Ex-Madam on a Mission

Ex-Madam on a MissionPatsyann Maloney knows enough about being used. When she was 6 years old a relative molested her. Two years later a blind man in her neighborhood began sexually abusing her, offering her 25 cents for every encounter.

Violated throughout her young life, Maloney also battled dyslexia but would later turn her pain into a business. She became a prostitute in her early 30s and eventually a madam.

“It came to a point in my life as a single mother of five children that I wanted to make my own money,” Maloney says. “So the entrepreneur in me decided to stop being a prostitute and open a brothel.”

Maloney owned several brothels in Ohio and Kentucky, but when she was detained by the FBI and sentenced to five years in federal prison, her life changed for the better.

“Getting arrested was the best thing that could have ever happened to me … because I was able to get the psychological help that I couldn’t get on the outside,” says Maloney, who dedicated her life to Christ during the 11 months she served of her prison sentence. 

Today the 72-year-old is being used in another way, meeting weekly with women in need of hearing about the true love of Jesus.

 




Ex-Madam on a Mission

Ex-Madam on a MissionPatsyann Maloney knows enough about being used. When she was 6 years old a relative molested her. Two years later a blind man in her neighborhood began sexually abusing her, offering her 25 cents for every encounter.

Violated throughout her young life, Maloney also battled dyslexia but would later turn her pain into a business. She became a prostitute in her early 30s and eventually a madam.

“It came to a point in my life as a single mother of five children that I wanted to make my own money,” Maloney says. “So the entrepreneur in me decided to stop being a prostitute and open a brothel.”

Maloney owned several brothels in Ohio and Kentucky, but when she was detained by the FBI and sentenced to five years in federal prison, her life changed for the better.

“Getting arrested was the best thing that could have ever happened to me … because I was able to get the psychological help that I couldn’t get on the outside,” says Maloney, who dedicated her life to Christ during the 11 months she served of her prison sentence. 

Today the 72-year-old is being used in another way, meeting weekly with women in need of hearing about the true love of Jesus.

 




God’s Eternal Purpose

Sometimes, in order to trust God, we must be reminded who He is, what He’s capable of doing, what He’s done in the past, and what He’s currently doing on our behalf.

One of the greatest problems in our generation is the diminishment of our perspective of God—we have lost the biblical perspective of His majestic greatness. We read of His greatness in Genesis, His majesty in Exodus and His miraculous power in the Acts of the Apostles, but we fail to see Him the “same yesterday, today and forever” (Heb. 13:8, NKJV).

To understand the sovereignty of God is to acknowledge that nothing began with us—and it probably won’t end with us. We are simply a part of the successive, progressive work of God, and by His greatness we occupy a moment of time in a generation.

We live in Him. We move in Him. We breathe in Him. And we do His will as long as He gives us life.

When our mission is complete, and our time is over, He raises up another generation and continues to do what He has been doing from the foundation of the world. Nothing stops God in His eternal purpose.

Nations rise and fall and are reborn under the banner of a new hope. A church grows and is celebrated, then dies a terrible death because of a split or moral failure in the leadership. But these things don’t stop the work of the kingdom of God.

The eternal purpose of God is greater than a nation, a church or a generation. But sometimes it is hard to see God’s greatness because our image blocks the Son. The key is not in making God larger, but in making ourselves smaller in our own eyes.

Terri Crist is the senior pastor of City of Grace in Scottsdale, Phoenix and Mesa, AZ.

 




Unforgiveness Can Create Chronic Pain

I have often wondered, Why do we see much more rheumatoid arthritis occurring in women than in men? I began to pay close attention to the studies showing that men are usually able to express their anger, whereas women tend to hold it in and become depressed. I recalled the scripture, “A broken spirit drieth the bones” (Prov. 17:22, KJV).

Could it be that a “broken spirit” in some women is causing rheumatoid arthritis? Is it causing the joints and bones to be inflamed and weakened?

The person who continues to seethe over some unresolved issue is not only destroying a personal relationship and harming his or her own body but also blocking communication with God. A bitter person no longer has the desire to read the Word of God or pray. Bitterness is costly.

What should your plan of action be? At the first sign of anger or bitterness, go immediately to the person involved and deal with it–regardless of who is at fault. You will feel a wave of freedom sweep over you as you forgive.

