Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Sunday, October 5, 2008

This past Sunday was really great. My wife and I attended two of the services at Beulahland and then traveled to Milledgeville, Ga and attended the 2nd Pastoral Anniversary for a friend of mine Pastor Shedrick D Ellington.

The services were great at Beulahland. We had a very special guest Dr. Bill Crouch of Georgetown College. He came and spoke about the oppurtunities for minority students at Georgetown College in Georgetown, Kentuky. It was inspirational but its sad that I am too old to participate. Pastor Watson preached a sermon entitled "Take the Load Off" out of I Peter 5:7. The message was great and over 15 people united with the church in response to the message.

The Anniversary service was an afternoon service. I would like to say congratulations to Pastor Shedrick D Ellington of the Shiloh Baptist Church in Milledgeville, GA. It started 30 minutes late. I was the Worship Leader for the program and moved it quickly. The special guest was Pastor Derrick Dumas and the Greater Lizzieboro Baptist Church of Macon, GA. He preached a good message out of II Chronicles. Overall the service was meaningful and mindful of time.

After church we went to visit my wife's grandparents. It was good to see them and her grandmother Barbara cooked a wonderful meal that we throughly enjoyed. We actually enjoyed it for two days.

I have to preach this Sunday at Beulahland at the 10:00 am service. I look forward to the oppurtunity and ask for prayers to perform this task.

Saturday, October 4, 2008

Passing of a Public Servant

This week I had the opportunity to participate and assist in the final arrangements of Charles Dudley.



Charles Dudley, a former Macon city councilman and police officer whose public service was marked by his advocacy for children and the Unionville community, died Monday at a local
hospital.



He was 58. The cause of death was a blood clot and respiratory failure, Bibb County Coroner Leon Jones said. Dudley had been admitted to The Medical Center of Central Georgia for undisclosed medical reasons. A friend of the family, Kecia Morris, said Dudley was hospitalized after complaining of shortness of breath Sept. 17 and that his condition had worsened since then.


For about 18 years, Dudley represented the city's fourth ward. First elected in 1987, he served through 2005 before leaving in the middle of his last term to take a job as the police department's truancy coordinator.


"He was always interested in the community," said longtime Unionville activist Dorothy Johnson. "He worked with the kids. His slogan was 'save the kids.' He would have a day with them. He solicited funds for the Unionville Improvement Association. ... He was a wonderful person, a wonderful person. It's a shock."



Bibb County school board member Tommy Barnes remembered Dudley as "always looking out for the little guy."


"He was very active and cared about Unionville," Barnes said. "I saw him three or four months ago at the Frank Johnson gym working with kids. He was outside talking to them about staying in school."



On the council, Dudley was highly respected and known to be thorough in his business, said Councilman Ed DeFore, who had already occupied a council seat for nearly 16 years when Dudley first arrived. He said Dudley was instrumental in bringing to Macon the Miracle League, a baseball league for disabled children.


Dudley also excelled at brokering compromises among his colleagues, putting together the coalitions needed to get done work he felt was important, DeFore said. And when that wasn't possible, Dudley was not one to hold a grudge.


"It's tough to lose a good leader like he was," DeFore said. "It's sad. It's sad."
Mayor Robert Reichert, who was elected to the council the same year as Dudley and served nearly four years with him, also described him as easy to work with.



"I remember him fondly," Reichert said. "Always pleasurable, gregarious, outgoing. And he had a contagious laugh."


As a member and chairman of the council's Public Safety Committee, Dudley was able to put his law enforcement experience and expertise to use. It was a committee he was interested in immediately after taking office. And it was one he continued to think about after he left, said Councilman Virgil Watkins, the current Public Safety Committee chairman and occupant of the same Ward IV seat Dudley held.



"When I got that, he was more excited than I was," Watkins said. Dudley would frequently call the young councilman to school him on the background of various issues, and Watkins said he has spent hours at Dudley's house jawing about local politics.


"He knew it well, and he enjoyed it," Watkins said. "He was a good man. He worked hard for the community, really hard. He definitely loved Macon."


Years before joining the council, Dudley patrolled the streets as a Macon police officer. And he made a mark in his eight years with the department.



In 1976, Dudley spearheaded a class-action lawsuit in response to the treatment of black officers in the department. The lawsuit was eventually settled in 1981 for $500,000 and a consent decree that required the city to maintain a 31 percent minority representation across a range of departments and job levels.


Dudley eventually rose to the rank of detective sergeant. Gary Collins, now the police chief for Mercer University, was his partner when Dudley joined the detective squad.



"All I can say was that he was a heck of a policeman and a good guy all around," Collins said. "He was humble and very bright. He was a great investigator and a good person. He believed in what was right and believed in speaking up for what he believed in."


