Ready for deliverance
Shreveport Times, LA -
3 hours ago
The 2006 district convention of Jehovah's Witnesses starts the final day of its program at 9:30 am today at CenturyTel Center, 2000 CenturyTel Center Drive in ...
Ready for deliverance
June 11, 2006
By James Ramage
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While waiting for her turn, 13-year-old Nia Ross said she was nervous and cold.
But when she was pulled from the pool, she came up smiling.
"It's like there was nothing else in the world," she said.
Ross, of Bossier City, was baptized during Saturday's program of the district convention of the Jehovah's Witnesses. The ceremony involved head-to-toe submersion in a pool of water before almost 6,400 inside the CenturyTel Center.
According to Walter Brown, an elder from Farmerville, the ceremony represents an ordination service. Now Ross is ready to take on her responsibilities to speak on God's behalf about the congregation, he said.
Ross' outlook suggested she understood what is demanded of her.
"Everything you do needs to be by (God's) standards," she said of her actions and behavior following the baptism. "It makes you think about what you're doing."
The three-day program of presentations, talks, demonstrations and biblical re-enactments launches a series of conventions held throughout the year, according to Carlos Boston, overseer to Shreveport's Witnesses.
The theme for this year's district convention, "Deliverance at Hand," speaks to Witnesses about their need to pray and prepare for God's kingdom to arrive, Boston said. Today represents a pivotal part of history, he added, and people must be ready for God's kingdom to deliver them from the world's unprecedented troubles, including violence, pain and wickedness.
"The conventions are reminders to us that we are living our lives in harmony with Bible standards," Boston said. "Our goal is to make the best contribution to society we can."
Over the years, Maude James, 65, of Shreveport, has seen just that. As a Jehovah's Witness for 43 years, she still remembers the segregated seating at Hirsch Coliseum, where the conventions for the area's two congregations were once held.
Now she looks over the faces around her at CenturyTel and said she can reflect on how individuals and the congregations have both grown and changed. For one, black and white Witnesses sit together throughout the arena.
James also looks back at her own development. She wanted to attain a specific position dedicated to full-time service within the denomination, and she has achieved it.
"I know the importance of the (convention's) programs," James said. "They deepen my appreciation of the hope of the resurrection. It's a lifelong thing; you don't retire from it."
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