Christian Band Reaches Punk Subculture With Gospel Message

The members of Flatfoot 56 are at home sharing their faith in secular clubs and in their Chicago-area church
The members of a Celtic punk band are as comfortable singing about Christ in nightclubs as in their Chicago Pentecostal church.


Brothers Kyle, 17; Justin, 20; and Tobin Bawinkel, 22, spend most Sunday mornings leading worship at Risen Savior Assembly of God, where their father, Dan Bawinkel, 52, is pastor. But on Saturday nights, the Bawinkel brothers and longtime friend Josh Robieson, 20, share the gospel with a very different crowd–scores of teens packed like a box of spikes into a local coffeehouse for a night of punk and hard-core music.


Their band, Flatfoot 56, plays a high-energy mix of accessible Celtic punk, with Robieson’s bagpipe and mandolin adding a muscular Irish accent to Flatfoot 56’s good-natured but uncompromising set.


A punk show and a worship service may seem like two different worlds, but Tobin Bawinkel says they have more in common than one might think. “Our main purpose on this earth is to worship Christ,” he said. “Punk is a different way of expressing our love to Him, and gives us another way to tell others about what He’s done in our lives.”


The band is committed to living an authentic faith before their audience, a subculture known for having little tolerance for hypocrisy. Lyrics such as, “The faith that lies within our hearts doesn’t come from the halls of a church / It’s not about religion, its about a Friend, and it’s Him that gave us worth” leave no doubt about the band’s spiritual heartbeat.


When his sons started playing punk music in 2001 in the empty church sanctuary, pastor Dan Bawinkel didn’t pay much attention. “I knew from past experience that sometimes boys go through phases, and I thought that punk was one of those phases,” he said. “But when they incorporated Josh, their buddy from a nearby fellowship, into the band, I took notice. They started sounding pretty good.”


Others started to notice too, and soon the band with the funny name–a combination of a family joke and an old-school name for a police officer–began getting invitations to play around the Chicago area and beyond. Flatfoot 56 has since opened for nationally known Christian bands such as The O.C. Supertones, Superchick, Five Iron Frenzy, Bleach and The Insyderz. They also play regularly in skate parks, secular clubs and concert venues.


“We have found that in the kind of places we usually minister, the best way to reach people is to show them what Christ has done in our lives,” Tobin Bawinkel said. “We have had many people ask us why we are so different from everyone else in this scene. We are not ashamed to tell people that we are Christians and there are definite references to Christ in our lyrics. There are times when we are playing at a secular venue where people are not interested in our beliefs. When this happens, we show the love of Christ by living it in front of them.”


One way they do this is by traveling as a family. Robieson’s sister, Lynn, and the Bawinkel sisters, Cori and Emma, often work the merchandise table at shows. Mom, Dena Bawinkel, handles shipping duties for the CDs and T-shirts that the band’s growing legion of fans orders from their Web site ( ).


In addition to his full-time ministry at the church, Dan Bawinkel is the band’s manager. “I started to see both saved and unsaved young people showing up to listen to the guys play. I thought, Could this be a way to reach teens and young adults for Christ?”


Dan Bawinkel said that at first, some members of his congregation weren’t too sure about the wisdom of the worship team members stage-diving into the punk world. “After much prayer, the Lord told me to get involved with the band and share the band’s ministry with the church,” Dan Bawinkel said. “Our people realized that there was a place for outreach through music that may not have been the style taste of many in the congregation.”


The church also has learned to welcome the sometimes-intimidating-looking Sunday morning visitors who respond to invitations from one of the guys at a punk show the night before. “Our church supports the band big time,” Tobin Bawinkel said. “They allow us to use the church van for our travels, and the congregation prays for us when we’re on the road.”


These non-churchy church boys bring a little dose of Sunday morning into each Saturday night performance, no matter where they play. They end each show by inviting the crowd to sing along to their bagpipe-led, punk version of “Amazing Grace.”
Michelle Van Loon in Chicago




News Briefs


JERUSALEM GAY-PRIDE EVENT POSTPONED
The massive World Pride festival that was to be held in Jerusalem in August has been rescheduled for Aug. 6-12, 2006, because the previous date conflicts with Israel’s planned withdrawal from the Gaza Strip. Charismatic pastor Leo Giovinetti of Mission Valley Christian Fellowship in San Diego said he will continue to seek 1 million signatures to a petition posted at , which calls for the event’s cancellation. Organizers targeted Jerusalem to “proclaim that love knows no borders” in the home of the world’s three major religions, their Web site said.


PASTOR RESIGNS AMID POLITICS CONTROVERSY
A North Carolina pastor who came under fire in May for telling members who planned to support presidential candidate John Kerry last fall to “repent or resign” has stepped down from East Waynesville Baptist Church, the Associated Press (AP) reported. The Rev. Chan Chandler, 33, resigned May 10 amid growing internal tension over his decision to make East Waynesville “a politically active church,” the Smoky Mountain News reported. Nine members allegedly were voted out of the church after they walked out of a meeting in which Chandler challenged members to support his vision or leave, the Smoky Mountain News said. About 35 members left with Chandler, who had been pastor there for three years, the AP said.


CHRISTIAN HUMAN RIGHTS GROUP SUSPENDED FROM UNITED NATIONS
A Woman’s Voice International (AWVI) has been suspended from United Nations activities after allowing China Aid Association President Bob Fu to demonstrate a device Chinese police allegedly use to torture Christian prisoners, Jubilee Campaign reported. Days after the April 5 U.N. Human Rights Commission meeting in Geneva, Switzerland, Chinese officials filed a complaint against AWVI. Because Jubilee Campaign had fewer than five days to respond, the human-rights organization, which partners with AWVI, said it was unable to counter the complaint. A U.N. council is to review the suspension this month.


