident whose parents grew up in Anderson County.
            Blakeman still keeps up with what is going on in Lawrenceburg through Twitter and has family in Anderson County.
            Blakeman was 15 years old when his mother took him to Memorial Auditorium for that show in October, 1974. When the legendary group hits the Kentucky State Fair next Sunday, Blakeman plans to be there, taking in a show from his favorite group. He says he’s already done so over 50 times.
           Since the Oaks started making an annual appearance at the fair 40 years ago, Blakeman says he has missed the Country Music Hall of Famers only a handful of times.
           His reasons for making the annual trip to Cardinal Stadium are similar to what Oak Ridge Boy Joe Bonsall believes is the reason for the group’s incredible longevity.
          “They are upbeat,” Blakeman said. “They sing happy songs. They sing about our faith and our freedom as Americans.”

Wednesday, July 8, 2015

Isaacs to pack em in at Sand Spring Baptist

 (Note: This story about one of my favorite music groups appeared in the July 8, 2015 edition of The Anderson News.)


One of the biggest names in Nashville will be performing Friday night, July 10, at Sand Spring Baptist Church.
The Isaacs, a world-renowned acoustic group, will be the headliner as part of the Sand Spring Gospel Concert series. Also performing will be The Shireys, another family group from South Carolina which has become a local favorite at Sand Spring.
The program begins at 7 p.m. There is no admission charge but a love offering will be taken.
The Isaacs have been traveling in full-time ministry since 1986, according to Lily Isaacs, who along with her three children – Becky, Sonya and Ben – make up the group that has won numerous Dove Awards from the Gospel Music Association. The Isaacs have also been nominated for several Grammys.
The Isaacs in concert in January 2014.
The Isaacs strive to bring a message of hope based on their own life experiences, Lily said in an e-mail. She was born in Germany to Polish Jewish survivors of The Halocaust. The family moved to New York when she was 2 years old. At age 35, she was diagnosed with breast cancer but beat the dreaded disease.
“I certainly hope that our ministry is an experience of hope,” Ms. Isaac said. “Through all of our personal trials and victories, we've tried to incorporate this message in song and testimony. Of course, this includes my my history with my parents as Halocaust survivors and my battle with cancer.”
Lily Isaacs is now a 31-year cancer survivor and her fight was the inspiration for perhaps the group's most well-known song, “I'm Gonna Love You Through It.” Written by Sonya Isaacs, her husband, Jimmy Yeary, and Ben Hayslip, the song was a major hit for country music superstar Martina McBride. The Isaacs perform the song extensively.
When the idea for the song came about, Lily says, “they called me and asked some very personal and soul-searching questions. The next day, (Sonya) sang the song to me. I was deeply moved and I know the song has been a great blessing to millions of people world-wide.”
The words to the chorus say,
When you’re weak, I’ll be strong
When you let go, I’ll hold on
When you need to cry, I swear that I’ll be there to dry your eyes
When you feel lost and scared to death,
Like you can’t take one more step
Just take my hand, together we can do it
I’m gonna love you through it.
While “I’m Gonna Love You Through It” is perhaps the most well-known song to originate with The Isaacs to make it big on the country charts, it is almost impossible to put the group in any one category. Their repertoire includes country and bluegrass the Isaacs often appear at the Grand Ole Opry. The group is most well-known for its work in the gospel music industry and is a regular feature on the Bill Gaither Homecoming series and the concert schedule is loaded heavily with appearances in churches.
The Isaacs in concert in 2014 at Sand Spring Baptist Church.
“I'm not sure we can be labeled as bluegrass or country or gospel, only,” Lily says. “We actually are more Americana, in my opinion. We've had many opportunities to perform in many different genres. I feel like this happens because we are not concerned about being categorized. We just write songs and arrange them the best way they sound. Our family writes songs about real life issues and that's gospel music to me.”
This week's schedule underscores Ms. Issacs' assessment. Sunday, the group was to have played at the Brooklyn Tabernacle in New York. Thursday, the Isaacs are scheduled to play at the Bill Monroe Memorial Park in Bean Blossom, Ind., before heading to Lawrenceburg on Friday.
The music is full of variety, from “I'm Gonna Love You Through It” to a spine-tingling version of the old hymn, “I Must Tell Jesus” to the bluegrass standard, “Daniel Prayed,” to a fun adaptation of the Bing Crosby-Andrews Sisters hit from 1944, “Accentuate the Positive.”
Recently, the group was asked to sing at the funeral for country star Jim Ed Brown.
“We befriended Jim Ed Brown by being on the Opry over the past 20 years,” Ms. Isaacs said. “He was a wonderful person and good friend. When the family requested that we sing at his funeral, we were humbled. We recorded (Brown's hit) “The Three Bells” on our “Naturally” CD and have had the opportunity to sing this song with him on the Opry stage several times.”
The Isaacs last appeared in Lawrenceburg when they packed the house at Sand Spring last January. Another full house is expected Friday.
“We always enjoy coming to Lawrenceburg, Ky.” Ms. Isaacs said. “We hope to have a wonderful time of praising God and enjoying fellowship.”

