Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Allentown March Fellowship Meeting 2014 is Next Week!

Here we are in the month of March and the Allentown Holiness March Fellowship Meeting in Semmes, Alabama is on us once again. It begins next Tuesday morning March 11th and runs through Friday night March 14th. It is always a super great meeting with lots of friends, fun, food and fellowship. Oh and we have a bunch of good church too.

The Allentown March Meeting has always been a time of spiritual refreshing for our family. We will hear 5-6 sermons each day and enjoy great singing each and every service. The preaching and singing will charge our batteries and we will leave the meeting ready to take on the world. It happens every year.

Pastor Eugene Futral


Pastor Eugene Futral, his family, his church and the other churches and Pastors that participate work so hard to prepare for the meeting. They are all such a blessing to every person that walks on the grounds. I sure appreciate them working so diligently so that folks from across the nation can be blessed and refreshed.

The preaching is always excellent at Allentown. This year the scheduled night speakers are Bro. Bill Preskitt, Bro. Tim Brimm, Bro. Kevin Lloyd and Bro. Jonathon Brock. I know that God will use these men to minister His Word to His people. I am excited about each and every night service.

There are usually three preachers in the morning service and Pastors on the Allentown board are in charge of running those services and choosing the preachers. Most of the visiting preachers have been given warning if they need to be prepared to preach and they should be ready to go as well. The days services are some of the best services in the meeting.

There will be young preachers each evening during the youth service. Perhaps Odie's husband will show up in one of those services. I am sure she would like that.

The Allentown Meeting does bring a little sadness this year. Our dear friends, Bro. George and Sis. Arlene Brimm are not going to be able to make it to Allentown. We have been hanging out with them for years at the March meeting and we are so disappointed they are not able to come. They are some of our very favorite people in the world.




Sis. Brimm has been very sick the last several months and she is not able to travel at this time. They are so consumed with all the things going on that traveling is not even on the radar right now but they would like to be there so badly. We are going to miss them terribly. In fact, we may not have anybody to hang out with this year!

Please pray for our dear friends. They are carrying a heavy load and a special touch from the Lord would be a great blessing to them right now. God bless our friends.


We always go to Dairy Queen one afternoon with the Brimm's. It is an Allentown tradition. Bro. Brimm is an ice cream eating machine!



We always argue, fight and squabble over who is going to buy the ice cream. Bro. Brimm always says it is his year to buy and I always say it is my year to buy. Last year we let Odie buy. That worked out good for everybody.

If you have never been to Allentown it is still not too late to make plans to attend. If it has been a while since you have made the trip, come on down. It may not be as warm as it usually is here in March but it is well above freezing and that is better than most places up North. The weather guessers are saying 60's and low 70's. You will be glad you came.

God bless you all.

Davy

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Savana Coffman

Our Cousin Savana Coffman passed away on February 22. I know that many of you have been praying for her and her family. Thank you so much for holding them up before God. I woke up this morning overwhelmed with emotion for Mike, Tabby and Sydney. As I hurt, ached and prayed for them I realized that they are carrying that feeling every moment of every day. Only God can soothe that pain.

Odie found an article about Savana on the Dayton Daily News website and forwarded it to me yesterday. It gives some more information about Savana, her family and the long struggle she had to survive. She fought a long hard battle. Please continue to pray for my cousin Mike, his wife Tabby and their daughter Sydney. They need God to help them and we know that God can do it.

This the Link to Savana's obituary and this is the Link to the article. I have posted both below because in time I am sure the links will become inactive. The article is formatting weird but it is the best I can do.



Davy

Savana Marie Coffman, 21, of Wilmington, passed away Saturday, Feb. 22, 2014 at the Cleveland Clinic Foundation.

Savana was a 2011 graduate of Clinton-Massie High School. She worked in guest services at the Holiday Inn Convention Center, Wilmington.

She recently received a phlebotomist certificate from Sinclair Community College, where she was currently attending college. She enjoyed fishing, camping, baking and helping people, even taking up sign language to assist others in need. She also greatly enjoyed spending time with her sister, her boyfriend, and her dogs.

She was preceded in death by her grandfather, Roy Coffman; and great-grandparents, Ed Allen, Claude and Alice Coffman, Godfrey and Bessie Isaacs, and McKinley and Gladys Hymer.

She is survived by her parents, Michael and Tabitha Coffman; sister, Sydney Cheree Coffman; grandmother, Alice Coffman, grandparents, McKinley III and Barbara Marie Hymer, great-grandmother, Thelma Allen, and her boyfriend, Stephen Purkey.

