Saturday, January 05, 2013

C.S. Lewis College update
For those of you interested in the status of C.S. Lewis College, which I have written about several times, below is the latest from the C.S. Lewis Foundation.
The bottom line is that Hobby Lobby has given the Northfield Campus in Massachusetts to a Christian foundation that will decide who gets to use the campus. The CSL College people still are trying to get approval for the college to be on the Northfield Campus. --Mike H.


C.S. Lewis College Update


Greetings and Happy New Year!

I want to take this opportunity to thank you for your contribution as a Founder of C.S. Lewis College and for your words of encouragement and prayerful support through the ups and downs of this past year of uncertainty.

In particular, I am writing to apprise you of late-breaking news regarding the Northfield Campus: The Green Family of Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc. has donated the campus to the National Christian Foundation (NCF), which is a nonprofit grant-making foundation. NCF has taken ownership of the property and will, from this point on, conduct the search for a suitable recipient for the campus.

An excerpt from Hobby Lobby’s press release reads as follows:

"NCF is a nonprofit charity based in Alpharetta, Ga. Hobby Lobby has made donations of other properties to NCF in the past and is confident they will care for the property with the same commitment demonstrated by Hobby Lobby over the past three years. NCF will continue the work of finding a long-term owner for the property that will honor the legacy of D.L. Moody.

We're thrilled with the opportunity to further preserve the heritage of the Northfield campus and to serve Hobby Lobby with their charitable giving objectives," said Steve Chapman, NCF Vice President of Communications."


Please know that the C.S. Lewis Foundation remains deeply committed to the founding C.S. Lewis College at a site that suits the particular vision of the College as a Christian college of the Great Books and Visual and Performing Arts that is actively committed to engaging the broader secular community. We continue to be interested in the Northfield Campus as our preferred site and are seeking the needed funding to launch the College there.

With this in mind, we would welcome your continued prayers and best wishes as we make contact with the National Christian Foundation to explore the future possibilities of launching C.S. Lewis College on location in Northfield.

Further up and further in!

J. Stanley Mattson
President & Founder
C.S. Lewis Foundation




Jan. 5, 2013, column:

End of the world should be last thing we worry about



In case you missed the news, the world didn’t end Dec. 21, as some people thought the Mayan calendar predicted. In fact, if you’re reading this, we’ve made it to Jan. 5.
Some “worlds” did end that day. By coincidence, it was the last day at work for my wife, who is moving to a new job after 28 years in a place she loved. It also was the last day at work for my brother, who is retiring after a productive career in education.
But both are embarking on new phases of their lives, so they have new worlds to enjoy. Kathy is glad she will be closer to the patients she treats, and Sam will have more time for golf, travel and ranching.
Actually, followers of Christ believe that at the real end of the world, they will have a wonderful new environment to enjoy forever. Many of us are uneasy about the future, but those who believe the scripture’s words should be confident.
“Has this world been so kind to you that you should leave it with regret?” wrote C.S. Lewis. “There are better things ahead than any we leave behind.”
Paul said it more succinctly in Philippians 1:21: “For to me, to live is Christ and to die is gain.”
I don’t waste much energy worrying about when the world will end. The final day could be tomorrow with some comet striking the Earth or with Jesus showing up literally as portrayed in the Bible.
For any of us individually, though, it also could end tomorrow as our pastor, Tommy Politz, described in his sermon Sunday — with a car accident, an aneurysm or any unpredictable calamity.
Even in the best scenario, the longest any of us will be here is a few more decades, so for each person, the end will arrive soon. Compared to the trillions of years of eternity, each life is shorter than a tweet.
My mother has been in poor health for a while. Although little was said about it during Christmastime, I know all my family, especially Dad, my brothers and sister, were thinking more about Mom than about presents or turkey and dressing. We’re thankful that as the New Year approached, she was feeling better.
Christmas Day did remind us we can’t predict the future. The electricity went out on the windy, snowy day, and instead of our traditional holiday feast, we ate cold ham sandwiches.
I didn’t hear anybody complain. There’s no point in worrying about what we can’t control, and the biggest thing in that category is when we will leave this Earth.
Sunday’s sermon was based on a letter by James, brother of Jesus: “Why, you do not even know what will happen tomorrow. What is your life? You are a mist that appears for a little while and then vanishes. … If anyone, then, knows the good they ought to do and doesn’t do it, it is sin for them.” (James 4:14 and 4:17)
Clearly, as our pastor said, we should do good things now, not “someday.” We all put things off until someday, whether it’s losing weight, volunteering or telling someone we love them.
What we do today should be our focus, not when it all will end. And even when we worry about our loved ones, Christian hope can comfort us. Consider this German saying: “Those who live in the Lord never see each other for the last time.”
Mike Haynes teaches journalism at Amarillo College. He can be reached at AC or haynescolumn@hotmail.com. Go to www.haynescolumn.blogspot.com for other recent columns.

