Document 6523139
Transcription
Document 6523139
Why I’m Pentecostal | Maine Revival | Argentina | Fresh Fire! | After Katrina | Why I Pray | Blueprint APRIL 2006 In stock and now available for immediate shipping 2005 - 2009 IPHC Manual I n this manual, you will read about the history, doctrinal emphases, and government of the people known as the International Pentecostal Holiness Church. Our structure, which is a combination of the episcopal and congregational forms of government, gives our churches a measure of both uniformity and local autonomy. We see this blend as vital to church growth. Our doctrinal emphases center on the Bible, God’s infallible Word, as our textbook. Theology provides the track on which the wheels of evangelism turn. No. 2101996 $6.95 ea. 12 or more $5.95 ea. If you need help placing your order, call toll-free: 1-800-541-1376 / Fax: 706-245-5488. To check your account, call: 1-706-245-7272 from 8:00-5:00 Monday-Friday (requests cannot be processed without customer number). www.lifespringsresources.com Issue In This 4 10 12 4 5 7 8 10 11 12 13 14 15 15 16 17 20 21 Expressions From Bishop James D. Leggett The Fire Still Burns; The Wind Still Blows Why I’m Pentecostal Teams Touch Argentina Revival Waves Sweep Maine Oil of Gladness Teens Get Ready for Fresh Fire! Rebuilding After Katrina 14 Countdown to Pentecost F. M. Britton-Persuaded by Acts 2:4 A Katrina Christmas Why I Pray 15 Meet the Missionaries Al and Coli Argo Book Review/Prayer Emphasis Experiences Here and There.. The Stewardship of Following Blueprints A Rose by Any Other Name.. 21 Cover Notes PHOTOS AND LOGO © AZUZA STREET CENTENNIAL 1. William J. Seymour, the evangelist who led the Azusa Street revival of 1906-1909. 2. What became known as the Azusa Street Revival began in this small cottage on Bonnie Brae Street in Los Angeles where the Holy Spirit fell on William Seymour and his supporters. 3. The meetings moved from the Bonnie Brae Street address to this structure on Azusa Street. IPHC Experience GRAPHIC DESIGN Timothy W. Beasley EDITOR IN CHIEF James D. Leggett GENERAL EXECUTIVE BOARD INTERNATIONAL PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS CHURCH April 2006 • Vol. 3, No. 4 EXECUTIVE EDITOR Shirley G. Spencer EDITORIAL ASSISTANT Kathryn Shelley EDITORIAL COMMITTEE Kimberly Wilkerson (Women’s Ministries) Joyce Ayers (Men’s Ministries) Thelma McDowell (Evangelism USA) Marsha Plumbtree (Stewardship) Paula Ward (World Missions Ministries) Shandra Youell (Church Education Ministries) PUBLISHER LifeSprings Resources Gregory K. Hearn, Chief Executive Officer General Superintendent James D. Leggett Executive Directors Evangelism USA: Ronald W. Carpenter, Sr., Vice Chairman World Missions Ministries: A. D. Beacham, Jr. Church Education Ministries: Talmadge Gardner Stewardship Ministries: Edward W. Wood Women’s Ministries: Jewelle Stewart Men’s Ministries: Bill Terry Representatives on the GEB Terry Fowler, Southeast Zone Chris Thompson, Northeast Zone Randell Drake, Central Zone Curtis Belcher, Western Zone Ronnie Saldaña, Hispanic Derrick Gardner, Pastoral Frank G. Tunstall, Pastoral Trish Weedn, Lay IPHC Experience (ISSN 1547-4984) Vol. 3, No. 4, is published monthly except in July and December by LifeSprings Resources of the International Pentecostal Holiness Church, 2425 West Main St., Franklin Springs, GA 30639. Printed in the USA. MMVI. Address editorial comments to IPHC Experience, P.O. Box 12609, Oklahoma City, OK 73157-2609, [email protected]. Member: International Pentecostal Press Association • Evangelical Press Association LSR 260085 April 2006 | www.iphcExperience.com Expressions From Bishop James D. Leggett James D. Leggett General Superintendent M The Fire Still Burns; The Wind Still Blows any reporters, as well as people in the church, dismissed the great movement God started a century ago on Azusa Street as a passing fad. One religious leader said the little meeting in Los Angeles was “not deemed of sufficient importance to be mentioned.” He referred to it as “a pebble thrown into the sea.” Yet that revival has continued unabated until it is now the mightiest force in Christianity. It reminds me of a word Luke gave concerning the Pentecost at Jerusalem. He wrote at the end of Acts 2, “They continued…” (v. 42), or, as the NIV renders it, “So continuing….” After describing the marvelous outpouring of the Holy Spirit on the Day of Pentecost with its remarkable rushing wind, tongues of fire, and speaking with tongues, Luke captures the truth that Pentecost was more than a moment in time. It was and is a movement for the ages. The outpouring of the Holy Spirit at Azusa Street was not a tangent, an exercise in emotionalism, or a passing fad. It was a powerful move of God that could not be defeated by opposition or contained by human limitations. It began as a small and seemingly insignificant event in Los Angeles, but it has spread like the ripples of a pebble until it fills the whole earth. Like the river in Ezekiel, the streams from Azusa continue to flow, changing the landscape of the church and society. As we observe the Azusa Street Centennial, we do more than celebrate a great moment of the past; we commit ourselves to be part of the continuing movement of the IPHC Experience | April 2006 Spirit for the future. We not only celebrate yesterday at this centennial; we make a commitment to tomorrow. We must rededicate ourselves to make sure the next generation – our sons and daughters and grandchildren – are fully Pentecostal. It is for the emerging leaders – the Joshuas, Davids, Deborahs, Peters, and Pauls – tomorrow’s spiritual giants. God is equipping a mighty army of young men and women who will lead the church to greater exploits of faith. We believe God continues to give the ascension gifts of apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors, and teachers to His church. We believe sons and daughters will continue to prophesy, and young men will see visions as the old men dream dreams. Acts 4:31 is a remarkable evidence of the continuing outpouring of the Spirit on God’s people. You know the story of how the infant church gathered for prayer after strong persecution. The passage reads like another Acts 2:4. “When they had prayed, the place was shaken where they were assembled together; and they were all filled with the Holy Ghost, and they spake the word of God with boldness.” The book of Acts contains several accounts of Holy Spirit outpourings, and those wonderful experiences of Pentecost are repeated in the church today. Oh, yes, Pentecost continues. When God’s people get together and pray with passion for His kingdom, the fire still falls, the wind still blows, people still speak in tongues, supernatural power is demonstrated, and the kingdom of God marches forward. ARTWORK © AZUSA STREET CENTENNIAL why i’m pentecostal Since its resurgence in April 1906 in an obscure little mission in Los Angeles, Pentecost has swept around the world. Today, with an estimated 400 million adherents (some say 600 million), Pentecostalism is the fastest growing segment of Christianity in the world. We thought IPHC Experience readers might enjoy hearing from a cross-section of Pentecostal Holiness believers regarding this life-changing experience. – The Editor O n September 5, 1976, just weeks before I was to start college, I sat outside a Baptist church in Atlanta and asked Jesus to baptize me in the Holy Spirit. I wasn’t sure what I was getting myself into, but I wanted more of God and His power in my life. This experience was not about wearing a new label or adopting a new doctrine. I didn’t know what a Pentecostal was, and “charismatic” sounded like some kind of back problem! I didn’t hear a rushing wind or see flames of fire, but Jesus transformed me that night while I sat on an empty volleyball court. I received a prayer language, and the Holy Spirit began to speak to me in ways I didn’t know were possible. I experienced the equivalent of a mega-voltage electric shock, and people around me are still feeling the impact of that current 30 years later. —Lee Grady, Editor Charisma Magazine Lake Mary, Florida I am a Pentecostal because I have been baptized with the Holy Ghost and with fire. I am a Pentecostal because I enjoy enthusiastic praise to God. I am a Pentecostal because I love to see the gifts of the Spirit manifested in my church and in my life. I am a