News Briefs


Hal Lindsey Pulls Show From TBN Lineup


Christian broadcaster Hal Lindsey pulled his International Intelligence Briefing (IIB) from Trinity Broadcasting Network (TBN) in January, claiming the network asked him to stop making negative comments about radical Islam on his show. “I … know your heart for evangelism of the Muslims,” Lindsey wrote in a letter to TBN founders Paul and Jan Crouch. “But I don’t agree with your reasoning that warning about the dangers of ‘radical Islam’ is a hindrance to the Gospel to all Muslims.” Lindsey claims TBN pre-empted IIB, which analyzes current events in light of end-times prophecy, in December in an attempt to censor him. TBN spokesman Colby May said several shows were pre-empted that month for Christmas specials. Noting that Trinity began broadcasting a 24-hour Arabic channel in January 2005, May said the network in December asked all programmers to be careful about how they discuss Islamic terrorism. He said TBN wants to make the gospel accessible in the Muslim world, “and you’re not accessible if you are inartful in the way in which you make the segregation between Islam … and terrorists.” Lindsey planned to air IIB on Daystar and Sky Angel.


Megachurches Name New Senior Pastors


John and Carol Arnott stepped down as senior pastors of Toronto Airport Christian Fellowship, effective Jan. 22. Senior associate pastors Steve and Sandra Long were selected to lead the church, which has been home to the Toronto Blessing revival since 1994. The Arnotts said they planned to focus their attention on Catch the Fire Ministries, a church outreach that oversees thousands of “soaking prayer centers” worldwide. Jan. 22 also marked the installation of Robert A. Schuller, 51, son of Los Angeles pastor Robert H. Schuller, 79, as senior pastor of the Crystal Cathedral. The elder Schuller said he planned to remain chairman of the board of international ministries and stay active in the church, the Los Angeles Times reported. Meanwhile, South Korean pastor David Yonggi Cho said he would not leave the helm of his 750,000 Yoido Full Gospel Church in Seoul. Though he had previously announced plans to retire on his 70th birthday in February 2006, Cho said he would remain in the pastorate until he turns 75, the Korean Times reported. The Jan. 1 announcement sparked a controversy among some Protestant groups who worry that church members deify Cho and that the ministry is too dependent on him for its survival, the Korean Times said.


Southern Baptists Bar Missionaries From Speaking in Tongues


During a Nov. 15 meeting, trustees for the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) International Mission Board (IMB) voted to no longer appoint missionaries who practice a “private prayer language,” widely understood to mean speaking in tongues, the American Baptist Press (ABP) reported. The IMB already bars people who speak in tongues during public worship from serving on the mission field. The new policy also prohibits those who speak in tongues privately. Some observers say the vote was an attempt to undermine the leadership of IMB President Jerry Rankin, who acknowledges having spoken in tongues for many years, ABP reported. IMB spokeswoman Anita Bowden told the news service the new policy was not connected to Rankin, as it does not apply to missionaries appointed before Nov. 15.


Harvest House Libel Action Dismissed


The Court of Appeals of the First District of Texas has dismissed a multimillion-dollar libel lawsuit brought by The Local Church and its publishing arm, Living Stream Ministry (LSM). The suit alleges that Harvest House Publishers defamed The Local Church by including it in its Encyclopedia of Cults and New Religions by John Ankerberg and John Weldon. In its decision, the appeals court said the group’s inclusion in the book with “others who may have committed [immoral, illegal and despicable] … actions does not give rise to a libel claim.” Chris Wilde, spokesman for LSM, which publishes the writings of Watchman Nee, said an appeal would be made to the Texas Supreme Court.


Michael W. Smith to serve on president bush’s service Council


The White House nominated contemporary Christian musician Michael W. Smith to serve a two-year term on the President’s Council on Service and Civic Participation. President Bush established the council in 2003 on the first anniversary of the USA Freedom Corps to promote volunteer service. Chaired by former football pro Darrell Green and co-chaired by former senators Bob Dole of Kansas and John Glenn of Ohio, the council includes members from the private and nonprofit sectors, entertainment, sports, education and government. Smith was sworn in Jan. 14.


