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THE
LEGACY OF THE MCKAMEYS ... A CONTINUING MINISTRY
by: Sandi Duncan Clark

After three months of tests,
blood work, treatment and countless prayers, the news is
good. The surgery was successful and both patients are up
and about and doing well. Prayers were answered and one of
the nation’s top Southern Gospel groups would once again
be boarding their bus, filling their concert dates.
In mid summer, 2007, Connie and Roger Fortner got the word
they had expected for more than thirteen years of their
son’s life. Eli’s kidneys were failing and he needed a
transplant. Connie, Roger and Eli, half of the singing
group, The McKameys, were facing the surgery they had
anticipated since Eli was five months old.
“When Eli was diagnosed with nephritis following a bout
with strep throat when he was just a baby, we knew that
somewhere down the road, he would need a transplant,” Peg
McKamey Bean said. “When his condition worsened last
summer, Roger was tested and proved to be a perfect match.
Eli’s kidneys were removed and we waited for three months
for the disease to get out of his system. Eli received
Roger’s kidney on October 2nd and both Roger and Eli were
able to be with the McKameys at Dollywood the weekend of
October 20th, 2007!”
Without a doubt, God has been good to the McKameys. From
the conception of the music ministry; three daughters of a
Baptist minister singing together in their home church, to
the current nationally acclaimed Southern Gospel group,
the McKameys have been steadfast in their efforts to
uplift the name of Jesus and bring joy to the lives of
others.
It’s
not always easy to climb on the bus every Thursday for
three days away from home, but the knowledge of doing it
for God puts things in perspective for Peg and Ruben Bean,
Carol Woodard, along with Connie, Roger and Eli Fortner;
“The McKameys.“ Peg tells us, “I get up early every
morning, excited to see what God has in store for us for
that day.”
That attitude and their reverence for the leadership of
the Lord have endeared the McKameys to thousands of fans
across the country. Those same fans have lifted this
family to the throne of God in prayer through one of the
most eventful years of their career.
From the beginning of their accent to the top of the
Gospel music industry, this Clinton, Tennessee family has
maintained close ties to their fans. They share prayer
requests, stories, meals and fellowship with the people
who travel hundreds of miles, buy tickets, sit in front
rows and collect every CD and album the group has ever
recorded. They are on first-name basis with thousands of
people who only see them in concert once or twice a year,
but who are bonded to the McKameys by the power of the
Holy Spirit and the strength of their music.
It was only fitting that the fans who have sustained them
throughout their career be involved in prayer for the
healing of their son/grandson during his health crisis.
And the people rallied around the McKameys. The prayer,
email, letters, cards and gifts were astounding and have
not gone unnoticed or unanswered by this staunch Christian
family.
“How could we not trust the God who ministers to us over
and over again through songs like “Right On Time,” “Even
The Valley” and “God Will Make This Trial a Blessing." Peg
asked. “The surgery wasn’t in our plans but it was all in
God’s plan. He knew exactly when and how it would all come
about, to get the most glory for the Kingdom,” Peg
finished.
When we talked, the McKameys were returning for a weekend
in Florida and although Eli was recovering from a bout of
“walking pneumonia,” he was able to sing and play each
night of the weekend trip. “God is so good,” Peg
proclaimed.
When asked what truth had come to the family through the
past six months, Peg said with reassurance, “That God is
faithful. That He knows what He has planned for our lives
and He will carry through that plan.”
“I’ve learned to be more sensitive and caring toward
people who are going through things; who are hurting,” Peg
said. “I think God has opened a new highway of ministry
for the McKameys through all of this.”
It seems that God has always given the McKameys songs to
minister to people from all walks of life. Through the
years fans have received encouragement and comfort from
“Getting Used To The Dark,” “Under His Feet,” “Do You Know
How It Feels,” “Prayer Changes Me” and their all-time,
most requested song, “God On The Mountain.”
The McKameys are currently looking for new songs for a
recording to be done in late spring of this year. “We get
songs from a lot of people,” Peg said. “They send us tapes
and CDs and I try to listen to every one. I always listen
for the message because if it speaks to us, then it will
speak to others. I want it to be scripturally sound and
have a good tune.”
“Our daughter Sheryl Farris writes a lot of our songs. She
brought us three new ones while we were in Florida this
weekend,” Peg said. “The most important thing I try to do
is to stay in the word and in prayer and to find what God
is trying to say to me through His word and through the
songs. He knows exactly who He will bring into our path
and we want to have something that will speak to them.”
Through the years that wisdom has proven faithful for the
McKameys. For more than half a century, fans have not
tired of the music and the ministry of this family. Their
following has reached around the world as their music is
played on satellite radio and sold over the internet.
Audio and video clips are available on various websites
that have attracted fans to this down-to-earth, sincere,
Godly family. And the legacy of the McKameys continues…
(This article appeared in a recent issue of GOSPEL MUSIC
NEWS. Sandi Duncan-Clark is feature writer for GMN.) |