Welcome
I met with a small group of clergy and laypersons to recruit them to join me in a movement to recover the core values and foundational principles upon which the African Methodist Episcopal Church was built and that remain critical to its vitality in the present age. I am challenged each time I hear someone say that the fastest growing denomination is “Used to be AME!” The job of stopping the hemorrhage is too big for one person or a committee or even a department. It requires a movement by persons such as yourself to make the difference.
So, I recruit you! Your mission, should you choose to accept it, is twofold:
First, share with me the thoughts that “Recovery Movement” evokes for you when you consider the past, present and future of the AME Church. Share those thoughts by emailing me, or writing on my Facebook wall. Comments posted to my blog are also welcome!" Second, with camera in hand or keypad before you, document recovery wherever you see it. Send pictures, text messages and forward articles depicting community involvement and outreach, evangelistic crusades, capital improvement, and renewal in its many shapes and forms to cwfugh@recoverymovement.org.
GOD IS WITH US
“Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death,
I will fear no evil: for Thou art with me…”
Psalm 23: 4 (KJV)
“Behold, a virgin…shall bring forth a Son, and they shall call His name Emmanuel,
which being interpreted is, God with us.”
St Matthew 1: 23 (KJV)
JESUS!
“She shall bring forth a Son, and thou shalt call His name JESUS! He shall save His people from their sins.”
EMMANUEL!
“They shall call His name Emmanuel, which is being interpreted, God with us.”
God with us!
God is with us!
God is with us in Jesus to save us from our sin.
In fact, God is always with us, with you and with me.
Say it, “God is always with me!”
“God sees all we do! He overheard what you were whispering! He saw what you did when you thought all heads were bowed and every eye was closed. He saw! And where men and women are impressed by ‘what we do,’ God looks into our minds and into our hearts to determine ‘why we do.’
God is always with us.
God’s abiding presence, His constancy of oversight and companionship are not for the sake of JUDGEMENT, but for LOVE’S SAKE!
It is motivated by love for us, love toward us.
“He never sleeps, He never slumbers, He watches over us by night and by day.”
God is always with us!
John 16: 13 tells us that it is the Spirit of God that gives us the ability to discern between truth and the lesser realities to which we give ourselves that carry with them major consequences.
Some of those lesser realities are:
- WEALTH! “What does it profit a man to gain the whole world and to lose his own soul?” (St Matthew 16: 26)
- BEAUTY! “All flesh is grass and the goodliness thereof is as the flower of the field. The grass witherth, the flower fadeth:” (Isaiah 40: 6)
- SECURITY! “The earth is the Lord’s, the fullness thereof, the world and they that dwell therein; for He hath founded it…He hast established it.” (Psalm 24: 1, 2)
We lose ourselves in empty pursuits, oblivious to the presence of God, blind to the truths of God. Yet, God does not abandon us. In Jesus, those who are the people of God are assured of the comfort and the protection and the advocacy of God Himself.
“God was in Christ Jesus, reconciling the world unto Himself!”
Imagine that! Behind the person of Jesus, born of the Virgin Mary, is the face of God, the welcome embrace of the arms of God, extending tender mercies, loving kindness and great compassion!
“O come, let us adore Him, O come let us adore Him,
O come, let us adore Him, Christ, the Lord.”
AMEN!
Clement W. Fugh
Candidate for Episcopal Service – 2012
And a good time was had by all…
“And a good time was had by all…” Thanks and appreciation are extended to all who contributed to the success of the Holiday Luncheon held December 13, 2011, at the Gaylord Opryland Resort and Convention Center during the meeting of the General Conference Commission and CONVO XV, sponsored by the Clement W. Fugh for Episcopal Service Team. The venue, the food, and the fellowship came together as a warm expression of sincere hospitality.
Team 13 Day – December 13, 2011

Recovery Team!
December 13, 2011, is “Team 13 Day” at the Gaylord Opryland Resort and Convention Center, Nashville, TN, as we entertain the General Conference Commission and CONVO XV.
The dress for the day is black dresses for women (or pants suit) with exaggerated red flowers. Men are to wear black suits, white shirts and red (bowtie) tie.
JOB ONE: EXTEND WARM HOSPITALITY!
See you there!
A HEART OF THANKSGIVING!
“With my hands lifted up
And my mouth filled with praise
With a heart of thanksgiving
I will bless Thee, O Lord.”
