December 2006

I will bless those who bless you and curse those who curse you. All the families of the earth will be blessed through you.
—Genesis 12:3, NLT

What do you do with a family whose genealogy goes back 4,000 years, whose national roots reflect 2,000 years of history? The answer is, study and learn from them.

That’s exactly what we’ve been doing with God’s covenant family, the Jews. Today they’re strong in the earth. Why? Because family principles have preserved them.

One of the main principles Jewish families are built upon is a system of moral codes and values. This is an extremely important principle in keeping the family strong and healthy.

The Jews based their standards of right and wrong on revelation from God. He introduced the standards when He gave them the law (the Ten Commandments) through Moses. The law was based on absolute truth—meaning certain things are always right or wrong for all people, at all times and in all places.

It was with this standard that the Jews raised their children.

They also built their families on the principles of heritage and legacy. Rare is the Jew who doesn’t have an understanding of and appreciation for the history of his people and who doesn’t know the stories of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.

Unfortunately, many of our kids today would be hard-pressed to know the names of their uncles, aunts and distant relatives. This is largely due to the break up of the family structure that has resulted from emotional and geographical separation. We are rapidly losing the building block of heritage in the American family.

Several things can happen when heritage and legacy are missing. First, when you lose an appreciation for family history and heritage, you have a tendency to repeat the mistakes of previous generations.

Second, progress in personal development is much slower. Because each generation stands on the shoulders of the previous one, heritage and legacy thrust one to the forefront of life’s learning curve. It causes families and individuals to move ahead exponentially.

In light of these truths, ask yourself: Does my family understand legacy and heritage? Is it built upon strong moral codes and values? Do I practice these principles?

Your kids will be much further ahead if you do. So give them a head start in life and begin putting these principles into practice today.


John Chasteen is the assistant dean of Southwestern Christian University Graduate School in Bethany, Oklahoma.




Lessons From Da Vinci

We must put down our protest signs and start a dialogue with others.
In Mid-November, The Da Vinci Code released on DVD. Looking back since the film premiered in May, recalling the deep feelings it stirred in our culture, I’ve been thinking about the reaction of the Christian community and what we can learn in retrospect.


I’m sure you’ll remember that during the last few months before the movie opened there was a wave of anger that Sony Pictures would release a major film that essentially said the Christian faith was founded on false pretenses.


When I was interviewed on CNN, MSNBC, CNBC and other media outlets, I often discussed the fact that Christianity seems to be the last subject people can criticize without fear of reprisal.


Can you imagine if a major studio released a movie that said Islam was a fraud? The public would be outraged.


Recently on Comedy Central the producers of South Park put the network to the test and filmed scenes that disparaged both Muhammad and Jesus. The network cut the scene in which Muhammad was being made fun of. But with Jesus, the ridicule was just fine.


It’s been interesting to see both the secular and faith communities react to Da Vinci. From the beginning, I called for a gracious strategy of engagement rather than protest. But now that time has passed and the DVD is released, what have we learned?


Think before boycotting the media. Consider the history of boycotts. The leadership of the massive May 1 boycott on Mexican immigration are questioning its success. Many worry that it created bad feelings with the public and may have done more harm than good, in spite of the thousands who protested.


During the last boycott of Disney by a major denomination, the company said sales actually went up! So we need to be careful with boycotts and use them only when absolutely necessary.


Start a conversation with the culture. After my appearances on most of the talk shows, non-Christian producers and staff would come up to me and say, “Wow, I didn’t know there were Christians out there who thought this way.” They wanted to talk with someone about the film but were afraid of believers who publicly disapproved of it. We must put down our protest signs and start a dialogue with others.


Use the resources that are available. I was excited about all the seminars, books, teaching materials and other resources that were marshaled to point people to the truth of the Bible. Sites such as pointed thousands of people to some of our most brilliant scholars and leaders who provided important information to help people share their faith.


Even the Los Angeles Times reported on the incredible number of pastors who used the film to share correct information about Christianity.


Stay with the original assignment. Too many Christians get so caught up in controversial issues that they lose their focus on reaching the world with the gospel. Yes, politics, culture, poverty, social problems, media and a host of other issues are important. But we need to address them in light of the Great Commission.


Know that a movie can’t stop the faith. The film won’t create a nation of agnostics or atheists. Yes, some will be duped, but frankly, the Christian faith has defeated the Roman Empire, and transformed music, literature, art, scholarship, and science throughout Europe and the West.


Although I’m always ready to share my faith and I am concerned about the moral decay of the culture, I’m not too worried that God needs defending. He’d rather I spend more time focusing on loving my neighbor.


Phil Cooke, Ph.D., is a media consultant to ministries and churches worldwide. He publishes a free monthly e-mail newsletter, Ideas for Real Change. Find out more at . To read past columns in Charisma by Phil Cooke, log on at




God Loves You

Our Father loves each of us with perfect love. His love is unqualified and incomparable.
“For God so loved the WORLD” is a wonderful phrase. If God didn’t love us unconditionally, we would have no hope.


John 3:16 gives us a picture of God’s love: “For God so greatly loved and dearly prized the world that He [even] gave up His only begotten (unique) Son, so that whoever believes in (trusts in, clings to, relies on) Him shall not perish (come to destruction, be lost) but have eternal (everlasting) life” (The Amplified Bible).


“Whoever” means anybody! The most vicious and vile person you can imagine is a “whoever.”


I am so grateful for the day I believed in Jesus, the only begotten Son of God. The day we each believe in Him is the day everything changes for us. We switch tracks. We get off the road of death and destruction and get on the road to abundant life.


First we believe in Jesus. And as we get to know Him through spending time with Him in prayer and in His Word, each day we begin to see that we can trust in, cling to and rely on Him as the source for every aspect of life.


Every abominable thing in us is exchanged for every wonderful thing heaven has to offer. We begin to look at and handle the situations in our lives from Jesus’ perspective. We realize that living every day by the principles and power of God’s Word is the only way to exist.


I have learned God wants things to go well with us. He has taught me how His love works in my life, how His Word and the laws of the Spirit work for the good of His children. Everything He has provided in this abundant life is a product of His love.


Our Father loves us with perfect love. It’s unqualified and incomparable. Even if we get off track here and there, He loves us right back onto the right path. He puts us right back into the stream of His will. Isn’t it wonderful to be God’s children?


He not only made provision for us to be born again into His family but also adopted us as dear children. You are greatly loved and dearly prized.


Just like a parent loves a child regardless of the child’s actions, so God loves us. He has taken on the responsibility to feed and clothe us, give us the desires of our hearts, keep us healthy and whole, deliver us from trouble, teach us in all wisdom, knowledge and understanding, and guide us throughout our lives. His love covers everything!


What glorious love the Father has bestowed upon you and me. He intends for every person to receive and experience this love.


I see from the first words of blessing the Father spoke to Adam in the Garden of Eden to the last words Jesus spoke to His disciples before He ascended to heaven, the message has been based on God’s love.


Words such as “be fruitful,” “multiply,” “replenish,” “have dominion” (Gen. 1:28, KJV) communicate God’s love for the world. And, “‘Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them'” (Matt. 28:19, NKJV), says to take the Father’s love to the world!


Every word Christ spoke and action He performed had something to do with the Father’s love for us. And that love always changed people’s lives.


That’s how each of us received God’s love, salvation and everlasting life. We heard and accepted the good news of Jesus Christ.


For most of us something changed immediately. And for all of us our lives have changed for eternity.


Now, because His love dwells in us it can come through us to people we encounter. And when it does, they too are changed!