Cable Companies Offer Family Bundles


Responding to pressure from the Federal Communications Commission amid growing concerns about indecency on TV, the nation’s leading cable providers announced plans to offer family-friendly programming tiers. Beginning the first quarter of this year, Time Warner, Comcast and Cox Communications will offer mostly sex-and-violence-free bundles that include such channels as Disney, CNN Headline News and HGTV, while excluding networks such as FX, Comedy Central and MTV. Time Warner and Comcast bundles include Trinity Broadcasting Network, while Cox will allow local systems to tailor packages to include religious channels.




Shall We Dance?

You married an amazing person but has your Woman of the Year become a wall flower, frozen by fear? If her fire has cooled and her pizzazz has fizzled, then take her in your arms and lead her to dance again.


Maybe you wonder where she went—that woman you fell in love with so deeply that you asked her to marry you. Remember her? The one with lots of energy. The adventure girl who inspired you with her enthusiasm. The woman who lit up the room just by showing up. The passionate, alive, beautiful person who stole your heart and made you want to be a better man.

Maybe it’s been years since you’ve felt like you’ve seen that woman. Maybe today you live with a version of her that reminds you there is more to that person than you’re experiencing now.


Maybe you didn’t realize when it happened, but at some point during your marriage, the woman you love became comfortable standing in the background, perhaps even sitting on the sidelines. She became a wallflower, no longer exuding passion, enthusiasm and hope for the future.

I was that woman once—a passionate, enthusiastic wife who turned into a grown woman living in a daze. I kind of knew I was dead to life because when I saw other people who looked like they were living, I didn’t believe I could ever be alive again. In the midst of the ups and downs of marriage, taking care of the kids, difficult circumstances and day after day of disappointment, it didn’t seem possible.

After those years all had run together, I wasn’t sure I even wanted a real life anymore—a life with passion, one in which you are able to feel and respond to people and events. I had become the “unperson”—neutral, safe, asleep, numb, vanilla, harmless. And I was living an “unlife”—going through the motions, surviving, reacting, smiling.

Somewhere along the way, I had given up. For a million reasons and because it seemed like the easiest way out, I had become a wallflower.

The Big Dance

Women don’t just wake up one morning and think: OK, today I am officially giving up on life. I am checking out, going numb, going nowhere—only breathing and surviving from here on out. Yet for many of us, it happens anyway. We embrace various degrees of giving up, various degrees of living as an unperson with an unlife.

As it turns out, I am not the only woman who has ever given up and retreated into the barren life of the wallflower.

I recognize that same familiar emptiness in women everywhere I go. I sit beside them on airplanes. I look into their eyes at conferences. I live in the same neighborhood, go to the same church and wait in the same carpool lines with women who are fading away: women who are playing it safe, blending in and “unbecoming”—morphing into the unperson.

Depending on the amount of disappointment and overwhelming circumstances she faces, a woman might become a wallflower because giving up feels like the most painless option she has. Increasingly it seems that many women are surviving for decades of their lives by turning their hearts inside out and trying not to feel.

Becoming an unwoman with an unlife is the unhappy reality for many of us.
If you live with a woman who has given up, then I’m sure your heart is broken. You fell in love with an amazing woman whose heart danced. Now you share life with a very good woman whose inner brilliance has faded.

Before you too give up, I’m going to ask you to try—and then try again. You can’t let go of her. Her heart is too valuable for that. God is the only one who can bring healing to your relationship, but your love is one of the vessels He can use to accomplish that miracle.

She will always have to do her part in responding to and obeying God’s prompting, but if the love of your life has withdrawn to the background or the sideline, then here is my best advice for inviting her to dance anew:

Become her partner again. Dancing alone isn’t as fun as it is with a partner. But this is not a Sadie Hawkins Day dance. A woman who has become a wallflower doesn’t have the courage to ask anymore.

