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WCS GRADUATION THURS

May 05, 202353 min
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Is a sign of confidence. Make sure you get the best call. Dave at Tim and Sheet Battle nine eight, three three six sixteen sixty two. Where storms are there are issues with the Internet causing interruptions of service, Summer storms, winner storms. When you have Martinet IP Internet service, you'll have

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the Affordable Connectivity Program. Congratulations to the Wesleyan Christian School graduating class of twenty twenty three. As you take the next steps in life and survey the many options and choices that lay ahead, remember to seek first a Kingdom of God, and all things you need and desire will be added unto you. From

the Wesleyan Christian School staff. Congratulations to Nieva Ashlock, Craig Boorton, Nick Burke, Chase Cottner, David Good, Jarla Poudie, Jordan Heskin, Rachel Hopkins, Joseph Jones, Matthew Marquez, Austin Rigden, Brady Rutger, Drew Wright and Jackson Zamora, Dignity, Compassion, Excellence, Stuff Funeral Home in Crematory, Bartlesville, Nowada, Barnstall, Hey w and Bartlesville to twenty seventy Q Bartlesville, KY two thirty six ct POSCA. And now here's mister Tom

David. So it's the Wesleyan Christian Graduation much and it's being brought to you in part by wesley And Christian School, Wesleyan Kinney College. Also we're brought to you by Barton and I P. Kimmins sheet Metal and No wanna Duncan your farm bureau agent. We're getting ready to begin in just mere moments.

It's been a stellar year for this group of small but mighty seniors. They saw a lot of cool things this year, and their sports teams really he did well and academically well, they're at the time they're the cream of the crop when it comes to that as well. We now begin our ceremony right here on K one, the one you trust, dear teachers, honored guests, families, and fellow WCS graduates. My name is Matthew Marquez, and it is my great honor to stand before all of you on this momentous occasion

as we celebrate the graduating class of twenty twenty three. I know all of us are excited to finally graduate, and there's nowhere I'd rather be than right here representing this class. It goes without saying that all of us could not have done this alone. So thank you to everyone here, to those who could not attend, and everyone else. I know many of my fellow graduates

for expecting me to write a funny speech filled with jokes. However, I was told that inspiring speeches were more appropriate for a valedictorian to give, and I now understand that high school graduation is a serious matter and potentially the peak of some of our lives. So I edited this speech and presenting the serious version without the five pages of jokes about Brady. So to the twelve other graduates here, classmates and close friends that share this stage with me today,

mark's an important milestone in our lives. It is an end of an era for us, and as we look towards the future, we should not forget the journey that led us here. From now on when we look back on today, we can finally say we made it. So I don't think the serious thing is going to work out. Let me really start from the beginning. Dear fellow graduates, teachers that gave us all that homework, and the guests we might know, also the family that we were forced to invite.

I was required to stand here before you and speak of this graduation. Still, thank you to everyone who could attend, and to those of you who couldn't. You can still send money and the special thanks to last year's senior class because you guys made us look way better. To the twelve graduates that share the stage with me, also known as the people I was forced to group to do group projects with, we made it. And although I'm the one up here giving the speech, all of us have worked hard and are

successful at different things. Many of us have putting countless hours working on our different passions. Rachel has worked hard, and you're a scholarship for volleyball. Chase and Drew both have successful businesses that they run. Jordan runs a ranch and works out a lot firm, and Devey has been going to school for cosmetology. Brady, well, we're not sure about him. Yet twelve of my classmates that put in so much hard work and time studying and practicing sports,

it's finally time to enter the new challenge of college. But your gifts, talents, and work will finally be rewarded and as scholarships you received to attend university. There are also those that got esport scholarships. I have somewhat of a reputation for being bad at answering my calls or texts, so some of my friends say that I disappear every summer and don't respond to anyone.

I'm not sure that these accusations are justified, but they disagree. It might be partially my fault because every year when school gets out, I promised to stay in touch, to hang out, and to answer my phone more. But sometimes that doesn't pan out. It seems like every time life gets in the way. It's not like I was ignoring your messages because I don't think you have something important to say, or I just saw your messages and acted like it was never there. Okay, that probably is the reason, but

regardless, this year is different. There is no next year to come back to. That's why I'm making this offer to you and promise to follow through this time. This time will be different. If any of you call or message me after today, I promise you I will not answer. Okay, I can't end with that, so I'll end on a serious note. I want to thank all of you for being part of such an amazing class. I truly believe our class was something special and unlike any other class graduating here.

