14A RELIGION / The Charlotte Post December 5,1996 I i im CHURCH NEWS •New Shiloh Baptist 2600 Ehnin St. The church will host its annu al Jacob Ladder Program at 7 p.m. Friday. The guest speaker win be the Rev. Walter Gwin of New Pleasant Valley Baptist Church. Sunday Satxirday •Faith Memorial Baptist 6840 Wilson Grove Road The church will host a dedica tion service Sunday at 4 p.m. The Rev. George Weaver, pastor emeritus of New Mount Olive Baptist Church, will be the guest speaker. will be “Don’t Forget to Call Home.” The 11 a.m. message is “Hold on, Joy is Coming.” Prayer meeting and Bible study will be held Wednesday 7 p.m. •Berean Seventh Day Adventist 1801 Double Oaks Road The speaker for 11 a.m. Sabbath service will be Evangelist Michael C. Martin. Martin has sponsored crusades in the U.S., Africa and the Caribbean. •Chappell Memorial Baptist 110 Bradford Dr. The church will celebrate its 25th anniversary Sunday at 3 p.m. The guest speaker will be the Rev. Herbert Shackleford of Mount Olive Presbyterian Chiuch. •Shepherd’s Fold AME Zion 428 West BlvdL The church will celebrate its anniversary Sunday at 3 p.m. The evangehst wUl be the Rev. L.D. Parker of St. Luke Baptist Church. •Reeder Memorial Baptist 3725 Beatties Ford Road The Mighty Voices of Reeder will be concert Svmday at 3 p.m. Special guests include the Transfiguration Gospel Singers. •Pleasant Hill Baptist Chiuxh 517 Baldwin Ave. The Adult Choir will be ih con cert at 4 p.m. •St. Luke Baptist Church 1600 Norris Ave. The L.D. Parker Mass Choir will be concert Svmday at 6:30 p.m. •Logan Chapel CME 9505 Parkton Road The Brothers of Faith will host a fish fry and gospel concert Saturday at 6 p.m. •Clement Memorial AME Zion 2207 Newland Road The Lay Coimdl wiU sponsor a fish/chicken dinner Saturday at 10 a.m. Dinners are $6. •Weeping Willow AME Zion 2220 Milton Road The church will observe Miracle Sunday 96, Sunday. Services begin at 7:30 a.m. vmd conclude with a choir concert at 5 p.m. featuring the Weeping Willow Mass Choir. •First Mount Calvary Baptist 208 W. 28th St. The Angels of Calvary, Youth Choir and Men’s Choir will be in concert Sunday at 4 p.m. •All Saints Episcopal Church 6600 'The Plaza 'The Ministry of Reconciliation will host a healing and dehver- ance service Sunday at 6 p.m. Keynote speakers include Evangelist Tina Patrice Johnson, Bishop A. Foxworth, the Rev. Marilyn M. Campbell and Evangehst A Triplett. For more information, call 335-1535. •New St. John Baptist 2000 Si. John’s Church Road The 8 a.m. message Sunday •New Shiloh Baptist Church 2600 Ehnin St. The church will present “I Don’t Have Heaven in My View,” a gospel play, Sunday at 7 p.m. For more information, call 398-0184. Upcoming events •Weeping Willow AME Zion 2220 Milton Road 'The Voices of Praise wiU spon sor a Hobday Open House Show on Dec. 14 at 9 a.m. OBITUARY Clegg angers some in Nation Post loses one of its best Continued from 13A By Jeri Young THE CHARLOTTE POST You could set your watch by Lee Best. Every Thursday for the past 12 years, he could be found at preacher's son in rural Georgia to his death in 1975. Clegg, a Salisbury native, first learned about Muhammad while reading “The Autobiography of Malcolm X.” Then an under graduate at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Clegg decided to delve deeper into black history. He discard ed his plan to become a lawyer and enrolled in a doctoral pro gram at the University of Michigan to pursue Muhammad’s story. “I became interested in, real ly: What was it about Elijah Muhammad that could cap ture the imagination of Malcolm X and thousands of others for most of their lives?” said Clegg, 28. He pored over thousands of FBI documents and traveled to New York, Georgia, Chicago, Washington and Detroit in search of answers. Clegg’s book is peppered with the contradictions of Muhammad’s personality. He was a poor speaker, yet enthralled audiences with his messages. He was an unas suming man but held enor mous power over far more dynamic figures. Journalists and scholars have praised “An Original Man,” but the book seems to have struck a raw nerve with in the Nation of Islam. Clegg notes that he could not get current Nation of Islam lead ers, nor those once in Muhammad's inner circle, to talk with him for the biogra phy. “His appeal was not the same as Malcolm X, who was young, charismatic and ener getic,” Clegg said. “Elijah’s appeal had to do more with his patriarchal, or paternal, air about him. A lot of people were looking for that.” Willie Mohammad, minister of the Nation of Islam mosque in Greensboro, said he had not seen the book and could not comment. Two years ago, several A&T students rebuked Clegg after he gave a presentation on Muhammad during Black History Month. They said he should not treat Muhammad like an ordinary man. Old, new gospel clash in churches By Christopher Barton ANDERSON HERALD BULLETIN Bost The Charlotte Post, picking up papers for his routes through out Charlotte. Mr. Bost died Monday after a lengthy illness. Mr. Bost was bom in 1923 in Cabarrus County to Bob and Elsie Bost. He attended N.C. A&T State University in Greensboro and retired from