“For God so loved the world” —from before the foundation of the earth until this very day—is indeed a wonderful phrase. His love changes everything!


Gloria Copeland is co-founder and vice president of Kenneth Copeland Ministries in Fort Worth, Texas. She and her husband, Kenneth, are known for their teachings on faith, healing and victorious Christian living. Their daily TV broadcast, Believer’s Voice of Victory, airs globally on more than 300 stations. Gloria is also an internationally known author whose works include To Know Him and Blessed Beyond Measure (Harrison House). To read past columns in Charisma by Gloria Copeland, log on at




Fall on Your Knees

It’s time to rediscover the humbling power.
My favorite scene in the new movie The Nativity Story shows a nasty King Herod barking military orders to his guards. He feels threatened by the prophecy of a new king in Israel, and he wants to make sure this renegade messiah gets caught. So he tells his soldiers to nab him when he arrives in Bethlehem.


Herod says the phantom king will be easy to identify since he will be a man of wealth and significance. So the soldiers station themselves all around Bethlehem, looking for a well-dressed guy traveling with an entourage.


But no such man of importance arrives in the little Judean town—only poor Jews, including an exhausted young peasant who has traveled 100 miles with his very pregnant wife, a donkey and barely enough provisions to stay alive. The soldiers let Mary and Joseph pass. After all, can anything good come out of Nazareth?


That amazing moment provides the essence of the Christmas story. When God sent His only begotten Son into the world, the “important” people didn’t recognize Him. Jesus’ parents were commoners. He didn’t come with fancy robes or royal fanfare. He slept on a bed of hay, and angels announced His birth in a lonely field when only a few shepherds were awake to hear the news.


Judging by Madison Avenue standards, this was a public relations disaster. There were no news conferences, press releases, book signings or fireworks displays. Jesus got absolutely no airtime on CNN or Face the Nation. It’s true that He got His own star, but only a watchful few even noticed it.


Herod expected any king worth his crown to enter the city with banners, dancing girls, trumpet blasts and big-budget hoopla. But God didn’t do it man’s way. He slipped in the back door.


Even the mysterious magi who visited Jesus after His birth took the low-key approach to publicity. When they saw the child they “fell to the ground” to worship (Matt. 2:11, NASB) and then returned to their country unnoticed. After being in the Messiah’s presence, they had no interest in returning to Herod’s luxurious palace to play his power games.


Bethlehem, as simple as it was, changed everything.


This Christmas, I hope to spend some time kneeling on the floor as I think about that manger. There is something about the birthplace of Jesus—a crude, cramped room that smelled of dirt and animal waste—that helps me reorder my priorities. If this is where the Savior made His debut, then it is only in the place of humility that His presence will abide.


Unfortunately in today’s church many of us have adopted Herod’s values. We are impressed by fame, wealth and sophistication. We think God likes grand entrances, entourages and red carpets. We’ve been seduced by our celebrity-obsessed culture. Some misguided ministers have even reinvented the Christmas story to fit their self-centered theology.


One prominent television preacher told an Atlanta newspaper recently that Jesus was actually very wealthy, and that He got much of His treasure from the magi when they visited Him as a child.


The Bible actually does not tell us the amount of gold the wise men presented to Jesus, but Bible scholars say it could not have been enough to make Jesus independently wealthy during His time on Earth. After all, if Jesus were that rich, why would He have needed a coin from a fish’s mouth to pay His taxes? And why would He have needed to borrow a tomb from an affluent friend?


People can waste their time arguing about how many gold coins Jesus had stashed under His mattress. But my Bible says plainly: “For your sake He became poor” (2 Cor. 8:9). The point is that Jesus—who deserved all the applause in the world, and who owns all its riches—took the lowest road when He came into the world. He was teaching us that the path to greatness starts when we lay down our reputation and become servants.


My prayer is that we all will find a place to kneel near Bethlehem’s manger. There, amidst the sheep, the straw and the simple swaddling clothes, we will rediscover the humbling power of Christmas.


J. Lee Grady is editor of Charisma and author of 10 Lies the Church Tells Women (Charisma House). His ministry, The Mordecai Project, focuses on empowering women in ministry and confronting abuse. His weekly online column is available at .




Keeping Kids Safe

We must make it a priority to know what our youth are saying and doing in cyberspace.
Virtually everyone has heard of MySpace. With more than 90 million users, it has become the most popular social network on the Web. Whether or not you know much about it, you can be assured that your kids do.


About 20 million teenagers in America have a MySpace account, which they use to meet new friends, connect with old friends, post pictures and write online journals—sharing their thoughts for the whole world to see.


Millions of teenagers spend several hours each day on this site for entertainment and interaction.


The problem many parents are not aware of is that not everyone on MySpace is a teenager. Many adults are online for legitimate social-networking purposes themselves, but untold thousands of them are online predators posing as teenagers. They hope to begin a relationship that will ultimately lead to a sexual encounter.


Time magazine recently reported that a 14-year-old girl was raped by a 19-year-old Texan named Pete Solis after he met her on MySpace. The girl’s mother is now suing MySpace for $30 million alleging the company did not take proper precautions to protect her child from Internet pedophiles.


The latest data show that 71 percent of people who join MySpace accept the “friendship” of other users who are actually strangers to them. The scary part is that 41 percent of youth respond to invitations from people they don’t know.


It may look innocent enough to see your teenager sitting at a computer, talking and swapping pictures with an online friend, but do you have any idea who is on the other end? There is no way to verify online the age and profile of a person.
Our young people are more vulnerable than ever to cunning and smooth-talking criminals.


The pornography on the site does not help either. Even though the company tells people that they should not post inappropriate pictures, the indecency and imitation of celebrity crudeness on many teen MySpace sites would cause some adults to shiver.


As a concerned parent or ministry worker you are no doubt asking yourself what can be done to protect young people from the threat of online predators and other criminals.


For starters, make sure your computer is in an open room and has the most effective protection software to block pornography. In addition, ask your kids lots of questions. Who are they talking to? When you look at the list of friends they have on MySpace, you should know all of them.


A more thorough way to protect your kids is to help them switch over to My Battle Plan at . On this site, I not only help them connect with friends, but also help them establish a plan to grow their faith and be held accountable to that plan. They will begin to set spiritual goals and learn to encourage others to make an impact for Christ.


As parents, leaders and laypeople, our involvement and protection is needed now more than ever. The stakes are high because we face the possibility of losing an entire generation. The future of America is right before our eyes.


If you have a desire to see young people protected, saved and on fire for God but don’t know how to get started, I suggest you attend one of the leadership summits listed on the site.


We need to defend and rescue our kids. It is no longer enough for us to say, “We didn’t know.” We have the opportunity to be informed and equipped, so we must make it a priority to know what our youth are saying and doing in cyberspace. We must seize the moment and capture the heart of this generation before the next predator does.


Ron Luce founded Teen Mania in 1986. He and his wife, Katie, have seen more than 2 million youth attend events they host called Acquire the Fire, and they have sent more than 50,000 teens across the globe on mission trips. Ron and Katie live in Garden Valley, Texas, with their three children: Hannah, Charity and Cameron. To read past columns in Charisma by Ron Luce, log on at




Need Confidence?

Don’t be afraid to make mistakes, and if you do, recover quickly and press on.
People who feel safe are free to take chances in life—even if it means failing at times.


When you know you are loved for yourself and not just your performance, you no longer need to fear failure. You are free to explore and find out what you are best suited for. Trial and error is the road to success, and you can’t drive that road as long as your car is parked.


Some people are naturally confident. For those of you who are not, I have developed several keys that will help you live more confidently and boldly.


