Vibes

Worship from Casting Crowns, Paul Baloche
Plus New fiction releases

Loving God When You Don’t Love the Church
By Chris Jackson, Chosen, softcover, 208 pages, $13.99.


Although the title may lead one to think the author endorses leaving tradition behind for cell groups, house churches or other alternatives, Chris Jackson delivers a stirring exhortation for the body of Christ to mature. Executive pastor at Dutch Sheets’ Freedom Church in Colorado Springs, Colo., Jackson doesn’t gloss over the fact that some churches deal in spirit-killing legalism or function more like spiritual fraternities than loving fellowships. Yet this book forces readers to look deep within and acknowledge that their flaws and shortcomings have hurt others instead of carting around grudges for the offenses others inflict on them. Particularly insightful is the chapter titled “Ten Times Better,” in which he questions whether Christians’ marriages, job performance and integrity are 10 times better than those around them—as were the wisdom and understanding of Daniel and his friends in Babylon (see Dan. 1:19-20). Jackson emphasizes that one reason so many people are leaving the church is that there is seldom a discernible difference between Christians and the world.
Ken Walker


BOOKS


Praying Through the Deeper Issues of Marriage

By Stormie Omartian, Harvest House Publishers, hardcover, 250 pages, $21.99.

Stormie Omartian tackles 14 of the most difficult problems that confront couples today in Praying Through the Deeper Issues of Marriage: Protecting Your Relationship So It Will Last a Lifetime. Knowing firsthand the joys and sorrows of marriage, she shares wisdom gained from personal experience. Deftly balancing practical advice with prayer, Omartian reminds readers that the dangers to the marriage union are primarily spiritual. In lighter moments, she tells stories of her chihuahua, Wrigley, to help illustrate the importance of good communication. At other times, Omartian offers sober advice on how to cope with a spouse’s addictions and infidelities. Each chapter concludes with a prayer and selected Scripture passages for personal reflection. Omartian’s latest title will appeal to both husbands and wives and also to couples considering marriage. After years of writing her best-selling The Power of a Praying series, Omartian undoubtedly has something to say about integrating the practice of prayer into the oft-challenging marriage relationship.
David Rogers


Prophecy & Responsibility
By Graham Cooke, Brilliant Book House, softcover, 245 pages, $17.99.

Author Graham Cooke declares, “The world today desperately needs a prophetic church.” In the pages of Prophecy & Responsibility, Cooke sets forth a lesson guide in prophecy that will bring about required, and much desired, functionality and efficiency to an essential spiritual gift. To those who apply its teachings, Prophecy & Responsibility will help a prophet learn how to be “accountable,” “humble,” “safe” and “strong.” Although many churches crave the freshness of a spiritual “word” in their midst, many don’t know what prophetic ministry looks like. Still others have denied the potential for fear of error and misuse. Cooke embraces Scripture in order to define and map out a practical route to prophetic service.
James Estrada


I Dare You
By Joyce Meyer, FaithWords, hardcover, 256 pages, $22.99.

“If purpose is our journey and destination, then passion is the fuel that’s going to get us there.” This is just one of the many nuggets you will gain from reading Joyce Meyer’s newest book, I Dare You. This book is the missing link to many messages on purpose. Meyer positions herself as a “purpose coach,” taking readers from dream to reality with each passing chapter. With the “I Dare You” action points, readers are challenged step-by-step to move further out of their comfort zones and into their life purposes. Sections such as “Check Your Motives” and the teaching on the eight ways people extinguish their own passions will not only get readers where they want to go but will also help keep them there.
Jevon Bolden


Pray Big
By Will Davis Jr., Revell, softcover, 208 pages, $12.99.

Pastor and intercessor Will Davis Jr. believes that one of the best ways to access God’s power is through a deliberate prayer life. He offers simple tips on praying for brokenness, praying during periods of “spiritual blackout” and even praying for your prayer life. His perspective is bolstered with scriptural principles and peppered with vibrant and compelling personal encounters. In order to pray big, Davis says, one must abandon the meaningless, Christianized terms during prayer and instead pray specific, aggressive “pinpoint prayers” in understandable language. In other words, prayer should contain “no fluff, no fat, no extra words or theologically heavy terms.” Actually, Davis seems to interject this advice into his own writing style. By communicating practical truths without leaning upon elevated diction, Davis crafts a prayer manual for the everyday believer. By offering daring, concise prayers Davis helps make speaking to God “as natural as breathing.”
Jonathan Merritt


Applying the Kingdom
By Myles Munroe, Destiny Image Publishers, hardcover, 256 pages, $24.99.

Author and teacher Myles Munroe uses his third book in his Kingdom series to teach readers the importance of establishing and following through with priorities—and the top priority should be establishing the kingdom. He says that priority was never a problem with the first family in the Garden of Eden. They had all their needs met, and ruling was their top priority, not pursuing resources. All that changed after the fall. Today man’s consuming priority is in meeting personal needs. Munroe works to offer a solution to the materialism trap that is evident all around us. He provides practical principles designed to free readers from the self-destructive spirit of materialism so they can experience stress-free living above the world’s standards of success. He wraps up each chapter with a handful of principles that quickly and simply summarize the lessons taught.
Rhonda Sholar


MUSIC


Every Reason Why

By Mark Roach, Myrrh Records.

Worship leader Mark Roach delivers his debut album, Every Reason Why. His voice will soon be unmistakable to everyone, but it’s his lyrics that will stir listeners’ hearts to sing along and worship the Lord (toe-tapping or even dancing is likely to occur). Serving as worship pastor at Morning Star Church in Missouri, Roach writes music for the church. His smooth voice fits well on rousing songs such as opener “A Thousand Hallelujahs,” yet seamlessly flows straight into ballads such as “You Are,” which declares who God is. “As Long As I Have You” offers an upbeat tempo as well as faith-filled words of courage, declaring that as long as we have Him we can face anything. These songs are perfect for worship—at home or at church.
Leigh Devore


Pages
By Shane & Shane, Inpop Records.

