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Some Ray H. Hughes Sermons
I recently received an incoming link from a South African (I think) site called Katoikei’s Jukebox to my page on Tom Autry.
Much to my surprise, I found four Ray H. Hughes Sr. sermons posted on this site as well. My Church of God readers know Dr. Hughes, former General Overseer, former president of Lee University and widely regarded as the “Prince of Pentecostal Preachers,” well; I worked with Ray Jr. at Church of God Laity Ministries.
Update (February 2015): the links to the sermons originally here have been broken. But now, there’s a YouTube Channel featuring Dr. Hughes’ material, along with some material from Ray Jr. Click here to view the material available.
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The Kairosingers: Some Background From One of the Performers

One of the really nice albums I’ve posted is The Kairosingers’ Of One Accord. I recently received an interesting response from Charlie Balsam (now Director of the Jason’s Deli Leadership Institute):
I am from Houston, but went to Lamar University, where I got involved with campus ministry. That is where the group met each other….the core quintet: me, Debbie, Nancy, Russ and Peggy were originals: Pam came soon after; Debbie & Nancy were sisters, and later their other sister Lisa joined us for a while, as did a second flutist when Pam moved on. Russ (on the right side of the cover) died in 1993. Usually a sextet, sometimes seven voices…
WE only printed @ 1000 of the albums, sold all of them. I am not sure where the original master tapes are, but I and others have transferred the vinyl to CD I am sure.
The Kairosinger “sound” was partly shaped by the Kea sisters, who had sung from childhood, and whose dad was a solid Baptist. So that may be where a protestant flavor seeped in. But the group was 100% Catholic. However, the overarching sound was shaped by my fascination with the 60s rock/vocal group The Association. So the vocals always had a layered quality about them. You should have heard us do the Wedding Song. There are places on the album where you can “hear” James Taylor guitar-style influence (In the Spirit) and the Byrds/Dan Fogelberg (Living Water).
Another reason the album may have seemed protestant is that most of the songs are personal rather than congregational or liturgical; two exceptions – Praise & Thanks to Yahweh (a responsorial psalm) and His Love Endures Forever, with a strong refrain. Our concerts, similar again to the Association, were often an eclectic, versatile selection of songs, depending on the venue. One of our last concerts included a Peter Paul and Mary song (The Unicorn Song), the late John Stewart (Some Kind of Love), John Michael Talbot’s Holy Is His Name and Behold Now the Kingdom, and two Doc Watson arrangements: Summertime (from Porgy & Bess) and Any Old Time (Jimmy Rodgers ragtime tune). Both were enhanced by Debbie’s clarinet and Lisa’s sax. We also had a nice, a capella arrangement of How Great Thou Art. There are several other original pieces we performed as well…
Our sound was also shaped by Houston’s Keyhole singers (early 1970s), and a Christian folk music coffeehouse affiliated with the evangelical but still Anglican (at the time) Church of the Redeemer, off Telephone Rd in central east Houston. I believe Betty and Graham Pulkingham were involved at the time.
Catholic guitar-based praise/worship and liturgical music matured over the next 20 years with John M Talbot, the St. Louis Jesuits, and United Church of Christ musician Marty Haugen from Minnesota, and various other artists.
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The Collect for the Fourth Sunday in Advent
From the 1662 Book of Common Prayer:
O LORD, raise up (we pray thee) thy power, and come among us, and with great might succour us; that whereas, through our sins and wickedness, we are sore let and hindered in running the race that is set before us, thy bountiful grace and mercy may speedily help and deliver us; through the satisfaction of thy Son our Lord, to whom with thee and the Holy Ghost be honour and glory, world without end. Amen.
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Gaudete, the Steeleye Span Way
Anglicans Online notes that the Third Sunday in Advent is “Gaudete Sunday.” If they want to bring it alive, one way is to feature Steeleye Span’s (the 1970’s British folk group that brought that genre of music alive to so many of us) version of the ancient Latin hymn, as you can see it below.
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Cessationism, A Protestant Idea
An interesting thought, from Sherry Weddell at the Catherine of Siena Institute:
In 1970, only 16% of non Catholic, non-Orthodox Christians qualified as renewalists. By 2000, 60% of Reformation heritage Christians in the world were renewalists. And a significant percentage of the remaining 40%, who would not formally qualify as renewalists, have nonetheless absorbed some of their ideas and practices. The part of the world where Christianity is most obviously faltering, such as Europe, has the fewest number of renewalists while Latin America and Asia have the most. The United States is the western country with the largest number (31%). (A detailed look at the global growth of the renewal is available in the World Christian Encyclopedia, pages 19-21).
This is especially significant because cessationism – the theological conviction that the miracles of the apostolic age ceased when the full canon of Scripture become available as a source of revelation and guidance – is a Protestant idea. Cessationism never made much sense to Catholic or Orthodox Christians who continued to expect the saints to work miracles, but it was the norm among non-Pentecostal Protestants only a generation ago. As a baby Baptist in southern Mississippi, I was taught that things like speaking in tongues and miraculous healings were demonic manifestations. In the 80’s, many evangelical mission agencies still would not accept charismatic candidates.