Sunday, December 16, 2012

Dec. 15, 2012, column:
College documents key Methodist figures


By Mike Haynes
            Asbury, Coke, Wesley.
            If you keep up with Christian denominations, you know which one counts those three among its founders.
            Having grown up in a Methodist church, I certainly know and respect those names. So while on the Southern Methodist University campus in Dallas with Amarillo College journalism students a few weeks ago, I visited the Bridwell Library, part of the Perkins School of Theology. On display were books and documents associated with those iconic Methodist names as well as many others – including Carhart.
            If you’re familiar with Clarendon, one of the Texas Panhandle’s first towns, you might recognize that name. I have a cousin who lives on Carhart Street, in fact, in the Donley County seat.
            We’ll get back to Carhart. First, I have to tell you how glad I was that I walked across the gorgeous SMU campus to that library. One of the first documents I encountered was a yellowed piece of paper with a circular, bright red, wax seal on it – signed “John Wesley.” The 1770 signature of the founder of Methodism was at the bottom of the manuscript in brown ink.
It was his last will and testament, in which the 67-year-old preacher entrusted James Rouquet with many of his Methodist duties, such as making payments to the Kingswood School and allowing other ministers to use his personal library.
            Rouquet died in 1776, 15 years before Wesley, so the will later was revised. But 12 inches in front of my eyes was the signature of one of the most well-known preachers in history.
            The Bridwell collection also includes a May 14, 1765, letter from Wesley explaining his theory of “Christian perfection.” Who did he send it to? John Newton. You may have heard of Newton, too; the Anglican vicar wrote “Amazing Grace.”
              There’s a Bible bought in 1806 for the Methodist church in Coeymans, N.Y. The renowned Francis Asbury used it when he preached at that New York church. But just as interesting to Panhandle residents is the fact that it later was owned by John Wesley Carhart (1834-1914), another Methodist minister, writer, physician and inventor who was the cousin of Clarendon’s founder, the Rev. Lewis H. Carhart.
            Lewis Carhart, who established the town in 1878, had gotten J.W. Carhart,  living in Oshkosh, Wis., to print Clarendon’s first newspaper. For a while, it was mailed from Wisconsin to Texas.
            Clarendon began as a Methodist community and was known as “Saints’ Roost.” For the full story, see “Panhandle Pilgrimage,” a book by Pauline Durrett Robertson and R.L. Robertson.
            Still excited to see the Clarendon connection in the SMU library, I made a quick descent to the Bridwell basement to be sure I didn’t miss anything in this building where so many pastors have studied.
In a hallway were three library carts with signs that read, “Free Books.” Not able to resist, I scanned the carts for books that looked old. I picked J.B. Phillips’ “Letters to Young Churches” from 1948, Evelyn Underhill’s “Worship” from 1937 and, mainly because it was printed in 1856, “Life of Rev. John Clark” by the Rev. B.M. Hall.
It wasn’t until that night, back in the hotel, that I discovered this in the Clark book, written in brown ink:
“J. Wesley Carhart’s Library.”
The minister and printer of Clarendon’s first newspaper was born in Albany County, N.Y., and the book has a sticker that says it was sold in “Albany.” He would have been about 22 when it was published.
I’ll have to do more research to confirm that one of the Carharts inscribed his name in that now-fragile book, but it sure looks like it.
OK, I guess what I will do since the Amarillo Globe-News started charging for access to amarillo.com is to post my entire column here each time. I also will include a link to the column at amarillo.com.
(I know I should go back and post every past column here in addition to the link, but I don't know when I'll have time to do that.) Thanks for your patience.
--Mike H.

Sunday, November 25, 2012

Uh, oh. All these links to my columns go to the Amarillo Globe-News website, amarillo.com. The Globe-News is about to start charging for access to its website, so I suspect that unless you are a Globe-News subscriber, the links no longer will take you to my columns.
I'm not sure what to do about that or if I have time right now to come up with an alternate way to make the columns easily available.
We'll see.
Thanks for your interest.
--Mike H.
Nov. 24, 2012, column:
Spend time on the road with God
(This column has two parts: the first is about praying while driving; the second is an update on C.S. Lewis College.)