After more than three years Shane & Shane are back with a new release. The songs came directly from the pages of Shane Barnard’s journal—hence the title, Pages. “Beg” does just that—it’s a cry for God to break through and cause us to love Him more. “Burn Us Up” speaks of Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego’s trust in God and willingness to surrender. “We Love You Jesus” is a rousing song about love but also about death and how Jesus takes away the sting. “Holiday” is a pleasant, upbeat song that declares that Jesus is “my favorite part of me.” This duo continues to offer the acoustic-based melodies and reflective lyrics fans have come to expect and relish.
Leigh Devore


Our God Saves
By Paul Baloche, Integrity Music.

Singer-songwriter Paul Baloche demonstrates again why he is one of the most prominent names in praise and worship music with his latest album, Our God Saves. In keeping with the genre, Baloche writes emotive, lyrically repetitive songs that build to a crescendo. But unlike many of his colleagues, he never gets too comfortable with any one style, as this latest album demonstrates. Incorporating moments of rock, pop and even country, Baloche gives listeners more than a dozen songs, which collectively clock in at just over an hour in length. The disc is a comprehensive worship experience, from “Beyond Us (Only True God),” a soaring duet with Kathryn Scott, to the rock song “Your Love Came Down,” a surprisingly powerful number with arresting lyrics (“Your blood ran down from Your head to Your face, from Your hands to Your feet”). Nice moments on the album also include Baloche’s beautiful arrangement of “Rock of Ages,” as well as his duet with worship leader Matt Redman (“I Cling to the Cross”). “The Kingdom of God” and “Our God Saves,” the title track, are both fairly standard. Baloche is best when he’s doing something a little out of the ordinary. Yet, even when he’s not, his songs are catchy—and likely coming to a church near you.
Cameron Conant


The Altar and the Door
By Casting Crowns, Reunion Records.

Casting Crowns return with their third album, The Altar and the Door. This collection is packed with faith-filled, heart-stirring lyrics that will challenge and encourage listeners and bring glory and honor to God. Opener “What the World Needs” offers hard-hitting truth that Christians have to care more about the inside than appearances, and we have to stop being so like the world that the world can’t see a difference in us. The title track is based on how easy it is to know right from wrong when spending time with Him. But somewhere between “the altar and the door” we can lose sight of the lines. “I Know You’re There” is an album highlight with Megan Garrett taking lead vocals. She declares: “I know You’re there / I know You see me / You’re the air I breathe / You are the ground beneath me / I know You’re there / I know you hear me / I can find You anywhere.” This group continues to create music that helps usher listeners into God’s presence.
Leigh Devore


Fiction


SUPERNATURAL


Angel

By Alton Gansky, Realms, softcover, 304 pages, $12.99.

California has a new visitor. Aster speaks with wisdom and makes promises—and miracles happen all around him. People are drawn to him: Politicians look to him for advice, and religious leaders befriend him. It seems only one person is leery of this stranger. Priscilla Simms, an investigative journalist, is determined to find out if Aster is too good to be true. She could lose everything, even her life, in uncovering the truth.


ROMANCE


A Family in Full

By Vanessa Del Fabbro, Steeple Hill, softcover, 331 pages, $13.95.

Monica Brunett’s life seems idyllic in Lady Helen, South Africa. She has two adopted sons, a meaningful career, great friends and a beau. But things aren’t perfect. A young girl holds a grudge against Monica, a friend is filled with grief and criminals are wreaking havoc on the village. But Monica has the faith to know that love is worth any risk.


CONTEMPORARY


A Promise to Remember

By Kathryn Cushman, Bethany House Publishers, softcover, 320 pages, $13.95.

Two women’s lives collide when their teenage sons are killed in a car accident. Melanie Johnston, a single mom, feels the rich boy is getting more attention from the press. Andie Phelps, the wealthy son’s mother, and her husband feel partly responsible for the boys’ deaths. Melanie is determined to keep her son’s legacy alive and sues the Phelps, dividing the church, friends and the community.


New On DVD


3:16 Stories of Hope

Lionsgate $19.98

This companion DVD to Max Lucado’s new book, 3:16 the Numbers of Hope, features Lucado’s teaching on the message of John 3:16. He also wrote the story for the short film included, which has themes of rebellion and consequences, forgiveness, and unconditional love. This DVD has a running time of 75 minutes.


Buzby and the Grumble Bees
Thomas Nelson $14.99

Hermie and Friends are back. Buzby’s niece and nephew come for a visit and everyone gets a rude awakening when the two youngsters misbehave. Buzby’s friends devise a plan to teach them the importance of cleaning up after themselves, using good table manners and getting enough sleep. Victoria Jackson (Saturday Night Live) joins the cast as Beebee.


Travel the Road Season 2
Challenge for Christ Ministries $49.99

Follow along as missionaries Tim Scott and Will Decker travel from Borneo to the Himalayan Mountains to Tibet. The pair shares the gospel wherever they go. Season two is now available on DVD, and the 14 episodes add up to more than 500 minutes of footage. Also included are commentary, deleted scenes, maps, photo galleries, country profiles and much more.




Channel Surfing


Watch and Pray


Mike Bickle’s worship-driven prayer movement partners with GOD TV.


In July, GOD TV moved its cameras into the International House of Prayer (IHOP) in Kansas City, Mo., transmitting to more than 200 countries live footage of a worship-fueled prayer room that has burned day and night since September 1999.
“Our vision with GOD TV is to [work together] to establish 100,000 houses of prayer [worldwide],” says Mike Bickle, founder and director of IHOP. “We are not establishing an IHOP network. … We do not want them to be called IHOP, but rather to use whatever name the Lord gives them.”