EPISCOPAL PRIESTS THREATENED WITH REMOVAL

Six Episcopal ministers in Connecticut have been threatened with removal from their parishes for not supporting their bishop’s vote in favor of ordaining the Rev. V. Gene Robinson, an openly gay man, as bishop of New Hampshire in 2003, the Hartford Courant reported. The ultimatum is the latest development in an ongoing rift between the ministers, known as the Connecticut Six, and Bishop Andrew Smith. Church leaders from as far as Uganda and Nigeria have applauded the rectors of Bishop Seabury Church, Christ and the Epiphany Church, Christ Church Parish, St. John’s Episcopal Church, Trinity Episcopal Church and the charismatic St. Paul’s Episcopal Church. Smith said the priests face removal not because they disagree with him, but because they refuse to fulfill their ordination vows “by being in communion with me as their bishop,” the Courant said.


CORRECTION
In a news brief in our May issue, we reported that Living Church of God leader Roderick C. Meredith and his son had been killed in a shooting at Living Church of God near Milwaukee, and that Meredith’s wife was among the wounded. It was actually Living Church of God pastor Randy L. Gregory and his 17-year-old son, James, who were among the victims. Meredith is the head of the North Carolina-based denomination, which broke away from the Worldwide Church of God several years ago. Charisma regrets the error.


Lesbian Pastor Reinstated

The United Methodist Church’s Northeastern Jurisdictional Committee on Appeals voted April 29 to reinstate lesbian minister Irene Elizabeth Stroud, whose clergy credentials were removed in December after she announced that she was involved in a “covenant relationship” with another woman. A previous church panel found her lifestyle “incompatible with Christian teachings,” but the appeals panel voted 8-1 to reverse that decision, saying many of the terms under which Stroud was defrocked had not been properly defined. United Methodist renewal leader Tom Lambrecht told AgapePress the April decision tarnishes the denomination’s image. The appeals decision is being referred to the Judicial Council, the denomination’s highest court.


Inmate Sues to Stop Use of Alpha Course in Jail
A self-proclaimed witch and jailed sex offender has filed a claim in Australia accusing the popular Alpha discipleship course of endangering his health and safety, CNS News said. Using the state of Victoria’s controversial Racial and Religious Tolerance Act, Robin Fletcher filed a complaint against the state’s prison authorities; The Salvation Army, which offers the course; and a Christian company that produces the materials, asking that the jail where he is incarcerated stop using the course, CNS News said. In December two pastors were convicted of vilifying Muslims under the law when they “explained Islam” to a group of Christians after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. The two are appealing the decision.


Texas Public Schools to Offer Bible Course

The Odessa, Texas, school board voted unanimously April 27 to add a Bible class to its curriculum, the Associated Press (AP) reported. The course, which would be taught as a history or literature class, is to begin in the fall of 2006. The vote came after the board heard a presentation from the North Carolina-based National Council on Bible Curriculum in Public Schools, the AP said. People for the American Way and the American Civil Liberties Union have criticized the council’s material, saying it promotes religion. A Frankenmuth, Mich., school board voted against a similar proposal in January. The council says its material has received support from 292 school districts in 35 states, the AP reported.




Sight and Sound


BOOKS


Approval Addiction

By Joyce Meyer, Warner Faith,
236 pages, hardcover, $.


Bible teacher Joyce Meyer knows a lot about approval addiction. Her childhood was filled with mistreatment, violence and fear. The abuse she suffered left her self-image battered. She believed nobody liked her, so she tried to act like she didn’t need anyone. Secretly she needed the approval of others to feel good about herself. But she found freedom through God’s help.


In her latest book, Approval Addiction: Overcoming Your Need to Please Everyone, Meyer provides principles to help believers live life to please God, not people. Meyer, selected by Time magazine as one of the top 25 evangelical leaders in America, writes that to become free from approval addiction you must face fear and find freedom; know who you are in Christ; think, act and talk in accordance with God’s Word; change your self-image; love yourself; and give yourself permission to have faults.


This book can help anyone who is tired of trying to please people more than God. With the straightforwardness that marks her ministry, Meyer offers empowerment to those who feel that they need to break an addiction to approval.
Tracee N. Mason


I Told the Mountain to Move
By Patricia Raybon, Tyndale House
Publishers, hardcover, 288 pages, $.


Award-winning author Patricia Raybon adds a fresh, transparent and sometimes comical look at the theme of prayer in her book I Told the Mountain to Move. She describes how her own quest for intimacy in prayer led to her learning lessons the hard way, during what she describes as “boot camp.”


Raybon’s journey began when her husband suffered an illness that easily could have taken his life–a trial she recounts in the first part of her book. The second section, “The School of Prayer,” is divided into 24 well-taught, easy-to-read lessons about prayer.


A unique quality of I Told the Mountain to Move is the transparency with which Raybon exposes her journey to understanding the passion of communicating with God.


Readers who are deliberately seeking the same will be drawn by her writing, wishing perhaps they could read her book in one sitting but being wise to savor it.
Eva Marie Everson


Praying for Israel’s Destiny

By James W. Goll, Chosen, softcover,
176 pages, $.


Whether you are a casual or careful observer of the historical, biblical or contemporary issues that concern Israel, it’s unlikely you will find much in the first five chapters of Praying for Israel’s Destiny that will seem insightful or thought-provoking. Most of the conclusions reached by author James W. Goll, for example, are common knowledge for students of the Bible. However, Chapter 6, “The Descendants of Keturah,” more than makes up for the book’s slow start.


And the pleasant surprise of Goll’s book is that praying for Israel from a scriptural basis likely will have the kind of far-reaching consequences many dream of but few believe could ever happen concerning the affairs of the Middle East.
Eric Wilbanks


Become a Woman of Power

By Shirley Sustar, Chosen, softcover,
192 pages, $.


Shirley Sustar, author and founder of Women of Royalty Ministries, urges Christian women to cultivate a mother’s heart in her latest book, Become a Woman of Power: Releasing Mighty Women of God Through Mentoring. Writing in a style that conveys the nurturing warmth of a mother, Sustar delves into the mandate of Titus 2:3-5 for older women to instruct younger ones.