On more than one occasion I have seen an individual healed of arthritis when he or she released bitterness and anger through total repentance. The person was first set free spiritually, then emotionally and physically. Don’t let deadly emotions rob you of life and health; forgive and be healed.

 


Don Colbert, M.D., is board-certified in family practice and in anti-aging medicine. He also has received extensive training in nutritional and preventive medicine, and he has helped millions of people discover the joy of living in divine health.




Life After Attempted Suicide

God sings in the darkKristen Anderson lay on railroad tracks hoping to end her life. Instead, she heard a song that changed everything.

 

On a bone-cold night in January 2000, Kristen Anderson made an impulsive decision: She walked to the railroad tracks not far from her Chicago home, lay facedown on the ground and let 33 freight cars roar over her body at 55 miles per hour.

The engineer frantically blew the whistle and brought the train to a halt—on top of Kristen’s body. The botched suicide attempt left the 17-year-old in piercing pain. As she lay there in her own blood, trying to decipher whether she was dreaming, Kristen managed to pull herself from under the train and crawl to some nearby rocks.

She looked around, patted the ground and suddenly realized her legs were gone. Kristen’s left leg was severed above the knee, and her right leg was cut off just below the knee. Both limbs had been thrown 10 feet away from her frail frame.

But right there, in the darkest hour of her life, the teen had an encounter with God. He had foiled her plans and instead of taking her to heaven as she hoped, He invited her to a “heavenly concert for one,” and Kristen heard the lyrics to the hymn “Amazing Grace.”

“A song filled my heart. There was no clear voice, yet the words were sharp and clear, playing 10 times louder than the music,” Kristen, now 27, tells readers in her new book, Life, in Spite of Me: Extraordinary Hope After a Fatal Choice.

Before that moment, Kristen didn’t realize she could turn to God with the pain she was feeling. “I didn’t know at the time in my life that I could go to God for comfort, strength, wisdom and understanding,” she told Charisma. “I stuffed it all down inside.”

She was just a sophomore in high school when her world began to feel overwhelming. In 1998, her close friend’s older brother was killed in a motorcycle accident. That same year, another friend on her high school’s football team was killed in a car accident. Then her grandmother died unexpectedly in 1999. The same year, Kristen was stalked by two boys, then raped by a third young man she considered a trusted friend.

“It was too much,” Kristen says. “When my grandmother passed away, my family didn’t talk about it. It just got really quiet in our house, and I didn’t know what to do with my feelings and how to handle them. And then I was raped.”

To look at Kristen today, it’s inconceivable that she would have tried to kill herself. She wears a bright smile and seems secure in her relationship with Christ. But in 1999 she faced yet another loss that would plant the seeds of her suicidal thoughts.

The Valley of the Shadow of Death

Kristen says she was stunned by the death of her childhood friend Brandon. He had been using drugs and stopped hanging out with her and his friends. But what shocked her most was the way he died. “He took his life by hanging himself in a cemetery, which was just a morbid, graphic, extreme way, and I just didn’t understand it at all.”

But she says her thought process started shifting. “It was when I was struggling through his death, wondering how he could ever do it, that I thought I could never do it the way he did it,” she says. “I started thinking, If I didn’t do it that way, how would I do it?

Kristen now believes Satan planted lies in her mind, telling her she wasn’t worthy to live, that no one would miss her and that her life no longer mattered. But at the time, she saw no end to her torment other than suicide. She began plotting her own death, trying to decide how she wanted to die, what would work and what wouldn’t.

Kristen was lying in her bedroom one night pondering a handful of ways to kill herself when a train passed by. As she heard the whistle and felt the house vibrate, she decided that would be a sure way to die. The thought didn’t return until later when she was sitting in a park trying to push back the pain she’d been feeling for months and heard a train nearby. Thinking she could quickly end her misery, Kristen stood up from the swing set and rushed to the tracks.

“I felt hopeless, and I didn’t want to be here,” she says. “I took such an extreme route because I just didn’t trust any other route. I figured this was the only way I could die.”

Kristen knows today it was God’s plan for her to live and tell others about Him, but initially she was angry with the paramedics for saving her life. She has had multiple surgeries and is being fitted for prosthetics. But recovering from the physical wounds was just part of the battle. Even after she accepted Christ in 2001, her struggle with deep depression continued.