Bickle’s partnership with GOD TV formed after the network’s founders, Rory and Wendy Alec, interviewed him last October during GOD TV’s initial U.S. launch. He now heads GOD TV’s global division of prayer and hosts a daily one-hour devotional program. GOD TV also airs three hours of IHOP’s prayer room live every day and streams it 24-7 over its Web site, god.tv.


Bickle’s vision for nonstop prayer began in 1983 when prophetic minister Bob Jones declared Bickle would spearhead a “24-hour house of prayer in the spirit of the Tabernacle of David.” Bickle says that at the time “the Lord promised we would eventually have 5,000 full-time staff.”


Today IHOP is nearly halfway there, due in large part to its distinctive “harp and bowl” model of prayer—worship music mixed with intercession. “You can’t imagine how powerful it can be to mingle songs with spoken prayers and proclamations,” said Rory Alec, GOD TV’s co-founder and CEO, after he visited IHOP.


The harp and bowl model of prayer is sustainable, Bickle says, because it’s both powerful and enjoyable. “[Without intimacy in Jesus] it is much more difficult to motivate people to pray [for hours]. The war cry in prayer is best fueled by love songs.”


Bickle says some Christians find it difficult to accept the idea that aside from training and outreach, the primary responsibility of IHOP’s 1,300 full-time staff and students is worship and intercession.


“We believe that the most effective way to evangelize and care for people is in the context of night-and-day prayer, which releases more of the power of God in our labors,” he says. “This is a new paradigm for many in the church today. The New Testament presents the missions movement as deeply connected to continual prayer.”


Over the satellites of the fast-growing GOD TV, Bickle hopes thousands of believers will tune in and catch IHOP’s latest vision for 100,000 houses of prayer worldwide.
Paul Steven Ghiringhelli




Buzz


SPOTLIGHT


Finding Joy


Joan Rosario: Worshiping God on the mountaintop


When Joann Rosario was writing the songs for her latest CD, Joyous Salvation, she says she wanted the project to show listeners “how to worship on the mountaintop.” But the depth of her gratitude was born in the valley, when she had lost her voice and wasn’t sure it would return. During that time, before the nodules on her vocal chords healed, she says she learned not to put her confidence in her gifts. “When you read about David it says he was excellent, but the Lord was with him,” she says. “And I think as human beings … we strive so much to be excellent in our talent and our gift that we forget to seek that the Lord is with us. The Lord being with us is the most important thing.”
Adrienne S. Gaines


Prayer Point

Roughly 1.6 billion unevangelized people live in the 10/40 Window, a region from 10 degrees north to 40 degrees north of the equator that includes Africa, the Middle East and Central Asia. This month we encourage you to join Window International Network (win1040.com) in praying that:


Terrorist groups in that region will be thrown into confusion
Laws banning conversion to Christianity will not be passed
The murders and inhumane treatment of Christians would be investigated.


To sign up for regular prayer updates from Charisma’s Prayer Initiative, visit prayerinitiative.com


Bible On Film


This month the first in a series of 12 animated epic Bible stories will open in theaters. The Ten Commandments—featuring the voices of Ben Kingsley, Christian Slater, Alfred Molina and Elliott Gould—releases from Promenade Pictures Oct. 26. The 3-D production is to be followed next year by Noah’s Ark: The New Beginning. “Not since my years working with Walt Disney have I been so happy to bring motion pictures to families,” says Promenade Pictures CEO Frank Yablans, former president of Paramount Pictures and former CEO of MGM/UA. “I truly feel that we are helping accomplish God’s work in bringing stories to film that will make a difference in the lives of people.”


PEOPLE


Angel Sightings


Though some Christians worry that the current fascination with fantasy novels may be luring people away from biblical truth, California-based author Alton Gansky sees it as a sign that individuals are longing to understand the supernatural. “We have a curiosity about such things because we are spiritual beings,” says Gansky, a former pastor who has written 20 novels. “The problem is if you go into them without any [biblical] grounding, it’s easy to be misled.”


Gansky explores the lure of deception in his latest novel, Angel, a supernatural thriller about a miracle-working stranger who appears in a California town after an earthquake. In a time when Gansky says many churchgoers don’t understand basic Christian doctrine, he hopes Angel—drawn from Galatians 1:6-8, in which the apostle Paul warns the church not to believe any other gospel than what he has preached—will entertain and provoke thought. “When they’re done reading the book, I hope the reader will lean back and say, ‘I wonder,’ and then maybe do some self-examination.”
Adrienne S. Gaines


EVANGELISM

Evangelism 101


Evangelist helps Christians witness without fear


She average Christian in America will likely die without ever having told anyone about Jesus. So says Daniel Owens, founder of Eternity Minded Ministries (EMM), who hopes to change that trend through his books and workshops on evangelism.


“For the unbeliever, we’re trying to get them to think more about their eternal soul, and for the church, we’re trying to get them to think more about their accountability to Christ,” he says. “And that’s really what moves us.”


Since he founded California-based EMM nearly 10 years ago, Owens has spent most of his time leading festival-style evangelistic crusades in nations such as Burundi, Peru, India and Uganda. He says thousands have come to Christ and dozens of churches have been planted in regions that previously had little Christian witness. All around the world, he says, believers have the same anxieties about evangelizing.


Through his book Sharing Christ When You Feel You Can’t and related seminars, Owens helps Christians, especially those who are introverts, find ways to share their faith. “You start with just being yourself and recognizing that the average person has seven to nine contacts with the gospel before they ever make a decision,” he says.