Realize you are loved. Do not fear being unloved and be assured that God loves you unconditionally. Everyone desires and needs love and acceptance from God and others. Concentrate on those who do love you and forget about those who don’t. Follow the leading of the Holy Spirit in choosing your circle of friends.


Refuse to live in fear. Fear is an epidemic in our society. The Bible instructs us in Hebrews 10:38 to live by faith and not draw back in fear. God wants you to walk in the Spirit, not the flesh, and that applies to your emotions. You cannot walk in the vanity of your own mind, in your feelings or in your own will and experience victory in your life.


Choose a positive attitude. Confidence and negativity are like oil and water; they do not mix. Being positive or negative is a choice—it is a way of thinking, speaking and acting. Both come from a habit that has been formed in your life through repetition. Why not believe something good is going to happen to you? Why not think positively and walk with confidence?


Put setbacks behind you. You are not a failure because you try new things and they don’t work out. You fail only when you stop trying.


Many people are confused about what God’s will is for them. I recommend that you pray and begin trying some things. It won’t take long before you will feel comfortable with something.


Our destinies unfold as we take steps of faith. Don’t be afraid to make mistakes, and if you do, recover quickly and press on.


Don’t draw comparisons. Confidence will be impossible as long as you compare yourself to others. Your joy comes from being the best you can be. Confidence begins with self-acceptance—which is made possible through a strong faith in God’s love and plan for your life. Celebrate your uniqueness.


Be willing to take action. Whether you are by nature an introvert or an extrovert, there is nothing wrong with your particular personality. God created all of us different. Search your heart and ask yourself what you believe God wants you to do—and then do it.


Avoid “if only” and “what if.” There are countless people who are unfulfilled because they have spent their lives bemoaning what they did not have. Refuse to live in the tyranny of “if only.” One of the biggest mistakes you can make is to stare at what you have lost and fail to take inventory of what you have.


“What if” is just as devastating as “if only.” Negatively anticipating a future experience can be more devastating than actually living it. Run to God’s Word, which strengthens you to take steps of faith, no matter how you feel.


I encourage you to pay attention to your thoughts and choose to think on things that help instead of hinder. It releases God’s power to help you be the confident person He wants you to be. I believe these seven secrets will help you along the way.


I’ve learned a lot on my journey about what true confidence is, and it is a pleasure to share things I’ve learned that can help you. God has a plan for your life, and He wants you to live it to the fullest.


Hold your head up and be filled with confidence about yourself and your future. You have what it takes.


Joyce Meyer is a New York Times best-selling author and one of the world’s leading practical Bible teachers. She has written more than 70 books, including the popular Beauty for Ashes and Battlefield of the Mind, and her most recent, The Everyday Life Bible (all FaithWords). She is also the founder of Joyce Meyer Ministries Inc. and the host of Enjoying Everyday Life radio and TV programs, which air on hundreds of stations worldwide. To read past columns in Charisma by Joyce Meyer, log on at




Help Save Christmas

This year, do your part to change public opinion about celebrating Christmas.
Recently, in teaching about the Jewish feasts, John Hagee suggested that Jesus was born in late September or early October, around the time of the Feast of Tabernacles, rather than on December 25, the date on which we traditionally celebrate His birth. Hagee developed a credible argument for his claim based on the timing of the birth of John the Baptist, who arrived on the scene shortly before Jesus.


The word we use to refer to Jesus’ birth date came from the term “Christ’s Mass,” eventually shortened to “Christmas,” which was probably the name of a celebration initiated by the early church to compete with the pagan holiday that signaled the beginning of winter. Whether we celebrate it on December 25 or a more historically accurate date, Christmas has become a time when the world stops to acknowledge the miracle of God’s becoming man in the form of a baby born to a virgin in Bethlehem.


For many people, it is the happiest time of the year, not only because of the spiritual significance but also because of the special traditions, memories, love and good will that attend it.


So why is it that in our culture today there is an attempt to snuff out every aspect of the holiday that reflects its spiritual origins? It’s OK to decorate our homes with glittering evergreen trees and send out greeting cards with cheerful little snowmen on them, but we can’t put Nativity sets in public view or even wish someone “Merry Christmas!” without inciting public criticism.


We’ve seen the demise of Christian values in the secular media, in the political arena and in the educational system. Now in the day-to-day workplace, it’s considered politically incorrect to acknowledge the Savior’s birth with a friendly greeting.


Thankfully sane voices are rising in the secular media. John Gibson, a commentator on the Fox News Channel, wrote a book titled The War on Christmas (Sentinel) in which he documents what he calls “the liberal plot to ban the sacred Christian holiday.”


Now it’s time for Christians to stand up and say enough is enough.


I encourage our half-million readers to get involved. One of the best ways is to participate in the Liberty Counsel’s “Help Save Christmas” program.


You can find out more by going to and ordering a Help Save Christmas action pack, which includes two legal memoranda about public Christmas observances that will teach you how to defend Christmas and help you educate government officials, teachers, parents, students, private business owners, employees and others in the legality of celebrating the holiday. The action pack also includes an “I Love CHRISTmas” button, bumper stickers and other items to promote Christmas.


Last year I encouraged churches to take the lead in decorating for Christmas. That’s because we can’t expect city hall to do it. Government employees must by law add “secular” elements to make their holiday displays “seasonal.” But as private citizens we still have the freedom to decorate our homes and businesses and the lawns in front of our churches.


Our Web site () has more information about what Hagee said regarding the date of Jesus’ birth, as well as additional details about Gibson’s book and the Help Save Christmas campaign. It also has sample letters you can use to write your newspaper and express your support for public Christmas displays and celebrations, and a blog to tell you what’s happening around the country.


Whatever you do, do something. Be a part of changing public opinion on the issue of celebrating Christmas. It isn’t as important an issue as the sanctity of human life or traditional values. But it’s a nonpolitical way to speak up for the Christian position and do your part to reverse the secularization of America.


Finally, remember Christ in your giving this Christmas. As I have in years past, I invite you to support the ministries of our nonprofit partner, Christian Life Missions (P.O. Box 952248, Lake Mary, FL 32795-2248), or a local charity or church. Remember during this time when we celebrate Jesus’ birth, that Jesus said: “‘Inasmuch as you did it to one of the least of these My brethren, you did it to Me'” (Matt. 25:40, NKJV).


Stephen Strang is the founder and publisher of Charisma. To read past columns in Charisma by Stephen Strang, log on at




FeedBack


He’s Got A Testimony


Thanks for sharing pastor Zachery Tims’ testimony with the readers of Charisma. (“Grace So Amazing” by Valerie G. Lowe, October). His story gave me hope and a reason to share my past life of drug abuse with people who struggle with the same addiction I once had. We can never read too many stories in your magazine about believers who get the victory over sin and the devil.
L.W. James
Syracuse, New York


Stop the Television Hype


Thank you for the column about Christian television (Fire in My Bones by J. Lee Grady, November). As a student of the Scriptures, I have yet to find God’s Word backing up these televangelists who preach during a telethon that God will make you debt-free and wealthy if you send them a $1,000 donation.
Edward Johnson
Charlotte, North Carolina


I have never seen so much junk on a so-called Christian TV station. I do have some favorite TV preachers, such as Perry Stone, David Jeremiah, Jesse Duplantis (he is always good for a laugh and very uplifting) and some others, but in general I am sick of TV preachers. Get real for goodness’ sake!
Louise Swedo
Bel Air, Maryland


I believe current Christian TV programming is designed to attract those who have fallen prey to satisfying their flesh. If spiritual leaders would listen more to their hearts instead of media marketers, Christian programming for all of us would improve. For now, PBS and the news are my options for TV viewing.
Name withheld
Locust, North Carolina


I’ve been praying about the issue of Christian television for some time and I feel as if God is answering those prayers! I’m thankful for most of the programming on Daystar and for the launching of God TV in the United States. But the majority of Christian programming needs a fresh breeze of the Holy Spirit.


