Persecution Watch


Christians Massacred by Muslim Militants


Some 49 Christians were recently massacred by Islamic militants in a raid on the Christian town of Yelwa in Nigeria. According to the Barnabas Fund, ethnic Fulani Muslims reportedly shot most of the victims on Feb. 24 as they ran to a church desperately seeking refuge. Local Christians in Plateau State have suffered repeated attacks from ethnic Hausa-Fulani Muslim settlers since September 2001. Hundreds have been killed in the violence. Believers in Plateau say militant elements within the Muslim community are working on a strategy to drive out Christians in the state, Barnabas Fund said.


Christians Pressured to Give Up Faith in Eritrea


Police recently imprisoned a group of 51 Christians worshiping in secret in the Eritrean capital of Asmara. On Feb. 16, Mengse Tweldemedhane, pastor of the Hallelujah Church, was arrested along with his congregation in the Edaga Hamuse district, Compass Direct reported. The 34 men and 17 women were detained at a military camp until Feb. 18, when Tweldemedhane was separated from the group and locked in an underground cell. He remains under severe pressure to renounce his Protestant beliefs and return to the Eritrean Orthodox Church.


Christians Flee Villages After Mob Attack


Christian women in Orissa State, India, were attacked and humiliated recently by Hindus for refusing to give up their faith. On Feb. 6, Hindu extremists dragged eight women, including two 15-year-old girls, out of their homes while their husbands were at work and tried to persuade them to renounce Christianity, Compass Direct reported. When the women refused, the group beat the women, stripped them naked and forced them to walk through their villages before shaving their heads. The act of “tonsuring,” or shaving the crown of the head, is a religious ritual normally reserved for priests and monks. When the mob of about 45 villagers made further threats against them, the women and their families fled the two villages of Kilipala and Kanimul in Jagatsinghpur District of Orissa. About 20 people, including two infants, took shelter in a church in Bhubaneshwar.




Texas-Based Ministry Plants Churches, Offers Relief in Mexico

Founded in 1982, Mexico Ministries runs two Bible schools, two medical clinics and a missionary training center
More than 25 years ago, Larry Myers resigned his pastorate at Evangel Temple Assemblies of God in Denison, Texas, and headed south of the border.


He spoke no Spanish and knew little about Mexican culture, but in 1982 he launched Mexico Ministries, an outreach that helps build churches and train indigenous pastors, as well as offer medical and humanitarian assistance.


“I saw the tremendous needs there,” said Myers, 67. “Every little town of 10,000 in this country has 20 churches or more, but in Mexico there are thousands of villages without a church at all. I realized I was needed there more than in the States.”


Today Mexico Ministries runs two Bible schools, operates two medical clinics and conducts a missionary training center. But the Louisiana native is quick to credit God with the ministry’s accomplishments.


“God put a love in my heart for Mexico, but the vision developed over time,” said Myers, whose ministry is based in Denison. “Rarely does God show a vision to more than one person at a time, and rarely does God show a complete vision.


“Others have to believe the one who saw the vision. I had no idea when I started if it would be one trip, two trips or five trips.”


Myers learned to speak Spanish after spending time with the Mexican people and working in villages throughout the nation. Although the method worked, Myers recommends formal schooling for those who minister in foreign countries.


However, his inexperience in speaking Spanish and understanding Mexican culture provided some humorous moments during the ministry’s early days.


Myers stopped at a remote village late one evening and spent the night in his car. When he awoke the following morning, he discovered he had parked in front of a small restaurant and went inside to order breakfast.


“The waitress came over and asked me a question I didn’t understand,” Myers recalled. “I responded, ‘Dos huevos [Two eggs].’ That was about all the Spanish I knew.


“She brought me two raw eggs floating in some kind of liquid. Everyone else was stirring them up and drinking it, so I did too. It was terrible. I laid some money on the table and just walked away.”


Despite the humble beginnings, awkward moments and financial difficulties, Mexico Ministries grew and expanded through Myers’ diligent efforts. He has taken the gospel by boat along the Mexico-Guatemala border and by horseback deep into the mountains of Chiapas. These days, he alternates between raising funds in the United States and ministering in Mexico.


“I was once asked what my budget was, and I said, ‘Everything I raise,'” Myers told Charisma. “There is never enough to meet the needs. We have so many young men going out and evangelizing that there’s always a waiting list. As we have the funds, we build the churches, then do it over and over and over.”


Although he said every aspect of Mexico Ministries excites him, Myers said his passion is to share the gospel and build churches. His organization quit counting the number it has constructed years ago.


“The greatest call for me is taking the gospel to an unchurched people, building a church, walking away and duplicating it again,” he said. “Last year we completed a church almost every three weeks.”


Since Mexico Ministries began, the outreach has helped thousands receive medical and dental care, blankets, a place to worship and most important, the message of Christ. But Myers gives sole credit to God for the organization’s accomplishments.


“When people ask who I am, I tell them that I’m a 6-foot piece of PVC that was cast aside,” Myers said. “One day, God reached down, blew the filth away and began to use it. I am nothing but a conduit for Him.”
John Hillman in Denison, Texas




News Briefs


The following reports were released during the last month by Charisma News Service. Go to our Web site at to subscribe to the free weekday service or to access full-length versions of each day’s stories. The site also includes a search engine so you can access archived news.


FOURSQUARE PRESIDENT, TREASURER RESIGN
The head of the International Church of the Foursquare Gospel voluntarily resigned after the denomination lost $14 million by investing in two allegedly fraudulent organizations. According to a statement from the denomination, President Paul Risser and Treasurer Brent Morgan resigned March 10 during Foursquare’s annual cabinet meeting. Risser, 66, led the denomination in the sale of a Los Angeles radio station, and invested almost 6 percent of the $250 million profit in Financial Advisory Consultants Inc. and International Product Investment Corp. Both companies were shut down recently by federal authorities, who described them as Ponzi schemes. Risser had hoped the proceeds would enable Foursquare to “advance the kingdom of God,” the statement said. But leaders were divided on whether he had the authority to invest the money. Foursquare officials said there was no criminal intent on either man’s part, adding that Risser would “continue to be available to serve the church family.”


U.S. MISSIONARIES KILLED IN IRAQ
Four Southern Baptist missionaries who had been working on a water-purification project in Iraq were killed March 15 in a drive-by shooting in Mosul, northern Iraq, Baptist Press reported. Larry T. Elliot, 60, and his wife, Jean Dover Elliot, 58–both of Clary, N.C.; and Karen Denise Watson, 38, of Bakersfield, Calif., died at the scene. David E. McDonnall, 28, of Rowlett, Texas, died in a military hospital the next day. At press time, his wife, Carrie Taylor McDonnall, 26, remained in critical condition.


POSTAL CAMPAIGN TO HONOR WILLIAM SEYMOUR
A Florida evangelist has started a grass-roots effort to have the U.S. Postal Service recognize the black pastor who led the Azusa Street Revival in Los Angeles in 1906. Larry Martin, the academic dean at the Brownsville Revival School of Ministry in Pensacola, wants to honor William Seymour with a postage stamp. On Aug. 1, Martin plans to submit a formal petition asking the postal service to issue a stamp in April 2006 to honor the 100th anniversary of the Azusa Street Revival, which is credited with sparking the Pentecostal movement. For more information about Martin’s stamp campaign, visit .


