Big Blunders


When I was in Nigeria conducting interviews for this month’s cover story,
I was invited to speak at a growing church that meets near a university in Lagos. Knowing that future church leaders would be in the audience that Sunday morning, I wanted to deposit something that could shape the destiny of Africa. My message was titled “Eight Mistakes the American Church Made That I Hope You Don’t Repeat.”
I don’t have the kind of pulpit savvy that gets people shouting amens and waving handkerchiefs. Yet this sermon struck a chord not only with my new Nigerian friends, but also with Americans who heard about it when I returned. I am sharing the gist of the message with you because I know it’s not too late to learn from our blunders. Here’s my list of the American church’s all-time biggest goofs:


* We made unbelief a doctrine. While Christians in China, Latin America and Africa were casting out devils and healing the sick, we were teaching seminary students that the Holy Spirit doesn’t do miracles anymore. That’s really bad theology.


* We tolerated division. Who needs the devil when Christians are perfectly OK with hating one another in the name of denominational loyalty? Why should the world listen to us teach about “family values” when the family of God is so fractured?


* We cultivated a religious spirit. We taught converts that Christianity is about daily Bible reading, church attendance and avoiding cigarettes and beer. Genuine faith became drudgery. Christians trapped in dry legalism lost their joy because they thought intimacy with God could be achieved by their performance.


* We encouraged “superstars.” We elevated ministers to celebrity status, and some of them actually believed they deserved the titles, the pedestals, the grand entrances and the first-class seats next to Jesus’ throne. They stopped modeling servanthood, and as a result the church forgot that Jesus washed feet and rode on a donkey.


* We equated money with success. We taught that biblical prosperity could be obtained by inserting our tithes into a heavenly slot machine. Lotto fever spread throughout the church, and we found a way to legitimize greed and materialism when we should have been using our wealth to feed the poor, adopt orphans and fund missionary ventures.


* We wouldn’t release women in ministry. We let gender prejudice have more control in the church than the Holy Spirit. He’s ready to send an army of dedicated women to the front lines of spiritual battle–but He’s waiting for us to bury our stinking male pride.


* We stayed in the pews and became irrelevant. We insisted on letting a group of older white men in dark suits represent our faith in the marketplace, and
we freaked out when somebody tried to use rap, punk or metal music to reach the younger generations. Instead of engaging the culture we hid from it.


* We taught people to be escapists. Jesus told us to occupy the planet until He returns. But most of us were reading rapture novels when we should have been praying for our brothers and sisters who were on the verge of martyrdom. They were willing to suffer and die for the cause. Why can’t we have that kind of faith?




Ignorance Isn’t Bliss

It is time for us to stop making excuses for being ignorant about events around us.
Oh, I never read the newspapers. All they talk about is bad news!”


“You should never trust what you read in the newspapers. They’re all biased!”


These are comments I have heard dozens of times as a reporter. They have come from evangelical Christians who feel no need to apologize for their ignorance of what is going on in the world.


Of course, both statements contain part of the truth. Newspaper or TV news is always some sort of bad news. The “bad” or unusual is seldom far from any definition of news.


You also can assume some bias from reporters. Those in the mainstream,
secular media tend to be religiously agnostic, politically and culturally liberal, and seldom informed about religious issues.


But as an excuse for not keeping up with what is happening in the world, these comments are absurd. You might as well never go outside because a bird might drop something on your head or never cross the street because pedestrians have been known to get run over.


The world around us is constantly moving and being transformed. Customs, fashions and habits of life change all the time. Occasionally, dramatic national or international events arise that significantly affect everyone’s life.


How as Christians are we supposed to know how to interpret these events to ourselves–much less to others–if we haven’t a clue what is happening? Newspapers and television are never perfect, but there isn’t a whole lot out there other than the Internet (not always reliable itself) to tell us what is going on.


The influential 19th century English Baptist, Charles Spurgeon, often used to say he lived with a Bible in one hand and a newspaper in the other. Evangelist Billy Graham has made it a habit through the years to read several newspapers every day, including some from overseas. He found that it was impossible to address any culture credibly unless he knew what was going on within it.


Yet still you find some earnest evangelical (and often charismatic, too) Christians who think that devotion to Jesus is inversely related to knowledge of current events. The more ignorant, the more sanctified, they must think.


This is both nonsensical and dangerous. It implies to fellow-Christians that if they are well-informed they probably are not praying enough. It gives the impression to non-Christians that Christianity is a form of head-in-the-sand escapism that has nothing to say to the realities everyone else seems to be able to recognize as needing to be addressed.


One explanation of this phenomenon is theological. “Premillennial dispensationalism”–even if in the end it is true as an explainer of the end-time events preceding Christ’s return–has since its inception in the 19th century encouraged Christians to expect things in every arena of life to get worse, not better.


Here’s a thought. If 19th century British evangelical William Wilberforce had believed this doctrine, do you suppose he would have campaigned 46 years until his death in 1833 to abolish slavery and change the moral condition of England? I don’t think so.


Yet it’s probable that evangelicals in the United States since the 1970s have spent more to consume fictional speculation about the end times than to invest in the hard work and long-term preparation that are needed to change our culture. I’m all in favor of fiction. What I have no time for is speculative paranoia, fictional or nonfictional.


It really is time for us to stop making pathetic excuses for being ignorant about events around us. It requires from us hardly any financial outlay, since much of the content of national newspapers can be read free of charge on their Web sites. Buying a book occasionally and reading it helps, too.


My prayer is really very simple: Could we Christians change our entire attitude toward knowledge? God created knowledge, so it must be good–and it’s certainly better than ignorance.


And could we just start reading the newspapers? That would be a small, but wonderful, first step.




Nigeria’s Miracle

Some of the world’s largest churches are in Nigeria. Observers say God is raising up an army there to evangelize a continent.
On a Friday afternoon in December, millions of lively Africans congregated in a dusty, rust-red field 30 miles outside Lagos, Nigeria’s largest city. The people had been arriving all day in endless busloads. They came carrying food, blankets, jugs and firewood. Men hauled elderly or sick relatives on makeshift stretchers. Women carried infants on their backs and balanced three days’ worth of provisions on their heads.


As night fell, thousands of giant white moths swarmed around a hundred lightposts. The silent fluttering of their wings provided the only movement in the thick, humid air.


When the worship service began, people took their places on cue, standing in front of orderly rows of crude wooden benches that fanned out into the darkness. A quarter of a mile away, latecomers gathered under a huge metal pavilion to hear what they could not get close enough to see. Then the ground began to vibrate as a team of musicians, clothed in colorful African fabrics, sang a chorus and invited audience participation.


Baba baba baba baba / Ese O baba / Ese O baba / Awa dupe O baba.


Millions of voices sang the words in Yoruba, a Nigerian language. The simple song (which is translated, “Father, thank You, Father; we give You thanks, Father”) could be heard a mile away.


On the stage, crammed with thousands of ministers and guests, musicians beat and shook percussion instruments including gongans, omeles, agogos and talking drums. In response, a sea of dark-skinned people raised their hands, waved white handkerchiefs or broke into rhythmic praise. They came to this open-air tabernacle, as they have done every year since 1998, to worship God–and perhaps to receive a miracle.


“The wind is blowing! There is an anointing here! It is the wind of God!” a preacher announced from the podium. A deafening roar went up from the crowd. There was no wind on this sultry night, but the man’s voice was carried for more than a half-mile by way of huge 100,000-watt speakers.


People rose from their seats and shouted “Hallelujah!” or fervently spoke in tongues. Many of them watched the service on giant video screens that had been posted far into the crowd. A 40-man sound crew spent three weeks laying 1 million meters of cable and almost 3 kilometers of electrical cord so that the pilgrims on the fringes of this gathering could at least hear the music and preaching.


Welcome to Holy Ghost Congress 2001, the largest Christian gathering on earth. It is sponsored by Nigeria’s fastest-growing Pentecostal denomination, the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG), a movement founded 50 years ago by an illiterate tribesman. Today the group is destined to change a nation.


Five thousand security guards were posted on the property, a 4,000-acre tract of land the church bought and renamed Redemption Camp. Ten thousand ushers used plastic garbage bags to collect offerings from 36 wooden platforms positioned in every sector of the audience. The crowd, which included people from more than two dozen African nations, exceeded 2 million–and organizers said twice that many people came during the three days.


Although many were dressed in uncomfortable dark suits and Sunday dresses and were already soaked in sweat by the first night’s service, few of them would take baths during their stay here. Most people expected to sleep under benches or trees for the three-day conference. They lay their children on blankets or grass mats during services. Eight babies were born in a clinic on the property the first evening.


“In the civilized world, they would not allow a meeting like this,” one of the event’s organizers told Charisma.


Before an altar call was issued, a preacher from northern Nigeria roused the crowd with a passionate prayer. “O God, arise! Chain every demon that comes against Your church! Bring down every government that would oppose You! May God consume every altar that has been set up against Nigeria!”


A shout that followed shook the ground again. Then a million fists were raised into the air, and another million voices screamed the name of Jesus. The prayers continued, followed by more preaching, then more deafening music. When the next altar call was given at 3 a.m., hundreds of men, women and children walked to the stage area to seek physical healing.


Some of them left their crutches at the altar when they returned to their seats. They had found their miracle.


Waves of Revival


Crowds like this are not unusual in Nigeria. After all, the world’s largest church building is located 30 miles west of Lagos, and stadium-sized sanctuaries are springing up throughout the country. When German evangelist Reinhard Bonnke visits Nigeria, he attracts as many as 1 million people to open-air venues, sometimes resulting in riots incited by Muslims who resent the growth of Christianity here.


But the astounding numbers prompt the question: Why are so many people coming to Christ so quickly in this part of West Africa?


Enoch Adeboye, general overseer of the RCCG–which is starting three churches a day in Nigeria–sees a divine strategy behind his country’s Pentecostal boom. “Since one in five Africans is a Nigerian,” Adeboye theorizes, “perhaps God is raising up an army to evangelize all of Africa from here.”


Adeboye’s role in that strategy began in 1981 when he assumed leadership of the RCCG from its founder, Josiah Olufemi Akindayomi–an uneducated preacher from the Yoruba people group in western Nigeria. When Akindayomi died in 1980, the RCCG had only a few dozen churches. Under Adeboye it has grown to 5,000 congregations and an estimated 3 million adherents in Nigeria alone.


“God has visited us in the same way He did in the book of Acts,” Adeboye says.


Book of Acts-style miracles have been the norm in Nigeria since a Pentecostal outpouring began in the 1920s, brought by missionaries from Oregon. Revival was stirred in 1930 when Nigerians traveled hundreds of miles to hear the preaching of an indigenous evangelist, Joseph Babalola, who was based in the city of Ilesha.


