icantlogoff
23rd August 2007, 11:05 AM
from the... oh crap why do i still live here file
http://www.wmcstations.com/Global/story.asp?S=6969380
If you live within the city limits of Memphis, someone new may be praying for you right now!
A new prayer campaign matches one prayerful person with each of the 7,000 city streets in Memphis.
Mary Ann Livesay is a member of the prayer campaign, which maps out streets of Memphis and matches them up with people of prayer.
"So that the Lord can take care of the people on that street, keep them safe, and most of all to lead them to know him," she said.
Mary Ann claims the power of prayer restored her health after a stroke and coma. Days before her stroke, the Cordova woman led a youth basketball team in a bible study and devotions. The players learned of her condition 35 hours into the coma:
"They dropped to their knees on that basketball court and I was out of my coma within an hour," she said.
Mary Ann found out about the street by street prayer assignments after columnist Wendy Thomas wrote about Kathy Hammond in The Commercial Appeal:
"I grieve with everyone over the suffering of the city," Hammond said in an interview with Action News 5. "It's a large city, and it's difficult to pray for the city as a whole. But I thought what if we go street by street?"
A home invasion and brutal attack on a woman near Chickasaw Gardens this Spring prompted the creation of a group called Citizens Against Crime. They flooded city hall demanding a safer community. The attack prompted Kathy Hammond to begin her street prayer campaign. Hammond said the power of prayer carried her through a personal health crisis, and has faith it can restore Memphis' community health, too.
"For those who would doubt, I would just ask: have you ever asked him yourself? Have you ever asked, 'God show me the way?'"
Many do, knowing it will take a lot of other grassroots actions in education, public safety, and quality of life to change Memphis. But they insist street by street prayer is the path to our city's salvation.
:funny:
I wonder who is responsible for anything that now happen on those streets....
I think Mr deity words are apt right now
When things go right who gets the praise..me, when things go wrong who gets the blame...Not me,,,i am not gonna mess with that!
http://www.wmcstations.com/Global/story.asp?S=6969380
If you live within the city limits of Memphis, someone new may be praying for you right now!
A new prayer campaign matches one prayerful person with each of the 7,000 city streets in Memphis.
Mary Ann Livesay is a member of the prayer campaign, which maps out streets of Memphis and matches them up with people of prayer.
"So that the Lord can take care of the people on that street, keep them safe, and most of all to lead them to know him," she said.
Mary Ann claims the power of prayer restored her health after a stroke and coma. Days before her stroke, the Cordova woman led a youth basketball team in a bible study and devotions. The players learned of her condition 35 hours into the coma:
"They dropped to their knees on that basketball court and I was out of my coma within an hour," she said.
Mary Ann found out about the street by street prayer assignments after columnist Wendy Thomas wrote about Kathy Hammond in The Commercial Appeal:
"I grieve with everyone over the suffering of the city," Hammond said in an interview with Action News 5. "It's a large city, and it's difficult to pray for the city as a whole. But I thought what if we go street by street?"
A home invasion and brutal attack on a woman near Chickasaw Gardens this Spring prompted the creation of a group called Citizens Against Crime. They flooded city hall demanding a safer community. The attack prompted Kathy Hammond to begin her street prayer campaign. Hammond said the power of prayer carried her through a personal health crisis, and has faith it can restore Memphis' community health, too.
"For those who would doubt, I would just ask: have you ever asked him yourself? Have you ever asked, 'God show me the way?'"
Many do, knowing it will take a lot of other grassroots actions in education, public safety, and quality of life to change Memphis. But they insist street by street prayer is the path to our city's salvation.
:funny:
I wonder who is responsible for anything that now happen on those streets....
I think Mr deity words are apt right now
When things go right who gets the praise..me, when things go wrong who gets the blame...Not me,,,i am not gonna mess with that!