HOLLYWOOD PONDERS RELIGIOUS FILMS AFTER PASSION SUCCESS
Hollywood is rethinking films of faith after the success of The Passion of the Christ. According to The New York Times, producers and studio executives are asking “whether the movie industry has been neglecting large segments of the American audience eager for more openly religious fare.” At press time, Mel Gibson’s dramatization of Christ’s final hours had been the top film for three consecutive weeks, pushing its total to $264 million in the United States and Canada, the Associated Press (AP) reported. With support from a large number of churches, The Passion was on track to gross between $350 million and $400 million, the AP said.


Karl Strader Marks 50 Years in Ministry


Well-known for hosting what was dubbed the “laughing revival” at his Carpenter’s Home Church, pastor Karl Strader will celebrate 50 years in ministry next month during a reception June 6 in Lakeland, Fla. An Assemblies of God minister, Strader joined the church’s staff in 1966. It grew to 5,000 members at Sunday services in the early 1990s when Rodney Howard-Browne led revival services there. Today the ministry has approximately 2,000 members. The anniversary also marks 50 years of marriage for Strader and his wife, Joyce.


Marlin Maddoux Dies at 70


Christian talk-radio pioneer Marlin Maddoux died March 4 in an Irving, Texas, hospital due to complications from heart bypass surgery, the Associated Press reported. He was 70. Best-known as the host of the Point of View radio talk show, Maddoux was the founder of USA Radio Network, which has 1,300 stations across the country. Maddoux is survived by his wife of 49 years, four children and 10 grandchildren.


Tammy Faye Messner Faces Lung Cancer


In an interview with CNN’s Larry King March 18, Tammy Faye Messner, 62, announced that she has inoperable lung cancer. The ex-wife of televangelist Jim Bakker said she plans to seek alternative cancer treatment in addition to chemotherapy. Since she divorced Bakker in 1992, Messner has become a personality in her own right, writing a book, I Will Survive … And You Will Too, and appearing on the reality show The Surreal Life.


If you have a news tip for Charisma News Service, e-mail us at charisma@.




British Evangelist Treks Across United States Repenting for Slavery

Traveling by faith on a skimpy budget, Geoff Sadler has been visiting U.S. cities and seaports that were once part of the slave trade.
The Liverpool, England, native begs African Americans to forgive his city’s role as the leading slave-ship port in the 18th century in hopes that genuine reconciliation will bring revival to his nation, theirs and Africa.


Sadler, 42, hatched the idea to repent for his hometown’s past sins in the fall of 2003 after researching Liverpool’s history of building slave ships as well as ships for the Confederate navy during the Civil War. “It shocked me,” he said.


Wealthy merchants also bankrolled slave-snatching expeditions to the west coast of Africa from 1740 to 1808. The ships unloaded their grieving human cargoes in Southern ports. John Newton, the reformed slave-ship captain who wrote the hymn “Amazing Grace,” sailed from Liverpool.


Sadler came to Christ at a Billy Graham crusade in Liverpool in 1984. He quit his job as a carpet installer and attended Roffey Place Bible School. He joined Youth With A Mission (YWAM) and worked in England, the former Soviet Union and the United States. While working for YWAM Slavic Ministries in Oregon in 2003, he sensed God calling him to apologize to black people.


“God started speaking to me about being involved in reaching out to African people both here and abroad, and also being involved in reconciliation and repentance issues concerning Liverpool’s involvement in the slave trade,” he said.


During a Sunday worship service in Albany, Ore., in November, he approached a black churchgoer saying: “This may sound weird but I’m from Liverpool, England, and we were heavily involved in the slave trade in the 1700s. I want to ask for forgiveness and will you pray with me.”


The man didn’t act surprised about Sadler’s offbeat plea and prayed with him. Several weeks later Sadler connected with black people on the street. Hesitant at first, he gained confidence that he was doing God’s will and won over skeptics with his self-effacing demeanor. Then the Holy Spirit prompted him, “Go to places where Liverpool ships docked.”


In January he landed on the East Coast sharing his vision one-on-one with hundreds of African Americans. He visited the site of the main slave market in Richmond, Va., where he prayed publicly and witnessed to passers-by. However, one man challenged, “Oh yeah, we forgive you, but where’s the money?” When Sadler pulled the last $5 bill from his wallet, the young man refused it, but showed him an article about reparations.


Watching Sadler praying by the Mississippi River in New Orleans, two black men questioned what he was doing. When he revealed his mission their eyes moistened. “We wish there were more people like you doing this,” they said.


In Annapolis, Md., he kneeled in a historic pub and restaurant, attracting the attention of kitchen workers. One of them accepted his forgiveness while another one said, “How are you going to make it up to us?”


In Atlanta Sadler spoke to street people loitering near a subway station. “I felt God moving in their hearts,” he said. “Some people became tearful. There was sadness in their eyes.”


Sadler addressed members of Messiah’s World Outreach, an independent African American charismatic church in Scottdale, Ga., a suburb of Atlanta. The congregation embraced his message and was impressed that someone would travel from England to repent for the sins of his forefathers.


“This gentleman is one of the few voices acknowledging that,” said the church’s pastor, Donn C. Thomas. “Rather than reopening wounds, it’s an opportunity to heal wounds that have never been closed. It’s an attempt by God to bring significant healing to the generation that is living today. Who knows, it could start a revival in reconciliation.”


Sadler will join a church in Georgia soon. In October he will participate in a YWAM initiative visiting former U.S. slave markets and ports. They will walk in shackles and chains as a symbolic sign of apology for the slave trade.


Sadler sees all of his efforts aimed ultimately at revival in Liverpool. “I feel this is the purpose God has prepared for me,” he said. “This is my calling now. I see reconciliation and repentance as a foundation for revival in the United States, Liverpool and Africa.”
Peter K. Johnson




Sight and Sound


BOOKS


Jesus in Beijing

By David Aikman,
Regnery Publishing,
Hardcover, 344 pages, $.


If your spirit needs a boost, read this masterful account of Christianity’s advance in China. Former Beijing bureau chief for Time magazine and Charisma columnist David Aikman predicts this phenomenon could transform the world by 2030.


Full of anecdotes brimming with signs and wonders, the book’s strength comes from its focus on God. It reminds readers that only one Being could have masterminded the events that brought China to this remarkable position.


Though it includes historical perspectives and a chapter on the Catholic Church, much of Jesus in Beijing: How Christianity Is Transforming China and Changing the Global Balance of Power examines the burgeoning house-church movement. The most captivating chapters review patriarchs and leaders of both genders who withstood torture, persecution and imprisonment to proclaim the gospel.


Pentecostals and charismatics will appreciate the tracing of American pastor Dennis Balcombe’s influence. According to Aikman, as an outgrowth of the Californian’s preaching and teaching there, more than half China’s house-church believers belong to the Spirit-filled fold.
Ken Walker


Seven Things That Steal Your Joy
By Joyce Meyer, Warner Faith,
Hardcover, 230 pages, $.


Anointed evangelist Joyce Meyer brings together a number of teachings in her new release, Seven Things That Steal Your Joy: Overcoming the Obstacles to Your Happiness. Meyer’s followers will hear echoes from previous teachings as they learn how to break free from the strongholds that steal their joy.


A list of Meyer’s joy-stealers points to the themes always present in her evangelism: works of the flesh, religious legalism, complicating simple events, excessive reasoning, ungodly anger, jealousy and envy, and habitual discontent. She follows each joy-stealer with a joy-keeper to reinforce her message of trusting God in faith in order to be at rest.


