Contact Darryl Fuhrman 205.394.7521, [email protected] to purchase tickets.
“One Yard at a Time” Gala
Featured
Are We There Yet?

Just a short ride from Birmingham, you can experience a Colonial Christmas. That’s right- have a delightful luncheon with hostess Abigail Adams. Sing familiar Christmas carols in an early American Chapel. Visit the President’s House. Share a Christmas homecoming with George and Martha Washington and attend a Colonial Christmas party. It’s all happening at the American Village in Montevallo, Ala. as a part of the Village’s annual Colonial Christmas Lunch and Tour.
Due to the popularity of this event, making reservations early is highly recommended. Two tours are offered each day, Monday through Friday, December 3-4-5-6-7. The first tour begins at 10:30 a.m. and concludes with a luncheon at noon. The second begins with a noon luncheon and is followed by a tour, ending at 2:30 p.m. Make your reservations by calling 205-665-3535 extension 1031 or emailing, [email protected]. Tickets are $30 per person, and pre-reservations are required. †

Tell Us Your Family Favorites!

As a part of a senior-level Marketing Research course, students at Samford University’s Brock School of Business are conducting a survey on behalf of Birmingham Christian Family magazine to help us learn more about you, our readers. The research is being done under the leadership of Clifton Eason, Ph.D. “Each semester, we take on several ‘clients’ from the business community that have a research need. They have ranged from small businesses and local nonprofits to huge organizations, like Adidas, Waffle House, and the Bayern Munich soccer team in Germany,” explains Eason adding, “Through this class, we have had tremendous success producing high-value research for our friends in the business community. These ‘real world’ projects provide meaningful and practical experience for our students while generating data and insights that may otherwise be financially out-of-reach for many of our course’s clients.”
Would you take just a couple of minutes to complete the brief anonymous survey? Share with us your Birmingham Family Favorites when it comes to where you eat, shop, play and worship. Simply visit www.birminghamchristian.com/survey to complete.
To say thank you for your time, provide us with your email address and we will enter you to win one of two $50 gift certificates to Taziki’s.
Later this year we will share with you the what we have learned and use this information to help us better serve you with Good News!
-Laurie Stroud
The Great Outdoors
Presented by: Mark’s Outdoors

October 15, 2018 is opening day for bow hunting, which means it’s time for the final stages of getting your fields finished and stands placed. It’s also time to get your gun sighted in, and Mark’s Outdoors offers a free sight in with the purchase of two boxes of Hornady rifle ammunition. Before heading out, make a hunting checklist to ensure your first trip to the woods is safe and successful.
- License. First and foremost, make sure you have a current Alabama hunting license. If you are a license exempt hunter, meaning you are over the age of 65 or under the age of 16, you will still need a Hunter Exempt License Privilege (HELP) number. Your license or HELP number can be obtained in-store at Mark’s, or online at www.outdooralabama.com. Anytime you are hunting, have your hunting license readily available.
- Essentials.On Friday, October 5 and Saturday, October 6, 2018, Mark’s Outdoors will be hosting an in-store Deer Show with specials on the essentials for deer season. There will be sales on rifles, ammunition, bow hunting gear, scents, calls, and more! Be sure to stop by the clothing section for the layers you’ll need for any fluctuating weather conditions.
- Extras. If you hunt out of a stand, shooting house, or blind, you may find yourself with some slow stretches in the wee hours of the morning or afternoon. These quiet moments spent in the great outdoors provide an excellent opportunity for reflection. It is uninterrupted time you can use to improve your personal relationship with God by reading the Bible, doing a devotional, and soaking in the beauty before you.


As always, if there is anything you need to get ready for the season, call or stop by to see the friendly and knowledgeable staff at Mark’s Outdoors. Happy hunting!
– Mark’s Outdoors 
1400-B Montgomery Highway, Vestavia 35216
205-822- 2010, www.marksoutdoors.com
Photo Fun
The Prince of Peace high school youth group and the Knights of Columbus joined forces to raise more than $11,000 for the youth group at a recent garage sale. From left to right: Mandy Burmester, Lauren Atchison, Tony Phillips, Debra Spuhler, Jeff Murai, Deborah Buford, Adam Jusino, Ashley Seger, Bradley Murai, Anna Sewell, Ben Chambless, Gerald Buford, Brian Cuevas and Jeff Allen.
Photo Fun
The Prince of Peace Knights of Columbus Council #11537 recently recognized Anna Claire Grondin as the recipient of a $1,000 memorial scholarship to John Carroll, awarded based upon scholarship, service and extra-curricular activities as well as an essay contest. This year’s essay question was, “Why Does God Love Us So Much”?
Photo Fun

