Florida Pastor Turned Family Grief Into Ministry Opportunity

The death of his son in a DUI accident led David Mallory to double his efforts to reach alcoholics
When a drunken driver slammed into a group of teens standing alongside a central Florida highway after their church bus broke down, David Mallory experienced one of the darkest days of his life.


His 16-year-old son, Joshua, along with three other teens and a chaperone from his church, was killed in the collision, leaving Mallory to question his life’s work.


Pastor of First Assembly of God in Naples, Fla., Mallory wondered whether or not his son would be alive if not for his two ministries–a bus ministry for children and an outreach to drug addicts and alcoholics. “It was as though a voice said to me: ‘You fool. If it weren’t for the combination of the two ministries, Joshua would still be alive,'” Mallory said.


But Mallory said he shook the voice from his head by remembering what he and his wife, Becky, did when they got married. On their knees, the couple dedicated their lives to the glory of God. Mallory said the lyrics to “I Surrender All” came to mind, and he realized God was asking him if he meant those words when he sang them at his wedding.


So instead of being hardened by the irony in his son’s death, Mallory increased his efforts to reach addicts with the forgiving, healing power of Jesus Christ.


A decade later, he is building a $100 million, 70-acre community in east Naples dedicated to helping rehabilitate people with drug and alcohol addictions. The facility will have 1,100 beds for addicts, the homeless and unwed mothers, and another 600 apartments for retired ministers and missionaries.


Developing a ministry to addicts has not come without a struggle. Mallory has had to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars to comply with federal wetland permits. He’s spent thousands of dollars to meet county zoning and development codes. And the church must repay $1.2 million they received from a man later convicted of swindling investors out of millions.


But Mallory is convinced of the importance of the Campus of Care, which currently can house up to 40 recovering addicts in modular homes. He knows God can change lives; he sees success stories every day.


Antony Diehl, 40, drank so much he was on the verge of death before turning to the campus for help. “Now I feel whole,” Diehl said, adding that he wants to become a missionary when he completes the program. “So I can go on and help others.”


Literally hundreds of testimonies have emerged from Mallory’s work. By the time the buildings are completed, the facility will house the Life Academy, a live-in drug and alcohol rehabilitation program; Neighborhood House, a homeless shelter; Alpha House for those in transition; and MUM’s, the Ministry to Unwed Mothers.


The ministry’s effectiveness has caught the attention of people in high places. Local judges often offer convicted drug and alcohol offenders the option of going to jail or to Mallory’s Campus of Care. There is a waiting list for the recovery program, which has an 80 percent success rate for those who complete it. But Mallory needs millions of dollars more to bring the vision into full fruition.


“There are so many that desperately need the programs offered, we [need financial partners] to make the completed facility a reality,” he said.


The man convicted of killing Joshua and the four others is serving five life sentences and has become a Christian since the incident, Mallory said. He wrote Mallory and his wife a letter, saying that when he gets to heaven he will thank Joshua. Had he died that night, the man wrote, he would have spent eternity separated from God.


Mallory wonders aloud about the value people place on restoring works of art. His restoration work is on people. “These are lives,” he said. “The greatest work of art is a man’s soul.”
Denise Zoldan in Naples, Fla.




News Service 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.


GROUP ISSUES ‘REBUKE’ ON ANTI-MUSLIM REMARKS
Pledging to heal rifts with Muslims that threaten missionary work overseas, the National Association of Evangelicals (NAE) condemned remarks by some high-profile Christian leaders that disparaged Islam. In a meeting convened May 7 with the Institute on Religion and Democracy, a Washington, conservative Christian group, the NAE said the derisive comments endangered Christians working in the Muslim world, strained already tense interfaith relations and fed the perception that the war on terrorism is a Christian crusade against Islam, the Associated Press reported. NAE president Ted Haggard suggested holding a meeting with Jerry Falwell, Pat Robertson, Franklin Graham and former Southern Baptist Convention President Jerry Vines, who all criticized Islam or Muhammad last year.


BAPTIZING GAYS GETS CHURCH EXPELLED>
McGill Baptist Church in Concord, N.C., was expelled from the Cabarrus Baptist Association for baptizing two gay men in April, The Charlotte Observer reported. Pastor Steve Ayers said many in the congregation knew the couple was gay when the baptism took place and that it was held because it’s not up to him or the church to decide who deserves salvation. But Randy Wadford, missions director for the association, said baptism is only for those who agree to repent of their sins. In a letter to the church, the group said: “To allow individuals into the membership of a local church without evidence or testimony of true repentance is to condone the old lifestyle.”


PARENTS UNINVOLVED IN KIDS’ SPIRITUAL TRAINING
According to a May 6 study released by the Barna Research Group, 85 percent of parents with children under 13 believe they have the primary responsibility for teaching their children about religious beliefs and spiritual issues. But related research revealed that a majority of parents do not spend any time during a typical week discussing spiritual matters or studying religious materials with their children. The survey of 1,010 adults found that although about two out of three parents of children under 12 attend religious services at least once a month and generally take their children with them, most are willing to let their church provide all of their youngsters’ spiritual training.


‘CHRISTIAN’ AIDS BOOKLET PULLED
Florida health officials have pulled a Christian-themed AIDS brochure because the American Civil Liberties Union complained that the state-funded materials contained biblical messages. The 16-page booklet titled A Christian Response to AIDS included pictures of Jesus, quotes from the Scriptures and referred people to Bible passages, the Associated Press reported. The pamphlet had been in circulation for about a decade, and was used in several states. It was yanked from circulation in April after the state health department’s lawyers reviewed the material. Meanwhile, the House of Representatives passed a bill May 1 that promotes abstinence in fighting AIDS worldwide and protects religious groups from being forced to distribute condoms.


Singer Jaci Velasquez Defends Film Role


Jaci Velasquez defended her involvement in a movie that upset some fans for its racy content. “To put your minds at rest, no I haven’t left my personal faith in God, and I don’t ever intend to,” she said in a message at her Web site. Velasquez posted the comment after eyebrows were raised over her Hollywood debut in Chasing Papi. Released April 18, the film features the singer as one of three women–in one scene wearing skimpy underwear–involved with the same man. The movie is rated PG “for mild sensuality and language” and opened to lukewarm reviews.


Groups Decry Hiring of ‘Radical Feminist’


Pro-family Christian groups urged supporters to refuse to back the Young Women’s Christian Association after the group hired well-known feminist Patricia Ireland as its leader. They say the former president of the National Organization for Women is not a role model of whom most parents would approve. American Family Association chairman Don Wildmon said Ireland would “incorporate her left-wing values into the mission.”