Pentecostal because I can’t even imagine being anything else. I am “plugged in” to the moving of the Spirit, and I don’t want to get “unplugged.” What a life! —Thelma McDowell, Executive Assistant Evangelism USA Oklahoma City, Oklahoma I was born and raised the son of a Pentecostal Holiness pastor; therefore, I was first introduced to the baptism in the Holy Spirit by Dad when I was quite young. Years later, I had the opportunity to graduate from Oral Roberts University (a Charismatic school) and Fuller Theological Seminary and Trinity Evangelical Divinity School. Neither of these seminaries were Pentecostal/Charismatic although they held an open stance, and many Pentecostal students attended both. During this time of education, I had numerous opportunities to reflect on and evaluate my personal theology. The end result is that I feel comfortable with my beliefs and my sincere commitment to walk in the Spirit daily. —Dr. Harold Dalton, Assistant Director IPHC World Missions Ministries Oklahoma City, Oklahoma April 2006 | www.iphcExperience.com A s a third-generation Pentecostal Holiness believer, I was first introduced to Pentecost as a child. I have been a believer as long as I can remember, but it wasn’t until the end of my college years that I began seeking the baptism of the Holy Spirit. I knew at a young age that I was called into full-time ministry, but I never pursued that calling as I should. (I was distracted by life in general.) However, at a youth retreat in 1994, I was baptized in the Holy Spirit, and the most incredible things began to happen after that. That Pentecostal experience sparked a desire, boldness, and a strength within me to become what Christ had called me to be – fully devoted to Him, which, in turn, equipped me to do what I knew God had called me to do. I remain Pentecostal today, not because of the supernatural experiences that may accompany Pentecost; rather, through the power of the Holy Spirit, we are daily becoming more like Christ. And in becoming more like Christ, we are allowing Him to be lifted up through our lives and through our obedience, becoming the bold witnesses that accompany a life led by the Spirit. Life is a journey, not a series of events. Every step of the journey – both the good and the bad – may be used by the Holy Spirit to draw us closer to Christ. If we allow the Holy Spirit to direct our lives, He will lead us along the journey, and in His doing so, our lives will reflect His glory to the world as a witness of His love and grace. That’s why I am Pentecostal. —Joe Francisco, Campus Pastor Southwestern Christian University Oklahoma City, Oklahoma W hen I was growing up, some wonderful neighbors picked me up on Sunday morning and took me to church with them. Though their church was not Pentecostal, I was saved and baptized [in water] there when I was 12 years old. I loved the Lord very much. As I grew older, married, and had children, I attended a full gospel church with my sister. The Holy Spirit was so strong in that place I knew that was the fulfillment I was looking for. My family and I visited the Pentecostal Holiness church in Purcell, Oklahoma, in 1978, and because of God’s anointing and the love extended to us by the church family, we knew our family had found a church home. Later, God filled me with the baptism of the Holy Spirit, and as I studied God’s Word, the Truth was confirmed in my spirit. Time and experience have only reinforced my belief in Pentecostalism. —Trish Weedn, Lay Member IPHC General Executive Board Purcell, Oklahoma I celebrate with Pentecostals the marriage of Word and Spirit. I love the Scriptures and their catalytic role in transforming the life of the believer, and many traditions have the same distinctive. But it’s too easy in our modern world to ignore the power of the Spirit not only to convict humans and draw them to Christ and transform their lives from the inside out – which is the heart of the gospel – but also to heal and give gifts to believers in order to empower evangelism. Pentecostals have helped bring that reality to more people than ever before. —James Cain, Campus Pastor Emmanuel College Franklin Springs, Georgia IPHC Experience | April 2006 TEAMS TOUCH ARGENTINA by Brenda Clowers T wo IPHC mission teams concentrated their efforts on Argentina in 2005. And, according to Juan Passuelo, national superintendent, these were the first teams to minister in his country in decades. In June 2005, Ron Sexton led a team to Buenos Aires to begin the work on a security wall at the IPHC Bible School and conference campgrounds there. My husband, Dan, and I were a part of that effort. The team worked diligently on the 500-foot wall in the rain and mud. Though they were unable to finish the project, they did lay the foundation and completed a large portion of the wall. We received reports later that, with the money the team left behind, the wall was finally finished. Following this team, Northwood Temple in Fayetteville, North Carolina, dispatched a medical team to Argentina. I was privileged to help with this team as well, along with Tony and Sherry Martin. Here are some statistics compiled by the medical team: twins, who died as infants. Here is an excerpt from her letter: Only someone like you was able to comfort and encourage my heart and soul with such grace. Truly, I never felt that I would ever feel so clean on the inside. I only needed someone to listen as I spoke of my problems, my anger, and how far I was from God…. Today, I began to walk toward God with firm and sure steps … because I know that two little angels will be waiting for me at the end of the journey and will say to me, “You see, Mommie, Jesus was not so bad.” When this team first arrived in Concordia, where they held the clinic, the mayor came out to inspect everyone. He was somewhat skeptical, but after meeting with the team leaders, he decided to give his approval. Only a handful of patients showed up the first day, but as the word got out, the lines grew long, and the reception in the community was positive. At the end of the week, the mayor hosted a huge cookout for the team and gave them an open invitation to return. Perhaps one of the greatest miracles as a result of the medical team’s ministry was that a church was started spontaneously with over 70 people. This was absolutely amazing. We praise God for Ron Sexton and Cecille Booth, leader of the Northwood Temple team, and their wonderful team members who blessed Argentina. Both teams were successful in accomplishing great things for the Lord. Brenda Clowers serves as TEAMS coordinator for World Missions Ministries. Her husband, Dan, is overseas ministry coordinator for Latin America and the Caribbean. Welcome to • • • • General medicine patients – 1,584 Prescriptions – 5,273 Eye patients – 609 Glasses distributed – 1,000+ (many patients had to have two pairs: one for distance and one for close up) • Counseling patients – 45 • Professions of faith – 27 recorded One of the patients in the counseling clinic wrote a long letter describing how God had healed her emotionally and spiritually through the team’s ministry. She had been extremely depressed from having lost Coming from World Missions Ministries to your home online Global Front is a monthly online e-news broadcast that will keep you current on what’s happening among our missionaries and ministries around the world. Visit us online at WMM.IPHC.ORG April 2006 | www.iphcExperience.com Revival Waves SWEEP MAINE by Paul and Monette Dibden S omething significant is stirring in Maine. It is like the initial waves on the seashore signaling that a tsunami is rolling in. As the founders of New Life Christian Fellowship, a new church plant in Augusta, we sense an undercurrent of anticipation that something big is about to break over us. Although the church is less than two years old, we are already seeing amazing growth and sensing much excitement. Two things make our church unique: First, at least 60 percent of those who attend New Life Christian Fellowship every Sunday are under 25 years of age. Obviously, God is raising up this younger generation in our midst. These young people are on fire for Him. They study their Bibles consistently, hold prayer meetings, witness to the lost, and seek the Lord for deeper experiences in Him. No one coerces them; they are simply passionate about their devotion to God. Some of these