Charisma News –

Meeting
of Elders of Evangelical Churches and Bishops of Groups of Churches of the
Ukraine with Pastor Sunday Adeladja held in Kiev, Ukraine.


 

 
December 16,
2008, Kiev, Ukraine. 

A meeting of
elders of Evangelical Churches and bishops of Churches with Sunday Adeladja,
senior pastor of the Religious Congregation “God's Embassy”, and was
held in Kiev, Ukraine. The meeting was called in order to address Sunday
Adeladja's activities entailing negative ramifications for the evangelical
movement in the Ukraine.

 
During the
meeting the of Evangelical Churches and bishops of Churches of the Ukraine
expressed their concern and claims regarding the actions and statements made by
pastor Sunday Adeladja in the following sequence:

 
1. Public
exaggeration of Adeladja's own merits and results of activities (e.g.
exaggeration of the number of parishioners of “God's Embassy” as well
as often openly spoken untruth, e.g. regarding his role and involvement in the
Orange Revolution in the Ukraine);

 
2.
Non-evangelical doctrine of financial prosperity as well as spiritual support
of financial structures (e.g. “King`s Capital”, etc.) which resulted
in impoverishment of many people left without housing and means of living;

 
3. Personal and
individual management of the religious congregation, creating an image of
personal infallibility which resulted in forming of Sunday Adeladja's
“personality cult”;

 
4. Appropriation
of funds belonging to the religious congregation having been collected as
offerings for the construction of a religious compound;

 
5. Involving of
the “God's Embassy” congregation into political processes which
entailed building adversity by politicians towards churches and, consequently,
multiple assaults against evangelical churches in mass media as well as
disgrace in society;

 
6. Making
statements and cultivating an opinion that “God's Embassy” is supreme
among all churches and Sunday Adeladja is supreme among all pastors resulting
in haughtiness and disdain shown toward all other churches;

 
7. Making
statements on behalf of all evangelical and protestant churches of the Ukraine
without being endowed such authority.

 
In the process
of the meeting, the bishops of the Ukrainian evangelical churches did not
accuse “God's Embassy” congregation or its members, did not disparage
their social and evangelistic work, sincerety and diligence. However, the
elders and bishops of churches were concerned that the elders of “God's
Embassy” failed to discern and make express timely reaction to Sunday
Adeladja's messages contradicting sound evangelical doctrine.

 
The meeting and
conversing of the elders and bishops of the Ukrainian churches with pastor
Sunday Adeladja was held based on the Bible (Ezek. 34:1-11; Math. 6:24; Math.
18:7; I Pet. 5:1-3; I Tim. 5:20; I Tim. 6:5-11).

 
After the
meeting Sunday Adeladja thanked all those present for the meeting, acknowledged
many mistakes, asked the ministers for forgiveness and promised to repent
publicly for the mistakes acknowledged as well as defer to evangelical
standpoint expressed at the meeting by the leadership of the Ukrainian
evangelical churches. From their end, the elders and bishops expect Sunday
Adeladja to make corrections promised for their final conclusions to follow and
be made.

 
The leaders of
the Ukrainian evangelical churches and groups of churches called all Christians
to pray for the deceived, suffering and devoid of faith and expressed a hope
for positive resolution of this situation.

 
The following
ministers participated in the meeting:

M.S. Panochko,
Senior Bishop of the All-Ukrainian Union of Pentecostal Churches of Evangelical
Faith

,
Senior Bishop of the Ukrainian Christian Evangelical Church

A.V. Glukhovsky,
Assistant Senior Bishop of the Union of Free Churches of Evangelical Faith in
the Ukraine

F.M. Savochka,
Bishop of the Church of God of Christians of Evangelical Faith in the Ukraine

V.N.
Reshetinsky, Bishop of “Ukrainian Missionary Church”, Association of
Churches of Evangelical Faith Christians 

A.P. Gavrilyuk,
President of the Association of Independent Charismatic Christian (Full Gospel)
Churches in the Ukraine

A.I. Kalyuahniy,
Bishop of the Council of Independent Evangelical Churches in the Ukraine

B.S. Grisenko,
Senior Pastor of Kiev Messianic Congregation

P.I. Kovalenko,
Senior Pastor of Kharkov Christian Church

S.V.
Balyuk, Bishop of the Evangelical Christian Church of the Living God

 

 




OFFICIAL STATEMENT

 KYIV — A number of evangelical
leaders in Ukraine signed a statement, dated 29 December 2008, and sent
exclusively, in English translation, to RISU’s office. The subject is the
activity of Pastor Sunday Adelaja, head of the Kyiv-based Embassy of God Church.
The leaders, among other things, write that “We radically dissociate ourselves
from Sunday Adelaja and his activity.” The original text, with no editing
changes, follows.
 