Bryn Jones Dies


Bryn Jones, 63, a well-respected charismatic leader with an apostolic ministry based in England, died of unknown reasons May 1 during a ministry trip to the San Diego area. Jones founded Coventry-based Covenant Ministries International (CMI), which has several U.S. congregations and works with churches in Africa. Jones was editor of Restoration magazine, a prophetic publication published by CMI. Born in Aberdare, Wales, Jones is survived by his wife, Edna, and four grown children.


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




Sight & Sound


MUSIC


Gotta Serve Somebody:
The Gospel Songs of Bob Dylan

By Various Artists, Word.


This collection of black gospel-style music must have been what was in Bob Dylan’s head back when he was recording his pivotal Slow Train Coming and Saved albums. But because Dylan is a white folk singer from Minnesota, his particular spin on church music took on a unique flavor all its own.


This new release offers a distinct contrast to Dylan’s original recordings, and may be why Gotta Serve Somebody: The Gospel Songs of Bob Dylan is so much fun. It gives listeners the chance to hear Shirley Caesar testifying with the title track, the Fairfield Four giving “Are You Ready” a traditional quartet treatment and Aaron Neville injecting soulful sweetness into the track “Saving Grace.”


In the late ’70s, when Dylan shocked the music world by revealing his conversion to Christianity, these songs were subjects of much controversy and debate. But in the hands of these A-level gospel and soul artists, they clearly stand the test of time as sincere testimonies of faith. Not everything works here, however. Sounds of Blackness, for example, give “Solid Rock” the full choir treatment, but it sounded much more powerful in its original rocking version. Overall, Dylan fans should get a kick out of this compilation of finely written songs, sung particularly well.
Dan MacIntosh


You and You Alone
By Various Artists,
Vineyard Music.


You and You Alone, the latest offering in the Vineyard Worship series, embodies a collection of worship songs especially geared to today’s modern church. The album features well-known Vineyard worship leaders Dan Wilt and Kathryn Scott, who focus on helping listeners get in tune with God and the very essence of who He really is through these 13 contemporary praise songs.


From the opening, upbeat title track to the catchy “Your Amazing Love,” the project is packed with refreshing songs that will appeal to anyone who has a heart prepared to worship. The music is simple and melodic, allowing the compelling messages of the lyrics to be this project’s primary strength.


As a bonus, the CD is enhanced with chord charts and overhead song masters that will serve soloists, worship bands, praise teams and congregation members alike.


You and You Alone follows in the footsteps of Vineyard’s long-standing heritage of bringing fresh songs to the church body, yet is diverse enough to stand on its own merits.
Ginny McCabe


Sar Shalom
By Karen Davis,
Galilee of the Nations.


While we fear terrorism, the newest worship album from the Names of God series, Sar Shalom (Prince of Peace), was created and recorded amid the daily real-life dangers of suicide bombings and terrorist attacks happening in Israel. Worship leader Karen Davis says: “These are songs the Lord has given us the last few years during some of the most difficult times we’ve had in Israel. Days when we have needed to see the Lord, seated on His throne, high and lifted up, and to know the peace of God that passes all understanding.”


Davis works alongside her husband, David, the senior pastor at Kehilat HaCarmel (Carmel Assembly). They came to Israel as Messianic Jews and began ministering to drug addicts in Haifa, where they founded “Beit Nitzachon” (House of Victory), a residential rehabilitation center for Jews and Arabs.


“For over a decade now we have witnessed the miracle of the transforming power of God’s love as He works in the hearts of afflicted men to be reconciled to Him through the blood of Yeshua and then toward each other,” Karen Davis says. Their church congregation, which rose alongside the center, is built on Mount Carmel, where Elisha called down fire from heaven.


The soothing melodies of Sar Shalom, sung in English and Hebrew, embellish the message of peace and yet a strong resolution resounds throughout the CD to give praise to God, no matter what.


Preceded by worship albums Adonai, Elohim and Yeshua, Sar Shalom is a message of peace to a worried world, making the subtitle–Breakthrough From the Land of Israel–especially appropriate.
Marsha Gallardo


BOOKS


Islam and the Jews: The Unfinished Battle
By Mark A. Gabriel, Ph.D.;
Charisma House;
softcover; 230 pages; $.


Mark A. Gabriel, in Islam and the Jews, has captured the essence of why conflict rages in the Middle East. He sets the record straight by dispelling false information and revealing how and why Islam teaches Muslims to hate Jews. However, Gabriel is quick to add that Muslims are not the enemy. The enemy is a religion that trains people to hate and encourages violence.


As a former Muslim and scholar of Islam, Gabriel brings a non-Western point of view to the teachings of Islam found in the Quran–the Islamic holy book–and Hadith, the reported sayings and actions of Muhammad. He shows how the Quran handles seemingly conflicting revelations given to Muhammad and how later
revelations replace the earlier. This answers how early revelations of peaceful co-existence received in Mecca were annulled by later commands for jihad against the Jews given in Medina.


Through his own story,Gabriel shows that the only avenue of peace is through Jesus. Islam and the Jews: The Unfinished Battle issues a call to understand what’s behind the hatred and violence, and to subdue it through love.


I strongly recommend this book to everyone, leaders and laity alike. Read it and discover the important role you have in praying for the peace of Jerusalem.
Tom Gill


VIDEOS


Gods and Generals
By Warner Bros. Pictures.


If you’re not a movie buff who reveled in last winter’s Gods and Generals, check out the video that releases July 14. This Civil War film deserves the “epic” label, although it raises disturbing spiritual questions.


Be warned that the prequel to 1993’s Gettysburg won’t seem as majestic as in theaters, which are best suited for its picturesque scenery and poetic movements. Parents who haven’t seen it should be aware that violent battle scenes earned it a PG-13 rating.


Yet, if you long ago tired of movies that either mock Christianity or dump it into a grab bag of spiritual alternatives, here’s one you will find refreshing. Ron Maxwell’s stellar production views faith with respect and provides an intimate picture of the beliefs that sustained people during this bloody war.


Seldom can a movie keep its pace for nearly four hours while stirring emotions and forcing viewers to contemplate life’s larger issues. Yet those who use the video as a basis for family or small-group Bible-study discussions will find it prompting some unnerving reflection.


For one, it is easy to second-guess 1860s Southerners who simultaneously embraced faith and slavery. But human weakness and self-deception haven’t disappeared. One is left to contemplate whether eagerness to proclaim our righteousness is a root of present-day global conflicts.


Christians should also consider modern-day racial tensions. To what extent do they derive from our inability to come to terms with the Civil War? It is tough to escape such a question amid the movie’s pro-Southern tilt, one that paints Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson and Robert E. Lee in most sympathetic, God-fearing lights.


Yet, one can’t help but ask, “Are we supposed to feel good that people could quote Scripture and offer heartfelt prayers while fighting tooth and nail to preserve slavery?”