Saturday, November 03, 2012

Nov. 3, 2012, column:


Katy Magee speaks Oct. 14, 2012, at the 110th anniversary of First United Methodist Church of McLean. She was instrumental in the installation of the historic windows and the church renovation.

This century-old window at First United Methodist Church of McLean is in the new fellowship hall.
First United Methodist Church of McLean marks 110th anniversary

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Oct. 13, 2012, column:

More churchgoers embrace technology

Sunday, September 02, 2012

Smith Reunion, Amarillo, Texas, July 21, 2012
Sept. 1, 2012, column:
Reunions rekindle family bonds

Saturday, August 11, 2012

Jack and Rose in 1997 movie, "Titanic"
Aug. 11, 2012, column:
Tears show appreciation for life's tender moments
(Also notice that there's an update on the C.S. Lewis College situation at the end of the column.)

Saturday, July 21, 2012

July 21, 2012, column:
Houston Bible museum worth the time
At left is a page from the 1455 Gutenberg Bible, printed in Latin in Mainz, Germany. It's on display at the Dunham Bible Museum at Houston Baptist University. The portrait of Gutenberg is from the painter's imagination, because there are no known pictures of Gutenberg from his lifetime.

Sunday, July 01, 2012

June 30, 2012, column:

Couple heads to third-world Boys Ranch

For those interested in Texas history, here are two book reviews that were in the Amarillo Globe-News June 24. One is by British rock singer Phil Collins.

Collins' history collection impressive look at Texas




Zaboly gives us fresh view


Saturday, June 09, 2012

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Sunday, April 08, 2012

April 7, 2012, column:
C.S. Lewis College encounters money woes
Happy Easter, or as our pastor says, "Christos Anesti!" It would have been good timing for me to write a column about Easter, but I didn't want to wait any longer to alert people to the C.S. Lewis College situation. –Mike H.

Saturday, March 17, 2012

March 17, 2012, column:
Authors seek Christian unity

Happy St. Patrick’s Day! I wanted to write today’s column on something related to Ireland, but I had interviewed these two guys and needed to get it in the paper before it was too old. I do hope you’ll take a look at their book. –Mike H.
 These three photos show James Robison, Jay Richards and their book tour bus.


Saturday, February 25, 2012

Feb. 25, 2012, column:

Spiritual undertone grips show

 

Monday, February 06, 2012

Feb. 4, 2012, column:
Book joins church, world history

Saturday, January 14, 2012

Jan. 14, 2012, column:
Make reading the Bible resolution

Saturday, December 24, 2011

Dec. 24, 2011, column:
Holidays bring youth to mind

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Dec. 21, 2011, extra column:
Family dishes out pie-ty
This column originally appeared in the Amarillo Globe-News on Dec. 24, 1998. It was reprinted in the "Our Town" section of the Globe-News on Dec. 21, 2011.

Friday, December 09, 2011

Jeff Messer column
Accept each other
This column was in the Amarillo Globe-News Dec. 7, 2011. It's by Jeff Messer, former pastor of McLean's First Baptist Church and now chaplain at Bivins Village in Amarillo.

Saturday, December 03, 2011

Dec. 3, 2011, column:
Congress endorses Aitken Bible

Sunday, November 27, 2011

Nov. 12, 2011, column:
Gadhafi death raises worries

Tuesday, November 01, 2011

Saturday, October 01, 2011

Saturday, September 10, 2011

Sept. 10, 2011, column:
Best-selling author Foer to visit AC

Sunday, August 21, 2011

Aug. 20, 2011, column:
Biblical artifacts on display
Oklahoma museum exhibit runs through Oct. 16

  This working replica of Gutenberg’s 15th century printing press is on display at the Oklahoma City Museum of Art through Oct. 16. (Green Collection photo)
-        Green Collection Director Dr. Scott Carroll, left, and Hobby Lobby President Steve Green display a 1611 King James Bible. (Green Collection photo)
-        A 16th century Megillah scroll, top, and a 15th century Gutenberg Bible section are part of the “Passages” exhibit in Oklahoma City. (Green Collection photo)


-      

Saturday, July 30, 2011

Carl Dwyer, McLean High School principal, in the 1969 yearbook, the Tumbleweed.
July 30, 2011, column:
The body dies; spirit does not

Sunday, July 10, 2011

Monday, June 20, 2011

June 18, 2011, column:
Questions linger after disasters

Thursday, June 02, 2011

May 28, 2011, column:
It looks like the May 28 column isn't going to be put on the Amarillo Globe-News website (amarillo.com), so here it is:

