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- National Bible Week--November 19-26--is coming soon! Get ready with the great info we’ve provided here.
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Great Americans talk about their love for the Bible.
- The elections are over—and it’s still time to pray!
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President and Mrs. Bush voted on Tuesday at their regular polling place in Crawford, TX. Pray for President Bush as he makes plans with the new leaders who were elected to office this week. Photo courtesy of the White House. |
- Elections are over! Our whole country has been wrapped up in this important event for many months. Now the people have spoken and new leaders are elected. So it’s a great time to pray for President Bush as he makes plans to work with newly elected leaders and those who are already in office. Pray also for every leader who was just elected, that they will consult with God in their plans and will seek to do His will. Pray for a spirit of cooperation to spread across our country as leaders develop new relationship with one another. Give thanks, too, for the blessings of living in America—a country where every citizen of voting age has an equal voice.
- Veterans Day is November 11, so remember to thank God for our veterans, asking Him to encourage them and to provide for the needs of each one. Pray that our veterans will know the gratitude of all Americans, and that they will get all the help and services they need. Pray also for those who have been injured in the line of duty, that they will recover successfully and will have great health and strength as they face the future.
- President Bush has a busy week this week! Pray for him as he participates in Veterans Day ceremonies at Arlington National Cemetery on November 11. He will lay a wreath and give a speech in honor of our nation’s veterans, so pray that his presence and words will be an encouragement to veterans and their families who are present. On November 13 President Bush will welcome to the White House Prime Minister Ehud Olmert of Israel to discuss issues of interest to both our countries, so it is a great time to pray for God’s blessing and guidance in each of these important events. President Bush is also getting ready to go to Vietnam for the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Leader’s Meeting on November 18-19. He will also travel to Singapore and Indonesia so be sure to pray for safety and protection and for a very positive outcome to these meetings.
- Our troops continue to work hard to safeguard our freedoms by serving the cause of democracy in Afghanistan and Iraq. Whether they serve in the Middle East or Asia or elsewhere in the world, we can thank God for our troops and pray for their safety and protection every day. Pray that they will have the courage to keep doing their jobs well and pray for everyone back home who loves them and misses them—that they will be encouraged and comforted by God and His presence in their lives.

Chaplain of the United States Senate
—Rev. Barry Black
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Chaplain Black portrait courtesy of the United States Senate. |
Rev. Barry Black serves our nation as Chaplain of the United States Senate. Appointed in June 2003, Rear Admiral Barry C. Black (Ret.) served in the United States Navy for more than 27 years, ending his distinguished career as the Chief of Navy Chaplains.
Rev. Black opens each Senate session with prayer and makes himself available to the members of the Senate, their families and their staffs—that’s a “congregation” of over 6,000 people. He works to assist them with their spiritual needs, providing counseling, Bible study and spiritual advice. On occasion Chaplain Black will be called on to advise senators on moral issues, researching from the Scriptures.
Rev. Black is the first African-American, the first Seventh-day Adventist, and the first military chaplain to hold the office of chaplain to the United States Senate. He is the 62nd chaplain of the Senate, the first having been appointed in 1789. He is married and has three sons.
Chaplain of the U.S. House of Representatives—Daniel Coughlin
Rev. Daniel Coughlin is a Chicago born and bred priest, ministering in the Catholic Church since he was ordained on May 3, 1960. He served a variety of parishes in the Chicago suburbs and in the city, including the magnificent Holy Name Cathedral. In 1984 Fr. Coughlin took a one-year sabbatical.
For five months he lived with the Trappist monks of Gethsemani Abbey in Kentucky and then worked with the Missionaries of Charity in Calcutta, India. After his sabbatical, Fr. Coughlin was a scholar-in-residence at North American College, Vatican City in Rome, Italy. Following those studies, he returned to Chicago and served in a parish, a retreat house and in the Archdiocese offices.
When it was time for Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert to find a new chaplain for his fellow congressmen and women, he asked Cardinal George of Chicago for help. Father Coughlin's name came up and he was approved. He was sworn in as the fifty-sixth Chaplain for the 106th Congress on March 23, 2000.
As Chaplain of the House, Father Coughlin has huge responsibilities to the many members of that body. He must exercise great sensitivity to the many diverse religious backgrounds represented in Congress. He also presides at many functions, offering prayer and counsel when needed.
Click HERE to see a photo of the inside of Holy Name Cathedral, Chicago, where Father Coughlin served in the 1960's.

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God’s Word can help us find our way in just about any situation! National Bible Week is a great time to spend more time in God’s Word. Be sure to talk to your mom or dad about National Bible Week, November 19-26! |
Your word is a lamp for my feet and a light for my path.
—Psalm 119:105
Since everything God created is good, we should not reject any of it. We may receive it gladly, with thankful hearts. For we know it is made holy by the word of God and prayer. If you explain this to the brothers and sisters, you will be doing your duty as a worthy servant of Christ Jesus, one who is fed by the message of faith and the true teaching you have followed.
—I Timothy 4:4-6

When Senate Chaplain Barry Black was asked “How do you stand for Christ in a pluralistic environment?” He said, “The apostle Paul talks about how you are a living epistle, and the only epistle some people will ever read is the epistle they see in your life. So as Edgar Guest puts it, ‘I’d rather see a sermon than hear one any day.’ Being above reproach, hospitable, sober and monogamous…I think that kind of life enables your light to shine.”

Rev. Daniel Coughlin knows that his job as a spiritual advisor is important, but he also encourages the rest of us to pray for all the members of his spiritual community.
“The formal prayer before each legislative session of Congress…casts a light on the day which awakens faith and calls forth a nation to stand with its leaders and say in unison: ‘In God we Trust.’ But daily prayer for the members of the House cannot end there.
I ask people across this great county to join me in praying for the Members of the House of Representatives. Know the member of your Congressional district by name and raise his/her name before God each day with us here in the nation’s capital.”

Rev. Barry Black uses some very good words from the Bible in the quotation above--actually the Apostle Paul’s words about being a letter that is alive. Hover here to read.
In the above quotation by Rev. Daniel Coughlin he also speaks words that come right from the Bible. Do you know where? Hover here to read.

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Image courtesy of the United States Secret Service. |
There are many places in the Bible that talk about how wonderful it is to trust in God. But this passage is really great because it talks about trusting in God rather than in the riches we can earn--our money! When you read this verse, it makes sense that our money has the statement, “In God we trust” right on every piece! Have you ever been tempted to think too much about money, or to be fooled into thinking that money can make you happy? Trust in God--all the money belongs to Him anyway!
National Bible Week was first begun during the difficult days of World War II. It was an effort to encourage and comfort Americans through the worries of having our nation at war. The organizers knew that if Americans read God’s Word, they would find hope and comfort and strength from God.
Although it was begun in 1941, National Bible Week has been going on faithfully ever since then. Many groups support its simple goal--to promote daily reading of the Bible with the knowledge that the Word of God so that our nation is powerfully influenced for the good.
What will you do to celebrate National Bible Week? There are all kinds of great ways you can observe this important time.
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