Reports that a dead baby had been resurrected during one of his meetings triggered widespread conversions and launched several new ministries–including that of William Kumuyi, whose Deeper Life Church was at one time the nation’s largest.


Consistent waves of miracles–accompanied by false doctrines and bitter sectarian divisions–have characterized the growth of the church here. Nigeria’s chronic social problems also have quenched the Spirit’s work. A bloody civil war during the 1960s interrupted a period of charismatic renewal that led many Roman Catholics to embrace a born-again experience.


But the most significant trait of Nigeria’s revival is that it is no longer contained in Nigeria. Some of the largest churches in the world are pastored by expatriates who left their country for Europe or other parts of Africa.


Ukraine’s largest congregation, 20,000-member Word of Faith Bible Church in Kiev, was founded by Sunday Adelaja, a Nigerian who came to the ex-Soviet republic in 1986 to study communism. Matthew Ashimolowo, an ex-Muslim who spent part of his life in the Islamic stronghold of Kaduna, in northern Nigeria, now pastors the largest church in England, Kingsway International Christian Centre in east London.


Nigerians also pastor the largest churches in Kenya, Tanzania, Ghana, Zimbabwe and Jamaica. “There is a prophetic mandate on Nigerian Christians,” Ashimolowo told Charisma. “God has given us a word that our ministers will go out and shake the world.”


Just how fast Christianity is growing in Nigeria is in dispute because Muslims in the nation’s northern region don’t want to admit that Islam is losing ground. Christian missiologists say the country is 45 percent Christian; Ashimolowo believes it could be as high as 60 percent. He adds: “Whatever it is about Nigeria, it must be special because the devil fights it.”


A Nation on the Brink


There is no question that the devil was working during the regime of Sani Abacha, the iron-fisted dictator who ruled Nigeria from 1993 until his sudden death in 1998. A Muslim who had aligned himself with military thugs, Islamic radicals and occult sorcerers, Abacha was steering the country toward another war. It is widely known that he asked Islamic clerics to perform occult rituals in the capital to keep him in power.


But Christians say God heard the prayers of the church and sent a miracle. It came in the form of Olusegun Obasanjo, a military leader and born-again Christian who had been jailed by Abacha for treason. Like a character from an Old Testament drama, Obasanjo was suddenly plucked from his prison cell and placed in the presidency after a free election in early 1999.


As soon as he came to power he built a Protestant chapel on the property of Aso Rock, the presidential residence in Abuja. There were three mosques on the property, but today they are shuttered. “Muslims never thought that a committed Christian would one day live in the presidential villa,” Ashimolowo says.


Observers say the prayers of Christians averted a serious disaster. Joseph Thompson, a Nigerian who serves on the pastoral staff of New Life Church in Colorado Springs, Colorado, is organizing a conference in the United States in May 2003 to expose Americans to the zeal of Nigerian leaders. Says Thompson: “When you look at other African nations where there is not a move of God, there is anarchy. It is because of the church in Nigeria that the country even exists today.”



Yemi Osinbajo, 44, a former university professor and Pentecostal who is attorney general of the state of Lagos, says Obasanjo’s abrupt rise to power took Christians by surprise too, even though there was a national prayer movement aimed at healing the nation.


“The church feels responsible for bringing down Abacha’s regime,” Osinbajo says. “The amount of prayer going up for Nigeria was unprecedented. Our prayer was that there would be political change without bloodshed.”


“Abacha’s regime made people pray,” adds Ghandi Olaoye, 40, pastor of the largest Nigerian church in the United States, 1,000-member Jesus House in Silver Spring, Maryland. “People had to pray about whether they would have water, gas or electricity. The desperate need made a lot of people come to Christ.”


An invisible spiritual battle raged during Abacha’s last days. While he had asked spiritists to bury fetishes, charms and live animals on the property at Aso Rock, Christians were fasting. Meanwhile, Adeboye, the head of the RCCG, prophesied on June 6, 1998, that God was about to bring a “new dawn” to Nigeria. Abacha died of a heart attack three days later.


After Obasanjo came to power, he arrested senior military officials with ties to Abacha. Those arrests continue to this day. Death threats and assassinations also still haunt the country, and riots triggered by religious tensions are common in the north.


“Muslims are getting more aggressive now,” says Eskor Mfon, 48, pastor of City of David Church in Lagos. “They are meeting on Sundays as well as on Fridays. They know that if they don’t do something, all the young Muslims will become Christians.”


But Mfon notes that the clash between Islam and Christianity is only one of many spiritual challenges facing his country. Although he sees positive changes, he views corruption as a serious problem that could paralyze the church.


“Nigeria is a lawless place,” Mfon admits. “If there is anything that could hurt the church here, it is money issues. There is no accountability, no tax laws, there are dictatorial tendencies, and people tend to revere leaders. If you want to abuse the system, you can do it easily.”


At the root of Nigeria’s struggle with Islam, poverty and corruption is a dark legacy of idol worship. But today a growing number of Nigerian pastors are addressing that issue more boldly than in any previous generation.


Leading the charge is Anselm Madubuko, 42, pastor of 12,000-member Revival Assembly in Lagos. He says he was delivered from the influence of witch doctors and freemasonry while a college student. Today, he scolds the Nigerian church for being passive in this invisible war with territorial demons. “There is so much struggle today because our fathers covenanted us to devils through all kinds of rituals,” Madubuko says.


Nigerians trace their lineage to various tribes, the largest ones being the Ibo, Yoruba and Hausa-Fulani. All these people groups practice various forms of shamanism associated with ancient gods of rivers, iron or thunder. And many people still worship Yemoja, a water deity portrayed as a half-man, half-fish creature.


“Some people are covenanted in the demonic realm by what their parents did,” explains Madubuko, who has trained his congregation to minister deliverance to new converts. “There are so many who are born again but are oppressed, depressed and miserable. We are stopping it in this generation. We are determined to not let it get past us.”


Ayo Oritsejafor, pastor of Word of Life Bible Church, reaches people in the eastern coastal region where the Ibo, Urhobo, Itsekeri and Ijaw tribes have worshiped idols for centuries. He has established a deliverance school to train people to overcome generational curses and other demonic influences.


“In my tribe there is hardly any person who has not had contact with water spirits,” Oritsejafor says. “If they are not delivered they will backslide, have sexual problems, struggle with barrenness or find it difficult to get married.”


He believes his region is prone to civil strife because the Ibo worshiped ancient war gods. “You must deal with the occult to have a breakthrough,” Oritsejafor says.


Today in his city of Warri, many of the 26,000 people who attend his church are descendants of families who prayed to demons. The state’s governor attends the church, along with other government officials. They worship alongside several former tribal “doctors,” or practitioners of magic arts, who renounced their paganism after finding Christ.


A 21st Century Reformation


Speaking for most Nigerian pastors, Oritsejafor says God opened the heavens in 1998 and gave Nigeria a reprieve when Abacha was removed from office. “The exit of Abacha had a spiritual correlation. When he was moved out, churches exploded,” the pastor says.


There is no question that darkness turned to light after the dictator’s dramatic ousting. But Nigeria’s churches still need another miracle.


Although the growth of Nigerian Christianity is spectacular when compared to the West, a growing number of younger, innovative church leaders in the country say the revival there is fraught with problems.


They say most Pentecostal churches are mired in legalism. Many pastors, they add, have adopted an American model of celebrity Christianity–which has been eagerly embraced by a patriarchal African culture that struggles with hero worship. People follow their leaders rather than God.


It is widely known, for example, that the leader of the Deeper Life denomination, William Kumuyi–once praised by Americans as a premier example of Nigerian Pentecostalism–has isolated himself from other churches while demanding an unhealthy level of loyalty from his followers. Other prominent leaders like Kumuyi have made themselves virtual dictators over their religious kingdoms.


All this shallowness invites heresy, spiritual abuse and a faith that is too irrelevant to address complex issues such as social justice, AIDS and hunger. And those problems must be solved soon.


“The problem here is that Pentecostal Christians simply trade their occult oracles for their pastor. This is perversion,” says Lagos pastor Tony Rapu, 44, a leading proponent of reform in the Nigerian revival movement.


Some critics including Rapu blame the American Word-Faith movement for the problem (see related article on page 42). They say a cheap version of the “prosperity gospel” message was welcomed in Nigeria and that preachers have used it to enrich themselves.


“It has become a sham,” says one Christian professional from the eastern Delta region who requested anonymity during his interview. “I know of churches where they will not pray for you at the altar unless you give money first. They teach that you must give a seed first in order to receive any kind of blessing.”


“In some cases the prosperity the preacher enjoys is not trickling down to the people,” adds Ashimolowo. “There is some teaching of prosperity in Nigeria that is without balance.”


However, Ashimolowo is not quick to point a finger at American faith preachers. He believes that books about healing, prosperity and tithing by Oklahoma-based Bible teacher Kenneth Hagin Sr. have fueled Nigeria’s revival since they began circulating there in the 1970s. This literature offered Nigerian pastors theological training when materials were scarce and seminaries weren’t accessible.


Agreeing with Ashimo-lowo is prominent pastor David Oyedepo, 47, founder of Winner’s Chapel near Lagos. He is proud to claim faith preachers such as Hagin, Kenneth Copeland and Fred Price as valued mentors. And he often brings American faith preachers to speak at his church’s sprawling facility–which is as big as most American sports arenas.


It was during a trip Oyedepo made to Tulsa, Oklahoma, in the 1980s that he says he heard God say to him: “Make My people rich.” Since that visitation he has focused his ministry on teaching Nigerians to be generous–so they can give their way out of poverty, establish businesses and become successful.


“Every time I see lack it taunts me on,” Oyedepo told Charisma. Noting that poverty statistics went down when a Christian revival swept South Korea in the last century, Oyedepo says he expects “an industrial revolution” to transform Nigeria in the next decade.


“Every move of the Holy Spirit culminates in social reformation,” says Oyedepo, who has sent teams to plant churches in some of Africa’s poorest countries, including Madagascar, Gabon and Ethiopia. Oyedepo adds: “If revival stops with jumping and clapping and speaking in tongues, then we have wasted the grace of God. This move of God is not to redecorate the church. It is to redecorate the world.”


Perhaps Oyedepo has identified the key question facing the Nigerian church today. Will it shift from jumping and clapping to genuine social transformation? Will a church that is familiar with miraculous signs and wonders–but which still struggles to model biblical integrity–be strong enough to withstand the storm of Islam from the north and the lure of American materialism from the West?


Enoch Adeboye, who has prayed with and advised President Obasanjo six times since his election, says the answer lies in whether Nigerian Christians will humble themselves. If God’s people take the right posture, he believes, then God will tear down the Islamic curtain just like He dismantled the Iron Curtain in 1989. Says Adeboye: “I believe there will be a time when everyone in leadership in Nigeria is a Christian.”