Sustar’s own desire for a spiritual mother led her to open her heart to become one for other women. She encourages women to become spiritual mothers in God’s kingdom and to be willing to be perfected in the process.


Female role models in the Bible and powerful, personal experiences aid the author in teaching women how to find power through prayer, develop husband-wife teamwork and nurture a heart for service. Sustar, whose husband is the senior pastor of Heartland Christian Center in Wooster, Ohio, addresses the role of women in the church and, more specifically, of women whose husbands are pastors.


This book is a rich treasure that displays Sustar’s wisdom and will help women gain confidence about their place in the body of Christ.
Tracee N. Mason


For the Audience of One

By Mike Pilavachi, Regal, hardcover,

144 pages, $.


Mike Pilavachi, pastor of Soul Survivor Watford, a London-based congregation, helped birth the worship ministries of Matt Redman, Tim Hughes and Kevin Prosch. Now he lays out his theology of worship in his new book, For the Audience of One: Worshiping the One and Only in Everything You Do.


Though he writes in a nonthreatening and conversational style, Pilavachi also challenges, asking questions such as: “How many times have you said something like ‘The worship didn’t do anything for me today’? Hello! Whoever said it was for us in the first place?”


If you have ever questioned the traditions-turned-doctrine that seem to have a stranglehold on modern worship mentalities and methods, For the Audience of One will be a welcome and insightful addition to your library.

Eric Wilbanks


MUSIC


Look to You

By Hillsong United, Integrity Music.


The latest CD from United–Hillsong Church’s modern-worship youth band–is a live recording of 12 new songs that will engage listeners in an exciting worship experience.


Look to You opens with melodic rock guitars on “Salvation Is Here” and continues through the evangelistic “Tell the World.” The simple worship of “All I Need Is You” is a touching moment of personal dedication to God. “All for Love” starts slowly, builds into rock and then leads into the stirring “Shout Unto God.”


This album also includes United’s cover of Rich Mullins’ hit “Awesome God.” An accompanying free DVD features six more live recordings and two documentaries. Look to You is a blend of modern rock sounds and memorable lyrics created to lead young worshipers into God’s presence.
DeWayne Hamby


One Church

By Kurt Carr Project, Gospocentric Records.


Kurt Carr, writer of such hits as “For Every Mountain,” “In the Sanctuary” and “The Presence of the Lord,” has become one of gospel music’s most sought-after songwriters and producers. After being mentored by gospel greats Richard Smallwood and the Rev. James Cleveland, Carr gained notoriety with his gold-selling Awesome Wonder and his Stellar Award-winning production of Byron Cage’s debut.


One Church finds him stretching his musical wings by combining contemporary Christian music and gospel music. He includes the tango-inspired “Psalm 68 (Let God Arise!),” the African-driven “If I Tell God” and the tasteful rendition of the Walter Hawkins’ gospel classic “Be Grateful.”


Carr’s exceptional songwriting is hard to ignore on such cuts as the powerful “God Blocked It,” the energetic “My Time for God’s Favor (The Presence of the Lord Remix),” orchestra-savvy “Reign” and the moving “Why Not Trust God Again.” Carr breaks new ground with One Church.
René Williams


Psalms, Hymns & Spiritual Songs

By Donnie McClurkin,Verity Records.


Pastor and gospel singer Donnie McClurkin has provided uplifting songs for years. Known for hits such as “We Fall Down,” “The Prayer” (with Yolanda Adams) and “Stand,” the platinum-selling McClurkin returns with Psalms, Hymns & Spiritual Songs, his follow-up to the award-winning Again.


Recorded live at The Rock Church in Virginia Beach, Virginia, this two-disc project is aptly titled. Songs such as the already popular “I Call You Faithful,” the catchy “I Will Sing,” the Calypso-flavored “Awesome God” and guest artist’s Richard Smallwood’s “Total Praise” could easily be taken from the book of Psalms. This vertically focused collection is marked by worship-driven tracks such as “Agnus Dei,” “Only You Are Holy” and “Draw Me Close.” Contemporary gospel artists Kirk Franklin, Dottie Peoples and Joann Rosario make cameo appearances.


Psalms, Hymns & Spiritual Songs will satisfy the most devoted of McClurkin fans and certainly bring in new ones.
René Williams


MOVIES


Cinderella Man

Universal Pictures, Miramax Films,
Imagine Entertainment, PG-13.


Cinderella Man is based on the life of light-heavyweight boxer James J. Braddock, who, as a down-on-his-luck fighter, keeps boxing for family and for another chance to get back into the ring.


The film is set during the Great Depression when income is scarce. So, even the meager winnings Braddock receives from boxing help with rent, heat and food.


However, this income doesn’t last and poverty threatens to break the Braddocks apart. But Braddock will do whatever it takes to keep his family together.


Russell Crowe seems natural as the determined and devoted Braddock. And Renée Zellweger beautifully portrays his strong, faithful wife, Mae. The two flawlessly depict this couple’s devotion to each other and their children.


The film, which opened in theaters June 3, is rated PG-13 for boxing violence and cursing. The supporting cast does blatantly use the Lord’s name in vain, but the film still offers valuable lessons. Braddock has issues with God that are not resolved on-screen, but he stays true to his convictions of integrity and honor.


Moviegoers will also learn about how difficult life was during the Great Depression. Watching Braddock make sacrifices for those he loves inspires a sense of awe.


Cinderella Man celebrates Braddock, who approached his life with a strength of character that seems to be missing in society today. It is an inspiring story about an incredible man.
Leigh DeVore


AUTHOR SPOTLIGHT


Stasi Eldredge: Helping Women Find Value


Stasi and John Eldredge confront issues that weigh on the hearts of women–guilt, shame, failure and unworthiness–in their book Captivating: Unveiling the Mystery of a Woman’s Soul (Nelson Books).


Stasi is not immune to these feelings. “Either I feel I am not enough or I am too much,” she says. “Not pretty enough, not thin enough, not kind enough or too emotional, too needy, too strong and too opinionated.