As much as Meyer protests the overuse of secular counseling, this book is vintage Meyer in providing accessible counseling based on God’s Word. It is a complement to the volumes she has already provided in her Christian-counseling outreach. Most important, Meyer ministers powerfully to the real emotional need of contemporary Christians–an intimate relationship with Jesus Christ.
Pamela Robinson


Twentysomething
By Margaret Feinberg,
W Publishing Group,
Softcover, 192 pages, $.


The transition from full-time college student to independent adult involves extensive decision-making. For those in the quarter-life stage, Margaret Feinberg offers a guide to “surviving and thriving in the real world” in Twentysomething.


Using relevant lingo and drawing from interviews with 20-somethings, Feinberg, also in her 20s, discusses topics such as landing a job, managing finances and facing disappointments. The book is sprinkled with supportive Scriptures and “Fast Facts,” including the current number of 25-year-olds buying first homes. The book concludes with six “Freebies,” such as tips for “Moving Back in With the Fam.”


Some of the humor early in the book is youthful sarcasm. The content grows in maturity as the book progresses, focusing more on the spiritual aspects of becoming a well-adjusted adult.


The book’s specific audience is 20-something college grads, particularly those whose college expenses were covered by their parents. The hip, candid writing style of Twentysomething will connect with and encourage its intended readers.
Leslie Santamaria


MUSIC


Faithful


By Hillsong, Integrity Music.


Hillsong is the praise and worship team led by Darlene Zschech, and Faithful presents a series of songs that express appreciation for God’s steadfastness. The reverent “Mercy Endures” paraphrases various psalms to highlight God’s eternal grace, whereas the hushed “Faithful to the End” features a male and a female lead vocalist as it meditates upon God’s sure covenant with the body of Christ.


The general sound of this release is adult pop, although “Wonder” leans just a little toward the dancey side, and this release’s remix of “Magnificent” rides atop a wave of strings and features a delightful flugelhorn solo. By delegating some of the singing duties to her fellow group members, Zschech has given this release much vocal variety. For instance, “Chosen As Mine” particularly stands out for its R&B/soul-inspired male vocal.


Although it’s far from what you might call unplugged, this CD is nevertheless a quiet, meditative collection of songs. Hillsong’s Faithful faithfully follows a smooth music worship path.
Dan MacIntosh


More Than Life

By United, Integrity Music.


Sales sheets for the band United say the group is the top-selling modern-worship act in Australia. It originated from the “United” youth ministry at the 15,000-member Hillsong Church in Sydney.


Like other Hillsong projects, More Than Life shows why this church has inspired a modern-worship movement, with 10 new songs and five favorites that will bring down the house. Recorded live, United opens with the enthusiastic “One Way” and proceeds to use a mix of guitars, bass and drums to deliver the message that God is on His throne and His Son, Jesus, reigns forever.


One reason this album stands out is the unabashed disregard for the radio-friendly three-minute “packaged” song. Free-form worship here runs from three to more than seven minutes, with highlights including “Sing (Your Love)” and “Where the Love Lasts Forever.”


United will sound very familiar to fans of Hillsong, Vineyard and other live, loose modern-worship projects. One of the biggest advantages is that these songs are catchy without being the same worship songs that have been recorded again and again. More Than Life offers a fresh alternative.
Natalie Nichols Gillespie


Hands Lifted High

By Dennis Jernigan, Doxology Records.


On Hands Lifted High, worship leader Dennis Jernigan demonstrates once again the versatility of his talent for praise and worship that edifies the modern church. By blending the styles and voices of top artists in duets and a trio, Jernigan creates an uplifting and inspiring version of greatest hits, with standout performances by special guests, including Natalie Grant, Jeff Deyo, Ron Kenoly and Rebecca St. James.


The opener with Grant, “You Are My All in All,” sets the tone for the avid Jernigan fan to prepare for something different. The instrumental intro is a refreshing variation from the usual and anticipated piano-backed offerings. The bonus track, “Let Freedom Ring,” is the patriotic theme song for the National Day of Prayer 2004 and is an inspiration.


Hands Lifted High is a passionate expression of worship to the Lord which typically characterizes Jernigan’s music, but with added musical diversity and refreshing twists. Listeners who have cherished this worship leader and prolific songwriter’s music will find this album a pleasing addition to their collections.
Elizabeth Witherell


Born Again

By Greg Long, Christian Records.


With song titles such as “Born Again;” “Sing About Jesus;” “The Cross, the Blood, the Love;” and “Savior of the World,” Greg Long makes no bones about what he believes on his new solo project, Born Again. Long stays firmly rooted in adult contemporary and inspirational territory with light pop creations and ballads that accent his beautiful tenor vocals.


The most powerful track is the story song “Fifteen,” a reminder that we are to plant seeds of the gospel continually. The song states: “If it takes fifteen times / To hear about Jesus / For someone to believe / Wherever I stand in line / I’ve got to make a difference / In case it comes down to me … What if I’m fifteen?”


Title track “Born Again” captures the infectious enthusiasm of new conversion and baptism, while “Once Upon a Time” is a quiet gem that retells the story of Christ’s birth, life and saving grace. The R&B-flavored “The Cross, the Blood, the Love” is a winner, and Long waxes pleasantly nostalgic on his rendition of Dallas Holm’s 1970s classic “Rise Again.”


The only missteps may be “Sing About Jesus” and “Savior of the World,” which have great lyrics but a dated sound. Overall, Long’s new solo album deserves to be heard.
Natalie Nichols Gillespie


NEWS


Books Help Kids Experience God


Opening a life-changing moment in children’s lives” is the ambition of CharismaKids and CasaKids books, which launched their premiere titles last month.


“We see children as Spirit-empowered believers,” explains editor Pat Matuszak. “Our message to kids is not about being good Christians; it’s about experiencing God.”


The first six books–four of which are being released simultaneously in Spanish–take advantage of popular Strang Communications authors Dr. Don Colbert and Juanita Bynum, along with Casa Creación publisher Tessie DeVore.


The Toxic Detective by Colbert is an interactive adventure story. Parents and children will learn biblical principles about healthy living.


Bynum boiled down her message from Matters of the Heart for A Heart for Jesus, using a narrative of a girl who sees how God changes her mother from the inside out. Matuszak said she asked women who’ve been changed by Bynum’s message how they would relate that same message to their children.


Interactivity comes into play through a finger puppet in Hover Gets His Wings by Chris Blake, which is about finding courage through the Holy Spirit. Blake also wrote I’m Just the Right Size, the tale of a crab who thinks he’s too small to be noticed. By story’s end, the crab and his fish friends have learned about the self-esteem, patience, power and courage that come from God.


Praying With the Presidents, written by multiple Gold Medallion Award-winning artist Ron DiCianni, helps children get involved with this country’s national leaders through prayer. Study questions and suggested prayers are included.


Happy Birthday to Me! by husband-and-wife writing team David and Tessie DeVore features a child whose parents are Anglo and Hispanic. This story of a boy who celebrates his birthday with multicultural customs incorporates Spanish words into the text in a natural flow.


Releasing this fall are Jack Hayford’s ACTS! Bible Story Book with Carol Wedeven and Big Bad Bible Bullies by Scott Hagan. Hagan uses Bible heroes to teach children how to deal with bullies.


Under the CasaKids imprint in Spanish are ¡Feliz cumpleaños a mí! (Happy Birthday to Me!), Cometín recibe sus alas (Hover Gets His Wings), Un corazón para Jesús (A Heart for Jesus) and ¡Soy del tamaño correcto! (I’m Just the Right Size). Out this month is Una parábola sobre el Rey, the Spanish version of A Parable of the King by Beth Moore.