OFFICIAL STATEMENT

of the senior leaders of
evangelical churches of Ukraine
regarding the activity of Sunday Adelaja and
the
negative impact it has had on Ukrainian Christianity

“…and
have tested those who say they are apostles,
and are not and have found them
liars…”
( Revelation 2:2, Bible, NKJ)

On December, 16th, 2008 a
meeting of the senior ministers of evangelical churches of Ukraine with the
senior pastor of the “God’s Embassy” religious community Sunday Adelaja took
place in Kyiv, Ukraine. The purpose of the meeting was to lay claims and to pose
the questions exciting within the churches and the public of Ukraine as well as
to confront about his actions and statements which do not correspond
with the Holy Scriptures. In the course of the discussion acknowledged
many of his mistakes, asked for forgiveness, promised to repent publicly and
also promised to subordinate to the evangelical position expressed at the
meeting with the leaders of evangelical churches of Ukraine. From our side we,
as senior leaders of evangelical churches, expected pastor Sunday Adelaja to
consequently undertake definite actions in the fulfillment of the promised
corrections.

To our deep regret, no actions which could be qualified as
“worthy fruits of repentance” have been undertaken by since the time
of the meeting. On the contrary, such reports as “Sunday Adelaja thanked leaders
of evangelical churches for support”, or “It is unfair to give the one-sided
report, said pastor Sunday Adelaja “, or ” An official address of pastor Sunday
Adelaja to all protestant believers” appeared on the “God’s Embassy’s” web-site.
This makes it clear that pastor Sunday resorted to manipulations, untrue
statements and self-justification.

We have taken into consideration the
appeals for the help and council of many people from among the members of the
“God’s Embassy” religious community who suffered from the activity of “King's
Capital” financial company. Testimonies of these people, the close analysis of
the facts, reaction to reproof of the bishops of evangelical churches of Ukraine
(dated December, 16th, 2008) – all of these point out that pastor Sunday Adelaja
is an inspirer and a spiritual protector of the above mentioned financial
structures which finally led to deplorable spiritual and material condition of
many people, and even to the point of loss of their accommodation and own
habitation. The given activity has become the cause for some mass-media to
identify Sunday Adelaja with all Christian evangelical
churches.

Previously leaders of various Christian evangelical churches
repeatedly admonished and warned , but have been ignored.

In
view of the above-stated and based on the Holy Bible (Is. 56:10-11;
,20-21; Ezek. 34:1-11; Mat. 6:24; 18:17; 1st Peter 5:1-3; 1st Tim 5:20;
6:5-11) WE ANNOUNCE:

• We radically dissociate ourselves from Sunday
Adelaja and his activity.

• We condemn:
— Aspirations to create a cult
of personality;
— Methods and the activity, based on self-advertisement,
exaggeration of personal merits and on lie;
— The false doctrine of
prosperity, the sin of love of money;
— Practice to curse the church members
and parishioners who disagree with his opinion.

• We ascertain:

Sunday Adelaja is the inspirer and the spiritual patron of the para-church
financial structures («King's Capital» and other);
— Sunday Adelaja evaded
from the pure evangelical doctrine and is currently in spiritual seduction and
error.

• We address:
— All the church leaders to abstain from
brotherly fellowship with Sunday Adelaja;
— To pray for spiritual healing of
members of the “God’s Embassy” religious community;
— To pray for those who
suffered from the activity of the “King's Capital” financial company;
— The
Board of the “God’s Embassy Church to discharge Sunday Adelaja and to compel him
to leave the ministry for the improvement of the spiritual the church.


We suggest Sunday Adelaja to sincerely repent in his words and deeds and we do
believe that only a true repentance gives freedom and cleanses from all sins and
delusions.
(Holy Bible, Revelation 3:18-19: “I counsel you to buy from me
gold refined in the fire, that you may be rich and white garments, that you may
be clothed, that the shame of your nakedness may not be revealed and anoint your
eyes with eye salve that you may see. As many as I love, I rebuke and Chasten.
Therefore be zealous and repent”.)

The Official Statement was signed
by:

Bishop Mikhail Panochko – President of the All-Ukrainian Church Union
of Evangelical Faith Christians – Pentecostal;
Bishop Leonid Padun – Leader
of the Ukrainian Christian Evangelical Church;
Assistant Bishop Anatoly
Gluhovsky – Union of the Free Churches of the Evangelical Faith Christians of
Ukraine;
Bishop Philip Savochka – Leader of the “Salvation” Christian
Evangelical Church;
Bishop Valery Reshetinskiy – Leader of the Union of
Christian of Evangelical Faith “Ukrainian Missionary Сhurch”;
Bishop Anatoliy
Gavriluk – President of the Union of Independent Christian Charismatic Churches
of Ukraine (Full Gospel);
Bishop Anatoliy Kalyuzhniy – Leader of Independent
Evangelical Churches of Ukraine Union;
Pastor Boris Grisenko – Kyiv Messianic
Congregation;
Pastor Peter Kovalenko – Senior Pastor of Kharkiv Christian
Church.

