Running from God

The statistics are alarming: Fewer teenagers attend church today than ever. If we don’t reach them soon, we will face a spiritual crisis.
On the way home from church one Sunday several years ago my brother, Ralph, became an unassuming hero. He pulled out of the church parking lot, following a car with two teenage girls in it. About a mile down the road, a pick-up truck ran a stop sign and slammed into the side of the girls’ car.


Instantly, the car exploded. The driver, 16-year-old Ashley, was thrown from the vehicle and killed. The other girl, 14-year-old Amy Cifranic, was trapped inside the burning vehicle.


Ralph jumped from his car and pried open the door of the burning vehicle. He grabbed Amy by the belt loop and managed to drag her from the car. Soon the paramedics arrived and took her to the hospital.


When I called to congratulate my brother on the rescue, I asked him: “What were you thinking? I mean, what was going through your mind as you approached the car?” I still remember his response.


“I didn’t do anything that anyone else in my position would not have done. When the car is on fire, you do whatever you have to do to get the girl out!”


If we saw a car explode in front of us, the shock of what we had just seen would stun us. Few among us would simply drive by and act as if nothing had happened. Yet many Christians are standing by watching flames engulf our teens and doing nothing to rescue them.


I’m here to tell you, the car is on fire-and it’s up to us to do something about it.


Nation at a Crossroads


I’m not writing just to move you to care a little bit. A pattern is developing right under our noses here in America that demands our attention as Christians.


It is a well-documented fact that the percentage of Bible-based believers (evangelicals) has been steadily decreasing since the Builder generation. In his book The Bridger Generation, Thom S. Rainer gives the following statistics:


  • 65 percent of Builders (born from 1910 to 1946) are evangelical
  • 35 percent of Boomers (born from 1946 to 1964) are evangelical
  • 15 percent of Busters (those born from 1965 to 1976) are evangelical
  • 4 percent (projected) of Bridgers, aka Millennials (born after 1977) are or will be evangelical.


    Our nation has the proud heritage of being founded on Christian principles. Many of our Founding Fathers were godly men. For two centuries we have enjoyed a society in which the moral imperatives from Scripture have kept some restraint on our lifestyles.


    However, as the majority of the population has ceased to hold core Bible-based beliefs, societal standards and guidelines have changed. There is no longer a potent majority who screams loudly when traditional biblical values are violated.
    Let’s look at the influence of the Boomers on society. As a result of their shift away from godly principles, we now have:


  • increasingly perverse TV, movies and music
  • Internet access to 4.2 million pornographic Web sites
  • legalized gay marriage or civil unions in some states
  • removal of Christian symbols such as nativity sets and the Ten Commandments from public places
  • any evidence of Christianity removed from public holidays and government logos
  • 50 percent of marriages ending in divorce.


    If we are already facing such evidence of moral depravity and anti-Christian sentiment, what will our society be like with a population that is only 4 percent evangelical?


    Imagine a society that mocks the fact that “under God” was ever in our Pledge of Allegiance. Imagine “In God We Trust” taken off our money. Imagine all references to Christ and His cross taken off all emblems and city logos (as is already happening).


    Imagine a world in which a pastor can go to jail for saying homosexuality is wrong (as recently happened in Sweden). The current generation of 12- to 17-year-olds is the largest group viewing porn on the Web. What percentage of their marriages will stay together?


    Where will this new generation take us? What sort of world will our children and grandchildren grow up in? Will we be guilty of allowing ourselves to be the last generation in America that had the benefit of a strong Christian ethic in our moral codes? Will the sacrifices of our forefathers be for naught for the generations that are to come?


    We Must Act Now


    Studies have shown repeatedly that nearly 80 percent of people who come to Christ do so before the age of 21. Something happens to us at that age. All of a sudden, we think we know it all.


    What does that mean for us? If we do not reach our youth now, in 10 years we will have a whole new set of challenges in America.


    The time before our children leave their childhood years and become young adults is the most moldable time in their lives. During these years morals and values are being shaped. Unfortunately, they are often being shaped by those in the media industry who are motivated by the need to make a profit rather than a desire to promote moral standards.


    Many adults know that kids are having a hard time, but they don’t fully realize what the enemy is doing to destroy kids. We all need to know the world our kids live in so we can be a part of the answer.


    The good news is we do know. We can do something. In fact, we can do a lot-if we will.


    There is a holy urgency burning in my soul to capture the heart of this generation now while there is still an openness to the gospel. I believe the next five to seven years will determine the direction they take.


    This is our moment, our defining moment. What we do in this season will determine the next 100 years of American history. The actions we take now will determine whether or not America is still the main mission-sending force in the world. Because American culture dominates the world in so many ways, the fate of millions here in America and around the globe is in our hands.


    What can we do? How can we fight the effects of MTV, Hollywood and the music industry? We need a strategic battle plan.


    Through prayer and discussions with a number of leaders across the land, I have devised what I believe is an effective battle plan to rescue the current generation of youth. The plan contains three phases:


    The first phase is a massive awareness and engagement campaign. People in the body of Christ must be made aware that the need is urgent and that they can do something to make a difference in their own communities.


    The awareness campaign is designed to inform the people of God so they will be moved with compassion to get involved in reaching teens. In addition to the media (both Christian and secular) that are helping to make teenagers the issue of the day, the book Battle Cry for a Generation and associated study guide have been released to help both leaders and lay people understand the crisis and what they can do about it. The study guide is designed for small groups such as Sunday school classes or cell groups to go through together so that people can get a clear picture of what they can do to help.


    September has been designated Youth Emphasis Month by many churches across America, and one day in the month, September 11, has been set aside as National Youth Sunday. This is a chance for us to show teens that we as Christians love them and want to make a difference in their lives. Many churches are using it as an outreach to all the families of teens in their community. The parents of youth are being invited to church on that Sunday to reinforce the fact that the church is not just preachers but also problem-solvers for families that need answers.


    The broader plan is for 100,000 churches (both pastors and lay people) to catch the vision and become passionately committed to rescuing this generation. If they do, we can turn the current situation around within five years. Just think: If 100,000 churches willing to act as “hospitals” for a broken generation doubled their youth ministries every year for the next five years, and the average group started with 20 students, in five years’ time, we would be collectively discipling 32 million teens! We can do this!


    Phase II. The second phase of the battle plan involves equipping youth pastors and workers. Even with all that has been done in the name of youth ministry for the last 20-30 years, we are still losing this generation. It seems that no matter how hard we have been working, the enemy has been working harder.


    To deeply influence this generation in a profound way we need to change what we are doing. We must learn new ways to reach and disciple teens. We must plan to double the size of our youth groups every year for at least the next five years. Information about materials that have been designed to help youth workers do this, including books, planning guides, discipleship materials and Battle Cry Leadership Summit events, is available at .


    Phase III. This phase involves capturing the hearts of our teens. With all the media, music, movies and cultural pressure bombarding them every waking moment, we must find ways to isolate them from these influences long enough to grab their attention and help them see how God wants to dramatically change their lives.


    One way is to stage mass events geared to the younger generation. Weekend-long meetings such as Acquire the Fire youth conferences, Dare 2 Share conferences and Battle Cry stadium events are designed to help teens focus on God so He can capture their hearts. It is imperative that every adult reading this article (not just youth pastors) load up his car with teens and get them to one of these events if we are to change not only individual lives but also the course of this nation.


    A Call to Arms


    Everyone who calls himself a follower of Christ is needed to win this battle for the hearts of a new generation. We must rally around our youth and transform our churches into hospitals for the brokenhearted. Every mom, dad, grandparent, teacher, pastor, senior and 20-something can play a part.


    Even if you do not feel called to youth ministry, reach out to a young person near you before he is beyond reach. The urgency of the moment compels every one of us to grab a teen and pull him out of the fire. Do not wait for your youth pastor to do it all. Go to him now and insist on helping in some way. Can you love? Listen? Smile? Go out for a Coke?

    We all have known that kids are in trouble, but for the most part we have not known what to do to rescue them. Now we have a plan, and if we all get involved we can avoid imminent tragedy for our nation.
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    Leaders from many different streams-Joyce Meyer, Kay Arthur, Chuck Colson, Jack Hayford, Pat Robertson, Jerry Falwell, John Maxwell, Jack Graham (former president of Southern Baptist Convention)-are willing to use their voices to alert the adults in the body of Christ that we all must get involved. Denominations and their leaders from across the spectrum have indicated that they are ready to get their pastors and lay people on board. This Battle Cry idea has turned into a movement as leaders and lay people have continued to join the Battle Cry Coalition, knowing we are engaged in a battle we dare not lose.


    Thousands of concerned parents and leaders are coming to the rescue, but that is not enough. It is going to take all of us. It is not only my job to rescue this generation. It is not only your youth pastor’s or pastor’s job. It is the job of the body of Christ. We must study it and understand it deeply so it will thoroughly penetrate the way we think about our Christianity.


    As a layperson there is much you can do to rescue the teens in your community. One practical step you can take is to organize a group of people and go through the Battle Cry materials with them.