In another scene, Jackson–played by Stephen Lang in dominating fashion–prays with the slave who serves as his battalion’s cook. After Jackson’s fervent intercession, the slave asks God to reveal why those who profess Christ can still hold His people in bondage.


Glossing over the seriousness of the man’s inquiry, Jackson echoes his plea, then promises that one day he will be free. The comment leaves the impression that after it triumphed over the evil North, the South planned to free its slaves so everyone could live in peace and harmony.


That is a tough proposition to swallow, considering the South’s eagerness to separate from the United States after Abraham Lincoln’s election.


But those on the other side must acknowledge the North’s willingness to fight stemmed more from its desire to preserve the Union–and the attendant economic implications–than a motivation to end slavery.


And, if no pure motives existed then, who among the nations can claim them today? Given that scenario, what is the Christian’s role as an advocate for peace? Such questions are as fresh now as in 1861.
Ken Walker



MUSIC SPOTLIGHT


“God Is In Our Hearts”


The hip-hop trio Souljahz began making waves after a performance in 2002, before their Warner Bros. debut, The Fault Is History, even hit the streets. Fusing Latin, soul, hip-hop and folk, siblings Joshu’a, J’ekob, and Rachael Washington formed a sound unique to the genre. Their first single, “All Around the World,” propelled to No. 1 on the Christian Hit Radio Charts last summer. Since then they have shared platforms with such mainstream artists as Ashanti, Nelly and Brian McKnight, and garnered two Dove Awards in April.


But even with these accomplishments, the siblings have not lost sight of their goal. “We’re spreading the Word,” J’ekob told Breakaway magazine. “Seeing God use the music and giving us [our] lyrics, that’s untouchable.” Since they began traveling internationally, the group has witnessed the increased need to get the Word out to other countries. “We just saw this desperate need internationally to explain what the Bible is to kids. … Everyone over there reads it, and they are very open to hearing your message,” Joshu’a said.


With this mission in hand and focusing on world issues and their love for Christ, Souljahz provide a message to complement their top-notch production. Every song is written from real-life situations that they or those around them have experienced. They aim to minister to others going through similar situations.


When asked by The Gospel Zone about how they would categorize their music, they replied: “We don’t want to pigeon-hole our album. It is rooted in hip-hop, but we are Christians, and God is in our hearts. This comes out in our songs.” This is an album with thoughtful lyrics and big-label sound, giving the gospel music industry something to cheer about.
Eric J. Olson



CHARISMATIC TOP SELLERS


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


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


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


4. Pigs in the Parlor
Frank and Ida Mae Hammond

(Impact Christian Books)


5. A Divine Revelation of Heaven
Mary K. Baxter (Whitaker House)


6. The Three Battlegrounds
Francis Frangipane (Arrow Publications)


7. The Tongue: A Creative Force
Charles Capps (Harrison House)


8. The Final Quest
Rick Joyner (Whitaker House)


9. A Divine Revelation of the Spirit Realm
Mary K. Baxter (Whitaker House)


10. No More Sheets
Juanita Bynum (Pneuma Life Publishing)


CHARISMA RECOMMENDS


Sharpening Your Leading Edge
By Jack Hayford, Charisma House,
193 pages, hardcover, $.


This is not a how-to book about being a leader. Jack Hayford teaches that leadership is not about methods. “Whatever your skill set, mind-set is the starting place.” In this effort to prevent others from experiencing the same problems he has faced, Hayford gives personal examples not only of what did work, but also of what did not work in his life. Hayford has more than 40 years of leadership experience.


Ruling in the Gates
By Joseph Mattera,
Creation House Press,
96 pages, softcover, $.


Joseph Mattera issues a new call for the body of Christ. It is time for us to take our God-given place on Earth to bring about the kingdom of God. Only the gospel has the blueprint for a healthy society, so the body of Christ must lead the way for reform. Believers must discover their divine purpose and learn how to pray for the next move of God.


At the Cross: Where Healing Begins
By Rod Parsley,
Creation House Press,
102 pages, hardcover, $.


Sadly, many believers miss their healings and agonize, wondering if it’s God’s will for them to be healed. Rod Parsley solves the mystery with simple biblical truths. He shows the reasons behind God’s purpose in healing and that the power of faith will grow as His


eternal plan is understood. God does want to heal us, and it took only one moment in time to wipe away the bondage of sickness. We can still experience the healing Jesus died to give us at the cross.


Come Unto Me: God’s Call to Intimacy
By James P. Gills, M.D.;
Creation House Press;
96 pages; softcover; $.


During a divine appointment with God on the summit of Mount Sinai, James Gills discovered a revelation that changed his life: God’s deepest desire is intimacy with us.


Gills teaches that a committed spiritual life is not something that can be obtained–it’s learned. God wants us to open our lives to Him so He can fill us with His very own life.


Cuando gente de Dios hace cosas que no son de Dios
(When Godly People Do Ungodly Things)

By Beth Moore, Casa Creación,
217 pages, softcover, $.


Bible teacher Beth Moore warns that the devil is out to seduce God’s children and trap them in sin. She shows Christians how we can be prepared to fight temptations and that we can stand against the devil’s attacks. For those who have given in to temptation, Moore lovingly gets them on the road to total repentance and restoration with the Lord.




God Doesn’t Want YOU to Crash and Burn

Americans today–including many Christians–are destroying their lives with stress, unforgiveness and other dangerous emotions. Here’s how you can avoid an emotional breakdown.
Many believers live in a prison of unresolved emotional issues, not realizing the price they will ultimately be required to pay because of their failure to deal with the poisonous emotions holding them captive. Negative emotions such as anger, envy and bitterness–as well as the mishandling of stress–can destroy one’s health and life. Studies have shown, in fact, that anxious thoughts cause our bodies to release chemicals that actually suppress our immune systems.


That is why the Bible tells us to renew our minds and to fix our thoughts on what is true, honorable and right: “Finally, brethren, whatever things are true, whatever things are noble, whatever things are just, whatever things are pure, whatever things are lovely, whatever things are of good report, if there is any virtue and if there is anything praiseworthy–meditate on these things” (Phil. 4:8, NKJV).


You must consciously monitor your thoughts on a daily basis. When you are first regaining your emotional health, it may take minute-to-minute monitoring until you get control. But the Lord heals today, just as He did in the past: “Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, today, and forever” (Heb. 13:8).


So it follows that we can be healed of our past, be set free in the present, and be all that we can be in the future. In other words: You can become whole, healed and free; you can experience life as God intended it to be.


You must, however, have the willingness and the desire to do so. You must do the work. It will not be easy. It may, in fact, be the most difficult task you have ever undertaken.


Looking deep within yourself takes a lot of courage. But that is where the Holy Spirit comes in and holds you up as you go deep within. With God’s help, the
process is accelerated. That is why prayer and a close walk with Him are imperative.


