The Future of the Church

Daniel Juster is a Jewish believer in Jesus and the founder of Tikkun Ministries International. He was the senior pastor of Beth Messiah Congregation in Gaithersburg, Md., for 22 years but now lives in Israel. The author of several books including Growing to Maturity, Jewish Roots, The Dynamics of Spiritual Deception and Jewishness and Jesus, Juster says revival in Israel could have a major impact on the church worldwide. To hear more about the future of the church from Daniel Juster, listen to the podcast below.

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Paying the Price in Jericho

When American missionary Karen Dunham gave her life to Christ years ago, she had no thoughts of traveling to Jericho, West Bank, to minister. Not even after God told her several years later to go to Jerusalem to pray at the Western Wall did she consider such an undertaking. Like most Americans, she saw the Palestinians as enemies and had no love for them whatsoever.

“I didn’t even know what an Arab was,” Dunham says. But she associated the people in that part of the world with bombs and terrorism.

An encounter with a Catholic priest at the New Gate in the Old City of Jerusalem helped change her perspective. “If you go to Jericho and feed the people, you can win the city for Christ,” he told her.

“When he said it, the Spirit of God gripped me,” Dunham says. “I had never thought about winning a whole city before, but the Spirit of God says, ‘You can win the city if you’ll go to Jericho and feed the people.'”

She knew God was telling her to feed her enemies. And she remembered that He had said of Israel in His Word, “It’s a good land flowing with milk and honey.”

“That means all of it,” she says. “He didn’t divide it up and say, ‘This part’s bad, and this part’s bad.’ He said, ‘It’s a good land flowing with milk and honey.'”

With that understanding, Dunham, a single mom and previously associate pastor at Solid Rock Christian Recovery Center in St. Petersburg, Florida, moved with her teenage son, Peter Blake Davis, to Jericho. Because the Palestinians were afraid of them, the only place they could find to rent a home was in a refugee camp. But after living in the area only a short time, Dunham had a radical change of heart toward the people.

“I had to get out of my religious box,” she says. “When I went to Jericho, I felt the Palestinians were my enemy, and I had never even prayed for here I am living in a refugee camp, and I realize they’re real people. They may wear long dresses and have goats, but they cry and they bleed and their babies are hungry. And God loves these people.”

PAYING THE PRICE
It was God’s love expressed through Dunham that eventually began drawing people in the area to Christ. She reached out to them in practical ways by giving them food and clothing and by providing lessons in English to local children and to the Jericho police. Eventually she was able to begin offering Bible studies and showing Jesus videos. And she handed out gospel tracts with every item she gave away.

But her ministry came at a great price. From the moment she and her son set foot on Palestinian soil, they were persecuted by both Christians and Muslims.

“All my Zionist friends acted like I was called to the lepers,” Dunham says. “I was cut off from the body of were kind of like outcasts because they thought I would become an enemy of Israel.” Even the Christian pastors in Israel wanted nothing to do with her, she says-unless it was to criticize her and tell her what she was doing wrong.

The lack of support from fellow believers was painful. But even more disruptive to their daily lives was the persecution from Muslims in the area. Because of Dunham’s presence, they shut off water to the entire community in the middle of summer, leaving Dunham and her son, as well as their own people, with nothing to drink and with no air conditioning.

“I felt like Joseph, being thrown in the pit,” Dunham says. “I was in the refugee camp with my son, going without water, killing scorpions [in my house], and I really felt like I had fallen off the face of the earth.

“Things got really hot,” she continues. “I began to be talked about in the mosques because they thought I was going to steal their babies.”

But that was just the beginning.
“I’ve been through seven fires,” Dunham reports. “They’ve blown up my car, and they burned down my house. We’ve been totally robbed of everything. Our lives have been threatened.”

The Muslims also threw a Molotov cocktail through her son’s bedroom window. Thankfully, he wasn’t home at the time.