I'm honored to be part of this class, and as we go into the next chapters of our lives, remember this. Hold onto your dreams, stay true to your beliefs, and never lose sight of the plant God has for you. Good evening, graduates, family, friends, and Westland Christian

School faculty, thank you for being here today. My name is Nivea Ashlock and it is an honor to be able to speak this evening on behalf of Westland Christian Schools graduating class of twenty twenty three, all whopping thirteen of us.

Before I begin, I would like to relieve you all of some dread by letting you know that because of our humongous class size, you will not be stuck here all night, listening to names being called for hours upon hours just to hear the announcement of the one name that you came here for. So the good news is that hopefully this will be a quick, compainless event. Now I would like to take a moment to say a special thanks to all the roles every one of you have played on our journeys up until this

moment. We would not be here today about to walk across this stage if it wasn't for the many sacrifices, encouragement, support and love that we have received from you at some point in some way. So thank you again for all that you have done. As the last class to experience COVID in high school, or as my Papa calls it, the COVID, I feel it necessary to give a brief special thanks to the teachers who believed us when we

had network problems during our eight am zoom calls. And another special thanks to the teacher who took our word for it when we promised we were keeping up

with our Shakespeare reading assignments. Now Here, we are sitting in the same black fold up chairs that we have sat in for the last four years, the same chairs in which we have heard countless lectures, participated in endless academic discussions, and been given many assignments that we knew we'd be staying up till midnight to complete, but also the same chairs that we have sat in and laughed till our stomach's hurt, cheered after as in that exam and intimately discussed

our relationships with God and others, growing together as one body of Christ. If high school has taught us anything, it is that times in the fact that these are long and years are short, and what once seemed like an endless moment of laughter becomes a short clip memory. Doctor SEUs once said, sometimes you will never know the value of a moment until it becomes a memory.

High school has left us with numerous memories, and it is up to us to use the lessons we have learned from those memories to pave the way for our success in our future. C Sis also once said, they are far far better things ahead than any we leave behind. So as we go forward, it is important that we do not take the moments we have failed, learned, grown, and succeeded for granted, because they are what have

firmed us into the individuals who are now entering the world. Fellow graduates, I would like to give you some encouragement in first Timothy four twelve, Paul writes to say, do not let anyone look down on you because you are young, but set an example for the believers in speech, in conduct, in love, in faith, and impurity. While entering a world full of differing opinions, world views, and cultures. Always remember your impact on the

world will be determined by your love for God and for others. Although we are beginning this new chapter as young new adults, we have the power to let all right shine into the lives of others. So even when you feel that you may not be capable of doing something God is calling you to do, whether it be because of your age, your position, or any other circumstances, just do it. God is working on our behalf if we are willing to allow it. So trusting him and He will make your path straight.

Now, as we are sitting here in the same old black fold up chairs, back about to walk across the stage and receive a sweaty handshake and a piece of paper from mister Landers that will release us into the world. I would first like to challenge you. I want to challenge you to remember and reflect on the memories that you've formed you into who you are today.

Acknowledge your strengths, acknowledge your weaknesses, and going forward, allow God to use every part of who you are to pay out his plan for your life. I wish you all the very best. Congratulations, Class of twenty twenty three. We did it, and we did it well. I'm never turning boy and boxed up in the road. Don wrapt you by the restrect you went to go, So make the best off. Thissn't known, That's why it's not a question, daughter, lasn't learned it. Time put something dredtable

in the under's right. I help you at the time of your life. So take the fat out that since their friends enjoying mine and in honor shove them, got out them. Get time that Jesus mands get on chilm body. Try of the wilds. Something that intentabe in the end of at the time by your line. That's something that intent an in the end of that tide, at the time of your mind. Something on the wall right,

help you have the dime of your life. So talk to Don about the rest of my lives never gonna be when you turned twenty five, keep thinking time to ever change, keep going down and convince will always be the same. You will be coming back. No hanging down is what I want to do. The track and even God something that she needs to say. You're being to see right down to you having down the days I want to be keep so down his man. He's saying, like few without summer night,

keep making on the night in you. I didn't know what you love that keep you shooting, and he see and you know the got your blue wetstead home to home until Phoney get so excited, him to get so scared. I'm laughing at Sis, thinking that's not fair. I'm so crazy as we come on we meet back all the time to me and you can't sage hell still me. I'm told now think about tomorrow like we think about now.