I’m not over 75 years old but I’m very close—yet I don’t appreciate that old stuff. I love the new things God is doing among all generations.
Lois McDonald
Post Falls, Idaho


No More Politics?


I was disappointed with your decision to tell Charisma readers to vote for Republican senatorial candidate Katherine Harris in the primary election (Final Word by Stephen Strang, October). The most powerful thing we can do as Christians is pray, not vote for a particular person or party.


The ability to cast an informed, independent vote is one of the great benefits of our democracy. People should not be told who to vote for.
LaVonne T. Harmon
via e-mail


This letter is in reference to Stephen Strang’s column about politics. On one hand you say the First Amendment protects freedom of religion, but then you urge your readers to get involved in partisan politics to elect Republican candidates to office.
I would say that churches that become agents for the White House and engage in partisan politics might be influenced more by nonspiritual motives. As James Robison wrote in your October issue, “We have made such an idol of economic gain and material possessions, I am not certain brokenness will come, apart from the collapse of our economy and the loss of treasured possessions.”
Name withheld
Sunnyvale, California


It’s Time to Pray


Thank you for the article by James Robison (“Humility … or Humiliation?”; October). It was great to hear someone tell it like it is concerning our nation and the church. I would like to know if there is some way to get a National Day of Prayer for all churches to participate in.


We need to have major prayer gatherings for our troops in Iraq. I believe events can be turned around, like James Robison said, if we humble ourselves.
Angela Jones
The Villages, Florida


Editor’s note:
Thousands of churches participate each year in the National Day of Prayer. The next one will be observed on May 3. Also, the Global Day of Prayer is scheduled for May 27. Charisma also urges all readers to participate in revival “prayercasts” organized by Lou Engle’s ministry, The Cause. For more information log on at .


Shame in the Sanctuary


The fact that a pastor was taking drugs and raping women in his congregation in Texas (News, November) is a sad commentary on the state of the church in America. It speaks of the lack of accountability in the church today. We must hold church leaders accountable as outlined in 1 Timothy.


So what can we do? Here is a solution for Charisma magazine: Please begin by calling pastors and teachers to be accountable for what they teach, just as the apostle Paul did. Second, name those who are acting like grievous wolves.
Phil Fletcher
Fort Irwin, California


Correction:
In Stephen Strang’s Final Word column in November, we should have stated that Christian Life Missions is raising funds for The Joseph Storehouse ministry in Israel, not the Joseph Project. Charisma regrets the error.


My Turn


If Christian publications such as Charisma are going to openly endorse candidates and or platforms, then all aspects of the platforms should be considered. I fear that Christian organizations have blinders on and tend to see only “moral” issues such as abortion or having the Ten Commandments posted in public buildings.


I submit that every issue is moral, including poverty, access to health care, consumer protection (eliminating fraud perpetuated by large corporations on the public) and many other issues. You should openly question the Republican candidates and elected officials who espouse Christian values and back up their statements with their legislative record on all issues, not just the politically sensitive “hot buttons.” Sometimes their rhetoric is nothing more than manipulation.


Though I do not propose any particular course of action in this regard, I bring this to your attention to point out that our Republican-led Congress can also be unfriendly to religion when it clashes with their economic agendas. It is ironic that Congress has taken a shot at the very people who put a large number of them in office.
Adrian M. Lapas
Goldsboro, North Carolina




The Passion of the Christ Child

It’s a gamble, but Hollywood is betting that Christians will flock to theaters to see this year’s most Bible-friendly film, The Nativity Story.
In December 2004, screenwriter Mike Rich was restless to break out of writing sports-related films. The author of The Rookie, Radio and Finding Forrester found inspiration on the covers of Time and Newsweek, which were trumpeting the “secrets” of the Nativity.


“It struck me that the Nativity had always been presented as an event-based story and was rarely looked at as a character story,” says Rich, a member of Southwest Bible Church in Beaverton, Oregon. “The timing was certainly right. The Passion of the Christ earlier that year had served as a trailblazer and opened doors for this kind of movie.”


But when he ran the idea by his pastor, “There was a bit of a raised eyebrow when I first told him I was going to pursue this particular story,” says Rich, laughing. “He said: ‘I’ll pray for you. Godspeed.’ There’s a natural inclination to wonder if you’ve bitten off more than you could chew.”


New Line Cinema was more enthusiastic, buying Rich’s Nativity Story script within weeks of its completion in early 2006 and rushing it into production for release in December 2006—an almost unheard-of schedule for a major motion picture.


“I’ve never had a project go this fast,” says Nativity producer Wyck Godfrey, whose producing credits include Daddy Day Care; I, Robot and Behind Enemy Lines. “When the studio read it in February and wanted to make it for December I said: ‘That won’t happen. It’s impossible. It’ll take forever.’


“But every time there was an obstacle it got cleared. … There is an element of it feeling like providence. This is happening for a reason. Maybe we’ll look back and say, ‘This is a miracle that this movie passed all thresholds to be made.'”
In the wake of Mel Gibson’s The Passion of the Christ, which pulled in $610 million in worldwide box office receipts, Hollywood is rushing to make Christian-friendly movies. But will Christians like what Hollywood is offering?


A Journey of Faith


The Nativity Story, scheduled to release December 1, stars Academy Award-nominee Keisha Castle-Hughes (Whale Rider) as Mary and takes audiences inside Mary and Joseph’s journey of faith, culminating with the birth of Jesus. “All roads, from a storytelling standpoint, lead to that one moment on screen that shows what we put on our fireplace mantle every December,” Rich says.


The story also delves into the minds and motivations of the Magi and shepherds. “We’re going to see a side to a lot of these characters that maybe hasn’t been showcased much before,” Rich says. “We’re going to see a story that has a lot of layers and emotional depth [because] a lot of times when the Nativity story is played, the Magi and shepherds are looked at as bit parts.


“I wanted to show that there were no bit parts. They represented the poorest of the poor, and what a remarkable gift from God these individuals received on that day. This was an amazing grand design.”


The filmmakers hope The Nativity Story becomes the go-to movie for the holiday season. But they recognize that, as the still-uneasy relationship between evangelicals and Hollywood matures, Christian audiences may snub the film if they see it as a patronizing money-grab rather than a sincere effort to illuminate a beloved Bible story.


For that reason, New Line worked hard to gain evangelical street credibility. They hired Grace Hill Media, founded by Jonathan Bock, son of the late Christian composer and arranger Fred Bock, which helps studios woo Christian audiences. And New Line put the script into the hands of influential Christian and Jewish leaders and asked for their stamp of approval.


“It’s very good,” says Darrell Bock (no relation to Jonathan Bock), author of Breaking the Da Vinci Code and research professor of New Testament studies at Dallas Theological Seminary. He read the Nativity script in spring 2006, just as filming commenced. “The story is terrific … and the genuine authenticity of the first century was handled very well,” Bock says. “They had certain details you would only know if you really had done some work in the first century background.”


New Line also secured Bible teacher Anne Graham Lotz’s blessing. “From what I have observed, The Nativity Story is biblically accurate, historically authentic and visually stunning,” she states. “Written with heart, directed with sensitivity, produced with excellence and performed with artistic grace, it is destined to become a beloved, cherished classic.”


