Bill Whitwer, the beloved former pastor of Rainbow Pres.
Dear Rainbow Church,
Below is the obituary from Karen and Karla, the daughters of Bill Whitwer. Bill served two stints at Rainbow Pres.

We will be having Dad’s graveside service Sunday at 3:00 pm at Grace Cemetery at Madison Heights Church. Reception following.

Bill Whitwer was born one of nine children, in Tilden, Nebraska, on July 23, 1930 to Theodore G. Whitwer of Tilden, Nebraska and Bertha Kossman Whitwer of Thayngen, Switzerland.
Bill worked at The General Electric Company as he attended The University of New York in Albany. After completing his undergraduate degree in German, he moved to Los Angeles, California where he attended Fuller Theological Seminary.

After graduation, Bill ministered for the summer in Canada before accepting a call to the staff of First Presbyterian Church of Jackson, Mississippi. He later pastored The Presbyterian Church of Woodville, Mississippi, then Edwards (Mississippi) Presbyterian Church.
He met his wife, Carol Sue, when they were both counselors at McIlwain Presbyterian Youth Crusade in Pensacola, Florida. After being married, they later moved to Gadsden, Alabama, where Bill ministered to The First Presbyterian Church, and Rainbow Presbyterian Church. In early 1974, the Lord called Bill to Jackson, Mississippi, to First Presbyterian Church, where he served as the church planter. He then became the founding pastor of Pear Orchard Presbyterian Church, as well as the founding pastor of Lakeland Presbyterian Church. In 2014, Bill returned to Pear Orchard Presbyterian Church and assisted in the founding of Madison Heights Presbyterian Church.

Bill is survived by his wife of fifty years, Carol Sue Colley of Pensacola, Florida, his brother, Wayne Whitwer (wife, Carole) of San Diego, California, brother in law Captain Donald Colley of Alexandria, Virginia (wife, Harriet), his two daughters, Karla Collins (husband, Guy), and Karen Carpenter (husband, Scott) and his granddaughter, Daisy Collins, all of Madison, Mississippi, as well as several nieces and nephews.

Those who knew Bill knew his greatest love was the Lord and people! He was well known as an avid turkey and pheasant hunter. He quite often returned to Nebraska to hunt with friends and family, on his family's land. He loved potluck dinners and visiting people in their homes, as well as in the hospital. He was a pilot and a self-appointed car dealer.

The family would like to thank Debby Gooch, and all the staff at Beau Ridge Independent and Memory Care Assisted Living for all the love and care they gave Bill in the last several years.

A graveside service will be held Sunday, February 21 at 3: 00pm at Grace Cemetery in Madison, MS. The service will be live streamed. Follow the Madison Heights Church website for information to the link.

There will be a memorial service at a later date.

Memorials can be made to:
Christ Covenant School
752 South Pear Orchard Road,
Ridgeland, MS 39157
or
Mid-South PCA Church Planting Network, 750 South Pear Orchard Road,
Ridgeland, MS 39157.

Follow Madison Heights Church and/or Sebrell Funeral Home websites for any changes that may have to be made for the funeral due to the winter weather.

We are discussing holding a memorial service here at Rainbow in the next month or so for people to remember and celebrate Bill's life and ministry among us here in Etowah County. We will be in touch later about this.
Five Essentials for Walking with God
Pastor Cain will lead a five-week study through the Five Essentials for Walking with God Through All the Seasons of a Man’s Life.

Why don’t you join us tonight, Wednesday, February 17th, and invite a friend.

We will meet in the sanctuary from 6-7 PM.

Why should you join us? To jump start your relationship with the Lord and receive practical help through this interactive study.

Today is Ash Wednesday
We do not celebrate the liturgical calendar at Rainbow, but we would do well to remember this day and begin to process of preparing our heart over the next forty days to celebrate Easter.

Ash Wednesday is a day devoted to three endeavors:
To meditate on our mortality, sinfulness, and need of a savior;
To renew our commitment to daily repentance in all of life;
And to remember with confidence and gratitude that Christ has conquered death and sin.

As a result, may the Lord do the following in your life and mine:
May God the Father, who does not despise the broken spirit, give you a contrite heart.
May Christ, who bore our sins in his body on the tree, heal you by his wounds.
May the Holy Spirit, who leads us into all truth, speak to you words of pardon and peace. AMEN.

If you want to digest a little more, here is a short blog post on my website:

Sunday's Sermon - 2 Timothy 3:16-4:5
This coming Sunday Pastor Cain will preach on "Faithful to the Scriptures" from 2 Timothy 3:16-4:5.

Paul instructs his young protege Timothy that God holds preachers and listeners accountable for faithfulness to the message of the inspired Scriptures.

In light of this heavenly commissioning, the charge is then immediately and appropriately coupled to a call to contancy despite the vagaries of earth: “be ready in season and out of season” (v. 2).

Paul gives a reason for this awesome charge. In verses 3–5: “For the time is coming when people will not endure sound teaching” (v. 3a). Timothy must persevere steadily, because people will be fickle. Paul therefore directs Timothy to gospel-centered endurance. “As for you, always be sober-minded, endure suffering, do the work of an evangelist [literally, one who speaks the gospel], fulfill your ministry” (v. 5).
  • From the ESV Gospel Transformation Bible
Please stop for a moment a pray for Wade and Kim in Tanzania
They arrived safely in Tanzania this afternoon and are finalizing preparations for the pastors' and wives conference . They are expecting 1,200 pastors. Pray for the Lord to bring together all the logistics and bear much fruit from their labors.

To the right is a text thread that occurred this afternoon when the Hoopers arrived in Tanzania.

You too can let them know what you are praying for them by downloading the app called "WhatsApp." You can text message them by plugging in their regular phone number. When they have wifi access, they will receive your message.