“So when Jesus says, ‘I want you to be My witnesses,’ that’s what He’s asking us to do, and it doesn’t mean you have to close the deal every time. It’s just being part of the person’s spiritual journey, one of their many contacts they’re going to have.”
Rachael Cox




Out of the Darkness

Anne Rice, the queen of Gothic fiction, has found Christ and dedicated her writing to God. She recently talked with Charisma about her life and how it changed.
The author of The Queen of the Damned is now worshiping the King of kings.
Anne Rice, the acclaimed icon of modern Gothic fiction, who once rode in a coffin through her native New Orleans in the back of a blacked-out hearse flanked by a horde of personal undertakers, is writing Christian fiction and has vowed never to write anything else.


Books about vampires, witches and erotica by the Southern author have sold more than 100 million copies. They have made a household name of the vampire Lestat, who was the subject of a Tony-nominated Broadway musical in 2006 and who was played by Tom Cruise in the 1994 film adaptation of Rice’s first novel, Interview With the Vampire.


It was therefore startling to her publisher and millions of readers when in 2003 Rice, then known as an avowed atheist, announced that her 26th book would be a fictional first-person narrative given by Jesus at age 7, titled Christ the Lord: Out of Egypt.


Not only would the book be about Christ and not Lestat or a similar figure, but it also would have the “audacity” to delve into Jesus’ incarnation, how He came to realize He was both man and God, and when He began His battle with Satan. It has sold more than 400,000 copies since going on sale in November 2005 and was listed 13 weeks on the New York Times best-sellers list. It dares to answer questions on which the Bible is largely silent.


Rice’s surprising shift in subject matter was closely aligned with her return in 1998 to her spiritual roots in the Roman Catholic Church—a move that has been chronicled in print by Newsday and The New York Times and discussed during television appearances on Today, Good Morning America, The O’Reilly Factor and other programs. The year after she announced Christ the Lord, as if punctuating the new direction she intended her stories to take, Rice left her Louisiana home of many years and moved to California.


She lives today in Rancho Mirage near Palm Springs in an enormous house—a single-story, pale-yellow edifice of stucco and glass that sits behind two sets of gates and includes a massive library with thousands of volumes on theology and church history. Open, bright and airy, it is far different from her lush, ornate and historic New Orleans mansion—the scene of lavish parties hosted by Rice, clad perpetually in black, and her atheist husband, Stan Rice.


Her guest house in Rancho Mirage is home to her assistant, Sue Tebbe, and to a young man named Becket Ghioto, a former Benedictine monk with a master’s degree in theology who helps Rice with research and enjoys playing the baby grand piano in the author’s tennis-court sized living room.


The main house is filled with religious statues. Yet hanging in a hallway is a painting, one of about 300 by Rice’s late husband, that depicts in gay colors a playful demon who is perhaps Lucifer himself seducing a coy but obviously delighted, unclothed woman.


Rice enters the room, tiny but looking trim and vibrant today at 66, and sits on a tan overstuffed couch. Her Irish-brown eyes hold an unexpected sparkle and peace. She talks fast and laughs often.


Telling the Old, Old Story


“We’ve been telling the story of Jesus for over 2,000 years, and it has as much power today as it ever did,” Rice states emphatically. “When I was an atheist I thought Christianity was a dying religion. That’s nonsense; it’s like an explosion going off all the time.”


Though exuberant, she is a diabetic and receives six insulin injections each day. Without them, she says, she would die within 24 hours. In 1998 she went into a diabetic coma and later suffered an intestinal blockage.


Rice had gastric bypass surgery in 2003 and lost 25 pounds. Best of all, her chronic depression has disappeared.


She prays before writing and, although confident of her talent and skills, says that depicting the thoughts, attitudes and spirituality of the boy Jesus in her latest book is a task she takes very seriously.


“It feels frightening at times,” she admits. “But it never feels anything less than incredibly exhilarating. Even the terror is exciting. I wake up thinking: I can’t do this. I can’t, I can’t.


“And the terror is inside: How am I going to do this? Christ is sinless, yet He is tempted. He’s a healthy man, yet sinless. How do I do this?


“But then I say: ‘I am going to do this somehow. I am going to make this a fictional reality in which a person can enter and be close to Christ.'”


Christ the Lord is the first of four novels Rice will write about Jesus’ life. In the postscript, she asks, “After all, is Christ our Lord not the ultimate supernatural hero?”


Published by Alfred A. Knopf, the book portrays the Savior as supernatural, as well as sinless and serious. It provides a well-researched but historically debatable look at the lifestyle and events surrounding the young Jesus.


“To me it’s the most gorgeous and beautiful mystery I could ever think about,” Rice says. “God became this man who descended, not just for a day or a week. He was born here and grew up here and lived here over 30 years. I could meditate on this until my head explodes.”


The story tells of Christ’s family fleeing Bethlehem and living in Egypt’s largest city, Alexandria, where Jesus studied the Torah and learned Greek under Hellenistic philosopher Philo. Joseph leads his extended family home to Nazareth by way of Jerusalem during the brutal Jewish uprising against King Herod Archelaus.


Rice’s literary license is broad if not breathtaking. Jesus makes it snow and heals his uncle. An off-handed curse kills an attacking bully whom He later brings back to life. He makes a group of clay pigeons fly away.


The huge family sleeps in the same room. In the book Mary never sleeps with Joseph, and Jesus’ brother James is seen as Joseph’s son by a previous marriage. Both parents seek to protect Jesus by keeping secret the miraculous details of His birth and the reason for the flight to Egypt.


On some levels, Jesus always understands He is God yet on other levels gradually realizes what that means.


“I really do believe and I hope it comes across in the book that Jesus is God and at any given time can know anything He wants, yet He might not want to because He is human and going through this for us,” Rice says. “He knows we can approach Him more easily if He has been through suffering, persecution and temptation.”


Rice researched the book for three years using a variety of sources, but most scholars doubt Christ spoke Greek and was already 7 years old when the Jews rose up against Herod. In addition, it is set during a period of time the Bible is silent about.


