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Hundreds gather to pray for county
Hundreds gather to pray for county

Yahoo

time03-05-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Hundreds gather to pray for county

AUSTINBURG TOWNSHIP — Hundreds of people gathered to pray Friday morning during the Ashtabula County Concerts of Prayer Breakfast at Eagleville Bible Church. 'When you look around this room, it is all about unity,' Ashtabula Concerts of Prayer Board President Janie Gildersleeve said as she got the event rolling. The event was the 35th concerts of prayer breakfast that has included speakers ranging from professional athletes to Christian's with a unique life experience. She urged those in attendance to continue the prayer into next week and beyond. 'It shouldn't end today,' Gildersleeve said. Eight area residents were chosen to pray for eight different aspects of society, which included churches, the economy, education and youth, families and community, first responders and law enforcement, the military, medical facilities and health care and addiction and homelessness. A video detailing the power of prayer in the family of Rev. Curtis Cecil. The video brought to life the real life story of his daughter, Dakota, who was in a terrible crash on March 10, 2024. Cecil said, in the video, the family did not know if their daughter would live or day for the first 20 days and then what her life might be like if she survived. He credited prayer, and God's sovereignty, with putting the right medical personnel in close access to the crash scene that helped save her life. Roman Vencill prayed for the economy and area business, and Rev. Tim Kraus prayed for area churches. James Kimmerle prayed for the military, saying our young men and women perform as the 'tip of the spear' to protect our freedoms. He said he prays daily for his two sons presently serving in the military. 'My legs are out in my car,' Gordon Mapley, who lost parts of both his legs in 2014 after a still unknown disease attacked his body, said. He now has prothesis that he uses, but did not Friday morning. Mapley detailed how he believes his two sons and himself would not be alive if it were not for the power of prayer. Mapley added he spent seven and a half months in the hospital and the prayers of people from all over the country, and the world, sustained him. 'I was not expected to live,' Mapley said. He said he had been a Christian for about 50 years, but did not have the experiential challenge of facing such a major life experience which helped his faith grow. Mapley said his son, Andrew also started to have seizures at the age of 36, and his son, Peter had a heart attack at 43. 'Both of my sons and I are here because of prayer and nobody will ever convince me otherwise,' Mapley said. Mapley said he spent 40 years working in college administration until his retirement in 2019. He also said he doesn't know why some prayer requests don't seem to be answered, but God wants us to always to bring our requests to him. 'All I know is God wants us to be faithful,' Mapley said.

Michigan Army National Guard members say goodbye to loved ones ahead of deployment
Michigan Army National Guard members say goodbye to loved ones ahead of deployment

Yahoo

time26-04-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Michigan Army National Guard members say goodbye to loved ones ahead of deployment

GRAND LEDGE Mich. (WLNS) – A unit with the Michigan Army National Guard is headed overseas to support the U.S. European Command. A deployment ceremony was held at the Grand Ledge Armory Thursday, where families said their goodbyes. This is Captain Timothy Mapley's first deployment, and he shared why these ceremonies are so important. 'This is that last opportunity to give the hugs and kisses that you wish you could have done more of.' Captain Mapley continued. He is one of around 100 soldiers headed to the country of Kosovo in Europe for up to a year to support Project Joint Guardian. Captain Mapley said he is excited to put his intense training to work, but goodbyes are tough. It is Lieutenant Colonel Brian Snook's third deployment and third time saying goodbye to his family. He said that support from loved ones is the true bedrock for service members. 'That is what is going to keep you able to serve this great country,' said Lieutenant Colonel Snook. His wife and kids will miss him a lot, but the Lieutenant Colonel said that for this deployment, technology will help them get by. 'Whether it's over the phone for a few minutes, or just getting to see my beautiful family's face, that's what's going to keep me going through the entire move,' Lieutenant Colonel Snook said. At the ceremony, around 25 of the 100 soldiers left in helicopters for Texas. From there, they will head to Kosovo, and the rest of the Army National Guard members will follow shortly. They're in the country to help keep a safe and secure environment in the region. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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