young people, by their examples of holy living, abundant worship, diligence in prayer, and boldness for the Lord, are actually stretching the adult leadership. Every week in our rented facilities we are enjoying awesome services with tremendous altar experiences IPHC Experience | April 2006 that are characterized by unrestrained worship. During these times of worship, individuals of all ages feel free to dance before the Lord with all their might. In a recent service, our evangelist challenged any of the youth to step forward and give a brief exhortation. One young adult and one young Paul and Monette Dibden (back row) with young people from New Life Christian Fellowship in Augusta, Maine. person boldly and spontaneously amazed all of us with powerful and passionate preaching. Only the Lord Himself could have enabled these individuals to speak with such clarity and anointing. The second unique and exciting characteristic of New Life Christian Fellowship is our approach to leadership. We celebrate the fact that the IPHC is one of the few denominations officially to affirm the fivefold ministry model of leadership. We can testify that this model is working well in Maine. As part of that genre, we avoid the tendency to focus on only one ministry. Instead, we highlight each ministry as God fills the need. We have the apostolic, pastoral, and evangelistic offices in place and trust the Holy Spirit for the others in His timing. We like the fact that when visitors attend our church, they find it difficult to tell which of us is in charge. We want the lordship of Jesus to show forth more than the leadership gifts of one person. And yet there is healthy order in all of our services and activities, as leaders and elders flow together in the Holy Spirit. The following excerpts are from a prophetic word given by one of our youth – a 17-year-old girl. We received this message as timely and from the Lord: … In and of yourselves, you are small and unlearned, but do not fear, My children, for I will take you under My wings and enfold My love around you as a shield. I am going to try you and refine you like gold. See, I lay out My tools that I might carve the wood – that I might stir the fire – that I might mold the clay. He who resists My hand and pulls from the heat of My correction and the BACKGROUND PHOTO © 2006 JUPITERIMAGES CORPORATION restraint of My love will find himself dissatisfied… Many issues of your days will be shaken; I will reveal Myself with power. I will wipe from My church the “clingings” of immorality and the fingerprints of sin. My bride shall be engraved with My love and adorned with the beauty of My holy power. Place yourselves under My authority, and I will give you authority that you might pierce the nations… I select from the masses those whom I would anoint and raise up. It is My pleasure and perfect will to pour out My power on the land through imperfect vessels, that My glory would be marvelous. Answer the call to run with Me, and you will feel the ground flying beneath your feet. We believe this will happen because the leadership here desperately wants to be part of what God is doing and has completely sold out to the Lord Jesus Christ. The waves on the seashore are getting higher and coming faster. The endtime revival in Maine surely will be like a great tsunami that sweeps everything before it. FEATURING Steve Ely Jay Pike Dr. Richard Ledford YQ Worship Team & Choir with Contrel Neal One Voice REGISTER AT http://yq.iphc.org 866.263.1623 OUTREACH GUESTS March April 2006 | www.iphcExperience.com of Gladness by Thelma McDowell I t happened on October 27, 1997. A few days earlier, I had received the news that Tonesha, a lovely young lady, recent bride, and student at Southwestern College (now Southwestern Christian University) had been killed instantly in an automobile accident. She was the daughter of close friends who pastored a church near Oklahoma City. Tears flowed as my husband, James, and I visited the family. Our hearts were torn with grief. The night before the funeral, James, who was to conduct the service, told me the family had written a one-page poem about Tonesha entitled “Our Gentle Bird.” They had requested that I read the piece for them at the funeral. There was only one problem: every time I thought about Tonesha’s death, I couldn’t stop weeping. I assured him I wouldn’t be able to read the poem without sobbing. He offered to ask the family to get someone else. Then I had a thought: If I memorize it well, I can just say the words by rote – without thinking. I might be able to do it that way. After dinner, I went to my bedroom and began reading the words again and again. Each time, I would break down crying. I became exhausted, so I crawled into bed. Just before I 10 IPHC Experience | April 2006 fell asleep, the words came to me: “Ask for the oil of gladness.” The next morning, I arose long before anyone else in the house and went downstairs for my devotional time. As I prayed with my head buried in my arms on the couch, I was reminded of the words I had heard while falling asleep. So without even realizing what I was asking, I prayed, “God, give me the oil of gladness.” Immediately the most wonderful scent – like an exquisite men’s cologne – filled the room. It shocked me so much I jumped up and opened the door to see if someone had come downstairs. No one was there. I returned to my place of prayer and grabbed my Bible to see if I could find an explanation for the sweet aroma. I opened to Isaiah 61:3: “[I will] provide for those who grieve in Zion … the oil of gladness instead of mourning …” (NIV). At that moment, I knew I would be able to read the poem without tears. I had been given a gift: the oil of gladness. At the funeral, I sat on the platform observing the family and the many students who were in deep sorrow. I read the poem with all the passion I knew the family wanted expressed. Not once did I dissolve into tears, nor was there a break in my voice. At the close of the poem, I addressed the family and friends: “God wants me to share this with you: if you ask Him, He will give you the oil of gladness for your mourning.” ILLUSTRATION BY TIMOTHY W. BEASLEY I t happened before. It can happen again. In 1906, the fire of God fell on a small group of seekers at a tiny mission on Azusa Street in Los Angeles, California. In April 2006, 100 years later, multiplied thousands of Pentecostals from around the world are expecting it to happen again. Because of their proximity to the centennial venues, Pentecostal Holiness young people on the West Coast have the opportunity of a lifetime. They will have the chance to experience the fresh fire of Pentecost. For the past six years, Church Education Ministries (CEM) has hosted a West Coast Youth Quest. These events have been extraordinary times of impartation and worship. This year, however, CEM is joining forces with the Azusa Street Centennial. On April 28, IPHC young people and youth workers are invited to meet at the World Agape Mission Church (933 South Lake Street) in Los Angeles at 8:00 p.m. for Fresh Fire 2006. The keynote speaker for the event will be National Youth Director Steve Ely. Jason Reyes and his worship team will lead the teens in high energy and intimate worship. Then, at 7:00 a.m. on Saturday, April 29, the young people will make history by participating in perhaps ILLUSTRATION © 2006 JUPITERIMAGES CORPORATION the largest outreach ever to the city of Los Angeles. Partnering with the Dream Center and thousands of other Christians from around the world, they will distribute 30 semi-truck trailers full of food. “This outreach effort will impact 1,200 families by providing them with enough food for one week,” says Ely. “At 1:00 p.m., following the outreach, we will enter the L.A. Coliseum for an incredible festival of pageantry and praise during the centennial assembly.” This high-impact day will conclude with the International Youth Convocation at 7:00 p.m. Organizers are expecting as many as 70,000 young people to attend this event. According to Ely, a highlight of the entire Azusa Street Centennial Celebration will take place when 300 members of the Centennial Prayer Team lay hands on the young people and ask God to fill them with fresh fire. This prayer team consists of people such as T. D. Jakes, Kenneth Copeland, Benny Hinn, and Oral Roberts, to name just a few. “This indeed