Can we survive it that bed? Can we make it somehow? I guess I thought this will never end, and suddenly, like the mam in, I will ask be a shadow that fallow us round and will smell of his game when I meet this channel. I keep keep thinking that to keep back into time to fly as we read all the time that you we just still all the time to change. I don't know what you can talk Thomas on it. I don't need to take a soul. I stepping to your tale

to talk. I should be scanned on your ny so I making any ninety rods. I ain't running swimming in the class, Am bay. I ain't worried that I I don't know to the tie, but timas on it. I was spending like go. I'm never like a magine. I'm not requires even the number. I'm my mother's manners something. I'm wanting to see it into many bubble bottles and bottoms of feeling the accession for succession with seeing the gear. I'm thinking and I ain't running making many ninety worlds. Child.

I worried. It's my privilege to introduce tonight's speaker. I met this young man when he was second, third, fourth grade, I can't remember an elementary school. And then he came to h I was his principal for four or five years, and then he came when he came back, he taught under me for three or four years. And I can honestly say that he's probably said less than a thousand words to me in the entire time. But

I learned that he doesn't speak very often. When he does, you need to listen because he's pretty wise, and I think this class has learned that too, so please help me. The welcome Cameron Middleton. By the way, I didn't know who was reading and wasn't so I saw your scores. But I'm if you haven't run mc McBeth, you need to because it's pretty

fun. But thank you mister Cloud and mister Landers for having me. I'm really honored to be here with this class on me the fourth, a very important day in my life and for people like me, you know, the nerds. A few weeks ago, Jackson was at my house and came to get some firewood because we had in the windstorms, we had a bunch of trees fall down. And he told me that this was a couple of days after I had been chosen to speak, and he told me the class pick

me for two reasons. They didn't want someone to give a forty five minute sermon, and they wanted someone to make fun of Brady. So I can guarantee you on the first one and the second one. Sometimes it just slips out, okay, So speaking in graduation, I said yes, because it's actually a really low pressure situation. I don't know if you're like me, or maybe you're not. But I've been to like probably a dozen graduations of high school and college and I can't tell you what anybody said at any of

them, any of the speakers. At my own graduation, I had a relative that was speaking and I don't know what he said, and I was right there. So the good news for me is there's pretty low pressure, low stakes. My goal then, with that in mind, is I'm not going to come up here and give you some life altering wisdom you've never heard

of before, because that's just probably unlikely. What I do want to do is encourage you, and this time and this season, as you move to a new step, a new chapter, I want to encourage you and maybe hopefully tell you some things that will ring true for you, maybe not this year, but hopefully in the years to come. So for everyone else here, sorry, I'm really hearing this at these guys, I hope that what I say ring true for you also, but my focus is on them.

But the good news is, again, it's not gonna be forty five minutes, so we're gonna get out of here first. Before I do any of that, though, I'm gonna break a rule that I know I told you when I was your English teacher. And I'm gonna say up front, i am not an expert. Okay, when he wrote papers you weren't supposed to do that. I'm gonna break the rule. I'm not an expert. I'm

not a pastor. I'm not a life coach. I'm not some wise old man who sits on his tree stump and like gives out fortune cookie stuff. All I am is someone who's spent quite a few years with this class, and who mostly enjoyed that time, and who is rooting for them now as they move forward. It wasn't all that long ago that I was sitting in your seat. We did a little differently when I graduated. We didn't have

our own row, so that's cool. But as I was thinking back about what to say and thinking about how I felt on that day, I just kind of focused on some things I wish someone would have told me when I was in your seat. And you know, if you played basketball for me, I like to pick a word or a phrase for each season. That was just I'm a words guy. I'm an English ranger. And so as I thought about, like, what's a word for this class in this moment,