“The result is shame, the universal companion of women. Our remedy? We keep trying harder until we are exhausted.”


Stasi wants women to embrace the truth that they are deeply loved by Christ. “An intimate relationship with Jesus is for every woman,” she says.


The couple write that from childhood women are haunted by the question, “Am I lovely?” Often the answer is crushing, resulting in a wound to the soul that affects a woman’s entire life. How can women escape the trap?


“Healing must come from God,” John Eldredge, author of the best-selling Wild at Heart (Nelson Books), writes. Stasi has found healing through the Holy Spirit, Christian counselors and ministries of spiritual warfare.


“As a result of balanced restoration I finally see myself as lovely, from the inside out. I am captivating and bring delight to my Father God,” she states.


“Each woman has her own unique calling and beauty and can uncover it and shine.”
Judith Hayes




Sight and Sound


BOOKS


Changing the World Through Kindness

By Steve Sjogren, Regal, hardcover,
224 pages, $.


With a simple but powerful message, author Steve Sjogren challenges Christians to use the oft-forgotten weapon of kindness to win unbelievers to Christ and help transform lives. In his latest book, Changing the World Through Kindness, Sjogren puts a practical handle on this spiritual principle.


Using colorful illustrations and vivid examples, Sjogren, who founded the Vineyard Community Church in Cincinnati, writes that kindness is every bit as important in spiritual warfare as casting out demons or praying earnestly for others. Kindness can penetrate the spiritually darkened hearts of people with God’s love.


The author leads Christians to witness to nonbelievers in unconventional ways such as cleaning toilets at bars and stores, feeding expired parking meters and washing cars. “By serving in kindness we’re building bridges to the unchurched that will transport them toward a relationship with God,” Sjogren writes.


This book is a must-read for anyone who has ever thought they “weren’t spiritual enough” to engage in spiritual warfare, or for those who are looking for ways to influence others with their faith. The author is simply challenging Christians to be available to be used by Christ in word and in deeds.
Tracee N. Mason


Launching Your Kids for Life

By Bob and Cheryl Reccord,
W Publishing Group, softcover,

240 pages, $.


All good parents want their children to grow up to be happy, productive and effective adults. And for Christian parents, they add to this determination the desire to see their children bringing glory to God by fulfilling His purposes for their lives. A daunting task, but with God’s grace and wisdom–and with the insights Bob and Cheryl Reccord offer in their newest book, Launching Your Kids for Life–families can have more direction, vision and success.


The Reccords offer mental pictures, poignant parallels and practical steps to help parents create childhoods that lead to meaningful adulthoods. Consulting with NASA executives and astronauts, the authors weave an inspiring comparison between child “launching” and space-shuttle launching–both “launches” have similarities–from mission control (parents) to ground crews (grandparents, teachers, church staff and others).


The authors challenge parents to have the humility and the spiritual fortitude to “abort” a mission; in other words re-evaluate situations and begin again. For example, if extracurricular activities are distracting children from school or causing negative attitudes, parents need to stop the activities, decide what is best and then start again on a new, adjusted course.


These are tough decisions, but “it comes down to [parents] having the guts to make judgment calls, regardless of the criticism and hurt feelings that may result,” the authors write. It’s not easy to “abort” a mission. But regrouping can help parents learn what they did right, how to do better and what has to change in order to help their children become all that God created them to be!
Kristi D. Shores


MUSIC


Great River Road

By Jason Upton, Gotee Records.


Worship leader Jason Upton’s new release, Great River Road, is a collection of introspective acoustic worship tunes. Upton’s voice blends well with the low-key musical experience, which mixes elements of folk, pop and world music.


Upton fuses many flavors of international music on songs such as the orchestral “King’s Way,” “Chop Down the Tree,” which features spoken-word Scripture, and the melodic title track. “When It Thunders” speaks lovingly of a paternal relationship with God, and the romance of “Return to Me” parallels the far-reaching love of Christ. “Trust Again” is a solemn message of healing for the hurting.


Because Upton has been compared to music pioneer Keith Green, a fitting track to end on is a new pop version of the late singer’s “You Are the One.”


Great River Road is an intimate journey that will help create a unique, relaxed time of personal worship.
DeWayne Hamby


It’s My Time

By LaShun Pace, EMI Gospel.


LaShun Pace, a former member of the Anointed Pace Sisters, has provided inspiring gospel music for years. With an unbelievable vocal range and a powerful delivery, she has released a number of independent, top-five-charting albums.


She now offers her EMI Gospel debut, It’s My Time, her first project in four years. During her absence, she endured the sudden death of her daughter Xenia, a divorce and illness. Songs such as the power ballad “For My Good,” the catchy up-tempo “Hey” and the urban-touched title tune carry a special poignancy in light of her recent trials.


Other great church tracks include the traditional “Emotions” and the choir-backed “I Trust You.” She also includes a tasteful remake of the church classic “The Lord Will Make a Way.” One of gospel’s best voices is back.
René Williams


Pressing On

By various artists,
Discovery House Music.


The apostle Paul receives a musical homage with the release Pressing On: Songs Inspired By the Journey of the Apostle Paul. This album features songs rooted deeply in scriptural references and a lineup of skilled vocalists, including Larnelle Harris, Michael O’Brien (NewSong), Travis Cottrell and a reunion of the original First Call lineup: Bonnie Keen, Marty McCall and Melodie Tunney.


First Corinthians 13 gets a musical retelling courtesy of Harris, who belts out an inspiring call for brotherly love on “The Greatest of These.” The title song displays O’Brien’s vocals with a message of faithful determination. First Call fans will be thrilled to hear the trio’s return on “Living Sacrifices” and “Nothing Can Separate Us.”


Though the inclusion of musical pioneers and an “easy-listening” soundtrack make this release sound somewhat dated musically, it still proclaims timeless truths.
DeWayne Hamby


NEWS


Filming of Left Behind: World War III Wraps Up


Cloud Ten Pictures is in post-production of Left Behind: World War III. The movie, which is based on the popular Left Behind series by Jerry B. Jenkins and Tim LaHaye, is the third installment in the film series and stars Kirk Cameron (Growing Pains), Lou Gossett Jr. (An Officer and a Gentleman) and Gordon Currie (Left Behind II: Tribulation Force).