The Infancy Gospels of Thomas, Rice’s source of two childhood miracles by Jesus, were reportedly used by the Gnostics, a heretical group that believed special knowledge was needed for salvation. Rice insists no reputable scholar considers them Gnostic teachings.


“Gnosticism is heresy, and I have no interest in it,” she says. “The most radical thing I did was use the Apochrya legends, which some people think are the Gnostic gospels. It has nothing to do with the Gnostic gospels. The Infancy Gospels of Thomas are far different.”


Doubts about that and her source material caused some Christian bookstore chains to keep her book from their shelves. Yet it is consistently reverent.


Rice hopes the same people who call to ask if her vampire creation Lestat is a real person will also believe that the shepherds saw angels, the wise men came and Mary bore Jesus as a virgin.


“I know that many, many of the people I’m writing for don’t believe any of that,” the author notes. “I’m just struggling to get it right. And it’s worth all the work if I can reach one person who reads the book and says, ‘I want to know more.'”


Rice’s typical characters are complex, conflicted and confused, their lives riddled with paradox. Rice was like them, a prodigal daughter on a long day’s journey into light. The journey had a nexus moment in June 2002 when she walked into St. Mary’s Assumption Church in New Orleans for counsel and prayer.


“I said to God: ‘I won’t write anything anymore except for You. I don’t care what happens. You figure it out, how I take care of the people and things I have to take care of. It will work out. And I will not write another book about vampires. I’m not going to glamorize evil. I’m not going to write another book about anything except what’s for You.’ And I walked out of that church a changed person.”


Getting there, however, had taken her a lifetime.


‘I Lost My Faith’


Rice was born in New Orleans, where her father Howard Allen O’Brien worked in the post office and her mother, Katherine, stayed home, read palms and drank. Named “Howard” after her father, Rice would often join her namesake at dusk in their blue-collar neighborhood to walk through the cemeteries and gaze at the above-ground crypts.


Having two aunts who were nuns and a cousin who was a priest, she was confirmed in the Catholic Church at age 12. She adopted a saint’s name, following a family tradition, hers being Alphonsus Liguori. Afterward, “Howard” became “Anne.”


She attended Catholic school, went to Mass daily and even followed a tradition of visiting 12 churches on Fridays. She was disappointed when she learned women could not become priests and begged her father to let her enter a convent. He insisted she first finish high school.


Katherine died of complications from alcoholism when Rice was 14. She remembers that her mother described her disease as “a craving in the blood”—a malady that was shared by Katherine’s father and grandfather. Her father later married Dorothy Van Bever, and for a time Rice and her sisters lived in a Catholic boarding school.


She moved with her family to Richardson, Texas, near Dallas, and at her first public school met Stan Rice. He was an avid atheist, but the two shared a love of the arts. When Rice attended Texas Women’s University she was drawn to the literary fad of existentialism, and her faith soon underwent a crisis.


“All of this was forbidden by the church,” she says. “I broke with the rigid perception of what it meant to be a Catholic. I didn’t grow up in a university community, so I didn’t have the intellectual equipment to deal with doubts and shades of gray. Had I gone to a Catholic college it might have been different. But it is pointless to say that. I lost my faith.”


At 19, she moved to San Francisco just as the hippie era was dawning there. After Stan proposed by telegram, she returned to Texas where they were married in a civil ceremony.


The couple moved to San Francisco’s counterculture Haight-Ashbury district, got jobs and went to college. Stan painted and became a nationally known poet. When he was teaching at San Francisco State University, Rice, then 24, gave birth to Michele, a brown-haired, blue-eyed child they nicknamed “Mouse.”


At age 4, Michele came down with a constant fever, and a doctor told the Rices their daughter had leukemia. The couple was spending the night with Michele in her hospital room when she died, one month before her 6th birthday.


Transformation


Five weeks later Rice finished Interview With the Vampire, a story about Louis—a 17th century New Orleans vampire and former member of the Catholic Church who was dealing with the death of his brother and his need for blood.


Though the couple drank heavily, Rice says she never became angry with God over Michele’s death. Still, her fictional characters wavered between belief and despair as they wrestled with timeless themes of good and evil.


Apparently, so did Rice.


“To me the vampire was a metaphor for the lost person disconnected with God,” she says. “There I was, lost and groping and convinced on some level that faith in God was impossible. But that was all I could do at that time. I thought we were lost and not created by a loving God, and this concept was a myth.”


Using a pseudonym, she wrote four pornographic novels, and under her name wrote books on the Mayfair family of witches and a 10-book series on vampires. In 1978 the couple had a son, Christopher, and in 1988 they moved into a New Orleans mansion.


They traveled to research locations and, oddly, visited Israel, where Rice says she became impressed by the survival of the Jewish nation. She read C.S. Lewis’ Mere Christianity and by 1998 was again reading the Bible.


She came to realize that writing about witches and vampires fed her chronic depression. God began dealing with her, she says, and she found that the same verse she read at night began to show up randomly—in another book, or when she and her sister Karen read the Bible together.


“The verse in the Gospel of John when Jesus is saying, ‘Unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink His blood, you have no life in Me,’ kept coming to me,” Rice recalls, referring to John 6:53. She says she came to understand that for both Christians and fictional vampires eternal life lies in the blood.


In her books Rice explored gay sex and glamorized androgyny. When she learned that her own son, Christopher—today a successful novelist—was gay, she knew his lifestyle could endanger him physically and also block her return to Christ, since the Catholic Church condemned homosexuality. She once asked a Christian friend how she could return to the church when the priest says her son is going to hell.


“He thought for a moment and said, ‘Our God is a merciful God,”‘ she recalls. “That started me on the glimpse—that God will work it out, He will take care of everything. He is not going to let someone go to hell by mistake.