When that happens, you can be sure that the shouts of praise resounding from Nigeria’s record-breaking Christian gatherings will be loud enough to shake a continent.


The Prosperity Controversy


While Nigeria’s churches are growing, many of them are preaching an imported message that focuses on money.


Christianity is evident everywhere on the streets of Lagos, Nigeria’s largest city. Messages of faith are emblazoned on store marquees and on the sides of houses, buses and cars. Almost every block of the city has at least one church, and each one announces service times in bold block letters.


On the road to Victoria Island, a downtown business district, billboards feature looming portraits of celebrity evangelists. The signs read: “Apostle of Deliverance and Breakthrough,” “Victory Holy Ghost Ministries” or “Bible Survival Strategies Conference!” On any given week, churches sponsor some kind of camp meeting, conference or special “miracle service.”


Lagos actually resembles one big Pentecostal gathering. The majority of Christians here–even many Roman Catholics and Anglicans–have embraced a theology that leaves room for miracles, speaking in tongues and noisy worship. Christianity is loud and colorful here, perhaps because the demonstrative style of Pentecostalism matches the inherent aggressivenes of Nigerian culture.


But there are critics within the Nigerian church who are making a different kind of noise today. They complain that while faith may be a mile wide in their country, it is only an inch deep.


“There are a lot of big, weak churches here,” says Anselm Madubuko, 42, pastor of 12,000-member Revival Assembly in Lagos. Known as a maverick, Madubuko and his wife, Constance, started their church in 1990 by teaching the importance of character and the need for deliverance from demons. This is crucial, he says, in a culture that is steeped in corruption, poverty and pagan occult practices.


Madubuko has no tolerance for what he calls a “shallow gospel” that has become popular in southern Nigeria. He partly blames Christians in the United States for exporting this prosperity message to his country.


“Fifteen years ago, church here was serious business,” Madubuko says. “But there has been a lot of American influence. We learned from the Americans that we do not have to tarry, that we don’t have to fast and pray, that you don’t need deliverance and that you can do things in a hurry.


“The faith movement told us that we don’t have to fast,” Madubuko adds. “It tells us that we can just ‘speak the Word’ instead of praying for three hours. So many Christians think it is easy now. And we have a church on every corner.”


There is no question that Nigeria has been fertile ground for the American faith message. Kenneth Hagin Sr.’s teachings on healing and prosperity have enjoyed wide circulation in Nigeria since the 1970s, partly through the influence of Nigerian megachurch leader Benson Idahosa. Kenneth Copeland, Jerry Savelle, John Avanzini and many other preachers who specialize in the prosperity message have huge followings in the African country.


“There was a place for the faith message,” says Tony Rapu, 44, pastor of a growing charismatic church in Lagos called This Present House. “But the glamour and the glitz of the American church was imported here. The gospel was commercialized. Sometimes it is really disgusting.”


“Some churches take the prosperity message too far,” adds Enoch Adeboye, 60, general overseer of the nation’s fastest-growing denomination, the Redeemed Christian Church of God. “Some Christians think that if you are prospering financially–no matter how you are living–that it is a sign of God’s favor. So wealthy people can actually buy their way into the leadership of the church.”


One prominent pastor who has helped spread the American faith message is David Oyedepo, 47, founder of the largest church in the country, Winners Chapel in Ota, 30 miles west of Lagos. An eloquent preacher who carries himself like a diplomat, he built the world’s largest church building in 1999 on a 638-acre campus. The cavernous building has 50,000 seats and room for a 1,000-voice choir.


When he visited a conference in Oklahoma several years ago, Oyedepo says God gave him a mandate: “Make My people rich.” Since then he has worked to raise Nigerians from poverty by teaching them to give out of their lack. Today, presidents of corporations and hospitals attend his church, along with three state governors. And his church members paid for their huge sanctuary with cash.


There is no doubt that Oyedepo is a faith preacher, but he says he does not preach a get-rich-quick gospel–and he is critical of those who think faith is just a means to personal gain.


“I tell people to quit looking for cheap money because it will cheapen your destiny,” Oyedepo told Charisma. “I tell my congregation that they must learn to live for others. We have been anointed as change agents for Africa. This anointing is not given to you just so you can feed your family–it is to make you a blessing to the world.”


Africa’s Islamic Challenge


In northern Nigeria, where Muslims still outnumber Christians, brave believers are risking their lives to preach the gospel.


Christians are paying a high price to serve Jesus in northern Nigeria. Just ask Emmanuel Kure about persecution, and he will show you his scars.


When Kure was enrolled at a university in the northern city of Kano in the 1980s, Muslims who had been monitoring his underground Christian activities dragged him onto a third-floor balcony and prepared to slaughter him like some kind of gruesome sacrifice to Allah.


“They put the knife to my throat, and then they said a prayer that they recite before they kill a goat,” says Kure, now 39. “But I began to laugh, even though I was under a death sentence. They asked me why I was laughing, and I replied: ‘You are too late. I died many years ago.'”


Enraged, one of the gang members pressed his knife into Kure’s flesh. But everyone began to scramble when they heard a sudden eruption of police sirens and gunfire nearby. “They thought the military had been called, so they ran away. But when it was all over, there were no police anywhere. I believe the Spirit of God caused that noise in order to save my life,” Kure told Charisma.


Kure’s story is not unusual in this region, where Islamic radicals have burned hundreds of churches in recent years. Currently, Muslim politicians and warlords have enacted strict Islamic law in six states in northern Nigeria–forbidding women to drive and requiring harsh punishments for minor crimes. Converting someone from Islam to Christianity is considered a serious offense in those regions.


“We are not allowed to preach openly,” says Fakulade Taiwo, 38, a pastor from the city of Kaduna–the spiritual headquarters of Islam in Nigeria. “We cannot even share our faith on the bus, but Muslims are allowed to have open-air meetings.”


A pastor from Bauchi state, Richard Agori, said local mosque leaders monitor people’s activities so they won’t visit Christian churches. “And I know people who are afraid to come to my church because they will be persecuted by their own families,” Agori says.


In Nigeria, like nowhere else on the planet, Islam and Christianity are set for a dramatic showdown. At one time the Muslim dominated government claimed control of the nation, but the tables were turned in 1998 when Muslim dictator Sani Abacha died of a heart attack and Nigerians elected Olusegun Obasanjo, a born-again Christian, to replace him. Today, the spread of Islam is quietly financed by organizations based in Saudi Arabia and Pakistan.


“The kingmakers in the north want to maintain the impression that the whole of the north is Muslim when it is not,” Kure says. Recent statistics suggest that the country is 45 percent Christian and 44 percent Muslim–with a growing Christian revival spreading even in the most resistant Islamic strongholds.


Kure, an aggressive church-planter who establishes “prayer towers” throughout the north as well as in Europe and other parts of Africa, is serious about arresting the spiritual powers behind Islam. In 1999, the day before Obasanjo’s inauguration, Kure laid hands on the president, prayed for him and charged him to make a fresh covenant with God.


Kure maintains that the Muslim insurgence in the north is rooted in the occult. He saw this firsthand when he watched Muslim clerics walking in the streets of Kaduna, pouring libations on the ground and claiming the nation for Islam prior to an election.


“Muslim clerics in Nigeria have not accepted our president, and they chant against him,” he says. “Muslims carry out incantations and enchantments by reciting verses from the Quran. They even call upon demonic spirits to remove ‘infidels’ who oppose Allah.”


The clash between the two religions could lead to further bloodshed. Riots incited by Islamic radicals came like waves in 1987 and 1996, and many pastors have been murdered. One report released last year by Compass Direct estimated that 294 churches in Kaduna state alone had been burned since 2000, and many Christian children have been orphaned by the violence.


But Kure, who was almost sacrificed on a Muslim altar, believes Christians in the north are prepared to die for their faith. “We have experienced many baptisms of fire,” he says. “This has made us stronger.”


Marching to a Different Drum


Nigerian church-planter Tony Rapu has broken ranks with status quo Christianity and is calling Nigerian believers to transform society.


When you ask a typical Nigerian pastor about the state of the church in that country, most will eagerly describe the staggering membership numbers, the surprising church-growth rates, and the impressive crowds at outdoor Christian festivals and healing crusades.


But if you ask Tony Rapu, he is more likely to rip his clothes and throw some dust on his head.


That’s because Rapu is playing the role of the unpopular prophet. The 44-year-old pastor and church-planter may look like a hip Nigerian professional (he is in fact a doctor as well as a minister), but his primary profession is that of reformer. He refuses to color inside the lines or stay inside the box, and he is training a younger audience of Nigerian believers to think just like him.


In spite of his dignified British accent, Rapu has been successful in upsetting Nigeria’s Pentecostal establishment–mostly because he is pointing his finger at religious traditions that people have been afraid to criticize.


“I am saying that the emperor has no clothes,” Rapu says of his message. “The church in Nigeria is in a mess. The structure must change.”


Rapu could have stayed in the structure and kept his popularity. Just 10 years ago he pastored one of the largest churches in the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG), Nigeria’s fastest-growing denomination. He was viewed as the favored son of the general overseer, Enoch Adeboye, and many assumed that Rapu might one day assume leadership of the group. During his time in the RCCG, he helped steer many of the group’s churches to adopt more progressive music and ministry styles.


But in 1997 Rapu decided that he could not work within the system. When he pulled out, many of his colleagues in the RCCG blacklisted him as a rebel. He went to England for two years, then returned and pioneered a new church in Lagos near Nigeria’s most prominent law school. The congregation, known as This Present House, attracts students and young professionals who feel out of place in the traditional confines of African Pentecostalism.


“I’ve always felt that the church shouldn’t be just about getting together on Sunday morning,” Rapu told Charisma. “We must make an impact on society. You can’t just camp around Pentecost.”


Among the issues Rapu addresses is the tendency of Nigerians to worship their leaders. “Pastors, ministers and leaders have become surrogate parents mediating between God and us. Most of our Christian experience then becomes nothing more than doing what the leaders tell us to do,” Rapu wrote in a monthly publication he produces, The Voice of One Crying in the Wilderness.


Rapu also has come down hard on the authoritarian leadership style that is so prevalent in the Nigerian church. And he is a vehement critic of the competitive, territorial spirit that prevents churches in his country from cooperating. “Pastors, please release the people of God. You are not the Holy Spirit. The superstar and celebrity mentality of the ‘anointed’ must be nailed to the cross,” Rapu says.


Adeboye, who was Rapu’s mentor and spiritual father for so many years, says he is still hurt over Rapu’s decision to leave the RCCG. “I doubt there is any one of my spiritual children who can see farther than him,” Adeboye told Charisma.


It is that spiritual farsightedness that makes Rapu one of the most innovative leaders in Africa today. If he keeps reaching the younger crowd, Nigerians may be surprised by how quickly his offbeat message is eventually embraced by the mainstream church.