Funeral services will be held 1 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 27, 2014 at the Dodds Pentecostal Church, Waynesville. Burial will be in Miami Cemetery, Corwin. The family will receive friends 4-9 p.m. Wednesday at the church.

Stubbs-Conner Funeral Home, Waynesville, is serving the family.
To send condolences, please visit www.stubbsconner.com.



Dayton Daily News, Ohio, Tom Archdeacon column

By Tom Archdeacon, Dayton Daily News, Ohio
McClatchy-Tribune Information Services
March 02--WAYNESVILLE -- They had just finished burying their 21-year-old daughter under a big walnut tree at the old Miami Cemetery in Corwin as a bagpiper had played a mournful rendition of Amazing Grace.

Now they were back at their country church, Dodds Pentecostal Church of God south of Waynesville, for a downhome meal -- fried chicken, collard greens, mashed potatoes, dumplings, macaroni salad and much more -- carried in in covered dishes by the fellow parishioners.

Mike and Tabby Coffman -- accompanied by their 20-year-old daughter Sydney -- sat in the back of the room dressed mostly in black but managed to light up some when they talked about a couple of matters of the heart.

When it came to Savana, the conversation wasn't about the genetic glitch in her heart that had brought so many problems over the past 6 1/2 years and ultimately caused her death at the Cleveland Clinic eight days ago, it was about the always-full and caring embrace she put on life.

And when it came to Coldwater -- the Mercer County town of which the family knows very little and yet knows oh so much -- they still marveled at the way people there once had opened their hearts and purse strings for Savana, a girl they didn't know other than that she was an ailing cheerleader from Clinton-Massie, the school the Cavaliers would face at Welcome Stadium in a football playoff game.

Three days before that mid-November game in 2007, Savana -- who had learned in early October that she had the same kind of heart problem her mom had and that hers was working at less than 25 percent -- got a heart transplant at Cincinnati Children's Hospital.

That had been yet another blow to a good family and it was further complicated because Mike had lost his job at General Motors and the family now had no health insurance.

"I remember we had an administrative meeting a few days before that game and we had heard about the girl from Clinton-Massie so we decided, 'Let's try to do something to help,' " said Eric Goodwin, the Coldwater athletics director.

"I sent emails to community people and we put out a bucket in the office where we were selling tickets to the game. Students, people from around town, they all started dropping money in the bucket and people brought money in and we started getting more and more.

"Most were smaller amounts, but I remember one junior high boy showing up with an envelope with $1,000in it. I went, 'Wait up a minute. Do your parents know you have this?' We called them and they said, 'Yes, we want to give that and we wanted him to bring it in.' "

Before the game, Coldwater officials handed Sydney and her uncle -- Mike and Tabby were at the hospital with Savana -- a check for $15,180 to go toward medical bills, all of it collected in less than three days.

"Can you imagine that?" Tabby was now saying, still incredulous all these years later. "We didn't know anyone in Coldwater. We just know it's a town up north some place."

At the game, which the eventual state champion Cavaliers won decisively, Clinton-Massie fans hung up a banner that simply said: "Thank you Coldwater."

Although Savana had always wanted to visit the town of her benefactors, her health issues and those of her mom prevented that. But she was honored at the state basketball tournament in Columbus and she was escorted onto the court by then-Coldwater principal Steve Keller.

"After that, his daughter, who worked for Abercrombie & Fitch, I think, sent Savana and me gift cards at Christmas and all kinds of clothes and bags," Sydney said.

"We could never say thank you enough for what Coldwater did for us," Tabby said.

And yet, you could say Savana did just that by the way she lived her life after her heart transplant.

'Three good years'

Tabby Hymer was a 15-year-old sophomore at Franklin High when she met Mike Coffman, who was 20 and already had graduated from Waynesville High.

"My girlfriend and I were going to our football game in Miamisburg and we'd stopped at the McDonald's there to get something to eat," she remembered. "Mike had stopped there, too. He was on his way to a George Jones concert."

Actually, Mike was inside and tapped on the store window as they came through the drive-through . Their eyes met and it was, as they say, kismet.

"We ended up switching numbers with each other, but that was it," Tabby said. "I was just 15 and wasn't allowed to date, so we talked on the phone a few times."

They finally went out when she was 17 and three years later they married. Savana came a couple of years later and a year after that they had Sydney. It was then that Tabby's heart problems were diagnosed and in 1995 she had a heart transplant.