Matuszak explains: “This is a different take on children’s books because we’re dealing with the Holy Spirit in children’s lives. The use of story opens that window in a child to see how the Holy Spirit relates to his or her life.”


She adds that these products see children as participants with the Holy Spirit no matter what their individual ages, rather than teaching them that the concept applies only when they grow up.


“Our books emphasize the power of prayer and a personal relationship with God,” Matuszak says. “They answer three questions for kids: How can I experience God’s presence, find His purpose for my life and receive His power to fulfill it?”
Elizabeth Witherell


MUSIC SPOTLIGHT


Voice of the Celts


As the “first lady” of Celtic music, Moya Brennan was the ideal choice to lead the St. Patrick’s Day celebrations at Capitol Hill in March. The singer is known not only for creating a new genre with Irish band Clannad but also for sharing her Christian faith.


President Bush, Sen. Ted Kennedy, Irish Prime Minister Bertie Ahern and political leaders from Northern Ireland were among those who gave Brennan “a fantastic reception.” Her short set included “Theme From Harry’s Game,” a major hit for Clannad in 1982.


Back then, the group’s haunting vocals set a fresh tone and Brennan became known as “the voice of Clannad.” Since then, she has released a series of solo albums that speak openly about her faith. Brought up in a Catholic home, Brennan now attends St. Mark’s, a charismatic church in the heart of Ireland’s capital, Dublin.


However, her latest release, Two Horizons, is not overtly Christian; it’s a concept album about a harp. New Age listeners will love it. Brennan knows that when such fans hear her mainstream material, they investitgate her Christian recordings–sometimes with life-changing results.


“Quite a number” have traveled that journey, she says. “I always include the Lord in all my work.”


It fits the evangelistic model pioneered by St. Patrick and others. The Celtic saints were known for weaving timelss truths into the art and culture of their day.
Clive Price


CHARISMATIC TOP SELLERS


1. Total Forgiveness
R.T. Kendall (Charisma House)


2. Matters of the Heart
Juanita Bynum (Charisma House)


3. The Three Battlegrounds
Francis Frangipane (Arrow Publications)


4. Pigs in the Parlor
Frank and Ida Mae Hammond
(Impact Christian Books)


5. The Torch and The Sword
Rick Joyner (Destiny Image)


6. A Divine Revelation of Hell
Mary K. Baxter (Whitaker House)


7. Prison to Praise
Merlin R. Carothers (Merlin R. Carothers)


8. The Tongue
Charles Capps (Harrison House)


9. The Final Quest
Rick Joyner (Whitaker House)


10. Within the Gates
Rebecca R. Springer (Christ for the Nations)




From a Distant Shore

Songwriter Darlene Zschech lives in Australia, but her music has revitalized worship in thousands of churches on this side of the planet.

You’ve probably heard of her, although you may have mispronounced her last name. Darlene Zschech (pronounced “check”) might not conjure up the face of the blue-eyed, blond-haired Australian beauty, but the chorus she wrote in 1993, “Shout to the Lord,” should surely resonate as soon as you read the words: “Shout to the Lord / All the earth / Let us sing / Power and majesty / Praise to the King.”
Zschech is the person behind this and many other worship songs currently popular the world over, including “The Potters Hand,” “Worthy Is the Lamb,” “All Things Are Possible” and “I Will Run to You.” But what is crucial to remember is that she is first and foremost a worshiper–then a wife, mother, songwriter and worship leader.


Her love for her Lord shines through, and she knows this love is contagious. It’s as if she wants to infect everyone around her.


“I owe Him so much more than my life,” she says. “I’m eternally thankful. And whether on a platform or in my bedroom, I worship and honor Him the best I know how.”


For Zschech, 38, music has always been an integral part of her life. She’s been singing professionally since age 10 when she appeared on a weekly children’s TV program in Australia called Happy Go Round.


“So I’ve sung every bad song there is as well as some good ones,” she notes with a smile.


Her childhood was full of joyful memories, as well as disappointments and heartaches. She grew up with loving parents, but their decision to divorce when she was 13 brought a tragedy to her family that she thought happened only to other people.


Her teenage years were bumpy, as she was riddled with guilt and anxiety, responses typical of children from broken homes, she says. However, through the trial Zschech found more than tragedy.


“The longing in my heart found its home the day I found Jesus at the age of 15,” she says.


When Zschech became a Christian, her life radically changed. “Everything in the natural sense remained the same, but my heart was completely changed. I can honestly say that from that day till this, Jesus takes my breath away,” she says.


“He has literally walked me through the valleys. Magnificent! I cannot praise Him enough for reaching down, like Psalm 18 describes, and rescuing me.”


Not long afterward, she started to want more.


“It wasn’t long after we were in church I really had an encounter with the Holy Spirit,” she says. “When you accept Christ you get the whole deal–Father, Son, Holy Ghost. You don’t get two out of three; you get the three.


“Without that real sort of encounter with the Holy Spirit there’s just no way that I would have the strength and that fire in my belly to get up and do what I do today,” she adds. “That ‘keeping’ power of God is amazing.”


The Servant’s Life


What the Holy Spirit helps her “do” is serve as worship pastor of the 15,000-member Hillsong Church in Sydney, Australia. Zschech oversees the Worship and Creative Arts Department of the church.


In addition, she is worship leader for the Hillsong Television program, which reaches more than 125 countries, and associate director of Hillsong Conference, an annual music and leadership conference held by the church. Last year it drew 18,000 people from more than 70 countries.


She has written three books: Worship (Hillsong Music Australia), Extravagant Worship and The Kiss of Heaven (Bethany House). She is also a mother–she and husband Mark of 19 years have three daughters, Amy, 15, Chloe, 11, and Zoe, 3.


Adding to this list of titles is Zschech’s best-known role as an award-nominated songwriter and producer. “Shout to the Lord” is sung today by an estimated 25 million to 30 million churchgoers each week and has been recorded by more than 20 other artists. Hillsong Music Australia’s best-selling albums, for which Zschech is lead vocalist and producer, have reached gold status, selling more than 7 million copies.


Zschech says she really doesn’t think much about her far-reaching influence.


“I don’t understand it,” she says. “I’m with my team most of the time. I travel a bit, but I’m with my church, my team, my family–that’s where I concentrate my focus. I take the responsibility seriously. I don’t treat that lightly. I just want to honor God. I didn’t go out looking for it.”


To help keep that focus, Zschech says she protects herself from getting too wrapped up in the business side of making music. She prefers not even to know how many CDs she’s sold. She actually avoids conversations about that if she can.


“My husband is a great protector because he knows my heart,” she says, adding: “Even when I started working at the church, I didn’t want to be paid because I was like, ‘What if my heart goes the wrong way?'”


She acknowledges having her own faults, while recognizing that in spite of them she has a role to fulfill.


“I’m imperfect just like humanity is so imperfect,” she says. “And the Word says the heart is deceitful above all else. I get it wrong and have gotten it wrong so many times. I don’t forget about the influence or my role for myself and my children. I really want to be better for Him.”


Zschech maintains some barriers as a way to shield herself from the international recognition. One of them is to stay planted in her local church, serving and contributing to the music team. She says if anyone on her team wants to get an ego, even for a second, that “they’ll just get it knocked out of ’em so quick.”


“‘Get over yourself,'” is the team’s advice.


Having known many worship leaders who have had some sort of influence through their churches, she is saddened when they leave to do their own thing and end up with less-than-happy results.


“If God calls you, you better know God has called you, because it’s usually the church family that’s given you any sort of platform,” Zschech says. “If you leave your home base and believe your own mail and your own press, it’s only a matter of time before you implode, and then it’s really sad.”