    The materials are full of practical ideas about what you can do for your own children as well as what you can do to influence the teens in your community in a practical way. Ask your pastor today if you can start a group. Bring the materials to the leaders of your church so they can stay informed.


    Whether you are a pastor, youth worker or layperson, log on to and join the Battle Cry Coalition. You will learn how you can be an important part of rescuing those who are battered by the world and will receive free materials and tips for reaching the teens in your community. You will be part of an army of love coming to the aid of teenage America.


    We can rescue our teens. It is not too late. Let it be said of us that when we saw a generation headed for destruction we did everything we could to save them.


    A burning car demands our response. It demands that we go out of our way to help. It demands that we get out of our own car, out of our comfort zone, and take a risk. It compels us to do something.


    This generation is on fire. It is burning right before our eyes. Will you be the next unassuming hero to rescue some of the 33 million teens caught in a burning society?


    Ron Luce is the founder and president of Teen Mania Ministries. He is also the author of numerous books, including his most recent, Battle Cry for a Generation (Cook Communications), and worship leader for five Teen Mania worship albums. He hosts a weekly television program for teenagers called Acquire the Fire that is broadcast on several Christian networks.


    Code Red


    Ron Luce, founder of one of the nation’s largest youth ministries, is calling for a national rescue of today’s teenagers.


    Many Christian leaders consider Ron Luce the premier evangelist to the youth of America. But the president and founder of Teen Mania (TM), a nondenominational youth organization that has influenced millions of young people worldwide, was at one time “a ragtag heathen” teenager growing up in California.


    Raised in a broken home, Luce ran off at age 15 and became involved in drugs and alcohol.


    “I grew up attending assorted dead, boring churches,” Luce, 44, told Charisma. “I wasn’t saved and I didn’t love God.”


    But all that changed in 1978 during his junior year of high school in Fresno. “A friend invited me to church and the people there were singing with all of their hearts,” he recalls. “It blew me away. I was in church my whole life and I had never seen that.


    “I went back the next week. I got on fire for the Lord, and I have been ever since,” continues Luce, who was saved at Belmont Believers Church in Fresno. “I was a 16-year-old party animal who got totally turned on to Jesus.”


    Since Luce started TM in 1986, the ministry has been highly effective at reaching teens. Featuring state-of-the-art multimedia, live drama, music and biblical teaching, Acquire the Fire (ATF) events have drawn 2 million youth since 1991. This year, 260,000 teens are expected to attend ATF in 33 cities nationwide.


    “It’s no namby-pamby, ‘Kumbaya’ gospel presentation,” Luce notes. “It’s, ‘Give your all to Jesus.'”


    TM also has a 650-student post-high school academy, in which “interns” receive one to two years of leadership and Bible training at the ministry’s 472-acre campus in Garden Valley, Texas. Since 1988, nearly 4,500 teens have gone through the program.


    In addition, TM’s Global Expeditions have taken more than 49,200 youngsters to other nations. This summer, more than 4,100 teens traveled to 27 countries.
    “We have seen lots of miracles, churches planted and churches doubled,” Luce says. “We’ve had many teens who have led people to Christ in villages on the other side of the world.”


    Luce has been passionate to reach teenagers since his conversion. He and his wife, Katie, planned to live on the mission field after college because they had a heart for kids and missions.


    “The Lord spoke to our hearts about the young people in America,” recounts Luce, who has two teenage daughters and a 10-year-old son. “We had no money, supporters or contacts when we started. … It was me, Katie, our Chevy Citation, and a dream to raise up an army of young people who would change the world.”


    Luce realizes the odds are against fulfilling his dream. But the determined preacher believes there’s an answer. “We need to make sure that our youth pastors and staffs have a strategy to get out and get the lost,” he says. “We need outreach-oriented youth programs.”


    He adds that in order for youth ministry to be effective, “the philosophy of ministry has to change.”


    “Youth ministry is not the youth pastor’s job,” Luce says. “It’s our job as the body of Christ to reach this generation.”


    That’s Luce’s battle cry. “It’s going to take the involvement of all of us to win this generation,” he insists. “We have to do it now because now is when we have the window to reach them.”
    Eric Tiansay




  • Buzz


    SPOTLIGHT


    Man on Fire


    Day of Fire’s Josh Brown (front) says he’s been witnessing miracles after concerts


    Day of Fire vocalist Josh Brown knows the truth. If it weren’t for Christ, he would still be lost in a world of sex, drugs and hopelessness. “I was definitely chosen,” he said. “I was on such a terrible path. God uses people like me to show the world that He exists.”


    In 1998, all of Brown’s dreams had come true. He had money and fame. He was on MTV with his band Full Devil Jacket (FDJ), playing Woodstock ’99, and touring with bands such as Creed. He was also addicted to every drug he could find. In 2001, after a heroin overdose, Brown accepted Christ and quit FDJ to wash dishes at a retirement home. “I had to hit rock bottom before I would listen to [the Holy Spirit’s] voice,” he recalled.


    In the last year, Brown entered Christian music and has seen his band Day of Fire score several chart hits and play in front of thousands of fans. Still, it’s the one-on-one contact that he savors most. “I’ve had the opportunity to pray with people stricken with drugs, alcohol, schizophrenia, whatever,” he said. “There was a woman I met who heard voices for years. At that moment, faith rose up inside of me and I began to pray. She said that for the first time in three years the voices stopped. I’ve seen God move on people. His desire is to set His people free from the chains and weight of sin.”
    Steven Douglas Losey


    Stirring the Pot


    Exodus International created a stir in Orlando, Fla., when it began posting billboards asserting that homosexuals can change. The ads are to be featured for six months in Orlando, where Exodus is based, and a similar sign is posted in Houston. Exodus, which recently celebrated its 30th anniversary, has more than 125 member ministries in North America that have helped some 400,000 people who contact the organization each year.


    FAITH & CULTURE


    Big-Screen Debut


    Brandon T. Jackson has less than three months of experience in Hollywood, but already he’s landed a major role in the upcoming film Roll Bounce. The 19-year-old preacher’s kid from Detroit says it is an answer to many prayers.


    Jackson appears on the big screen this month alongside teen sensation Bow Wow, who stars as X in the 1970s era roller-skating movie. Jackson depicts X’s best friend, Junior. “This [breakthrough] is something I always prayed for,” Jackson told Charisma. “I [would pray], ‘God, if You are going to use me, use me in entertainment, for Your glory.’”


    Jackson’s father, Bishop Wayne T. Jackson of Detroit’s Great Faith Ministries International, has the church interceding for his son, and he sent one of the ministry’s young leaders to Los Angeles to be his son’s prayer partner and Bible study leader. Although the PG-13 film will stir up more hoots than hallelujahs, Jackson’s performance could position him for bigger roles and greater influence. All part of the plan, says the young actor, who once wanted to follow his father’s footsteps into the pulpit. Now he wants to preach “in a different way” and be a transforming force in Hollywood.
    Steven Lawson in Hollywood


    Famous Faces


    Couple says God has given them a unique ministry tool


    A Florida man is on a campaign to “glorify God” as a President Bush impersonator. Orlando native John Morgan, 49, is 10 years younger than George W. Bush, but he is a dead ringer for the 43rd U.S. president.


    A Christian for 30 years and a longtime member of a nondenominational charismatic church in Orlando, Morgan said it was during Bush’s first presidential campaign that people told him how much he looked like the then-Texas governor. But it wasn’t until his wife of 22 years, Kathy, saw a Bush impersonator on TV in fall 2003 that Morgan entertained the thought of being a look-alike.


    “She told me, ‘I’ve found you a new career,’” he recalled. “Immediately a spark of interest ignited in my heart. I spent two weeks praying. After two weeks, I was convinced the Holy Spirit spoke to me that it was His will for me to be a President Bush impersonator for five years.”


    Morgan has made nearly 60 appearances as the president for corporate and birthday parties, trade shows and sales meetings in the U.S. and as far away as Mexico, Japan and the Bahamas. Morgan’s family is also in the impersonating business. His wife is a Laura Bush look-alike and Morgan’s daughter-in-law, Emily, and her cousin, Jennifer, resemble the Bush twin daughters.


    Morgan said he got to meet the president in May when Bush discussed Social Security in Orlando. “I shook his hand and told him, ‘Mr. President, it’s an honor to be your look-alike,’” he recounted. “And in his self-depreciating humor, [Bush] said: ‘Well, I feel sorry for you.’”
    Eric Tiansay


    LEGACY


    Deliverance 101


    Frank Hammond has passed away, but his message lives on


    Though it sparked a wave of controversy for its assertion that Christians could be demonized, Pigs in the Parlor by former Baptist pastor Frank Hammond and his wife, Ida Mae, has never been out of print since it debuted in 1973.


    And though Hammond passed away March 17 at the age of 83, contemporary deliverance ministers say his work will continue to underpin modern teaching on deliverance. “The book truly had an anointing on it,” said Gene Moody, a Baton Rouge, minister known for his comprehensive Deliverance Manual. “I have given many of them away, and I still recommend it today. It was a very good beginning book.”