In the midst of the persecution, God gave Dunham great favor with the local authorities. Early on, she says, the Israeli army became her mission board, encouraging her and letting her know that they support her work. “Israel is behind what you are doing,” she says they told her. “They want us to feed these people.”

Perhaps even more significant is that the governor of Jericho is behind her. About a year ago, she says, he called her into his office and said: “We had a meeting with the local politicians. We no longer consider it evangelism if you want to put one of those booklets [gospel tracts] in your rice and your clothing, and a Bible. We freely receive it.”

According to Dunham, the “local politicians” included representatives from the terrorist groups Jihad, Hamas and Infata. One of them was a secret convert, and with his encouragement, they passed a law that made gospel tracts and Bibles legal in the city of Jericho.

Not only that, but the governor, along with other government officials, including the minister of health and the minister of welfare, have asked her to get involved in every area of government, she says. They want her input on how to transform the city.

THE FRUIT OF AFFLICTION
Dunham does not have any bitterness about the attacks she and her son, who goes by his middle name, Blake, have endured. In fact, she compares her situation to that of the biblical character Joseph, who said that in his affliction, God made him fruitful.

“When our house was burned down, it was great because God told us His vision was for the whole city, not just a single church in a refugee camp,” she says. “So now we have church in a public place, an Arabian wedding hall.

“And when it fills up, there might be close to 600 people in that many people come every week; there’s a couple hundred-maybe 300. But there are times when they all fill up and come. And they come from the refugee camps, Jihad comes, Hamas comes, Infata comes, and they want to hear the words of grace.

“What are we preaching? We’re preaching the gospel!” she continues. “Right now there is a move of God, it’s a sovereign move of God in Jericho….[The people] want to enter our kingdom, and they’re coming in. They’re coming in rapidly.”

Dunham says she has lost track of how many they’ve baptized. They don’t keep records or use the word “convert” because of the potential danger to new believers.

But “people are coming from all over” to her Living Bread International Church, she says. They are also watching her television program, Door of Hope that is broadcast from a cave on the Mount of Temptation and currently goes into 133 Arab nations.

“You know what happened?” Dunham asks with regard to the bombings and other persecution she’s endured. “We’ve been blown right into the glory of God!

“Eighty percent of our church is there because the Spirit of God showed up in a dream or a vision and told them to get down to the church,” she explains. “They’re coming because of the Spirit of God.”

One little girl told her recently, “Jesus came to me and told me to bring my mother, my father and my brothers,” Dunham says. “The Father is building the church.”

It has to be Him, she claims, because she couldn’t do it in her flesh. “When God sent me there, I didn’t know the language. He sent the most foolish thing. I didn’t know anything about the culture. But I went because I do know one thing: I know the voice of My God, and God said, ‘I’m going to do this now.'”

Dunham attributes the move of God in Jericho in part to the response she and Blake, had to the affliction. “What we’ve learned in our affliction is to worship,” she says. “When our car was burning up, we said, ‘Put on the worship music.’ We went outside, lifted our hands [in praise].

“It took a few fires-it took a little bit of affliction-to catch on to what the Spirit of God wanted us to do, but when we started embracing it, and when we started counting it all joy, our spirits soared, and we were pushed into such a deep place in the Spirit, and I feel the atmosphere started changing. We started to see great miracles.”

As proof, she offers, “I had every one of the police officers ask me for Jesus videos and Bibles.” She has also seen many miracles of healing, including deaf ears being opened and leprous limbs being restored, and of salvation.

“The Arabs couldn’t believe we didn’t run,” Dunham says, “and they have seen us in our affliction, stay.” It hasn’t been easy, she admits, but she was determined to remain because God told her to “ride out” the persecution.

“The Lord said, ‘Karen, I want them to see by witness that you are willing to lay down your life for them.'”