So the responsibility of inviting her to dance falls on you. You will have to recommit afresh that you are her partner. She will have to hear your invitation and see that you mean it.

Don’t leave her standing by the wall feeling like she is facing life by herself. Does she feel alone in your marriage? Does she feel like she is raising the kids by herself? Does she go to church alone or to most social events without you?

You need to realize that the woman you fell in love with also remembers the man you used to be. Have you pulled away from her? If she feels physically or emotionally abandoned, she will eventually begin to fade away.

So, if you are charming and she’s heard all your words before, then she needs to see you follow through with action. If you have been a man of few words, then it’s time to speak your desire. Tell her you want her to dance the dance of life in your arms.

Call out the best in her. I realize that what I am going to say may sound like the goofiest stuff you’ve ever heard. But every woman I know would agree with me, so here you go.

The woman you love needs you to call out her strengths and her passions. In a way, it’s like you are giving her permission to be the woman that she has always desired to be.

Much of my own heart restoration happened because the strong men in my life began to speak truth to me, essentially calling out the best in me. They told me I could, and over time I began to believe them and act like it was true.

Use your words and every creative idea you have to bring affirming attention to her gifts. Lay off the negativism. The wallflower beats herself up every day; no one else needs to do that.

See for her what she cannot see for herself, and point it out to her. Surround her with belief—an atmosphere of hope. Orchestrate circumstances that give her little victories.

Tell her when you see a spark of passion in her. Celebrate the best in her.

Wrap her in arms of love. God wired women with a need for this. Your wife functions in greater strength and confidence when she has been given physical and emotional security. Ultimately God is our source of security, but you, as the man who loves her, play an important role, too.

So make sure she is wrapped in a healthy, consistent, “no matter what comes” kind of love. When she feels your righteous strength, it imparts strength to her.

Lead her into the dance. Dancing is contagious—especially when you live with people who dance. Your wallflower is watching you dance and yearning to be where you are.

She wants you to see her across the room. She hopes you will want her enough to come to her, take her by the hand and lead her into the center of the dance floor. Even though she was made for the strobe lights and funky music, she’ll truly need you to lead her there.

No Better Time Than Now

It is an amazing, beautiful thing when a man who is filled with the passionate love of God takes his place as partner and starts inviting his wallflower to dance.
Your invitation may be rejected at first. Keep asking.

She may be unsure of herself after having spent many years in the shadows. Keep asking.
Her spirit may be downcast and her two left feet may embarrass her. Keep asking.
A wallflower can find healing and restoration when the man she loves determines to invite her to dance. With all my heart, I believe that the woman you love truly wants to dance the dance of her life.

She longs to become the woman she has always dreamed of being. You can be a part of that becoming—and of reversing the unbecoming.

So tonight, no matter how you feel or how drippy you think the whole idea is, right in between loading the dishwasher and getting the kids ready for bed, put on a CD, take the woman you love in your arms and hold her until she believes it’s really you.

Then dance.

And when that song is over, dance to the next one. Let her know that she is seen, that your love for her is steady and unchanging, that from here on out the woman you love will be asked to dance.

A very wise man once wrote, “There is … a time to dance” (Eccl. 3:1,4; NIV). Let this be your time.


Angela Thomas is a mom, friend, writer, speaker, teacher and encourager. But the name she most enjoys is “follower of Christ.” Through speaking engagements across the country, including her Beautiful Conferences, she encourages women in their relationship with Christ. She holds a master’s degree from Dallas Theological Seminary and is the author of three books, When Wallflowers Dance, Do You Think I’m Beautiful? and Prayers for the Mother to Be (each from Nelson Books). For more, visit .




Reflections From the Man in the Mirror

In 1986, Patrick Morley discipled a handful of men who met together in an Orlando-area bar to study the Bible. Today, he challenges men in 80 countries to be Christ’s disciples. New Man recognizes an icon of the modern men’s movement.