    Though the debate over whether a Christian can have a demon still rages, with the Assemblies of God officially rejecting the idea, C. Peter Wagner of the Wagner Leadership Institute in Colorado Springs, Colo., says deliverance ministry is becoming more respectable. Hoping to see the field rise to new levels, Wagner said, Hammond encouraged him to launch the International Council of Deliverance Ministers, which offers members training and accountability.


    That fatherly leadership is what Kimberly Daniels, head of Spoken Word Ministries in Jacksonville, Fla., and author of Clean House, Strong House, remembers most about Hammond. She believes his legacy will continue to impact ministers such as herself for generations.


    Eddie Smith, who leads the U.S. Prayer Center with his wife, Alice, agrees. “The book wasn’t the point; he was the point,” Smith said. “His life and his presence and his selflessness will long outlive his book.”
    Adrienne S. Gaines


    Changed Lives


    Sherron Williams’ friends say her laughter is contagious. But the 40-something mother of three hasn’t always felt like smiling. At the age of 5 she was molested by a trusted baby sitter; the same year she was burned so badly doctors weren’t sure she’d live. “I was miraculously healed physically, but the scars covering two-thirds of my body left me living in a cloud of self-loathing and destruction,” she said.


    As a result, she began abusing drugs and became promiscuous, giving birth to her first child at age 15. Then at age 19, she was led into a life of prostitution.


    “I wanted to stop; I just couldn’t,” she said. “I would sit in jail and wonder why I couldn’t be like my sisters who were getting married, working and raising children. I thought something happened to my brain when I almost died from the burns. I gave up, resolving to live that life and die that way. But today I know somebody was praying and God heard their prayers.”


    In 1993 she was incarcerated again, but this time she says she was tired. She read the Gideon’s Bible she was given, prayed the sinner’s prayer written in the back and began attending church services. Though she received a 16-year sentence, Williams was released in 1998. Today she’s a Sunday school teacher and intercessor, and has kept the same job for seven years. “I am proud to be a Christian. No more looking over my shoulder; now I look up. God has lifted me out of the muck and the mire.”

    Glenda Goodson
    In Lancaster, Texas


    UNSUNG HEROES


    Food for Africa


    Back in 2002, Africa was hardly on Rick Tunis’ radar. But when the Pennsylvania pastor came across a Charisma magazine article about a drought in Malawi that was expected to leave hundreds starving due to failed crops, he couldn’t stop reading. “It felt like God tapped me on the shoulder and said, ‘I want you to do something about this,’” he said.


    That something began as a fundraising campai gn in his 30-member church, Living Word Fellowship in Allentown. It has since grown into a nonprofit organization called Bread of Life International (), which he founded with his wife, Nancy, in 2003. He has teamed with Arn and Elsie Bowler of the Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada (PAC) and has taken two trips to the nation, which is loacted in southern Africa.


    During the first trip, in May 2003, Tunis teamed with Steve Chetepa, the general superintendent for the Pentecostal Assemblies of Malawi, to buy 20 tons of food and distribute it in the worst-hit areas. “It’s emotionally overwhelming to see people fight over food,” Tunis said, but he noted that the whole trip “was a bombardment of affirmation that I’m doing what I’m supposed to be doing.” Hundreds made decisions for Christ.


    Tunis expected to return to Malawi in August, and his 16-year-old daughter, Patricia, planned to tag along. Each year, he said, his vision grows. He hopes to someday see Bread of Life assist Sudanese refugees, help feed people in nearby Zambia and partner with PAC to establish a home for AIDS orphans. “I would like to see this get much bigger,” Tunis told Charisma. “But for now, Malawi is a strong base for us.”
    Adrienne S. Gaines


    NOTEBOOK


    The Pentecostal World Fellowship (PWF) elected Bishop James D. Leggett as its new chairman on May 4. Leggett, who is general superintendent of the International Pentecostal Holiness Church, is the fourth person to lead the international network of charismatic and Pentecostal ministries since its founding in 1947. The PWF convenes every three years, with its next meeting scheduled for Indonesia in July 2007.


    California pastor Frederick K.C. Price of Crenshaw Christian Center was to be honored July 23-29 for more than 50 years in ministry. The weeklong celebration was also to mark the 15th anniversary of the Fellowship of Inner City Word of Faith Ministries, which Price founded. The festivities were to begin with a ceremony during which 79th Street and Vermont Avenue in Crenshaw were to be renamed Dr. Frederick K.C. Price Square.


    Evangelist morris cerullo was indicted July 12 on three counts of filing false individual income tax returns, the San Diego Union-Tribune reported. The president of Morris Cerullo World Evangelism allegedly underreported his income by $550,000 between 1998 and 2000. If convicted, he faces up to three years in prison and a $100,000 fine for each count, the Associated Press said. Cerullo planned to contest the charges.


    Singer Pat Boone, 71, is ending his recording career with the release of five albums in one year, the Associated Press (AP) reported. Each project will reflect a different genre, ranging from patriotic songs to country hits to romantic ballads to R&B tunes. The gospel CD, Glory Train, is to release in September and will feature a tribute to Billy Graham that Boone recorded with U2 lead singer Bono, the AP said.




    Florida Ministry Purchases 75-Acre Carpenter’s Home Church Campus

    Considered the fastest growing church in the U.S., Without Walls International planned to finalize the $14 million deal in August
    Three years after it first entertained the idea, a large charismatic church in Tampa, Fla., has purchased the property of what was once one of the largest church facilities in the world.


    On June 14, Without Walls International Church (WWIC), a 22,000-member nondenominational congregation, signed a contract to buy Carpenter’s Home Church (CHC) in suburban Lakeland, which is about 45 minutes east of Tampa.


    In the $14 million agreement, CHC would receive $8 million plus a 3,000-seat auditorium in Auburndale, Fla., which was used by Without Walls Central (WWC), a satellite of the Tampa congregation. The Auburndale church has been appraised at nearly $6 million, WWIC officials said. Auburndale is located about 25 minutes east of Lakeland.


    “I think it’s a win-win for everyone,” said Randy White, who pastors WWIC with his wife, Paula. “Carpenter’s Home Church gets an almost brand-new sanctuary debt-free. We get a facility that we can grow into. It’s been our dream and ambition to impact the state of Florida.”


    CHC’s spokesman Greg Gillman called the sale “a great win in the kingdom of God.” CHC is affiliated with the Assemblies of God (AG). “There are many wins in this arrangement,” said Gillman, CHC’s CFO and treasurer. “First and foremost, the grounds and buildings that pastor Karl Strader have ministered on for over 20 years will continue to be used to spread the gospel, which is the legacy of our pastor.”


    Under Strader, the First Assembly of God of Lakeland built a 10,000-seat sanctuary in 1985 at a cost of $12 million, renaming the church Carpenter’s Home in the process. At the time, CHC had about 5,000 members, a TV ministry and a radio station. But in 1989 about 800 members split from CHC in a dispute over Strader’s leadership and formed Victory Church.


    In the early 1990s, CHC was the site of services by Rodney Howard-Browne, the South African preacher who introduced the “laughing revival” to America. But Strader’s son, Daniel, was arrested in 1994 on fraud charges and convicted the following year of swindling investors, including some church members. The congregation of Strader, 76, who has served as CHC’s pastor for the last 38 years, now attracts only about 750 people on Sundays.


    In contrast, Church Growth Today, a megachurch research center, recently named WWIC the nation’s fastest growing church. White said the ministry has 15,000 members in 240 satellite congregations across the U.S. and in Europe.


    WWIC was close to an agreement to buy the CHC sanctuary in 2002, but in February 2003 CHC reportedly rejected a $10 million offer from WWIC because the board was asking $12.5 million, The Tampa Tribune reported. White said CHC contacted him in the spring to see if WWIC was still interested in the 75-acre property.


    “We’re extremely excited to acquire this property,” said White, 47, noting that he expected to finalize the deal on the Aug. 1 closing date. “We believe this is part of God’s plan. Several years ago, prophet Kim Clement saw Carpenter’s Home filled to capacity. He said one day we would own the property.”


    The agreement calls for a one-year transition period during which CHC would continue to hold worship services in a theater on the campus. Without Walls Central will worship at the massive CHC sanctuary starting this fall.


    WWC pastor Scott Thomas, 38, will lead the Lakeland congregation, White said. Launched in January 2004, WWC started with 115 members, and it now has 1,500 people attending Sunday services.


    Gillman said CHC owns the property, not the AG, adding that voting members approved the sale. “Pastor Strader has notified the Assemblies of God concerning the sale of our property,” he said. “We will continue to be Assemblies of God.”