J. Lee Grady traveled to Nigeria with Joseph Thompson, who is co-sponsoring a Nigerian revival conference in May 2003 in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Speakers will include Anselm Madubuko, David Oyedepo, Enoch Adeboye, Sunday Adelaja, Emmanuel Kure and Ayo Oritsejafor.




A Healthy Heart

The most important factor in whether or not you develop heart disease is the food you eat.

Q. With heart disease as rampant as it is, just how concerned should I be if I have a high cholesterol level?
M.C., Coronado, California

A.When people get together and the subject of health comes up, it’s very common to hear someone ask, “What’s your cholesterol level?” If the answer is 195, people think it’s good. However, if the answer is, say, 220, then the reaction is typically sympathetic.

Most people think anything under 200 is good and anything over that is bad. But a level of 195 may not be good, and 220 may not be all that bad.

There is good cholesterol and there is bad cholesterol. High-Density Lipoproteins (HDL) is the “good” cholesterol and Low-Density Lipoproteins (LDL) is the “bad” cholesterol. The important thing is the ratio between them.

HDL actually helps prevent cardiovascular disease because it helps remove LDL from blood cells, which means that less LDL can enter into the blood vessel walls. HDL can reverse the buildup in the arteries and act as a blood-thinning agent. This is very important to good heart health.

LDL, on the other hand, is very unhealthy for you if the level in your blood is high. It can cause the inside layers of your arteries to inflame, and fatty plaques and platelets can begin to build up. The blood can start to thicken, a process that can lead to heart complications.

Here is the most important fact to know about cholesterol levels: It is not the individual levels of HDL and LDL or their combined levels that make a big difference. It is the ratio of HDL to LDL that will determine your risk for heart disease.

Your total cholesterol divided by your HDL should be less than 4, and your LDL divided by the HDL should be less than 3.

If your ratios work out to be less than 4 and less than 3 respectively, you are at a low risk to develop heart disease. If your ratios are higher, your risk of heart disease is much higher, regardless of what the individual levels of cholesterol are. That is why a person with a total cholesterol greater than 200 may not be at risk, and a person with a lower cholesterol level may be at great risk.

I recommend that you have your cholesterol levels checked by a doctor and then work out your ratios. If you see that they are higher than what they should be, you should ask your doctor and a nutritionist to help you lower them, preferably through diet and exercise instead of prescription drugs. May you be blessed with a healthy heart.

Q. My father died at age 52 of a heart attack. I am 48. What can I do to lower my risk of the same?
J.M., Houston, Texas

A.I have been to Texas quite a few times, and it is one of the best states in America to get a huge, delicious steak and a baked potato with all of the fixings. But if you really love your heart, you need to add more fruits and vegetables to your diet. The most important factor in whether or not you develop heart disease is the food you eat.

In 1989, the U.S. Surgeon General issued a report on nutrition and health that confirmed a reduction in the intake of fat would reduce the risk of heart disease. Fruits and vegetables are the foundation of a heart-healthy diet.

You see, when God created us, He put the foods before us that were designed to keep our bodies healthy forever: “Then God said, ‘I give you every seed-bearing plant on the face of the whole earth and every tree that has fruit with seed in it. They will be yours for food'” (Gen. 1:29, NIV). Or consider Psalm 104:14: “He causes the grass to grow for the cattle, and vegetation for the service of man” (NKJV).

Science confirms the Scriptures. Many studies conclude that people who eat lots of fruits and vegetables have a reduced risk of heart disease.

My book An Alternative Guide to a Healthy Heart (Siloam Press) shares the findings of many of these studies, as well as the benefits of exercise, which is the second most important factor in heart health.

It is not that difficult to lower your risk of heart disease, but are you willing to make the lifestyle changes needed? Having a healthy heart depends on making healthy choices.


Francisco Contreras, M.D., director of Oasis of Hope Hospital in Mexico, oversees the treatment of 600 cancer patients annually. He is a surgical oncologist, health educator and author of several books, including The Hope of Living Long and Well (Siloam Press), available at .




Saints of Our Lives

They’re beautiful, and they’re bold–about their faith. Some of daytime drama’s brightest stars shine for Jesus in the world of soap operas.
Jamie-Lyn Bauer is an intercessor. Austin Peck seeks to find God’s perfect will in every contour of his life. Julianne Morris has a passion for overseas missions. Kirsten Storms refuses to take the Lord’s name in vain. Hunter Tylo boldly tells everyone who will listen about her relationship with Jesus. Scott Reeves views his vocation like a ministry.


It is not surprising to find such spiritually focused characteristics among churchgoers, but these Christians are also stars on daytime-TV soap operas.


As members of an unlikely but growing cast of believers on the Hollywood scene, their impact for the gospel is showing up both on and off the screen. They all are part of a deeper plot than what viewers see unfolding on the sets of Days of Our Lives, The Bold and the Beautiful, The Young and the Restless and others.


Perhaps it is ironic that a deeply devoted troop of actors, writers, producers, administrators and stagehands populate this particular TV genre–famous for power-grabbing and greed- and lust-driven storylines that extol duplicity, scandal and revenge. But these believers are not debating whether or not a Christian should “run in the soaps crowd.” They are on Hollywood’s frontlines and in studio back lots leading co-stars and crew members to the Lord, bathing studios in prayer, and solidifying real-life blowups and heartbreaks.


Charisma interviewed a number of these brave believers to hear in their words what it’s like to be a Christian in Hollywood. Not surprisingly, we found that they face temptations and make mistakes–while being criticized by believers and nonbelievers alike who disagree with their stand for God in the entertainment industry.


They told us God is using them right where they are. And more than ever, they believe, it is the right time to share God’s love with Hollywood professionals.


“Before, it was just getting people saved. Now we are equipping, encouraging and covering them,” says Bauer, a former star on Days of Our Lives. “It is a very exciting time to be a Christian in Hollywood.”


A Christian Soap Opera?


It’s past midnight and the 23-hour-long shoot for a Days of Our Lives special has taken a dangerous turn. The script calls for a fire that forces Laura Spencer-Horton (played from 1990-1999 by Jamie-Lyn Bauer) to flee from the psychiatric hospital where she has been institutionalized.


The scene has been carefully choreographed, and firemen stand by to guarantee safety on the set. But something goes awry. A blazing 6-foot-long beam crackles and shimmies, then suddenly, ripping from its overhead moorings, plunges downward directly toward Jamie-Lyn and her co-star.


This predicament is not in the script. Instinctively, and almost audibly, Jamie-Lyn prays in tongues.


“By the grace of God, we were not hit,” she says. “I know that God was there. I wouldn’t be surprised if the enemy was, too. Satan probably was not very happy that I was on the show.”


This was not the first or last time Jamie-Lyn sought God’s presence while at Days’ Burbank, California, studio. In fact, each day while she drove the short distance from her North Hollywood home to the TV lot, she interceded.


“I would plead that His blood would be everywhere I would go,” she recounts. “This was my territory, God’s territory. I would pray for divine order on the set. I prayed for His manifest authority to be present.”


She sounds like intercessory leaders Cindy Jacobs, Chuck Pierce or Frank Damazio firing up attendees at a spiritual warfare conference, not someone who has spent most of two decades acting in soaps, movies and stage plays. But following the prodding of her spiritual mentors–who include Jacobs, Pierce and Damazio–Jamie-Lyn accepts her spiritual role in Hollywood.


As a Days cast member, her dressing room became her prayer closet, and God answered in a dramatic fashion.


She took spiritual authority over the psychic readings sought by co-stars and the horoscopes read each day in makeup. The activities disappeared.


She fervently pleaded for the salvation of every cast and crew member and asked God to bring more Christians to the show. Some were saved. More solid believers joined the cast.


She asked God to bless Days of Our Lives and its executive producer, Kenneth Corday. The show strengthened its reputation. It became known as being a good place to work, having a cast who were like family, exhibiting comparatively minimal in-fighting, and standing as America’s favorite and most-watched daytime soap.


Jamie-Lyn has not been God’s sole representative on the program. Through the years He has placed other believers in key roles to buoy it with prayer. Notably, administrator and “show mother” Nancy Lewis and sound-man Jim Thomas have gained respect and acceptance as believers and co-workers.


“At times I felt all alone [as a Christian on the program],” says Lewis, who is the assistant to the head writer and wife of film producer John Lewis. “But now it is great. There are so many Christians here. It is wonderful to be able to have someone who understands and who I can pray with.”


In fact, in recent years the number of regular actors on Days of Our Lives who profess Jesus as Lord has multiplied, including Austin Peck (Austin Reed), though he is leaving the show this spring; Julianne Morris (Greta Von Amburg); Melissa Reeves (Jennifer Horton); Kirsten Storms (Belle Black); Brian Ditello and Suzanne Rogers.


“God has these people placed in the right places at the right time,” Julianne Morris says.


Don’t get the wrong picture. Days of Our Lives has not become a Christian soap, nor is this likely to happen. Kidnappings, switched babies, backstabbings and the like still fill Days’ daily episodes, as they have for more than
30 years.


Yet many characters mention God, and miracles occur in the fictionalized Days city of Salem. Once, a baby rose from the dead. Habitat for Humanity has been worked into scripts. The character Eric Brady is part of a Bible study.


“While there is a lot of other stuff that goes on, characters pray, and there is always a sense of God,” Julianne says. “There is a basis on God, and that is nice.”


In fact, the show’s name comes from Psalm 23: “Surely goodness and love will follow me all the days of my life [italics added], and I will dwell in the house of the Lord forever” (NIV).


A GQ Model Finds God


In 1995 a young, brash, former GQ model and amateur boxer named Austin Peck joined the Days cast. Austin quickly rose to the top of soaps’ heartthrob barometer as the jaunty, daring Austin Reed. He and co-star Christie Clark earned the Soap Digest 1997 badge for hottest romance of the year. Off-screen, Peck’s life sizzled as much as any on-screen soap exploit.


“I smoked pot. I did everything. I was way off-center,” he says.


Yet, long before the San Francisco native’s network debut, God had begun the process of getting his attention. As a child, Austin heard booming warnings of an impending hell set aside for sinners.


Years later, while on a modeling assignment in Zurich, Austin asked God tough questions about life and death. To his surprise, the answers came in a clear, inner voice and made sense. Later, while walking through New York’s East Village, Austin talked to God about his career–even committed it to Him–yet he still spent plenty of time on the wild side living a real-life spiritual tug-of-war.


God did not concede, however. Austin’s sister, Casey, started reading the Bible to the young actor over the phone. When he first arrived as a cast member for Days, Jamie-Lyn, Nancy and Jim were there, rushing him to the top of their prayer lists.


In September 1997, God spoke to him.