will be a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity,” says Ely. For more information, contact Church Education Ministries toll-free at 1-866-263-1623. Please pray that a new generation will experience old but fresh fire. Teens Get Ready for FRESH FIRE! April 2006 | www.iphcExperience.com 11 Rebuilding After Katrina One Team Leader’s Account by Gordon Knox F ollowing the destruction of Hurricane Katrina, the Kinston First Pentecostal Holiness Church (North Carolina) organized a disaster relief team. I had the privilege of traveling with them in September 2005 to Moss Point, Mississippi, where the team worked alongside the South Carolina Conference Mobile Feeding Kitchen. This group of men worked tirelessly, serving approximately 7,000 meals a day. As soon as I returned home, I began assembling a local disaster relief team to return to Mississippi in October. While speaking to the Men’s Ministries of Higher Ground PH Church in September, I encouraged the men to become a part of the effort. Almost immediately two men volunteered. Additional team members included two men from Grace Family Fellowship and one man from Wake Forest Free Will Baptist Church. The Higher Ground PH Church Disaster Relief Team, with instructions from the director of Disaster Relief USA, set out on a 16-hour journey on October 8, 2005. We arrived late at night at the New Horizon Church in Moss Point, where we were housed. The men were shocked at what they encountered the next morning as we Our role was to do whatever was needed to prepare these homes for reconstruction. 12 IPHC Experience | April 2006 rode to the neighboring community of Pascagoula to begin our work assignment. They gaped in awe at the devastation on every block. The storm had destroyed homes of every size, entire shopping centers, medical offices, and piers. Most heartbreaking to me, however, were the churches that lay in ruins. On this trip, the team worked on four homes. We tore out walls, floors, ceilings, and bathrooms, removed roof shingles, and began replacing the shingles. Our role was to do whatever was needed to prepare these homes for reconstruction. The team labored long and hard each day in an effort to complete as much of the task as possible before we returned to Ahoskie. Not only did we work on the homes, but we also took time to get to know the families we were helping. They have all been a blessing to us. Once we returned to North Carolina, our job wasn’t over. We garnered support from the community to help cover the costs of supplies needed to complete the work begun by our team. Thanks to local businesses, churches, and the family members and friends of our team, we returned to Mississippi on October 29 with $30,000 worth of materials. Even the motor freight to Moss Point was provided free of charge. On this third trip, the team worked on insulating homes and began installing sheetrock. We also put down flooring where needed. As we cleaned, removed damaged household items, ripped out cabinets and walls, yanked hundreds of nails, worked on rooftops, and witnessed, we also found time to get to know one another better and enjoy one another’s company. The families we were helping fed us daily, and believe me, they knew how to cook! We also found time to get to know one another better and enjoy one another’s company. PHOTO OBJECTS © JUST TOOLS/GETTYIMAGES f After praying in the woods about this doctrinal quandary, the next day a brother asked Britton to pray for him to get baptized in the Spirit. Britton was reluctant at first, but while doing so, he himself began to speak in tongues. Britton says that prior to hearing about the Azusa Street Revival, several people in his meetings had spoken in tongues. But he described these as manifestations of the “gift of tongues,” not initial evidence of Spirit baptism. Britton and S. D. Page visited the Azusa Street Mission some years later, but at a date currently unknown. o tec P en st On November 26, the Higher Ground team made its fourth trip to Mississippi. This time, we concentrated on finishing the sheetrock and making sure it was ready to paint. We have delivered new appliances and other household items to these families, and with God’s help, we hope to help them move back into their own homes no later than mid-March 2006. Our last two projects are about 75 percent complete. We plan to finish them by mid-February. On December 17, the team made its fifth trip to Moss Point. This time, instead of being a work detail, we focused on ministry. Immediately following our first venture into the “battle zone,” the Higher Ground Men’s and Women’s Ministries and Grace Family Fellowship had launched a “Toys for Katrina’s Kids” drive. So several children and Higher Ground leaders accompanied us on this trip. r F . M. Britton’s initial reaction to B. H. Irwin’s scheme of “dynamite, lyddite, and oxydite”1 was to condemn it as unscriptural. Thus, he remained outside “all organizations” until May 1908, when he reunited with the Fire-Baptized Holiness Church (FBHC) in Pleasant Grove, Georgia. In 1909, Britton was appointed assistant general overseer; then in 1910, he became acting general overseer while J. H. King circulated the globe. He was an active figure in the January 1911 FBHC consolidation with the Pentecostal Holiness Church. In 1906-07, Britton was in Alvin, South Carolina, leading a group called the “Saints or Church of God” that was seeking a renewal of Pentecost by meeting only in “upper rooms.” G. B. Cashwell came to the meeting in Alvin hosted by Britton on February 8, 1907. During a discussion, an unnamed preacher there quoted Acts 2:4, which says that all were filled with the Holy Ghost, and tongues of fire sat on each of them. The references to “all” and “each” persuaded Britton he had been wrong in his opposition to this new teaching. to own ntd Cou F. M. Britton – Persuaded by Acts 2:4 Dr. Harold Hunter, Director Archives and Research Center 1. Since his son was an ardent chemistry student, Irwin freely adapted and invented words from this field to quantify levels of the baptism of fire. Thus, one would have been salvation, then sanctification, then baptism in fire, then baptism in dynamite, and so on. A children’s ministries group went into the community, where they gave away 100 Bibles. They also performed a puppet show, sang songs, and ministered in other ways to families who attended a special program at the New Horizon Church. Because of the outreach efforts, New Horizon now has several new members. Recently, we were informed that a family that attended the children’s ministries venues had been saved and were active in the church. On Christmas Sunday, over 450 people attended a beautiful service at New Horizon Church. The program included a dramatic portrayal of Hurricane Katrina’s effects on the people of Mississippi before, during, and after it struck. This moving presentation was designed to reassure the victims that God was (and is) with them through it all. At the close of the service, every child was given a gift bag filled with toys, books, fruit, and new clothes. These gifts were made possible by local businesses, churches, and the families and friends of our team. At least 100 boys received footballs signed by David Garrard, a Jacksonville Jaguars quarterback.1 The Higher Ground Relief Team plans to return to Moss Point in midFebruary and complete the work in progress. We know God organized and ordained these teams, and they are doing exactly what He has planned for them to do. Gordon Knox is a lay member of Higher Ground Pentecostal Holiness Church in Ahoskie, North Carolina. He is also a member of the North Carolina Conference Men’s Ministries board. Pastor David Bryan and the Higher Ground Relief Team wishes to thank those who contributed toward the reconstruction of these homes. 