    Gillman added that the sale will enable CHC to move into a new era of ministry. “Prior to the congregation approving the sale of the property, pastor Strader cast a dynamic vision of raising up young pastors and planting them in multiple locations, providing them with the wisdom of his years and the resources necessary for them to be successful,” he said. “The sale of our property will provide Carpenter’s Home the unencumbered, debt-free resources that are critical to make this vision a reality, as well as provide a beautiful campus to a congregation of like faith.”
    Eric Tiansay




    Gay Marriage Legalized in Canada

    Christian activists say they will work even harder to block similar legislation in the United States

    The tempestuous six-month parliamentary debate over legislation that would legalize same-sex marriage in Canada ended with its passage June 28. But Christian traditional marriage activists on both sides of the Canadian border say they’ll continue fighting the acceptance of gay marriage in mainstream culture.


    Following a close vote of 158 to 133, marriage was redefined as “a union between two consenting adults,” rather than a union between one man and one woman. The legislation includes a provision that permits religious officials to refuse to marry gays and lesbians.


    Canada is the third country in the world-following Holland and Belgium-to legalize same-sex marriage. Spain followed suit in approving gay marriage legislation just two days after Canada did. Seven of Canada’s 10 provinces and one of its three territories already allowed civil marriages for same-sex couples prior to the parliamentary vote. Ontario was the first province to do so, following an appeal by a gay couple in June 2003 to the Supreme Court of Ontario.


    “June 28 was a sad day for Canada, a sad day for marriage and a sad day for children,” said Charles McVety, head of Defend Marriage, a coalition of Christian groups seeking to maintain traditional marriage in Canada. “I don’t know if traditional marriage will be the norm by the time my 7-year-old daughter grows up.”


    The House of Commons sat for several days into its summer break to allow the Liberal minority government time to finish voting on the controversial legislation. A parliamentary drama unfolded, with some Liberal Members of Parliament becoming independents or joining other parties, and others losing their cabinet positions because they refused to follow Prime Minister Paul Martin’s orders and vote in favor of legalizing gay marriage.


    Critics say rushing the legislation was a ploy to keep gay marriage from becoming an issue in the upcoming federal election, and they say a referendum should have been held for the Canadian people. Opinion polls show Canadians are as equally divided as their politicians over the issue.


    Christian watchdog groups say the legislation has already caused a lot of problems for Christians working in the public sector. Two human rights complaints were filed in January against Catholic Bishop Fred Henry following a letter he wrote to his own diocese, in which he said homosexuality, prostitution and pornography should not be accepted and that the federal government should use coercive power to outlaw same-sex marriage.


    Civil marriage commissioners in several provinces have been told in writing that they’ll lose their jobs if they refuse to marry same-sex couples. Some have resigned, and others have lodged complaints with their provincial human rights commissions. Chris Kempling, a guidance counselor and teacher in British Columbia, has been suspended from his job twice for statements he made about homosexuals.


    The legal repercussions for Christian business owners affiliated with the wedding industry are tremendous, said Janet Epp-Buckingham, director of law and public policy for the Evangelical Fellowship of Canada. “Business owners who say they’re refusing service because the client wants a gay wedding can be charged with discrimination under the Human Rights Code,” Epp-Buckingham said.


    “I had a Christian caterer phone me in tears because her husband unknowingly told a gay client that she was available the day of the client’s wedding. At that point she couldn’t refuse service.”


    Same-sex marriage also has caused rifts within the Canadian church. When an Anglican diocese in British Columbia added a service of blessing for same-sex unions in 2002, a group of Anglican clergy broke formal ties with the church and established The Anglican Communion of Canada. The communion, which acts as an international advocate for traditional biblical values for Anglicans, now has 12 Canadian parishes on board who report to archbishops in other parts of the world.


    Epp-Buckingham says the problem is worse for United Church clergy who disapprove of same-sex marriage. “Their superiors won’t back them legally if they decline doing a same-sex ceremony because the United Church of Canada has already sanctioned the process,” she said.


    Americans fighting same-sex marriage in the U.S. say its validation in Canada is making them gear down harder. “It’s alerted us that there’s a virus to the north, and we better not let it cross the border,” said Lou Sheldon, president of the Traditional Values Coalition based in Washington, D.C.


    “I think federal passing of it in Canada will get us moving to tighten up on same-sex marriage here,” said Mathew Staver, president and general counsel for Florida-based Liberty Counsel. “I think what’s intended to tear down marriage will actually strengthen it because it’ll make us rethink the importance of marriage.”


    Staver said the Defense of Marriage Act protects any state from validating a same-sex marriage license issued elsewhere. He said a same-sex couple who was married in Canada launched three lawsuits seeking to get Florida to recognize their marriage. All were rejected.


    Same-sex marriage is now permitted in Massachusetts, and California and Vermont allow civil unions for gay couples.


    Glen Lavy of the Alliance Defense Fund cautioned that the legalization of gay marriage in Canada and other nations could prompt courts that look at international law to use that as rationale to force same-sex marriage through U.S. courts.
    Josie Newman in Toronto




    Persecution Watch


    China pastor on trial over Bibles


    A leader in China’s underground church stood trial July 7 on charges of operating an illegal business. Last year, pastor Cai Zhouhua, who oversees six house churches, was detained with 200,000 copies of unauthorized Bibles, the Associated Press (AP) reported. Cai was arrested with his wife and two relatives in what Christian human rights groups say is an ongoing crackdown on underground churches. No verdict has been handed down, and Cai’s lawyer, Gao Zhisheng, said he is not optimistic about the outcome, BBC News reported. Though Gao said the Bibles were to be given away for free, the authorities “are always using economics as a pretext to deal with religious and political issues,” BBC News reported. Only the state-sanctioned church is authorized to publish Bibles in China, and they are produced in controlled numbers and cannot be sold in ordinary bookstores, the AP said.


    Missionaries’ Killers Sentenced to Life in Prison


    The death sentence of a Hindu extremist who killed Australian missionary Graham Staines and his two sons six years ago has been reduced to life in prison. In June, the high court of Orissa State ordered life imprisonment for Dara Singh, Reuters reported. The court also acquitted 11 people sentenced to a life term by a lower court for burning alive Staines and his sons in a remote village in the state in 1999. Staines’ widow, Gladys, and her daughter, Esther, stayed in India after the deaths and opened the Graham Staines Memorial Hospital for lepers in 2004, but have since returned to Australia. Gladys Staines said she had forgiven the killers.


    Pastors forced to Apologize for Statements About Islam


    Australian pastors Daniel Scott and Daniel Nalliah, both of Catch the Fire Ministries Inc., were ordered June 22 to apologize for comments they made last year that a Muslim group said disparaged Islam. Last December the two were found guilty of breaching the Victorian Racial and Religious Tolerance Act after the Islamic Council of Victoria accused the pair of making derogatory comments about Islam on their Web site and in a seminar, Christian Solidarity Worldwide (CSW) reported. They were then ordered in June to apologize to the council, place a notice on their Web site giving the judges’ verdict and take out a newspaper ad for two weeks stating that they have been found guilty of inciting religious hatred. They were also banned from speaking about Islam anywhere in Australia. The pastors have taken out a “staying order” against the verdict and are appealing to the Supreme Court, CSW said. They also have launched a fundraising campaign to help cover their legal fees, arguing that the case is a fight to preserve religious freedom in Australia.




    Church Seeks to Help Revitalize Detroit

    Church of God in Christ Bishop P.A. Brooks says ministries have a duty to build in their communities
    In a cluster of barren fields on Detroit’s east side, Bishop P.A. Brooks sees the future, for his church and people in need far beyond its doors. Soon the fields will be home to COGIC Villages, a housing and retail development of the New St. Paul Tabernacle (NSPT) Church of God in Christ.


    The development is one of several projects that Brooks, New St. Paul pastor and president of the church’s nonprofit housing corporation, is orchestrating to help revitalize Detroit, a city plagued with urban blight. Churches, Brooks says, have a duty to build in their communities.


    “We looked at our community and saw houses boarded up and deterioration of the community,” said Brooks, 73, who founded the 2,100-member church 52 years ago with his wife and mother-in-law. “We can’t let the community go down. We have to bring life, not just spiritual life, but practical life for other people. If we don’t help people we aren’t serving in the ministry of Jesus Christ.”


    In recent months the media have been splattered with news reports about
    Detroit’s $300 million budget deficit and massive layoff s. Though the city has attracted Major League Baseball’s 2005 All-Star Game, the 2006 Super Bowl and splashy new downtown developments, a recent Time magazine article ranked Detroit Mayor Kwame M. Kilpatrick among the worst in the country because of his management of city funds and personnel.


    But while some doubt his city’s economic viability, Brooks sees opportunity. “People say Detroit is bad, but the glass is not half empty, it’s half full,” he said. Developing abandoned areas is“ how new life is given to these urban centers.”


    Brooks says the New St. Paul Tabernacle Non-Profit Housing Corporation
    developed a limited license corporation with Metro Educational Concepts Inc.
    (MECI) to erect homes and business areas throughout the city. Their first project,
    COGIC Villages, is a three-phase development all on Detroit’s east side.


    Michael Bartley, executive director of MECI, a nonprofit community development
    corporation, explained the project: Gratiot 24 is the first area that will have 24 two- and three-bedroom townhouses and at least 50 studio, and one- and two bedroom
    garden apartments for those with low incomes, including seniors.