“He told me, ‘Austin, I see your heart, but you don’t know My Son,'” he recounts. “That got my attention. I started reading the Bible. All of a sudden the words jumped off the page and became real.” Almost immediately the sinner’s prayer followed, and Austin’s life hasn’t been the same.


The next day at lunch, he noticed a new actor, Paige Rowland, saying grace over her meal. On the way to makeup Austin approached her and introduced himself as a Christian.


“He is phenomenal,” says Paige, who attends Bel Air Presbyterian Church in Los Angeles. “From the moment he was saved he shamed me [as a bold believer]. He was on fire from the moment he started. Everyone on the set could see it.”


This spiritual passion has curried Austin some great moments–which have included leading co-star Brian Ditello to the Lord–but it also has led to some big headaches.


“I became a Bible-thumping Jesus freak,” he says. “All of a sudden purpose was flooded into my life, and that tornado inside my chest calmed down, and I felt like I was full. I had to tell everyone.”


On the set, Austin and co-star Julianne Morris have become friends.


“When he messes up a line, I will lay hands on him,” Julianne says. “Of course, [the other cast members] have no idea what I’m doing, but Austin and I know.”


Austin describes his character as a seeker who “wants to best person he can morals not sleep around.” In one episode, Reed prayed for a baby who was in a coma, and the child recovered.


“The baby rose from the dead–right on Days, and then [Reed] becomes self-righteous. Isn’t that just like some of us?” Austin says.


Austin and his wife attend Oasis Christian Center in Los Angeles, and he says he has matured as a Christian.


“I was pretty strong. I think I scared one [co-star] and once [an actor from another show] said I was all over him [sharing the gospel] when we were waiting at the airport,” Austin says. “I look at how on-fire I was and see that I am just as much on-fire now, but more on the inside.”


In January he was given notice that his Days contract would not be renewed.


“I could not imagine going through this without faith,” he says. “I have had my private moments, but people keep telling me how well I am handling it. I think that is a witness to others because they know I am a Christian.”


Letting Her Light Shine


Nilavae Morris once prayed three hours for her daughter Julianne’s audition, until Julianne called to say she had gotten the part.


“She is always praying for me and everyone on the show,” says Julianne, who was on The Young and the Restless before she made her debut on Days of Our Lives.


Julianne was raised in Windermere, Florida, near Orlando, and her father is Christian writer and former evangelist Max Morris. She grew up attending Pentecostal churches and is now active at Hollywood Presbyterian Church, where several ministries directed specifically at the entertainment industry are based.


“I am a Christian first and then an actor,” says Julianne, who has been active in overseas missions trips when not acting. “I feel this is the door God has opened. This is where He wants me.”


Julianne was a child actor and attended drama school in New York City before moving to California. Before breaking into Days she was cast in the lead of a South African TV series titled Sinbad.


Christian actors often talk about what lines they can cross in their roles, and Julianne discovered hers when she was asked to lead a séance in an episode of Sinbad.


“I read the script the night before and started crying. I just didn’t know how I could do it,” she says. “[The next day] I walked off the set and went back to my dressing room. I wasn’t a diva or anything, but [shooting the scene] went against every single fiber in me.”


During five months of filming, Julianne had been a vibrant, kind presence on the set, befriending and helping co-stars and crew members.


“I had let my light shine,” she says. “So when it came to the séance, and I could not do it, they were nice about it.


“Sometimes we find ourselves doing what maybe wasn’t part of God’s original plan or what God really wanted us to do. But even in the midst of that it is amazing how He’s so gracious to stand by us and, like Scripture says in Romans 8:28, ‘All things work together for good to those that love the Lord, to those who are called according to His purpose.'”


Julianne has not had any significant problems with her character, Greta Von Amburg, on Days of Our Lives. But she, like most Christians interviewed for this article, would not take God’s name in vain or act in a sex scene.


“Sure, a lot of myself comes out [in Greta],” says Julianne, who is leaving the show this spring to pursue prime-time roles. “She is so sweet, but there are lots of choices Greta would make that are different than mine. That is what acting is. I hope I would be a little smarter about men.”


A Teen Role Model


Fifteen-year-old Kirsten Storms had just been cast as Belle Black when Jamie-Lyn Bauer was seeing the close of her stint on Days of Our Lives in 1999. Kirsten was assigned to Jamie-Lyn’s dressing room–and recognized immediately the presence of the Holy Spirit from the years Jamie-Lyn had used the room for prayer.


“My mother and I noticed right away. There are good spirits in this dressing room,” says Kirsten, who has gained fame in Disney movies, including Zenon: Girl of the 21st Century for which she won the 1998-1999 Best Performance on a TV Movie or Pilot and a Leading Young Actress award, beating out the likes of Kirsten Dunst and Tegan Moss.


Kirsten grew up in Orlando, Florida, where she attended a Baptist church and later Metro Life Church, an independent charismatic congregation. Her family, including her father, Mike Storms–a NASCAR race announcer and former TV sports anchor in Orlando–moved to California in 1996 to pursue acting opportunities that had opened in Hollywood for Kirsten. They now attend a Vineyard church.


“God places Christians in the entertainment business,” says Kirsten, 17, and one of the most popular characters on Days. “He is going to turn lights on in dark places.”


Guiding Lights in Hollywood


Daytime soaps trace their roots to serial fiction from the likes of Charles Dickens and radio serials of the 1930s and 1940s, acquiring their name from the advertisers who sold soap products. The first TV soap aired in the early 1950s and gained popularity in subsequent decades. Today, they are mainstays competing with talk shows and game shows.


Soaps tend to focus on female characters, both bad and good. They reflect on societal issues and tend to clearly define good and evil. And, of course, the stories never end.


This last element allows the scripts to explore the attitudes and emotions around touchy subjects such as AIDS, premarital sex, racial prejudice, homelessness and other real-life issues, which could include Christianity.


“Why not?” Austin Peck says. “There could be a Christian character on a soap. But it would have to be an honest character [who] is allowed to struggle with his faith, stumble, fall and get up again.”


He’s willing to play a bad character if the role is redeeming or shows the ugliness of sin. But, he adds: “[Soaps] are a slice of cannot take them too seriously.”


Soap Digest managing editor Stephanie Sloane has noticed the increasing number of actors who believe in God on the programs.


“There are Christians on all of the shows, but there is a larger, more vocal contingent on Days,” she says. “Soaps are not all about sex. People who say that do not watch them. They deal with poignant, ongoing stories. Yes, yes, many people have sex. there are consequences.”


So why be a Christian on a soap? Even some of the stars themselves wrestle with the question.


“The day I became a Christian I thought, Oh no, I can’t work on that show anymore. I was horrified,” says Hunter Tylo, a charismatic Christian who stars as Taylor Hayes Forrester on The Bold and the Beautiful. “I was willing to walk away. I prayed about where God wanted me. I said: ‘Lord take this career. I do not want to be a stumbling block for anyone.'”


Hunter walked through the entire CBS studio anointing every room and sound stage with oil. Like Jamie-Lyn, she prayed that God would bring other Christians to the show and the network.


Resolved that God indeed wanted her to stay, Hunter has been able to bring Scripture into several episodes and has shared Christ with co-stars and crew members, even leaving notes and tracts in their mailboxes.


Many of the stars see God’s hand at work in their careers and are careful not to cross the lines in their parts.


Scott Reeves, former star with The Young and the Restless agrees that an actor’s place on the soaps is a position to be taken seriously for Christ.


“How can a Christian be in a soap? I don’t think it is for another person to judge. It is between God and the person. You know when you are doing something you should not be doing,” he says.


Says Julianne Morris: “I am not on a soap to minister to other Christians. I am more concerned about the non-Christians. If I can reach one person for Christ, it is all worth it.”


When Life Is More Than Soap Opera


Julianne Morris says abstinence iis one role she won’t negociate.


Julianne Morris’ first role in a daytime soap was as a 16-year-old on The Young and the Restless. The storyline took a turn that challenged her faith as a Christian. It called for her character to lose her virginity.


“I was mortified,” Julianne says. “That is such a horrible message.”


She tried to reason with the producers and writers.


“I did not go in like a bull in a china shop. I tried to be humble and kind and loving and backed it with facts [about teen pregnancy],” she told Charisma.


But the producers had their way, and her character was unable to remain a virgin.


“They were very nice about it and agreed to add several scenes–several days of me just crying and saying [the pregnancy] was the biggest mistake I’d ever made, that I wanted to wait until I was married and that I wish I had waited.


“But there are a lot of situations where girls lose their virginity and then realize they made a big mistake,” Julianne adds. “So there was a message in it.”


Julianne, who is single and is leaving Days of Our Lives this spring, clearly advocates sexual abstinence before marriage.


“I am waiting. It is not always easy, but it is the right thing to do,” she says.


The Days star has a strong message for all singles, especially teens. “I believe marriage is ordained by God,” she says. “The Bible teaches quite explicitly that the romantic attachment between a husband and a wife is a parallel to our relationship to God. There could be no stronger indication of its importance.


“The idea of waiting until you are married to have sex is simply an acknowledgment of the power of sex and its unique status. Christians understand exactly how exalted and life-changing it is, which is why we don’t advocate treating it as cavalier as getting a manicure.”


Steven Lawson is a veteran journalist based in Southern California. While he does not watch soaps, his late grandmother, Pauline Steves, was a fervent Days of Our Lives fan from the show’s inception in 1965.




Give Harry Potter a Chance

I was intrigued. I could relate to Harry Potter. I’ve seen him in therapy a
hundred times.

When I was asked to be on yet another TV program to discuss Harry Potter, I responded: “What more needs to be said? In my opinion, the topic has been run into the ground.”


The producer pressed: “Public interest is still high and probably will remain so. We want your view not only as a mom but as a therapist.”


I reluctantly agreed to do the show. My hesitancy had to do with the line that has been drawn in the sand by the Christian community.


On the one hand you have those who feel anything to do with Harry Potter is evil. On the other, you have the lovers of literature who see the book series as classic and compare it to the writings of C.S. Lewis and . Tolkien.


I’ve sat at swimming events and ballet programs, in church and in shoe stores
listening to parents attribute their children’s newfound reading interest to Harry Potter. I’ve heard others claim that the books elevate evil and unwittingly seduce kids into the occult. Both sides are passionate and believe their position is correct.


As I prepared for my TV appearance, I wondered why I was being asked to join this great debate. My children have no interest in the books or the movie, so I had no passion for the topic as a mom. And I generally dislike this type of discussion because it tends to alienate the Christian community from the very people we need to reach.


But as a therapist, I was intrigued. After I read the first paragraphs of the book, I could relate to Harry Potter. I’ve seen him in therapy a hundred times.


Harry is a child of trauma (murdered parents) who is forced to live with people who care little about him and show no genuine affection. He is often mistreated and emotionally neglected. Essentially alone, he faces the world as one of the disenfranchised.


