Persons Shaped by His Teachings Represents Dr. Munroe's True Monument Says Prime Minister
By Dena Gibbs - BIS
|  | 
| Prime 
Minister the Rt. Hon. Perry Christie, at the Memorial Service for Dr. 
Myles and Pastor Ruth Munroe.  (BIS Photo/Gena Gibbs) | 
NASSAU, The Bahamas – At the State-Recognized Memorial Service for 
Dr. Myles and Pastor Ruth Munroe at the Thomas A. Robinson National 
Stadium, December 3, Prime Minister the Rt. Hon. Perry Christie said Dr.
 Myles and Pastor Ruth Munroe’s true monument is represented in the two 
wonderful children they produced, and in many of the leading men and 
women of our society who were shaped by their teachings and personal 
example.
The Prime Minister noted Dr. Munroe’s testimony is witnessed in the 
leaders of our society he greatly influenced and shaped, who will 
continue his work, and their children “will take the baton and carry on 
the cause.  And that is how great nations are built, brick by brick, one
 family at a time; one person at a time; one generation at a time, but 
all moving in the same direction, guided by the same sense of purpose, 
guided by the same values.  Yes, that is how great nations are built, 
and how great nations endure.”
Before a large stadium crowd, and as part of a comprehensive 
programme of speakers and cultural expression -- the Prime Minister 
observed that we hear too little of those are doing good things “even 
great things, day in day out, working by the sweat of their brow; 
raising good families; helping out and doing good works in the 
community; leading lives of high purpose that ennoble themselves and 
ennoble us as all as a society, as a people, and as a nation under God. 
That’s the kind of people Dr. Myles leaves behind as his monument.”
During his condolences, the Prime Minister discussed his last meeting
 with Dr. Munroe and his last conversation, noting in retrospect it 
seemed there was a lot on his mind, “much more than normal” and that he 
had a sense of urgency that “the challenges of our time summoned us all 
to leadership in one form or another so that the problems of 
contemporary Bahamian society that so troubled him could be more 
aggressively addressed and remediated.”
He said: “I don’t have to tell you that Dr. Munroe really loved his 
country, this beloved Commonwealth of The Bahamas. Yes, he would go 
forth into the world, crisscrossing continents, flying across the great 
oceans of the planet but he would always come back home to play his 
part, a leading part, in helping to build up his country,” said Prime 
Minister Christie.
 “This kind of outreach was central to his sense of purpose and 
central to his work as an evangelist for Christ because it was clear to 
me that religion for Myles Munroe was not about locking oneself up in 
some remote ivory tower of private contemplation. Rather, it was about 
rolling up your sleeves and getting down into the trenches to deal with 
the real problems of real people living in the real world.”
 Prime Minister Christie said while Dr. Myles Munroe was 
unquestionably a globalist, an internationalist, in the scope of his 
Christian ministry and in the reach of his teachings and travels, he 
was, at the same time, a profoundly committed nationalist; a Bain 
Town-bred Bahamian through and through; a man who never forgot his 
roots; a man who was passionately involved in Bahamian nation-building 
and who played an important part in that process over the course of more
 than three decades.
 “And so my brothers and sisters, as Prime Minister of the 
Commonwealth of The Bahamas, I therefore stand at attention today and 
salute Dr. Myles Egbert Munroe as a Bahamian patriot of the first order.
 And on behalf of all my compatriots, I offer the thanks of a grateful 
nation for the life and work, and for the shining example, of this great
 son of our soil,” said the Prime Minister.
| 
The large crowd.  (BIS Photo/Gena Gibbs) 
 | 
Liturgical dancer.  (BIS Photo/Gena Gibbs)
December 05, 2014