Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Faith and Culture: Redemption, forgiveness true paths to wellness

Faith and health unite at the center of Abraham Verghese?s redemptive and semiautobiographical novel,�?Cutting for Stone.?

This is the first work of fiction for Verghese, a medical doctor and professor of medicine at Stanford University and author of�?My Own Country: A Doctor?s Story,? the acclaimed account of his work with AIDS patients in Johnson City, Tenn.

In�?Cutting for Stone,? Verghese surgically exposes the personal, familial and cultural wounds that sever faith and health. Then he skillfully stitches them together.

Set first in Ethiopia, and later in the United States, it?s a story about a brilliant British surgeon, Thomas Stone; an Indian nun, Sister Mary Joseph Praise, who dies in childbirth; and their twin boys, Marion and Shiva. Both boys grow up to become surgeons.

The doctors practice their medicine in a Roman Catholic mission hospital, where diseased, war-wounded and starving Ethiopians stream through the gates, and where familial deceit and violation occur within.

Stone is an exquisite surgeon with unparalleled ability to cut and repair the human body. As Shiva says, the three men are skillful at�?fixing holes,? an apt metaphor for the surgical profession.

But as Marion says,�?There?s another kind of hole, and that is the wound that divides families? and tears apart communities. It is the wound of the human heart sickened by fear, mistrust, hatred and deceit. These spiritual wounds fester between father and sons even as they provide medical healing for others.

No matter how skillful a doctor, Stone?s surgery cannot repair these human wounds, especially the ones that he causes for his own sons. Grieving over the death of their mother and incapable of caring for the twins, Stone abandons the babies and flees to the United States. He buries himself in medicine, believing that�?work was his salvation,? until he and Marion meet years later in Boston.

Verghese stitches the plot across the gaping wounds caused by the father?s abandonment of his sons and, later, Marion?s betrayal by Shiva, who has casual sex with Marion?s beloved Genet. This violation leads to Genet?s self-destruction and simmering animosity between the twin brothers.

While the doctors heal others physically, their most elusive need is for reconciliation among themselves. This kind of health comes only through confession and forgiveness. They will not be whole until faith opens the way to forgiveness. As Marion says,�?No surgeon can heal the kind of wound that divides two brothers.?

Cutting for Stone brings us out of the operating theater and into the human theater, where faith and health flourish together. What lasting human value can come from a surgeon who performs exquisite surgery but fails to love his own children? Of what value is a repaired liver if the patient despises his brother? If the choice, as Stone?s medical mentor says, comes down to�?perfection of life or perfection of work,? which will you choose?

Stone realizes almost too late�?how completely work had failed him.? Only in the end, facing the threat of Marion?s death, does Stone ask�?to be redeemed for a lifetime of mistakes.?

In the New Testament, the Greek word for�?heal,? sozo, is the same word for�?save.? To be healed or made whole is to be saved. Such wholeness does not consist of physical wellness alone, though attention to the body when healthy and sick is an important aspect of faithfulness.

Here in Memphis, we are fortunate to be on the cutting edge of the growing faith and health movement.

Thanks to the important work of medical doctors and religious leaders of various faiths and institutions such as the Church Health Center, Methodist Healthcare and others, we are coming to understand that health is so much more than the absence of disease or the full functioning of all our internal and external body parts. Health pertains to overall well-being of body, mind and spirit, and the wellness of our communities.

For people of faith, this wellness flows from God. Wholeness, salvation, is a gift of God in which relations between self and God and between self and others are put right, reconciled. Only then can we say that we are healthy, redeemed.

That?s why�?Cutting for Stone? is a redemptive story worth reading. It wields a fine scalpel to cut away our illusions and cultural deceptions that full health is determined in the operating room or by the prescription pad. Then it points toward God, our only true source of faith and health.

Dr. Lee Ramsey is a professor of pastoral care and preaching at Memphis Theological Seminary.

Source: http://www.commercialappeal.com/news/2011/nov/19/faith-and-culture-redemption-forgiveness-true-to/?partner=RSS

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Monday, November 21, 2011

Hundreds of runners take part in Edwin's Way 5K

John Mac Koester (left), Jake Lindow, Allison Miller and Eleanor Cummings, all members of the Germantown United Methodist Youth Group, participated in the Edwin's Way 5K, held at Neshoba Park in Germantown.

John Mac Koester (left), Jake Lindow, Allison Miller and Eleanor Cummings, all members of the Germantown United Methodist Youth Group, participated in the Edwin?s Way 5K, held at Neshoba Park in Germantown.