By Mike Haynes
               At graduation time, teachers tend to think about the students who are leaving and sometimes about those who’ll be back in the classroom next fall. At least this college instructor’s thoughts go there.
               After you’ve stood in front of a group twice a week for a semester, and especially when you’ve worked closely with some of them as they produce student newspapers and magazines, you wonder how they’ll do when they transfer to a university, how their dating relationships will turn out and whether they’ll be in the same field five years from now.
               Although I rarely talk to them about it, I also ponder what their spiritual life will be like.
               Our campus is a mirror of our community. Lots of students grew up in church, lots didn’t and some have religious backgrounds that still seem unconventional to native West Texans.
               Many are Christians but drift away when they go to college. Some, like I did, slack off of church attendance out of laziness or the new freedom of young adulthood. Others start questioning the beliefs they inherited from their parents.
               Raising doubts is good. The Christian faith can stand up to any challenge, and many college students go through a questioning, sometimes rebellious time before landing back in the pew when they settle into their own stable, adult lives.
               It would be sad for a young, bright student not to explore why Christians believe what they do and how it compares to the tenets of other religions – or to unbelief.
               I make a point not to discuss religion with students unless they bring it up or possibly in a non-school setting. Unlike a few of our faculty, I don’t think teachers should try to persuade their captive audiences to any political or spiritual view. But sometimes I’d like to.
               There are countless reasons some students seem unreceptive to Christianity, but here are three. Some think an intelligent person can’t believe in the supernatural or in such events as Christ rising from the dead.
               Others are hesitant because church just isn’t “cool,” whatever that means. Youth ministers have for decades tried to figure that one out.
               And every campus has its nonconformists who may subscribe to some kind of spirituality, but they just can’t stomach the organized religion of the establishment.
               I’ve heard students say, “I’m just not religious.” I want to ask them, “What does that mean?” Do they not believe in God? Do they dislike formal religion? Are they tired of rules or what they see as restrictions on their lifestyle? Or have they really thought about it?
               The disconnect between some students and the God who I believe created them bothers me, but I don’t want to take advantage of my position to unduly influence them.
Paul wrote in I Corinthians 2:14 that “The person without the Spirit does not accept the things that come from the Spirit of God but considers them foolishness and cannot understand them because they are discerned only through the Spirit.”
               I believe that once a person has a taste of the love flowing from the true God, he or she is on the road to belief. I’m not going to preach in the classroom, but maybe a student here and there will glimpse that Spirit in me.       

Saturday, May 07, 2011

May 7, 2011, column:
Modern royals embrace tradition

Saturday, April 16, 2011


April 16, 2011, column:


Photo: Bill Reeves plays "Taps" at the 2010 Memorial Day ceremony at Hillcrest Cemetery in McLean. Also shown, left to right, are Shiner Webb, L.H. Webb, Dick Bode and Steve Brass. (Photo courtesy of Bob and Janet Glass, The McLean News)

Sunday, March 27, 2011

Monday, February 28, 2011







Feb. 26, 2011, column:



Mike took these photos in 2000 at Alamo Village near Brackettville, Texas. It's where the 1960 movie was filmed.

Saturday, February 05, 2011

Saturday, January 15, 2011


Jan. 15, 2011, column:

(Illustration is the title page of the original King James Bible printed in 1611 in London. The pages were about 16 inches tall.)

Monday, December 27, 2010


Dec. 25, 2010, column:

Santa greets needy

Photo: Santa Claus carries a bag of candy and a cane as children rush him upon his entrance to the Salvation Army’s Harrington Hope Center two weeks ago. (Photo by Mike Haynes)

Thursday, December 02, 2010

Monday, November 08, 2010




Nov. 6, 2010, column:


(Photos by Katy Magee)

Wednesday, October 20, 2010




Oct. 16, 2010, column:



Saturday, September 25, 2010

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Aug. 14, 2010, column:
Wording a petty argument

Monday, August 02, 2010


July 24, 2010, column:

Photo: The Rev. Rupert Brashears admires a robe that followed him from Kansas City to Amarillo and gives him great satisfaction. (Photo by Mike Haynes)

Saturday, July 03, 2010

Thursday, July 01, 2010

June 12, 2010, column:
Wise coach valued Bible

Sunday, May 30, 2010








May 22, 2010, column:








In the two photos, John Haynes of McLean, left, shakes hands with Dr. Duane Dunn, president of Seward County Community College in Liberal, Kan., after receiving his diploma May 8, and McLean graduate Sheri Haynes poses with her parents, Ginger and David Haynes, May 28.