The word that kept coming back to mind for me was opportunity. This season of your lives, it's kind I've already started and it will continue, is one of great opportunity. Graduation is not a finish line, despite what anyone maybe told you, but it is a milestone, a rite of passage to demonstrates that you have done what you've been asked to up to this point. Some of you have done that with enthusiasm and eagerness, some of you

who were dragged here by your parents and teachers. But the point is you made it. You got here, okay. So now with that in mind, you're launching into this new stage in your life, whether that's college or you go to work or whatever else, and for the first time, you are completely in control of what happens. You were completely in charge of what comes next for you, and that is a really big opportunity. When I was your age, it was a really scary burden. I felt it like

really heavy. I remember my graduation day. I was terrified, what if I picked the wrong college. What if I didn't like my professors that much? I really liked my high school teachers. What if I don't like my professors, what if my roommate is weird and he was. What if I never find a job and I end up just totally failing. You See, when you're in school, the nice part about school, the part about school I really liked, was that every like year, you know what's next.

Right when you're done with kindergarten, you go to first grade, assuming you passed. You when you're done with eighth grade, you go to high school, assuming you passed. And now at this moment, like what's next is pretty much up to you. You're the captains of your own destiny. Now.

I know for some of you, your family probably gave you, like maybe very specific instructions of what's next, but in general, you are now considered adults by society, right even though it's an arbitrary thing, and you're in charge of and responsible for what happens to you from here on out. Obviously your family will still love you and all that, but like it's on you now. So well, I said, when I was your age,

that was like a burden that was really heavy. I remember my graduation day like for like an hour that afternoon, like I just like was so overcome by that, Like I just cried for like an hour when I on the day of my graduation. It's not something I'm proud of. And it actually kind of is funny when you look back on it, because, like, who would want to stay in high school? But I was terrified because I had all these decisions in front of me, and what if I make the

wrong one? What's next? My hope is that you view this moment not as a burden but as something of an opportunity. You are never going to be this age again. For some of you that's like, oh, thank goodness, but you'll never be this age again. And well, we know from brain research tell us that right now your brains are actually still developing. So right now you're creating the habits that are going to make you the person you are in five years, ten years, fifteen years, and so on.

And that opportunity is something I want to emphasize for you today. I don't super like garden metaphors, but I'm going to use this one. Right now, your life is like a brand new flower bed. Right, you get it all cleaned out, you bring in new dirt, and it's super clean and it's awesome. Right, there's no weeds, It's ready to go. That's what you are right now, right like you have more or less. I mean, you still probably have some bad habits, but you're still

pretty young. You get to pick what you plant, right, You can pick the plants that you bring in, what seeds that you're going to sell now, it's up to you. So the habits that you're instilling in yourselves right now are going to stick easier than they will when you're twenty five, thirty, or forty five. If you don't believe me, ask your parents. It's way easier to start something now than it is going to be later

priors twenty six or twenty two six. Excuse me, is that if you start children off on the way they should go when they're older, they will not turn from it. Now. It's a weird verse for graduation because they're not really kids, but you kind of still are in that training phase, the difference being now you're the ones directing that right. You get to pick what's next. So I'm gonna talk about some things that I hope you consider

in this critical time of opportunity. And I remember, I'm not an expert. These aren't commands. These are just things that I wish someone would have said to me when I was an eighteen year old who was freaked out about what came next. Every week has one hundred and sixty eight hours. I did the math. Mister Jordan can check me on it later if he wants. Everyone in this room has one hundred and sixty eight hours of every week.

The biggest lie, I don't know if you know this, The biggest lie we tell ourselves and we tell other people, is the lie of I didn't have enough time. It's just almost never true. If Brady can get up at five in the morning to go get football cards or basketball cards or whatever nonsense he was doing, then we have time for stuff, right, like we can all limit that. Well, we really mean when we say that is actually that thing you asked me to do wasn't that important to me,

so I didn't do it. But of course we don't say that because that would be rude, and your parents taught you not to be rude. But that's I mean in reality, right when you go to your professor and say, hey, I didn't have time, what you mean is actually did something else with my time. Time is our most diable resource, right A lot of us thing maybe it's money or cars or the stuff we have.