Kyiv, December 29,
2008

 




Rick Warren Sued by Atheists

Michael Newdow—who tried to have the words “under God’ removed from the
Pledge of Allegiance—claims the Saddleback pastor’s participation in
the inauguration violates church-state separation.
 
Rick Warren Sued by Atheists
[] California megachurch pastor Rick Warren is being sued by a group of atheists seeking to block his prayer and other mentions of God during the upcoming inauguration of President-elect Barak Obama.

 
The lawsuit filed by Michael Newdow—a California physician who previously tried to have the words “under God” removed from the Pledge of Allegiance—names among several defendants Warren, Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts and the Rev. Joseph Lowery, who is giving the benediction.
 
Newdow, who is joined by several individuals and 10 atheist and humanist organizations, filed similar lawsuits in 2001 and 2005, which both failed. He claims that by including the words “so help me God” in the oath of office, Justice Roberts would “infuse the inaugural ceremony with purely religious dogma,” the atheists contend. Supreme Court chief justices and presidents used that phrase since at least 1933, the Orange County Register reported.
 
Newdow and the other atheists also object to the place the Bible has in the ceremony, and the fact that there will be opening and closing prayers. Obama, who is not named in the lawsuit, has asked to use the Bible Abraham Lincoln used in 1861.
 
Attorney Colby M. May, director of the Washington, D.C., office of the American Center for Law and Justice, said the lawsuit is unlikely to progress because the plaintiffs must prove that they will be harmed if Warren gives the invocation. May said Newdow’s case is contrary to the Supreme Court’s decision on Marsh v Chambers, where it ruled that Congressional clergy and prayers did not violate the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment.
 
“In other words, if it is OK for legislators and the public to hear Congressional prayers without harm, it should be OK in Newdow’s context as well,” May told Charisma.
 
Obama has been widely criticized for choosing Warren, pastor of the 22,000-member Saddleback Church in Lake Forest, Calif., to give the invocation during the Jan. 20 inauguration because of Warren’s opposition to gay marriage. Warren said he is a Christian pastor and plans to pray “the only kind of prayer I know how to pray,” the Register reported.



Be a Winner This Year

by Barbara Wentroble
 
You have probably heard the definition of insanity. Insanity means that
you keep doing the same thing you have always done and expect different
results
! At the beginning of this New Year, you have an opportunity to see
positive changes rather than continuing to do things that fail to bring the
desired results from your efforts. You can be a winner this year!
 
Winners are risk takers. Winners realize that life can only be fully
enjoyed when they are free to take risks. No one can guarantee that they will
not stumble or fall down. However, winners always get up and try again. A baby
usually stumbles or falls a few times when he is learning to walk. When the baby
is encouraged, he forgets the times he stumbled and is eager to not only walk
but also to run!

 
I encourage you to break out of every place of insanity in your life! Stop
doing the things you have always done that are keeping you from success. Be
willing to take a risk. Let this be a year when you not only walk out of your
present situation but also a year where you run into your future!

 
Have a very happy and prosperous New Year!

Barbara Wentroble is the founder of International Breakthrough Ministries and the author of
several books, including Prophetic Intercession. 




Controversial Article About Mormon Taken Off Focus’ Web Site

An article supportive of prominent Mormon and ex-CNN host Glenn Beck was removed from the political action Web site of Focus on the Family because it offended evangelical readers.
 
Controversial Article About Mormon Taken Off Focus' Web Site

[]  An article featuring popular radio and TV personality Glenn Beck, a Mormon, was removed last week from a Web site affiliated with Focus on the Family due to reader misinterpretation, reported The Gazette in Colorado Springs, Colo.

“We did not aim to signal theological compromise, which some of our base were concerned about,” said spokesperson Gary Schneeberger of Focus, which is based in Colorado Springs.

“In no case do we intend to alter our clear distinction as unwaveringly grounded in evangelical theology,” he told the newspaper on Monday.