Others listed in support of the film are Paul Cedar, CEO of the Mission America Coalition; songwriter Gloria Gaither; Catholic Archbishop John Foley; and The 700 Club Vice President Gordon Robertson.


But perhaps more surprising than the endorsements are the number of evangelical Christians involved in the film’s making. The Nativity Story, more than The Passion of the Christ, is an evangelical enterprise.


Writer Rich is an active member of his nondenominational church. Producer Godfrey grew up in a charismatic church in Tennessee and attends Bel Air Presbyterian with his wife and three children. His parents are still involved with Young Life campus ministry.


Director Catherine Hardwicke (Lords of Dogtown, Thirteen, winner of the Director’s Award at the 2003 Sundance Film Festival) grew up Presbyterian in Texas. Her parents still sing in the choir and teach Sunday school, and two of her cousins are ministers.


If Christians give The Nativity Story a lukewarm reception, one irony will be that these same audiences embraced The Passion of the Christ almost unquestionably even though director Mel Gibson had starred in violent, R-rated movies for 25 years and belongs to a deeply traditionalist wing of the Roman Catholic Church.


By comparison, The Nativity Story makers seem like a Baptist youth group. Each says the Nativity film intersects with his own spiritual journey.


“You find yourself at times in your life being more connected to God and less connected,” Godfrey says. “I wasn’t going to church in my 20s. I was focused on career. It was probably the least happy I’ve ever been in my life. Marriage and children were the path that reconnected me to my faith, which also forces you to look inward and say, ‘What can I do to live a life that’s more pleasing to God?’


“He finds you when you open your heart. That’s what this movie was. God reaching out and saying, ‘Do this.’ Of course I feel happier now having taken on that challenge than I had before.”


More Than Friday Night Entertainment


In the past, Godfrey would flinch when his parents read scripts of films he was producing. “They weren’t particularly excited about When a Stranger Calls or Alien vs. Predator,” he says. But The Nativity Story is “a movie you can take to your grave. It’s important to your faith.”


It is also the first film Godfrey is producing after leaving a secure position as president of a major production company to partner with former super-agent Marty Bowen in their own production venture.


Both men wanted to make movies “that are underserved in the marketplace, that put positive values in the world and leave audiences thinking and feeling, as opposed to pure Friday night entertainment that you forget about the next day,” Godfrey says.


“We wanted to get away from [the] cynical, jaded, irreverent. … Having children makes you think, What kind of values do I want to be putting on screen? You enter in that phase of life where you want to raise your kids in a more Christian environment.”


But Godfrey recognizes that selling Christian films to Christian audiences can be tricky. He is concerned “about Hollywood cynically chasing success,” he says. “[People say]: ‘The Passion worked, so let’s do every biblical story on an epic scale. They did the death of Christ, why not do the birth of Christ?’


“People doing movies but not for the right reasons: I think we’ll have to deal with that. People [can] feel they’re being pandered to. Hollywood just trying to make a buck. I would hate for that to happen. It’s the opposite of what Marty and I want to do with our company.”


He predicts that for a while studios will cater to “conservative Christian audiences because of the success of The Chronicles of Narnia and The Passion of the Christ. That will continue until people feel the movies are less authentic or entertaining. At some point there will be that sense of, ‘We’ve seen a bunch of those.’ It’s cyclical.


“Because of the success of some of these films, Hollywood will follow, maybe not for spiritual reasons but because they’re businessmen. Then at some point bad movies will be made chasing that dollar, and the Christian audience will be turned off. Then Hollywood will quit.”


Hardwicke says no director would make a film such as The Nativity Story if they didn’t have faith. “You pour your heart and soul into it,” she says. “It’s too intense, too many hours, too stressful. I get dozens of scripts every month. Even if it’s a fun script, if I don’t feel it’s going to do something for the world, I won’t make it.”


Hardwicke’s mother believes The Nativity Story is an answer to a long-ago prayer. “My mother wanted to have a child but couldn’t carry a baby to term,” Hardwicke says. “[When she became pregnant with me] she prayed to God and said, ‘If you let me have this baby it will be in Your service.’ So she’s so excited.


“Of course, two members of my family stepped forward and said this was preordained for me. My cousin who’s a minister said he’s prayed for two years for me to have this kind of opportunity. … Myself and the actors have discussions about how it’s come to pass that we’re making this movie instead of someone else. What a gift and what an opportunity.”


But Rich says the script was written with a sense of awesome responsibility. “There were many moments of trepidation,” he says.


“You don’t want to be irresponsible. If you write a scene where the audience even subconsciously feels that you strayed from the tone and content of the Gospels, then you’ll have failed. You want the speculative scenes to feel seamless, not as if they were shoehorned in.”


His challenge was to create a 90-minute story based on a few lines of source material. Although the events surrounding Christ’s crucifixion and resurrection are reported in great detail in the Gospels, the Nativity is told in just a few lines in the gospels of Matthew and Luke.


“The virgin birth is like a bookend to the life of Jesus,” Darrell Bock says. “You’ve got the virgin birth on one end and the crucifixion on the other. [The Nativity] is a very important indication that this child is something unusual and special. It shows that God is about the business of doing something unusual for people through this child.


“But what’s interesting is that the Bible doesn’t make near as much of [the Nativity] as you think it might. It doesn’t put a lot of neon lights around it. It tells it in such a way and accepts it that it’s surprising, but doesn’t put near the stress on it as the Resurrection. That’s part of the curiosity that surrounds it.”


The Gospel According to Matthew and Luke


In the script, Rich sought to bring to life the political, social and spiritual tenor of the times, including the oppression from the Roman government, to set the foundation for why so many people were seeking the Messiah. “There are usually bumps in the road that emerge as you write a script, but I never really had that with this script,” he says. “I’ve never had a script that flowed to the page as easily as this one did.


“[My] church spends a lot of time in the Bible. I value that. My faith is based, my foundation is the written Word, so there’s a reverence I have for those two gospel accounts.


“It was never something I forgot when writing it. It was very much in the forefront. You look at the WWJD bracelets and a lot of times I would have had a bracelet that said, ‘What would Luke and Matthew write?'”


Bock notes that the script takes poetic license and compresses time so the Magi and shepherds appear in the same scene, which “likely did not happen,” he says. Bock also recommended that New Line not promote the film by saying it was “completely biblical.”


“That is too much,” he says. “Just say it’s in line with and parallels the biblical account very well. You have to be honest with people about what’s going on.”


In Bock’s opinion, movies about biblical events should try to capture “the authenticity of the first century scene and stay true to the [biblical] characterizations” Bock says. “The Nativity script reflects that. It’s about the best you can do, or you can’t do something like this.


“A person has to appreciate the nature of the genre. You only have five minutes at most of directly biblical material. The best you can do is try to fill in the gaps.”


To Rich’s relief, there were no major complaints from the experts. “When you get the word back from Frank Wright or Anne Graham Lotz that the script has passed the test of what they view as a responsible and inspiring account, as a writer that’s all you can ask for,” Rich says.


Frank Wright, president and CEO of National Religious Broadcasters, calls the film “a biblically faithful and artistically superb expression of the most momentous event in human history—when God became a man. For a generation of moviegoers unfamiliar with this truth and its implications for their lives, this magnificent film may well be transformational.”


Rich says he will be pleased if audiences “go back and take a closer look at what was actually written by Luke and Matthew.”


“Regardless of what happens, we’ll be proud of the movie,” Godfrey says. “Hopefully the box office will vote and open the door for other movies and keep the trend of people wanting to make movies for Christian audiences.”