Dunham, who wanted nothing to do with the church growing up has proved in the last five years that she is willing. And every attempt on her life has served only to increase her commitment to the work God gave her among the Palestinians. She now provides not only food, clothes and Bibles but also toys, furniture, soap and other supplies to poor families, nursing homes and hospitals throughout the West Bank and in Israel. She also runs a food-stamp program that helps feed around 5,000 families each month.

“What we’re doing is, we’re loving on these Arabs,” she says.

Dunham’s loving the Arabs has made her name a household word in Jericho, and now not even the Muslims want her to leave. One young mother from the Aqabat Jaber refugee camp told the San Francisco Chronicle, “My husband is a policeman, but he has received no wages for months. I don’t know how we would survive without Karen.”

Dunham believes the transformation God promised her through the Catholic priest has begun. And she has no doubt that one day Jericho will again be totally devoted to God.

“We’re gonna see it in our lifetime that this great city will be called ‘The City of Our Lord,'” she says. And she’ll give up her own life, if necessary, to make it happen.

For more information on Karen Dunham’s ministry, go to . If you would like to support this ministry, send tax-deductible gifts to Christian Life Missions, Attn: Living Bread International Church, P.O. Box 952248, Lake Mary, FL 32795-2248.

 




Jews in Israel Need Your Help

In Genesis 12:3, God makes a promise to Abraham: ‘”I will bless those who bless you, and whoever curses you I will curse; and all peoples on earth will be blessed through you.'”

In my own life I have seen proof of this promise; when I have blessed Israel and the Jewish people, God has showered His blessings on me. That is why we have set up the “Bless Israel” fund through Christian Life Missions.

Over the last several years through Christian Life Missions and friends like you, we have helped buy an ambulance for Israel; helped rebuild a war-torn city near the Lebanese border; and provided bomb shelters near the Gaza Strip where Kassam rockets from Hamas rain terror on Israeli citizens who had no where to run and hide.

Many ministries raise money for Israel. However, some raise money for Israel but the funds never get to the intended destination, according to what I’ve been told by Israeli insiders. This has also motivated me to make a way for those who want to bless Israel to do so with integrity through a ministry like Christian Life Missions.

We are a small ministry with little overhead expense. Most of what you give will go directly to “Bless Israel.” Christian Life Missions has been around since the mid-1950s and has been a charter member of the Evangelical Council for Financial Accountability since 1980.

Over the years Christian Life Missions has functioned with the utmost integrity and without a shred of controversy, so you can give with confidence.

As we think of places to give, won’t you band together with others who (like me) believe in blessing Israel? If your gift is at least $30 we will give you a copy of David Brog’s book Standing With Israel, which tells from a Jewish perspective why Bible-believing Christians are Israel’s best friend.

My company donates the books so everything you give can go to bless the Jewish people and Israel. We have sold or given away nearly 150,000 copies of this important book. If you haven’t read it, you need to because it will bless you.

We sent out this request to our regular Christian Life Missions donors in the past, but we have decided to include readers of Standing With Israel eNewsletter because we want you to also receive a blessing by blessing the Jewish people and Israel!

Donations can be made by sending a check made payable to “Christian Life Missions,” designated for “Bless Israel” in the check’s memo line, and sent to Christian Life Missions, 600 Rinehart Road, Lake Mary, FL 32746.

Donations can also be made online at with a credit card or through PayPal. To me, that’s an even quicker and easier way to give.

Please check out Christian Life Missions’ new Web site, , which tells about all the ministries we support. But the ones closest to my own heart are those that bless God’s chosen people. Won’t you dig down and give a generous offering-as I’m doing?

God bless you for your generosity.

Steve Strang
President, Christian Life Missions
Founder and Publisher of Charisma magazine




That’s Not Your Purpose

Do you know people who are zealous for God and want to serve Him in every area of ministry possible? No doubt the Father appreciates our commitment to His work, but until we tap into our own purpose, we will be spiritually discontent. We all have a unique job to do for the kingdom, so we must resist the temptation to fulfill someone else’s assignment, lest we become ineffective and risk losing the favor of God. To hear more about purpose from author Patricia Hinds, listen to the podcast below.