Purina Chows in Charlotte. He then started working at The Post part time, often bringing his stepdaughters Adrian and Taliska to the paper’s office. “He loved that job at The Post,” said his wife, Ella. “It was just a job he loved. I think he loved it mainly because it was a black paper.” “We’ll miss him,” said Charlotte Post publisher Gerald Johnson. “We extend our sincerest condolences to the entire Bost family. He was a valued employee that always looked out for the best interests of the paper.” Mr. Bost leaves to mourn his wife, Ella; stepdaughters Adrian and Taliska Bost, all of Charlotte; brother John Robert of Charlotte; sisters Etta Belle Black of Duquense, Penn., Carol Adele Little and Letha Brandon of Concord; sisters-in-law Georgia Bost and Ruby Bost of Concord; and a host of nieces, nephew relatives and friends. Visitation is Friday from 6- 7:30 p.m. at Alexander Funeral Home. Mr. Bost will be funeralized Saturday at 1 p.m. at Second Calvary Baptist Church. Burial will be at York Memorial Park. ANDERSON, Ind. - The first thing you notice is the music - drums, an electric guitar, a bass guitar and syn thesizer. It's upbeat. Some people are clapping their hands. Surprisingly, all this is going ship at Southern Baptist Seminary in Louisville, Ky. “I suspect that in coming years it will grow to about 40 percent of all churches that will offer this kind of option, but it will likely be mostly in urban areas,” Mims said. But Park Place already is seeing gains from its new pro gram. The church has seen more come easy. So far, resistance has been minimal, although most church administrators know that any type of major change to liturgy and tradition can cause upheaval in some churches. However, Ponce said Park Place has been faced with a declining membership since 1969. “That’s one of the wake-up messages to really justify what we are doing.” Ponce, who has served as minister of music at two Churches of God in Springfield and Da3don, Ohio, said moving to a more contem porary sound hasn’t been easy. “For me, this has been an odyssey,” said Ponce, a classi cally trained musician. “There was a time when I had my defenses up, but I found this to be a viable form of wor ship.” on in a church. It's not the tra ditional service at Park Place Church of God in Anderson, where an organ and piano usually dominate the tones behind a congregation singing late 20th-century hymns. This is “New Place at Park Place,” a newly created service where churchgoers join in recently written Christian choruses. It is geared to attract a younger generation of people who have lost inter est in going to church. Park Place is the latest of several area churches to move to a more contemporary style of music and worship, while trying to retain their identity and tradition. “This is certainly a growing trend, but I’m not convinced it will overtake all of the main line and evangelical church es,” said Lloyd Mims, dean of the school of music and wor- than 250 people attend its 4- week-old 9 a.m. service on Sundays, while keeping its 500 regular attendees at its traditional 10:30 service. The Rev. Frank Ponce, a for mer Anderson University pro fessor, was hired by Park Place as a contemporary wor ship consultant. He has worked 18 years in music min istry. Ponce said Senior Pastor Ed Nelson and Music Minister David Coolidge began dis cussing innovative ways to increase membership and attendance about 18 months The Rev. Leigh Crockett of Grace Baptist Church in Anderson, which averages 550 attendance on Sunday morn ing, said he is still skeptical of some contemporary sounds. “We resist the contemporary music for the most part,” said Crockett. “Shallow words and a heavy beat are things we stay away from.” ago. “They began to think, ‘How can we do this without mar ginalizing what we are already doing?’” Ponce said. “This church has had a long tradition and change doesn't I SMALL Jf CHURCH Needs A Musician For Sunday Morning Worship Service Call Rev. Grady Sharps 391-4433 or 525-1125 Day or Evening SIMPSON - GILLESPIE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Dr. Walter McKelvey, Pastor Sunday School 9:30a.m. Sunday Worship 11:00a.m. 3545 Beatties Ford Road Dr. Walter H. McKelvey (704)399-2717 ROCKWELL A.M.E. ZION CHURCH “Celebrating ,128 Years of Christianity” William M lidtl.m III; Pastor 6301 Rockwell Church Rd. - WEEKLY HIGHUGHTS - Sunday Schooh9:45a.m. Sunday Worship-11:00a.m. Tuesday “Youth In Action”...7-9p.m. Wednesday - Prayer Service/Bible Study... 6p.m. Tutorial Prog. Tue. & Thur. all ages 4:0O-6:00P.M. Chariotte, NC 28269 596-8279 •r */v GALILEE BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. F.A. Griffin, PASTOR Rev. F.A. Griffin 2933 Shady Lane • Charlotte, NC 28208 Sunday School 9:45a.m. Sunday Worship 11:00a.m. Sunday School Study - Wed. 7pm Prayer Service - 8pm 333-0810 Wnow A M 1 0 3 0 P.O. Box 23509 Charlotte, NC 28227 704-332-8764 Bus. Line 704-882-9669 Studio Line 704-882-1330 Fax Interracial Interdenominational Christian Programming for The Carolinas "The Apostolic Assembly" Sunday 4:00 - 5:00 PM Bishop Lonnie C. 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