Joel Kilpatrick is a journalist and the creator of , the world¹s leading Christian satire site. His most recent book is A Field Guide to Evangelicals and Their Habitat. He lives in Southern California.


Screen Saviors


Hollywood hasn’t always portrayed Jesus accurately. Here’s how one film critic ranks the most popular films about Christ.


Which Hollywood films handle the Bible accurately, and which films botch it? Charisma asked Terry Lindvall, C.S. Lewis chair of communication and Christian thought at Virginia Wesleyan College in Norfolk, Virginia, and former president of Regent University, where he was distinguished chair of visual communication. His book Sanctuary Cinema, to release in 2007, traces the origins of the Christian film industry.


Lindvall says Cecil B. DeMille’s “spectacular and sentimental 1927 silent blockbuster, King of Kings,” in spite of controversy over its sex, violence and alleged anti-Semitism, “proved to be a model of visual piety, with the actor playing Jesus, H.B. Warner, being touted as the face of Jesus that people ‘saw’ when they prayed to God.”


The 1961 King of Kings, however, drew strong rebuke from even Time magazine, which called it “the corniest, phoniest, ickiest and most monstrously vulgar of all the big Bible stories Hollywood has told in its last decade.” Jesus was portrayed as the pawn between Judas and Barabbas, and the film constantly downplayed His divinity. (Because teen actor Jeffrey Hunter played Jesus, the film has been labeled “I Was a Teenage Jesus.”)


The 1946 neo-realist Italian film by atheist and communist director Pier Paolo Pasolini, The Gospel According to St. Matthew, surprised and gratified Christian audiences by literally conveying the words of Matthew’s Gospel “with a reverent intensity,” showing how Jesus chose suffering and death, called His disciples to be serious followers of His way and “spoke with a righteous anger against wealthy hypocrites and religious leaders,” Lindvall says.


George Stevens’ 1965 The Greatest Story Ever Told, on the other hand, featured silly Hollywood cameos including Pat Boone as an angel and John Wayne as the centurion at the cross drawling, “Surely this musta been the Son-a God.” The film was so long—originally 260 minutes—that it became known as “The Longest Story Ever Told.”


“Baptist film critic Billy Joe Bob once quipped that the film was so long that when Jesus says, ‘I am with you always even until the end of the world,’ it is a threat,” Lindvall says. Swedish actor Max von Sydow speaks in King James English though everyone else speaks colloquially.


Lindvall recommends Franco Zeffirelli’s television miniseries Jesus of Nazareth as “one of the most authentic, Jewish presentations of the gospel account.” And The Gospel According to Matthew, produced by the Visual Bible, offers a literal textual (NIV) version and “a laughing Jesus, [which] did much to make it enjoyable.”


He pans Martin Scorsese’s The Last Temptation of Christ for its “confused, neurotic and angst-ridden Messiah, struggling with His mission.” And he says Mel Gibson’s The Passion of the Christ “strikes one as an American film of the end of the century, full of violence and excess, even while demonstrating a visceral and emotional connection of passion to faith.”


But “to paraphrase the apostle Paul, whether the story is told in pretense, for crass profit or from an honest humility, the story is told and gets out,” Lindvall concludes.
Joel Kilpatrick


Mangers, Magi and Swaddling Clothes


Much of what we believe about the Christmas story is shrouded in myth and legend. Here are the facts.


Through the years since Jesus’ birth, we have read and heard the Christmas story over and over again. We have seen it portrayed in paintings, books, Nativity sets, plays, movies and TV specials, and on cards of every description. Unfortunately, much of what we have seen, read and heard does not accurately reflect the factual account found in God’s Word. Let’s debunk some of the most popular myths.


Myth: Mary rode into Bethlehem on a donkey.


Fact:
The Bible doesn’t specify how Mary got to Bethlehem. It says only that her husband, Joseph, went there to be registered with her, and that while they were there, she had her first child (see Luke 2:4-7).


Myth: Mary gave birth to Jesus the night she arrived in Bethlehem.


Fact:
It is more likely that she and Joseph went well in advance of her delivery. The Bible simply says that “while they were there [in Bethlehem], the days were completed for her to be delivered” (v. 6, NKJV).


Myth: Jesus was born in a stable.


Fact:
The Bible says, “And she [Mary] brought forth her firstborn Son, and wrapped Him in swaddling cloths, and laid Him in a manger, because there was no room for them in the inn” (v. 7). It doesn’t mention a stable.


The reference to a manger—a feeding trough for animals—has caused some people to assume that Mary and Joseph were staying in a free-standing barn. But in biblical times, mangers were also located inside houses because animals were often kept on the lower level of homes at night rather than in a separate building.


The Greek word translated “inn” in the verse quoted above is kataluma. Elsewhere in the New Testament it is translated “guest room” (see Mark 14:14; Luke 22:11).


When Joseph and Mary arrived in Bethlehem to register for the census, they would undoubtedly have gone to the home of one of Joseph’s relatives, not to a public lodging place. The upstairs living quarters of the home were probably already full of other relatives, so they stayed downstairs in a room that at times housed livestock (hence the manger).


Myth: Jesus was born on December 25.


Fact:
The Bible does not tell us when Jesus was born. However, considering the description of the events surrounding His birth, this date seems improbable.


It would have been too cold at that time of year for shepherds to be “living out in the fields” and keeping watch over their flocks, especially at night (see Luke 2:8). It also would have been a hard time for Mary to travel (see ).


The date was chosen by the early church fathers to replace a pagan festival that celebrated the annual return of the sun—the time of year when the days began to grow longer—with a Christian holy day.


Myth: Angels sang on the night of Jesus’ birth.


Fact:
There is no indication in the biblical account that the angels sang. One angel appeared to shepherds living out in the fields and announced Jesus’ birth, and then “a multitude of the heavenly host” joined the first angel “praising God and saying: ‘Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, goodwill toward men!'” (vv. 9-14). The Bible states that the angels were speaking, not singing.


Myth: Angels were in evidence at the site of Jesus’ birth.


Fact:
Though there may have been angels present, the Bible does not mention that they were there or that they were visible.


Myth: Three kings on camels visited Jesus soon after He was born.


Fact:
This is the impression we get from most Nativity sets. However, the Bible says only that “wise men from the East came to Jerusalem” asking for the King of the Jews (Matt. 2:1-2).


It doesn’t tell how many wise men there were, what mode of transportation they used or what their titles were. Some people have assumed there were three because they gave Jesus three gifts—gold, frankincense and myrrh. But there is no indication that each wise man gave only one gift (see v. 11).


There is also no reason to believe the wise men saw Jesus when He was still a newborn, as many greeting cards portray. In fact, by the time they arrived in Bethlehem, He was no longer a baby, but a young child—perhaps as old as 2—according to the Scriptures (see vv. 8-9,11,13-14,16).
Maureen D. Eha


Bethlehem on the Big Screen


The Nativity Story offers a refreshingly realistic look at the world’s most famous miracle.


When I first learned that Hollywood was producing a film version of Jesus’ birth, I feared the worst. I wondered if they would use computer-generated angel wings, Renaissance-era costumes, cheesy subplots and sappy dialogue spoken in King James English by blond-haired actors. But I didn’t cringe even once during an advance screening of New Line Cinema’s The Nativity Story. It is possibly the most tasteful treatment of a Bible story to ever grace the screen.


Don’t expect a romanticized, Christmas card version of the familiar story. This movie is not about cattle lowing while angels sing sweetly over a stable. It opens with a terrifying scene of Herod’s soldiers storming into Bethlehem to butcher Jewish baby boys—a grim reminder that the promised Messiah came to a world gripped by government-sponsored terrorism.