Directed by Craig P. Baxley (Storm of the Century), the film is based on the last part of the book Tribulation Force. It follows the story of the U.S. President (Gossett) who works against those who oppose the self-proclaimed messiah (Currie) until a surprising discovery forces him to change sides.


“There are two reasons I came back [and one] is that the script was really good,” said Cameron, who plays the role of Buck Williams. “It got better as we began working on it together. The second reason is that I’ve gotten so much positive response from normal, everyday people on the streets who like the Left Behind movies and say [the films] really brought some of the things from their childhood faith back to life. If the third movie can plant more seeds along those lines, then I think it’s worth it to give it our best shot.”


At press time, Cloud Ten Pictures was still in discussions regarding the film’s theatrical release date. Left Behind: World War III will be distributed on DVD and video by Sony Pictures Home Entertainment this fall or next spring.
Margaret Feinberg


MUSIC SPOTLIGHT


Paul Wilbur Offers Music and Mercy


When worship leader Paul Wilbur travels overseas, he often brings doctors, dentists and medicine–but not because he’s a hypochondriac. Wilbur believes that ministry to the poor is an integral part of true worship, and he makes sure his outreaches include not only music but also mercy.


On recent tours to Ghana, Nigeria, Nicaragua and El Salvador, for example, Wilbur’s team examined the sick, counseled with them and prescribed medicine. At each clinic 1,200-1,500 people were treated and had an opportunity to hear the gospel.


“We work with local pastors and leaders who meet with each person individually and share a salvation message,” Wilbur explains. “As a result, there is a huge number of salvations. If we could double the number of doctors, we could double the number of salvations. … We’re believing God for an increase of $50,000 a month so we can do six outreaches this year.”


Wilbur, who is a Messianic Jew, recorded his latest CD, The Watchman (Hosanna! Music), live on Yom Kippur at Cornerstone Church in San Antonio. “The timing is significant,” Wilbur says. “Yom Kippur, or the Day of Atonement, was the one day of the year that the high priest was allowed to come into the presence of God with blood, making atonement for himself and all Israel.


“I believe this recording will carry that anointing in a very special way and will sweep many into the kingdom of God.”
Elisabeth Farrell




Holy Spirit, Renew Us

I fear that charismatics are fitting in more and emphasizing the Holy Spirit less.
When my son Cameron graduated from Oral Roberts University in 1998, the speaker was Atlanta pastor Creflo Dollar. His topic was unusual for a commencement address–he talked about the importance of praying in tongues and interpreting the message.


It wasn’t unusual to hear someone talk about speaking in tongues at ORU. Oral Roberts has testified that when his campus was just a pasture he prayed in tongues and God showed him how to build a great university.


In the early days of the charismatic movement it seemed that every week I heard another story about someone being baptized in the Spirit and speaking in tongues. The joke back then was that after someone was filled with the Spirit we needed to lock them up for months because they were so crazy for God!


The late Jamie Buckingham, my longtime mentor, described the first time he spoke in tongues. In his 1976 book Risky Living he wrote: “From the very depths of my inner being, I heard the Holy Spirit Himself beginning to speak. … I was speaking the language of the angels. It was an unforgettable moment. Sheer ecstasy.”


Jamie often joked that trouble was the evidence of the baptism in the Holy Spirit. That’s because entire congregations were being swept up in the charismatic renewal during the 1960s and 1970s, and many churches split over it. Today, churches that once opposed the gifts of the Spirit are open to renewal.


The charismatic experience was also a bridge builder. Christians who argued about how to take communion or perform water baptism were swept up in this renewal movement. As more and more Christians experienced the intoxicating power Jamie described, it became more difficult for us to argue about secondary doctrines.


One of the most surprising bridges between denominations was built when charismatic renewal erupted in the Roman Catholic Church. Before the 1962 Vatican II reforms, Catholics believed anyone outside their church was lost. But after Pope John XXIII called for a “new Pentecost,” they began viewing Protestants as “separated brethren.”


A few years later, in 1967, a group of Catholics at Duquesne University received the baptism of the Holy Spirit. The fervor spread to Notre Dame, where my colleague Bert Ghezzi was then a graduate student. I’ve enjoyed listening to Bert’s stories of how a group of Catholic students spoke in tongues and prophesied for hours after some businessmen prayed for them in South Bend, Indiana. The renewal in the Catholic Church has now touched an estimated 60 million Catholics worldwide.


One of the first leaders of the Catholic charismatic renewal, Ralph Martin, wrote a feature in this issue on Pope John Paul II, who endorsed the renewal (see page 46). Martin and others believe the pope himself was charismatic.


Catholics, in fact, were the first to use the term “charismatic”–deriving it from the Greek word charism, or spiritual gift. The word was mentioned in a Vatican II document, which called on the church to “embrace charismatic gifts … with thanksgiving.” When we chose to name this magazine Charisma in 1975, the term had become widely used by Protestants.


The charismatic movement has evolved and changed since then. Charismatic churches are growing. The entire evangelical church seems more open to charismatic worship styles.


But at a time when the media pays more attention to evangelicals, I fear that charismatics are fitting in more and emphasizing the Holy Spirit less. Many people are still baptized in the Holy Spirit, but hardly anyone talks about it. It seems our fervor has waned.


God poured out His Spirit at Pentecost to empower the church. He did it again during the Azusa Street Revival in 1906, and again during the charismatic movement, to renew and empower us all.


I believe we need to heed the words of Pope John Paul II, who said these words in 2004, less than a year before he died: “Whenever the Spirit intervenes, He leaves people astonished. He brings about events of amazing newness; he radically changes persons and history.”


Let’s pray that the Holy Spirit will again intervene in our lives, empower us afresh and astonish our generation.


Stephen Strang is the founder and publisher of Charisma.