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To purchase The Good Sense Handbook, click on the book cover below.




Transformed by His Power

Do you get upset when it seems you’re in a trial all by yourself with no one to see you through it? You probably think your husband doesn’t care or that your friends are insensitive to your plight. But the truth is, God is the only one who can deliver you in tough times. Like a butterfly pushing its way out of a cocoon during metamorphosis, a believer must be willing to endure struggles to complete the Father’s transformation process. Watch the video below.

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Iverna Tompkins on Women in Ministry

Iverna Tompkins has been preaching and teaching the gospel for more than 45 years, and knows first-hand the challenges women face in five-fold ministry. She has had to overcome many gender barriers to fulfill her purpose, but she says women are called to help lead the church in the 21st century. Iverna talked with Spirit-Led Woman magazine about what life will be like for women in the church in 10 years. To hear her insight, listen to podcast.

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When We See Ourselves in Others

So often I stand in judgment of others, and soon discover I am guilty of the very same things I see critically in others. You’ve heard the old expression, “When you point your finger at someone, four fingers are pointing back at you.” Isaiah 58 speaks of God’s chosen fast, and one of the things listed we need to fast from is the pointing of the finger. If our church could go on such a fast, we would have unity in the church.

Jesus tells us that we often see the mote (a tiny splinter) in the eye of others and neglect to see the beam that is in our own eye. It has been my experience that the things that really bug me in some people are the very things I am struggling to overcome in my own life.

The moment I get irritated by another person, I quietly pray, “Lord, is this in me?” The answer always comes back, “Yes.” Then I have to pray, “Lord, forgive me for seeing this so quickly in another and refusing to see this in myself. I confess this as sin and ask You to cleanse me.” Now I am in a position to effectively pray for the person I criticized or the person who irritated me.

Most critical, judgmental people have a lot of insecurity. They are always pointing the finger to keep from examining their own lives for fear they will discover they too are not perfect. I have found that most critical, judgmental people are perfectionists. They are afraid of having their imperfections discovered, so they criticize all those they encounter in life.

Today you might want to ask the Lord, “Is there a beam in my own eye I need to see and with Your help remove?”

Lord, forgive me for being judgmental and critical of others. I need to recognize my own faults and to see I am the one who needs to change. Help me to look at myself honestly first, and then I will be able to accept others just the way they are. Amen.

READ: Deuteronomy 4:1-49; Luke 6:39-7:10; Psalm 68:1-18; Proverbs 11:28
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Passover: Covered by the Blood

Passover is one of the most important holidays on the Jewish calendar because it marks a significant event in history. God protected His people from the death angel during the last of the 10 plagues. Exodus 12:3 says, “Now the blood shall be a sign for you on the houses where you are. And when I see the blood, I will pass over you; and the plague shall not be on you to destroy you when I strike the land of Egypt.” To discover why Yeshua shed His blood for us, watch the video below.

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Attracted to Unhealthy Relationships?

Have you ever been abused by a loved one? Danette Crawford can relate to your pain. She says she grew up in a home where there was physical and verbal abuse. And when she later married the man she thought was an answer to prayer, she discovered he was verbally abusive and addicted to pornography. Many women are drawn to unhealthy relationships because of what happened to them in the past. To discover how Danette broke the pattern in her life, watch the videos below.

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Sow Kindness in Your Marriage

The first command God gave mankind was to be fruitful and multiply (see Gen. 1:28). But fruitfulness involves more than merely growing physical fruit.

As a Christian, the Spirit of God has already been planted within you, now it’s your job to cultivate the seed of His nature. And it is not going to be an easy thing to do all the time.

The farmer’s seeds must push through a layer of dirt in order to reach the sunlight. That dirt outweighs that little seed, and it will have to struggle hard to break through. In the same manner, God’s Spirit has to push through the dirt we call our flesh.