"The girls have been around this their whole life -- the sickness, nurses coming to the house, hospital visits," Tabby said. "They were used to it."

Whether or not that played a part in Savana's empathetic nature, one thing is certain: She cared about ... everything.

"I remember her walking home from school crying," Tabby said. "I was like, what's wrong?

"Turns out, it had been raining that day and she was trying to save all the earthworms in the street. She had been throwing them all back into the yards. She didn't want them to die. Back then already, she knew how precious life was."

It was early in her freshman year that Savana began to complain of shortness of breath. At first she thought she had asthma, but after some trips to Urgent Care, it was realized there was something more serious. She was hospitalized and the heart problem was discovered.

After some initial setbacks following the transplant, Savana had "three good years," her mom said.

She was a Clinton-Massie cheerleader throughout high school, was on the bowling team and danced at a studio in Springboro.

Although she had been hospitalized at the end of her senior year, she was released the day of her graduation ceremony and marched with her classmates.

After that she began classes at Sinclair Community College, where she also learned sign language so she could help hearing-impaired students. When the hospital had children who were nervously facing a heart transplant, Savana often came in to speak to them.

Her family talked about her far-reaching embrace of life, how she liked to garden, loved her three dogs (a German shorthaired pointer, a yorkipoo and a toy poodle), how she was best friends with her sister and how, in the past year or so, she had a steady boyfriend, Stephen Purkey.

"And she loved to bake, too," Sydney said.

Tabby nodded: "Oh Lord, she baked some funky stuff."

"Cakes, cookies, she took them into work so people could have them, too. She could bake," Sydney said before flashing a smile her parents understood.

"Some of her cookin' though -- she had a casserole we probably all could have passed on."

Put others first

"She didn't let anything go by," Tabby said. "She knew exactly what she wanted and she went after it. She had her life planned.

"I went through her room the other day and there was her notebook. She had everything scheduled. She had gotten her phlebotomist certificate at Sinclair and she was getting all set to start her new job drawing blood at Bethesda North.

"She had decided the classes she was going to take next in college. She wanted to get a real estate license and then she wanted to buy her own home."

In the process Savana had deeply influenced her sister, who is now going to nursing school.

"I had told myself I never-ever wanted to be a nurse," Sydney said. "I had seen too much over the years and figured I'd be too emotional. But after I finished my classes at Sinclair, I really thought about it and I know all about the hardships patients face. And I thought this would be a way to give back. I know the way nurses have helped our family."

Savana had worked one week at her new job when she came home one January day feeling ill. "She said, 'Mom, I think I ate something bad,' " Tabby said. "She started vomiting and the next day she still was. That's when I said, 'We're going to Cleveland to see my doctors.' "

"We got her up there just in time. She needed a new heart. They put her on a heart-lung machine. Even then when she was in ICU she was worrying about other people first.

"There are no doors on the rooms in ICU and even though she was very sick, she could hear the buzzers and beepers going off in other rooms and she knew what that meant. The nurses told me she told them, 'You need to go help those people, I'm OK.' "

When no heart became available, Tabby said doctors had to do "a total mechanical heart transplant" on Savana. "They couldn't close her, the heart was too big, so her chest had to stay open."

Complications developed and she died Feb. 22.

Wednesday night, they had a five-hour visitation at the church and thousands showed up. "After just 90 minutes they already had run out of the 500 announcements they had," Tabby said. "They had to go back to the funeral home seven times that night to make more announcements."

The following afternoon, Savana's funeral service drew an overflow crowd to the small church. In the middle of all the songs and words of worship, Sydney stood and gave a touching tribute to her sister.

Now the Coffmans are trying to help others. They hope to educate people about the need for organ donations and no one makes that case better than the 43-year-old Tabby.

She's on dialysis every day for 14 hours. She needs a new heart and kidney and has been on the wait list for nearly three years.

"So many people are up there (Cleveland) and everywhere just waiting," Tabby said, her voice starting to break. "If Savana had gotten a real heart before the mechanical one, I believe she would have made it."

The family has also started the Savana Coffman Scholarship Fund. Donations can be made at any branch of the LCNB National Bank.

"We're hoping we can get enough to offer a scholarship every year to a student from Clinton-Massie and one from Coldwater," said Mike, now a power lineman working out of IBEW Local 71.

The Coffmans haven't worked out the details yet, but they may well look for someone who is embracing life as fully as Savana did.