The controversy stemmed from a Dec. 19 article written by freelance writer Karla Dial about Beck and his new book The Christmas Sweater. Readers of , the Web site of politically inclined Focus on the Family Action, worried the article was proselytizing ideas of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

The Gazette also reported that Steve McConkey, who heads the evangelical group Underground Apologetics, released a statement two days later denouncing the online publishing of the Mormon-friendly article, which is no longer available for public viewing. “Christians should be promoting the central issues of the faith properly without opening the door to false religions,” he wrote, according to The Gazette.

Beck reportedly was unhappy that the story was removed from Focus' site. Schneeberger told the paper he wished no ill will. “We intended no insult,” he said. “We merely miscalculated on how best to feature Glenn, whom we greatly appreciate.”




How do I live my faith in a secular culture?

The crises of man are not new. There is nothing “more secular” about the world today than there has ever been, in any age or society. The world’s hostility toward God has not changed since the days of Adam.

Living out your faith in a secular world does not depend on the approval or disapproval, acceptance or persecution, or health or disease of the world. The issue at stake centers not on the depth of the world’s depravity but on the depth of your personal desire for God.

Daniel, along with the whole host of Scripture (see Hebrews 11, for example) stands to prove that it is entirely possible to live out your faith in any age or condition. No one suffered more pressure to conform than Daniel.

At 16, he witnessed the cruel slaughter of his family and the burning of his village. He was carried away to exile in a foreign land, utterly stripped and forced to serve ruthless kings.

They required him to learn their ways, study their arts and perform their wishes. They even changed his name to reflect their gods. In every way possible, the ruling world tried to claim Daniel—and failed.

Why? Because Daniel chose. Daniel chose his God, and he chose obedience to his God, even if it meant death (see Daniel 6 and Rev. 12:11). The whole secret to living out your faith in a secular world lies in one simple, ageless word—choice.

David chose (see Ps. 27:4). Mary chose (see Luke 10:38-42). Jesus chose (see Matt. 26:39). And so it will always be for His followers.

Look up the following verses:

• John 15:18-21

• Deut. 30:15-20

• Josh. 24:14-15

• Matt. 6:24

• James 4:1-5

What can you conclude from these passages? Do any of them apply to you?

If you are struggling to live out your faith in a secular world, it may mean that your choice is not clear. All the performance of your choice is God’s, a responsibility He assumed in the person of Jesus Christ.

Thus the problem is not strength, but resolve. God will perform your choice for you, and overcome the world in you, if that is what you really want.

The question is: What do you really want?

 


JULIE R. WILSON is a Bible teacher and freelance writer and editor living in Lubbock, Texas.





The Faith of Sarah Palin

She was vilified by the media, hated by pro-abortion activists and adored by many evangelical Christians. Her 2008 candidacy energized conservatives, broke tradition and made history.

Sarah Palin was a little girl holding on to her mom’s hand when she first attended Wasilla Assembly of God (AG) Church in her hometown of Wasilla, Alaska. The church’s founding pastor, Paul Riley, remembers the pigtailed second-grader—then Sarah Heath—coming with her mom, Sally. They established a pattern of faithful attendance that continued through Sarah’s childhood and teenage years.

Every week, Riley recalls, Sarah attended Missionettes, the church’s program for girls. During those formative years, Sarah learned about the Pentecostal tradition, the baptism of the Holy Spirit, divine healing and the importance of living out her faith in the world.

By the age of 12, Sarah showed depth in her personal faith, Riley told Charisma. “She began to have a strong desire for the Lord,” he says.

One summer’s day in 1976, 12-year-old Sarah waded into the chilly waters of Beaver Lake, a popular location for church camps. She had committed her life to Jesus and wanted to be baptized along with her mom and sister. Riley immersed Sarah in the lake, baptizing her in the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit. “I wish I could remember more about that moment,” reminisces the retired pastor, now 78. “I know that she loved the Lord with all her heart.”

At that moment, though, no one, including Riley, had any inkling of what the future held for the small-town Alaskan girl.

After her baptism, Sarah continued to attend Wasilla AG, growing in her faith and singing in the choir, Riley recalls. “I know that she did receive an experience of the Holy Spirit,” he told Charisma, “and that she received a calling on her life.” That spiritual turning point came when Sarah’s youth pastor told her: “You are called by God for a purpose.” Years later, Palin confided that the pastor’s words were etched on her mind.

Last June, Palin spoke fondly of her years growing up in Wasilla AG when she appeared at a ceremony for graduating ministry students. “It was so cool growing up in this church and getting saved here, getting baptized by Pastor Riley … my whole family getting baptized,” she told the congregation, just two months before her vice presidential nomination.

Speaking to the ministry graduates, 44-year-old Palin said: “Just be amazed … the umbrella of this church here, where God is going to send you from this church. Believe me, I know what I am saying, where God has sent me from underneath the umbrella of this church.”