Your time is your most diable resource. May not seem like it when you're eighteen, but I promise you that's true, and learning to become the master

of our limited time is a worthwhile pursuit. If you spend some of your energy right now, at this age, trying to figure out how to become the master of your time, you will reap benefits later in your life that are going to instantly set you apart from like ninety percent of everybody else, right, because there's just a lot of people who just float through life. So with that in mind, right, I came up with kind of three areas. Again, not a sermon, but there are three points. So

take that what you will. And I look, I don't expect you to think about this right now because you're like half an hour from cake and graduation stuff, but hopefully right in the coming days we'll maybe think about this. So the first one is take stock of how you're spending your time. Your generation is probably maybe not exactly the first is the first to grow up with an infinite supply of things to distract you and stuck up your time. Probably

right now, I'm going to guess all thirteen. You have a computer in your pocket, a phone in your pocket that would blow the minds of scientists from forty or fifty years ago, like there would be. They have no idea what to do with it. On that computer, you have thousands of hours of movies and TV shows and games and memes and YouTube videos and whatever else you're doing that I don't know about because I'm one hundred and fifty years

old. But you have all of that all the time. I'm not suggesting that you go into the ocean and enjoy your phone and just get rid of it. I do think probably life would be better if all of us did that, but I don't think the world could work that way. But I am saying, periodically, take time. Take stock of your time and how you're using it on that device and on the dozens of devices you have in your rooms at your house. Okay, those things are not bad things.

They'll let me be very clear, they're not bad things. But they can become bad if you allow them to master your time. For you, I've seen it happen. I've probably told you stories of people i've seen it happen with. So every now and then, right, put your phone down, take a weekend off, go read a book you liked when you were a kid, go to the park, or maybe next time you're with a friend, instead of like having your phone for ice creamer coffee, just leave it

in your car and just like see what happens. Many of us, and I'm including myself in this, let our time be controlled by the device instead of controlling the device to benefit her time. So that's the first thing, right, big big picture stuff. Secondly, the second most valuable resource I

think that we have is our physical bodies, these physical things. Right in a few minutes, you're gonna walk across the stage, and you probably learn in science like all the different complicated things that have to take place just for you to get up and walk across the stage. That probably makes you realize, like, hey, this is a pretty special thing that God gave us. You only get one of them until I guess robots come and you can

like transfer your consciousness or whatever. But that's probably not happen anytime soon. So you get one one of these physical bodies, you need to take care of it. You need to find a way to exercise that you enjoy and make it a part of your habits. Make it part of your life. For me, that's playing basketball and going for a run. My wife said, I'm not gonna go for run, So I'm gonna go to kickboxing class

twice a week. Whatever it is for you, I don't really care, honestly, But whatever it is for you, find something that's good for you, that's healthy. Make it a part of your habit. Make it a part of your habits now at eighteen seventeen, eighteen nineteen, so that when you're thirty forty fifty you don't have to do it so with such difficulty. One of the things I regret about my college years is that I had this really nice gym like that I was actually paying for, and I'd hardly ever

went because I had other stuff going on right I didn't have time. I didn't take advantage of that opportunity enough. If you prioritize your health right now, you will be so far ahead of the game when you're my age older. Again, ask your parents. And by the way, this does include like what we eat too. At some point, I promise you your metabolism is going to slow down. You're not gonna be able to go to tacubell

at eleven at night with no repercussions. Like you, there will be a day that hits and it will be a sad day, but you will have to like, oh, I can't do that anymore. I'm not saying that we all have to go full vegan or anything, but having a balanced diet now probably not a bad idea, so that when you're ten years from now, you're not coping down kale smoothies every morning. Some people are laughing because

they have to do that. Lastly, the final thing, the most important thing, is that this season of your life, these next four or five six years, can become, if you let it, one of the most spiritually rewarding times in your entire life. I meant freely. Okay, I'm gonna tell you telling myself here, I didn't do a very good job of this. When I was your age, like you, I grew up in this WCS bubble, and I did all of the things that you do in

the VC's bubble. Right, we have chapel, you have Bible class every day, and like, oh that's great, I'm I'm a good kid or whatever. Then after that, I went to college and I went to Christian College, and then we started having chapel three times a week and I still have Bible classes. And I was like, oh, I'm a you know, it's a different bubble. It's a bigger bubble, it's still a bubble. If you make a habit now of taking time with Jesus, read the

