Jimmy Stewart

  • Victory Over Death

    Victory Over Death

    Sharon Daugherty’s tears came freely as the dim light of dawn began to break over the MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston. She hugged her four adult children and her mother-in-law, Iru Daugherty, who were gathered with her in the hospital room that had for many hours been the site of her faith-filled vigil. Outside, …

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  • ‘Nefarious: Merchant of Souls’ Exposes Sex Trafficking Industry

    ‘Nefarious: Merchant of Souls’ Exposes Sex Trafficking Industry

    As we waited in a packed theater recently to see a new documentary about sex trafficking, I wondered how Christian filmmaker Benjamin Nolot would present this graphic subject to us. Nolot heads an international ministry called Exodus Cry, based in Grandview, Mo., and is part of the leadership team of the International House of Prayer, …

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  • NIV Bible Changes Gender-Inclusive Language

    The world's best-selling Bible is getting an upgrade. Since its debut in 1978, the New International Version, known as the NIV, has been the Bible of choice for evangelicals, selling more copies than any other version. But a 2002 gender-inclusive edition bombed after being condemned as too liberal.

    Translators hope their latest edition, which is available for preview at BibleGateway.com, will avoid a similar fate. They've retained some of the language of the 2002 edition. But they also made changes—like going back to using words such as "mankind" and "man" instead of "human beings" and "people" — to appease critics.

  • Running to Save a Life and Change Lives

    Running to Save a Life and Change Lives

    Running for His LifeGilbert Tuhabonye loves to run. Growing up in Burundi, he ran the African plains near his village every day, challenged often by other distance runners who wanted a race. “They would see dust,” he says, “because I would run like the wind.” 

    Now 36, Tuhabonye never dreamed his youthful passion for running would one day save his life or become his gift of life to people a continent away. 

    Of the Tutsi tribe, Tuhabonye was a middle-schooler when civil war ignited in his country between the Tutsi and Hutu tribes. One afternoon, Hutus came to his school.

  • Darlene Zschech Leaving Hillsong to Co-Pastor Church

    Darlene Zschech Leaving Hillsong to Co-Pastor Church

    Well-known worship leader Darlene Zschech will soon be leaving the Australian megachurch where she has served for 25 years to become senior pastor of a nearby Pentecostal church. Zschech, whose songs “Shout to the Lord,” “The Potter’s Hand” and numerous others over the last decade made the name of Hillsong Church in Sydney synonymous with …

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  • U.S. Christians: Where’s the Love?

    U.S. Christians: Where’s the Love?

    Jesus prayed in John 17 that the world would know His followers by their love. Yet nearly half of evangelicals recently polled in America cite a lack of love as one of the primary contributions U.S. Christians have made to society.

    Some 48 percent listed a lack of love for others, as well as violence, hatred, bigotry and intolerance as Christians' greatest negative contributions, according to a nationwide survey of American adults released Monday by The Barna Group. By comparison, only about 25 percent of the nation listed those same items as the most negative.


    The difference reflected the survey's findings that evangelicals are even more likely than many other Americans to acknowledge the faults of believers. They were "the single, most critical subgroup of all," according to the report, and least likely of all respondents to say they were unable to identify any negative contributions by Christians.

  • Running for His Life

    Running for His Life

    Running for His LifeGilbert Tuhabonye loves to run. Growing up in Burundi, he ran the African plains near his village every day, challenged often by other distance runners who wanted a race. “They would see dust,” he says, “because I would run like the wind.” 

    Now 36, Tuhabonye never dreamed his youthful passion for running would one day save his life or become his gift of life to people a continent away. 

    Of the Tutsi tribe, Tuhabonye was a middle-schooler when civil war ignited in his country between the Tutsi and Hutu tribes. One afternoon, Hutus came to his school.

  • The Best Seat in the House

    The Best Seat in the House


    I happened to have been named for a Hollywood actor, James Stewart. If you've never heard of him, that's understandable. He's hardly a pop-culture icon anymore. He had his day in the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s, dying in 1997 at age 89. But once a year—at Christmastime—he's all over the TV map. Sometimes two, maybe three channels at the same time run his famous, either-you-love-it-or-hate-it movie "It's a Wonderful Life."



    Ironically, during most of that film, Stewart's character, George Bailey, is miserable. Life for him is anything but wonderful.



    George was a small-town guy who had dreams of leaving his dudsville hometown, Bedford Falls, for high adventure. He was just about to get that dream started when real life slammed him. The needs of others arose, and out of his compassion he responded. Before he knew it, he had sacrificed his own education for his brother's, kept the family-run savings and loan afloat, protected the town from the greed of a greasy banker named Potter, married his childhood sweetheart, and started a family.

  • Apocalypse Tomorrow

    Apocalypse Tomorrow

    “It’s the end of the world as we know it and I feel fine.” When piano-bar musician Tony Delgatto (George Segal) croons those R.E.M. lyrics to a sloshed crowd in the new film 2012, he has no idea he’s performing the intro to a seismic disaster that’s about to take center stage on planet Earth. …

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  • Faith Tourism Sees Growth

    Faith Tourism Sees Growth

    May 8, 2009 — Even during an economic downturn, faith-based tourism is a growing industry, with some 300 million people taking religious-oriented trips each year, making up an $18 billion segment of the overall tourism industry. A U.S. Department of Commerce report states that faith-based tourism has been on the rise since 2001 and is …

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  • ‘Charisma’ Interview with Brian Zahnd

    ‘Charisma’ Interview with Brian Zahnd

    Charisma‘s managing editor, Jimmy Stewart, recently sat down with Pastor  Brian Zahnd to discuss his newest book  What to Do on the Worst Day of Your Life. To purchase this book click here.  Charisma: Your new book, What to Do on the Worst Day of Your Life, is based on a sermon you preached. What …

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  • A Voice in the Wilderness

    Sen. Sam Brownback of Kansas is unusually outspoken about his faith. He didn’t hold back when Charisma asked him about the moral condition of our country.

  • 1906: The Year the Earth Shook

    When the Pentecostal movement began, americans were concerned about corporate greed, fuel prices, an earthquake that destroyed a major u.s. city and a tidal wave that killed 2,500 in florida.

  • One Woman’s Interview With The Devil

    Television producer and author Wendy Alec has broken new ground with her supernatural thriller The Fall of Lucifer.

  • God’s Beacon of Hope In Houston

    Bob Ferguson started a treatment program six years ago that has helped countless addicts kick harmful habits. Come Friday afternoons, and Bob Ferguson is ready to pack his tackle, hitch his boat and roar off solo in his truck for a weekend of fishing. There’s hardly anything he likes better. Hardly. “I’m a fishing fiend,” …

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