    The second phase, Cathedral Place, targets COGIC’s Northeast Michigan Cathedral, which is the jurisdictional headquarters, and the surrounding area. Initial plans include a Cathedral face-lift and construction of 45 new homes on city-obtained land. The third phase is Eastown Residential, neighborhoods of single-family homes in which owners pay mortgages in the range of 40 percent to 60 percent of the median residential income.


    Brooks said NSPT Non-Profit Housing Corporation and MECI received a $10,000 grant from a local bank to complete the application process to the state of Michigan to get approval for their plans. They also were able to obtain,
    through another bank, a $3 million guarantee from bank investors who provided
    monies for home mortgages.


    Henry Hagood, director of development activities for the Detroit Planning
    and Development Department, says the city “fully supports Bishop Brooks. He’s
    filling in the holes in the community, bringing back the housing stock. He has
    a built-in market. The faith-based market can have a major impact on what we’re
    doing in the city.”


    Brooks is a member of the Church of God in Christ’s General Board and bishop
    of the Northeast Michigan Jurisdiction, where he oversees 90 churches. His
    rebuilding work has been so successful the U.S. government invited him to a policy meeting based on his“ excellent reputation and proven ability,” said Ryan Streeter, director of the Department of Housing and Urban Development Center for Faith Based and Community Initiatives.


    In the last decade, Brooks has implemented several faith-based ventures, including
    a 57-unit seniors complex located on the church’s grounds. In 2001, NSPT
    teamed with the nonprofit Faith Community Homebuyers Program (FCHP) to
    educate people about mortgages.


    The Wayne County First-Time Homebuyer Program contracted Brooks’ homebuyer’s program to manage its down payment housing assistance program. And that program made all the difference in Paul Schumacher’s dream of owning a home.


    “I had gone through the orientation,” said Schumacher, a licensed builder. “As
    time went on I realized I was not in a position where I could buy one. I was going
    through a physical and emotional crisis at the time. … Without the down payment
    program I would not have been able to pursue [a home] otherwise.”


    Schumacher is living testament to the impact of Brooks’ vision. “We’ve got to
    improve the quality of life for other people,” Brooks said. “As Isaiah 58:12 says, we
    have to build up the waste places. We have to be in on the front end of development.


    The church can no longer sit and let outsiders take it. We have to get in on it. We
    have the opportunity to breathe new life.”
    RHONDA J. SMITH IN DETROIT




    Tyndale House Founder Kenneth Taylor Dies


    Kenneth Taylor, creator of The Living Bible and founder of Tyndale House
    Publishers, died June 10 in his home in Wheaton, Ill. He was 88.


    Taylor’s translation, which has sold more than 40 million copies, began
    as a project to help his children understand God’s Word. And while Tyndale has become one of the largest Christian publishing houses, Taylor started it humbly, using the family’s dining room as the company’s first office.


    Launched in 1962, Tyndale was named after William Tyndale, the 16th century reformer who was burned at the stake for translating the Bible into English. Taylor and his wife, Margaret, began with the publication of Living Letters, a paraphrase of the New Testament epistles.


    The first printing was 2,000 copies, but when evangelist Billy Graham began to promote Taylor’s work on his television broadcasts, demand for the books dramatically increased. In 1967 the Living New Testament was published, and in 1971 the complete Living Bible was released, becoming
    the best-selling book in the U.S. for the next three years.


    A pastor’s son, Taylor was born May 8, 1917, in Portland, Ore. He graduated from Wheaton College in 1938, receiving an undergraduate degree in zoology. He also attended Dallas Theological Seminary for three years and graduated from Northern Baptist Seminary in Chicago in 1944.


    Taylor began his 65-year career as editor of HIS magazine and later
    served as director of Moody Press in Chicago. In April 1950, while working
    at Moody Press, Taylor helped found the Christian Booksellers Association, an international trade association now known simply as CBA. Taylor was inducted into the CBA Hall of Honor in 1989. In 2001, he received a Visionary Industry Pioneer award from Christian Retailing, which is published by Charisma’s parent company, Strang Communications.


    In 1984, he turned Tyndale over to his son Mark, but remained chairman of the board until his death. “Making Scripture accessible for all people was my father’s passion,” Mark Taylor said, adding that people have told him they became a Christian upon reading The Living Bible. “Even at 88 years old, [my father’s] enthusiasm and fervor for his work never waned,” he noted.


    Tim LaHaye, co-author of the Left Behind series, which is published
    by Tyndale, said Taylor “contributed greatly to the harvest of souls and
    worldwide growth of the church that is going on in the world today.”


    James Dobson, founder of Focus on the Family, credited Taylor with
    playing an integral role in helping to launch the Colorado-based ministry
    in 1977. “I asked if he and Tyndale would consider underwriting our efforts, and he provided a grant of $35,000, which allowed us to get Focus under way,” Dobson said. “We may never have made it on the air if it hadn’t been for the generous support we received from him at that juncture.”


    Taylor is survived by his wife, Margaret, 10 children, 28 grandchildren
    and 22 great-grandchildren. A funeral service was held June 15 at
    Wheaton College.
    JENISE MORGAN




    Youth Prayer Effort Targets Abortion

    Through the Justice House of Prayer, young intercessors are staging silent protests on behalf of the unborn
    Teens and young adults are praying for an end to abortion in what prayer leader Lou Engle says is a continuation of the movement that began in 2000 when The Call D.C. drew 400,000 youth to Washington, D.C., for a day of prayer and fasting.


    “The call to fast, pray and change the history of a nation is as strong as it was five
    years ago,” said Engle, founder of The Call prayer events and The Cause USA. The latter effort began in July 2004, after Engle convened thousands of youth for a prayer gathering in Colorado Springs, Colo.


    “After 50 days and 50 nights of prayer, it was clear our assignment wasn’t finished,” Engle told Charisma. “Through a series of dreams and visions, God showed us [that we needed] to travel across country and plant the burning torch of intercession in Washington, D.C.”


    That torch has been named the Justice House of Prayer (JHOP), where intercessors pray 24/7 in a building on Capital Hill overlooking the Supreme Court. “As soon as we walked in, we knew it was the place,” Engle said. “The room was literally shaped like an arrowhead. One could stretch a measuring line down Pennsylvania Avenue, through the Capitol building and straight toward the White House.”


    Currently 66 interns, or “prayer activists” as they prefer to be called, are affiliated
    with JHOP. Determined to “reverse the decree of Roe vs. Wade” through prayer,
    JHOP interns arrived in Washington in October with a plan they said they received
    through a dream.


    Each member covered his mouth with a piece of duct tape that had the word
    “life” written on it and began a “silent siege” in front of the Supreme Court
    building. For five hours each day they stood silently, identifying with the silent
    screams of the unborn and repenting for the silence of the church.


    “We’re actually out there fighting for the very life of a generation,” said intern
    Heather Harris, 32. “The Lord wants to bring forth the Deborahs … Joshuas … [and] Davids of the next generation. And right now they’re being killed in the womb.”


    Just days into the siege, which is an ongoing effort, one intern suggested to
    Engle that they take the “life tape” and turn it into wrist bands and start a justice
    movement like that of Martin Luther King Jr. Today more than 30,000 of the
    free bands have been distributed through the Web site .


    “Our vision is that 10 million people will wear these bands, and every time they look at it they will pray, ‘God end abortion in America,'” Engle said.


    In conjunction with its efforts to end abortion, JHOP is raising funds to help women and children in need. “There’s got to be more than just praying for the end to
    abortion,” Harris said. “There’s got to be action-works added to our faith.”


    In addition to praying at strategic sites in the capital, the interns plan to travel
    across the country to call others to take up the Cause and launch day and night
    intercession for revival and justice.


    “We need to subpoena the conscience of the nation,” Engle told Charisma. “I believe a great confession season is coming in America-a season of coming clean.
    There’s going to be great joy and great pain mixed together, but I believe God
    wants to visit us in this nation.”
    SANDRA CHAMBERS IN WASHINGTON, D.C.




    Christians in Sri Lanka Face Attacks, Threat of Anti-Conversion Bills

    Observers say religious tension has replaced the unity forged between Christians and Buddhists after December’s tsunami
    In the months following the tsunami that claimed thousands of lives in south Asia, Christians in Sri Lanka again faced violent attacks by Buddhist mobs and the renewed threat of legislation that would criminalize conversion.


    Evangelical pastors and converts from Buddhism were the most frequent targets
    of beatings and terrorism, with several churches and homes attacked and burned
    in recent months. The perpetrators were often Buddhist mobs, frequently led or instigated by radical Buddhist monks.


    Though 70 percent of Sri Lankans are Buddhists, according to theU.S. State Department, in recent years growing numbers have converted to Christianity. A sharp increase in religious violence has followed, and proposed “anti-conversion” bills and a possible 18th amendment to Sri Lanka’s constitution have worsened the situation.


    Sri Lankan pastor Jebamoney Ratnam of Holy Trinity Church in Colombo said
    in addition to Buddhists, some Catholic and mainstream Protestant leaders support the proposed legislation as a means of combating alleged” unethical conversions” at the hands of “fundamentalist sects.”