1. See “A Katrina Christmas,” page 14. April 2006 | www.iphcExperience.com 13 A Katrina Christmas by Sandra Eisler H ow do you bless hundreds of children with Christmas joy and give their parents peace of mind? You do it with vision … and that’s exactly how the concept of “A Katrina Christmas With Jesus” began. When Sheriff Kent Harris from Erwin, Tennessee; Gordon Knox from Higher Ground Pentecostal Holiness Church, Ahoskie, North Carolina; and Pastor Gary Robertson and Mount Calvary PH Church partnered with Pastor Don Edeker and the New Horizon Church in Pascagoula, Mississippi, they made wonderful things happen for 600 children and their parents. Those of us on the “front lines” of duty following the storm saw the desperate need in the faces of the families that came to our church every day for assistance. Some came to put their names on a list to have their homes repaired. Others came for sheetrock and roofing materials. The idea of operating as a distribution center for hurricane assistance took root after New Horizon teamed up with the South Carolina Mobile Feeding Kitchen and the Baptist Kitchen to serve over half a million meals. Storm victims shared their tears and stories of heartbreak. The details were different, but their stories all had the same beginning and ending. They knew their only hope was the Lord and His people. Requests for help came in all sizes. One man needed a mattress for the back of his truck so he would have a place to 14 IPHC Experience | April 2006 sleep. The mother of five-year-old quadruplets needed sheetrock to rebuild the walls of their flooded home. Even with Christmas approaching and the disaster food stamp program ending, we noticed the requests were always for necessities, never “extras.” Parents were either unable or not emotionally equipped to handle the idea of Christmas in a FEMA trailer, a tiny cruise-ship room, or yes, even a tent. Where would you put a tree? As God opened our hearts to the looming needs, He also opened the floodgates of support that involved churches and countless individuals hundreds of miles away. Individuals led entire counties in marches of “good will toward all men.” For example, the Cornerstone and North Carolina Conferences and the Erwin PHC joined together to make our Katrina Christmas parties a success. New Horizon members presented a Christmas play entitled He Came and Stood by Me, a reenactment of storm scenes, complete with the sound effects of helicopters over rooftops and lapping waves and strong winds as rescuers in a boat pulled children out of the raging waters. In every scene, Jesus appeared at just the right time. We wanted people to realize they were not alone then, and they are not alone now. Jesus is the reason they were being blessed and helped. continued on page 19 ILLUSTRATION BY TIMOTHY W. BEASLEY B efore I knew the secret and power of prayer, I worWhen I pray, I get a new and fresh enablement to witried about every problem that came my way. Then I ness the good news of the kingdom of God to those who read the Holy Word – the Bible – and discovered that have not yet committed their lives to Him. I don’t fear as I I must ask the Lord God for whatever I need and believe did before I started a life of prayer. I become courageous to that He will meet that need. Now, when I pray, I counterattack any opposition from the antichrists. I am bold to face whatever I encounter in stand my ground firmly to resist any form of life. Prayer energizes me in times of heresy and abide in the truth because, discouragement. Life’s challenges through prayer, the Holy Spirit cannot overwhelm me when I reminds me of Scripture passeek God in prayer. sages with which to defend When I pray, I receive sound doctrine. I don’t spiritual awareness. When compromise with sin, and I efore I knew the secret and ask the Lord wholeheartedly. which to defend sound doctrine. I my soul is cast down and gain a strong boldness to power of prayer, I worried Whenever I pray, I have power to don’t compromise with sin, and I gain my faith seems to be say whatever God wants about every problem that came defeat the spirit of doubt. The Spirit of a strong boldness to say whatever God dimming, I increase my me to say. my way. Then I read the Holy Word God reminds me of the great promises wants me to say. faith through prayer, When I am sick, – the Bible – and discovered that I He has in store for me. That is why I When I am sick, prayer quickly and no temptation can prayer quickly relieves must ask the Lord God for whatever teach my family to depend on God and relieves my broken body. In 1992, I make me lose hope. I my broken body. In I need and believe that He will meet live above despair and hopelessness. I suffered from highland malaria. I was receive refreshment, 1992, I suffered from that need. Now, when I pray, I am bold defeat the attacks of the devil because treated in many health centers but comfort, and peace to highland malaria. I was to face whatever I encounter in life. the Holy Spirit alerts me to watch and did not get well until I went on my continue serving the treated in many health Prayer energizes me in times of dispray, even if I grow tired of doing so. knees seriously. I have not been sick Lord Jesus Christ. I don’t centers but did not get well couragement. Life’s challenges cannot When I pray, I get a new and fresh with the same case since. In 1997, panic and lose confidence until I went on my knees overwhelm me when I seek God in enablement to witness the good news I had a stomach problem and went to face tomorrow because I seriously. I have not been prayer. of the kingdom of God to those who to the hospital for treatment. I was ask the Lord wholeheartedly. sick with the same case since. When I pray, I receive spiritual have not committed lives taken to a ward, and the doctor said byyetMorris A. their Ayolo Whenever I pray, I have In 1997, I had a stomach problem awareness. When my soul is cast down to Him. I don’t fear as I did before I needed an operation. This made me power to defeat the spirit of doubt. and went to the hospital for treatment. and my faith seems to be dimming, I I started a life of prayer. I become fall facedown to plead with God for my The Spirit of God reminds me of the great I was taken to a ward, and the doctor said increase my faith through prayer, and courageous to counterattack any deliverance. My brothers and sisters promises He has in store for me. That is why I teach I needed an operation. This made me fall facedown no temptation can make me lose hope. opposition from the antichrists. I stand in Christ also prayed for God to intermy family to depend on God and live above despair and to plead with God for my deliverance. My brothers and sisI receive refreshment, comfort, and my ground firmly to resist any form of vene. I remember feeling my stomach hopelessness. I defeat the attacks of the devil because the ters in Christ also prayed for God to intervene. I remember peace to continue serving the Lord heresy and abide in the truth because, cooling down, and on the same day Holy Spirit alerts me to watch and pray, even if I grow tired feeling my stomach cooling down, and on the same day I was Jesus Christ. I don’t panic and lose through prayer, the Holy Spirit I was admitted to the hospital, I was of doing so. admitted to the hospital, I was released to go home. confidence to face tomorrow because I reminds me of Scripture passages with released to go home. B Why I Pray continued on page 22 Meet the Missionaries Al and Coli Argo A l and Coli Argo – the A-TEAM – are career missionaries for the IPHC. They were serving in children’s ministry at the Celebration Center in Anniston, Alabama, when they felt God leading them into missions. The Argos are now based in Southeast Asia, where Al teaches in several Bible schools. Through writing, teaching, and mentoring, they are equipping pastors, leaders, and world-changing Christians. Al, Coli, Alex and Chandler Al and Coli also assist in church-planting efforts across Asia and help lead teams on shortterm mission trips. Pray for divine guidance, wisdom, and safety as this family continues its quest to reach the unreached for Christ. Al and Coli both graduated from Christ for the Nations. Al also holds an advertising/marketing degree from the University of Alabama. They have two children, Alex and Chandler. Al’s hobbies include checkers, football, and reading. Coli enjoys Scrabble, puzzles, and reading. Alex and Chandler love books, music, soccer, and swimming. April 2006 | www.iphcExperience.com 15 Book Review The Azusa Street Mission and Revival by Cecil M. Robeck. Thomas Nelson Inc., 2006 Their prize possession was a printing publishing a companion volume titled press. Their nondescript location The Azusa Street Revival and Its did boast a trolley stop, but most Legacy (Pathway Press). importantly, they were the recipients Ultimately, Robeck will produce of an unprecedented outpouring a multivolume