Black Pastors Split on Moral Agenda

Two Atlanta ministers hope to unite clergy who disagree on which issues should take priority
An Atlanta pastor and the daughter of a slain civil rights leader are seeking to build bridges between black ministers who have expressed divergent views on the overall agenda for black America and how vocal African-American clergy should be in opposition to gay marriage.


Bishop Eddie Long, senior pastor of New Birth Baptist Church, and the Rev. Bernice King, daughter of Martin Luther King Jr. and a member of New Birth, are taking active steps to build open communication in the black church. In April the pair hosted the first Kingdom Summit, a closed-door, invitation-only meeting aimed at fostering honest dialogue between veteran, civil-rights-era pastors and prominent charismatic ministers in hopes of bringing unity between the two groups. A second meeting was to be held in May.


Long declined to name the summit participants in hopes of keeping the dialogue confidential. Since the November presidential election, there has been increased public disagreement among black religious and civic leaders about which issues are most critical to the African-American community.


Some younger leaders–the majority of whom are charismatic or Pentecostal–have expressed opposition to gay marriage, many supporting a constitutional amendment banning same-sex unions. Other veteran, mostly mainline clergy say arguing about amending the Constitution draws attention away from more pressing moral issues, such as ending the Iraq war and creating a more equitable health-care system.


In January the four oldest black Baptist denominations–the National Baptist Convention USA Inc., the Progressive National Baptist Convention, the National Missionary Baptist Convention of America and the National Baptist Convention of America–held a first-ever joint meeting in Nashville, Tenn. Though they expressed opposition to gay marriage, they said ending the Iraq war, reforming President Bush’s education plan and calling for more funding to fight AIDS in Africa and the Caribbean were more urgent concerns.


Days later, the newly formed High Impact Leadership Coalition unveiled its Black Contract With America on Moral Values, which expresses support for a federal marriage amendment alongside calls for education, health-care and prison reform, and small-business development.


Affiliated with the conservative Traditional Values Coalition, the group is hosting a series of summits aimed at mobilizing black clergy to support a ban on same-sex marriage. The first was held in January at Crenshaw Christian Center in Los Angeles. A second was held at The King’s College in New York in April.


The Rev. Eugene F. Rivers III of Azusa Christian Community in Boston said the divergent views represent a larger trend in which Pentecostals and charismatics are emerging as the dominant political force in the black church.


“We’re coming to the end of an intellectual age,” said Rivers, who supports an amendment banning gay marriage and plans to announce his own document, God’s Gift: A Christian Vision of Marriage and the Black Family, during a Washington, D.C., press conference this month.


“The paleo-liberal civil rights industry leadership has come to an end,” he said. “They no longer have political, moral or intellectual traction. Rev. Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton are good men who represent a philosophically and intellectually exhausted political paradigm.”


Though he represents the emerging leadership, Long hopes his summits will help build a bridge. He said honest dialogue could benefit everyone involved. “That’s a good thing because now we’re stirring each other to search the Scriptures and to really dig into why they believe what they believe,” he said.


In December Long and King led a march in downtown Atlanta to advance a moral agenda for the nation. Media coverage targeted their opposition to gay marriage, but Long said his purpose for the march was to mobilize the church.


“The church has been silent for so long and not really giving a clear voice in the community about what we stand for and why we stand for it,” he said. “So often we stay in our sanctuaries and … never really [get] out in the main conversation of what [is] really going on in the world, and we become irrelevant.”


Neither Long nor King supports a constitutional amendment to ban gay marriage. They say changing the Constitution should rarely be done and that other legal remedies exist to ensure gay marriage is not legalized.


Though Coretta Scott King has been an advocate for gay and lesbian rights, Bernice King said her mother also does not support same-sex marriage. “Her view has been twisted by the majority media,” King said. “My mother does not believe in same-sex marriage. However, she is very concerned and is an advocate for preserving the Constitution and not tampering with it.”


Long said he and Coretta Scott King communicate regularly, adding that she, Bernice King and Martin Luther King III visited New Birth for a prayer meeting in 2002. “They laid hands on me in reference to moving forward in that which her husband had started,” Long said.


Since then, Long has appeared more outspoken on sociopolitical matters. He said the December march was a means of issuing a challenge to African-American Christians. “When we put the call out, they were able to break camp from their groups, break camp from their associations because they knew in their spirits it was God calling them to this move,” he said. “I believe it is a time now that people are drawing a line and God is saying ‘choose this day who you’re going to serve.’ At least you have to come out and say something.”


The Republican Party has made strides in wooing black voters, with President Bush getting 2 percent more of the black vote in 2004 than he did in 2000. But King says neither party truly connects with the black church or the church in general.


“Because you take a biblically based stance does not mean you are necessarily Republican; that’s the tragedy of our times,” King said. “At the end of the day, morality is not just confined to homosexuality and abortion. The Republican Party has been able to hone in on these two things and get the support of those in churches across America.”


King said a pastor from New Zealand has begun an alternative political party in his country. “I believe this is something we need to look at in the body of Christ in America,” she said. “Honestly, there are truths that come out of both parties.”


Long said there will always be people who choose homosexuality, but he believes a nation cannot avoid consequences when it promotes this lifestyle. “History has proven that that route will destroy a nation,” he said. “The issue really grabs us at our foundation of being in the very image of Christ.”


Long said he knows there are practicing homosexuals in his and other churches. Many are coming to church because they don’t want to remain in the lifestyle, he said, but even if they don’t change their ways his message to them centers on God’s love, not man’s hate.
Richard Daigle in Atlanta




Keith Butler Declares Candidacy for 2006 Senate Race


Detroit pastor Keith Butler announced April 12 that he will run for U.S. Senate in Michigan’s 2006 election.


“With all that I have seen, heard and felt in my soul, running for the United States Senate at this time and place in Michigan’s history is not a mere opportunity,” said Butler, founding pastor and bishop of 21,000-member Word of Faith International Christian Center, the Associated Press (AP) reported. “It is something much more important: a responsibility.”