Wednesday, July 1, 2015

An old-school message to modern times

(This column was originally published in The Anderson News on June 24, 2015)



Tommy Bowden is a football coach. At least that’s how he’s known to the masses.

And even though he’s been away from the sidelines for more than six years, that success he had at Tulane and Clemson give Bowden an avenue to share his first love.

Bowden, who also spent a year as Bill Curry’s first offensive coordinator at the University of Kentucky, was in town over the weekend, speaking at Hope Community Church Sunday morning.
 Tommy Bowden speaks at Hope Community Church.
He was using a platform given by his enormous gridiron success to talk about his deep Christian faith.

“I have a big platform because of what I did,” he told those gathered to worship Sunday morning.
What Bowden did was forge a 90-49 record and take teams to nine bowl games in 11 full years of coaching. However Clemson and he parted ways midway through the 2008 season. Since then, Bowden has been working television – he’s now analyzing the ACC for Fox Sports South – and talking about what is his real life.

It’s a message that is as old-school as the single-wing delivered to a modern crowd.

“I believe in the inerrant and infallible Word of God,” Bowden said during Sunday’s worship hour.
It was a simple statement. But it forms the core of his message and one he learned from his famous father, Bobby Bowden, who was the second-winningest college football coach of all-time when he was let go at Florida State after the 2009 season.

“My father was my Sunday School teacher,” Bowden said later as we talked between Hope’s two main services. “I would see him at home reading the Bible. He was a great example. I had a great mentor.”

Part of Bowden’s message focused on life’s ups and downs. They hit his family hardest on the football field.
Tommy Bowden spoke of the Bible being one's guide.

Tommy Bowden, who never had a losing season as a head coach, shared a bit about his ouster at Clemson during the 2008 season. The Tigers were 3-3 when things came to an end. “They said I resigned to soften it, but my contract said if I resigned, I didn’t get the buyout,” Bowden remembered.

An ESPN report from the time said Bowden offered to resign after the team lost to Wake Forest but that he would be paid through the end of the season and receive a $3.5 million buyout.
Less than a year earlier, he

“You put two-and-two together,” Bowden smiled as we talked Sunday morning.

Bowden now lives in the Florida panhandle. In addition to his work with Fox, he also does some commentary for Raycom. He’s also busy as a speaker at Christian conferences and motivational gatherings.

“All of my stuff is faith-based,” he said. “I enjoy the church service more than any of (the speaking venues.)”

He also talked about his father, who lost his job after allegations surfaced that the Seminoles had used an ineligible player in 2006 and 2007. “He had a field named for him and a statue in front of the stadium and still got fired,” Tommy Bowden said as we talked.

But those dark times gave Bowden even more experience in the faith he shares. “We have got the most comprehensive safety net for people out there,” he said as we talked.

It was a fraction of the message Bowden had delivered just a few minutes before.

“Football was a huge, huge part of my life, but not the most important part,” Bowden said early in his message, a few moments after telling some jokes, including one about Hope member Freddie Maggard, Bowden’s quarterback in his one year in Lexington.

Bowden did not talk a great deal about himself other than some self-deprecating humor – “When I get home, I am the football coach and my wife is the athletic director. When you are coaching, you have one boss and that’s the AD,” he laughed. Instead, he focused on the timeliness of the message he shared, owing many of the nation’s troubles to pushing the Bible out of everyday life.

“As Christians, we have to have a little backbone and defend the Word of God,” he said during the service. “I want to hear pastor teach the Word of God, not water it down.”

He elaborated a few minutes later.

“I believe in a literal interpretation of the Bible,” he said. “I am not perfect, but that is what I believe. One of the problems is we have compromised the Word and watered it down.

“God wants us to have all of it, or none of it.”

Maggard, in introducing Bowden, said his former coach lived that way. He recalled a time when Bowden led several of the Wildcats in prayer. Not a mundane prayer where the right cliches had been uttered but a real talk with the one Bowden worships.