academic series on of Pentecostal fire. Their message the Azusa Street Revival that will be crossed race, gender, and class lines the definitive work for generations while rapidly reaching into Latin to come. Yet this popular version has r. Cecil M. Robeck, Jr., America, Europe, Asia, and Africa. considerable value of its own. I was professor of Church History This overview of the revival hosted by honored to be among those who con- and Ecumenics at Fuller Theological the Azusa Street Mission is inspiring tributed to the project. Seminary, is the foremost authority on and packed full of photographs, arti- the legendary Azusa Street Revival. cles, and testimonies. D That event propelled Pentecostalism We are grateful to Thomas Nelson across the world and forever changed for making this volume available to be the landscape of Christendom. used at the Azusa Street Centennial The Azusa Street Mission and For more information about the centennial, visit the official web at http://www.azusastreet100.net/ —Dr. Harold D. Hunter, Director IPHC Archives & Research Center that will convene April 25-29, 2006, Revival tells the story from the days in Los Angeles. During this historic of the small, racially inclusive group event, Dr. Robeck and I will co-chair that gathered in Los Angeles in 1906. a theological track. We are also jointly Order these books from LifeSprings Resources, 1-800-541-1376, or online at www.lifesprings.net. Prayer Emphasis National Day of Prayer – Freedom Five I f you knew five minutes a day could impact and change America, would you be willing to set aside time in your car, during your coffee break, or before bedtime to make that happen? Although the National Day of Prayer focuses most of its efforts on promoting the annual day of prayer, organizers realize 16 IPHC Experience | April 2006 that true life-altering, world-changing prayer cannot happen in a single day. It must become a discipline. Freedom Five is an initiative that challenges you to commit to pray for our country on a daily basis. It involves praying for five minutes a day about five centers of power – Government, Media, Education, Church, and Family. Visit the National Day of Prayer website (http://nationaldayofprayer. org) to learn how to pray for these specific areas. By targeting these centers of power, America can experience the freedom that accompanies God’s power. Experiences Here & There... Rangers Leaders Challenged at 2006 National Council A bout 70 Royal Rangers leaders participated in the 2006 National Council, held January 12-14 in Franklin Springs, Georgia. This event included inspiration, information, and planning for local Rangers leaders. Dr. Ronald Moore, bishop of the Upper South Carolina Conference, gave the opening message. The topic of his sermon and the 2006 Royal Rangers theme was “Pursue With Passion God’s Destiny.” Bill Terry, executive director of Men’s Ministries, was also one of the keynote speakers. Rev. Terry challenged the men with the topics “Where Are the Men?” and “Spiritual Fathers.” According to David Moore, National Royal Rangers Commander, plans are under way for a combined Men’s Ministries/Royal Rangers meeting in 2007. “Anyone who is involved in Men’s Ministries or ministry to boys at any level will not want to miss this event,” he says. The meeting is scheduled for January 11-13. One of the highlights of the National Council occurred on Saturday morning at the conclusion of a session led by Talmadge Gardner, executive director of Church Education Ministries. In a gesture demonstrating his commitment to Royal Rangers, Rev. Gardner washed the feet of Commander David Moore. “I could think of no better way to show my commitment to Rangers than to wash the feet of their leader,” he said. The The megachurches have an estimated combined income of $7.2 billion and draw nearly 4.4 million people to weekly services, according to Megachurches Today 2005. The South has the largest share with 49 percent, including Texas with 13 percent. California led the nation with 14 percent but is part of a declining western region with 25 percent, 7 percentage points lower than 5 years ago. – EP News Extra, 2-14-06 Acts2Day Conference Plans New York City Tour Commander David Moore presents to Leon Reeves the “Bill Linn Award for Excellence in Shaping the Lives of Boys.” presence of the Lord was very real during this time of ministry. Royal Rangers is one of Church Education Ministries’ six core discipleship ministries. For information about Royal Rangers and how to launch an outpost in your church, contact the national office at 706-245-3149, or e-mail Commander Moore at [email protected]. Study Says Megachurches Growing Quickly in Size, Reach A new survey on U.S. Protestant megachurches shows they are among the nation’s fastest-growing faith groups, drawing younger people and families with contemporary programming and conservative values. The number of megachurches, which are defined as having a weekly attendance of at least 2,000, has doubled in five years to 1,210. T he Acts2Day Conference (Home Missions) is planning a tour of New York City and Metro Ministries in fall 2006. According to Dr. Ronald Carpenter, Sr., executive director of Evangelism USA and superintendent of Acts2Day, several conference bishops and evangelism directors have expressed a desire to see Metro Ministries “up close and in action.” The tour is scheduled for October 11-15. “Since no bishops’ and Evangelism directors’ training summits are planned for 2006 or 2007, this trip will accomplish the purposes of both,” says Carpenter. “EVUSA could furnish leaders with no greater training opportunity than to visit Metro Ministries on site and see the phenomenal outreach ministry that takes place there.” Carpenter says he believes the evangelism/church-planting models used by Metro Ministries will work not just in the inner city. “These strategies can work anywhere you have a housing project or a dense population,” he says. continued on page 18 April 2006 | www.iphcExperience.com 17 Experiences Here and There continued from page 17 EVUSA has synchronized the tour schedule with that of Pastor Bill Wilson so he will be able to spend some time with participants during the visit. SCU Announces New Director of Institutional Advancement P resident Bob Ely has named Jon Chasteen as the new director of Institutional Advancement at Southwestern Christian University. Chasteen officially started his duties in September 2005 and has been making significant changes across the campus. Jon is a 2001 alumnus of SCU and holds a master’s degree in education from University of Central Jon Chasteen Oklahoma. “I am honored to serve my alma mater, and I’m excited about all God is doing here at the university,” he says. His responsibilities include alumni relations, campus development, and philanthropy/fund-raising. SCU is in the process of an “Extreme Campus Makeover.” The makeover includes remodeling dorms and the cafeteria/kitchen, new furniture, auditorium chairs, computers, and a state of the art wireless Internet campus. The school continues to lead and serve the International Pentecostal Holiness Church by equipping world changers with a vision for “Service, Scholarship and Spirit.” 