Bible, pray, don't give you a lot of time. But if you make that a habit every day part of your life, now, that's going to stick with you ten, fifteen, twenty years from now. I really believe that God blesses that time. Even if it feels like, man, I don't really understand what I'm reading, or God's not really listening to my prayers. I've not really I don't feel like he's hearing me. I promise

you that time is not wasted. It's never wasted. And as an aside, since we did Worldview, it's a lot harder for the nonsense of the world and the lies of culture to get into your mind and in your heart. If your heart is rooted in the Bible and in Jesus, just it's way more difficult. And by the way, the same thing goes for church. One thing I actually did well of, or well at, I think

in college as I went to church. Even though we had chapel three times a week, I still felt like I should go to church, and I often went by myself, and I didn't really like that very much. But I look back on those times now, those lonely Sunday mornings of sitting in the back of a church that I barely knew anybody, as being really important for my spiritual growth in my relationship with Jesus. I had to trust that he was still working, even though I didn't really understand it, and I

didn't really know why it was this way. I've seen friends that have given up on that that has not been a habit of theirs, and they have let that kind of fall by the wayside, and you know, because they got out of the bubble and then they just wasn't part of their life. It wasn't a habit, it wasn't deeply rooted. So I'm just urging you next fall, wherever you end up with our college, whatever, wherever you end up next fall, find a church you like that preaches truth, right,

and make sure it preaches truth. But find a church you like and make sure you're there more often than you're not. I really believe that God blesses that obedience, even if it doesn't maybe feel like it in the moment and it's lonely because maybe you're by yourself because your roommate's weird and he doesn't

want to go with you. But I really believe that God blesses that obedience, and I really lived back on those that season of my life as being one of the most enriching in hindsight because I was faithful, even though I didn't see the results of that until later. So we're not at forty five minutes. Those are my kind of my big three things to think about. Okay. To close out, I'm going to quote a scripture passage that you

may or may not know. Hung in my classroom, my last classroom up here before I left, and I didn't really make a big deal of it because I had to decorate because they said you have to decorate, even though why I'm a man, I don't want to decorate. But I decorated, and I had this verse above the door because I this was my prayer for my students, right this verse. Everyone who came in and out of my classroom. I wanted that for them. Okay, so it's still my hope

for you. Even though you're not my students anymore. I still I'm going to say this over you, and I hope you know this is still what I desire for you in the future. Okay, So this is from numbers, chapter six, verse twenty fourth to twenty six. The Lord bless you and keep you. The Lord make his face shine on you, and be gracious to you. The Lord turn his face towards you and give you peace and joyless opportunity, but also make the most of it. Thank you for

having me speak. Thank you very much. St. Nettleton, great words. Um. So, now is the time of the awarding of diplomas. Also during this time when we award diplomas, we also give a gift to seniors from US Wesleyan Christian School. And we believe that the greatest thing that we can hand off to them is the Word of God. And so we h and we know that different students may have uh some Bibles at home,

but they're in the outsides of the Bible. We do have some teachers who have signed put some scripture verses for you guys to consider and think about. And just know that these are people that are going to be praying over you, not just now, but continually. You are not just part of our lives now, but will always be a part of WCS and the lives of those of us who work here. So now it is time for us to

present the seniors their diplomas. Seniors, if you'll take your place, Mister Josh Pruvy, our board president, will be handing the diplomas and I will hand the bibles. Nevada Ashlock H. That's the best. Rachel, Elizabeth Hopkins, Matthew Marquez m m H. Drew White Jackson, Zamorah Craig Bourton, m Nicholas Burke, Chase Cottner m m H. David Get Jolla pretty I got, Jordan Haskett, Joseph Jones m m H. Austin Rigden, Brady Rucker. These socks are awesome. If you don't know the story,