    “This label targets evangelicals as ‘extremist crusaders funded by Western colonists,’ and we are falsely accused of preying on poor Buddhists by offering financial inducements in exchange for conversion,” he said.” Although proponents speak often of unethical conversions, not a single case has been documented.”


    In April 2004, the Buddhist-led Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU) party won nine seats
    in Sri Lanka’s Parliament after promising to pass an anti-conversion bill. The following July, the JHU introduced the Prohibition of Forcible Conversion of Religion bill.


    “Under the language of the JHU bill, simply sharing with a Buddhist the
    benefits of a relationship with Christ could be construed as ‘allurement,’ and the very assertion of such relationship as ‘fraudulent,” said Sam Thevabalasingham, president of the South Asia Institute of Theology.


    Violators of the proposed bill could face up to five years in prison and a fine of
    roughly $1,500. If the “victim” is a minor, woman, student, welfare recipient, prison
    inmate or member of another protected group, the sentence may be increased to
    seven years in prison and a $5,000 fine.


    Last August, the Supreme Court ruled that though the JHU bill is constitutional,
    it would be struck down on the basis of two minor provisions deemed unconstitutional.


    In September, the JHU proposed an 18th amendment to Sri Lanka’s
    constitution, which would make Buddhism the official state religion and prohibit
    attempts to “convert Buddhists into other forms of worship or to spread other
    forms of worship among the Buddhist.”


    The government also introduced its own bill called the Act for the Protection
    of Religious Freedom, which would make any religious conversion illegal. That bill,
    which is the most restrictive of all the proposed legislation, had not been formally
    considered when the killer tsunami hit.


    Christians hoped the unity forged after the disaster would end the dispute, but
    the government’s bill was reintroduced in a March 16 Cabinet meeting and was
    scheduled for a vote in Parliament in April. The vote has again been postponed, but its threat looms heavily over the country.


    “This law would jeopardize faith-based aid exactly when it’s needed most,” said
    Roger Severino, an attorney with the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty. “Unfortunately, the campaign of threats and attacks against religious minorities has survived the tsunami, and the proposed anticonversion law would only encourage the religious persecution we’ve already seen.”


    Observers say passage of any of the legislation also could jeopardize the assistance Sri Lanka receives from the newly created Millennium Challenge Account, as recipient nations are required to respect their citizens’ civil and human rights.
    MICHELE LOMBARDO IN COLOMBO, SRI LANKA




    Persecution Watch


    PASTORS MURDERED IN INDIA


    Officials in southern India have ordered an official investigation into the recent murders of two pastors in southern India, BBC News reported. K. Isaac Raju and K. Daniel, were found dead within days of going missing in Hyderabad, capital of Andhra Pradesh state. Raju went missing on May 24. Just days earlier, on May 21, the body of pastor Daniel was found with marks suggesting he had been the victim of an acid attack, Compass Direct reported. Both men led churches on the outskirts of Hyderabad. A letter sent to a local newspaper claimed the killings were the work of an organization called the Anti-Christian Forum, Compass said. Police later questioned 150 members of Hindu nationalist organizations but at press time authorities had no suspects. The All India United Christians Movement for Equal Rights is putting pressure on the
    state officials to speed up its search into the pastors’ deaths, New India Press reported. A reward also is being offered for information leading to the arrest of those responsible for the deaths, Compass said.


    PENTECOSTAL PASTOR RELEASED IN IRAN


    An Islamic court has acquitted an Assemblies of God (AG) lay pastor
    on apostasy and proselytizing charges. During a court hearing May
    28 in Bandar-i Bushehr, a judge reportedly declared he was acquitting Hamid Pourmand because he had “done nothing wrong” based on Islamic law, Compass Direct reported. Pourmand had faced execution by hanging under Muslim law for leaving Islam for Christianity 25 years ago. Despite the acquittal, the pastor remains imprisoned, serving out a three-year jail sentence for a separate military court conviction also linked to his religious conversion. Pourmand, 47, was arrested last September by the Iranian security police while attending a church conference near Tehran. An army colonel, Pourmand led an AG congregation in the southern port city of Bandar-i Bushehr.


    NIGERIAN CHURCH DESTROYED IN FIRE
    Arsonists recently set fi re to a church in Kaduna state, destroying the
    sanctuary for the fourth time in fi ve years. Conquerors Chapel pastor
    Ndubuisi Chiazor was holding an elders meeting at the church on April
    10 when it was torched, Compass Direct reported. Chiazor suspects Muslim
    extremists living in the area were responsible for the attack. “From the
    comments we hear from Muslims in this area, we know that they have resolved
    to force us out of the area through terrorist acts,” he said. “We hear
    them all the time say, ‘You must leave this place. We shall build a mosque
    on this land where your church is standing.’ ” The Word of Faith Ministries’
    congregation has rebuilt their meeting place after each attack. Chiazor
    said he is prepared to die rather than move, but many church members
    have left. Word of Faith Ministries counted 500 members at the onset of
    the arson attacks, but today less than 150 remain. Chiazor said the arsons
    began with the introduction of Shariah law in Kaduna state in 2000.

    Duke University Medical Researcher
    Says Faith Is Good Medicine

    Dr. Harold Koenig says the key to good health is
    having a deep, personal relationship with God

    Duke University researcher is changing the heart of the medical community with a
    simple, yet profound message that faith is good for your health.

    Dr. Harold G. Koenig has found a clear relationship between faith and health, one
    that he has dubbed “the healing connection.” Koenig, founder and director of the Duke University Center for the Study of Religion/Spirituality and Health in Durham, N.C., and editor-in-chief of Science & Theology News, has published 25 books and more than 200 professional journal
    articles detailing his findings.

    “The pile of evidence is growing and showing that spiritual faith has a very real,
    scientifically measurable, and positive association with mental and physical wellbeing,”
    Koenig writes in his book The Healing Connection. According to Koenig,
    the key to the healing connection is “having a deep, personal relationship
    with God and loving your neighbor.”

    “The combination of those two things, at least the research seems to show, is one of
    the most powerful combinations of things that predict a person’s health,” he said.

    Koenig has extensively studied the healing connection in the mentally and
    physically ill, and in the elderly. “Our research
    has found a simple behavior that
    might save more lives than buckling seat
    belts or quitting smoking,” Koenig reported
    after studying 4,000 randomly selected
    people over the age of 65 in North Carolina.
    “People who attend church regularly
    live longer,” he concluded.

    After following the subjects for six
    years, Koenig said he found that the likelihood
    of dying during that six-year period
    was 41 percent lower among those who
    regularly attended religious services.

    His most current research involves
    chronically ill patients. In April, Koenig
    and his colleagues reported in The Journal
    of Nervous and Mental Disease that among
    patients with sickle cell anemia, those
    who go to church at least once a week
    had the lowest pain scores.

    Bottom line, Koenig says, is “as long
    as you are here on this earth, God has a
    purpose for your life. That purpose is not
    sitting around just existing. That purpose
    involves ministry to others. It’s when people
    do that, that people get healthier.”

    “I can speak with authority about these
    issues because I experience them myself,”
    stressed Koenig, who was diagnosed in his
    late 20s with psoriatic inflammatory arthritis,
    a progressive disease that inflames
    the tendons and makes even the most ordinary
    movements painful. Once athletic,
    Koenig now relies on a wheelchair when the pain is heightened and must carefully
    plot his every movement.

    But Koenig says God is using his
    background in some extraordinary ways,
    giving him an open door to many secular
    audiences, including the mainstream media
    and some of the world’s most prestigious
    medical schools. To date, Koenig’s
    research has been featured on every major
    U.S. news outlet, and has been included
    in cover stories for Reader’s Digest, Parade
    magazine and Newsweek.

    While his research has amassed international
    attention, Koenig points to his life’s
    testimony as his most powerful witnessing
    tool. While a third-year medical student,
    Koenig says he experimented with a slew
    of Eastern religions in an effort to overcome
    shyness. But his attempts to speak
    up in class became increasingly disruptive,
    and he eventually was expelled.

    After his expulsion, Koenig battled
    mental illness as a homeless person on the
    streets of San Francisco for almost four
    months. Later, a devastating divorce after
    2-1/2 years of marriage changed everything
    for Koenig. The breakup led to a
    “spiritual rebirth that brought him back
    from an emotional brink.”

    At the age of 33, Koenig gave his life
    to Christ, and he hasn’t looked back since.
    Today Koenig celebrates almost 19 years of
    marriage with his wife, Charmin. The two
    attend King’s Park International Church,
    a charismatic ministry in Durham.

    Koenig credits God for giving him a
    second chance, particularly when he was
    accepted back into medical school as a
    third-year student. “When I read the living
    Bible, it explained just about everything
    about my life to me,” he said. “That helped
    to organize my life and gave it direction.
    Turning to Christ helped to really bring it
    together; it has for almost 20 years now.”

