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DeKalb Tigers Gearing Up for State Play-Offs After 26-7 Loss at Upperman Friday Night

October 28, 2023
By: Dwayne Page

The DeKalb County Tigers kept it close for much of the game Friday night but Upperman pulled away in the second half for a 26-7 finish at Baxter wrapping up a perfect 10-0 regular season. The Tigers end the campaign at 5-5 heading into the state playoffs next Friday night, November 3.

Upperman is the Region 4-4A regular season champs at 5-0 and will host a first-round state play-off game next week against East Ridge (4-6). The Tigers, with a 3-3 region record, finished in 4th place and will travel for their first-round state play-off game at Chattanooga Red Bank (7-3)

The Tigers and Bees played to a scoreless tie through the 1st period Friday night but Upperman broke through for the first points of the game with 4:07 left in the 2nd period as Ethan Palk took it in from 2 yards out completing an 86-yard drive. Sebastian Stanfill came on for the extra point and the Bees were on the board 7-0.

Upperman tried to tack on a 34-yard field goal just before halftime but the attempt was no good.

The Bees extended their lead with 7:21 left in the 3rd period on a 52 yard pass play from Bronzden Chaffin to Branson Turnbow. The PAT try was no good but Upperman held a 13-0 advantage.

The Tigers’ only touchdown of the night came on a 10-yard run by Marquez Chalfant with 4:43 left in the 3rd period capping a 67-yard drive. Adrian Prater added the extra point and DeKalb County trailed 13-7.

Upperman added to their lead with 1:34 left in the 3rd period on a 4-yard touchdown run by Jaxson Rollins completing a 70-yard drive. A 2-point conversion attempt failed but the Bees were on top 19-7.

Ethan Palk scored his second rushing touchdown of the game with 6:39 left in the 4th period capping a 55-yard drive. Stanfill’s PAT was good, and the Bees went on to claim a 26-7 victory.

Here are the Region standings: The top four teams have earned a state play-off berth.

Upperman: 10-0: Overall, 6-0-Region

Macon County: 9-1 Overall, 5-1 Region

Stone Memorial: 6-4 Overall, 4-2 Region

DeKalb County: 5-5 Overall, 3-3 Region

White County: 5-5, 2-4 Region

Livingston Academy: 3-7 Overall, 1-5 Region

Cumberland County: 3-7 Overall, 0-6 Region




New City Bridge Completed

October 27, 2023
By: Dwayne Page

Now Open!

After being closed for several months, Dry Creek Road is back open with a brand-new bridge just completed over Fall Creek.

During the summer of 2022, a gaping hole was discovered in the old bridge which forced city officials into action to have the bridge replaced.

In April, 2023 the Mayor and Aldermen awarded a bid for the replacement of the bridge. Most of the funds for the project came from the city’s share of American Rescue Plan Act money. Twin K. Construction of Helenwood, Tennessee was the only bidder and the aldermen accepted their bid of $630,605. In addition to the construction bid, other added costs including engineering were incurred that put the total project at more than $700,000.

Mayor Josh Miller said he is happy to see the new bridge completed and he regrets the inconvenience it caused especially for those who live in that area.




Alexandria Pastor whose Ministry Took him to Israel Reflects on Hamas Attack

October 27, 2023
By: Bill Conger

Alexandria First Baptist Church Senior Pastor Dan Coe has invested over five years of his adult life and ministry in the land of Israel. So, news of the October 7 Hamas terrorist attack that killed over 1,000 in Israel hit him and his family especially hard.

“We have friends all over the country, including areas close to the Gaza Strip and the border with Lebanon, who have had to evacuate. Some of their towns were obliterated. We had close friends who were in the desert camping not far from the music event where dozens were killed and others abducted by Hamas terrorists. Our friends escaped the massacre. But the episode did trigger one friend’s PTSD which she already suffers from as a result of her previous army stints. It is absolutely appalling what is happening. It is saddening, it breaks our hearts.”

“Our most recent community that we lived in is being asked to evacuate. That’s close to the Lebanese border. I had just been there in June to pack up our home. I was interacting with these neighbors – with my friends – and now it’s almost a ghost town. Today, I learned of a missile hitting the area and injuring a man and his children in our previous hometown.”

Prior to moving to Israel for ministry work, Coe had spent some formative years in the Nashville home of some Messianic Jewish believers – that is, Jews who believe that Jesus is the Promised Messiah. Through this family, Coe began to meet Israeli believers who would visit Nashville and share about their lives and ministries.

“I heard about God’s work among Jewish people. I began to understand God’s purposes for the Jewish people. I discovered the authentically Jewish nature of Jesus and the gospel message. My heart became burdened for the salvation of the Jewish people. There is only a very small minority of Jews globally – and historically – who believe the gospel, who follow Jesus. But I got to see how powerful it is when Jesus does grip the heart of one of his fellow Jews. Sure, Jesus is the King of All Nations. But if He is not the Messiah to the Jewish people, then He is not the Messiah to anyone!”

In 2008, Coe had the opportunity to do an internship in Israel where he met his future wife, Julia, who had come from Germany.