Up From Depression

The Anderson family has long battled depression. Kristen describes her father’s long-term struggle with the illness as “a large, dark object that everyone tiptoed around.”  When she was 15, just two years before she tried to take her own life, Kristen learned that her father’s mother also was depressed and that his uncle had killed himself. But the Andersons are not alone.

According to the National Institute for Mental Health, approximately 58 million people in the U.S. have depression. And although women are twice as likely to be depressed as men, people in middle- and low-income households are reportedly less likely to be treated for the disorder because they cannot afford to get help.

The Centers for Disease Control says depressed individuals experience feelings of sadness or anxiety that last for weeks at a time. Symptoms of depression include but are not limited to feelings of helplessness, sadness, guilt and fatigue. Depressed people often lose their interest in everyday activities; they may gain weight or lose it, and may have thoughts of death and suicide.

Kristen encourages people to seek counseling if they are depressed, a topic that often draws mixed reactions among believers. Many Christians believe depression is often a form of demonic possession, but Kristen says Christians shouldn’t be so quick to blame all depression on demons.

“I think that anyone, Christian or not, can fall into depression—even me,” she says. “It would be naïve of me to think that I’m all good, and I’m covered, and nothing will ever happen to me or go wrong or that Satan will never try to mess with me again.

“It’s so easy for him to get into our minds and make us believe that we don’t matter. Knowing that those things are not true is critical because you cannot fight the lies if you don’t know … what the truth is.”

She learned about the enemy and how to defeat him in 2003, after she joined The Chapel, a nondenominational church located outside Chicago. There she began to see Satan at work in her life, feeding her the lies that provoked her suicidal thoughts.

Unlike the church she grew up in, The Chapel was full of love, and the people there seemed to love life and have joy, Kristen says. She became involved with the young adult ministry and started working with preschoolers and high school students. Church members would hold her accountable, and she felt she was where God wanted her. “Satan was out to destroy me,” Kristen says. “But when I got involved with the church, I got off my pain medication and antidepressants. That was the biggest surprise to my family.”

The Chapel pastor Jeff Griffin says Kristen was still suicidal and hopeless when she began attending the church, and he has watched her become joyful and content. “It would be too easy to be filled with self-pity in her situation, yet Christlike servanthood is what flows out of her heart,” Griffin says. “The level of transformation that has occurred in her life can be explained by nothing other than a miraculous work of Jesus Christ.”

Kristen says she spent three years in Christian counseling and describes herself as a “big fan” of the practice. “I struggled with depression after my suicide attempt because I was a new believer and the enemy didn’t want me to grow as a Christian,” she says. “But I needed to think through what led me to make a choice like [suicide] … and what led me so astray.”

A recent graduate of Moody Bible Institute, Kristen says every believer must arm himself with spiritual weapons, starting with the Word of God. She also has a message for families struggling with the death of a loved one who committed suicide. “I don’t believe suicide is an unpardonable sin,” she says. “Jesus died to forgive us of all our sins. He came to set us free, and only God knows what’s in the heart of any of us.

“There are some people who accepted Christ and put their faith in Him who ended up in a battle with depression and suicidal thoughts and had their lives end through suicide who are in heaven,” she adds. “I do not think that all people who commit suicide are in hell.”

Kristen knows it is the Holy Spirit who has given her the peace she now enjoys. She wants others to know that suicide is never the answer. But her greatest desire is to see people accept Jesus and develop a strong relationship with Him.

That’s why she founded Reaching You Ministries in 2004 with a mission to “reach the hurting, the hopeless, the lost, the suicidal and the depressed with the life-transforming hope and leadership offered to us in Christ.”

Kristen shares her testimony across the U.S. at churches, colleges, women’s and youth events, and suicide prevention outreaches. In 2006, she told her story to millions of viewers on The Oprah Winfrey Show.

“When people hear Kristen’s story, they cannot deny that God does transform desperate situations,” Griffin says. “We are seeing God use Kristen’s ministry to bring many previously despairing people into a transforming relationship with Christ.”

Kristen’s inspiring message of salvation and hope has resonated with her family members. Since her accident, her mother, father and siblings have come to Christ. And she says her father has come a long way in his recovery from depression.

She says God also is moving among the hundreds of people who inundate reachingyouministries.com with e-mails. Some are hurting or struggling with suicidal thoughts, while others are spiritually lost and need direction. They come to the website hoping to hear some encouragement from Kristen.