    This fall, Koenig will release Simple
    Health, a book he co-wrote with Today’s
    Christian Doctor editor David Biebel. It
    explains 20 easy and inexpensive changes
    people can make to improve their health.
    -SUZY RICHARDSON IN GAINESVILLE, FLA.

    Liberty Watch

    CHRISTIAN GROUP ENDS DISNEY BOYCOTT
    The American Family Association (AFA) has ended its nine-year boycott of
    the Walt Disney Co., citing new challenges in the culture wars and some
    positive signs of change at Disney, including the resignation of CEO Michael
    Eisner. The Tupelo, group was instrumental in initiating
    the boycott in 1996 to protest Disney’s extension of benefits to domestic
    partners of homosexual employees, promotion of gay-related events at
    its theme parks, and violent and sex-filled content of movies made by
    its Miramax subsidiary. In June, the Southern Baptist Convention announced
    that it also is ending its boycott of Disney. Earlier this year, representatives
    from Focus on the Family and other Christian groups that had
    participated in the boycott agreed to meet with Disney to discuss its production
    of C.S. Lewis’ The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, set to release
    in December. The Orlando Sentinel reported that Disney has launched a
    10-month marketing campaign to get Christian support for the film.

    8-YEAR-OLD’S CHRISTIAN SONG BANNED AT TALENT SHOW
    A federal judge declined to overturn a New Jersey school’s ban on a
    second-grader singing “Awesome God” at a talent show, but said he
    would consider the case later. On May 20, Stanley Chesler declined an
    emergency request to compel Frenchtown Elementary School to let Olivia
    Turton sing the pop song by the late Rich Mullins at Frenchtown Idol,
    which was held that night, the Associated Press (AP) reported. School
    officials claimed that such a performance would be inappropriate at a school
    event. A lawsuit filed May 27 on behalf of the 8-year-old claimed the
    school violated her constitutional rights. The suit, brought with the support
    of the Alliance Defense Fund (ADF), a Christian legal advocacy group
    based in Scottsdale, Ariz., argued that the constitutional separation of
    church and state does not restrict an individual’s religious speech.

    CHRISTIAN ATTORNEYS APPLAUD SUPREME COURT DECISION
    Religious liberty attorneys are applauding a June 1 Supreme Court decision
    that upheld the constitutionality of a federal law requiring prisons
    to accommodate inmates’ religious beliefs, AgapePress reported. Cutter
    v. Wilkinson involved two Ohio prison inmates-a witch and a Satanist-
    who claimed they were improperly denied access to religious literature
    and other ceremonial religious items. The high court overturned a lower
    court ruling that a 2000 law called the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized
    Persons Act prohibited the access because it would violate
    the separation of church and state, the news service said. Attorney Brian
    Fahling of the American Family Association Center for Law & Policy said
    the decision will benefit Christians, “but the oddity about this, again, is
    the fact that we have religious freedom being protected through the
    agency of a Satanist and a witch.” Brad Dacus of the Pacific Justice Institute
    called the decision “an outstanding victory for prison ministries and
    people of faith,” and he expected it to enhance his group’s work.

    Minister Translates Bible Into Remote Languages

    Syvelle Phillips has spent the last 30 years working to make
    the Scriptures available in every language

    In an effort to make the gospel accessible to the more than 500 million
    people who don’t have a Bible in their mother tongue, a former
    Assemblies of God pastor has taken up the task of translating the Scriptures into
    little-known languages spoken in remote regions around the world.

    During the early 1970s, while he was pastoring an Assemblies of God church in
    Southern California, Syvelle Phillips says he felt God calling him to translate the
    Bible. Through relationships with church members who worked for Wycliff e Bible
    Translators, Phillips learned the importance of their unique ministry.

    “I had never been aware of the need for
    Bible translation,” Phillips said. “I thought
    the entire world had the King James Bible,
    and it was good enough for everyone.”

    After much prayer and research, Phillips
    founded Evangel Bible Translators,
    which is based in Rockwall, Texas. Since
    1976, he and his team have devoted millions
    of hours to studying and recording
    the nearly 7,000 languages spoken
    worldwide. “When I said goodbye to
    my church, I had no missionaries and no
    money,” Phillips said, “but I attacked the
    project with great zeal, and there was tremendous
    response.”

    More than 30 translators and their
    families, located primarily in Africa and
    India, currently direct Evangel projects.
    Most work in their native countries. They
    receive both biblical and linguistic training
    before journeying to the mission field, and
    they are equipped with laptop computers
    to aid in their translation work.

    “One of our first translators was a
    Quechua Indian who took up a project
    Wycliff e had abandoned and returned to
    his native people,” Phillips said. “After we
    trained him, he completed an entire Bible
    before he was killed by guerillas in Peru.”

    Evangel also encourages missionaries
    to plant local churches and lead the
    congregations in worship and Bible study.
    “I’m highly committed to the church,”
    he said. “I tell our people when Sunday
    comes to get their guitars, go sing and tell
    someone about Jesus. It will be therapy for
    your souls.”

    Evangel trained 15 translators last year
    and expects another 30 to complete their
    preparation this year. Although the ministry
    is grateful for the increased interest,
    the growing demand also requires more
    financial resources. To fund these needs,
    the 76-year-old Phillips preaches more
    than 200 times annually in local churches
    and at conferences.

    “God called me from the start to challenge
    the charismatic, Full Gospel churches
    into involvement with Bible translation,”
    he said. “He began us at a point we
    could comprehend and moved us into
    an area we had never known. We’ve seen
    God raise up our mother-tongue speakers
    and connect us with them.”
    -JOHN HILLMAN
    IN ROCKWALL, TEXAS

    Couple Reach At-Risk Youth in Hollywood

    Through their Oasis of Hollywood outreach, Ron and Judy
    Radachy are sharing the love of Jesus with needy families

    Nestled in Hollywood’s inner
    city, a Christian outreach
    and drop-in center is shining
    a different kind of light in a
    city filled with stars.

    Oasis of Hollywood, founded in its
    current location by pastors Ron and
    Judy Radachy in 1993, is located a half
    dozen blocks away from the famous Walk
    of Fame sidewalk and the Kodak Theater,
    site of the Academy Awards and the
    crowning episodes of American Idol.

    But within another 10 minutes’ walk is
    Santa Monica and Highland, a haven for
    male, female or transsexual prostitutes of
    almost any age and drugs of all kinds. Two
    blocks farther is Panpipes Magickal Marketplace,
    a supermarket for occult shoppers
    and spiritual home to local Satanists.

    “This is a very oppressive area,” Ron
    Radachy said. “It’s like someone handed
    you a 10-pound weight to carry around
    and you carry it easily for a while, but
    then it starts to wear you down. There’s
    obviously a spiritual influence on the
    kids here.”

    Judy Radachy recounts the details of
    their ministry in her book, Walk of Faith
    on the Walk of Fame. Included in its short
    chapters are accounts of their Jesus Night
    Patrol, a fistfight at the center’s front door
    and a 9-year-old who overdosed on drugs
    during a suicide attempt.

    But the most poignant moment in the
    book-and perhaps in Judy Radachy’s
    life-came in 1982. Three years after she
    and husband Charles McPheeters arrived
    in Hollywood, he suddenly died, leaving
    her with two young children and a leaderless
    ministry. A talented speaker and musician,
    McPheeters had found Christ after a
    nearly fatal drug overdose and became one
    of the best-known ministers and anti-drug
    advocates of the 1970s’ Jesus Revolution.

    After Charles’ death, Judy Radachy’s
    family wanted her to move home to Texas.
    “Charles was the source of all my financial
    support, and I just couldn’t see how I could
    go on,” she said. “I opened my Bible and
    out popped Joshua 1: ‘Moses my servant is
    dead. Now arise and take his place.'”

    She started another nearby drop in
    center for teens and continued their
    House of Magdalene, a residential facility
    for local street prostitutes. During a midnight
    outreach to nearby Pasadena Rose
    Parade revelers four years later, she met the
    Rev. Ron Radachy. Both now licensed
    Foursquare ministers, the two married in
    1986 and six years later made an offer on
    their current facility, $300,000 below an
    already reduced price.

    In an area where few outreach ministries
    survive, Oasis has flourished. Reaching
    gangbangers, prostitutes, homeless
    alcoholics, single moms and “good” kids
    with abusive parents, the center offers after-
    school programs, tutoring, emergency
    food and shelter for families, and a Sunday
    evening youth service.

    Yet the Radachys believe their most
    vital program is the Urban School of
    Evangelism, a one-week mission trip for
    youth and college-age groups from across
    the nation. They stay in the center and
    minister in Hollywood streets, on skid
    row and on the Santa Monica beach.

    “Both of our hearts are not just in
    sitting in a pew in a blessing club,” Judy
    Radachy said. “But a world where God
    is real and people see it because we meet
    them where they are.”
    -ED DONNALLY IN HOLLYWOOD

    Hundreds Convene for Reconciliation Meeting Aimed at Praying for Europe

    Organizers believe God is positioning the church for’ a new Europe’
    by restoring the continent’s’ apostolic and prophetic foundations’

    A Channel Islander-whose homeland was the only part
    of the British Isles to be occupied by Nazi forces-found
    himself praying with a German. He conferred a “blessing” on a nation that his own
    people had despised as a wartime enemy.