What he finds among the world of wizards and witches is acceptance. It is the supernatural world of evil that mentors him, befriends him and allows him to operate in his gifts.


I thought of all the children of divorce who feel like Harry–traumatized by the loss of the family unit and often forced to live with new people who have no interest in their emotional lives. They are the modern-day Cinderellas whose princes never come.


I thought of those who have been sexually molested and learn to survive by fantasizing and mentally disconnecting from their physical bodies. Or those who know rejection because of their gay lifestyle, past abortion, addictions or homelessness.


They receive neither love nor acceptance from the church. But in the company of sinners, they are welcomed.


And when they enter a world of darkness, the longing for power and love draws them. Like Harry, they are the disenfranchised who yearn (as we all do) for something bigger than our mortal selves.


Then I remembered a “Harry Potter” in Brooklyn, New York–an unlovable man who swaggered into a church one Easter. The man was homeless and often slept outside the doors of the church.


He made his way to the altar, heading for pastor Jim Cymbala. Cymbala’s first thought was: Oh, no, not on Easter! This guy is probably a panhandler.


The stench of urine overwhelmed him. But as the Holy Spirit convicted Cymbala of his judgment, he obediently turned his head toward the man.


A miracle happened. The stench became a sweet smell, and the pastor saw the stranger with Christ’s eyes. As he prayed for and embraced him, the homeless found a home. Thankfully, it wasn’t a place of wizardry or lies. It was the love of Christ.


People long to be a part of something that connects them to unconditional love. They have gifts that either have never been awakened or are used for evil rather than good. They long for a supernatural power to help them overcome rejection and trauma.


When the church awakens to the need around us, we won’t be hearing so much about what’s wrong with Harry Potter. People will be talking about what is right with the body of Christ.


Linda S. Mintle, Ph.D., is a Virginia-based licensed clinical social worker and author of Divorce Proofing Your Marriage (Siloam Press), available at . She welcomes your questions about the tough issues of life at .




Whatever Happened to Lamentation?

The prophets of old knew the meaning and power of godly grieving. It still has a place in the lives of God’s people.
While indexing some articles recently, I ran across an unusual story, “The Lament of an Indonesian Rape Victim,” which told of a woman’s struggle to come to terms with her assault and mutilation by a mob. Furious with God, this woman had stopped praying, but she later found comfort in the Bible when she read about the trials of the Israelites in the book of Lamentations.


The article concluded in this way: “She still does not go to church, for one very simple reason: churchgoers cannot handle a lament. This struck me when I went to a famous central London church the following Sunday. All the songs were of victory and triumph, militaristic, confident, loud.


“I saw for the first time how hard it would be for someone like her to come into church and simply lament. Everyone would crowd around trying to perk her up or tire of her gloom and mutter about her ‘negative spirit.'”


Most Christians think that being spiritual means always being “up.” We assume that if we are upset with God, angry at injustice or grieving over a loss, we somehow have lost the faith.


We forget that lamenting is part of the Bible. It is part of our faith, and it is part of the persecuted church. So why do we tend to ignore our suffering brothers and sisters or shy away from sharing their testimonies of courage? Isn’t it because their stories don’t always end in triumph?


I often have felt badly about weeping over the world’s weighty issues. One shouldn’t live in doom and gloom, and I acknowledge my pessimism can be taken to an extreme. Nevertheless, I think the Western church’s penchant for sunny optimism can be extreme as well.


Consider the fact that:


* More than 70 million Christians the world over have been martyred in the last 20 centuries.


* Trusted church workers steal some $16 billion annually from church funds.


* Christians spend more on annual audits ($810 million) than on all workers in the non-Christian world.


* There are 500 million orphans in the world and 70 million abandoned children and infants.


* Worldwide, 200 million children are exploited for labor.


* Even in the year 2002, 35 million people are still slaves.


* As many as 120,000 prisoners are being tortured.


* Pedophile racketeers victimize some 5.8 million children.


* There are 24 million prostitutes.


* Every year, about $47 billion worth of cocaine is sold in the world.


**Approximately 250 million women are battered in their homes each year.


What is your reaction to these horrible statistics? What is the reaction of people around you? Do you say, “Oh, yes, it’s horrible, but there’s nothing I can really do about it”?


I agree that it is difficult for one person to solve these problems. But let me suggest a first step that anyone can do: Lament it.


What is a lamentation? It is not necessarily a declaration of personal responsibility, although in some cases it may include that.


To lament is to express sorrow, mourning or regret, often demonstratively. It also means “to mourn or wail.” Another definition is “to deplore.”


We don’t use these words often in the church today. For example, what does it mean to mourn?


My dictionary says it means: (1) to feel or express grief or sorrow; (2) to show the customary signs of grief for a death, such as wearing mourning clothes; (3) to murmur mournfully; (4) to feel or express grief or sorrow for.


To wail means: (1) to express sorrow audibly; (2) to make a sound suggestive of a mournful cry; (3) to express dissatisfaction plaintively, or to complain. (Have you expressed audible sorrow to God lately?)


To deplore means: (1) to feel or express grief for; (2) to regret strongly; (3) to consider unfortunate or deserving of deprecation.


To lament, then, is first to feel God’s heart of sorrow for something that is terrible–to weep with His tears, to wail with His cries, to put one’s arms around someone else, even if only spiritually, and cry with them. To lament is to stand in the gap and say: “Yes, I agree, this is terrible. Let me comfort you.”


Are we unwilling to lament something for fear we will be called to do something about it?


Further, to lament is to express dissatisfaction, to complain and to deplore. To deplore something is an especially loaded word. It carries with it an extreme regret that leads to action. It means that we must complain.


Christians often are told that complaining is unbiblical. For example, Philippians 2:14 tells us to do things “without complaining or grumbling.” But this is not the kind of complaint I am speaking of. The apostle Paul is referring to a spirit that complains about something God wants us to do in a grumbling sort of way.


Yet the complaint that comes from regret is a charge or accusation leveled at sin. It is the same term that is used when we take a complaint before a judge.


Guess what? I am complaining a lot to God these days.


I am complaining that 500 million orphans must go without families because no one cares. I am complaining that 200 million children are exploited for labor because the West is willing to buy the goods they produce. I am complaining that we must spend more on audits than on Christian work because some of our trusted workers are not discipled and should not be trusted.


When such a complaint is leveled, then the next step is action to redress the complaint. Such action must be taken by us.


The church is God’s tool to destroy the works of the devil. The structures of sin created by the enemy have bound up people in slavery, in oppression, in hunger and disease. Surely it is our responsibility to take action that redresses these problems.


Lamentations are the first step in making a change. Without them, anything we do is just a program or a change in procedure. With them, actions are undertaken on the basis of repentance and moral strength.


Lamentations are biblical and needed. What have you lamented lately?


Justin Long is a writer and missionary researcher based in Chesapeake, Virginia. He is co-editor of the newly updated World Christian Encyclopedia.




Facing the Facts

Instead of simply hoping that things will get better, we must honestly face
the issues.

I’ve always wondered why some churches grow and some don’t. Consider two charismatic churches: Same city. Same doctrine. Same Holy Spirit. Yet one booms and one folds. Since I’ve passed the half century mark, I’ve realized that the explanation is too complicated to reduce to idealistic formulas of what works and what doesn’t.


We charismatics seem to gravitate to the latest thing that brings results. A few years ago it was discipleship, then “name it and claim it.” After that it was spiritual warfare. Now it’s apostolic authority.


No matter what the current ministry focus is, when we espouse it, some things change, but others don’t. We take three steps forward and two steps back.


In his book, Good to Great, Jim Collins provides some insight that might help us address this phenomenon. He documents the results of a five-year study of the histories of 28 elite companies, in which he evaluated why some that for many years had been merely “good” made a transition to “great”–defined as outperforming the general stock market in cumulative stock returns an average of seven times in 15 years.


One of the characteristics Collins says made good companies great was their willingness to confront the brutal facts of their current reality while at the same time having absolute faith that they would prevail in the end.


I recognize the danger of applying secular insight to the church: It omits the spiritual dimension. But didn’t Jesus say that “‘the children of this world are in their generation wiser than the children of light'” (Luke 16:8, KJV)?


I believe it’s time for the charismatic community to confront the brutal facts, especially those related to churches. Consider that:


* Overall there is little true growth. Most is transfer growth.


* Hundreds of thousands of charismatics have been so offended by leaders they have either stopped going to church or attend a middle-of-the-road Protestant church where the leadership isn’t weird, even if there is no life.


* Many leaders in charismatic churches are self-centered. The entire ministry revolves around their vision, and they live a nice lifestyle because they control the finances.


* Few ministries support others that are being attacked. Witness the Assembly of God congregation in Texas that lost a lawsuit because they prayed deliverance over a member of the church. Even if there were abuses, we need to defend their scriptural rights.


**Many ministries go further and actually malign others. Consider how the prophetic ministry has been maligned by pastors because of abuses by a few.


* Few preachers preach against sin. If they do, it’s the sin of not tithing or not supporting the leadership. But what about racism? What about failing to come against the radical homosexual social agenda? What about greed, materialism and other sins?


Instead of simply hoping that things will get better, or staying in our small circles where some of the problems don’t exist, or failing to deal with ongoing problems that hinder growth both numerically and spiritually, we must honestly face the issues. Why do people leave charismatic churches? Why are charismatics ridiculed and characterized based on the extremes of some?


We could get discouraged looking at the problems. Yet for ministries to grow–for the entire renewal movement to grow and change the church–we must have absolute faith we will prevail in the end.


For all the prophets who have bowed the knee to Baal, many haven’t. Many ministries are grow-
ing and prospering and helping people become true disciples.


Leaders such as John Bevere are confronting the problem of offenses among Christians. The growth of his ministry and sales of his books testify to the fact that believers are receiving the message.


Many leaders are confronting sin. And many are standing against the tide in our culture, believing we will prevail.


It’s time for us to focus on the realities we face. Then, we must walk in absolute faith that there are solutions–and believe God will bring them about.


It’s as Bob Mumford said years ago: “I’ve read the last chapter of the book, and we win.”


Stephen Strang is founder and publisher of Charisma.




One Lunch can Feed a Multitude

A ministry born out of the compassion of a 12-year-old missionary boy is offering nourishment and the good news of Jesus to hundreds of youngsters in Guatemala and Mexico
Teresa Pérez was desperate for medical, if not divine, help. The mother of six knew her 1-year-old baby was dying in her arms from dehydration and diarrhea. Medical help was miles away from her one-room, dirt-floor mud hut in Santa Lucía Los Ocotes–a remote village near Guatemala City.