The letter came from a New Jersey man who attended a conference sponsored by a Methodist men’s group. The featured speaker: Patrick Morley.

“I truly believe [Pat’s] presentation saved my marriage,” the man wrote. “My wife and I had agreed to get a divorce the night before the gathering. I felt as though Pat were talking directly to me. Everything he said fit what I was going through and made perfect sense.”

Making sense to men is what Morley, the founder of the Orlando, Man in the Mirror (MIM) ministry, has been doing now for 20 years.


In 1986, long before house churches and other worship alternatives became the wave the 21st century church would ride, he gathered 15 men for a Friday-morning Bible study—in a bar.

Although that group quickly outgrew the space, some 160 participants still gather weekly in a neutral setting. The primary difference in today’s meetings is Internet hook-ups, which enable men from 80 countries to link to the sessions.

Morley openly credits the Web-linked instruction to a Friday-morning “table leader”—one of his ministry ­volunteers—who was developing technology for Sony Corp. in the late 1990s.

“What’s webcasting?” Morley first asked in response to the man’s offer to spread his teaching sessions worldwide.

“It was totally new at that point,” he recalls. “I had never heard of it. Frankly, most of the things that have worked out for us have been somebody else’s ideas.”

Such self-effacing stories are the former real estate developer’s trademark, according to those whose lives he has touched. Cheerful, deliberate and thoughtful at a time in life when early retirement occupies the minds of millions of other middle-aged men, the 57-year-old Morley recently wrapped up his dissertation for a doctorate in leadership and organizational change.

And, although he has turned over the reigns of daily management at MIM to create more time for his writing and strategizing, Morley has no intention of retiring soon. “I’m not going anywhere,” he declares. “I’ve got 30 or 40 good years left.”

Such determination demonstrates what David Delk, MIM’s president since 2003, calls the plodding nature of the ministry, which was named for Morley’s 1989 best-seller. The book emerged from his mid-1980s Bible studies and is nearing 3 million copies in print today. Seventeen years after being published for the first time, The Man in the Mirror (Zondervan) remains popular, speaking to men about such realities as purpose, workaholism, finances and biblical beliefs.

One of the philosophies the ministry embodies is “crawl, walk, run”—the idea that success comes from pushing steadily over a long period of time. Delk says that observing this principle of faithfulness helped him become a better husband and father.

“One of the things Pat has done is help me understand the power of faith and believing in the call and vision God gives,” Delk, 40, says. “Pat is not the kind of person who looks at all the reasons why something can’t be done. He’s the kind of person who says, ‘If God is really behind this, then there will be a way for this to get done, and all we have to do is be faithful.'”

Orlando real estate developer Scott Crossman echoes that sentiment. Last November, Crossman spearheaded an evening kickoff for the nation’s first “Purpose-Driven Community”—a program established to encourage 100,000 Orlando home-group members to read through pastor and author Rick Warren’s best-seller, The Purpose-Driven Life (Zondervan), before the end of March. By mid-December, he had enlisted almost half the 10,000 home-group leaders that he envisions will lead the members through the book.

Crossman points to Morley’s influence as key to inspiring him with the willingness to tackle such an ambitious project. The effort attracted 10,000 people to Orlando’s T.D. Waterhouse Centre and included flying in Warren from California for the kickoff.

“No matter what you do, half the people in the world are going to hate you, and the thing to do is make sure they hate you for the right reasons,” Crossman says of his favorite Morley quote. “Pat has modeled that in his life, helping change men’s lives.”

Getting Men on Track

Morley’s vision and faith have touched countless men. At its current pace, the ministry’s cumulative seminar attendance will reach 100,000 in 2007. Sessions focus on such topics as purpose, priorities, fatherhood and spiritual fulfillment.
While MIM doesn’t track the number of conversions or life-changing decisions that it’s responsible for, men with such experiences abound.

There are figures such as Robert Tunmire of Waco, Texas—a hard-charging corporate executive whose first two marriages collapsed before he decided to follow Christ. Soon after his 1999 conversion, he picked up a copy of The Man in the Mirror.