"The night before she went for her mechanical heart, I remember she was so nervous," Tabby said in a voice beginning to waver again. "But then she just sucked it up and right before they wheeled her back for surgery, she said 'OK, let's just get this over with.'

"That was the last time she was conscious and able to talk. She just wanted to get going so she could finish the rest of her life. She had so much she wanted to do for others and she just had so much she wanted to do herself."

To the end, Savana Coffman just had so much heart.

___
(c)2014 the Dayton Daily News (Dayton, Ohio)

Monday, March 3, 2014

Travel Day and More Ellisville Pictures


Friday was awesome in Ellisville. We have more pictures from Friday night at the end of the post.

Saturday was a normal Saturday for us. Wake up, shake off the late Friday night, unhook the utilities, hook the Green Machine to the bus, get everything inside ready to ride, empty the holding tanks, drive and then do everything in reverse. Well, everything but refill the holding tanks.

I like those travel days to go off without surprises and that is exactly the way it happened. You may remember the BoggsMobile did not crank on our last travel day but everything was fine Saturday. I have been keeping track of the voltage on the batteries and all looks well. It may be that one of the batteries is weak but I will have to unhook all of them to find it.

Here we are as we prepared to leave Saturday morning.


The BoggsMobile and the Green Machine hooked up and ready to roll.


When we go through Meridian, Mississippi and have time we always take a stroll through Dirt Cheap. My stroll was very short and I came out empty handed.


Kelly Jo and Odie looked around a while and I noticed they had a couple of items in their hands as they headed back to the bus. I am not sure what they found but knowing those two is was something they could not live without and it was cheap. Probably dirt cheap.


We rolled into White Plains Holiness Assembly near Conehatta and Sebastopol, Mississippi just a little before dark. Bro. Ricky Boler was there to help us get settled in and wired up.

We had great services Sunday and we will be here through Wednesday by God's grace. We will try to post more pictures from White Plains before the week is over.



We have a few more pictures from revival at First Assembly in Ellisville, Mississippi. We sure had a wonderful time with Pastor Kenny Morris, Sis. Joan and their kind folks. Friday night was tremendous. God helped us all in some amazing ways. If any of you all are reading, THANK YOU for being so good to us. May God bless you for your response in revival.

Pastor Kenny Morris celebrated his 64th birthday Sunday and we were on hand to help with the cake a little early on Friday night. Happy birthday, Bro. Kenny!

Thank you all for reading. I hope you had a great Sunday.

Davy

Pastor Kenny Morris

































Saturday, March 1, 2014

Fire and Fishing



Hey friends! Odie here again.

I can not believe we are already leaving Ellisville today. It has been wonderful to be with our Mississippi family once again!  We love the Morris family!!  This has been an exciting week in many ways. 

Monday's Adventure 

Monday was laundry day for us. The Washerteria is right next to the church so that makes the day a little easier. I enjoy getting to drive my scooter over to do laundry. We arrived got all the clothes loaded and we were ready to add money to the machines. Another couple came into with their laundry too. When they started their washer it made a loud noise and shot out flames.

It was a scary moment!!!  We could not find an emergency number for the owner or an emergency shutoff to the washer. The other lady called the fire department to come check it out. They came in and looked it over and soon we had the all clear from the firemen to continue laundry. Thank God for protecting us!!  It was an exciting couple hours. Here is a clip and  a few pics I took so I could share the experience with you. 









The culprit


Tuesday's Adventure

As Dad mentioned earlier in the week I was able to go fishing on Tuesday. I enjoy fishing from time to time. Thankfully I have wonderful friends who make fishing possible for me. That includes baiting the hook and getting the fish off the hook. 

Bro. Kenny Morris and Bro. Scott Morris took time out of their busy day to help me have a good time. Thank you both so much! Rylee Morris even let me fish in "her spot". Praise the Lord, we survived without hooking each other. Rylee and I are dangerous with sharp objects. We had a lot of laughs along the way. 

The grand total of fish that made it to the basket was 21, I had 10 and Rylee had 11. Several more fish had supper on our bait but we did not get them into the basket. Bro. Scott cleaned the fish and took them to his grandparents for dinner. 

Here are the fishing pictures. Thank you Mom and Dad for snapping them for me. I sure did not need to have my phone near the water. Have a wonderful weekend!

Odie


Dad and Bro. Toliver cheering us on. 



Cricket spill


The biggest catch of the day