A longtime Republican and former Detroit city councilman, Butler said he believed he had a moral obligation to oppose Democratic Sen. Debbie Stabenow, citing such issues as gay marriage and challenges to religious freedom as motivation for his run, the AP said.


Republican state Sen. Alan Cropsey is endorsing Butler and said he believes his chances of winning are strong, though the primary will likely be a tough race. “He’s a staunch conservative on fiscal issues; he’s a staunch conservative on moral issues,” Cropsey said. “But he’s more than a conservative. He’s a spokesman. He’s a leader.”


Butler is not as well known among Michigan Republicans outside the Detroit area, and Cropsey said white conservatives might not immediately see why they should vote for a black man from a densely urban part of the state. But he says Butler will win their support when they realize he shares their values. They also will likely be impressed with his business acumen, Cropsey said, as Butler has built the state’s largest church, which has 15 branches in the U.S. and abroad.


He added that Christian voters–a block that Cropsey said “will swing any [Republican] primary”–likely will not be deterred by Butler’s affiliation with the Word-Faith movement. “I take a look at Keith Butler, and I say, ‘This man holds my values. On the key issues, this man believes as I believe,'” said Cropsey, a Christian who has known Butler since the early 1980s. “I may disagree on some of the charismatic issues, but I know this is a man of God.”


Observers say if Butler wins the Republican primary, he could unseat Stabenow if he gains the typical percentage of Republican votes and at least 20 percent of the black vote. Butler supporters from Cropsey to Traditional Values Coalition founder Lou Sheldon to former National Religious Broadcasters chairman Glenn Plummer say he could win at least that percentage.


Cropsey said he believes Butler is called to this race. “In my spirit I sense there is a strong anointing from God on Keith Butler,” he said.
Adrienne S. Gaines




Pentecostal Pastor Seeks Clemency For Alleged Wrongful Imprisonment

Thousands of Christians across the nation are supporting pastor Dino Gentile’s appeal for clemency
Thousands of Christians nationwide have written letters expressing support for a Pentecostal pastor serving a 41-year sentence for a crime he said he was coerced into committing.


Pastor Dino M. Gentile of Chatsworth, Calif., is seeking clemency from President Bush for his role in a 1998 bank robbery in Pensacola, Fla.


The 49-year-old former pastor of The Ark, a Chatsworth congregation affiliated with the Apostolic World Christian Fellowship Inc., said he was forced to drive the getaway car at the threat of harm to his wife and two children in California.


“Dino was in terrible fear [that] he and his family [would be] executed,” said his mother, Emila Gentile Medeiros.


Gentile said he became involved in the robbery when Jeffrey Durham, now serving time for the Monsanto Employees Credit Union robbery, asked if he could accompany Gentile on a cross-country evangelism and fundraising trip.


Durham, who first represented himself as a mild-mannered Christian man and an agent with the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, was eager to participate in church activities and interacted closely with the Gentile family. By the time Durham revealed his plan to rob the Pensacola bank, Gentile trusted him.


“Gentile embraced society’s throwaways, an aspect of his personality that spilled into his ministry,” said Jennifer Elise Chase in a master’s thesis she wrote about Gentile’s case, which she titled “The Preacher Who Trusted Too Much.” “Dino believes everyone has redeeming value.”


But as he sat outside in Durham’s getaway car with a bomb on the seat behind him and a threat of death if he did not cooperate, Gentile said he was forced to make a decision. “He turned from a model saint in my church for eight months to this absolutely possessed young man,” Gentile told Charisma.


So instead of running to the police the minute he got the opportunity, Gentile drove Durham back to California. “He was screaming at me the whole time we drove back to Los Angeles,” Gentile said. “I had to wonder what he was capable of.”


Durham was arrested for the robbery in 1998, and FBI agents later linked Gentile to the crime, charging him with aiding and abetting. Gentile claims his attorney failed to introduce evidence that would have supported his version of the events. Within 15 minutes, a Pensacola jury convicted Gentile. He received 30 years for his alleged use of an automatic weapon, and 11 years for the abetting charge.


Since then, friends, relatives, former parishioners and members of his 3.2 million-member denomination have written some 3,000 letters and faxes requesting clemency. Supporters repeatedly describe Gentile as a man of integrity and devotion.


“This good and decent man has suffered enough,” wrote Bishop Samuel L. Smith of the Apostolic World Christian Fellowship. “His community work has been exemplary. Helping the poor, the down and out, was a particular passion of this humble man.”


Linda Oakland, senior pastor of The Well Foursquare Church in Northridge, Calif., agreed. “All of his life and his work reflect the testimonials, one after another, of people who came out of difficult circumstances, who now serve as vital people in our community,” she wrote. “…We are anxious to have Pastor Gentile back serving our community in Southern California where he is so desperately needed.”


Among those who received letters and petitions are California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, Senators Mark Montigny and Bob Dole, the U.S. Department of Justice, former President Clinton and now President Bush.


In 2001, Justice Department pardon attorney Roger C. Adams sent a letter to Sen. Dole, saying Gentile’s request for a reduced sentence was being processed. Four years later, the process is still not complete. Gentile is praying for a miracle.


For several years, Durham, who is serving a 120-year sentence in a Colorado prison, has been promising to exonerate Gentile. “Don’t waive your right to an appeal, Brother,” Durham wrote in a 1999 letter to Gentile. “That’s what’s going to get you out of prison–that and a statement from me. I have to wait until after my trial before I make any statements. I will do what I said, Brother. Just be patient and know that the truth will set you free.”


Durham has not provided a statement to authorities yet.


Gentile said his appeal process has been exhausted, but a presidential pardon may still be available. White House officials won’t discuss Gentile’s case. “We do acknowledge when we receive a petition or application that is under review,” said Justice Department spokesman John Nowacki, “but we don’t discuss anything during the interim process.”


Gentile has seen dozens of men saved since his incarceration, but he hopes his prison ministry will soon end and has asked supporters to keep writing and faxing the president on his behalf.
Michelle Lovato in Lompoc, Calif.