She believes the primary pitfall of a Christian leader is self-admiration. That’s why she stresses the need to always maintain the heart of a servant.


“I think for every Christian leader your admiration is your worst enemy,” she says. “I think you need to be always getting your hands dirty, serving. You don’t graduate from a life of service. The price for us is higher.”


Zschech is careful not to assume more power than is given to her as a worship leader. She believes the amount of influence a worship leader has “depends on how much you’ve been given … by your pastor.”


She explains: “My responsibility is to make sure that the integrity of worship in the body and in our local church is strong and their understanding of what they’re doing is always increasing.”


She notes that in fulfilling that responsibility she is “still serving” rather than leading.


“We worship for 20 minutes–mini-worship–but that’s what we’ve been given, that’s what we do,” she says. “Our church has learned we don’t need 20 minutes to warm up–we need 20 seconds because we’ve only got a little bit of time. It’s inspiring. You just do the best you can with what you’ve got.


“We don’t talk a lot. If we’ve been asked to or been given permission then we do, but if not, we don’t,” she adds. “When you serve another man’s vision and make it yours and then God gives you your own thing, the challenge is to continue to serve another man’s vision. It’s easy when you’ve got no vision of your own.”


Just a Simple Songsmith?


Even with more than 60 songs to her credit, Zschech says she is not really a prolific songwriter. Songs “develop” in her, she says, and often come out of her own personal experiences.


“Some people write cards, some people bottle up their feelings, some people write poetry. I write a song,” she says.


Some are recorded, but some are not–the decision being determined by Zschech’s personal view of the song.


“A lot of songs you don’t hear, and a few you do,” she adds. “I’m writing all the time, but some of them are not for the church, they’re just between me and the Lord.”


Zschech sees a difference between an artistic song and a worship song. Worship songs have to serve the congregation, she says.


“I think you want the congregation to sing, so you’ve got to write it so they’re able to sing it,” she points out. “And often it means as a writer you write as a servant not as an artist. And often I find that’s just a real easy difference in writing.


“I think there is always room for songs to reveal how you feel,” she admits. “But for the greater church, more and more they just need to be singing the Word because it’s the Word that holds life and truth that sets people free. You want to put the Word to music for them to help them live, not that you just express yourself–that’s not a good enough reason to inflict that on the congregation.”


Perhaps functioning more as an artist than as a worship leader, Zschech released her first solo project in October, Kiss of Heaven (INO Records). The songs on this album were not written specifically for church worship, yet there is a deep dimension of worship to them.


Zschech says she had wanted to do this album for a long time but that the time had not been right because other projects took priority.


“I didn’t really have a lot of time to work on it because we were working on our church album Hope,” she says. “And I just knew if I gave my first fruits again to the [church] and didn’t compromise on that at all, that God would honor my leftovers, what I had left, what He trusted me with.”


“Everything About You,” from her solo album, is a love song for her husband. Zschech says that for years he had been asking her to write a song for him. “You’ve written a song for the kids,” he told her. “You’ve written a song for your father. You’ve written a song for other people’s fathers. What about me?”


Though the song was written specifically for her husband and was not intended to be a general love song, Zschech says many people love it. “I’ve gotten some amazing feedback that it’s challenged people’s commitment to their spouses,” she says.


She voices a concern that the church does not do enough to celebrate long-term marriage commitments. Being a child of a broken home has resulted in her appreciating the finer points of a successful marriage.


“I’m, like, can’t we just celebrate the goodness of God? Without God we certainly wouldn’t be together. I love [my husband],” she says. “He’s cool. That’s pretty much inspiration for a song.”


Zschech says her husband wants another song. “I’m, like, ‘No, I’m going back to my first love–God.'”


Room for Everyone


Her love for God is what she wants to proclaim. But as a worship leader she wants to inspire and lead others to proclaim their love for Him too. It has encouraged her to see the changes in congregational worship that have occurred throughout the church during the last several years.


“I think in the last five years, the way we do church has changed,” she says. “The congregation is actually worshiping and not just listening or being entertained.


“Even people who used to just dabble in worship, you just can’t get away [with] that any more. It’s like either you are a worshiper or you’re not. I think it’s been a great journey, it’s been wonderful.”


She believes these changes have helped reshape the church, drawing it closer to a common goal of knowing and loving God from the heart. “I don’t think it’s songs or style–it’s heart, it’s spirit. There is room for all sorts of styles and sounds,” she says. “If you want to look at New Zealand through to Africa–every culture brings its own, and it’s all magnificent.


“So it’s always come back to the heart,” she notes. “I think the heart has been challenged in worship in the last five years.”


The word “unity” is specifically what comes to mind when Zschech thinks about what God is doing globally in His church.


“I see a great unity across the body of Christ,” she says. “God says Himself He commands blessing on unity. And if God commands blessing on unity, I just think, Man, what would that look like?


“It’s not our version of blessing, but His. What would that look like for the earth? Is it His glory, His goodness? Possibly. My desire is to see more signs and wonders, healing, reconciliation. Hard hearts would be changed. As hearts are changed, we are changed.


“People preach gloom and doom over the church, but I see exactly the opposite,” she adds. “I see it rising strong, glorious, unified. Not perfect–very imperfect. But that’s why we need God.”


Zschech sees some good coming from the United States pertaining to worshiping God, but she also talks about what she sees wrong with America.


“I’ve seen it change a lot. I don’t want to point the finger because in a lot of ways you have also pushed the bar so high on so many other levels.


“I just think for a long time the church [in America] has gotten caught in the wrong things,” she says. “Sort of a hierarchical system … religious thinking, who’s allowed to do this or what you’re allowed to wear–all those things that stand in the way.”


Religious approaches to God that exclude the majority of believers are “really sad,” she says, and overlook the key biblical tenet that worship in the kingdom of God is inclusive but never exclusive. Music artists or worship leaders who consider themselves or what they do as exclusive have missed the point, she notes.


“As artists, you are gifted and talented, and there is an exclusivity about what you do. But when it comes to worship, it’s about the Lord and it’s inclusive–every man, woman and child. It’s, ‘Shout to God, all the earth.’


“And so when it becomes just for the chosen few, [you’ve] probably got to relook at why you’re doing what you’re doing and whether it is serving the purpose well. I just think if we just get captivated by Jesus it’s amazing how things fall into place.”


One approach that can hold people back, she says, is the long-held debate of whether or not women should be in roles of leadership. Zschech adds, however, that she herself has hardly encountered any resistance to her role as a prominent female worship leader.


“I just think, If you don’t like it, don’t listen. … Find a guy and let him lead you.


“Actually, … I think if it’s a problem for you, listen to Ron Kenoly, listen to Alvin Slaughter, listen to Delirious,” she adds. “There are a million guys out there doing a finer job than I ever will. Go for it–just worship God. Don’t let a silly thing like is it male or female keep you outside of encountering Christ. That would really be a shame.”


When it comes to encountering Christ, Zschech just wants everyone to know that “the kind of walk that I’m walking is so available to everybody.”


“I’m just a very ordinary person. I’m not a special anything,” she says. “It’s hard work–what we do is hard work–but there is also favor, just great favor. It makes it so much easier–no striving–a different way to live.


“Trust God. It’s the hardest lesson in life–let yourself fall into the hands of God.”


A From Down Under


Christian music from Australia–with its raw, youthful edge– is topping charts around the world.


When Rebecca St. James and the Newsboys finished their 34-city tour in April, they were considered some of America’s most influential contemporary Christian musicians. But these recording artists are Aussies!