“That increased my heart not just for the Jewish people but for Arabs as well, and for the nations. We were in a melting pot of an international ministry on top of Mount Carmel. It was close to where the prophet Elijah traditionally called down the fire with the false prophets of Baal. That affinity that Julia and I shared for the nations, and in particular for Israel and the peoples of the Middle East, brought us together.”

The two wed in Germany in 2011 and began their family back in Tennessee. But in 2017, Coe says, God opened the door for them to return overseas to serve with the Baptist Convention in Israel. The first couple of years they focused on learning the language and culture before linking up as a teaching elder for an Israeli church plant. Coe invested the latter part of his ministry in Israel with post-military Israelis in their early to mid-20s who were either new converts or seekers of the Messianic faith (i.e., of Christianity).

“The bulk of my ministry, especially during the last stretch of it, was focused on these young men. A few years ago, we launched a college ministry outreach. I would take the young men to local campuses. I tried to give them opportunities to cut their teeth in evangelism, to try their hand in leadership, and ultimately to help them to identify their gifts and to develop them. But my focus was really on discipling these young men and giving them a heart, and giving them some tools, to reach their own people.”
Back in the States.

While his family was living there, Coe says he and his family rarely felt unsafe.

“Flare-ups would happen, but life just moved on. But this [recent Hamas attack] is different. There may be some little spots within Israel where the locals are living under some level of normalcy right now. At this point, anyway, there are some areas that have not been terribly impacted. I pray that will remain the case, and that the conflict will not continue to escalate. But whether directly impacted or not, this attack has absolutely disrupted life for everyone in Israel. I think even those places where there’s relative quiet right now, it’s an eerie quiet, right?”

Coe says he’s attempted to explain the effect the news has had on his family.

“I tried to describe it to people here in this community, the kind of duress that my wife and I have been under because of this,” Coe said. “Imagine this is where your roots are. You spent time here, you have relationships you are invested in; this is your home that you love, and you leave and move hundreds of miles, or even thousands of miles away. And then you wake up one morning, and you begin to hear stories of children being abducted, women being tortured, and hundreds being killed. Babies are being beheaded in your community and missiles coming incessantly.”

“We’re not just watching news reports. I still get numerous notifications from my home village from the security team there. These are reports on the latest border flareups and security protocols. ‘Do we need to take cover at this moment? What do we need to do? What are the evacuation plans, the contingency plans?’ And so this is, for us, not just watching the news. It’s around-the-clock updates to the point where I have to just shut my phone down and turn off notifications because it’s non-stop.”

One major concern for Coe and his family is the women and children who have to say goodbye to husbands and dads.

“Some of the most heartbreaking pictures to see are some of my friends who are squeezing their children so tightly as they’re leaving their homes with their M16s strapped on and heading off because they’ve been called up [to fight in the conflict].”

People in DeKalb County and across the nation are interested in helping Israelis. While there are some organizations like the Tennessee Baptist Disaster Relief that are gathering donated items, Coe says prayer is needed.

“If you’re a Christian, pray that God would use this as an opportunity to work supernaturally. Pray that the gospel would go forward. Ask that God would strengthen the believers in The Land who are involved in this, whether they’re Arabs or Jews, and that they would be a bright and shining witness – in word and in deed – and that they would show the love of the Messiah. Pray that God would reveal himself.”

“Let’s realize that there has always been a Satanic agenda to wipe out these people, and there’s a reason for that. The spirit of Haman in the book of Esther is still very much alive and operative today. Satan has always wanted to wipe out these [Jewish] people. Before the Messiah came, he wanted to annihilate them because the Messiah was going to come through this [Jewish] line. The Scriptures, I’m convinced, speak of a day when there’s going to be a great ingathering of the children of Israel. They’re going to return to their God – to the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob – and they’re going to trust in and worship His Son, Jesus. And so, the enemy hates these people; this is an ancient hatred. Remember that. Remember that our war is not against flesh and blood; it is against spiritual forces of darkness, and they’re definitely at work here.

Now, that being said, Jesus also commands us to pray for our enemies. And so we want to pray that God would take would-be murderers (or those who are already murderers) and turn them into emissaries of His Kingdom. That’s what God did with Saul of Tarsus (a.k.a. the Apostle Paul), and he can still do that. He can take Hamas terrorists and Hezbollah terrorists, and he can turn them into men of God. But if they continue in unrepentance, then we pray, “Come Lord Jesus; let your kingdom come and execute justice.”

Coe also encourages people to be wary of the news reports concerning the Middle East troubles.

“Don’t believe everything the media is selling. My wife and I watch the news, and it is night and day from one report to another. I mean, some of the mainstream media, including major outlets like the New York Times, had to pull back their reports after the hospital incident in Gaza where hundreds died. Mainstream media outlets immediately jumped on the story, and most of them claimed, ‘Israel is guilty’ and ‘What an atrocity!’ But if you looked closely at it, it was very clear: the people who were contributing to this report were one-sided sympathizers. This was not objective reporting. So, pay attention to what you’re listening to and compare the news reports.”




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