In order to appropriately deal with the emotional baggage holding us back, we need to recognize dangerous emotions and understand how they work. And we must make a conscious choice to ban the cluttered thought processes in our minds that lead to stress and breakdown.


Toxic Emotions


The dangerous emotions we must guard against are prolific and include jealousy, pride, envy, anger and bitterness. It is important to understand what plays into each one of these emotions.


Low self-esteem and the absence of unconditional love are often at the root of jealousy. Jealousy is a very destructive emotion because it is self-defeating. You can feel jealous only when you believe someone or something else has or is doing, being or withholding something you desire.


Jealousy is founded on the false idea that God has supplied only a limited amount of love or good in this world. If you believe this, you will become jealous of those who receive more than you do of what you desire. The truth is that God gives you abundance, which is yours just by asking Him in faith.


When you learn to love yourself unconditionally, your self-esteem and confidence become impregnable. You will realize there is nothing to be jealous about. You will be able to accept and love others without fear or envy. “Perfect love casts out fear” (1 John 4:18).


When you see a friend or acquaintance achieve or acquire something wonderful in life, be happy and thankful for them. Any feelings of jealousy will only hurt you and retard your progress.


Pride is another toxic emotion often caused by low self-esteem. Low self-esteem also produces envy, anger, prejudice, resentment and arrogance. These personality traits may be labeled as pride, but in fact they are pride turned inside out. Any exercise in false pride may harm another and always hurts the person misusing his or her proud nature.


False pride is usually born out of fear, self-doubt and anger. The person becomes heavily burdened with fear and self-doubt and angrily rebels against these traits by adopting a superior attitude.


True self-confidence is a healthy mixture of faith, self-control, compassion, achievement, purpose and love. As you learn to see yourself as a child of God, you cannot help but be self-confident of all that you are in Him and all that you are becoming through His help.


Many people struggle with envy, which is typically associated with low self-esteem and an unforgiving, resentful nature. Envy and resentment can keep you trapped in a life that prevents you from God’s abundance. The surest way to become poor in spirit and in your pocketbook is to be envious of others.


Envy is an enemy to success in life and causes a multitude of problems, most of them to the person who is envious. Building your self-confidence daily will gradually replace all of the life-destroying effects that envy brings on your mind, body and spirit.


God made you a very special and unique expression of Him. No one else is just like you. You are valuable to God. Therefore, there is no reason for you to be envious of anyone or anything–because you have it all.


One of the most dangerous of all emotions is anger. When anger is not dealt with immediately, it festers in our souls, causing pain, isolation and eventually physical disease. That is why the Bible says not to “let the sun go down on your wrath” (Eph. 4:26).


Warning signs of anger include low self-esteem; an inability to get close to people; being overly critical, controlling or confrontational; lacking in trust; blaming others for mistakes; and overreacting.


An example from nature helps to illustrate the danger of unresolved anger. If a tree is hit with lightning, it may survive unharmed. But it may also suffer damage ranging from minor to severe.


If a rain-drenched tree is hit by lightning, chances are it will not be injured because the moisture on the outside of the tree will conduct the lightning along the outside to the ground. On the other hand, if the tree is dry and has a wet, dead area inside the trunk, it could literally explode–slinging branches and propelling pieces of wood as far as 100 feet. This happens because the lightning travels rapidly down the moist interior of the tree, heating it to a very high temperature in thousandths of a second.


This is a good illustration of the explosiveness of a fiery temper. When you begin to boil inside, harm will come to you. That is why the psalmist said, “Cease from anger, and forsake wrath; do not fret–it only causes harm” (Ps. 37:8). As in the case of the tree blazing inside, “‘Wrath kills a foolish man'” (Job 5:2).


The Greek root for the word wrath means “to sacrifice, kill, slaughter.” Like lightning traversing the inside of a tree, wrath can boil up inside a person in an instant and even bring about death. Like the tree in which the lightning travels, a person filled with wrath or anger is apt to explode. The Bible puts it this way: “Anger rests in the bosom of fools” (Eccl. 7:9).


If anger is not dealt with, bitterness sets in. You can choose to hold on to your hurt or pain and grow increasingly bitter, or you can deal with it, release it and feel better.


I have a close friend who dramatically illustrates this. He and his sister lived in the same home growing up. Both of them were the products of their parents’ divorce. His sister slowly became bitter over the course of her life. She assumed the victim role early on, and the victim she certainly became.


She was an angry child and teen. In adulthood, her anger, resentment and blaming nature paralyzed her life so much that she turned to drugs and alcohol. Although she overcame her drug and alcohol habit, she is still unable to form lasting and meaningful relationships.


The difference for you will be how you choose to react. Long ago I chose to be a survivor. I experienced loss, but I forgave, released and loved. Today I am truly grateful because I am better for it.


The Power of Forgiveness


I have learned that many of our hurts and much of our emotional pain is made worse when we believe that others deliberately wronged us. In some cases, it may be true. But in most cases, people are so busy with their own lives that they simply have no time to purposely cause hurt and pain to others. Much of the emotional pain we experience is unintentionally inflicted upon us.


The path to healing is forgiveness. Forgiveness short-circuits a cascade of stress hormones that can cause accelerated heart rate, shut down your immune system and encourage blood clotting. Conversely, unforgiveness and holding on to anger increase your chance of a heart attack fivefold. They also increase your risk of cancer, high blood pressure, high cholesterol and a host of chronic diseases.


But forgiveness is a conscious choice. You must choose to give up your feelings of unforgiveness and anger. Although anger and resentment are perfectly natural responses to situations that hurt or upset you, it is not worth running the risk of letting negative experiences affect your attitude about people or life in general. If you do, you will be open to emotional health robbers such as anxiety, depression, poor self-esteem and staying in the victim role.


Forgiving is not necessarily forgetting. It is unrealistic to think that you can forget about an injustice, hurt or wound inflicted upon you by someone you love. You do have a memory, and the memory will always be with you.


Forgiving is letting go of the anger and hurt attached to it and moving on with your life. Forgiving results in better sleep, increased feelings of love, more ability to trust and the eradication of physical symptoms that are connected to anger or unforgiveness.


Life is always moving forward; it does not stop and look back. It moves forward at a steady pace, and in doing so, it gives us new opportunities to put into use what was learned from past mistakes. Every day is a new beginning–another chance to live in forgiveness, unconditional love and truth.


The power of love can heal us of the dangerous emotions that threaten to destroy our lives and our health. It is your choice. When you let go of dangerous emotions, you are then free to experience pure love. You will also be able to receive love and give love without fear.