The film then takes us to the town of Nazareth, where we meet the young Mary (played by Oscar-nominated actress Keisha Castle-Hughes of Whale Rider) and her future husband Joseph (Oscar Isaac)—whom Mary’s father forces her to marry. The miraculous events that follow—the birth of John the Baptist, the appearance of an angel to Mary, and her unexplainable pregnancy—are set against the rugged backdrop of Palestine during the Roman occupation. Life was cruel, houses were tiny, food was scarce and Jews were the victims when Herod’s troops marched into town.


When soldiers abduct a young Jewish girl because her father could not pay his taxes, we feel the fear and oppression that hung over the residents of Nazareth—and we find our hearts aching with theirs for the coming of a Savior. When the maniacal Herod (Ciarán Hinds) pouts on his rooftop lair in Jerusalem, worrying that his own son or a phantom Messiah will overthrow him, we understand the demonic forces that drove him to commit his despicable attempt at genocide.


Screenwriter Mike Rich (Radio, Finding Forrester) did his homework on the historic details of this film, and sets and characters conform to the customs of Palestine at the time of Christ’s birth. Filmed on location in Israel, Morocco and southern Italy, the movie has a gritty quality that reflects the hardship of the times. We see the oppression of women (the men of Nazareth want to stone Mary when they learn she is pregnant), the pain of primitive childbirth (Elizabeth holds a rope during contractions) and the dangers of travel through Judea’s terrain (Mary and Joseph’s 100-mile journey to Bethlehem is almost fatal).


The stark realism of The Nativity Story will challenge those who think of the birth of Jesus as a fanciful fairy tale. Director Catherine Hardwicke made sure that the characters are believable (including the angels, who are understatedly human-looking).


Unlike Mel Gibson’s The Passion of the Christ, which offered us a Catholic-style Mary on a decorative pedestal, this film gives us a frightened, teenage Mary who wonders why God chose someone like her to carry His Son and then tries to muster confidence after her family accuses her of immorality.


Though Mary’s relationship with Joseph is strained at the beginning (after all, this was an arranged marriage), she grows to love him after God shows him in a dream that the child in her womb was miraculously conceived. Eventually the young couple discovers they are on a divine mission, and Joseph emerges as a hero as he protects his bride from snakes, marketplace thieves and murderous soldiers.
The film is not preachy but the message is clear: When God sent His Son into the world, He chose the lowliest people to carry out His plan—and the most powerful man in Palestine could not stop Him. The baby Jesus (who is seen only in a few brief scenes) escapes Herod’s sword and finds a hiding place in Egypt.


Theologians may quibble over minor details of the movie, especially that the Magi who travel from Persia arrive on the night of Jesus’ birth instead of two years later. The film also suggests that the star that led the wise men to Bethlehem was actually an alignment of three heavenly bodies. That may not be how it really happened, but certainly some type of divine alignment occurred in Hollywood this year. The Nativity Story arrived in theaters just in time—when our terrorized world is desperate for some good news.
J. Lee Grady


Note to parents:
The Nativity Story, though certainly not as violent as The Passion of the Christ, is rated PG because of Herod’s brutality.




Going to Extremes

Don’t expect Patricia King to settle for the status quo. She is teaching a new Christian generation how to live in the supernatural.
When Patricia King got saved, she was so excited about finding Jesus that the very next morning she knocked on all her neighbors’ doors in her home of Mission, British Columbia, to tell them the good news.


“They said, ‘Have you gone crazy?’ And I said: ‘No. I was crazy, but now I’m not.'”
King was “crazy in love with Jesus.”


“I used to sit on bus benches—I’d hire a baby sitter to take care of my children—and I’d wait for someone to come and sit beside me so I could tell them about Jesus,” she says.


“When my kids took naps in the afternoon, I’d go through the phone book and phone people and tell them Jesus loves them. I led many people to the Lord over the telephone.”


That was in 1976. Yet, not much has changed with King’s passion for sharing God’s love. The 55-year-old grandmother, who wears large colorful jewelry and has funky spiked hair, still tells everyone she can about Jesus and has led hundreds of people to Christ during her 30 years in ministry.


It’s just that now she has more ways of reaching people than she did in the ’70s.
King presides today over Extreme Prophetic, an internationally known fivefold media and outreach ministry started in 2003 that now has offices in Phoenix and Kelowna, British Columbia.


The most popular aspects of her ministry are the globally telecast, half-hour teaching and prophecy show Extreme Prophetic TV, and street evangelism teams that she has commissioned to work in several of the largest inner cities of North America.


A writer of numerous books, booklets and ministry training manuals for Christians, she travels the globe to teach five-day courses she’s written on “prophetic evangelism” and “the glory realm”—a subject that one group of ministers recently criticized for being too much like New Age teaching.


But King describes herself as a “prophetic personality” who is “genuine,” “cutting edge” and “controversial.” As a prophetic evangelist, she fuses her desire to tell people about Jesus with a personal approach that puts hearers at ease and helps to lower barriers to the gospel.


Seeking and Sharing


King’s ability to hear God’s voice and obvious compassion for others was witnessed on a recent tour with her and one of her outreach teams through Ottawa’s Byward Market district.


Kayla, 19, was attracted by the TV camera filming King’s Extreme Prophetic program and shook her head in disbelief when King accurately told her that she often wondered where God was in hard times, especially recently when she was in the hospital being treated for asthma.


After bursting into tears, Kayla accepted Christ.


Eugene—a middle-aged quadriplegic who, rain or shine, sits on the street in a wheelchair with a tin cup—was all smiles after receiving prayer from King.


He said he felt heat in his back and legs and was able to move his legs in ways he couldn’t previously.


King says she actually learned through the Holy Spirit how to listen to God and prophesy over people, even though a year after she accepted Christ she took a course on prophecy.


Her dynamic combination of evangelistic and prophetic abilities, as well as a sociable personality and the ability to put others at ease, has led her to reach out to people just about everywhere she travels. She usually combines spontaneous outreaches—often filmed for Extreme Prophetic TV—with speaking engagements and other planned ministry trips.


“Wherever we have time and we hear the Spirit say, ‘Minister,’ we do,” she says.
A recent outreach in London’s Hyde Park was described by King as “awesome.”


“We led 37 people to the Lord in a three-hour period.


“We just set up a blanket on the grass and put up a sign saying ‘Free destiny words’ and ‘Free dream interpretation,'” King explains.


“Then we went to Buckingham Palace and prophesied over the guard. He couldn’t respond though, of course,” she joked.


A Time of Turmoil


King, however, wasn’t joking with her astonished neighbors all those years ago when she told them that she was “crazy.”


There was a time when she felt like she was. Before meeting Jesus, she lived through a desperate time of emotional turmoil and spiritual searching.


King was raised in a nominal Christian home by parents who she says were “good people and taught us good moral values,” yet there was much conflict at home.


As a teenager she fell for a boy with whom she compromised her morals. When the relationship ended, she fell into an abyss of depression.


“I had a very sensitive conscience, and after I violated my morals with him, I went into a deep party scene, club scene and drugs.


“The more I went into darkness, the more I was ridden with guilt and shame,” she recalls.


“I was raped twice in one year, but I just felt I deserved it. I was suicidal because I didn’t know who I was as a person.”


She met her husband, Ron Cocking, in a bar and they married when King was 22.


“He really, really loved me. His love was very healing. It was the best time in my whole life. I felt whole because I was loved.”