“If someone is going to hell, it is because they rejected Him. God made the world. He will let them know.”


In 1998, she confessed her sins and received Holy Eucharist, the sacrament of communion, in which Catholics believe the bread and wine become the very body and blood of Christ. She and Stan renewed their marriage vows—this time in a church.


Tragically, in 2002, Stan was diagnosed with a brain tumor and died less than four months later. Anne’s epiphany moment in a church pew closely followed.


“Certainly at that moment something incredible happened,” she says. “It was like untying a knot. I was finally able to say, ‘I love You too, Christ.’ The effect was unbelievable. I was transformed. I knew I was talking directly to Christ.”


A New Chapter


Rice left New Orleans a year before Hurricane Katrina and moved into a large seacoast home in La Jolla, California, near San Diego. She found it damp and cool and the sidewalk filled with hundreds of fans waiting to see her when she’d leave for church. In the winter of 2005-2006 she moved to sunny Rancho Mirage.


Today Rice will write only about Christian redemption. The Road to Cana, the second volume of her series about the life of Christ, is scheduled by Knopf for publication in March. It will cover the life of Jesus from the time He starts His ministry to the wedding feast at Cana, where the Bible records He performed His first miracle, changing water into wine.


Says Rice of book two: “It’s my full answer to the DaVinci Code, and more, I hope and pray.”


She also wants to write a Christian play. Given her enormous fan base, she has the potential to depict Christ as Lord to millions of unsaved people.


She constantly studies and reads the Gospels. And she gathers regularly with Sue Tebbe and Becket Ghioto to pray. Each Sunday she attends church locally.


Rice firmly believes in the power of prayer and that Jesus has the power to heal today, but she says her message to the world, at least for now, is that God is love.
“This, for me, is what I want to emphasize; this is what I want to say. I guess one of the greatest gifts we can get is to actually feel Him, and those times when we can talk about His love with conviction and not feel self-conscious.


“I always thought that to go back to the church, to believe again, was the annihilation of one’s spirit and brain. But I feel I’ve opened the door on this immense palace just gilded with riches and filled with rooms and vistas waiting to be explored.


“That’s my belief and my church and my relationship with God. It’s just filled with beauty. That I can find the mystery of the Incarnation radiating and exploding in everything, the source of light itself, it’s just unbelievable.”


Ed Donnally, a former Dallas Morning News writer, is a Foursquare minister and chaplain. He lives in Los Angeles with his wife, Sandi.




Feedback


My Turn


Thanks again, Charisma, for making me think. Your story on immigrants (August) reminded me of the richness that different races and cultures bring to our relationships.


One of my favorite experiences at my church has been getting to know Peter and Tetyana, a Ukrainian couple who had moved to New Orleans then fled to my city during Hurricane Katrina. Two avenues opened up to facilitate our friendship. One is music; the second is language. Were they not willing to learn English, they would remain always at a disadvantage.


What if they had refused to learn English and demanded that the U.S. government and culture adapt to their individual needs? That is neither practical nor logical. I admire Hispanics in our area who are committed to retaining their culture, and I admire those who speak Spanish in their homes. But they will not serve themselves or their adopted community well if they refuse to learn English.


Immigrants can teach their children the richness of living in a multicultural society, but unless they learn English, that won’t happen. They’ll isolate themselves in cultural neighborhoods and never experience all that this country has to offer.


English is not a threat to anyone’s heritage or culture. It offers immigrants a path to a richer, fuller life.
Randall Murphree
Tupelo, Mississippi


The Immigration Debate


Regarding your coverage of immigrants (“Immigrant Faith” by Joel Kilpatrick, August), my mother was an immigrant, as were my father’s parents. I’m thankful they came to the United States. However, they came legally!


The issue of open or closed borders is all about people who are coming here illegally. Let’s be open to those who come here legally and closed to those breaking the law and entering illegally.
Michele Horna
Dixon, Missouri


I am so glad someone is finally speaking out about the role that Pentecostal ministers should take concerning illegal immigration. Until now the matter was left to Hispanic ministers and Catholic bishops to address.


In God’s kingdom there are no borders. Where are the conservatives? Are they not the ones who oppose abortion and gay marriage? Yet the church is keeping silent while our immigrant nation turns into a nation of hatred.
Noble Osabu
New Brunswick, New Jersey


Christian conservatives have written far too many words that are denigrating to immigrants, trampling their dignity in the name of the law. A higher law commands us to love our neighbors—even if they weren’t born in this country.
Pamela McClure
Franklin, Tennessee


It is time to close the borders. Unsecured borders in Texas have allowed every kind of crime to affect our citizens. It is not just drugs and the mafia that come from Mexico. Illegals take jobs from American citizens.


Illegals have ripped off our hospitals and schools. Quality health care and education programs have been replaced by bilingual classes that don’t teach English well. It is your grandchildren who will not have education or job choices because of this foreign invasion.
Betty Thompson
San Antonio, Texas


Few if any Americans are opposed to immigration when it is done properly. The point of today’s problem is folks who come here without permission. That is a violation of our laws and must not be allowed.


These folks do not want to be U.S. citizens or to learn our language. Therefore we are not a melting-pot nation any longer.
Curtis Bellomy
Raleigh, North Carolina


There is a real difference between immigrants and illegal aliens. How many years should we support illegal immigrants who have no evident desire to become citizens?


They come here with no plans of becoming citizens. They pay $5 for a green card. They drain our social security system while hospitals provide free care for them. They are given a free ride at taxpayers’ expense.