More than 400 runners, walkers and volunteers came out for the second annual Edwin?s Way 5K. The race was held on at Nashoba Park in Germantown.

The annual event was sponsored by Germantown United Methodist Church in memory of Edwin Smith, who died last year from viral cardiac myopathy.

Smith was an avid runner and supporter of the GUMC youth program. Funds raised from the event will be used for youth worship arts at GUMC.

Race-day participants enjoyed a beautiful run down the Germantown Greenbelt and a post-race celebration with food, a live band, door prizes and awards was held for runners and groups.

Jeanne Miller is a member of Germantown United Methodist Church.

Source: http://www.commercialappeal.com/news/2011/nov/18/sports-hundreds-of-runners-take-part-in-edwins/?partner=RSS

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Faith and Culture: Redemption, forgiveness true paths to wellness

Faith and health unite at the center of Abraham Verghese?s redemptive and semiautobiographical novel,�?Cutting for Stone.?

This is the first work of fiction for Verghese, a medical doctor and professor of medicine at Stanford University and author of�?My Own Country: A Doctor?s Story,? the acclaimed account of his work with AIDS patients in Johnson City, Tenn.

In�?Cutting for Stone,? Verghese surgically exposes the personal, familial and cultural wounds that sever faith and health. Then he skillfully stitches them together.

Set first in Ethiopia, and later in the United States, it?s a story about a brilliant British surgeon, Thomas Stone; an Indian nun, Sister Mary Joseph Praise, who dies in childbirth; and their twin boys, Marion and Shiva. Both boys grow up to become surgeons.

The doctors practice their medicine in a Roman Catholic mission hospital, where diseased, war-wounded and starving Ethiopians stream through the gates, and where familial deceit and violation occur within.

Stone is an exquisite surgeon with unparalleled ability to cut and repair the human body. As Shiva says, the three men are skillful at�?fixing holes,? an apt metaphor for the surgical profession.

But as Marion says,�?There?s another kind of hole, and that is the wound that divides families? and tears apart communities. It is the wound of the human heart sickened by fear, mistrust, hatred and deceit. These spiritual wounds fester between father and sons even as they provide medical healing for others.

No matter how skillful a doctor, Stone?s surgery cannot repair these human wounds, especially the ones that he causes for his own sons. Grieving over the death of their mother and incapable of caring for the twins, Stone abandons the babies and flees to the United States. He buries himself in medicine, believing that�?work was his salvation,? until he and Marion meet years later in Boston.

Verghese stitches the plot across the gaping wounds caused by the father?s abandonment of his sons and, later, Marion?s betrayal by Shiva, who has casual sex with Marion?s beloved Genet. This violation leads to Genet?s self-destruction and simmering animosity between the twin brothers.

While the doctors heal others physically, their most elusive need is for reconciliation among themselves. This kind of health comes only through confession and forgiveness. They will not be whole until faith opens the way to forgiveness. As Marion says,�?No surgeon can heal the kind of wound that divides two brothers.?

Cutting for Stone brings us out of the operating theater and into the human theater, where faith and health flourish together. What lasting human value can come from a surgeon who performs exquisite surgery but fails to love his own children? Of what value is a repaired liver if the patient despises his brother? If the choice, as Stone?s medical mentor says, comes down to�?perfection of life or perfection of work,? which will you choose?

Stone realizes almost too late�?how completely work had failed him.? Only in the end, facing the threat of Marion?s death, does Stone ask�?to be redeemed for a lifetime of mistakes.?

In the New Testament, the Greek word for�?heal,? sozo, is the same word for�?save.? To be healed or made whole is to be saved. Such wholeness does not consist of physical wellness alone, though attention to the body when healthy and sick is an important aspect of faithfulness.

Here in Memphis, we are fortunate to be on the cutting edge of the growing faith and health movement.

Thanks to the important work of medical doctors and religious leaders of various faiths and institutions such as the Church Health Center, Methodist Healthcare and others, we are coming to understand that health is so much more than the absence of disease or the full functioning of all our internal and external body parts. Health pertains to overall well-being of body, mind and spirit, and the wellness of our communities.

For people of faith, this wellness flows from God. Wholeness, salvation, is a gift of God in which relations between self and God and between self and others are put right, reconciled. Only then can we say that we are healthy, redeemed.

That?s why�?Cutting for Stone? is a redemptive story worth reading. It wields a fine scalpel to cut away our illusions and cultural deceptions that full health is determined in the operating room or by the prescription pad. Then it points toward God, our only true source of faith and health.