As she continued, Palin spoke of a “spirit of prophecy … a spirit of revelation” that would “bubble over.” Then, she told the ministry students: “Thank you so much for dedicating your lives to Jesus Christ.”

Pentecostal Underpinnings

Within hours of Palin’s nomination as the Republican vice presidential candidate, the video of her 10-minute address at Wasilla AG was doing the rounds on the Internet. News reporters immediately picked up on Palin’s plea to pray for those serving in the military: “Our national leaders are sending them out on a task that is from God,” Palin told the congregation. “That’s what we have to make sure we are praying for, that there is a plan, and that plan is God’s plan.”

Suddenly, in the media frenzy that followed her nomination, every church Palin had attended came under scrutiny. Eager to unearth controversy, reporters probed into the Charismatic practices at Wasilla AG, especially the experience of speaking in tongues, which commentators often presented as bizarre.

“I don’t know if [Palin] has ever spoken in tongues,” Riley told Charisma. “I know she is a very strong Christian.”

In the video, Palin quips about the Charismatic-style worship she experienced at Wasilla AG. She tells the congregation that she jokingly reassured the pastor of another church: “I grew up at Wasilla Assembly of God. … Nothing freaks me out about [your] worship service!”

Following the vice-presidential nod, though, the McCain campaign seemed perplexed by the media attention directed at Palin’s Pentecostal roots. Campaign staff told reporters that Palin—who stopped attending Wasilla AG in 2002—did not consider herself to be a Pentecostal.

In fact, since 2002, Palin has attended several different churches—nondenominational evangelical and Charismatic—in Wasilla and in Juneau, her base as Alaska governor. Most recently, when at home, she has attended Wasilla Bible Church, a nondenominational evangelical congregation with an emphasis on the Word, prayer and—according to the church Web site—fostering a close relationship with God.

How deep do Palin’s Pentecostal convictions go?

“I think it’s important to recognize how [Palin] herself answers questions like this,” says Michael Leahy, author of What Does Sarah Palin Believe? (Harpeth River Press). “She is pretty clear in stating that she does not belong to any particular denomination but is a Bible-believing Christian. I don’t think there is any evidence that she places the same emphasis on the Charismatic gifts of the Holy Spirit that some members of the Pentecostal tradition do. On these matters, [Palin] is very private in her thoughts.”

Former pastor Riley has no doubt about the authenticity of her spiritual walk. Asked if he feels God’s hand is upon Palin’s life, Riley responds: “Yes, I very definitely do.”

Other church leaders in Alaska who know Palin or have known her in the past attest to the genuineness of her faith.

Ted Boatsman was a youth pastor at Wasilla AG 31 years ago and remembers Palin as a young teenager in the church. “It was a very active youth group, and she was with the junior high,” he recalls. “I remember this very nice, impressive young lady … one you just enjoyed being around. She had a grounded sense of God.”

That “grounded” faith continues today, Boatsman says, as is evidenced by her words and actions. Boatsman, who went on to become district superintendent for the Assemblies of God in Alaska, told Charisma that last April Gov. Palin attended the denominational banquet.

“She shared a little bit about her faith and some of the issues she was going through,” he recalls. “We were thrilled to be able to pray with her. She seemed very comfortable with that and she said, ‘I could always use your prayers.’ I asked the Lord to protect her and keep His hand upon her.”

Boatsman says Palin’s faith is real. “Her faith is very consistent, and she does not go off on tangents,” he says. “She has taken her honesty and lack of arrogance and turned them into real strengths. She’s the same person now as when she was Wasilla’s mayor. She treats people just the same … and she is completely comfortable around prayer.”

David Pepper, pastor of the 1,500-member Church on the Rock in Wasilla, told Charisma that Palin was a regular attendee at the Charismatic church in 2005, before she ran for the position of Alaska’s governor.

“My take is that she is a Spirit-filled believer,” 41-year-old Pepper says. “She was very comfortable in the environment of our church.” That environment, Pepper explains, sometimes involves dancing before the Lord and other Charismatic expressions of worship. “She still comes here occasionally,” he added.

Pepper grew up in Wasilla and remembers Palin as a senior in high school when he was a freshman. “I’d say she is very genuine, very authentic, and her values resonate with so many of us,” he says.

Pepper told Charisma that although Palin did not teach a Sunday School class or lead a Bible study, he believed she was involved in ministry “beyond being just an attender,” although he did not elaborate.

“I believe there is definitely a sense of destiny over her life,” Pepper says of Palin. Taking a line from the biblical story of Esther, Pepper adds: “There’s a sense that she is here for such a time as this.”

A Modern-Day Esther?