18 IPHC Experience | April 2006 Emmanuel’s Lady Lions Climb to Fifth in NCCAA Standings T he National Christian College Athletic Association (NCAA) ranked the Emmanuel College Lady Lions basketball team fifth in the nation for the week of January 17. Last year, the team won the NCCAA Regional Tournament and finished sixth in the nation. By mid-February, the Lady Lions were 20-8 overall and 10-7 in the competitive SSAC (Southern States Athletic Conference), which includes colleges and universities in the NAIA (National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics). Head Coach Mike Bona, who returned last year to coaching after taking off six years, says he’s pleased with the team’s progress and with how well they have come together as a unit. “Each game, they seem to be improving, and we want to continue this process right up to the end of the season and tournament time,” he says. “This group of ladies seems to have a special bond, and it shows when they step out onto the basketball floor. It will be exciting to see what may happen with the remainder of this season.” Emmanuel is a four-year liberal arts Christian college in the Pentecostal and evangelical tradition. Through liberal arts and professional programs, individuals are inspired and equipped to become Spirit-led world changers. IPHC Presenters Slated for Azusa Street Centennial Celebration T he Azusa Street Centennial is being billed as the “Spiritual Experience of a Lifetime.” The event has that potential as Pentecostal and Charismatic believers from around the world fill the Los Angeles Convention Center with praise April 25-29. The centennial celebration is designed to include more than mass worship gatherings. Everything from prayer walks to workshops is on the docket. For nearly three years, intercessors around the world have been petitioning the Throne of God on behalf of the centennial. A continuous, 120-hour prayer meeting will be going on during the week of the centennial events. The names of two Pentecostal Holiness presenters are listed on the program: Dr. Harold Hunter, director of the IPHC Archives and Research Center, and Shirley G. Spencer, executive editor of IPHC Experience magazine and One Accord Resources. Dr. Hunter’s involvement has three parts: First, he will serve on a panel for the Archives Seminar. Then every Future Experiences • National Youth Workers Appreciation Day is April 2. • April 7, First Friday Fast – a day of fasting and prayer for the nation and the IPHC • Host/attend a Men’s Ministries Resurrection Breakfast during the week of April 9-16. • Palm Sunday – April 9 • EASTER SUNDAY – April 16 • If discipleship matters to you, participate generously in the CEM Discipleship Offering. • The National Coalition of Ministry to Men will convene April 20-22 in Colorado Springs, Colorado. • Pentecostals/Charismatics from around the world will celebrate the Azusa Street Centennial in Los Angeles, California, April 25-29. • The Southwestern Christian University Commencement is scheduled for April 29. • The 2006 National Day of Prayer, May 4, will focus on Freedom Five. • May 5, First Friday Fast – a day of fasting and prayer for the nation and the IPHC • Commencement for Emmanuel College will be held on May 6 in Franklin Springs, Georgia. • Mother’s Day – May 14 • Armed Forces Day – May 20 For more information on any of these events/opportunities, visit the IPHC website (www.iphc.org). morning and on two afternoons, he will co-chair the theology track. In conjunction with these sessions, he and his coDr. Harold Hunter chair, Dr. Cecil M. Robeck, Jr., will release a book entitled The Azusa Street Revival and Its Legacy, published by Pathway Press. During the centennial, Dr. Hunter will also be meeting with the advisory board of the International Charismatic Consultation. Spencer will serve as a workshop leader and host in the “SpiritEmpowered Writing” seminar. On Shirley G. Spencer Thursday morning, she will present a workshop entitled “The Care and Feeding of the Spirit-Led Writer.” The IPHC General Executive Board and other boards are scheduled to meet in conjunction with the centennial. The Centennial Cabinet, composed of a cross-section of national and international church leaders, serves as the steering committee. The larger leadership group, the Centennial Ministry Team, includes about 150 pastoral and ministry leaders from around the world. Cooperating agencies include the Pentecostal World Fellowship, the Pentecostal/ Charismatic Churches of North America, and numerous other coalition groups and parachurch ministries. The Center for Spiritual Renewal is coordinating the meeting. A KATRINA CHRISTMAS continued from page 14 Each child received several gifts, and the teenagers eagerly came forward for their $20 Wal-Mart gift cards. After all the presents were distributed, a special moment took place that everyone will remember for years to come. David Garrard, a quarterback with the Jacksonville Jaguars, donated 100 official, autographed NFL footballs to the party. The boys nearly leaped out of their seats when they heard the emcee announce that the footballs would be given away. When he asked for all the boys who played football to please stand, they bounded to their feet, hands waving. What a sight! Boys of all ages and even some up-and-coming players in the arms of their mothers lined up to receive a football. After the footballs were distributed and the party drew to a close, one additional football was presented to Pastor Don Edeker. This one was a little different. It was a white, commemorative NFL edition, autographed especially for Pastor Don from quarterback Garrard. Another highlight of the endeavor was the Sidewalk Sunday School that Higher Ground Pentecostal Holiness Church held at a nearby public assistance building. A direct fruit of that ministry was evident on January 6, 2006, when a young woman came forward and received salvation. She had never attended a Protestant church service, but her family was led here by the ministry of the people who came to bring blessings for a Katrina Christmas. Our mission over the past several months, now, and in the future is to help people recognize that without the Lord Jesus Christ, they will always be in the midst of a storm. Sandra Eisler is a member of New Horizon PH Church in Pascagoula, Mississippi. April 2006 | www.iphcExperience.com 19 The Stewardship of Following BLUEPRINTS F or years, Grant had dreamed of creating a splendid building. Finally he decided it was time to see his vision fulfilled. He sought the most accomplished architects and spent countless hours laboring over the design. Soon his vision took shape on the blueprints the architectural team put together. It was going to be perfect. Thousands of dollars later, it was time for construction to begin. With blueprints in hand, the contractor began his work. He “specked” the job closely at first. Every beam was measured precisely according to the plans. Then the foreman hired to oversee the job started calculating other ways to make the building grand. He thought his way was better, so he set the blueprints aside and started including elements of his own design and imagination. From the outside, one couldn’t see the missing components in the building and the inferior products used in its construction. But slowly, as time began to chip away at the building, it began to disintegrate, piece by piece. Grant was puzzled by the obvious deterioration. He couldn’t understand why his grand dream 20 IPHC Experience | April 2006 was crumbling before his very eyes. Hadn’t he hired the best design team to draw up the plans? Blaming the architect, he demanded, “Why would you let this happen?” Upon closer inspection, they recognized that the problem did not rest with the architect. The building was eroding rapidly because the designer’s plans had been ignored. Grant was furious at the discovery of such presumption. “Why wouldn’t you follow the plans put before you?” he bellowed at the foreman. “They were created by a man who loved his work and clearly took pride in the development of this unique structure.” The foreman just hung his head. “I-I’m so sorry,” he stammered. “I was sure my substitutions would be better in the long run.” We are God’s crowning creation; He invested greatly in the blueprints for our lives. Then He handed us the blueprints (the Bible) that would ensure we would be the grand design He envisioned. But, like the foreman in the story, we often lay aside the master plan. Sure, it’s there, and we check it occasionally, but we try to improve on the design by doing our own thing. When we make a mess of by Marsha Plumbtree it all, we throw it back on the One who created the blueprints when it’s clear we failed to follow them to the letter. What do you do when you don’t understand how something is supposed to be constructed? You read the instructions. Proverbs 16:20 (NIV) says, “Whoever gives heed to instruction prospers….” You must take the time to know how something works before you attempt to do it. The same principle applies to the Bible. We have to study and read God’s Word; it is the blueprint for our life. Then we must act on the Scriptures we read. God’s Word provides the solution to every problem we will face. Being a good steward means taking those words and applying them to our lives. He gives us words of faith on which to stand and the details of how to accomplish great things. If your life doesn’t seem to be going in the direction you envisioned, maybe it’s time to stop what you’re doing, read