“I saw a man of God,” Maggard said.
Even though they had not seen each other for 25 years, Bowden’s influence was unmistakeable.

“You can have a lot of influence,” Bowden said. “It is all in your comfort zone.”

It was obvious Sunday that talking about his faith is in Bowden’s comfort zone. It flowed as naturally as talking about Bobby Petrino’s offense or Jimbo Fisher’s defense.

“I am not a Bible scholar,” Bowden told his audience.

Maybe not. There might not be a Master of Divinity by his name, but his message was an enthusiastic and passioned defense of the Bible and a challenge to make it work in ones life.

I had the privilege to meet and interview Tommy Bowden.
It was fitting that toward the end of Bowden’s message, he sounded like, well, a coach. Talking about Christianity’s influence, Bowden noted that each person in attendance had a part in making a difference. He referred back to the earliest followers of Christ.

“The 12 disciples were as ordinary as you can get, but they turned the world upside down,” Bowden said.

He left little doubt he believes the same principle applies to ordinary people today.

Saturday, June 27, 2015

Christians can turn Supreme Court decision into a positive



I disagree with the Supreme Court's decision legalizing gay marriage in all 50 states. To those who know me well, that is about as big a surprise as the sun coming up in the east.
Or about as big a surprise as the Court's ruling.
I find the homosexual lifestyle in conflict with the teachings of the Bible, which I have chosen to be the roadmap to my own life and the Bible clearly teaches that homosexuality is a sin. (See Romans 1, I Corinthians 6, I Timothy 1.)
It is  just as divorce, lying, hatred and many other common behaviors are called sin. And they are sins that can be forgiven, just like homosexuality.
That is not to take any of those sins lightly, nor is it intended to ignore the fact that some sins have different earthly consequences than others. However, many Christians, including myself, have the tendency to categorize sin, forgetting that all sin separates us from God.
As a Christian, I understand that and try my best to live my life in that manner. Sometimes I fail miserably. I also understand that Christianity can, and should, run counter to the prevailing thought in contemporary culture.
Instead, my disagreement to the decision is more in line with the dissents penned by Chief Justice John Roberts, Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito and Antonin Scalia. Their opinion focuses on the constitutionality of five persons on the Supreme Court usurping the power of the court. Roberts wrote that the issue should be taken up by the states and that it should not be a concern of the court.
If you want to read the entire 103 pages of legalese, both the majority and minority opinions, you can go to http://www.cnn.com/2015/06/26/politics/scotus-opinion-document-obergefell-hodges/index.html.
However, believing the events of June 26, 2015 were inevitable under the current court makeup, I have been thinking extensively about how I would react to the decision. I still wonder how I will react over the next 5 or 10 years. I know I come in contact with people who embrace the gay lifestyle every day, whether they practice it or simply support it.
I am praying for guidance and hope you are as well.
With that in mind, here are some random thoughts on the decision.


I CAN AND MUST LIVE WITH THE SUPREME COURT'S DECISION.
Few who adhere to a literal interpretation of the Bible and try to live their lives accordingly do. Many feel the decision is an affront to their faith and cite the many Scripture references as support for their position.
However, I see few differences in the homosexual lifestyle whether two who participate in it are married or not. Granted there are some legal differences, such as inheritance, insurance and other legal matters, but those are beyond the scope of this blog entry.
The main thing I am concerned about is the ability of Christians being forced to accept the lifestyle and being forced to give implicit endorsement. Would a minister be forced to officiate at a ceremony celebrating that which he holds strong convictions against? Would a business person be forced to “participate” with his services? We have seen the concrete examples such as screen printers, bakers and florists.
(For that matter, I am continuously baffled by the insistence of those participating in the LGBT lifestyle that businesses cater to them. If someone does not want your business, there are others that do. It's simple.)
Lost in much of the shouting from both sides of the issue is the fact that even the five Supreme Court justices who voted to make same-sex marriage the law of the land addressed this issue.
“Finally, it must be emphasized that religions, and those who adhere to religious doctrines, may continue to advocate with utmost, sincere conviction that, by divine precepts, same-sex marriage should not be condoned.  The First Amendment ensures that religious organizations and persons are given proper protection as they seek to teach the principles that are so fulfilling and so central to their lives and faiths, and to their own deep aspirations to continue the family structure they have long revered. The same is true for those who oppose same-sex marriage for other reasons. In turn, those who believe allowing same-sex marriage is proper or indeed essential, whether as a matter of religious conviction or secular belief, may engage those who disagree with their view in an open and searching debate. The Constitution, however, does not permit the State to bar same-sex couples from marriage on the same terms as accorded to couples of the opposite sex.”
For now, it appears the Supreme Court is acknowledging the right of churches, faith-based groups and individuals to still freely exercise their faith. Whether the current or future administrations will heed the wording of this decree without another day at the highest court remains to be seen.