Collins said he and Dudley often went out into the community to meet with people, which was helpful in getting information for cases. It also gave Collins an early peek at Dudley's political prowess.



"I knew Charles was going to be successful in politics," Collins said. "He would meet with people, and they got to know him."


While on the force, Dudley was cited for heroism several times. In 1981, a photographer from The Telegraph captured Dudley talking down an armed robbery suspect who was pointing a gun to his own head and threatening suicide. That same year, Dudley helped rescue two female hostages from an armed robbery at a local Kentucky Fried Chicken.



Former Mayor George Israel created the Mayor's Award for Superior Achievement for his efforts.


"He was always a good police officer," said Mike Carswell, deputy chief of police. "He was a decorated police officer. He was on the SWAT team. He was very vocal about equal rights and not afraid to speak up for what was right."



But despite his success, Dudley's tenure in the department was cut short. In 1982, he was fired following his arrest for DUI in Jones County. Although a judge threw out the charges, Dudley did not keep his post because he had not told supervisors about the arrest when it happened. Dudley sued the city for reinstatement but was unsuccessful.


Dudley also had a DUI conviction in 1994 while a member of the council. He voluntarily entered a hospital for alcohol addiction treatment.



After leaving his job as a police officer, Dudley worked several years for Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp. He left after the company closed its Macon plant in 2005, returning to the police department as coordinator for its truancy program.



"I think he saw that if you talked to anybody in jail, he could tie a lot of those individuals to school truancy issues," said Bibb County schools Deputy Superintendent Sylvia McGee. "He saw that was an indicator."


Dudley worked, through a city truancy grant, at Bruce, Burghard, Ingram-Pye and Burke elementary schools and found students who were absent from school. He knocked on their doors, McGee said.



"He did home visits," she said. "He got incentives, food coupons and bicycles donated to use as rewards. It was about pulling all the pieces together to make a difference."
In the final years of Mayor Jack Ellis' administration, Ellis made Dudley his liaison to the Macon City Council.


Ellis and Dudley butted heads in 2001, when as a councilman Dudley wanted to post "Stop the Killing" signs in city parks to promote an anti-violence message. Dudley had already led a campaign that printed 30,000 similarly marked bumper stickers.



Even though they disagreed, they maintained a mutual respect, Ellis said, and he had "a great deal" of confidence and trust in Dudley. Everyone who knew Dudley, said Ellis, "will know that he always put the community first, that he had a genuine love, caring and concern for the people that he represented."


"He did make a difference in the lives of people."



That was the article in the paper . . .



I had the opportunist to assist his children in planning his final arrangements in such a way that would be fitting for a man who had done so much for the community. I personally knew him and the work that he did in the community for children. I was a recipient of many of the activities and funds that he brought to the Unionville community. It was a somber yet uplifting service. He died suddenly without much warning. He had been attending our church for a number of years but had never joined. I was contacted on the Monday of his passing and asked if our Pastor Dr. Maurice Watson would be able to preach the funeral and if not would I do it. I was taken back by the invitation but assured the family that if Pastor Watson was available he would perform the services. He agreed and did a great job with the Eulogy comparing his service to that of Martha as she served Jesus at the passover meal. Our choir sang and our ushers served so it may as well have been a Beulahland service but it technically wasn't. He will be sorely missed and I ask that everyone keep his family and the community in your prayers.

Why Start a Blog

Why Blog? Why share my personal thoughts with the world?

It's simple yet complicated to discern the reason for this blog and the coming posts. There are several reasons to start blogging including improving my writing skills, learning to express myself through written word and i plan to use this a long term archive of events of my life for future reference.

i am not that great of a writer. In fact it could use some improvement to say the least. I have in the past written in a journal but throughout adulthood that practice has ceased and I now have to start back writing down my thoughts. As I continue my christian pilgrimage I know that writing and expressing myself will be tantamount to my continual success in ministry. I have to continue to develop the fundamentals of writing in order to perfect the skill. Therefore I'm starting to blog!

I have been told in the past that I'm a non expressive person. As a man I have been taught to avoid displaying emotions and feeling so its hard for me to express myself at times. I am now trying earnestly to better express myself. Let me add that it's not hard to tell how I feel but I am not expressive you just have to see me to know how I'm feeling. I plan to address that through this blog. That's why I'm starting to blog!

I plan to be used by God mightily through His Church and in the community. As the years past and I can no longer recall all the events of my life I want to be able to look back at this blog and recap the places I've been and the events of the ministry of that God has given me. I plan to use this as a tool to one day write my memoirs. This is why I'm starting to BLOG!!