Moody, Ala. native and Seaman Jared Held is one of more than 1,000 sailors who recently returned to Naval Station Mayport/Jacksonville, Fla. after a six-month deployment to the Middle East and Mediterranean areas of operation. Held is serving aboard the New York, an amphibious transport dock ship, which takes Marines to the locations they need to support U.S. interests around the world.
Parenting Points
Brought to you by: White Plume Technologies www.whiteplume.com
All parents make mistakes, but we can learn from them and help protect our kids from the dangers of addiction.
Parents want to raise their kids the right way. But many are hampered by some prevalent misconceptions of modern-day moms and dads. By correcting these mistakes, parents can help their kids develop more positive behaviors which will protect them from substance abuse problems and help them live a happier life. This month, we conclude the series of “10 Mistakes Parents Make.” You can find the other 7 mistakes in the August and September editions of this magazine and at this link: https://lifeimprovementsteps.com/10-mistakes-parents-make/
Mistake: I need to teach my kids to control every situation.
- Reality: None of us are in total control all the time. If your teenager believes they are supposed to be, they will not develop the ability to handle stress on their own.
- Parenting step: Help them learn to turn first to God for guidance and support.
Mistake: I can protect them by taking care of consequences of their bad choices.
- Reality: If you shield them from the pressures of life so they don’t have to address them on their own, they will develop insecurity.
- Parenting step: Learn to avoid enabling inappropriate behavior, which is what you do when you take away negative consequences they have brought on themselves.
Mistake: It’s not my job to talk about God to them.
- Reality: If you allow them to obsess on their problems, they may turn to depression.
- Parenting step: It is your job to talk to them about God and help them find their purpose in life and their identity in Jesus Christ.
Getting Help. STEPS Proactive Parenting provides training, coaching, and materials for parents to become intentional about protecting their kids from addictions. We can learn to raise our kids to be balanced emotionally, spiritually, and personally and, if we do, we can help prevent addiction. Churches and organizations can visit www.StepsProactiveParenting.com to get information on what types of training and coaching are available for parents and how to get started setting up a program that fits their needs, or they can simply contact Steve Ward. Parents can visit www.StepsProactiveParenting.com to receive the free weekly STEPS Ministries blog, learn about personal coaching options, and get information on seminars your church or organization can sponsor.


-Steve C. Ward
Executive Director, STEPS Ministries
Author of STEPS: A Daily Journey to a Better Life
Music Notes

When you find yourself staring death in the face, something special happens. I shifted in my chair as I felt the tired and calloused hands from years behind a piano. I turned around to see CDs filled with hymns and gospel music stacked next to the CD player in my grandmother’s room. Ironically, those CDs were more of her line holding to life than the oxygen tubes strapped around her nose.
My grandmother, Ella, was the textbook definition of joy. She loved music, she loved singing, and she always had some tune she was humming. She was a church musician and led the choir. She also had four sons she wrangled together to create a traveling quartet, singing in churches around their hometown of Detroit, Michigan. It’s no shock that all her sons and their families are now in ministry. Extended family gatherings for us always have some type of song sung together. Singing is a way of life for our family, and singing hymns is purely essential to our family DNA.
Ella loved hymns and knew every alto line to any hymn in her hymnal. When she was diagnosed with dementia a few years ago and her mind started failing, music remained her only constant. She would forget who her family was, but she remembered her hymns. in her last days when Ella was lethargic from her medicine, someone would play a hymn to redirect her mind. She straightened up in her chair, sang her alto line, and did not miss a word. Being with her in those moments, are moments I will never forget. What peace she must have felt in those moments.

As a worship leader, the more I lead worship the more I am convinced that the songs I sing matter. Maybe one day too, those songs will be the only thing that wakes my mind up. As a result, I’ve found myself entranced by the hymns that Ella sang. In a way, I feel a connection with her and the saints before me when I sing them. The songs we sing and the words we recite together in corporate worship are important because they will indeed carry us to our last day. They give us a language that goes further than the body can control, and they will continue to carry our voices to future generations of Christians as an encouragement and exhortation to keep pressing on in faith. In an attempt to preserve the past, I created a hymns project called Pillars. It intentionally keeps the same melodies, structure, and form of the hymns while updating the music programmatically in modern musical forms. They are an expansion of what is currently on a hymnal page without losing their original intent and penmanship. I hope these hymns sink their roots deeper into my heart and into the hearts of those who listen. Most importantly, I hope these melodies and words wake our hearts up now until our final breath.
-Jeremy Moore
Singer/Songwriter
Worship Leader, Mountain Brook Community Church and Beeson Divinity School