THE RULING COULD ACTUALLY BE GOOD FOR CHRISTIANS.
Anyone who has seen a freshly cut tree has seen the small rings that can give you some idea of how old a tree is. Those rings aren't formed during the growing season but in the winter when things are tough for any plant to survive. The rings also provide the strength in the tree trunk. Without those rings, formed when the weather is worst for growing, the tree becomes weak and will not stand.
I believe the church can actually be made stronger by testing. If anything, the tests and opposition to God and those who try to live in His will can make us stronger. We will need to examine ourselves and see if we really are “all in” or not in our commitment to Jesus Christ.


RESPOND WITH LOVE.
That might be very hard. While those who agree with the Supreme Court's decision rejoice at a “victory for equality,” the strongest venom I have seen or heard has come from those who claim to preach “tolerance.”
A Facebook friend derided opponents of the ruling with a profanity-laden post questioning people's intelligence and questioning their knowledge of what being American is all about. Suffice it to say that as of June 26, that person is no longer on my Timeline.
That should not be taken as an indictment of everyone on the left. I have some friends who are happy with the ruling and have expressed that with grace and civility. I have also seen and heard plenty of vitriol from conservative Christians who seem to think that people will respond positively when backed into a corner.
Take it from someone who grew up on a farm and has had plenty of experience: Backing a creature into the corner only makes it fight harder.
Some proponents of the LGBT lifestyle – or any lifestyle that has been traditionally believed to be contrary to the Bible – argue with bizarre interpretations of the Word. Then, when one disagrees, the “You are not tolerant!” mantra takes over. When that happens, it is also easy for us to act like an animal backed into its corner.
Yet, what Jesus DID teach over and over again that we are to love people. One of my favorite passages is John 8:1-11, where a woman, who was caught in the act of adultery was about to be stoned by the religious leaders of the day. Jesus told them, “Let him who is without sin cast the first stone.”
And to the woman he said, “Neither do I condemn you, go and sin no more.”  Notice that Jesus did not say what she did was OK. He loved her and said, “Go and sin no more!”
Disagreement is not hatred. Christians should not give anyone an opportunity to portray it as such.

CHURCHES SHARE SOME OF THE BLAME FOR OUR COUNTRY'S MORAL DECLINE.
I have come to this conclusion over the last 15-20 years and believe it more today than ever before.
We want people to worship with us. We want to make them feel welcome, as we should.
However, have we become so “non-threatening” that the sinner has no conviction to change his lifestyle?
Have we argued so much over worship styles and being “relevant” that we have actually become irrelevant?
Have we preached so much about the love of God (which we should!) that we have neglected the parts about being called to Christ means there is a transformation of self?  Have we so emphasized there is a heaven that we have neglected to teach about the horrors of hell?
I am so proud Alex Avritt, who I got to know from the days when she played high school basketball at Anderson County High School. Alex is in college now but on her Facebook timeline Friday, she wrote, “The Bible makes it clear that homosexuality is wrong. And the Word of God NEVER changes, regardless of how much this world has changed. Isaiah 40:8 & 1 Cor. 6:9-10.”
Alex also wrote on Twitter, “You either live the Bible entirely or not at all. You can’t just choose bits and pieces of it that YOU want to live by because it’s not about you, it’s about HIM.”
Speak on, Alex! Speak on others like her!

WHEN WE RELY ON PEOPLE OF THIS WORLD, WE WILL BE DISAPPOINTED.
Human government, while it is ordained of God (see Romans 13), is still made up of people. People are fallible, even when they are on the Supreme Court of the United States.
For too long, many conservative Christians have almost equated Christianity with the Republican Party. I am as guilty of this as anyone.
While it is true that conservative Christians identify more readily with the GOP, we must remember that the Bible does not say, “Ronald Reagan is the way and Rand Paul is the truth.”
Jesus said, “I am the way, the truth and the life.”
He also said, “My kingdom is not of this world.”
While we should be involved in the political system and should make our presence known – Jesus calls his followers, “Salt of the earth” – our ultimate allegiance is to GOD. He is first. Our citizenship is in his kingdom.
And He will not disappoint.