Our flesh may be innately selfish, rude and indulgent. The Spirit of God inside of us is none of those things. Thus, there is resistance; there is conflict. And in marriage, these can pose numerous problems in the way we communicate with our spouse.

Take the case of James, who comes home after a rough workday. The computer program he’d worked on around the clock for weeks wasn’t running. After a tense meeting with his concerned boss, James headed home exhausted.

When he opened the door to greet his pregnant wife, he was confronted with the words, “I hope you won’t work all hours of the day when the baby is born!” Without saying a word, James watched his wife set out the meal she had prepared hours earlier. He knew he was desperately in need of something, but couldn’t put his finger on it.

Then there is Charlotte, a homeschooling mother of four, who also had a tough day. Shortly after her husband left for work, one child developed a fever combined with nausea.

After a stressful day of serving as both impromptu nurse and schoolteacher, Charlotte was preparing dinner when her husband entered and said with a smile, “This house looks like a disaster area. What did you do today?” Not returning the smile, Charlotte became defensive as she set the table. She also needed something, but felt too overwhelmed to express it.

What James and Charlotte needed was an act of kindness. James needed a hug and a “Boy, I’m glad to see you, you hard-working man.” Charlotte needed her husband to notice her overwhelmed state and come to her aid.

Every spouse needs kindness daily. Many of us feel that life is like an overworked, fast-moving engine. In mechanical terms, an engine receives a constant supply of motor oil to prevent friction and overheating. Likewise, random and intentional acts of kindness lubricate marriage relationships, easing life’s friction.

An offer to help, a smile and a kind word will reduce the heat of everyday responsibilities. Knowing that someone cares enough to notice and say thank you makes the day-to-day routine a little easier to handle.

Kindness is a fruit of the Holy Spirit, and when it’s displayed, it can make anyone feel special. Think about the last act of kindness your spouse did for you, and how it made you feel. The fruit of kindness is sweet to the soul.

You’ve Got It In You – Through the Spirit of God, the power of kindness dwells within you, ready to be released. Any act of kindness you show to your spouse plants a seed that will eventually grow into a fruit-bearing tree of kindness. Will you reap a plentiful harvest because of your continual planting and nurturing, or will your harvest be small?

In Colorado where I live, huge trees grow right through rocks and boulders. It’s amazing that the power of a tiny seed is greater than the power of the large surrounding rocks. Similarly, your decision to exhibit the fruit of kindness is not hindered by the attitude of your spouse. Even the strongest will cannot weaken the power of the seed.

In marriage, you have been given the strength to be kind in order to fortify the spirit, soul and person of your husband. He, in turn, will grow because of your encouragement. King David, one of the greatest Bible characters and a friend of God, referred not to God’s power or wisdom, but rather to His gentleness as the thing that made Him great (see 2 Sam. 22:36; Ps. 18:35).

In essence, kindness is shown when one person chooses to use his or her strength in a gentle manner toward another. Take note of the following ways in which kindness can be expressed in your interaction with your mate:

Spoken kindness. The first seeds of kindness we can sow in the heart of our spouse are in the thoughtful words we speak. Often, out of laziness or familiarity, we begin to be gruff, sarcastic, or demeaning in our responses to normal questions. Our answers seem sharp instead of seasoned with grace. We should respond as though every question our spouse asks is an intelligent one. We should take time to listen fully and give a sincere answer.

Spoken kindness is expressed also in the tone of speech we employ. It’s possible to never say a wrong thing yet communicate an unkind attitude when we speak. Next to God, you are the loudest and most consistent voice your spouse hears. It’s your choice to use a kind voice that supports and encourages your spouse, or a gruff voice that discourages, degrades and minimizes.

Speaking thoughtful, gentle words to your spouse in front of your friends and your children is yet another expression of spoken kindness. Always thank your spouse when he or she is serving you in some manner. But instead of just saying, “Thanks, Honey,” be specific. Saying “Thank you, Honey, for getting the butter; that was kind of you,” communicates that you actually notice your spouse’s acts of kindness.