Today, it is a rare American or Latin or Asian or African Protestant indeed who holds to strict cessationism. They aren’t necessarily going to be speaking in tongues anytime soon, but even the most cautious are usually open to the possibility of divine healing. This can’t help but strongly affect our ecumenical dialogue with our Reformed heritage brothers and sisters.
One of the things that facilitated my transition into the Church of God a quarter century ago was the fact that I came from Roman Catholicism (and originally from the Episcopal Church) rather than a Reformed church. Although its attitude towards the charismatic gifts (to say nothing of speaking in tongues) is complicated, the RCC has never abandoned the reality of the miraculous, even while at the same time upholding Christianity’s premier intellectual tradition.
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Bernie Madoff: A Disaster of Biblical Proportions–and Meaning
I’ve been doing a little “Rocky Mountain High” in Colorado the last few days so I’ve not been blogging much, but during that time the whole Ponzi scheme of Bernard Madoff has broken. For most investors, smarting from the already gargantuan losses in the stock market, it doesn’t have much impact (yet, at least.) But for me, coming from Palm Beach, it’s both riveting and instructive.
A little explanation at the start is helpful. Students of the New Testament are very familiar with the division of humanity into Jew and Gentile: “And in his human nature put an end to the cause of enmity between them–the Law with its injunctions and ordinances–in order to create, through union with himself, from Jew and Gentile, one New Man and thus make peace.” (Ephesians 2:15) Unfortunately that division is still very much alive in Palm Beach, as I discussed in my 2005 piece Join the Club (Maybe Not!) Madoff socialised (and recruited) many of his clients at the Palm Beach Country Club, which we used to refer to as the “Jewish Country Club;” in fact, the Club itself is one of his victims. That leads me to point out something else important: most of his clients/victims are Jewish, although the impact of his collapse is now reverberating throughout many financial institutions around the world.
I’ve seen some comments which would lead one to believe that situations like Madoff’s are largely Jewish in nature, but this is not the case. I’ve seen this kind of thing at work in the Evangelical world. Someone comes along in church circles, claiming special financial genius and high rates of return coupled with being a great Christian. He or she (usually male) signs up some prominent people in the church and/or Christian circles, which puts pressure on the rest of us to get in on the action. Put another way, it’s very hard to make a putt when your golf buddies are over there crowing about how well their investments are doing with __________, and I guess there were many putts missed at the Palm Beach Country Club on account of Madoff’s clients doing this. Once they’ve gotten everyone (including you) on board, they tank, leaving everyone broke.
There are two important differences between such Evangelical scam artists and Madoff.
The first is that many Evangelicals of this kind claim that God tells them what to invest in. My guess is that Madoff never made this claim for himself.
The second is the sheer enormity of the losses. No Evangelical could ever corral enough people and money to do this. It is a disaster of Biblical proportions, and it’s no accident that such a gargantuan loss took place amongst God’s chosen people. The same people whose ancestors witnessed the plagues of Egypt, the parting of the Red Sea and the collapse of the walls of Jericho are watching their investments do the same thing.
Anti-Semites who gripe about how Jewish people control such a disproportionate portion of the world’s wealth never stop and think about why this is so. The blessings that God gave to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and their descendants have never stopped, and that includes special intelligence and industry. Out of that comes the ability to assemble and manage vast wealth.
But blessings that come can be lost. In addition to taking advantage of the “herd instinct” of his own people, Madoff managed to circumvent the weak oversight that our government exerted over his operation. That has led some to cry for more oversight. Some of this is justified, but it leads us into the next trap: attempting to use oversight as a substitute for people of integrity. Oversight’s limits are severe in an environment where people act without conscience.
It’s not an understatement that the whole Evangelical view of how a righteous society should operate is based on the Tanakh, the Old Testament. A large part of that is that people should first act with integrity and transparency, accountable to God himself:
Wherewith shall I come before the LORD, and bow myself before the high God? shall I come before him with burnt offerings, with calves of a year old? Will the LORD be pleased with thousands of rams, or with ten thousands of rivers of oil? shall I give my firstborn for my transgression, the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul? He hath showed thee, O man, what is good; and what doth the LORD require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God? (Micah 6:6-8)
Coupled with that is a respect for what people have, especially people that don’t have much. Although many of Madoff’s clients were wealthy (note the past tense,) others weren’t. The Old Testament shows God’s displeasure at those with little having that taken away, and that includes the sovereign, be it David with Bathsheba or Ahab with Naboth’s vinyard. It’s also not an accident that, at the end, protection of what one has is a part of God’s earthly paradise:
But they shall sit every man under his vine and under his fig tree; and none shall make them afraid: for the mouth of the LORD of hosts hath spoken it. (Micah 4:4)
Madoff has made them afraid by betraying their trust.
In the end justice needs to be done here. In our court system, it will take a long time. But we who claim to reject “replacement theology” and also claim to know the Scriptures must see that the disaster of Madoff’s making must be a lesson to us. There is no substitute for upright living and transparent dealing–not the Law, not the sacrificial system, not even whatever special spiritual gift that God has given us. That kind living is what God expects of us, as he expected it (and still does) of his special chosen people, the Jews.