Palin’s sudden appearance on the national stage during the campaign excited many evangelicals who viewed her as a present-day Esther—hand-picked by God for “such a time as this.” The comparison between Palin and Esther—the Old Testament queen chosen by God to save the Jews from genocide—was made by several church leaders interviewed by Charisma.

Prophetic minister Barbara Yoder, senior pastor of Shekinah Christian Church in Ann Arbor, Michigan, says: “I believe this is a time of incredible breakthrough for women. I am simple enough to believe that we don’t know everything about the way God moves and that [Palin] just might be an Esther.”

Mark Arnold, a Charismatic pastor in Hamilton, Ohio, would have to agree. In fact, he felt the Holy Spirit had given him a message for Palin about being an Esther, but he had no idea how he would deliver it. His opportunity came at a McCain-Palin campaign stop in Ohio last September. Incredibly, Arnold found himself just feet away from Palin and McCain at the podium after being asked to escort a group of Boy Scouts to the front—even though he was not a Boy Scout leader.

What happened next was remarkable. “[Palin] was on her knees, hugging a lady who had lost her son in Iraq,” Arnold told Charisma. “She spun around, looking right at me, and I told her: ‘God wants me to tell you that you are a present-day Esther.’ She began to cry and shake my hand in an affirming way. She said, ‘Yes, I receive that. … Please keep praying for me,'” says 47-year-old Arnold.

Barbara Wentroble, founder of International Breakthrough Ministries, describes Palin as “a picture of what God is doing with Christian women” as He calls them to positions of influence. “We need Christian women to make a bold stand for righteousness,” she says.

Others point to Palin as a woman of prayer.

Mary Glazier heads an Alaska-based prayer ministry called Windwalkers International. Charisma caught up with her on her way to a prayer meeting in Anchorage, the purpose of which was to pray specifically for Palin. This is nothing new, according to Glazier. “We actually began to pray for [Palin] before she became mayor of Wasilla,” Glazier says. “We felt then that she was the one God had selected.”

For several years, Glazier and other members of Windwalkers have prayed for Palin regularly—first when she was the mayor, then when she was the governor of Alaska, and when she was a vice presidential candidate. Last spring, Palin called Glazier and asked her to pray with her over the phone, and they met at the governor’s prayer breakfast.

“She asked me to pray with her for wisdom and direction,” Glazier recalls. “I sensed a real heart of surrender to the will of God in her. God often chooses the least likely people to be at the forefront, and I do believe that God has equipped [Palin] for this hour.”

Glazier told Charisma that members of Windwalkers had received words of knowledge about Palin being “called to impact the nation.” At that point, they had no idea she would be running for the office of vice president of the United States.

Palin’s public prayer life in the Pentecostal arena caused a stir when a video surfaced that showed her being prayed over by a Kenyan bishop. In the video, Bishop Thomas Muthee is seen laying hands on Palin in 2004 and asking God to protect her from “every form of witchcraft.” Liberal commentators and bloggers described the video as “terrifying” and claimed it made Jeremiah Wright, Barack Obama’s controversial ex-pastor, appear “pretty mainstream” in comparison.

The episode reinforced the fact that Palin’s faith, and Pentecostalism especially, is at best misunderstood and at worst deliberately ridiculed by a large segment of the media.

A Bright Future

Palin certainly needed prayer warriors during the grueling months leading up to Election Day. She was vilified by angry abortion activists (one blogger wrote that Palin’s son Trig probably wished he had been aborted), and voters criticized her for using GOP funds to buy a $150,000 campaign wardrobe.

She was also torpedoed by journalists. The New York Times admitted after the election that a report of Palin’s alleged ignorance of African geography was traced to a policy adviser who does not exist.

Many voters turned against Palin because of her pro-life stance, her eagerness to drill for Alaskan oil or her embarrassing interview in September with Katie Couric of CBS. Some evangelical leaders also opposed her, including theologian John Piper—who chastised Palin because he believed she neglected her domestic role.

The question in the minds of millions today is obvious: Where is Palin’s political career headed? For now she will remain Alaska’s governor, but her name has been floated as a possible GOP nominee for president in 2012. She had considered running in a special election to replace U.S. Sen. Ted Stevens of Alaska—who was convicted of ethics violations—but he was defeated by his Democratic opponent.

Biographer Joe Hilley says Palin’s faith is intertwined with every aspect of her life—so her faith will determine her future.

“[Palin’s] commitment to Christ forms the core of what I refer to as her moral center,” says Hilley, author of Sarah Palin: A New Kind of Leader (Zondervan). “Around that core are three basic beliefs: the authority of Scripture, a clear sense of justice and an unavoidable ethic of personal responsibility.”