Abandoned by her husband, Pérez seemed to have nowhere to turn. Then she remembered that three of her children were part of the feeding program at Wedding of the Lamb Assembly of God church. Without hesitation, Pérez rushed her son, Carnación, to pastor Luis Villatoro in the middle of that February 2001 night.


Pérez had two requests: prayer and that Villatoro would take her skin-and-bones child to a doctor. With only the equivalent of $25 on hand and a public bus for transportation, Villatoro somehow got the baby to a physician, who gave him antibiotics for a severe stomach infection complicated by malnutrition.


Villatoro returned to the village and took the child back to Pérez. Then he and his wife prayed all night for God to save him. When Villatoro checked on Carnación the next morning, the child was eating and doing well.


“It was a miracle that God gave me,” says Pérez, 42, with Carnación, now 2, in her arms. “I was praying for God’s help and that he would get well. He answered that through Pastor Luis and Charlie’s Lunch.”


Testimonies like Pérez’s are becoming increasingly common as a result of a little-known, worldwide compassion ministry inspired by a 12-year-old boy named Charlie Stewart, who loved to give–especially to the hungry and needy.


The son of former Guatemalan Assemblies of God (AG) missionaries, Charlie died in Guatemala of a congenital heart condition in 1996, but his legacy of generosity would live on. The year after his death, Charlie’s parents, Sam and Janey Stewart, unintentionally launched Charlie’s Lunch after some street children knocked on their door begging for bread.


“I felt the Lord was telling me, ‘Give them Charlie’s lunch,’ and so I did,” recalls Janey, who in August 1997 returned with her husband to Guatemala from the United States.


Without large fund-raising efforts and publicity, the El Paso, Texas-based ministry has spread from Guatemala to Mexico, and it also has helped establish feeding centers in the Philippines and Africa. This year, Charlie’s Lunch expects to be in Morocco, Africa, India and Chile, and the ministry plans to add more feeding sites in Mexico and Guatemala.


In the beginning, the feedings consisted of sack lunches. Since then, Charlie’s Lunch has served as many as 15,500 hot meals a month. At least three times a week, about 500 children–ranging in age from 1 to 15–receive a lunch consisting of meat, rice or beans, fruits or vegetables and a drink. It costs an average of 50 cents a meal, or $15 per month, to feed each child.


An offshoot of Charlie’s Lunch, Charlie’s Christmas also has blessed thousands. Typically sponsored by a U.S. church team, the outreach provides food, shoes and toys, and sponsors evangelistic events for the Charlie’s Lunch children and their families. The care packages are also delivered as an unexpected blessing to the families of poor pastors.


Last Christmas, the gifts surprised several Guatemalan pastors at their homes. The ministers expressed gratitude with tears of joy. “This is a tremendous ministry in memory of Charlie,” Efraín Reyes, who pastors a 45-member church in Guatemala City, told the team. “We can’t repay you, but God will bless you.”


Just as Jesus met physical and spiritual needs in the feeding of the 5,000, Charlie’s Lunch offers the same to the multitudes of Third World countries. The interdenominational ministry aims to work alongside local congregations by installing a feeding center at the church, which primarily consists of a commercial kitchen that costs about $1,800.


“It’s a power tool in the hand of a pastor for evangelism and discipleship,” Sam Stewart, 44, says.


Villatoro believes without Charlie’s Lunch, Pérez’s family wouldn’t have been reached with the gospel. After Pérez’s son recovered, he joined the program and has not been ill since. To show her gratitude to Villatoro, Pérez, who grew up Roman Catholic, began attending church, and she later accepted Christ.


“Thanks be to God, I do now know Jesus,” Pérez says with a smile that spreads from ear to ear. “I felt God’s love when I came to this church. I now have peace and tranquility in my life. Charlie’s Lunch is a blessing that God has brought to us here.”


The church and Charlie’s Lunch have also impacted Perez’s oldest child, Teresita. “They have helped us so much,” Teresita, 11, says. “I felt Jesus through Charlie’s Lunch. This is our family now. They all love us here.”


‘Let the Children Come’


Through Charlie’s Lunch, Villatoro’s church, which sits on a hill, has become a beacon of hope in the poverty-stricken community of 6,500 people. The church’s brightly colored Charlie’s Lunch sign–which features Mark 10:14, “‘Let the little children come unto Me,'” in Spanish–fittingly captures the heart of the ministry. More than 150 children find nourishment and nurturing there.


“I’ve never seen anything like this,” says short-term missionary Steve Lovett, 28, who traveled to Santa Lucía in December with four members of El Paso’s Jesus Chapel West. “This ministry has transformed this village. It’s not just the food. The food just opens the door to the love and compassion of Jesus. The children feed on that just as hungrily.”


Steve Walker, Charlie’s uncle and Janey’s brother, agrees. “No one in
our family thought that Charlie’s Lunch could be such an evangelistic tool,” he says. “The purpose was to feed the kids. It became evident that God was using this to bring people to Himself. It was a sovereign move of God.”


The children are taught personal hygiene, Bible verses, stories and songs, as well as prayers for other nations.


Having seen firsthand the life-transforming effect of Charlie’s Lunch, Villatoro’s church–which numbered three people when he took it over in December 1998 but now has about 65 adults and 125 youths in attendance–wants to offer physical and spiritual food to others who are needy.


Members told Villatoro that they “have faith in God” to be able to plant a church and support 20 children for a Charlie’s Lunch they want to start in a neighboring village of 4,000 that doesn’t have a Protestant congregation. This is amazing, considering the parishioners barely have anything themselves, and the church–which has wooden planks on cinder blocks for pews–has meager resources. But Villatoro believes his church has caught God’s heart for their community.


“If Jesus was alive today, He would be doing Charlie’s Lunch,” Villatoro, 28, says. “Jesus said if we don’t become like little children, we cannot enter the kingdom of God. That motivates our church to love these children and to focus our ministry on children.”


Jesus’ heart may be in a ministry such as Charlie’s Lunch, but Sam Stewart remembers being hesitant to begin feeding begging children in a Central American country where 60 percent of the 12 million-strong population live
in poverty.


“I said, ‘We can’t start something we can’t finish,'” says Stewart, whose parents were missionaries. “I grew up [with] the begging, having lived in El Salvador. I was sort of desensitized to it. The Lord would teach me to look in the children’s eyes to see their need, but I was afraid then that we were going to have a hundred kids at our door.”


But Janey insisted. Instead of giving them bread, she made them what Charlie normally was served for lunch: a sandwich, bag of chips, piece of fruit and a drink.


She began feeding the children daily in September 1997. Although Janey invited the children to stay and eat, they always took the sack lunches with them. She later discovered that they were sharing their food with other kids and their families.


Several months later, around Christmastime, the Stewarts shared the story with Janey’s parents in El Paso, and the testimony of the home-feeding ministry touched a member of their church family.


“He felt impressed to give us $50, asking, ‘Will that feed those kids for a month?'” Stewart remembers. “I said, ‘Yes, it will, thank you.’ The Lord spoke to my heart, and He said, ‘I’ll multiply that $50 by 10 by this time next year.'”


A year later, in December 1998, Janey’s father, Fred Walker, once pastor of an independent charismatic church, called the Stewarts with a request. “Can you find the poorest pastors and
their families and provide Charlie’s Christmas to them?” Stewart recalls him asking. “He sent $500, which was 10 times $50. The Lord then put it in my heart that this $500 would be multiplied by 10 to $5,000.”


In August 1999, Charlie’s Lunch was officially launched, with Janey as its president. A year later, Janey’s brother Dale Walker, who leads an international compassion ministry from El Paso, agreed to temporarily oversee Charlie’s Lunch.


Most of Janey’s four other siblings, including worship leader Tommy Walker, are in full-time ministry and have been involved with Charlie’s Lunch.


Feeding Hundreds


Meanwhile, primarily by word of mouth, the ministry continued to grow. By Christmas 1999, $20,000 had been received for Charlie’s Lunch and Charlie’s Christmas, which was $15,000 more than what the Lord told Stewart a year earlier. “By then, we were just amazed at what the Lord was doing,” Stewart says.


However, trying to juggle their duties as AG missionaries and helping to operate Charlie’s Lunch was taking its toll on the couple, who during this time had just planted their second church in Guatemala City.


“We were caught in a dilemma because we were committed to church-planting and keeping Charlie’s Lunch,” says Stewart, who moved his family to Guatemala in 1993.


It wasn’t until September 2000 that Stewart got a word from God about committing completely to Charlie’s Lunch. During a routine visit to Villatoro’s church, Stewart heard testimony after testimony from the pastor about how the ministry was changing lives in the village.


“As I was leaving, it was raining so hard that I had to stop my pickup,” Stewart recalls. “I began weeping in awe and thanksgiving to God for what He was doing there. Then I had a vision in my spirit.


“I saw Charlie looking out of heaven, saying to me: ‘Dad, it’s worth it all–the five heart surgeries, the weeks I spent in the hospital and the fear of dying. It’s worth it all to see these kids getting saved,'” Stewart says. “Then I heard the voice of the Holy Spirit say, ‘[Charlie’s Lunch] is worthy of a lifelong call.’ That became holy guidance for me.”


Stewart discussed the revelation with Janey, and they agreed to submit his resignation to the AG Division of Foreign Missions, effective at the end of his term in June 2001. That summer, the couple moved to El Paso, with Stewart taking over for Dale Walker as director of Charlie’s Lunch.


“When I told [Janey], we knelt on the kitchen floor, and we asked God to help us surrender our lives for this lifelong call,” says Stewart, who is still an ordained AG minister. “We wanted to walk in grace in feeding as many children as He gave us.”


The ministry aims to feed the poorest children in the world. “While each country is unique and each presents different and distinct challenges, the similarities are remarkable,” Janey says. “At each location, extreme poverty and malnutrition, often severe malnutrition, are common threads.”


God has dramatically multiplied the ministry’s reach, but Charlie’s Lunch can feed only a small minority of the hungry because of limited funds. For example, in Guatemala approximately 1 million people, or 15 percent of the poverty-stricken population, are malnourished. The ministry can afford to feed only a few hundred of the country’s starving children.


In Santa Lucía, Villatoro’s church feeds 153 youngsters, but at least 300 children could benefit from Charlie’s Lunch. Villatoro remembers when he first came to the farming village, which didn’t have running water until two years ago. “Everybody was sick and weak, and two or three kids would die each month from lack of food,” he says.


Even after Charlie’s Lunch started in Santa Lucía in October 1999 as a monthly outreach of sack lunches, malnutrition still was pervasive. “When we first came here, the children couldn’t even smile when they were fed because they were so malnourished,” Stewart says.


But after a regular feeding program and kitchen opened in July 2000 at Villatoro’s church, the children became healthier as they ate better, and their countenance changed. Robert Medema, who helped distribute sack lunches in Santa Lucía in 1999, was pleasantly surprised at the turnaround when he accompanied a church missions team in December.