To say it struck a chord with Tunmire would be an understatement. He estimates he has given away 2,000 copies, including a case or two at his company’s monthly meetings of managers and franchisees.

Tunmire attended MIM’s leadership training and put its principles into action. In January 2005, he established a weekly Bible study at the Waco Hilton. Today, several dozen men attend the sessions, which include a roundtable discussion and prayer.

“The thing that stands out for me is his absolute passion and devotion to reaching men,” Tunmire says of Morley. “He has such a heart for changing the core value of men and core beliefs of their heart so they grow in relationship to Christ.”

Many men have benefited from Morley’s teaching, regardless of their backgrounds. Peyton Day, whose father founded the Days Inn motel franchise, grew up in a Christian home. After his father died when Peyton was 17, he looked for mentors—and found one in Morley.

“One of the things I’ve loved about Pat is his whole concept of transparency and being vulnerable,” says Day, who today develops land in Atlanta and along the Gulf Coast and is founder of Day Holdings. “You need to be vulnerable and let people know you’re struggling with some issues. As the leader of an organization, that’s important. People respect that.”

Day has read The Man in the ­Mirror twice, and a hotel chain he once owned gave away 20,000 copies during his tenure.

Thanks in part to Morley’s book, Day helped organize the Association for True Hospitality (ATH). The seven hotel owners who make up the group have pledged to remove porn from their properties whenever possible, providing business travelers with a place to stay that’s free of X-rated influence.

“Without question [Morley’s book] helps solidify your conviction about [not providing] porn,” Day says. “Reading the book helped me see what’s going through men’s minds and see as a businessman, that’s something I can deal effectively with.”

Through personal encounters, Phil Downer has seen Morley as peacemaker and unifier. When he was president of Christian Business Men’s Committee (CBMC), Downer attended one of the early meetings of the National Coalition of Men’s Ministries (NCMM)—a consortium of about 80 groups that Morley helped launch in 1996.

Because of various misunderstandings among the groups represented at the meeting, Downer says the room brimmed with suspicion, pain, critical attitudes and mistrust. Morley was poised to discuss business, but when he sensed the atmosphere among the men, he laid down his tools to explore their feelings.

“As our leader, he had the wisdom to spend the better part of two years building relationships before he brought out the whiteboard and magic marker again,” Downer says of his longtime friend. “That’s been the key to the men’s movement.”
Morley has also been a source of encouragement for the ministry Downer formed five years ago, Discipleship Network of America (DNA). With his wife and various family members helping at times, Downer leads about 40 seminars a year on marriage, leadership and discipleship.

“Pat’s been a great mentor, a model,” Downer says. “Most of all, he’s been willing to stand with me through some of the darkest, most difficult times of my life. Without Pat’s leadership in NCMM and his encouragement, I’m not sure there would be a [DNA] ministry.”

Tested by Fire

Every would-be, high-profile leader who thinks being in Morley’s role means demonstrating superior knowledge amid an aura of invincibility should study him, as he loves to open his talks with jokes about himself.

Take the one about how his wife’s broken ankle prevented her from doing household chores for a month. One Friday while out with a friend, Morley asked if he had some extra time so they could stop at K-mart. When his friend asked why, Pat replied, “I either need to buy a six pack of underwear or I’m going to have to do laundry.”

His down-to-earth image includes taking up racing his 1974 Porsche IROC in 2004. He has competed in amateur races sanctioned by the Sports Car Club of America and two other organizations. In his first 32 races, Morley racked up 15 wins in such places as Sebring and Daytona, Fla., and Savannah, Ga.

“I’ve always loved racing,” says Morley, who once dreamed of professional acclaim. When his fiancee, Patsy—now his wife of 33 years and mother of their two adult children—called home to tell her parents that she and Pat planned to live out of a trailer while he entered motorcycle races, her mother responded, “It must be love.”