Hilley told Charisma that Palin’s relationship with Jesus is an integral part of who she is. “One could not adequately define her commitment to Christ without including family and politics, nor could one define her political life without including her relationship to God,” he says.

Moreover, some black and Hispanic Charismatic leaders say Palin’s passionate faith appeals to minorities in the Pentecostal and Charismatic movements.

“It’s huge,” says Bishop Harry Jackson, pastor of the 3,000-member Hope Christian Church near Washington, D.C. “[Palin’s rise] marks the fact that Charismatics have become mainstream.” And even though McCain lost the election, Palin’s candidacy was “a watershed moment for our movement,” Jackson adds.

California-based Sam Rodriguez, president of the National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference, told Charisma: “Hispanic Pentecostals are excited about Palin. … She resonates with us. She understands what it is to have a Charismatic experience.”

Describing Palin as a “kindred spirit,” Rodriguez says many Hispanics identified with the news that Palin’s 17-year-old unmarried daughter was pregnant. “We understood her journey,” Rodriguez says. “We identify with what she’s going through.”

Palin herself told journalists after the election that she’s looking for divine direction. In an interview with Larry King on CNN in November, she said her life is in God’s hands.

“If He’s got open doors for me that I believe are in our state’s best interest, the nation’s best interest, I’m going to go through those doors.”

Certainly, those who know Palin best believe she has the resolve—and the faith—to go as far as God ordains.

 


Julian Lukins is a writer based in Sequim, Washington, and a former daily newspaper reporter in the U.K.

 


ONLINE EXCLUSIVE:To read an excerpt from the biography Sarah Palin: A New Kind of Leader click here.

 


The Unborn Still Cry Out for Justice

How should pro-life Christians view the 2008 election? By Lou Engle

Many people in America, including some of my best friends, would probably not agree with what I say here. Most have been conciliatory regarding the results of the recent presidential election and have counseled unity and peace. But I stand by the words of Dutch politician, journalist and theologian Abraham Kuyper: “When principles that run against your deepest convictions begin to win the day, then battle is your calling, and peace has become sin; you must, at the price of dearest peace, lay your convictions bare before friend and enemy, with all the fire of your faith.”

I have not been afforded the option of debating politics and reason around election results. Five years ago while I was reading the biography of British statesman William Wilberforce, God supernaturally apprehended me and called me to raise up a prayer movement for the ending of abortion, and I am under divine restraint to obey that commission.

I understand my friends’ conciliatory responses, but when I consider that 50 million babies have been killed since the ruling handed down in Roe v. Wade that legalized abortion and that the incoming president plans to ensure the ongoing legality of this march of death, I cannot live in peace. It is easy to counsel peace when you are not the object of the abortionist’s forceps and scalpel. But for me, peace with the legal killing of unborn children becomes sin, and battle is my calling.

So how do we wage the war against abortion in our nation?

We must follow the pattern of revolution of the prophet Elijah. First, carrying a spirit of love, not hate, we must be exceedingly zealous for the Lord. We must allow the crisis to drive us to desperation for God and His purposes. We must shake off materialistic slumber. The future of our children and our society is at stake.

Second, we must think generationally. It became obvious to me during this election that we have lost the next generation to moral relativity.

It took Elijah’s revolution two generations to overthrow the reign of Baal-worshipers Ahab and Jezebel. We must actively train a new generation of leadership and not entrust the discipleship of our sons and daughters to the morally relativistic professors in our Christian universities. We must raise them in the furnaces of prayer and fasting. We must anoint a generation of Elishas.

Third, we must let this election be a call to prayer and fasting such as we have never seen. Abortion is a spiritual battle. The blood of babies is not another socio-political issue. Blood fuels the demonic realm, and before heaven it demands a day of reckoning. We must have a spiritual awakening to turn the hearts of this nation—and I believe we will have it if we pray.

As my friend Allen Hood prophesied, “Let it be said that in the days of the rule of President Obama, stadiums were filled with prayer and fasting.” We must raise up a grass roots prayer and activism movement among the young. Bound4LIFE is a movement we launched 4 years ago that is spreading across the country carrying this youth mantle for the ending of abortion.

We must pray for President-elect Barack Obama. He is not our enemy. My heart has been going out to him in prayer because racism is raising its ugly head, and he has received many death threats.

Pray for his protection. Pray that God would give him wisdom. If God could change Nebuchadnezzar by haunting him with dreams, He can change Obama. Our mandate is not to curse but to pray for those in authority (see 1 Tim. 2).

Fourth, we must return to the basic commandments of the laws of God for society to flourish. Our pulpits must preach them and train a generation to vote according to them. God’s remedy to the social decline in Malachi’s time was first of all remembering the law of Moses.