    That was just one of the moving scenes at Target Europe-a recent event that drew
    nearly 400 people from 20 nations to the strategic naval port of Portsmouth, England.
    “The last thing I expected was to be praying with a German church leader,” said attendee
    Ray Tostevin, who was born on Guernsey.

    Now an idyllic island retreat, Guernsey
    once was part of Hitler’s frontier. Back
    in the 1940s, swastikas were draped from
    civic buildings, Jewish businesses had to
    display a yellow notice and listening to
    the BBC on a clandestine radio set was
    punishable by imprisonment.

    “My father and grandparents lived
    through fi ve years of that,” Tostevin explained.
    “My father might be forgiven for
    feeling a sense of harshness toward the
    German people. Far from it.

    “It’s a real irony that, 60 years on, my
    father recently found himself in a German
    hospital being operated on for a serious
    spinal condition by a German surgeon.
    The operation was a complete success.”

    Tostevin, who runs an independent
    TV company called GRACE Productions,
    said he participated in the event because
    he wanted to express his thanks for
    the way German people cared for his father.
    He ended up praying with Michael
    Schiff man, a leading German pastor.

    “I didn’t realize who this guy was-
    only that his lapel badge said he was from
    Germany,” Tostevin said. “I prayed that God
    would bless the German people, thanking
    Michael, as their representative, for the
    kindness they’d shown toward my dad.”

    Tostevin’s personal story summed up the
    Target Europe event-which was officially
    opened by the Lord Mayor of Portsmouth
    Jason Fazakerley. Uniting former enemies
    and praying blessings on one another’s nations
    was high on the agenda at this conference.
    “This event is for those following
    the Spirit,” said speaker and writer Roger
    Mitchell, who was one of the key facilitators
    for Target Europe, “as He positions the
    church for a new Europe.”

    Delegates packed out a meeting suite
    overlooking the English Channel, a narrow
    stretch of water that separates Great
    Britain from the rest of Europe. But people
    were also crossing more symbolic gulfs as
    they prayed and worshiped together.
    The event was jointly hosted by a
    French mission group called Cibler
    L’Europe, which is translated Target Europe,
    and an English network dubbed
    Building Together. The aim was to play
    their part in “restoring the apostolic and
    prophetic foundations of our continent.”

    That included praying for reconciliation
    between Europe and Africa-and
    sending a representative group to attend
    the Make Poverty History protest event
    that happened to be under way at the
    same time in central London.

    Among the intercessors at Portsmouth
    were Dutch intercessory leader Pieter
    Bos, national coordinator for Holland’s
    City Prayer Movements; and Martin
    Scott, author of Gaining Ground, which
    discusses prophetic intercession. “We
    lift up the cross this day into the very
    heavens above,” Scott cried out, “and we
    thank You that the cross speaks of justice.
    It speaks for an end-and it speaks for a
    new beginning.”

    Mitchell described the effort as “a kind
    of rallying cry-not an organization.” The
    initiative had resulted from various groups
    and networks working together. “I see
    some incredibly exciting new expressions
    of the body of Christ happening across
    Europe, with the help of the faith of Africa,
    South America and Asia,” he said. “I see
    seeds that make me incredibly hopeful.”
    In particular, he believes the spiritual
    landscape of France has been changing, an
    observation other Christian leaders have
    been making recently.

    “There is a lot of encouragement in
    France now, but we sense that the Lord
    is making a shift,” said French Christian
    leader Samuel Rhein, another Target Europe
    facilitator. “There’s a lot of disappointment
    at the same time because it’s
    not the breakthrough that we were waiting
    for. But still we see a lot of changes.”

    Rhein cited one example as the fact
    that he had brought 70 French people to
    the conference. “That’s a major thing,” he
    said with a smile. “I thought I was the
    only Frenchman in love with England.”
    CLIVE PRICE IN PORTSMOUTH, ENGLAND

    News Briefs

    C H A R L E S CO L S O N ‘S H O C K E D ‘ BY
    D E E P T H R OAT R E V E L AT I O N
    Prison Fellowship founder Charles Colson said he was “shocked” to
    discover that W. Mark Felt, 91, former deputy director of
    the FBI, was the notorious informant who helped expose
    the Watergate scandal. In a statement on his ministry’s
    Web site, the former senior Nixon adviser said he knew
    Felt well and considered him trustworthy. “No matter
    how Felt may justify his actions, it is not honorable to leak
    classified information to the press,” Colson said of the man
    who became known as Deep Throat. Ironically, the crime that led to Colson’s
    seven-month imprisonment was leaking a secret FBI report to the media.
    He believes going to prison was good for him, and he said he realizes that
    the end doesn’t justify the means. That’s why he says Felt is no hero. “I am
    disappointed in Mark for choosing the media as the way to expose the corruption,” Colson said. “If he felt that the wrongs of the Nixon administration
    had to be remedied, he should have walked into the FBI director’s office and
    told him so, and if necessary walked in to the president.”

    JUDGE OFFERS OFFENDERS ‘WORSHIP SER VICES’ OPTION INSTEAD OF JAIL
    A Kentucky judge has been offering
    some drug and alcohol off enders the option of going to God’s house
    instead of going to the “Big House” or rehab. District Judge Michael Caperton,
    50, a devout Christian, believes church attendance could help some of
    those convicted find spiritual guidance, the Associated Press reported. But
    critics say the practice violates the separation of church and state. “The goal
    is to help people and their families,” said Caperton, who requires defendants
    who choose the church option to get a signed affi davit from a pastor
    or spiritual leader after attending 10 services. “I don’t think there’s a churchstate
    issue because it’s not mandatory and I say worship services instead of
    church.” A district judge since 1994, Caperton has offered the option about
    50 times to repeat drug and alcohol off enders in Laurel and Knox counties
    since early spring.

    PASTO RS MEET WITH WH I T E H O U S E TO D I S C U S S
    A F R I C A I N I T I AT I V E
    More than two dozen African-American ministers met with Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and senior White House offi cials in May to discuss how the faith-based initiative could be expanded to fight AIDS in Africa and care for orphaned children, the Los Angeles Times reported. Attendees at the private meeting included Bishop T.D. Jakes, Bishop Eddie Long, Bishop Charles Blake, the Rev. Eugene Rivers, the Rev. Frank Reid and pastor Donnie McClurkin, as well as civil rights veteran Andrew Young and the Rev. William Shaw, president of the National Baptist Convention. Observers say the meeting was an attempt to
    woo African-American voters to the Republican Party by expanding black
    church participation in the faith-based initiative. The meeting was held the
    same day as a Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) summit with 200 black
    clergy. Some saw the timing as an attempt to upstage the CBC’s eff ort to
    strengthen ties between Democrats and religious leaders. Several of the
    delegates at the Rice meeting also attended the CBC event.

    PASTOR PLANS TO RETURN TO PULPIT AFTER
    REHAB.
    An Arlington, Texas, pastor is expected
    to return to the pulpit of his church after his
    June release from a second drug-treatment facility.
    Charged in March with drug possession
    and sexually assaulting three church members,
    Bishop Terry Hornbuckle was reinstated as pastor
    of Agape Christian Fellowship in April after
    a six-week suspension, the Fort Worth Star Telegram
    reported. After being rearrested in May for
    failing to pass a drug test, Hornbuckle checked
    himself into a drug-treatment facility May 16.
    On June 1 he checked himself into another “after-
    care” center, his attorney, Mike Heiskell, told
    the newspaper. Hornbuckle maintains his innocence
    and says he is a victim of extortion. His
    wife, Renee, has been leading the church since
    his arrest and suspension.

    M I N N E S O TA C H U R C H H I R E S T R A N S –
    G E N D E R M I N I S T E R .
    A Minneapolis church has hired a minister who had surgery to change
    sexes from a woman to a man, the Associated
    Press (AP) reported. The Rev. Malcolm Himschoot,
    27, is to serve as an outreach minister
    at 1,800-member Plymouth Congregational
    Church. Himschoot, who is married to a woman,
    is the subject of a documentary titled Call Me
    Malcolm, which was produced by the United
    Church of Christ, the denomination that ordained
    Himschoot, the AP said.

    RONALD WINANS DIES. Gospel recording artist
    Ronald Winans died June 17 of heart complications.
    He was 48. The second oldest of 10 siblings,
    Winans was part of the fi ve-time Grammy-
    winning quartet The Winans and a member
    of a famed musical family. He had suffered a
    massive heart attack in 1997, but experienced
    a miraculous recovery. In recent weeks, he had been admitted to a Detroit
    hospital for observation because he was
    retaining an unusual amount of fluid, the family
    said. In addition to recording with his brothers,
    Winans released solo projects, the most recent
    of which, Ron Winans Family & Friends V: A Celebration,
    came out in January. A musical tribute
    was to be held June 23 at Perfecting Church in
    Detroit. Funeral services were to be held June
    24 at Straight Gate Church, also in Detroit.