The words you speak and the kind way in which they are spoken will soon become the heart of your everyday lifestyle. As your heart becomes kind, so your words will also, and your spouse’s heart will be motivated by your example to do the same.

A kind touch. Sometimes a touch can communicate kindness more loudly than words. Holding your spouse’s hand, gently caressing his back or even giving him a private foot massage can express volumes of kindness.

There is a kind of touching that is expressly meant to communicate kindness without any hint of sexuality or need for reciprocation. This soothing, unselfish, gentle type of touch is a great way to plant kindness in your spouse’s heart. Although verbal expressions may be deflected or discounted, a touch is rarely rejected.

The expression of “teamfulness.” I use the word “teamfulness” as a means of defining the way a husband and wife operate in unity. They anticipate each other’s actions and, knowing the strengths and weaknesses of each other, capitalize on these strengths for the good of the team.

Here is how teamfulness works: When you see the laundry, you do the laundry because you’re part of the team. If you see a situation that must be dealt with regarding one of your children, you handle it without passing it on to your spouse. You know your husband’s schedule, and you cover for him without an attitude.

In the same way, your spouse-the other team member-is so in touch with your world that often he sees a need before you do. In this way your spouse throws you the ball, so to speak, and you both score.

Kindness is something you can offer your spouse freely every day. It should be both intentional and spontaneous.

Intentional kindness means purposefully releasing the kindness you possess on a regular basis. Along these lines, one piece of advice I offer husbands is to give their wives a night away from home once a week. This should be a time for her to spend as she chooses. I explain to them that their wives need time to relax or play, when she does not have to be a mom, a wife, a cook, the clean-up crew and the leader of bedtime rituals.

Similarly, a wife can plan intentional acts of kindness for her husband based on his interests. Some wives who are gifted cooks may want to select one day a week to prepare a gourmet meal for the family.

We also need to recognize the importance of spontaneous kindness. Don’t become so mechanical in your plans that you fail to capitalize on those great daily opportunities that arise to be kind to your mate.

My wife, Lisa, is regularly kind to me. When I come home on a warm day, I first like to spend about 15 minutes on the hammock in our backyard. It’s magical the way both my soul and body become relaxed and refreshed. Lisa usually protects this time, so I am not interrupted. This is a much appreciated, spontaneous act of kindness she gives to me.

Commit to Kindness – Just as a seed in the natural realm contains the nature of the fruit it will become, so, too, within that seed of the Spirit planted in you is the very DNA of God: His heart, His mind, His will and His nature. The seed in you desires to be respectful and kind.

The first step in making kindness a greater reality in your home is to break previous agreements you may have made with unkindness. Confess your sins against God and your spouse. Seek forgiveness for any actions, attitudes or beliefs that have fueled unkind habits in your marriage. And in the name of Jesus, break any spirit, soul or body agreements with meanness. Eliminate all traces of it from your behavior and speech.

Make an official declaration of your decision to uproot old habits and create new beliefs and attitudes. Prayer will help you establish a great foundation for your new resolve to be kind, and the Holy Spirit will strengthen you to carry out your commitment. Be intentional toward your mate, but also respond to those surprising opportunities to practice kindness that come along every single day.

You and I have a lot of farming to do. Oh, yes, it’s work. And yes, it’s daily. Some parts of the field will be easy to plow, and some will be harder.

But imagine the increased fruitfulness in your marriage, and in the lives of your children and grandchildren. Feel the hand of Jesus on your shoulder, and see the smile on His face when He will say to you, “Well done!”

So get ready to plow. There is plentiful harvest of eternal joy ahead of you.

Douglas Weiss, Ph.D., is the author of The 7 Love Agreements (Charisma House), from which this article is adapted. For more on his ministry, see “Meet our Authors.