It’s time we started drawing lines between these two distinct groups. Immigrants? Yes! Illegal immigrants? No! And, as Christians, we need to show our opinions when we go to the polls to cast our votes.
Doug Jones
Ferrum, Virginia


I thought conservatives were concerned about people entering this country in an orderly and legal way. Unregulated numbers of immigrants result in too great a strain on our health-care and educational systems.
Kate Hendrix
Knoxville, Tennessee


Immigrants have contributed much to make this nation what it is today. But at the same time people need to know that we’re a nation of laws, not anarchy.


I’m not aware of any other country in the world that would allow millions of people to cross its borders illegally, settle and then expect all the benefits of a national citizen. We need to pray for a just resolution to the current immigration situation in our country.
Anne Sampson
Greensboro, North Carolina


The real issue is not immigration, prejudice or being liberal. The real problem is rooted in drugs, gangs, terrorists and other criminals. Fox News reports that there are 80,000 illegal immigrants in the United States right now who have active warrants out for their arrest. Their crimes range from murder to rape to shoplifting.
Samuel McKittrick
Braselton, Georgia


Can Worship Be Too Loud?


Thanks for your recent cover story on the David Crowder Band (“It’s a Worship Revolution” by Chad Bonham, July). I know there are people who are probably uncomfortable with Charisma’s focus on this group because the band’s music is loud and because the members look different from people we see on Christian television. But God is using them to reach a different generation for His glory.
Dee Johnson
New Orleans, Louisiana


A decibel meter will easily prove that today’s worship music is too loud. It damages our ears and prevents us from entering into worship with the congregation. Who will challenge the “worship leaders” and “musicians” to bring the sound level down to a respectable volume?
Elaine Hardt
Prescott Valley, Arizona


My heart has been grieved by the exploitation of music in the church. Many churches have become entertainment centers and include rock and rap music, fog on stage and colored lights. Is this not a bar scene?


I am sure there are talented individuals on the instruments. But is their talent glorifying God? Or is it showmanship?


Must the drums and rhythm guitars be so loud that we feel each beat in the center of our chests? I once asked a worship director why the music had to be so loud. He replied, “The people need to feel the beat in their bodies to get into the ‘presence.'”


What happened to getting on our knees and being quiet before the Lord?
Darlene Walker
Benbrook, Texas


Women and Domestic Violence


I am pleased Charisma tackled the subject of domestic violence (“The Sin We Hide From View” by Marcia Davis-Seale, August). However, the article presents a biased portrayal of this problem. Research consistently shows that women are as likely to instigate domestic violence as men are.


In the area of dating violence, the Centers for Disease Control shows that women are actually slightly more likely to engage in partner aggression. Ignoring the problem of female aggression will not help us solve the problem of partner abuse.
Edward E. Bartlett
Rockville, Maryland


Editor’s note:
U.S. government studies and many other sources clearly indicate that 92 percent of domestic violence incidents are crimes committed by men against women. It is outrageous to claim that women are more violent. Also, many cases of female violence occur in lesbian relationships and are not, in fact, directed at men but rather at their female partners.


This certainly does not mean we should overlook the issue of domestic violence against men. But it is reprehensible to suggest that women are not the more vulnerable gender.


A Forgotten Pioneer


I enjoyed your recent profile of Matthew Ward and the music of the Jesus Movement (“The Jesus People: Where Are They Now?” August). But I wondered how you could have omitted Dallas Holm.


A true forerunner of Christian music, Dallas’ influence on the genre is legendary. He has won multiple Dove awards, received many Grammy nominations, and has gold records. But of infinitely greater importance is the reality that thousands have given their lives to Jesus at his concerts. My husband and I were greatly impacted by Dallas Holm and Praise when we were younger.
Rev. Teri Downs
Woodland Park, Colorado


Bush and Condoleezza


In your article about Condoleezza Rice (“The Quiet Faith of Condoleezza Rice” by Leslie Montgomery, June), you didn’t mention that as head of the State Department she was sent by President Bush to tell Israel to give up land given to them by God. The land for peace practice has never worked, and even now Israel is being pressured to give up the West Bank. Could this be the very reason the Bush administration seems to be cursed in everything it does?
Gary Greely
Cleveland, Tennessee


Let’s Get Real


In J. Lee Grady’s column called “Hurricane Warning” (Fire in My Bones, July), he asked why people don’t hold church leaders accountable for their moral actions. I think it’s because of greed on the part of church members and the abandonment of the true gospel. In a world where we’ve learned to build large congregations with marketing, we have reaped what we’ve sown.
Danny Thompson
Abilene, Texas


Jesus never told us that the church was to function as a hierarchy, an organization or an institution. He made us a family. Church was meant to be very simple. We’ve complicated it beyond recognition.
Dena Brehm
Dallas, Oregon


Grady’s questions are good and there are answers, but are church leaders ready to listen? The culture in charismatic churches is to have one man set the vision. There is really no understanding of teamwork. Until old mind-sets and lack of accountability are dealt with, we will continue to see the superstar pastors crash and burn.
Terri Routh
Midlothian, Virginia




Bikers Ride for Bible Translations

Recently, staff from Wycliffe Bible Translators began a cross-country bicycle tour to raise awareness for the need of Bible translations.
 
Bikers Ride for Bible Translations
Recently, two staff members from Wycliffe Bible Translators began a 3,000-mile cross-country bicycle tour to raise awareness for the need of both written and audio Bible translations. The two bikers, Ed Speyers and Doug Haag, hope the 40-day trek will raise awareness and funds to have a biblical translation in every language by 2025 and immediately translate Bibles for two people groups in Guatemala. The two Wycliffe staffers, along with five other cyclists, kicked off their trip in Los Angeles on Sept. 26, and plan to finish the tour in Lynchburg, Va. In partnership with the audio-Bible ministry, Faith Comes by Hearing, the riders hope the tour will enable Wycliffe to have Bibles translated in audio versions to reach cultures that communicate only orally. “Their passion is to see it in audio form, in a way that's professional quality that would have immediate impact on these oral cultures,” Haag said. “So you not only have it written down and available [and] accessible that way, but [it will be in] audio form as well.”