You will experience a peaceful trust that will replace the mistrust that has held you captive. You will feel more relaxed and at peace in your relationships with your friends, family and loved ones. Once you are free to accept and to give love, you will begin to allow this love to flow out of you and into the lives of everyone you come in contact with.


This is actually the way God made us to be. We thrive mentally, physically and spiritually when we develop a lifestyle of loving people unconditionally. Everyone desires love and needs to be loved. You will be amazed at the transformation that takes place in your life. People will be drawn to you.


Love is a balm that produces healing and change. This is because love is unconditional giving. Love is the healing emotion that cancels out all dangerous ones and eliminates fear. Love can set you free from your prison of toxic emotions.



Mastering Your Emotions


Learning what the Bible says about dealing with toxic emotions can put you on the path to overcoming them.


Anger and Bitterness:


“A fool vents all his feelings, but a wise man holds them back” (Prov. 29:11, NKJV).


“He who is often rebuked, and hardens his neck, will suddenly be destroyed, and that without remedy” (Prov. 29:1).


“So then, my beloved brethren, let every man be swift to hear, slow to speak, slow to wrath” (James 1:19).


“Pursue peace with all people, and holiness, without which no one will see the Lord: looking carefully lest anyone fall short of the grace of God; lest any root of bitterness springing up cause trouble, and by this many become defiled” (Heb. 12:14-15).


Anxiety:


“Be anxious for nothing, but in everything by prayer and supplication, with thanksgiving, let your requests be made known to God; and the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus” (Phil. 4:6-7).


“Anxiety in the heart of man causes depression, but a good word makes it glad” (Prov. 12:25).


“Casting all your care upon Him, for He cares for you” (1 Pet. 5:7).


“‘Come to Me, all you who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest'” (Matt. 11:28).


Fear:


“The Lord is my light and my salvation; whom shall I fear? The Lord is the strength of my life; of whom shall I be afraid?” (Ps. 27:1).


“‘Are not five sparrows sold for two copper coins? And not one of them is forgotten before God. But the very hairs of your head are all numbered. Do not fear therefore; you are of more value than many sparrows'” (Luke 12:6-7).


“For God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power and of love and of a sound mind” (2 Tim. 1:7).


“There is no fear in love; but perfect love casts out fear, because fear involves torment. But he who fears has not been made perfect in love” (1 John 4:18).


Unforgiveness:


“‘Forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors'” (Matt. 6:12).


“‘For if you forgive men their trespasses, your heavenly Father will also forgive you. But if you do not forgive men their trespasses, neither will your Father forgive your trespasses'” (Matt. 6:14-15).


“Then Peter came to [Jesus] and said, ‘Lord, how often shall my brother sin against me, and I forgive him? Up to seven times?’ Jesus said to him, ‘I do not say to you, up to seven times, but up to seventy times seven'” (Matt. 18:21-22).


Janet C. Maccaro, Ph.D., ., is a nutritionist, lecturer and author. She graduated with doctorates in nutrition and natural healing. Her most recent book is Natural Health Remedies (Siloam Press).




Jim Bakker Resumes His TV Ministry

Taping began on The New Jim Bakker Show 16 years to the day of the last PTL Club show
Just weeks after his release from prison in 1994, Jim Bakker looked at CNN talk-show host Larry King and told his audience of millions that he would never start another Christian TV ministry.


Yet on Jan. 2, exactly 16 years to the day of his last PTL Club program, he began taping The New Jim Bakker Show. Today the talk-show program is broadcast daily on more than 30 TV stations, 200 cable outlets and internationally through TCT Satellite Network of Worldwide Satellites.


“I meant what I said to Larry that day,” Bakker told Charisma. “When you put your hand in a fire and get burned, the body reacts to that, and it remembers that. What I had been through had been so painful, I could not imagine doing it again.”


In 1987 Bakker was convicted of overselling time-share-like units at his Christian-themed resort Heritage USA, and was sentenced to 45 years in prison. His term was later reduced to 18 years, and he served five years before his release.


The stunning fall of PTL revealed the lavish lifestyle Bakker and his ex-wife, Tammy Faye, had enjoyed, as well as a sexual encounter Bakker had with a woman from New Jersey. Upon his release, a repentant and humbled Bakker was eventually received in enough pulpits to speak most weekends.


But Bakker said he could not escape his passion for television. “For years I set about to do a number of other things, but I could not get away from what I feel God called me to do, anointed me to do, and that’s Christian television,” he said.


In the nine years since his release, Bakker has worked at the Los Angeles Dream Center, where he met his second wife, Lori. The two later moved to Charlotte, N.C., just a few miles from the old Heritage USA, and hosted workshops and continued Lori’s ministry to women who have had abortions.


Eventually, the Bakkers moved to Florida and started Camp Hope for inner-city children, but that door closed when the camp was sold. Then longtime friends Dee and Jerry Crawford approached them about moving to Branson, Mo.


Charisma interviewed Bakker minutes after he and Lori finished taping a show from the former Cowboy Café-turned-Studio City Café in Branson. The buffet restaurant serves all-you-can eat Southern cuisine for $ as the patrons watch the show for free. Guests have included Rex Humbard, Tony Orlando and Gary Smalley.


Branson–located about 250 miles southwest of St. Louis–attracts a variety of gospel singers and musicians, and draws millions of visitors each year to its family-friendly shows.


“People tell me that Branson exploded with growth the year after Heritage USA closed down,” Bakker said. “This became the place to come for wholesome family entertainment. Lori and I have found our home here. It’s perfect.”


The program opened with a drum roll that seemed like déjá vu for a former PTL staffer in the audience, and ended with the signature, “God loves you, He really does.”


“This is weird,” said Gene Bailey, a former producer for PTL. “For me it’s like going through a time warp. Everything that was good about the old PTL Club is back–without the hype and the glitz.


“He is gifted,” Bailey said of his old boss. “You cannot sit in this studio and not see that. His natural ability to connect with the viewer one-on-one is a rare quality. Not everyone in Christian television has that talent.”


The New Jim Bakker Show has been made possible largely due to the Crawfords, whose marriage was healed at Heritage USA years ago. The couple owns the studio-café, a small hotel across the street and the home where the Bakkers live.


But there are still financial struggles. “I had hoped I could do this without raising money on the air, but airtime is so expensive,” Bakker said, adding that the judge gave him no financial restrictions. “Many stations gave us a few months for free or at a reduced rate to get us started, but now we have to generate the money needed to keep us on the air.


“I have to die to the flesh,” Bakker said. “That’s what old Jim Bakker has to do on the air every day. I have had the best of everything, 3,000 employees, the finest talent and equipment. Here I have an audio man who is learning, camera people who have never done this before, the copier is broken, and we don’t even have phones yet.


“With all that, the most awesome thing happens here every day. The presence of the Lord comes into this place, and people have been healed, depression lifted, and many come to know the Lord.”