Her words to them can no doubt be found in the lyrics she heard on that dark, cold January night when she so desperately tried to end her life: “Amazing grace, how sweet the sound / That saved a wretch like me / I once was lost, but now am found / Was blind, but now I see.” 


Valerie G. Lowe is an associate editor for Charisma. “Amazing Grace” is one of her favorite hymns.

 


 

Learn how to gain victory over depression at depression.charismamag.com 

 





God Sings in the Dark

God sings in the darkKristen Anderson lay on railroad tracks hoping to end her life. Instead, she heard a song that changed everything.

On a bone-cold night in January 2000, Kristen Anderson made an impulsive decision: She walked to the railroad tracks not far from her Chicago home, lay facedown on the ground and let 33 freight cars roar over her body at 55 miles per hour.

The engineer frantically blew the whistle and brought the train to a halt—on top of Kristen’s body. The botched suicide attempt left the 17-year-old in piercing pain. As she lay there in her own blood, trying to decipher whether she was dreaming, Kristen managed to pull herself from under the train and crawl to some nearby rocks.

She looked around, patted the ground and suddenly realized her legs were gone. Kristen’s left leg was severed above the knee, and her right leg was cut off just below the knee. Both limbs had been thrown 10 feet away from her frail frame.

But right there, in the darkest hour of her life, the teen had an encounter with God. He had foiled her plans and instead of taking her to heaven as she hoped, He invited her to a “heavenly concert for one,” and Kristen heard the lyrics to the hymn “Amazing Grace.”

“A song filled my heart. There was no clear voice, yet the words were sharp and clear, playing 10 times louder than the music,” Kristen, now 27, tells readers in her new book, Life, in Spite of Me: Extraordinary Hope After a Fatal Choice.

Before that moment, Kristen didn’t realize she could turn to God with the pain she was feeling. “I didn’t know at the time in my life that I could go to God for comfort, strength, wisdom and understanding,” she told Charisma. “I stuffed it all down inside.”

She was just a sophomore in high school when her world began to feel overwhelming. In 1998, her close friend’s older brother was killed in a motorcycle accident. That same year, another friend on her high school’s football team was killed in a car accident. Then her grandmother died unexpectedly in 1999. The same year, Kristen was stalked by two boys, then raped by a third young man she considered a trusted friend.

“It was too much,” Kristen says. “When my grandmother passed away, my family didn’t talk about it. It just got really quiet in our house, and I didn’t know what to do with my feelings and how to handle them. And then I was raped.”

To look at Kristen today, it’s inconceivable that she would have tried to kill herself. She wears a bright smile and seems secure in her relationship with Christ. But in 1999 she faced yet another loss that would plant the seeds of her suicidal thoughts.

The Valley of the Shadow of Death

Kristen says she was stunned by the death of her childhood friend Brandon. He had been using drugs and stopped hanging out with her and his friends. But what shocked her most was the way he died. “He took his life by hanging himself in a cemetery, which was just a morbid, graphic, extreme way, and I just didn’t understand it at all.”

But she says her thought process started shifting. “It was when I was struggling through his death, wondering how he could ever do it, that I thought I could never do it the way he did it,” she says. “I started thinking, If I didn’t do it that way, how would I do it?

Kristen now believes Satan planted lies in her mind, telling her she wasn’t worthy to live, that no one would miss her and that her life no longer mattered. But at the time, she saw no end to her torment other than suicide. She began plotting her own death, trying to decide how she wanted to die, what would work and what wouldn’t.

Kristen was lying in her bedroom one night pondering a handful of ways to kill herself when a train passed by. As she heard the whistle and felt the house vibrate, she decided that would be a sure way to die. The thought didn’t return until later when she was sitting in a park trying to push back the pain she’d been feeling for months and heard a train nearby. Thinking she could quickly end her misery, Kristen stood up from the swing set and rushed to the tracks.

“I felt hopeless, and I didn’t want to be here,” she says. “I took such an extreme route because I just didn’t trust any other route. I figured this was the only way I could die.”

Kristen knows today it was God’s plan for her to live and tell others about Him, but initially she was angry with the paramedics for saving her life. She has had multiple surgeries and is being fitted for prosthetics. But recovering from the physical wounds was just part of the battle. Even after she accepted Christ in 2001, her struggle with deep depression continued.