Head of Presbyterian Church to Step Down

Some Presbyterian leaders hope Kirkpatrick's retirement will allow for a change in the liberal direction the church has taken with its acceptance of homosexual ordinations.

 
Head of Presbyterian Church to Step Down
At the annual Presbyterian Church USA (PCUSA) meeting this summer, the Rev. Clifton Kirkpatrick, head of the denomination, announced he would not seek another term after his third one ends next summer. Since 1996 Kirkpatrick has held the highest position in the PCUSA as the Stated Clerk of the General Assembly. Some conservative leaders in the denomination said that Kirkpatrick’s decision to step down is a good change of direction for the “disheartening state” of the nation's largest Presbyterian denomination, which claims 2.3 million members. In recent years Kirkpatrick has been criticized for the PCUSA’s rapid membership decline and the liberal direction the denomination has taken with the acceptance of homosexual ordination and disputes over scriptural authority. “The last decade under his leadership has been a difficult and disappointing time for Kirkpatrick, and indeed for Presbyterians as a whole,” said James D. Berkley, director of Presbyterian Action at the Institute on Religion and Democracy. Kirkpatrick said he is eager to spend more time with his family, according to an Associated Press report. The PCUSA nominating committee has already begun searching for a new clerk to be elected next year.



Longtime Televangelist Rex Humbard Dies

Broadcast pioneer and televangelist Rex Humbard died Sept. 21 of natural causes. He was 88 and was noted as one of America's first television evangelist.
 
Longtime Televangelist Rex Humbard Dies
Broadcast pioneer and televangelist Rex Humbard died Sept. 21 of natural causes. He was 88. Noted as one of America's first television evangelist, Humbard began broadcasting his TV show, Cathedral of Tomorrow, to millions in the 1950s from his Ohio-based, 5,400-seat church of the same name. “He was the ultimate role model in showing love and caring for other people over and above himself,” said his grandson Rex Humbard III. The show aired for three decades on 360 stations across North America and in 91 languages on more than 2,000 stations worldwide. “The vast majority of people do not go to church and the only way we can reach them is through the TV,” Humbard wrote in his autobiography, Miracles in My Life. Regularly watching Humbard from hotels on Sundays, the legendary Elvis Presley reportedly called the televangelist “his preacher,” and upon his death in 1977 Presley’s father requested Humbard officiate the service, according to Humbard’s official Web site. Secular media has recognized Humbard—who at 13 began his broadcast career by singing gospel songs at a local radio station in Arkansas and inviting listeners to his father’s church—as an extremely influential televangelist. “Today, Rex Humbard has come closer than any other human being in history … to preaching the gospel in all of the world … more than any other evangelist, he has taken up the challenge,” TIME magazine reported in 1999. U.S. News & World Report named him one of the “Top 25 Principle Architects of the American Century.” Humbard is survived by his wife of 65 years, Maude Aimee; sons, Rex Jr., Don and Charles; daughter, Liz Darling; and 21 grandchildren and great-grandchildren. Funeral services will be held in Akron, Ohio, at 3 p.m. ET on Sept. 30.



Miracles During Purity Siege

Across the country young people have been praying and worshipping in front of nightclubs and bars, as part of Mike and Cindy Jacobs “Light the Highway” holiness campaign.
 
Miracles During Purity Siege
Across the country young people have been praying and worshipping in front of nightclubs and bars as part of an initiative called “Purity Siege,” sponsored by Mike and Cindy Jacobs’ ministry Generals International (www.generals.org). “In much the same way people protest against governmental or business aspects of society, youth across the nation will ‘siege’ sites of impurity in their city, by doing on-location prayer,” the ministry’s Web site states. “They will be protesting the machinations of evil, such as pornography, injustice, abortion, and other strongholds. They will stand outside of spiritual strongholds and visually demonstrate their opposition.” At a recent siege outside a known homosexual nightclub in Dallas, young people prayed for and evangelized homosexuals, transgenders and transvestites. A self-proclaimed homosexual atheist who called the police to report the purity siege as a disruption gave his life to Christ that night after one of the seige volunteers began to talk to him. “[He] was one of many who fell under the power of the Holy Spirit that night,” Cindy Jacobs said. “He then accepted Christ as his Savior … and spoke in tongues.”  He immedialtly left his partner and family and enrolled in a bible college. “I am willing to talk to any homosexual, drug addict or sex addict because I know what hell feels like, but now I know what heaven feels like and it is so much better,” he said. To find out how you can get involved in prayer sieges around the country e-mail [email protected] or visit  www.joeodenministries.com.



Americans Believe U.S. is a Christian Nation

An annual first amendment study, found that the majority of Americans believe the founding fathers and the Constitution established the U. S. as a Christian nation.
 
Americans Believe U.S. is a Christian Nation
An annual first amendment study, which gauges American attitudes toward issues such as freedom of religion, speech and the press, found that the majority of Americans believe the founding fathers (65 percent) and the Constitution (55 percent) established the U. S. as a Christian nation. Released Sept. 12 by the First Amendment Center, the survey found that 58 percent believed teachers should be allowed to lead students in prayer, compared to 52 percent last year; 56 percent of respondents believed freedom of religion applies to all groups regardless of how extreme their views are, down from 72 percent in 2000; and 43 percent said schools should be allowed to have Nativity plays with Christian music. Though the figures indicate widespread Christian sentiment in modern society, Gene Policinski, executive director of the First Amendment Center, said that doesn’t technically mean America was founded as a Christian nation. “People are applying their own values … rather than educated knowledge of the Constitution,” he told USA Today, which he said “clearly establishes the U.S. as a secular nation.” The survey, dubbed State of the First Amendment 2007, has been conducted annually since 1997.