Ukiah Daily Journal, Ukiah, Calif. Friday, October 15, 1976. Page 10
Temple revival services prove successful
Capacity audiences hear Rev. Jones speak
Rev. Jim Jones, pastor
of Peoples Temple, recently embarked on a series of remarkable revival
services that have been highly successful and heavily attended. The
tour began with an interfaith meeting that featured ministers of several
denominations (including the Nation of Islam, and a representative of
the Jewish community) as well as government and civic officials, in
Kansas City.
In subsequent meetings held in St. Louis, Chicago,
and Detroit, capacity audiences heard Rev. Jones stress the importance
of humanitarian service. Referring to examples from the life and
teaching of Jesus with regard to care for the people in need, Rev, Jones
emphasized the spirit of ecumenical unity as a vehicle for achieving
these goals.
In
every service, people with problems in the area of drug usage and
alcoholism were ministered to, and many of these joined the Peoples
Temple, choosing to relocate in California in order to receive more
extended help from the rehabilitation outreach of the Temple. These
people boarded the bus caravan that was carrying many hundreds of Temple
members traveling with Rev. Jones on this series of meetings, designed
to spread the message of Christian human service and interfaith unity.
Rev.
Jones has also been calling attention to the need for people of
conscious to be concerned about the dangers facing our freedoms,
especially freedom of the press.
Rev. Jones will be returning to
California after paying a visit to the church’s agricultural mission
project in South America, where great quantities of food have been
harvested in efforts to help relieve world hunger.
The project has received the plaudits of many government officials there and in the United States, and is demonstrating the kind of dramatic results that can be achieved when people work together with the spirit of service to mankind which, Rev. Jones emphasizes, is “the highest service to God.”