Newspapers / The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.) / Nov. 4, 1982, edition 1 / Page 16
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MIOMm M TOUT U|)N coupons wrfth a single $10.00 purchiee, nch Not to indudo ntoNici' coupons for frn coupons When triple Ihe value oxoeode the rota* of the Item, the refund wM be equal to the purchaae price of the Ham. Cigarettes and certain other Kant excluded by rCP? M~t8p*ctol. >1 Whole Rib Eye '< 1 2 lb 97 OOTTOM HOUND ? MRLOMTV ? MOULDCR ? CHUCK Beef Roast Sale 2s7 FULL CUT BONEM Round Steak ? 198 t2) J on FLOfjDAGOLD _0range ? Juice g.H 99? SAUSAGE ? HAMBURGER CANADIAN BACON ? PERPERONI trtino's oa# Pizza ggjjy Weekly Specials - ? w? wiitrsupermafket prices 'V Q ^ tXTRA LEAN SPECIAL TRIM COUNTRY FARM I ASSORT ED J Pork Chops 8 lbs. or more I2 I (Limit 2 Pkgs ) US.D.A. MSPECTED Box-O-Chicken MAMKET STYLE Sliced Bacon am* quality HEMH WESTERN ORAM FED WHOLE OM HALF _ 45* New York Strips T 1" 5KSI SSnufAS? "ou"? - 138 Sirloin Tip Roast . V PUJWOAOWOWNTAMQEWWES (178) ORANGES (125) OR 5 & 1" Tangelos 10 ? 1?? 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Organized religions are con stantly in danger of falling into one of two dangerous extremes. One of these is to dwell in the past and the other is to forget the past. Perhaps this is the reason that the musical show, FlddUr on Roof, has always had so much ap peal to me. Apart from being most entertaining, each time I see it I am reminded that life is dependent both upon keeping tradition and breaking it. Somehow we must keep a creative tension between forgetting our traditions and keep ing them. Perhaps this is evident in the story recorded for us in Joshua 3 . and 4. Having safely crossed the' Jordan, God commands the people through Joshua to create a memorial with 12 stones. One gets the impression that perhaps these stones were still visible when the Book of Joshua was written. At any rate, the 12 stones were part of Israel's tradition. Yet, the point of the story is not that the stones were to be honored, a but that the stones were to point to' something else: the safe passage over the river Jordan by the help of God. "When your children ask in time to come, 'What do those stones mean to you?' Then you shall tell them what the waters of the Jordan were cut off before the ark of the covenant of the Lord... So these stones shall be to the people of Israel a memorial forever" (4:7). f It is typical of human nature to in time venerate the symbol, rather than what for which the symbol stands. When that happens, our tradition has become as empty -and often even harmful - as that of the scribes and pharisees which Jesus condemned. God can con tinue to speak to us through tradi tions and symbols, but when these become a substitute for God, they | lose their meaning and their reason for being. If we want to keep our traditions alive as a means through which God can speak to us and future generations,- then it is extremely important for us to teach each generation the meaning behind them. All too often we simply pass on the symbols and ' traditions without making sure that they are. still alive. And perhaps the reason ^ that they do not live for our children and youth is that they no longer Uve for us. If we have allow ed our traditions to become mean ingless rituals that we practice by rote and without understanding, how can we expect that they will mean something to the younger generations? It is also true that there comes a j time when the old traditions no' longer are channels of God's revelation. Then it is that, instead of clinging to the stones, we must find new ways by which God is able to speak to us. Blood Pressure Clinic To Be Held Here Sat. I Blood Pressure Screening Clinics will be held Saturday, November 6, 1982 at the Edenborough Phar macy, Hoke County Public Library, and all County Fire Stations from 10:00-12:00 a.m. and 2:00-4:00 p.m. The Clinics are being sponsored by the Hoke County Heart Associa tion, and will be staffed by local! volunteers. AH residents are urged to visit a clinic and have their blood pressures checked for free. UN Day Celebrated With International Luncheon Dishes Hoke County Extension Home makers celebrated United Nations Day by having a covered dish! luncheon of international foods. Mrs. Bertha Hendrix of the Mildouson Extension Homemakers Club who is County International Chairman presided. Former Hoke County Extension Homemakers and former delegates were recognized. Over a period of 30 years, homemakers have visited the United Nations. ? Three international persons were guests: Mrs. H.N.O. Balfour from Cambridge, England, Mrs. Gretha Odom from Denmark and Mrs. 1 Edith Avant from Germany. The assembly room of the Lester ' Building WM beautifully decorated I with items from foreign countries.
The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.)
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Nov. 4, 1982, edition 1
16
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