The Australian origins of these acclaimed acts and of other international artists, including Darlene Zschech and Paul Colman, point to a thriving Christian music scene Down Under. Its strength came to light last December when singer Guy Sebastian won the Australian Idol contest. A committed Christian, Sebastian honed his talent at Adelaide’s Paradise Community Church, whose Planet Shakers conferences have expanded into a national youth forum for Christian music.


The edgy sound of Australia’s youth culture has been a major shaper of the country’s praise and worship genre. “The music here has a touch of rawness about it,” says Wes Jay of Woodlands Media, which specializes in promoting and nurturing Christian acts.


Other influences, Jay believes, are an inclination to improvise and a willingness to engage audiences. He cites a defining moment for the Paul Colman Trio when the sound system failed at Nashville’s Roman Auditorium during a Gospel Music Week.


The trio “immediately engaged the audience,” Jay says, “and they got everybody singing along. [They] won the hearts of America because they said, ‘Even in our difficulties here we’re going to still minister to you. … We’re going to create a sense of community and involve you.'”


Australians cut straight to the heart. Carl Laurens, creative ministries director at Waverley Christian Fellowship, Melbourne’s largest church, believes homegrown praise and worship songs grew out of this attitude.


“There was a genuineness about our worship that hadn’t been tainted by [its] marketability, so I think we’ve got to be careful that that doesn’t creep in,” he warns.


Exploiting their cross-cultural appeal, Australian Pentecostals have established music-focused churches in places as diverse as Tokyo, Ukraine and London. Last summer Assemblies of God youth teams traveled to Japan–notorious for its resistance to the gospel–to present outreach concerts in Tokyo and Osaka. The events yielded more than 300 conversions, a harvest that staggered experienced missionaries.


One of Australia’s best-established Christian singers also has an overseas focus, yet it is not only in the big-arena music scene. In 1996 the Gospel Music Association of America voted Steve Grace as International Artist of the Year, an apt title in the light of his close involvement with Samaritan’s Purse. Apart from playing at Franklin Graham’s crusades, Grace, a son of missionaries, has linked with Operation Christmas Child to visit Malaysia and the Solomon Islands to deliver thousands of gift-filled shoeboxes.


In songs such as “Saints of Sudan” and “Christmas in Kosovo,” Grace draws attention to people in need. “I’m just making people aware that we can bring about great historic change in nations that are either war-torn or in desperate situations,” he told Charisma.


Instrumental band Rivertribe offers a different international dimension, blending indigenous instruments from around the world to recreate a spiritual element the band believes is missing from both secular and church life. Originally Melbourne buskers with a sound based around the aboriginal didgeridoo, they craft a multicultural style they hope will be widely relevant and touch hearts in a way that songs with words cannot.


Although Rivertribe is gaining popularity in the United States and other artists such as Roma Waterman, Alabaster Box and Nathan Taske, are not far behind, a legion of unknowns is waiting to be discovered. Very few find success in the small Australian market, but Jay believes this has its positive side: “Australian Christian music is genuine, it is the real deal.”


Even within its own genre the chances of success are slim. “There are literally hundreds and hundreds of acts,” Jay says. “There are 160 new Christian albums made by Aussies each year, and out of those about 10 will rise to the top.”


Mark Conner, Waverley Christian Fellowship’s senior pastor, spent a few years in the United States and played keyboards for Ron Kenoly and Marty Nystrom. He identifies a different measure for success in the Christian music business.


“One thing that is a strength is that many of the worship songs coming out of Australia are birthed out of local churches and ministries that God is already blessing,” Conner says. “They are songs that have emerged out of what God is doing–songs that have already been proven to release people to touch God in worship that are then recorded for the benefit of others.”


In other words, Christian music from Down Under is not just about marketing and the almighty dollar. That could be Aussie music’s biggest contribution.
Adrian Brookes


Aussie Women Lead the Way


In Australia, women in Pentecostal and charismatic churches are enjoying a new day of opportunity.


Australia was the first nation in the world to grant women the right to vote and run for office. Among the notably few voices opposing that 1902 decision were 34 South Australian women who said they could not participate in the political process. “The energies of women are engrossed by their present duties and interests from which men cannot relieve them,” the women said.


Worship leader Darlene Zschech still runs into remnants of those attitudes. “The only negative comments I’ve ever received have been from women,” she says, noting that opposition is usually “in regards to being a working mother, rather than a woman in leadership.”


Zschech, who is worship pastor at Hillsong Church in Sydney, believes women’s influence in Australia’s Pentecostal and charismatic churches is strong. And, she adds, men are consistently supportive of women in ministry.


Her experience seems typical at all levels. Sharing the high profile is former tennis champion Margaret Court, now senior pastor of Victory Life Church in Perth. The winner of 64 Grand Slam titles emphasizes that ministry is “a gift on people’s lives, it’s not appointed by man.”


Court believes women leaders are readily accepted in Australia. “People know the gift and the call and the grace that is upon our work, and I don’t believe that they can question it,” she says.


Others, without Court’s profile, share a similar experience. Penny Webb, an associate pastor at Perth’s 3,000-strong Riverview Church, believes that though Zschech and Court are inspirational, women have been the backbone of many church activities.


“Women are involved in ministry based on their giftings, their constancy, their capacity to do the job,” she says of Riverview. “When it comes to even our teaching team … there are just as many women that actually teach in our weekend services as men.”


Though Webb regards Australia’s reputed male chauvinism as a myth, she concedes that Riverview may be ahead of the trend toward acceptance of women in the pulpit. For instance, the Assemblies of God (AG), Australia’s largest Pentecostal denomination, shows a marked disparity between policy and practice.


“The Assemblies of God in Australia has always taken a position of supporting women in leadership,” says Keith Ainge, the AG’s national ministries director. “The first national conference, which was in the 1930s, formally made a statement that supported women in ministry.”


Ainge readily admits, however, that the statistics do not reflect this. As of September, 2,408 people held AG credentials, but only 503, or percent, were women.


The gender disparity of senior ministers is still greater. Of 1,010 AG senior pastors only 35, or percent, were women. The number of female credential holders had, however, increased from 464 in 2002 to 503 in 2003.


Ainge was instrumental in encouraging Melbourne pastor Melinda Dwight into leadership, first of all as senior minister of Burwood Christian Life Center and then as a member of the AG’s Victorian State Executive. Dwight’s reluctance in taking the state executive post may reflect other women’s attitudes.


“I assumed that I was putting my name forward because God was teaching me a lesson about humility,” she says, “so I totally planned for how to handle rejection and public humiliation. It was a great surprise to me when people voted me for that position.”


Despite widespread approval of her leadership Dwight remains the country’s only female state executive member and still sees obstacles for women. “I think there are challenges in terms of perceptions within the church,” she says. “Women senior pastors are a very small group, so having support in those sorts of things is not quite there.”


Though neglect may be more significant than visible opposition, Jim Reiher, a lecturer at Melbourne’s Tabor College, points out there is still plenty of opportunity for covert resistance. “I did a survey [in 1999] and found about one in three leaders in th e AG in Victoria don’t really want women to be senior pastors,” he says.


But Webb is upbeat and optimistic about the future role of women in Australia’s church. As a mother of three, she admits women’s maternal role can be restrictive. But she challenges other aspiring women leaders to learn how to balance responsibilities.


“This is the juggling we have to do as mothers in ministry,” Webb said on a cell phone while picking her child up from school. “But I love it. I wouldn’t have it any other way.”
Adrian Brookes


Leigh DeVore is an assistant editor for Charisma. She interviewed Darlene Zschech in September.