Dr. Lee Ramsey is a professor of pastoral care and preaching at Memphis Theological Seminary.

Source: http://www.commercialappeal.com/news/2011/nov/19/faith-and-culture-redemption-forgiveness-true-to/?partner=RSS

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Sunday, November 20, 2011

People in business

masterIT announces the promotion of Connie Foster from senior vice president of finance and operations to chief operating officer.

Stephen H. Biller, principal in The Biller Law Firm, has been selected for inclusion in The Best Lawyers of 2012.

Heather Wingo was chosen as Patriot Bank?s Employee of the Quarter for the third quarter. She is a teller at its Collierville office.

Catholic Charities of West Tennessee is pleased to announce the election of new officers for its board of directors for the 2012 term. Bill Duncan, global head of Homewood Suites and Home2 Brand for Hilton Corporation, was elected board chairman; Virginia Scherer, a long-time board member and active volunteer, was re-elected vice chairman; Dr. John Smarrelli Jr., president of Christian Brothers University, was elected secretary.

Ford & Harrison LLP, a national labor and employment law firm, is pleased to announce that the firm has been named among the "Best Law Firms" for 2011-2012 by U.S. News and Best Lawyers. The following attorneys were recognized: Louis P. Britt, Herbert E. Gerson, Robert D. Meyers, David A. Prather and Delaine R. Smith.

Eight members of Wyatt, Tarrant & Combs, LLP, have been selected as 2011 Mid-South Super Lawyers by Law & Politics: Robert E. Craddock Jr., Robert L. Crawford and Thomas R. Dyer, were selected in the area of business litigation; Charles M. Key was selected in the area of health care; Glen G. Reid was selected in the area of civil litigation defense; William S. Solmson was selected in the area of mergers and acquisitions; Ellen B. Vergos was selected in the area of bankruptcy and creditor/debtor rights; and Mark Vorder-Bruegge Jr. was selected in the area of intellectual property litigation.

E-mail information and photos to cabiznews@commercialappeal.com.

Source: http://www.commercialappeal.com/news/2011/nov/21/peopel-business/?partner=RSS

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Frayser Woman Charged with 10 Counts of Aggravated Assault

Frayser Woman Charged with 10 Counts of Aggravated Assault

FAST FACTS:

  • A woman was arrested and charged with 10 counts of Aggravated Assault.
  • The victim says the suspect tried to run her and her eight children over with a minivan while in their front yard.
  • A 17-year-old was shot in the hand when the victim?s fianc� fired at the van in self-defense.

Daniel.Hight@WREG.com

(Memphis 11-19-11) - Tamara Harris is grateful her family escaped, after she says 30-year old Monique Golden tried to run her family over with a van.

?Somebody could have been dead,? said Harris. ?She could have killed my kids, could have killed my fianc�, could have killed me.?

Harris says Thursday she and Golden got into an argument and Friday morning Golden showed up with a van full of children, one of them Golden?s� 14-year-old son and he had a rifle.

Harris says Golden tried to run over her and her eight kids as they were walking out the front door for school.


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?I turned around and pushed them back into the house,? Harris said, as she reenacted what happened.

Harris says her fianc� shot at the van in self-defense hitting a 17-year-old in the hand. Golden then sped off.

Harris says she then took her children to the bus stop so they could go to school and Golden tried to run her family over a second time.

?The old lady that?s standing on the front porch right there was in the yard,? she said, as she pointed across the street. ?She was like 'Move out of the way. Here she comes again. Ya'll go, run?.?

They escaped but Golden did not. Police arrested her and charged her with ten counts of aggravated assault.

?They should have given her more than that because she endangered her own kid?s lives,? said Harris.

She is just thankful no one was seriously hurt. ?I thank God that it didn't come out worse than it did,? said Harris.

No one answered the door when News Channel 3 went by Golden?s home Saturday afternoon.

She is also charged with Contributing to the Delinquency of a Child. Her 14-year-old son is charged with Aggravated Assault.

Source: http://www.wreg.com/news/wreg-frayser-woman-charged-with-10-counts-of-aggravated-assault-20111119,0,6425453.story?track=rss

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Family Pleads For Hit-and-Run Driver to Come Forward

FAST FACTS:
  • 25-year-old Chamal Jones was hit by a car on East Holmes.
  • The driver stopped to pick up some debris, but then sped off.
  • Jones is at The MED, unable to respond to people or commands.
natasha.chen@wreg.com

Twitter - NChen_WREG3

Facebook.com/NatashaChenReports

(Memphis, TN 11/18/11) A 25-year-old woman visiting from Los Angeles was hit by a car on East Holmes Road Monday evening. The driver allegedly stopped to pick up debris, but then sped off.