Up From Depression

The Anderson family has long battled depression. Kristen describes her father’s long-term struggle with the illness as “a large, dark object that everyone tiptoed around.”  When she was 15, just two years before she tried to take her own life, Kristen learned that her father’s mother also was depressed and that his uncle had killed himself. But the Andersons are not alone.

According to the National Institute for Mental Health, approximately 58 million people in the U.S. have depression. And although women are twice as likely to be depressed as men, people in middle- and low-income households are reportedly less likely to be treated for the disorder because they cannot afford to get help.

The Centers for Disease Control says depressed individuals experience feelings of sadness or anxiety that last for weeks at a time. Symptoms of depression include but are not limited to feelings of helplessness, sadness, guilt and fatigue. Depressed people often lose their interest in everyday activities; they may gain weight or lose it, and may have thoughts of death and suicide.

Kristen encourages people to seek counseling if they are depressed, a topic that often draws mixed reactions among believers. Many Christians believe depression is often a form of demonic possession, but Kristen says Christians shouldn’t be so quick to blame all depression on demons.

“I think that anyone, Christian or not, can fall into depression—even me,” she says. “It would be naïve of me to think that I’m all good, and I’m covered, and nothing will ever happen to me or go wrong or that Satan will never try to mess with me again.

“It’s so easy for him to get into our minds and make us believe that we don’t matter. Knowing that those things are not true is critical because you cannot fight the lies if you don’t know … what the truth is.”

She learned about the enemy and how to defeat him in 2003, after she joined The Chapel, a nondenominational church located outside Chicago. There she began to see Satan at work in her life, feeding her the lies that provoked her suicidal thoughts.

Unlike the church she grew up in, The Chapel was full of love, and the people there seemed to love life and have joy, Kristen says. She became involved with the young adult ministry and started working with preschoolers and high school students. Church members would hold her accountable, and she felt she was where God wanted her. “Satan was out to destroy me,” Kristen says. “But when I got involved with the church, I got off my pain medication and antidepressants. That was the biggest surprise to my family.”

The Chapel pastor Jeff Griffin says Kristen was still suicidal and hopeless when she began attending the church, and he has watched her become joyful and content. “It would be too easy to be filled with self-pity in her situation, yet Christlike servanthood is what flows out of her heart,” Griffin says. “The level of transformation that has occurred in her life can be explained by nothing other than a miraculous work of Jesus Christ.”

Kristen says she spent three years in Christian counseling and describes herself as a “big fan” of the practice. “I struggled with depression after my suicide attempt because I was a new believer and the enemy didn’t want me to grow as a Christian,” she says. “But I needed to think through what led me to make a choice like [suicide] … and what led me so astray.”

A recent graduate of Moody Bible Institute, Kristen says every believer must arm himself with spiritual weapons, starting with the Word of God. She also has a message for families struggling with the death of a loved one who committed suicide. “I don’t believe suicide is an unpardonable sin,” she says. “Jesus died to forgive us of all our sins. He came to set us free, and only God knows what’s in the heart of any of us.

“There are some people who accepted Christ and put their faith in Him who ended up in a battle with depression and suicidal thoughts and had their lives end through suicide who are in heaven,” she adds. “I do not think that all people who commit suicide are in hell.”

Kristen knows it is the Holy Spirit who has given her the peace she now enjoys. She wants others to know that suicide is never the answer. But her greatest desire is to see people accept Jesus and develop a strong relationship with Him.

That’s why she founded Reaching You Ministries in 2004 with a mission to “reach the hurting, the hopeless, the lost, the suicidal and the depressed with the life-transforming hope and leadership offered to us in Christ.”

Kristen shares her testimony across the U.S. at churches, colleges, women’s and youth events, and suicide prevention outreaches. In 2006, she told her story to millions of viewers on The Oprah Winfrey Show.

“When people hear Kristen’s story, they cannot deny that God does transform desperate situations,” Griffin says. “We are seeing God use Kristen’s ministry to bring many previously despairing people into a transforming relationship with Christ.”

Kristen’s inspiring message of salvation and hope has resonated with her family members. Since her accident, her mother, father and siblings have come to Christ. And she says her father has come a long way in his recovery from depression.

She says God also is moving among the hundreds of people who inundate reachingyouministries.com with e-mails. Some are hurting or struggling with suicidal thoughts, while others are spiritually lost and need direction. They come to the website hoping to hear some encouragement from Kristen.