“I remember [in 1999] the kids were pretty lifeless, and a lot of them were numb from being hungry,” says Medema, whose Foursquare church in Los Angeles has been a faithful supporter of Charlie’s Lunch. “They’re just so different now. They’re happy and singing the Bible songs. Pastor Luis and Charlie’s Lunch are really impacting the individual lives. God really does use the food from Charlie’s Lunch to reach people with the gospel.”


Presenting the gospel along with the feedings has proven to be a challenge for the ministry because some of the countries are religious, yet hostile to biblical teaching. In Santa Lucía, the staunchly Catholic community initially spurned Villatoro’s evangelistic efforts.


“Before they rejected us, but the people here accept us now,” Villatoro tearfully says. “We talk and evangelize through Charlie’s Lunch. It’s a miracle of God. He has given us grace and favor through this.”


Villatoro, who lives in a humble tin shack like most of the residents in the village, which is accessible only via a rock-strewn dirt road, says the community started changing about three months after the feeding center began. They brought Villatoro’s family vegetables and invited them over for dinner.


“They began accepting me because they saw us loving their children,” says Villatoro, who envisions starting a Charlie’s Lunch in India someday. “For a parent, there’s nothing better.”


Steve Walker, senior pastor of El Paso’s Jesus Chapel West, says the spirit of love and giving that drives the ministry is tangible and contagious. In December, he witnessed it firsthand when he traveled with four members of his church to visit three Charlie’s Lunch feeding centers in Guatemala.


“We’ve seen some destitute kids, but every child responded to love,” says Walker, 49. “Before we leave, they would give us hugs and kisses. They just warm up so easily. As we were leaving one site, I’ll never forget a little girl holding some candy we had just given them. She kept asking me if I wanted some. It was so touching that she wanted to give.”


Charlie Stewart, who gave his lunch to a hungry classmate on the first day of kindergarten, would have been proud.


The Boy Who Started It All


Charlie Stewart didn’t let a heart defect keep him from doing what he loved–bringing joy to others with his generosity.


The Bible says that “it is more blessed to give than to receive.” The words of Jesus as recorded in Acts 20:35 may be a fitting life verse for Charlie Stewart, whose short legacy of generosity inspired his former Guatemalan missionary parents to start Charlie’s Lunch–a ministry that seeks to physically and spiritually feed the hungriest children in the world.


Born with a serious congenital heart defect, Charlie, the second oldest of Sam and Janey Stewart’s four children, wasn’t expected to live past his first 24 hours. But he miraculously survived, though he eventually endured five heart operations, including two open-heart surgeries.


Janey Stewart, 44, says although her son was physically handicapped by his heart condition, he was “one of the most spiritually alive kids you could ever meet.”


“He was a beacon of joy who loved to give,” she says of Charlie, who died suddenly at his family’s Guatemalan home Feb. 1, 1996–three weeks before his 13th birthday.


Janey remembers Charlie at age 5 sitting next to his new friend, Micah, on the first day of kindergarten. “Micah was eating Charlie’s lunch, and Charlie had the biggest smile on his face,” recalls Janey, who along with her husband, Sam, were Assemblies of God (AG) missionaries in Guatemala from 1993 to 2001, when they moved to El Paso, Texas, to direct Charlie’s Lunch. “While he must have felt a little hungry watching Micah eat, Charlie’s smile told the story. He loved to give and watch the joy it brought to others.”


In the ensuing months and years, giving and sacrifice began to mark Charlie’s life. When he went with his father to minister to the poor in Guatemala City and the surrounding communities, he often would come home with less than he took–giving whatever he could to a needy child.


“When we lived in Costa Rica, he sold his bicycle for $8, and he used that to buy gum and candy for the children in the neighborhood,” Janey remembers. “That’s how his mind worked. We actually had to teach him to be a little more selfish. There was not a selfish bone in his body. He wasn’t competitive in any way. He couldn’t play any board games because he made the other person win all the time. He didn’t have it in him.”


Eighteen months after Charlie’s death, the Stewarts returned to Guatemala, and the genesis for Charlie’s Lunch began in September 1997 when seven street children knocked on their door begging for bread.


“It came to me that I could give them what would have been Charlie’s lunch,” she says. “So I made them a little sack lunch. They began to come every day asking for food, knowing that they would receive a lunch. With that spirit of giving in mind, that’s really how this ministry started.”


Like the John 6 story of the boy whose five barley loaves and two fish were multiplied by Christ to feed more than 5,000, the lunches meant for Charlie have been increased by God. Reflecting the youngster’s passion, it seems only fitting that Charlie’s Lunch has become a growing, worldwide feeding and compassion ministry with operations in Guatemala and Mexico, with plans this year for sites in Morocco, Africa, India and Chile.


“It takes most people a lifetime to make an impact,” says Steve Walker, Charlie’s uncle and Janey’s brother. “Charlie–in less than 13 years–is impacting thousands.”


Last December, the senior pastor of Jesus Chapel West in El Paso, Texas, saw firsthand how God is multiplying Charlie’s spirit of generosity when Walker traveled with four members of his church to visit three Charlie’s Lunch feeding centers in Guatemala.


“We never dreamed that out of the ashes of his death would come such an incredible fruit to minister to the hungry children all over the world,” Walker, 49, says.


Walker’s daughter, Hillary, was part of the church’s short-term missions trip to Guatemala and was equally awed by her cousin’s legacy. “I never saw him much [because his parents were missionaries], but I feel like I know him better,” 20-year-old Hillary says. “I’m seeing what his heart was, which was giving.”


Danny Herrera, Charlie’s best friend and the son of the AG superintendent in Guatemala, says he was often the recipient of Charlie’s unselfishness, once receiving a new pair of tennis shoes from him.


Asked how Charlie would respond to the global impact of Charlie’s Lunch, Herrera didn’t hesitate. “I don’t know what he would think of Charlie’s Lunch, but he would have a huge smile on his face,” says Herrera, 20, who learned English from Charlie.


Janey says Charlie “wouldn’t like Charlie’s Lunch being about him,” noting that he disliked hospital stays because it drew attention to himself. “He wouldn’t like receiving a lot of attention from Charlie’s Lunch at all,” she says. “He would like it to be about the love of God being poured out.”


Eric Tiansay is an associate editor for Charisma and Charisma News Service. He traveled to Guatemala in December to file this report.




Joyce Meyer Leads Her Father to Faith

The popular Bible teacher recently baptized the man who she says abused her when she was a child
Most people don’t realize when they watch the petite, sassy-talking evangelist Joyce Meyer walking across the stage in her high heels and fashionable clothes that they are looking at a former victim of long-term sexual abuse. Yet when the charismatic preacher talks about miracles these days, it’s with a renewed passion because she has seen God’s power change the life of the one who caused her pain.


From the time she was very young until she was a teen-ager, Meyer was sexually molested by her natural father. When she speaks about him, and about what he did, her voice carries great emotion, but a tone of compassion as well.


“He was born in the hills–way back in the hills. In his family, incest was just part of the culture,” she says.


Meyer, who grew up in Missouri, was 9 years old when she first told her mother what was happening. Frightened by it, her mother did nothing.


“I guess on some levels, I can understand that. It is easier to believe your 9-year-old daughter is a liar than it is to believe that the man you married could be capable of something so awful,” Meyer says.


But something that ultimately made the difference in her situation also occurred that same year. She made a decision that she wanted to be saved.


“I was going to get saved,” she said, recalling her youthful boldness and determination, which now are hallmarks of her personality and message. Yet even at church in those days she needed both qualities to get what she needed from God.


“Wouldn’t you know it, the pastor didn’t give an altar call that night. I sat there in my pew as long as I could, then I grabbed my two cousins’ hands and dragged them up with me–‘Come on, we’re going to get saved!'” she said.


Through tears, the young Meyer stammered to the surprised pastor, “Can you save me?” As she prayed, she felt the cleansing forgiveness of Jesus.


“I always felt dirty. I was always washing, bathing, trying to get clean. And in this one moment, Jesus washed me, and He never left me,” she told Charisma.


A verse she had heard–Isaiah 61:7–came to mind: “Instead of your shame you shall have double honor, and instead of confusion they shall rejoice in their portion. Therefore in their land they shall possess double; everlasting joy shall be theirs” (NKJV).


But afterward she still had to return home–back to the abuse. When Meyer was 14, her mother actually walked in while it was occurring.


“I thought: Thank God. Now she’ll put an end to it,” Meyer said. “But she didn’t. She picked up her purse and walked out the door–away from the nightmare.”


Meyer says her mother simply did not know what to do, so she did nothing, but Meyer doesn’t blame her mother. A few hours later, when her mother returned, Meyer held her breath, waiting for the fallout.


“But she walked in and never said one word,” she said.


Only adulthood removed Meyer from her father’s assaults. But the abuse was a cloud over the family that never went away.


“We never talked about it. I never confronted the issue,” Meyer said.


That was 40 years ago. Meyer has since married, raised children and founded a ministry that today spans the globe, preaching the gospel through television, radio, tapes, books and conferences. She learned early in her ministry that she had to forgive her father, totally and unconditionally, which she says she did.


But two years ago, while he lay on a hospital bed weak and frail, he told her: “Joyce, I am sorry you feel I hurt you. But I still don’t understand what was so bad about what I did.”


Meyer says that with incredible sadness she left the hospital room not knowing if her father would live through the night and certain that if he died he’d go straight to hell. God told her that she was to move him close to her house and take care of him.


It was a very difficult act of obedience. Meyer’s husband, Dave, strongly disagreed with the plan, but it soon was confirmed that God had spoken to Joyce, and Dave agreed to follow His leading.


Every chance she got, Meyer showed her father she loved him. Every need he had, she met. She bought clothes and food and made sure all his basic needs were met.


One day, Meyer’s mother found him crying. He called Joyce, asking her and Dave to come over right away. When they arrived, he broke down in tears again.


“I am sorry for what I did to you. I have wanted to say this to you for a long time, but I didn’t have the guts,” he said. Then he looked at Dave and began to weep again. “Dave, I am sorry for what I did to you, too. I am sorry I hurt your wife. Please forgive me.”


Meyer knew in that moment that the miracle of salvation was there for her father. She knelt beside him, and together they prayed the sinner’s prayer.


A few days after, Meyer came back to the house after her mother reported that he was doubting his salvation. She used God’s Word to encourage him. He then asked Joyce to baptize him.


Meyer baptized her father on December 2, 2001, in front of hundreds of onlookers at the Dream Center that Joyce Meyer Ministries started in the inner city of St. Louis. Though her father’s health remained frail at press time, Meyer reported that his soul is “healthier than it’s ever been.”


Meyer has never mentioned her father’s name in public. In order to protect him, she also has chosen not to release her maiden name.
Mary Hutchinson