(Words by Teresa Muller)
This is my refrain to THE SERVICE OF THANKSGIVING AND CELEBRATION presented Sunday, November 20, 2011, by the Middle Tennessee Area Ministerial Fellowships, the South Nashville and the North Nashville Districts, and the Tennessee Conference AME-Women In Ministry to benefit The Recovery Movement and my Candidacy for Episcopal Service – 2012. Special thanks go out to Pastor Broadnax and Greater Bethel AME Church, Nashville, TN, for hosting the Service; to Rev. Darrell Drumwright and The Temple Church for the anointed Word and Song; to Mr. Sam Robinson and the Tennessee Conference Choir, our featured musical ensemble; to the Program Committee and Participants; and to each of you who supported the Event with your presence, your gifts and your prayers.
I thank God for each of you.
Clement W. Fugh
A THANKSGIVING MESSAGE!
“No Hands But Our Hands”
“Christ has no hands but our hands to do His work today
He has no feet but our feet to lead men in the way
He has no tongue but our tongue to tell men how He died
He has no help but our help to bring them to His side.
“We are the only Bible the careless world will read,
We are the sinner’s Gospel; we are the scoffer’s creed;
We are the Lord’s last message, given in word and deed…”
(Annie Johnson Flint)
The First Thanksgiving observed by the Pilgrims was during their SECOND winter in the New World. It was only by the grace of God and the help of a friendly tribe of local Indians that they survived their first winter. The Indians taught them how to preserve and to store what was in abundance in the summer for times of scarcity in the winter. So, when the second winter (November) came around, they were so well prepared with rations that the whole colony came together for a “thanksgiving feast.” They invited the local Indians, to whom they owed so much, to share in the festivities.
As was the case with the Pilgrims of early America, survival requires more than a one time gift of turkey and trimmings. It requires the sharing of skills and insights that can sustain in tough times.
Thanksgiving!
What better time than the “Season of Thanksgiving” to reflect upon the hard times, the rough places, and the storms the Lord has brought us through? What better time than Thanksgiving to celebrate the persons whom He sent in to our midst to be His hands, His feet, His eyes, His mouth, and His help to us? Even though we may not be able to share a common meal (feast!), we can at least pick up the phone (Yes! Phone! Voice/Words/Audible!) to inquire about the well-being of those who “walk with feet of clay” who were our deliverers.
The best expression of having received a blessing is to be a blessing!
“Pay it forward!”
Happy Thanksgiving!
HOUR OF POWER
HOUR OF POWER, Central South Carolina Annual Conference, Orangeburg, SC.
Bishop Preston Williams II, Presiding Bishop.
Weekly Call to Prayer

“Be careful for nothing: but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be known unto God.” (Phillippians 4: 6 KJV)
On Sunday, June 26th, Recovery Movement Prayer Committee will begin a weekly “Call to Prayer” at 6:00 a.m. Central, to lift up the Recovery Movement and our Candidate, Dr. Clement Fugh. Please join us in the Call to Prayer by calling 1-218-936-4700, and entering the access code 9982983.
If you would like to be added to the contact list and to receive a reminder email about the Call, please email your request to: RevDKS@aol.com.
Stranger than Fiction
“Truth is stranger than fiction, but is it because fiction is obliged to stick to possibilities; truth is not.” — Mark Twain
One never knows what one will discover when one takes a close-up look at an individual’s life and journey and the circumstances that helped mold him or her into what he or she has become. If you are up to the challenge and could enjoy a good laugh, we invite you to join the West Tennessee Annual Conference contingent of The Recovery Movement – Clement W. Fugh for Bishop 2012 – as they gather on Friday, July 1, 2011, at 7:00 p.m. in the Fellowteria of St. Andrew AME Church, 867 South Parkway East, Memphis, TN to retrace the steps and missteps of Clement from his early beginnings to his present pursuit of Episcopal Service in the African Methodist Episcopal Church.
Bring your best “C. W. Story!” If it sounds too strange to be true, it is probably true! As Mark Twain reminds us, “fiction is obliged to stick to possibilities; truth is not.”