Her words to them can no doubt be found in the lyrics she heard on that dark, cold January night when she so desperately tried to end her life: “Amazing grace, how sweet the sound / That saved a wretch like me / I once was lost, but now am found / Was blind, but now I see.” 


Valerie G. Lowe is an associate editor for Charisma. “Amazing Grace” is one of her favorite hymns.


 

Learn how to gain victory over depression at depression.charismamag.com 




How to Pray God’s Purposes Over a Person’s Life

Problem-based praying identifies problems and forms appropriate requests. However, purpose-based praying forms requests appropriate to God’s purposes.

Jesus said, “I tell you the truth, the Son can do nothing by Himself; He can do only what He sees His Father doing, because whatever the Father does the Son also does” (John 5:19, NIV).

We should spend more time identifying and blessing what God is doing. Consider your prayer life. When you pray for someone or something, do you begin with what you see God doing or with what you wish He were doing? We suggest that you:

Identify what God is doing. What evidence, even subtle changes do you see?

Thank God and praise Him for what He’s doing. Thank Him for the circumstances He is arranging, the people and the influences He is using and the miracles He is performing in this situation.

Proclaim His works. Glorify His name.

Ask Him to enlarge the area of His activity. Ask Him to demonstrate His power and glorify His name as He extends His kingdom in this matter.

Rather than continually asking God to do what He is not doing, bless what He is doing!

Eddie and Alice Smith are founders of the U.S. Prayer Center in Houston, Texas.




Are You Sensitive to Carbs or Calories?

Gary Heavin, founder and CEO of Curves International, observes that some women do well on a particular diet, while other women on the same diet not only don’t lose weight, but actually gain weight. He attributes this to varied metabolisms and because some women are carbohydrate-sensitive and others are calorie-sensitive.

Carb-sensitive women are more than 25 pounds overweight, have been overweight most of their lives, often skip meals and crave starchy or sugary foods.

In general, calorie-sensitive women are less than 25 pounds overweight, didn’t have weight problems when they were younger, but have slowly gained weight since turning 30, have a normal appetite and few food cravings.

Some women have identifying factors in each group. Heavin recommends that these women start by watching carbs, and if they do not lose weight after two weeks, they should switch to a calorie-sensitive diet.

If results are not seen after trying both approaches, Heavin says these women’s metabolism may need a period of recovery before they can lose weight. More information is available in his book Curves (Perigee).




Are You Ready to Fight the Flu Epidemic?

With flu season (November to March) here, it is important to remember some of the natural ways to boost your immune system. According to Dr. Reginald Cherry, taking herbs such as echinacea will not only help your body fight off viral infections, they can also lessen symptoms, and can even protect you from coming down with the flu in the first place. He says many people take echinacea daily during flu season as a preventative measure.

“Echinacea works by stimulating the immune system,” says Cherry in his book Bible Health Secrets (Siloam, 2003), “but it should not be taken on a daily basis for an extended period of time because tolerance can develop and cause it not to work as effectively.” His advice is to take the herb for four to eight weeks, and then discontinue use for at least two weeks.

If you do come down with the flu, there’s nothing like a bowl of chicken soup, says Cherry, who also recommends the use of garlic to fight off viruses and bacteria. He suggests taking the equivalent of one clove of garlic per day in capsule form and to be sure to get enough fluids, especially if you develop a fever.


KARA DAVIS, M.D., is a doctor of internal medicine and a former assistant professor of medicine at the University of Illinois. She is also the author of Spiritual Secrets to Weight Loss (Charisma House).




With This Ring…I Give to the poor

With this ring...I give to the poor  Would you donate your wedding ring to a worthy cause if you knew it meant a child living in Africa would have clean drinking water for years to come? That’s the purpose behind With This Ring (WTR), a ministry dedicated to building wells in Third World countries. “We take to heart the command of Jesus when He says that we should sell our possessions and give the money to the poor,” says Ali Eastburn, executive director of WTR. “We believe that if we can learn to give radically, we can literally change the world for Jesus.” To donate your ring, first have it appraised for cut, style and estimated worth. If the cost of the appraisal is more than the ring, WTR recommends that you sell it and donate the proceeds to the ministry. If the ring is worth more than $500, go to withthisring.org and follow the steps to donate your jewelry.