Sunday, May 02, 2010



May 1, 2010, column:


Thea Scott leads a tour of Wesley's Chapel in London on Jan. 3. The chapel opened in 1778, and John Wesley preached there for 13 years. (Photo by Mike Haynes)

Thursday, April 15, 2010



April 10, 2010, column:

Saturday, March 20, 2010

March 20, 2010, column:
McLean bonds on Lady Tigers' tournament run
(This column goes in a different direction about McLean basketball than the "just the facts" report below. --Mike H.)

Friday, March 12, 2010


Below is my report of my hometown girls' basketball team at the state tournament last week. It appeared in The McLean News. In the picture, our niece is second from left in the front row! --Mike H.

By Mike Haynes
With a fourth of the town following them to Austin, the McLean Lady Tigers came up one game short of a state championship Saturday but still took home a second-place trophy for only the second time in 59 years.
Two Lady Tigers – seniors Sheri Haynes and Alexis Menefield – were named to the Class 1A Division II all-tournament team. Haynes led the team in scoring in both games at the Frank Erwin Center, and Menefield was McLean’s second-leading scorer.
McLean’s Saber Bohlar hit a three-pointer with 1.3 seconds left on the clock in the state semifinal game against Leggett Friday night to give the Lady Tigers a 66-63, come-from-behind win over the Lady Pirates from East Texas. The McLean fans in one corner of the “Super Drum” arena waved gold “McLean” towels and almost raised the roof of the “Drum” with their cheers.
Leggett had held a 17-point lead in the first half.
McLean never got on track in the state final game Saturday night and lost to Neches, also an East Texas team, 61-32. Haynes led the Lady Tigers in both games with 22 against Leggett and 12 against Neches.
Other McLean players scoring against Leggett were Menefield with 16, Nancy Castillo with 14, Bohlar with 10, and Rudy Rodriguez with 4.
Against the Neches Lady Tigers, Menefield had 11 points, Castillo had 7 and Rodriguez had 4.
In the semifinal game, Leggett led 23-11 after one quarter and 35-27 at the half. McLean had taken a 50-48 lead going into the final quarter but fell behind 60-55 with 4:08 left before making another scoring surge.
As one of the top two Class 1A Division II teams in the state, McLean duplicated the efforts of the 1951 team, which fell in the finals to Comanche, 50-49, in the first UIL girls state tournament. This year’s Lady Tigers finished with a 29-5 record.
About a fourth of McLean’s population, an estimated 230 fans, joined the team at the state tournament. The city’s population is 828. Enrollment at McLean High School this year is 76 students. In addition to players’ family members and McLean residents, many MHS graduates from past years and even former McLean coaches attended from the Dallas and Austin areas and from as far away as Arizona.
After the state championship game Friday night, McLean followers remained in the Erwin Center until halftime of the Class 5A title game, when the McLean and Neches players were honored. On the University of Texas court, head coach Benji Hausen, assistant coach Andy Glass and the Lady Tigers received the state runnerup trophy draped with a net from the game and also were presented with a game ball.
The team and coaches returned to McLean Sunday in the school district’s brand-new “McLean Tigers” bus.

Monday, March 01, 2010

Saturday, February 06, 2010


Feb. 6, 2010, column:
Connecting with C.S. Lewis as fellow Christian

Kathy Haynes stands Jan. 5 in front of the Kilns, where writer C.S. Lewis lived in Oxford, England, from 1930 to 1963. (Photo by Mike Haynes)

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Saturday, December 05, 2009

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Saturday, October 10, 2009

Saturday, September 12, 2009

Sept. 12, 2009, column:
Sunday best is in eyes of wearer

Monday, August 24, 2009

Sunday, August 02, 2009

Saturday, June 20, 2009


June 20, 2009, column:

Monday, June 01, 2009

May 30, 2009, column:
Idea of hell stems from imagination
It's not just something to scare people to heaven

(Above is the headline the newspaper used for this column. It's not very accurate. Better would be something like: "Hell isn't just imagined")

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Monday, April 20, 2009

April 18, 2009, column:
Testimonies have me watery-eyed

Monday, March 30, 2009

March 28, 2009, column:
Professions that cross my mind

Sunday, March 08, 2009

March 7, 2009, column:
Bible study gaining popularity

Sunday, February 22, 2009

Tuesday, January 06, 2009

Saturday, December 20, 2008

Thursday, November 27, 2008

Nov. 22, 2008, column:
Religion plays small role in voter decisions
From Kennedy to Obama, faith has had little effect

Sunday, November 02, 2008

Nov. 1, 2008, column:
Religion plays role for voter

Sunday, October 19, 2008