Steve Joy/Osentoski Realty and Autioneering

Steve Joy/Osentoski Realty and Autioneering Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Steve Joy/Osentoski Realty and Autioneering, Estate agents, 528 N State St, Caro, MI.

Steve will be in the Mini-Office on the following days
Thurs 10am-6pm / Fri 10am-7pm / Sat 9am-7pm / Sun 9am-3pm
Mini-Office phone 989-795-2153
Home phone 989-635-2721

I'm so happy and proud to work with this awesome company! 👍🤠
02/23/2022

I'm so happy and proud to work with this awesome company! 👍🤠

Osentoski Realty has served Michigan's greater thumb area for over 40 years spanning three generations of real estate professionals. This combined experience and expertise helps make us the area's premier full service realty brokerage. It's our dedication to you that makes us number #1.

07/02/2021

🙏🇺🇸

Always professional... 👍👍🤠
07/21/2020

Always professional... 👍👍🤠

ASA is the Army Security Agency... I did not serve in Vietnam as I enlisted in May 1975 as Saigon was falling... I did s...
05/24/2020

ASA is the Army Security Agency... I did not serve in Vietnam as I enlisted in May 1975 as Saigon was falling... I did serve with many that had been in Vietnam when I was overseas... The ASA does 'covert surveillance' in wartime and peacetime... We are called 'The Unlikely Warriors' and are not remembered often so I thought this tribute was overdue... ALL of our Veterans that gave all so that WE could enjoy American Freedom... THIS is the weekend that we Remember THEM... 🙏🇺🇸⚔️

We must never forget...

OUR Nation needs this today... 🙏🇺🇸
05/05/2020

OUR Nation needs this today... 🙏🇺🇸

On this day in 1988, President Ronald Reagan signs a law designating the first Thursday in May as the National Day of Prayer.

Of course, Reagan had already issued a proclamation for a day of prayer that year. In classic Reagan style, his proclamation included a story.

“Americans in every generation have turned to their Maker in prayer,” Reagan began. “That was surely so at the very beginning of our Nation, in the earliest days of our quest for independence and liberty. It could only be thus, for a people who recognized God as the Author of freedom . . . . So did they believe, those who gathered in Carpenters’ Hall in Philadelphia in 1774, the members of the First Continental Congress.”

The Congress described by Reagan was called to order on September 5, 1774. Early in the proceedings, a delegate moved that Congress be opened with a prayer. Two other delegates opposed the motion on the grounds that “we were so divided in religious sentiments.”

At this juncture, one respected delegate from Massachusetts spoke up. Samuel Adams rose to his feet and declared that he “was no bigot, and could hear a prayer from a gentleman of piety and virtue, who was at the same time a friend to his country.” Reagan summarized Adams’s plea: “Because Sam Adams gave voice to all the goodness, the genius, and the generosity that make up the American spirit, the First Continental Congress made its first act a prayer—the beginning of a great tradition.”

The Reverend Jacob Duché, a local Episcopal clergyman, was nominated to lead the Congress in prayer. He decided to read Psalm 35. Have you read the Psalm lately? Such an appropriate choice, under the circumstances. The Psalm begins: “Contend, Lord, with those who contend with me; fight against those who fight against me . . . .”

Duché finished the Pslam, then prayed a prayer that “filled the bosom of every man present,” according to John Adams.

Our nation began with the Boston Tea Party, the “shot heard round the world,” and other great moments. But perhaps we should remember that one of these great moments was a few quiet minutes in a hall in Philadelphia. Men of different religious persuasions agreed to spend a few moments praying together, because they knew that they needed divine assistance for the long struggle ahead.

That long struggle is ahead of us today, too.

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If you enjoy these history posts, please see my note below. :)

Gentle reminder: History posts are copyright © 2013-2020 by Tara Ross. I appreciate it when you use the shar e feature instead of cutting/pasting.

Address

528 N State St
Caro, MI
48723

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