I'd love for you to tell your seniors. Seniors feel take your places. M H m hm. Seniors, it's now time to turn your tassel. Ladies and gentlemen. I present to you the Wesleyan Christian School graduating class of two thousand and twenty three. MM after our Pastor Joe prays for us, and we appreciate so much, first Wesleyan Church, who does so much to support the ministry of Wesleyan Christian School, and who had a passion to start

a Christian school many years ago. And so we're so thankful for that. And so we are asking Pastor Joe Fiel come and pray for us. As soon as he finish his prayer, our students are going to march out, and then we ask you to stay here with us and spend a little time looking at the students boards and enjoying some refreshments. Thank you so much for

coming. Let's pray together. Almighty God, we praise you. And very often we come to a graduation and we think of the end, the end of high school and the beginning, and the scripture is filled with the words in the beginning. This is a time of beginning. Make this be an extraordinary time of beginning, a new step, a new part of life, and looking to the future for the ways we can advance the Kingdom of God

and bring you honor and glory. I pray for your spirit to be on each one of these graduates, protect them mentally, physically, spiritually, emotionally, financially, vocationally, relationally, and guide them in every step of their

walk to God be the glory Amen. Even listening to our broadcast of the Wesleyan Christian School graduation right here on K one the one you trust and casts have been brought to you by Wesley and Christian School, also Wesley and Kitty College as well as partner at IP through a sheet Metal and Lawanda Gobin barmb Hero. We're gonna take this prepe for our commercial messagers who will be right back with a wrap up right here on K one to one year tracks.

Wesley and Kitty College is now hiring for part time positions. Wesley and Kitty College is a daycare center and as a Christian based morals facility, and their goal is to not only teach children academically, but to train them spiritually and biblical truth. This is the perfect opportunity for high school students who are looking for a part time job that is fulfilling and rewarding. Applicants would need to

apply at seventeen eighty Silver Lake Road and Bartlesville. For more information called nine one eight three three three eighty six thirty. Hardy the Lucky Duck here putting it off. So let's say one day you wake up and realize, you know what, I just ain't getting any younger here. Trust the old duck on thisman might be a good time to start thinking about what happens when you

do get older. While you're still not my suggestion, stop buying See Luana Duncan and Oklahoma Farm Bureau Insurance on Frank Phillips Boulevard next to the radio station and get some absolutely free information on how to ensure your personal stuff and your personal self. Tell her the duck senteen. Since nineteen forty, contractors in this area have known the name of the company they can turn to for top

quality sheet metal manufacturing, and that's Tim and sheet Metal. Timmins is certified by Reheating and air Conditioning as a top provider of venting and ductwork for homes and businesses. That endorsement from REEM is a sign of confidence. Make sure you get the best call Dave at Tim and sheet Metal nine one, eight, three, three, six, sixteen sixty two. Partnet Ip and Bartlesville

is your Internet provider with high speed wireless internet services. Partnet IP is continuing with the Affordable Connectivity Program to enroll eligible household should visit ACP benefit dot org. That's ACP benefit dot org or mail and application A household worksheet and supporting documentation to ACP Support Center PO Box seventy eighty one, London, Kentucky four

zero seven four two. More information on how to apply, go to ACP benefit dot org forward slash how to apply or call eight seven seven three eight four twenty five seventy five. Congratulations to the Wesleyan Christian School graduating class of twenty twenty three. We have had an amazing year. Continue to trust in God and do what is right and you will have success in life. From

the Wesleyan Christian School faculty and staff. Congratulations to Nieva Ashlock, Craig Borton, Nick Burke, Chase Cottner, David gujar Lapoo, Jordan Heskett, Rachel Hopkins, Joseph Jones, Matthew Marquez, Austin Rigden, Brady Rugger, Drew Wright, and Jackson Zamora. Come back to Wesley and Christian School where we guest saw the graduating class of twenty twenty three tossed their caps and take it

into the world. Our broadcast tonight has been brooke to you by Wesley and Christian School also Westley and Kidney College, Westley, and there we've got to bartnett Ip Kim and sheet Metal and Lawata Duncan your farm Rural Agent. Want to thank you very much for being a part of our audience today and we now return you to our regular program right here on K Wonder When you trust

Scared areas of rain. A couple of rumbles of thunder are possible as we head through tonight and finally ending as we get on into the morning hours. Even though we'd love to have more rain across the area. Temperatures are expected to be around fifty four for late tonight tomorrow morning. Looking for a good Rea

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