When her first son, Chad, was 6 months old, King became emotionally volatile and prone to fits of rage.


“My son picked up on that, and he started showing hyperactivity. I needed help, but I couldn’t get help in the natural—I took courses, I went to doctors—so I pursued the spiritual route.


“I got heavily into transcendental meditation, astrology, numerology, spells, white witchcraft and tarot. The more I went into it, the worse my behavior got.”


The situation came to a head when King was pregnant with her second son. She became so angry that her blood pressure shot up and caused her to have a convulsion.


“I was in the hospital and I had a vision of the devil—he asked me to give him my son. Then immediately, Jesus came to me in a vision,” she says.


Soon after, she developed epilepsy and became addicted to morphine. Her blood pressure was still high, and she was in and out of hospitals for treatment. During that time she began hitting her oldest son.


New Life and Purpose


Help finally came in the form of an Anglican clergyman who invited King to a home meeting of charismatic Christians after she’d called his church and told him her problems.


“I asked the Lord to come into my heart that night, and He didn’t hesitate,” she says.


“I felt Him take the sin away—I literally felt the guilt, the shame, the dirt go. Within three days, I was baptized in the Holy Spirit and began to speak in tongues.”


Ron accepted Christ 11 months later, and by 1980 the couple had quit their jobs and started training at the Youth With A Mission (YWAM) base in Kona, Hawaii.
Although King has never stopped talking to people about Jesus and His love wherever she goes—”Restaurants are my favorite,” she quips—her first foray into teaching evangelism didn’t come until 1981.


A local pastor in her hometown spotted her evangelistic gift and invited her to teach his congregation how to win souls.


“I spoke to his youth group and decided to take them to Vancouver’s Skid Row because they were scared about evangelizing in their own neighborhood, where they’d see people they knew,” she recalls.


“They saw God do miracles, they led people to the Lord, they saw drug addicts totally sober up. They went back to their schools, told the kids the things they saw on the streets and started leading them to the Lord.”


In 1982 King and her husband organized a Youth for Jesus event for which 1,500 young people showed up. After the couple were asked the same year to come on staff as home evangelists at their church, membership leaped from 15 people to 120 people in three months.


In 1984, King started working for Christian Services Association, an organization founded in 1974 for teaching and equipping the body of Christ in the Holy Spirit.


She taught on the gifts of the Spirit, evangelism and intercessory prayer as an itinerant minister traveling across the western half of Canada and sponsored similar events in the Vancouver area. By 1990 she had been made president of the association when its founder, Mary Goddard, retired.


King’s itinerant preaching and teaching continue to this day. During any given week she has one to three speaking engagements.


Some 80 percent of her invitations come from American churches, though she is asked by pastors to minister at churches in Canada, the United Kingdom, Holland, Germany and as far away as Kuwait. King’s public exposure led her to change her surname from Cocking to King in 2003 after her ministry began receiving vulgar messages.


Controversy Hits


Some ministers, however, have been critical of her teaching. Between November 2005 and April 2006, King’s ministry came under fire from a network of prophetic pastors in the Phoenix area who widely circulated a letter claiming that “an element of the New Age remains in her work, which can be spiritually misleading.”


“It went to a real high level of apostolic-prophetic roundtable and impacted on a global level, and they were saying, ‘What shall we do about Patricia King?'” she told Charisma.


“It’s like a theological war that comes with every new move of the Spirit. There were some added things because I’m a woman in ministry, and they were trying to say I’m rebellious; I’m not accountable or submissive.”


King and her ministry staff checked with every place where she’d ministered in the 18 months prior to the allegations. According to King, none of them have complaints about her.


A full accountability report about the controversy is available on her Web site at


The criticism centered on elements of King’s teachings, particularly “third heaven” encounters and what she calls “the glory realm,” a term coined among charismatic and renewal churches to help explain experiences in which believers claim they are transported spiritually by the Holy Spirit—into heaven for deep encounters with God, into hospital rooms to minister to dying people, into countries to discern the spiritual climate of specific locations.


Some people report seeing angels and “glory clouds” or receive tangible expressions of their journeys in the form of gold dust, feathers, gemstones or manna.


Although some Christians align such beliefs to a false source, King says the same kind of supernatural experiences were common in biblical times and shouldn’t be feared by modern-day believers.


“Moving in the glory and third-heaven encounters is just walking with God. The supernatural has always been available and God’s always wanted it for us, but we haven’t been open to stepping into it because our heads have gotten in the way.”


She believes Western society has entered a “supernatural era” in which unsaved people are seeing the reality of the unseen realm because they are living in very troubled times and are looking for a power greater than themselves.


The body of Christ, she believes, should be pointing the way for them.


“The church should be teaching the nation how to operate in the supernatural—the occult shouldn’t be getting there first,” she says. “Once you know the truth of Christ, you can tell the difference between truth and counterfeit.”


Her ministry maintains a combined North American and European advisory panel that includes James Goll of Encounters Network, Steve Shultz of Elijah List, Ché Ahn of Harvest International Ministries and Mary-Audrey Raycroft of Toronto Airport Christian Fellowship. Her ministry colleagues include Graham Cooke, Bill Johnson, Bobby Connor and John Paul Jackson.


Setting Prisoners Free


When she isn’t traveling to teach or going into an urban area to share Jesus on the streets, King attends her home church of New Life in Kelowna, formerly pastored by Canadian revivalists Wesley and Stacey Campbell.


She offers a simple explanation when asked why she feels led to minister to the down-and-out. “I feel a tremendous burden for the addicted because they’re prisoners. The Bible says to go release them.”


“I look at the anointing as operating best in the darkness. With street ministry, it’s about letting people know love because God is love, and love is what will set them free.


“It tests our love, doesn’t it, when we allow them [to get] close, but that’s where you find out if you have any [love].”


King is qualified to make such statements. She and her family lived in Tijuana, Mexico, for four years in the late 1980s ministering to a community of street people. Addicts lived with them in their home in Honolulu during their YWAM training.


Today it sometimes works the other way around—King and her team at Extreme Prophetic live at street level with the addicts. Recently in a Phoenix suburb called The Zone they stayed in slum hotels for five days and lived on the street for 24 hours with no money, no cell phones and no toiletries.


“Before that, the street people wouldn’t respect us. It was, like, ‘Just get out of our face,'” King says.


“But when we sat on the pavement with them, when we stood in the food lineups with them, it was a statement to them because it gave us understanding,” she explains. “They’d tell us their stories and really opened up.”


King’s team subsequently formed Extreme Homeless Fellowship, a street church that meets on the pavement three nights a week in The Zone.


“Now when they see us coming, they run up to us. We’re seeing miracles on the street. One person with a crippled leg saw their entire leg straightened out in one day,” she says.


King says the main requirement for outreach teams is to love and to have knowledge of the Word. “[Without love and faith] it’s just a formula. We teach teams to ask God to help them see what they need to, not to be in a hurry, and not to view people as mission projects. It’s about humble love, it’s not a big, splashy thing.”


She says people who watch the filmed outreaches on Extreme Prophetic TV frequently set up their own teams. “Now they’re taking the world by storm,” she adds.


Wesley Campbell, King’s former pastor and today an apostolic leader with Ahn’s Harvest International Ministries in Pasadena, California, describes King as “a go for it lady.”


“A lot of people hear from God and think about it. Patricia hears and does it,” Campbell observes. “She’s obedient to the Word, has compassion and great personal integrity.


“But her best attribute is faith. She can just grab hold and believe, which is why she’s a starter of new things.”


Josie Newman is a reporter and freelance writer based near Toronto and a frequent contributor to Charisma.