Blessing Our Servicemen


If you are like me, you are proud of the 100,000 U.S. troops who are serving in Kuwait, Iraq and Afghanistan, defending democracy and waging war on terrorism. These brave men and women are serving under very difficult circumstances far from family and friends. Their work is dangerous and tiring and benefits us all.


A few months ago we had the privilege of publishing a book about our president titled The Faith of George W. Bush. We have been encouraged by the response to the book and the powerful message of faith author Stephen Mansfield crafted.


Now, we have an opportunity to get this book into the hands of military personnel who we believe will be blessed by the message and inspired by the faith of their commander in chief.


The book, which was on one of The New York Times best-seller lists for two weeks, is not a political book. It is the story of how a man who was considered the mediocre son of a famous father and who had a troubled marriage and a drinking problem was totally transformed after he came to faith in Christ. Twelve years later, the Lord spoke to this man and told him his country would need him in a time of crisis and he should run for president.


Scott Plakon, a businessman from Longwood, Florida, and a good friend of mine, read the book and asked for some copies to send to servicemen serving in Afghanistan and Iraq. Scott was inspired by reading the book of the president’s spiritual odyssey and thought that people who were risking their lives in defense of our freedoms might benefit by gaining a better understanding of their commander in chief.


Around Christmas Scott came to me and offered to make the book available to other troops in Iraq, Kuwait and Afghanistan. He said he would give a donation to our nonprofit partner, Christian Life Missions, to provide the books for thousands of servicemen and women. I told him I would match his donation and try to involve our readers in this project.


Because we like to do things based on relationship, we began contacting chaplains to ask them if they would be interested in helping. We got an enthusiastic response from retired Army Col. E. H. “Jim” Ammerman, head of the Chaplaincy of Full Gospel Churches, which has approximately 200 Spirit-filled chaplains serving in the armed forces. Ammerman had read the book and believed it would bless the troops. He is working with us to distribute the books through his own chaplains and to make contacts in high places in the military.


Our plan is simple. We will start by giving out as many books as we have money to pay for, and we will continue to distribute them as funds become available.


Our company is making the books available at our cost, with no royalty for the author and no profit for our company. The only additional cost is the shipping.


A few weeks ago we published a companion study guide, which takes the principles in the book and expounds on them in a format appropriate for group discussion. Because The Faith of George W. Bush was co-published with Penguin Group (USA) Inc., it was written without a lot of references to Scripture and without specific commentary on the spiritual concepts involved. The study guide explores these spiritual concepts. It is perfect for the troops to use with their chaplains.


We want to raise money to send between 25,000 and 50,000 copies of the book and the study guide to chaplains, who will distribute them to the men and women under their leadership in the armed forces. Our company will do its part, but we need readers such as you to give whatever you can for this project.


Tell us if you would like a copy of the book or the study guide for yourself. Christian Life Missions will be happy to send one to you as a thank you for your donation, deducting the fair market value of the book (as required by law) from the tax-exempt donation amount on the receipt you will receive.


We ask that you give generously. We need a big response to meet this need! You can trust us to use the money as outlined above and to report back later on the results.


Please send your tax-deductible gift to Christian Life Missions, P.O. Box 952248, Lake Mary, FL 32795-2248. Thank you for partnering with us to bless our servicemen and women!


Stephen Strang is the founder and publisher of Charisma.




Former Commodores Guitarist Trades Fame to Spread Gospel Message

The co-founder of the 1970s pop group now coaches gospel choirs and mentors aspiring musicians

At the height of his fame, the co-founder of one of the most successful pop-and-funk bands of the 1970s left his lucrative career to return to his Christian roots. Today one-time Commodores guitarist Thomas McClary leads a simpler life, overseeing the music ministry at his Orlando, Fla., church and preparing to release a CD by its 100-voice choir.


Once famous for million-selling singles such as “Three Times a Lady,” “Shining Star” and “Brick House,” McClary is a deacon and worship team leader at New Destiny Christian Center. Later this year he will produce the church’s first CD on his own Visitation Records label.


“He has the zeal of Peter but the wisdom of Solomon,” his pastor, Zachery Tims Jr., said. “He keeps everything balanced. He’s a team player and a team builder. When he takes charge, people want to follow him.”


“He’s really a nice guy,” added Sam Kenoly of the Kenoly Brothers, who is also a member at New Destiny. “He’s given me so much advice that it’s like taking college courses. He’s really been an inspiration to me.”


Born Oct. 6, 1950, in Eustis, Fla., the youngest of eight children, McClary played high school sports and graduated as valedictorian. He went on to the Tuskegee Institute in Montgomery, Ala., where his life took the path that would lead to fame. While standing in line to register for classes, he heard someone whistling a sax solo by legendary jazz musician Eddie Harris.


“He was going through all the riffs, and I was thinking this guy’s got to be a musician,” he recalls.


McClary asked the student to start a band with him. His name was Lionel Richie, and they founded the Commodores in 1968 with four other Tuskegee students.


They started off as a backup band for Jerry Butler, Candi Staton and the Ike and Tina Turner Revue. Later they landed a two-year opening spot for the Jackson 5’s world tour. Their popularity growing, Motown head Berry Gordy wanted to sign them.


Their string of pop smashes brought them negotiating power. They demanded to keep their song-publishing rights–something Motown’s Jobete Publishing never surrendered to artists.


But the Commodores became trailblazers, creating music that won fans worldwide. “Some of the letters we’d get were amazing,” McClary remembers. “One lady was dying of cancer. She said every time she put a certain song on, it would ease the pain.


“We had people write us from around the world who didn’t speak a lick of English but knew the spirit in which the songs were written. … We tried to be good stewards of that gift that God gave us even though we didn’t give God the glory at that time.”


One of the group’s most beloved songs, “Jesus Is Love,” hit the R&B Top 40 in 1980.


By 1982 McClary and Richie had co-written songs for Diana Ross and Kenny Rogers. After their manager–the glue that kept the group together–died, both men went solo.


McClary cut the Hot 100 single “Thin Walls” and produced a hit with the group Klique. He was scheduled to produce James Ingram, Melissa Manchester and the Four Tops. Then, “I heard an audible voice from God while I was in the shower,” he recalls. “The voice said, ‘It’s time for you to come home now.’ I thought I was hearing things.”


McClary went home–literally. He returned to Eustis, where he joined a church and produced a documentary titled The History of the Apostolic Faith. He used his celebrity influence and recording royalties to fund local church and community charities and, as a local hero, gave motivational speeches at youth groups.


Meanwhile, Universal Records keeps all of the Commodores’ music in print with various hit compilations. Because of the group’s enduring popularity, McClary says there may be a reunion tour in the near future. He keeps in touch with his band mates and reminds them of the source of their good fortune.


“I tell the guys all the time that God had to honor me to honor His Word,” McClary explains. “I was a tither even back then. I tithed even though I wasn’t saved because of my praying parents who feared God. My accountants used to laugh at me and wonder why I’d be giving six figures to the church. … For the last 20 years the royalties have not stopped. It’s been incredible.”
Bill Carpenter




Leaders Tackle Tough Integrity Issues

High-profile charismatic leaders convened in Orlando in January to discuss the state of the church
A who’s who of prominent charismatic ministers decried what they called an ethical “crisis” in the body of Christ during a first-ever symposium in Orlando, Fla., Jan. 6-7, calling on Christian leaders to deem those who demonstrate persistent ungodly behavior as unrepresentative of true Christianity.