Though some Christians may view his return to television with skepticism, Bakker believes he should be given another chance. “I was at a truck stop not far from here a while back. This rough-looking old boy came up to me, and you could tell by looking at him that this guy had been through a lot.


“He looked at me and he said, ‘If there wasn’t any hope for you–a preacher boy–to find forgiveness, a new start, there sure wouldn’t be any hope for me. I am no preacher boy.’


“People need hope that the past can be the past, that God can use them no matter what they have been through. Lori and I are both broken vessels, but God is using us. He can use anybody–no matter what.”


In addition to taping the show, the Bakkers are guardians of five children who “came from incredible poverty and the nightmare of living in a drug-infested, violent inner city,” said Lori Bakker, who was unable to have children after a fifth abortion caused an infection that forced her to have a hysterectomy at age 22.


“We are like every stressed-out family in America,” she added. “We are both working, and taking turns with the PTA meetings and the basketball games and practices.


When we have to travel for ministry, we try to take one of the kids with us for some special one-on-one time with us.”


The Bakkers are arranging to adopt the two youngest, while providing a loving, stable home to the older three.


Bakker says he won’t regret trying his hand at television again even if the show doesn’t succeed. “If we don’t make it, that’s fine,” he said. “It would be easy to get a little house in the Ozarks and speak once in a while. But that is not my calling. I have to be true to what God has called me to do, and trust Him with the rest.”
Mary Hutchinson
in Branson, Mo.




Soldiers Find Faith on Front Lines in Iraq

Hundreds of U.S. military personnel came to Christ and were baptized during the war.
There are no atheists in foxholes.” The phrase is often quoted among military chaplains, who say the war in Iraq brought many soldiers to faith in Christ and created opportunities to minister to their families.


Communicating with Charisma via e-mail, military chaplains said there were baptisms in the desert–using water bottles or makeshift baptismal pools–as well as opportunities to counsel soldiers who lost friends in battle. On the home front, ministers were providing aid to families of reservists, some of whom had been short an income since their loved ones were deployed.


Air Force Capt. Steven T. Dabbs, who was stationed in Kuwait, offered grief counseling to two Marines who lost three friends when one of their helicopters went down. “One of the Marines looked up at me, and as his blue eyes filled with water, he said, ‘I want to know Jesus as my Savior,'” Dabbs wrote in an e-mail to colleagues. “After I led them in prayer, I saw them off as they returned to their posts.”


Chaplains said soldiers were more responsive to the gospel, though the reaction was typical of wartime trends when people are more mindful of their mortality. “We hear reports of good things all the time, of soldiers coming to faith,” said Air Force chaplain Kenneth Stone, who is based at the U.S. CENTCOM headquarters in Florida.


Chaplains said soldiers gathered for worship services whenever they could find the time, and several participated in Bible studies in tents at night or carried camouflaged pocket-sized New Testaments distributed by Campus Crusade for Christ. In the midst of war, “my prayer is that God would bring glory to Himself through this conflict,” said Col. Ron Crews, a chaplain in the Massachusetts National Guard.

British soldier-turned-evangelist Mark Reynolds said he witnessed an outpouring of the Holy Spirit at a training camp in Catterick North Yorkshire. Sixty recruits came to faith in one month, he said, with an estimated 700 to 800 soldiers making professions of faith in the last year.


“I can’t explain it,” he said. “I’m not doing anything different, although I must admit I have been bolder in the way I approach the men recently.”


A 22-year military veteran, Reynolds said new converts were given Bibles and as he saw them off, “I’ve told them to remember God’s promise to be with Joshua wherever he went, and I’ve encouraged them to read the Psalms written by David, the warrior king.”


For one soldier’s parents, a videotaped baptism circulated through the media brought comfort when their son, 22-year-old Army Spc. James Kiehl, was found among the dead during the rescue of Pfc. Jessica Lynch. “I cannot overstate how important it has been to this family to have that video of their son being baptized, and how that can replace in their minds the image of their son’s body,” the Kiehls’ pastor, Jim Holt of Comfort Baptist Church in Comfort, Texas, told Baptist Press.


Knowing that Marine Pfc. Juan Guadalupe Garza Jr., 20, accepted Christ two years ago after a classmate invited him to a youth service at Bedford Christian Community in Temperance, Mich., has motivated the Assemblies of God church’s youth group to become bolder evangelists, their youth pastor said. News of Garza’s death April 8 during the battle for Baghdad had many of the teens in disbelief, youth pastor Rick Flood said, but also reminded them that tomorrow is not promised to anyone.


At home Christian organizations offered assistance to the families of servicemen. The Salvation Army distributed thousands of care packages as part of its “Operation Compassion From the Home Front” campaign, with similar efforts under way across the country.


In addition to giving food and clothing, many Christians supported the troops through prayer. After the conflict erupted, people signed up to pray for troops at a rate of 10 per second at one time, said Ted Haggard, founder of the World Prayer Team, which features a link to the Presidential Prayer Team on its Web site.


Two Christian aid workers said prayer led to their rescue March 31 after they had been held by Iraqis for 10 days. Kenyan truck drivers David Mukuria, 53, and Jakubu Kamau, 37, were rescued by British troops when the 7th Armoured Brigade seized control of Al Zubayr in southern Iraq, The Sun reported.


“God must have given them the power to save us,” Kamau said. “It really was a miracle that they came.”


Friends and family of Pfc. Jessica Lynch also credited the power of prayer for her dramatic rescue April 1. “Our prayers came through,” said friend Daniel Smith, 18, The Washington Post reported. “She made it.”


Similarly, relatives of the seven rescued POWs thanked God for their return. “We thank God for watching over them,” Army Spc. Shoshana Johnson’s father, Claude Johnson, said, the Associated Press reported. Her mother added: “I know [Johnson] was scared, but by her praying, she would get through it,” The El Paso (Texas) Times reported.


As the statue of Saddam Hussein bowed to coalition troops April 9, intercessors encouraged Christians to pray for Iraq’s next leader. “Let’s pray for the Lord to raise up a wise, compassionate man who will lead Iraq into a new era of freedom, that Iraqi citizens will enjoy a society based on liberty and fairness,” Haggard wrote in an Iraq Prayer Alert. “My prayer is that under Iraq’s new president, Iraqi Christians will be free to worship and proclaim Jesus to their fellow Iraqis without any repercussions.”


Franklin Graham’s Samaritan’s Purse and the Southern Baptist Convention were poised to take relief into Iraq when the war ended. Both World Relief and The Salvation Army were developing plans to aid the Iraqis after the war, and Convoy of Hope had collected a half-million pounds of wheat from Indiana to be distributed in Iraq at the war’s end.
Adrienne S. Gaines




World Day of Prayer for Cancer


With 9 million people living with cancer in the United States alone and another 10 million worldwide diagnosed each year, Christians are uniting to pray about one of the world’s most feared diseases.