Fifth, men must stretch themselves out in fasting and prayer over their “dead children” and raise them from the dead. The book of Malachi declares that Elijah will come and turn the hearts of the fathers to the children. The church must arise with an explosion of adoptions.

Today, homosexual couples are adopting thousands of children. This is their time and their moment, they believe. Who wants the babies more in America? The pro-life movement must take this on as their main mandate. Every church must adopt a Crisis Pregnancy Center. We must fuel the compassion movement with our finances by raising up pregnant mothers’ homes.

Finally, we must speak out for righteousness. We must preach it, pray it, prophesy it, praise it and print it until the forces of hell cannot hold back the Word of life.

Of his God-given mandates Wilberforce declared, “God has set before me two great objectives, the abolition of the slave trade and the reformation of morals.”

God has set before me two great objectives as well: “God, end abortion, and send revival to America.” Let this be the battle cry of the Pro-Life Movement in America today.

 


Lou Engle is founder of The Cause USA and co-founder of TheCall, an international prayer movement. To read a longer version of this column online, click here.




Holy Demolition

While our nation faces its toughest financial crisis since the Great Depression, the church is wandering in a wilderness of disturbing uncertainty. Ministries that enjoyed success two years ago are announcing layoffs. Some churches have been squeezed to a breaking point because donations are down.

There’s no reason to fear if our trust is in the Lord. God can provide manna in the desert even when banks and politicians fail us. He can use this perfect economic storm to purify our movement—and to test our foundations.

In late 2008 three once-popular charismatic churches fell on hard times. Without Walls International Church in Tampa, Florida, once attracted 23,000 worshipers, but it shrank drastically after co-pastors Randy and Paula White announced in 2007 that they were divorcing. In November their bank filed foreclosure proceedings and demanded immediate repayment of a $12 million loan on the property.

In Duluth, Georgia, near Atlanta, sheriff’s deputies arrived at Global Destiny Ministries on Nov. 14 and ordered Bishop Thomas Weeks III to leave the property. Weeks, who divorced popular preacher Juanita Bynum in June, owed more than $511,000 in back rent to the building’s owners. He was escorted out while a church service was in progress.

In another part of Atlanta, leaders of the Cathedral at Chapel Hill announced that their church is officially for sale. The gothic building—which once had a membership of 10,000—lost its credibility a few years ago after lurid sex scandals triggered a mass exodus. The church’s founder, Bishop Earl Paulk, turned his 6,000-seat church (valued at $24.5 million) over to his son, D.E., who has now abandoned orthodox Christian doctrines.

Why are these ministries suffering? It’s not just the credit crisis. I believe judgment has begun in the house of God.

Before Weeks was charged with assaulting Bynum in a hotel parking lot in August 2007, he told the men at a Global Destiny marriage conference that they should use profanity during sex to heighten their experience. He also brought couples on stage to play a game in which men were asked to name their favorite female body parts.

God’s answer to that kind of blasphemy? Eviction.

Many parishioners walked out of Earl Paulk’s church 16 years ago when it became known that he and other staff members were involved in wife-swapping. Paulk created a bizarre culture of secrecy to cover the immorality, which included his affair with a sister-in-law-and resulted in the birth of D.E. (who thought he was Earl Paulk’s nephew until last year). The church has had only a few hundred members in recent years.

Today, D.E. has embraced the inclusionist doctrines of Oklahoma pastor Carlton Pearson, who left the faith in 2003 and was labeled a heretic by a group of African-American bishops. The younger Paulk now preaches that all people, not just Christians, are saved. A pulpit that was already defiled by diabolical perversion is now the breeding ground for unthinkable deception.

God’s answer to that? Eviction.

How did our movement reach this level of disgrace? I hear the sound of bricks and steel beams crashing to the ground. The wrecking ball of heaven is swinging. It has come to demolish any work that has not been built on the integrity of God’s Word.

All of us should be trembling during this season of testing. There is more wreckage to come. God requires holiness in His house. He is loving and patient with our mistakes and weaknesses, but eventually, if there is no repentance after continual correction, His discipline is severe. He will not be mocked.

God is not married to our buildings, nor will He prop up our flimsy success. If He allowed foreign armies to burn Jerusalem and its glorious temple, He will also write “Ichabod” on the doors of churches where there is no repentance for compromise.

I pray the fear of God will grip our hearts until we humble ourselves. Let’s re-examine our priorities as we enter 2009. Let’s throw out the wood, hay and stubble and build on a sure and tested foundation. It is the only way to survive the meltdown.


 

J. Lee Grady is the editor of Charisma. You can read his previous online columns, as well as comments from readers here.