The invitation-only meeting was hosted by Ministries Today magazine, published by Charisma’s parent company, Strang Communications. It drew more than 50 high-profile leaders including Rod Parsley, Joyce Meyer, Rick Joyner and Myles Munroe, and was moderated by Foursquare leader Jack Hayford, pastor of Church on the Way in Van Nuys, Calif.


After discussing issues of moral and financial integrity and the appropriate use of titles, particularly apostle and prophet, participants endorsed a document that has been dubbed the “Orlando Statement.”


“This event was not just significant for the 50 people in attendance, but for the church at large,” said Ministries Today publisher Stephen Strang, who convened the meeting. “It will make a statement about the growing unity in the charismatic-Pentecostal community regarding the need for ethics and a renewed focus on winning the lost.”


An attempt to foster unity and further world evangelism, the Orlando Statement affirmed the “fivefold” ministry gifts listed in Ephesians 4, with the panel noting that the titles apostle and prophet should be used by those who demonstrate “the character and gifting requisite those titles.” The document noted that the use of those titles must “be submitted to the demands of servanthood and not become a distraction … to the very offices that they claim to serve.”


The group also acknowledged an ethical crisis in the church that is marked by a greater tolerance for sexual infidelity, an increase in divorce “under the guise of commitment to ministry callings,” an “indulgent understanding” of the concept of restoration, and a lack of self-moderation in areas of financial responsibility and extravagance.


The crisis was attributed to an increase in the number of ministries that operate outside existing accountability structures, as well as a failure by existing accountability structures to enforce their legal standards because of a lack of peer relationships.


During the two-day event, the group also attributed the moral breakdown to an increased prevalence in ministry being seen as a profession “in which the importance of success and power outweigh the demands of servanthood and integrity.”


The participants urged Christian leaders to asser-tively accept responsibility to minister discipline with love and grace, and to identify behavior that is “adverse to godly values” as “alien to the lifestyle of charismatic Christians and unrepresentative of the true charismatic Christian community.”


“I am certain that the symposium was the beginning of an opportunity that could have a lasting effect on bringing greater understanding and credibility to the charismatic movement from its leaders to the broader body of Christ,” said Parsley, pastor of World Harvest Church in Columbus, Ohio.


Hayford, who serves as Ministries Today’s senior editorial adviser, moderated three panel discussions. The first consisted of Meyer, Parsley, evangelist Reinhard Bonnke, Christian International Ministries founder Bill Hamon, theologian C. Peter Wagner and North Carolina pastor Kingsley Fletcher.


Wagner issued a strong challenge for the church to recognize the ministry of apostles. Although none of the panelists questioned the legitimacy of the fivefold gifts, some expressed concern that the power vested in the titles apostle and prophet often motivates the holder to exercise authority rather than to serve.


“All the fivefold should shepherd the church of God,” said author John Bevere, who issued a forceful call for accountability in prophetic ministry in his 1999 book Thus Saith the Lord? “If we’re not careful, we’re going to get right into what the Pharisees did–more interested in serving themselves than in serving people,” Bevere said.


Bonnke, founder of Christ for All Nations, said the use of titles is a “side issue,” and he called the church to focus on its primary task: winning souls. “It’s not a matter of position but a matter of function,” Bonnke said. “If we concentrate on functions, we will see the fivefold ministries in all their excellence.”


The second panel–comprised of Bevere, Joyner, Generals of Intercession head Cindy Jacobs, Detroit pastor Keith Butler, seminarian Mark Rutland and evangelist Steve Hill–explored ethical and moral issues. Expressing his concern at the onset of the discussion, Hayford said: “Like the book of Judges, the Pentecostal-charismatic movement is increasingly moving toward everyone doing what is right in their own eyes. We’re watching the dumbing down of a movement, in many ways–dumbing down in the thoughtful pursuit of what we’re really about.”


Hayford added that many people embrace charismatic tenets but are hesitant to identify with the movement because of concerns about high-profile leaders who flaunt excess and demonstrate shoddy ethics.


“We don’t have good character because we think we’re so important,” said Jacobs, who added that the larger a ministry becomes, the more layers of accountability it needs.


Joyner, founder of Morningstar Ministries, was more blunt: “In anything, our main commodity is truth, integrity, reality. Shame on us for what we’ve allowed the church to become on our watch.”


The third and final panel–consisting of Munroe, National Association of Evangelicals (NAE) head Ted Haggard, Bible teacher R.T. Kendall, Charisma editor J. Lee Grady, pastor and author Francis Frangipane, and pastor Frank Reid of Bethel AME Church in Baltimore–explored the Pentecostal-charismatic movement’s future.


Haggard suggested that the distinction between the Pentecostal-charismatic community and the evangelical world was quickly becoming irrelevant. In his work with the NAE, he said he has “found no resistance to the Pentecostal-charismatic message, and within 10 years, I don’t know if there will be a distinction. I don’t think the issue is theological; the issue is style.”


Munroe, pastor of Bahamas Faith Ministries International, expressed concern that many in the movement had not offered a public statement on the issues of homosexuality, gay marriage and the doctrine of universal reconciliation. “My heart is that we will take generational responsibility in this room before we leave,” he said. “I don’t want to be famous or important, but I want to be faithful to this generation.”


The Orlando Statement was published in the March/April issue of Ministries Today and posted on its Web site. Readers can log on to to read the entire document.
Matt Green




Chinese Missionary Nora Lam Dies


Chinese evangelist Nora Lam, who pioneered missionary ministry for women, died Feb. 2 in a nursing home in San Jose, Calif., at the age of 71. She had suffered a massive stroke six months before.


“Nora Lam liberated thousands of women for missionary ministry, and she especially helped Christians respond to the needs of persecuted, underground believers in China on many different levels,” said William Bray, who serves on the board of directors of Nora Lam Ministries (NLM).


“Most people probably think of her work only in terms of Bible distribution, evangelism and support for persecuted house churches and Bible schools in China, but she was also very concerned for children and the humanitarian needs of Chinese people everywhere,” added Bray, who is a staff member of Christian Aid Mission.


Lam, who fled her native Shanghai in 1958 as a refugee from Mao Zedong’s Cultural Revolution, is best known for her book China Cry, which chronicles her suffering under communist persecution. The book, which the Trinity Broadcasting Network (TBN) made into a movie in 1991, tells how Lam refused to deny Christ even while enduring physical abuse. She immigrated to the United States in 1966.


“Nora Lam was a dedicated soul-winner, prayer warrior and precious saint of God,” TBN founder Paul Crouch told Charisma. “Our lives are richer for having known her. Jan and I, along with all of us at TBN, will dearly miss her.”


Lam spent 30 years traveling around the world holding evangelistic crusades and raising awareness about China’s persecuted church. She supported Christian humanitarian ministries working there and hosted radio and TV broadcasts to free Chinese around the globe.


“Nora Lam’s life on this earth is over, but the work she started goes on,” said her youngest son, Joseph Lam, vice president of NLM, Assist News Service (ANS) reported. “Every one of us is still inspired by the life of sacrifice and service, which she taught us to live. We are still distributing Bibles, saving orphaned babies and helping persecuted believers.”


Her oldest daughter, Ruth Lam Kendrick, head of NLM, added: “Mom loved the house churches of China and needy children everywhere, and that is the legacy she has left for us to fulfill,” ANS said.


Lam is survived by three daughters–two of whom were adopted–two sons and seven grandchildren. A memorial service was held Feb. 24 in San Jose.
Eric Tiansay