Intercessors from all 50 states and more than 100 nations are expected to participate in the Worldwide Cancer Prayer Day held annually on June 5. In addition to individual prayer efforts throughout the day, a special service will be held that evening at Crystal Cathedral in California.


Among the participants will be Dr. Francisco Contreras, a noted oncologist who specializes in holistic and alternative cancer treatment. A committed Christian who leads the Oasis of Hope Hospital in Mexico, Contreras helped found the day of prayer in 1997 with Dr. Daniel Kennedy, executive vice president of Oasis of Hope, and Robert A. Schuller, son of Crystal Cathedral senior pastor Robert Schuller.


Author of The Hope of Living Cancer Free and The Coming Cancer Cure (both by Siloam Press), Contreras said he plans to pray for a breakthrough in cancer research. “I do believe God heals people, and I believe that He can prevent the occurrence of cancer in people, but I have a very special prayer that I lift up every year. I pray, ‘God, please grant wisdom to the doctors and scientists and help them find the cure for cancer,'” he said. “I believe that God will answer this prayer, and though the glory for the cure for cancer may be given to a researcher in some university, I know that it will be God who will give the enlightenment to that researcher.”


While praying for a cure, participants will also pray for those living with cancer and for the families of those who have died of the disease. Among this year’s participants are people who know firsthand the pain that cancer brings, including Paul Finkenbinder, a well-known evangelist in Latin America who is living with cancer, and the younger Schuller, whose mother battled the disease.


Kennedy said he receives prayer requests all year from as far as Kuwait, South Africa and Hong Kong at the Worldwide Cancer Prayer Day Web site (). The petitions are compiled into a book, which he has carried as far as Israel to have people pray over them.


Kennedy said the idea for the prayer day was birthed out of a series of visions he had over 11 days in which he saw “people uniting for one cause–prayer–for the healing of those who have cancer.” Contreras funded the inaugural event in 1998, which was broadcast internationally.
Adrienne S. Gaines




Ted Haggard Elected President of NAE

The pastor of an independent charismatic church is enthusiastic about leading one of the largest evangelical groups
During its 61st annual convention in March, the National Association of Evangelicals (NAE) elected independent charismatic pastor Ted Haggard as its third full-time president. Made up of 43,000 congregations from 50 member denominations and comprising 27 million constituents, the NAE is among the largest bodies of evangelical Christians in the United States.


Haggard will continue leading his 9,000-member New Life Church in Colorado Springs, Colo., but will network with NAE headquarters in Washington, D.C. He said he wants to see the NAE develop a louder voice in the public arena, becoming a proactive participant in the cultural “exchange of ideas.”


“I am super optimistic about the potential that exists within the NAE,” Haggard said. “Evangelicals in America are between 40 million and 50 million. … We’re getting things set up to be a resource should the major media outlets call to find out the evangelical view.”


High on Haggard’s priority list is responding to questions raised by the war in Iraq, as well as addressing partial-birth abortion.


Describing himself as a “Spirit-filled evangelical” because of his Southern Baptist roots, Haggard is the first NAE president who heads an independent charismatic congregation, though past-president Don Argue is affiliated with the Assemblies of God and immediate past-president Kevin Mannoia considered himself charismatic.


NAE chairman Bill Hamel, president of the Evangelical Free Church of America, said he “sensed no tension” over Haggard’s charismatic theology, and described Haggard as “a proven leader.”


“Ted has a positive, proactive desire to see evangelicals working together to reach the world for Christ,” said Hamel, who described Haggard as a friend. “Ted crosses denominational and theological lines very easily.”


Haggard recently founded the World Prayer Team (), an Internet-based, round-the-clock effort to link intercessors, and oversees the 200-member Association of Life-Giving Churches. Well-known for his teaching on church growth, Haggard has won the respect of ministers across denominational and racial lines.


“Ted Haggard has distinguished himself not only in the evangelical circles, but across the church world as a leader, a man of prayer, a man of vision, a man of passion, and one who can motivate people to become involved in the kingdom of God,” said Assemblies of God General Superintendent Thomas Trask.


Haggard plans to begin an aggressive recruitment campaign to increase NAE membership, hoping to draw large independent churches that are not affiliated with either the theologically liberal National Council of Churches or the more conservative NAE. Haggard said the essential ties that bind all evangelicals are the beliefs that the Bible is the authoritative Word of God, that Jesus is the Savior of the world and the only Son of God, and that in order to be saved a person must be born again. “All people with a conservative theological view should be part of the NAE,” he said.


Evangelical leaders say NAE is poised for growth. “It has been obvious from our initial meeting that Ted is bringing to this responsibility a commitment and dedication that will continue the growth and strengthening of NAE,” said Commissioner W. Todd Bassett, national commander of The Salvation Army.


“Ted Haggard will lead the National Association of Evangelicals into a new era of evangelical growth,” said Bill Bright, founder of Campus Crusade for Christ. ” The NAE has a vital role in communicating the cause of Christ through American Christians, and Ted will be a great spokesperson for this cause. My prayer is that key leaders will support him as he continues to lead many to help fulfill the Great Commission,” Bright added.


At its March meeting, the NAE partnered with Mission America Coalition to advance evangelistic efforts within member churches and denominations. With its growing bank of resources, including the World Prayer Team and World Relief, the NAE’s humanitarian assistance arm, the NAE can mobilize millions of Christians around an issue within a day, Haggard noted.


Haggard believes this is one of the greatest generations in Christian history, second only to the first-century church. He says there are more born-again pastors and government leaders than ever before, more Christian media and more Bibles being distributed worldwide.


“We’re stronger than we’ve ever been,” he said. “This is the generation of evangelism opportunity.”
Adrienne S. Gaines




Christian Lottery Winner Stirs Furor Over Issue of Gambling

Many church leaders frowned after a West Virginia Pentecostal took home millions in December
When a Church of God (Cleveland, Tenn.) member in West Virginia won a $314.9 million Powerball jackpot, tithing his winnings stirred controversy. Suddenly congregations nationwide were asking themselves if they would accept such donations.


In the face of gambling’s growth, this is no longer an academic question. Andrew Whittaker Jr. took the cash option and went home in December with $170.5 million, topping a list of 10 Powerball jackpots in 2002 that paid out more than $469 million, the Multi-State Lottery Association reported. Elsewhere, Tennessee and North Dakota had approved lottery initiatives in November, leaving Utah and Hawaii as the only states without some form of legalized gambling.


Many denominations frown on lotteries, including the Church of God. During its last general assembly, delegates affirmed their opposition to gambling.