Liberty Watch


Pharmacists Challenge Order to Give ‘Plan B’ Pill
The American Center for Law and Justice (ACLJ) filed suit on behalf of two pharmacists challenging Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s order requiring pharmacists to dispense medication even if the drugs violate their religious beliefs or conscience. The move came after two pharmacists refused to dispense morning-after birth control pills, invoking their “right of conscience,” which they believed was protected by the state’s Health Care Right of Conscience Act, the Chicago Sun-Times reported. The governor said the act does not cover the pharmacists and said refusing to dispense the pills denies a woman her right to health care. The ACLJ is asking a state court to declare Blagojevich’s emergency order null and void.


Lawsuit Against Jews For Jesus Dismissed


A second lawsuit filed against Jews for Jesus (JFJ) by a woman who claims she was wrongly said to have accepted Christ in a 2002 ministry newsletter has been dismissed. Liberty Counsel, which represented JFJ, said Florida Circuit Court Judge Catherine Brunson dismissed Edith Rapp’s claims that she had been defamed by the praise report her stepson wrote, in which he said she became a “Jewish believer.” A previous judge dismissed a lawsuit Rapp filed in May 2004, after her husband’s 2003 death. She later refiled portions of the suit. Those claims have also been dismissed. At press time Rapp had filed another lawsuit against JFJ. Liberty Counsel said it planned to file a motion to dismiss the third lawsuit.


School Board Sued for Praying at Meetings
The ACLU is suing members of a Delaware school board for opening monthly business meetings with prayer, AgapePress reported. The civil liberties group claims the actions of Reginald Helms, vice president of Indian River School District Board of Education, and his colleagues are unconstitutional. “I think there is Supreme Court precedent to say that these are legislative type prayers … so we’re hoping that in the end it will be upheld as constitutional,” John Whitehead, head of the Rutherford Institute, which is representing the board members, told AgapePress.




Texas-Based Library to Highlight Historic Revival Leaders

Founded by ‘the world’s oldest teenager,’ the Winkie Pratney Memorial Library will house works by trailblazing ministers
The man affectionately known as the world’s oldest teenager is looking to historic revival leaders for lessons in radical Christian living.


Winkie Pratney, a New Zealand-born evangelist who journeys hundreds of thousands of miles speaking to more than a half-million people each year, is preparing to open his unique collection of rare, handpicked books this summer as an extension of his ministry to young people and their leaders.


Located on Youth With a Mission’s Twin Oaks Ranch outside Lindale, Texas, and comprising more than 10,000 volumes, the Winkie Pratney Memorial Library will offer a unique look at the lives and teachings of historic revival leaders such as John Wesley, Charles Finney and William and Catherine Booth. Eventually, Pratney hopes to make many of the writings available online for free.


“The ultimate goal is to be a library that tracks evangelism, missions and spiritual awakening,” Pratney said, “one that chronicles the work of the Holy Spirit in history.”


Pratney, who celebrated his 60th birthday last year, said the library will be based on a Hebraic, rather than Greek, style of learning. Instead of packing the library with as many books and resources as he can acquire to help patrons accumulate knowledge, Pratney said he wants to highlight the works of leaders who can teach by example, who were known both for their evangelistic zeal and their Christian character.


“[When selecting a book] I ask: ‘Is the person who wrote this a soul winner? Are they doing what Jesus did, or are they merely theoretical?'” he said. “… The next thing I ask is, ‘What was the long-term fruit of their lives? What were the kinds of results they got when they pushed the truth God gave them? When you put these two meshes on a good chunk of the Christian life, a large number of things get left behind. What remains is a core of people who left a lasting legacy.”


Pratney said many of the authors in his collection have been omitted entirely from the racks of most Christian bookstores. And many of those who are included in anthologies have been edited to remove their emphasis on the supernatural.


“This is a unique sort of library because it follows the stream of the red-headed stepchildren of the Reformation,” Pratney said. “Many of these writers were neither Catholic nor Reformed, but were persecuted by both sides. They were of the stream that believed that a pure heart and unreserved love and obedience was what God required and that Jesus still worked miracles in their day.”


The library houses such original works as Butler’s Lives of the Saints, which John Wesley used extensively; the complete collected hymns of John and Charles Wesley; Charles Spurgeon’s 80 volumes of sermons from the Metropolitan Tabernacle and the Park Street pulpits; as well as books by such revivalists as Charles Finney and Catherine and William Booth.


The library will also house a natural healing library that includes books, videos and current research into alternative healing methods. Pratney plans to have a fully stocked kitchen where visitors will be able to prepare healthy alternatives to the burgers, fries, refined sugar and white flour that are staples of the American diet.


“Martyrdom is one thing … but death by stupidity is something else,” Pratney said. “I’m interested in Christians living long, productive lives so they can die old and happy serving Jesus.”


Plans are under way to make it possible for patrons to watch archival footage of revivals or teaching videos by such ministers as Campbell McAlpine, Leonard Ravenhill, Keith Green, Gordon Olson or even Winkie Pratney.


“Winkie is part of our spiritual heritage,” said Bob Weiner of Weiner Ministries International and former president of Maranatha Campus Ministries. “The world’s been changed because of the message he’s preached, and millions of young people have gotten saved.”


Weiner said Pratney has been teaching the truths he gleaned from the lives of the people represented in the library for more than 40 years. “Because of it, thousands of people are out there preaching the truth of the kingdom of God,” Weiner said.


“We need to study the works of [past great saints of God] to learn why they were so anointed and why God used them,” he added. “There’s something in the character of the people God chooses, and we need to line ourselves up with that.”


Vinson Synan, dean of the Regent University School of Divinity in Virginia Beach, Va., said a library of this sort can help provide a backdrop against which to judge present-day spiritual awakenings.


“No movement lasts very long unless it is buttressed by good thought and strong theology,” Synan said. “Experience is important, but it’s what you write down that affects future generations.”
Amado J. Bobadilla