Contacts:
Mrs. Roxie P. Ball, 901-948-5039 or 901-828-1170
Rev. Walter W. Reid Jr., 615-974-6857
An Open Door
On the Road to Recovery, as I travel across the Church
“There is a wide open door for a great work…” (I Corinthians 16: 9)
Among the many benefits of my travels throughout the African Methodist Episcopal Church is the opportunity to witness ministry taking place “in hard and remote places.” I was in Hyderabad, India, for the Opening Service of the AME-India Annual Conference, when I heard the Rev. Dr. Cecilia Bryant make the prophetic declaration that India will soon rival South Korea in spreading the Gospel of Jesus Christ on the continent of Asia. This predominantly Hindu nation about the size of Texas, has the world’s second largest population. Because of its strict adherence to a caste system, however, nearly one third of India’s population – roughly that of America – is marginalized and disenfranchised as “Dalits” (untouchables or oppressed people) or “Harijans” (God’s people). They provide fertile fields of souls ripe for harvest. Muslims seized upon this opportunity early on, and in recent years the Christian Church has begun to show a more noticeable presence. One of the presenters at the Conference estimated that Christians presence to be as high as twelve (12) to thirteen (13) percent in some regions of the country.
The African Methodist Episcopal Church, since its beginnings in 1816, has recognized and acted on opportunities to expand the Church:
- In 1824, Richard Allen endorsed a mission to Haiti
- In the 1830’s, William Paul Quinn took the Church “westward,” even into the slave states of Kentucky and Missouri
- In 1840, Morris Brown welcomed Canadians into the Church
- In 1891, Henry McNeil Turner took the Church to Africa
In 2007, Bishop John R. Bryant, followed in the tradition of those who had gone before him. At the invitation of the Reverends Abraham Peddiny and Minnie Sarah Peddiny, who had oversight of several small Christian congregations and who sought an association into the Church of Richard Allen, Bishop Bryant worked out the terms of that partnership in ministry. This agreement was confirmed at the Cathedral of St Thomas (named after the Apostle Thomas who is credited with having taken the Gospel to India after the death of Christ) in Chennai, India.
The 48th Quadrennial Session of the General Conference (2008) officially accepted the membership of AME-India, thereby establishing the presence of the AME Church on the continent of Asia.
At this, the Second Session of the AME-India Annual Conference:
- 40 congregations reported a total membership that exceeded 2000.
- Lay, WMS and YPD components met.
- The Book of Discipline was presented to candidates for ministry.
- 8 deacons were ordained.
- 39 pastors were charged and sent out.
- Delegates were elected to the 49th Quadrennial Session of the General Conference.
It was the foresight of pastors and members of the Fifth Episcopal District who embraced the vision of establishing an AME Outpost on the continent of Asia, and the unwavering support of Bishop T. Larry Kirkland that have brought us to this point. Bishop Preston Warren Williams II, Presiding Bishop, and the constituency of the Seventh Episcopal District, along with the generous support of AME’s Connectionally, have assisted pastors and delegates with the necessary sustentation, travel and housing.
For all that my eyes saw, that my ears heard, and that my heart felt, I am grateful!
It is said that a picture is worth a thousand words. So, courtesy of the Rev. Gary McCants, Presiding Elder of the South District, Illinois Conference, I invite you to view the attached “pictorial” for the rest of the story.
Clement Fugh
To view descriptions, click the Play button, then click the Expand button on the lower right, and then click the “Show Info” link in the upper right.
HAPPY EASTER
As a prelude to the performance of the Mime Ministry at the church where I worshiped on Palm Sunday, projected on the huge screens throughout the sanctuary was the gruesome/brutal beating scene from Mel Gibson’s movie, Passion of Christ. Suddenly, the pew where I was sitting did not seem as comfortable; the well appointed sanctuary did not feel distant and detached from the horrific price that Jesus paid for me to occupy that space. The contrast was disturbing, to say the least. I sat in soul-searching reflection. Could I have borne up under what Jesus suffered for my sake?
“But He was wounded for our transgressions
He was bruised for our iniquities:
the chastisement of our peace was upon Him;
and with His stripes we are healed.”
(Isaiah 53: 5 KJV)
I left the service last Sunday humiliated to my lowest degree for the sins and transgressions that I had committed, and loving the Christ of God more than ever for His love toward me.
“Forbid it, Lord that I should boast,
Save in the death of Christ, my God,
All the vain things that charm me most,
I sacrifice them to His blood.”
(Isaac Watts, “When I Survey the Wondrous Cross”)