But Whittaker’s announcement that he would give more than $10 million to his church and other charitable causes sparked two dozen inquiries about the Church of God’s policy. That prompted the International Executive Committee to issue a statement encouraging members to refrain from gambling. However, the committee noted that accepting financial contributions is up to the discretion of the local pastor and congregation.


Despite national anti-gambling policies, the same local option is practiced in the Assemblies of God, the nation’s two largest Protestant bodies–the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) and the United Methodist Church–and The Salvation Army.


Exercising its right of choice, the pastor of Whittaker’s church said it might build a youth worship center with its windfall. Pastor C.T. Matthews of Tabernacle of Praise didn’t respond to Charisma’s request for an interview. But earlier he told The Charlotte Observer, “All things belong to God.”


Some groups disagree. A Salvation Army chapter in Naples, Fla., returned a $100,000 donation last December to a man who won $14.2 million in Florida’s lottery. A spokeswoman for Maj. Cleo Damon said since the group preaches against gambling, accepting donations from lottery winnings would be talking “out of both sides of our mouth.”


Lt. Col. Tom Jones, The Salvation Army’s national development director in Washington, D.C., said Damon’s decision affected only his area because all fund raising is done on a local basis. However, Jones said the action reflects the international group’s stand, since officers must affirm opposition to smoking, drinking, cursing and gambling.


The dichotomy between the cases illustrates what ethics professor David Gushee calls an ambivalence toward lotteries. During Tennessee’s recent referendum, Gushee learned that many Christians don’t see anything wrong with them. “They are not convinced by the moral arguments that church leaders like myself are making,” said the Union University professor. “They see the lottery as a harmless amusement.”


The author of a forthcoming book on Christian liberty wrestled with whether believers have the freedom to participate in lotteries if they aren’t risking large sums or damaging their families. In the end, Rex Rogers decided lotteries violate God’s law, a belief that he says lines up with 500 years of church history. The president of Cornerstone University in Grand Rapids, Mich., Rogers also foresees a repeat of secular history like the tide against lotteries Louisiana stirred in 1890.


“The graft, greed and corruption there was so bad it caused a national outcry,” said Rogers, who previously wrote a book on the dangers of gambling. “Thirty-six states outlawed lotteries in their constitutions. Now it’s gone mainstream again. Eventually there will come an outcry.”


Gerald Farshey, a retired ethics professor who taught for 28 years in Chicago’s city colleges, said the people he sees routinely buying lottery tickets don’t look affluent. “For us to take that money and put it into the church’s activities seems to be robbing those who can’t afford it,” said the former United Methodist minister. “For us to profit from human misery isn’t good.”


But churches that don’t expect to face this sticky question may ultimately be surprised, forcing them to draw a fine line. That’s why Barrett Duke, vice president of the SBC’s ethics commission, advises his denomination’s congregations to adopt a policy before the temptation to take “blood money” arises.


“For a church to receive profits from lotteries is facilitating the activity by lending legitimacy to it,” Duke said.
Ken Walker




Ministry Reaches Growing Homeless Population in New York City

New York City Relief offers soup, hot chocolate, clothing, counseling–and the gospel–to street dwellers
The homeless population in New York City exploded last winter to an all-time high of 38,000, official estimates report. Shelter capacities were taxed to the maximum, and many shelter residents were forced to fend for themselves during the day, searching for handouts.


That’s when New York City Relief (NYCR), a nonprofit ministry, stepped in to deliver food, resources and the gospel to the needy and homeless. “We’re seeing increased need on the street all around,” said Dan Stoltzfus, NYCR director of development. “There’s a growing affordable housing crisis in New York and an unemployment rate above 8 percent, much higher than the national average.”


Stoltzfus said unofficial sources have told him the true homeless tally is closer to 100,000.


During the winter, two NYCR school buses served hot soup, hot chocolate and food on eight weekly stops in Manhattan, Harlem, Brooklyn and the Bronx. The food deliveries continued as the temperature grew warmer.


Kenny, a shelter resident, visited the Harlem bus every Friday. “I get bread and hot chocolate and soup,” he told Charisma in January. Robert, who suffers from AIDS, is another regular. “They [NYCR] help me with counseling,” he said. “They have given me food and clothing.”


Brenda relies on NYCR for encouragement. “Prayer means so much sometimes,” she said. “They uplifted my day.” A dialysis patient, she cannot work and collects a disabilities pension. She moans about social agency cutbacks and the treatment of seniors. “They put you in a corner like an old shoe,” she said.


Dave Anderson, director of bus outreach, relates easily to street people because he was one of them. “I kind of put myself right there with them,” he told Charisma. “I share the hope and trust that God has given me.”


He recalls an incident with Daisy, a methadone addict for 10 years. “I’m just tired of the way I’m living,” she told him. “I want to kill myself.” After sharing 2 Corinthians 5:17 with her, Anderson led her to Jesus, and she entered a drug-treatment program the following Saturday. Daisy has been clean for four months and attends a neighborhood church. “What a wonderful God we serve,” she said. “God is good.”


Since 1990 NYCR has given out 1.5 million servings of food and beverages, and made 41,508 referrals connecting needy people to substance-abuse treatment programs, shelters, food pantries, clothing, healthcare and jobs. “We’re obviously here to meet people’s physical needs,” Stoltzfus said. “But we need to be able to take them to the source of all hope, which is Jesus Christ.”


Richard and Dixie Galloway founded the ministry in 1989. At one time the couple managed multiple businesses and owned a 22-room mansion, a cattle ranch, boats, airplanes, a Rolls Royce, two Porsches and a Jaguar. Richard worked like a fiend but also played hard soaking up drugs and booze. Their marriage was collapsing. “I only knew how to make money and get loaded,” he said.


After miraculous life-changing encounters with Christ in 1981, they sold everything and devoured the Bible together. They planted a church and
did evangelism in the Caribbean and Texas. Almost broke in 1988, they worked with Christ for the Nations in Long Island, N.Y., for a while and took an old school bus into Manhattan to feed street people.


Since then NYCR () has grown to 14 full-time staffers and many volunteers who work out of a former factory in Elizabeth, N.J. They operate a food pantry, crisis and counseling programs, and substance-abuse support groups. Individuals and churches support the annual budget of $500,000.


The Galloways have refused funds from groups that restrict evangelism or want them to distribute condoms and information about abortion. NYCR is adding a new bus, and in September it will launch the East Coast School of Urban Ministries, a one-year training program in inner-city missions. “We’re agents of this supernatural thing called caring,” Richard Galloway said.


NYCR continues pushing the faith envelope every day. “Our product is hope,” Dixie Galloway said. “Without the Holy Spirit nothing real or significant happens. The Holy Spirit has to change lives. We’re just agents.”
Peter K. Johnson in