However, humor takes a back seat when Morley explains his passion for discipling men. Its origins stretch back 80 years, to the dark day his paternal grandfather deserted his family. Pat’s father grew up in a single-parent home with three siblings, all scrambling to survive. His first job was at age 6.

Wanting to break the fatherless cycle and to get their own children religious and moral instruction, Pat’s parents joined a church. But at age 40, Pat’s father, burned out on endless activities and embittered over some experiences, left the church.

“Over the next two years, the wheels fell off the wagon,” Morley says of the family. During that time, Pat quit high school to join the Army, and a younger brother also quit school and later died of a heroin overdose. Another sibling has struggled with employment; another is divorced.

“[Dad] was the top layman in our church,” Morley says. “Unfortunately, our church did not have the vision to disciple my father to be a godly man, a godly husband and a godly father. It just hit our family with such a force that he never saw it coming. The church should have seen it.

“The reason I’m so passionate about men’s discipleship is because I know that in every church, there are men just exactly like my dad. Men who really want to do the right thing. They are there for all the right reasons, but the church isn’t going to help them.”

Were it not for Patsy’s influence, Pat might have ended up like those men who “play church” only to quit when religion fails to produce the vibrant spiritual relationship men seek. Thanks to her convincing him that a relationship with Christ was exciting, the Morleys became a host couple for Executive Ministries. They chaired evangelistic dinner parties at private clubs and hosted smaller dinners in their home.

Sensing a need to hold Bible studies specifically for the men inspired Morley to start his Friday-morning study. Ironically, no dinner-party participants ever came, but the study developed a life of its own.

It not only led to his writing The Man in the Mirror, but it also in 1991—thanks to Morley’s increasing spiritual growth—convinced him that it was time to leave behind the 59 real estate concerns he had created. Unanimous feedback from his wife, friends and business associates sealed his decision.

“We’ve never had an extra dollar, ever,” Morley says, reflecting on the highlights of his second career. “But we’ve always had enough money to do all the ministry God wants us to do.

“It’s been deeply encouraging and faith-building. At this point, I have a tremendous sense of peace that God will provide.”

Still, the progress hasn’t come without pain. In another of his best-sellers, Seven Seasons of the Man in the Mirror (Zondervan; formerly titled The Seven Seasons of a Man’s Life), Morley noted that entering ministry meant wanting to quit twice a week instead of just once.

Such feelings have passed. The quantum leaps he lists since 1991 include:

 

  • Focusing solely on ministry to men following a strategic meeting with an Atlanta-based consulting firm
  • Launching the National Coalition of Men’s Ministries, which he believes will change men’s work from a “ministry” to an “industry,” something Morley says is needed for it to last
  • Initiating an effort in 2000 to give away 1 million copies of The Man in the Mirror, which spurred a low-cost printing offer from Zondervan. Thanks to other support, he distributed close to 1.2 million copies that year.

    The book-distribution effort helped his supporters “see God do something that hadn’t been done before. It created a new paradigm for the distribution of Christian literature,” he says.

    MIM started with Morley and a single assistant. Today, the ministry employs 20 full-time and six part-time employees. Thanks to its host of resources, including Morley’s 11 books, revenues have surpassed the $3 million mark.

    Seeing men changed for Christ remains his passion, however. Last year he challenged men to read the Bible through in 2005. One man in his Friday Bible study, a curmudgeonly senior citizen, was guarded and suspicious.

    Near the end of the year, though, he exhibited warmth and friendliness. Intrigued, Pat wanted to know why.

    “Unbeknownst to anybody, he had been reading God’s Word every day, and God had been visibly transforming his life,” Morley says. “And he wasn’t even aware that God was in the process of changing him. That was just an extremely touching moment for me.”

    Numerous superlatives could describe Morley’s embodiment of modern men’s ministry, but it is in the hearts of the men he has turned to Christ that one finds the living proof.


    Ken Walker, a freelance writer based in Huntington, ., was one of seven
    contributors to Align: The Complete New Testament for Men (Nelson Bibles). This article originally appeared in New Man magazine in 2006.