There is no accurate description of the vehicle.


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25-year-old Chamal Jones had come to Memphis with her twin sister and 18-month old baby, to visit her aunt and uncle.

They had been staying with them in Whitehaven for the past month and planning on spending the holidays together, with the possibility of moving to Memphis for good.

?It hurts me, because you come all the way from California to Memphis. You know, it makes me and my husband feel like, why? She?s visiting. Why now?? said her aunt, Kioni Logan.

On Monday evening, Chamal was trying to cross the street to the corner store, to get her baby something to eat.

?I thought she was gone. The way her body was twisted, she was bleeding a whole lot. She had a lot of injuries to the back of her head, broke her neck, lacerated her liver,? her aunt said.

Now Chamal lies at The MED. Doctors tell the family she has good vital signs, but is not able to respond to any person or commands.

Chamal?s grandmother, Olivia Bearden Logan, was planning to join them for Christmas but now has arrived early.

?I just got hysterical. And the only thing I could think about was to walk here, just to try to get here and see her,? she said.

Olivia Bearden Logan has raised Chamal and her siblings from childhood, since her parents are both deceased: one of them killed in a drive-by shooting in Los Angeles. Logan?s brother was hit by a car a few years ago, and her son was killed in Memphis at age five, also by a driver.

Logan herself just had a heart attack days before her granddaughter was hit. But she made it to Memphis, with only the thought of being with Chamal.

The family is focused on her recovery, though still frustrated at the thought of the driver getting away.

?I would just love to know why,? Logan said. ?For you to get out, and the only thing you were worried about was a license plate or some glass or something that came off your car??

They now hope and pray for Chamal?s recovery. At home, her twin sister feels an indescribable loss of her ?other half?. Chamal?s baby knows that her mother is not there, despite being in the care of her mother?s identical twin.

?We?re thankful that she?s still alive, but Thanksgiving is not the same, because usually everybody?s cheery. No one in our house is cheery,? her aunt said.

If you have any information that could help lead to the driver, please call Crime Stoppers at (901) 528-CASH.

Logan just has this message for the driver: ?If you are responsible for the hit and run of her, we know how bad it might seem to you, and how much trouble you think you?re going to get in. But the right thing to do in God?s eye would be to come forward.?

Source: http://www.wreg.com/news/wreg-family-pleads-for-hitandrun-driver-to-come-forward-20111118,0,2240684.story?track=rss

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Saturday, November 19, 2011

My Ride: Southaven man's perseverance pays off during long restoration

Restoring cars takes dedication and commitment. For William Ham of Southaven, restoring his 1960 MGA from the ground up -- took more than four years. Ham said "that it helps immensely having an understanding wife (Fay). I'm lucky in this respect."

The car enthusiast says, "No matter how skilled you are (when it comes to restoring), you will become frustrated and face disappointment. Just 'soldier on,' that light at the end of tunnel is not an oncoming train, it's the sunlight of success."

What car club(s) are you associated with? I belong to the North American MGA Register.

What car do you own: My car is a 1960 MGA 1600 roadster. The 1600 denotes the engine size, 1600 cc. The earlier version of this car had a 1500 cc engine . The later version, the Mark II, has 1622 cc engine. Only 2,111 of these cars had twin cam engines. This is last MG (Morris Garage, Oxford England) built with a separate body and frame and with wooden floorboards. The car has no door handles or locks. You open the doors by reaching inside and pulling a cord. There are no roll-up windows just side curtains which are stored behind the seats until needed.

What sparked your interest in cars: Being a teenager in the '50s when American auto design was at its peak sparked my interest in cars. I became interested in MGs in the middle 1980s when I was traveling to England to buy used tractors for resale. This is not my first MGA.

What advice would you give someone thinking of restoring his first vehicle: Lay in a good supply of perseverance if this is your first restoration. Find yourself a good body and paint man, not just a panel replacer. When it comes to body and paint work, this is an art.

To be featured in My Ride, call (901) 529-5270 or e-mail Kim Odom at kodom@commercialappeal.com.

Source: http://www.commercialappeal.com/news/2011/nov/20/my-ride-southaven-mans-perseverance-pays-off/?partner=RSS

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