“You Samaritans do not know what you worship; we know what we worship, for Salvation comes from the Jews.” (John 4:22) Jesus Christ himself noted this to the Samaritan woman. Salvation indeed comes from the Jews. That process is described here. But the Old Testament speaks of the Jews’ mistakes too. It’s easy to concentrate on them, but ultimately were it not for the mistakes the salvation wouldn’t be as significant: “And for this, I tell you, her sins, many as they are, have been pardoned, because she has loved greatly; but one who has little pardoned him, loves but little.” (Luke 7:47)
Bernard Madoff has given us an expensive lesson. Like those in the Scriptures, it’s our duty to learn from it.
Postscript: after I wrote this, Joyce Reingold posted a link to this, an article in the New York Social Diary about “Jewish Society in Old Palm Beach.” For those of us from Palm Beach or aficionados of the subject, both photos and reading are fascinating.
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The Collect for the Third Sunday in Advent
From the 1662 Book of Common Prayer:
O LORD Jesu Christ, who at thy first coming didst send thy messenger to prepare thy way before thee; Grant that the ministers and stewards of thy mysteries may likewise so prepare and make ready thy way, by turning the hearts of the disobedient to the wisdom of the just, that at thy second coming to judge the world we may be found an acceptable people in thy sight, who livest and reignest with the Father and the Holy Spirit ever, one God, world without end. Amen.
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Delayed for My Appointment
I usually refer to posts like this as a “blast from the past,” but I think you’ll see why I don’t in this case. I first posted this in 2005.
One of the wonders of Christmas is that it’s one of those things we do at the same time each year. As children, we’re caught up in the wonder of the decorations and the presents. As we age, our attention turns to all of the holiday partying and getting together with family. These kinds of associations accumulate over the years; we want to relive every Christmas in the one we’re celebrating at the moment.
A real spoiler of all of this merriment is when tragedy strikes at Christmastime. As an employer, I always found myself doing layoffs (and an occasional termination) during December, and this made everyone feel rotten. But for me Christmastime took a definite turn downward when my mother passed away a few days before Christmas. We had her visitation just before the holiday and afterwards took her back to her native Arkansas for burial.
It was an eventful time in the “Land of Opportunity.” Its “favourite” son, Bill Clinton, was going out of office shortly, not to be replaced by his sidekick Al Gore, who had lost his own home state. Arkansas had been hit by a record ice storm, darkening the state and making travel difficult. All of these events served as a distraction for the moment. But every year when the decorations go up and the partying begins the painful memories come back.

My mother’s father had purchased a family plot. My mother was the last to be buried there. Her family’s course through the twentieth century had been a tumultuous one. Her only brother was killed in World War II when his plane experienced mechanical failure and exploded over Long Island Sound. Her mother never got over that; the rest of her life was a long downhill run in the shadow of that tragedy. In turn my mother left Arkansas to seek opportunity elsewhere, as many from the South did after the war. But she found that prosperity in Palm Beach didn’t bring peace or happiness, and so our family had tumult of its own.My mother’s family were Christian people. As each one of them left this life, they carried the hope that, having trusted Jesus Christ as their personal Lord and Saviour, they would inherit eternal life and ultimately have that eternal life together. With each departure came the promise that the separation was temporary and that, when the plot was filled up, they would all be together with God in heaven.
Today I find myself in the same situation my mother was in after she buried her father in that same cemetery. I am the last one of my immediate birth family left. Our course to eternal life wasn’t as straightforward as my mother’s family, but the end crowns the work, and the eternal result is what counts. Each day I am reminded that those I have left behind are reunited with each other, waiting for me, and that someday I too will be reunited with them in eternity. That is the appointment that I will keep someday, the appointment with eternity, God Himself and those who have already kept their own appointment.
And that’s the greatest paradox of the Christian life. One the one hand, once we have made Jesus Christ first in our life, our course towards heaven is set, and our agenda is to let God keep us in the voyage. On the other hand we are commanded to do things that will facilitate others making the voyage with us, and that involves work. With eternity as the objective, however, that kind of paradox is eminently manageable, although sometimes our churches and religious institutions don’t do a perfect job of managing their paradoxes.
“And, as it is ordained for men to die but once (death being followed by judgement)…” The loss of those who have gone before is a painful reminder that the rate of death is still one per person. But there is hope: “…so it is with the Christ. He was offered up once and for all, to ‘bear away the sins of many’; and the second time he will appear–but without any burden of sin–to those who are waiting for him, to bring Salvation.” (Heb. 9:27-28 ) More than that, there are those who wait for us:
Seeing, therefore, that there is on every side of us such a throng of witnesses, let us also lay aside everything that hinders us, and the sin that clings about us, and run with patient endurance the race that lies before us, our eyes fixed upon Jesus, the Leader and perfect Example of our faith, who, for the joy that lay before him, endured the cross, heedless of its shame, and now ‘has taken his seat at the right hand’ of the throne of God.
Heb. 12: 1, 2This then is our hope. But I must go. I am delayed for my appointment.
If you need to prepare for your own appointment, click here
All scripture quotations taken from the Positive Infinity New Testament.