the instructions, and learn to build your life the right way. Follow the blueprints. Marsha Plumbtree is the executive assistant to Edward W. Wood, executive director of Stewardship Ministries. PHOTOS © 2006 JUPITERIMAGES CORPORATION Rose a by Any Other Name… IPHC Women Flock to Experience Holy Spirit Power at Retreats W hen did the icebox become the fridge? How long has it been since you referred to your jacket as a wrap? It seems like just yesterday we were all agog over the technology of the 8-track. Then, whoop! It became a CD. Who knows what’s next … MP3s? They’re already here. You may have shown your age lately simply by the way you referred to something. Don’t be embarrassed. It happens to most of us. We find it difficult to keep up with current terminology in this high-tech world. Over the past several years, Women’s Ministries has undergone numerous title changes. Woman’s Auxiliary morphed into Women’s Ministries. The WM president is now the WM director. GAs became GEMs, who became Missionettes. Individual ministries and events also are changing names. The Missionary Sponsor Plan is now called Stay in Touch. Even Sharing Sisters is soon to have a new moniker. The marvelous reality behind all these changes is that, although the names are changing, the quality and effectiveness behind the ministry remains consistent. Ministry to women and girls goes on. Women leaders are trained for excellence. Women in the church continue to take part in ministry and service to others. One type of WM event continues to forge ahead, empowering the women who choose to be involved. It goes by a number of names: fling, bash, come-away, get-together, blast, breakaway, conference, and retreat. Much more than a time for socializing and shopping, these experiences offer an opportunity for women to reconnect, recharge, and re-evaluate. Women’s retreats today are high quality, high expectation events. For instance, more than 700 women experienced “All About a Journey,” an event sponsored by the South Carolina Conference Women’s Ministries in September 2005. A combined worship team featuring Pentecostal Holiness, Assemblies of God, and independent worship leaders ushered the women into the presence of the King of kings. Special guests Dr. Janice Sjostrand and Reba Rambo-McGuire spoke with continued on page 22 PHOTO © 2006 JUPITERIMAGES CORPORATION April 2006 | www.iphcExperience.com 21 A ROSE BY ANY OTHER NAME continued from page 21 WHY I PRAY continued from page 15 power and authority, challenging not only the ladies in attendance, but also each other. “The glory and presence of God was so real,” said South Carolina WM Director Tamé Lambert, “it was life changing.” Becky Watkins, WM director in the New Horizons Conference, says attendance at their retreats has increased annually. In fact, she now plans two retreats each year, in different areas of the conference. Watkins attributes part of the growth to upgrading locations. When she came into her position, 67 ladies came to retreat at the conference campground. In 2005, about 400 ladies flocked to the resort locations, hungry for the one-on-one ministry offered at these events. “The thing that excites me most is that younger women are experiencing retreat and getting hooked on WM,” she says. “They return to their local churches understanding that Women’s Ministries isn’t just for older ladies. It’s for them. And they don’t just soak it in. They want to give back. Younger women are hungry for opportunities to operate in their giftings. Women’s Ministries is able to provide that opportunity.” Women still want to experience the manifest presence and power of the Holy Spirit. They attend these events expecting to receive, and they aren’t disappointed. Many testify of receiving physical and emotional healing and deliverance, a call from God, and an impartation of spiritual gifts. Perhaps you want to receive, reconnect, be revived … whatever you call it, you want to experience it. Check out the next Women’s Ministries Retreat in your area. Visit the Women’s Ministries website at www.women.iphc.org for more information. However, what I experienced the day I received salvation is the main reason I pray. I believe my spiritual growth after that experience came about because of my commitment to prayer. Many people did not believe that a youth could be saved and stand on the promises of God. They started numbering my days as a Christian. My spiritual father, who was also my pastor, was a man of much prayer. He told me to read the Word of God and pray daily. I’ll admit it was a struggle at first, but gradually, I gained momentum. Prayer intensified my spiritual understanding of God’s Word and how the Holy Spirit works. Prayer made me remain focused on God. God filled me with His Spirit while I was praying after our normal evening Bible study. Yes, I knew that when I got saved, I received the Spirit of God in my life, but that day has remained memorable because I felt an unusual calmness. I had seen others being filled and speaking in tongues, but I thought there was some remaining sin in me that hindered me from receiving the infilling of the Holy Spirit. So I repented of everything I could think of and simply released my life to God in prayer. After that I started worshiping the Lord. Suddenly, my tongue was loosened, and I began to speak in a language I had not learned. I was never the same again. Prayer continues to change my life. That is why I cannot skip praying even for a day. Prayer is all I have to transform me daily. I thank God because He gave me a way to fellowship with Him, and that is through prayer. 22 IPHC Experience | April 2006 Morris A. Ayolo is a student at East Africa Bible Training Center, Eldoret, Kenya. He is working in one of the new IPHC church plants in Outspan. This article is an edited version of an essay Morris wrote following a prayer class instructed by Winston Hollingsworth. We Believe • … there is but one living and eternal God, of unlimited power, wisdom, and goodness. • … that Jesus Christ, the only begotten Son of the Father, took the nature of mankind in the womb of the virgin Mary. • … that Christ arose from the dead and ascended into heaven, where He remains until the time He will return to judge all people. • … the Holy Ghost proceeds from the Father and the Son and is of one substance with them in majesty and glory. • … the Bible is the divinely inspired Word of God. • … eternal life with God in heaven is the reward of the righteous, and eternal banishment from the presence of the Lord and unending torture in hell are the wages of those who reject Him. • … Jesus Christ shed His blood for the cancellation of our past sins, the restoration of all sinners who repent, and salvation from sin and sinning. • … justification before God is by faith alone. • … Jesus Christ shed His blood for the cleansing of the believer from all sin and its pollution. • … sanctification by faith in Christ is an instant work of grace followed by a lifelong process of spiritual growth after conversion. • … the Pentecostal baptism of the Holy Ghost is available through faith with the initial evidence of speaking with other tongues as the Spirit speaks through us. • … divine healing was made available through Christ’s death on the Cross. • … in the imminent second coming of Jesus Christ. • … it is the responsibility of every believer to obey Christ’s command to spread His message of love and deliverance to every nation. An unabridged version of the IPHC Articles of Faith is available at www.iphc.org. Missionaries on Furlough Gary and Alesa Akerman Randal and Dorothea Aldred Al and Coli Argo Linwood and Nancy Berry Joe and Maggie Delport Tony and Patti Guasco Winston and Marie Hollingsworth Philip and Gailya List Sr. Mark and Jeannie McClung Scott and Cathy Miller Tim and Beth Salley Itinerating Missionaries Marty Delmon Mike and Tina Gentilini Daniel and Rocio Pitti Jimmie and Angela Pope Ron and Sharon Wooten David and Twilla Sasser LifeSprings Always Brings You the Best in Small-Group Resources! Curriculum of Christlikeness™ God Views Renovation of the Heart Celebration of Discipline With the God Views curriculum materials, you and your small group will enter a journey of discovery. Along the way, you will examine six of the most common false views of God, and four true pictures. 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